Students Protest in Favor of DixonThe announcement came in response towidespread student dissatisfaction over thefailure of the University to rehire assistantprofessor Marlene Dixon, expressed for¬mally by the ad hoc committee of 85, acommittee of graduate human developmentstudents who met Sunday and graduatestudents in sociology who met Monday andagain Tuesday. Dean Johnson commentedthat “the timing of it may have been inresponse, but we had had it under consid¬eration” before the current controversy.MAROON—Bruce NortonDIXON RALLY: Students march past a fire on the Ad Building steps during the Dixon demonstration.Divinity School Mourns for Lost YearBy Sue LothMore than 50 graduate divinity schoolstudents marched through Swift hall andthe quadrangles Monday in a funeral pro¬cession marking “the death of the D MinClass of 73.”The 60-minute procession and serviceswere triggered by the actions of a Decem¬ber 19 meeting at which the divinity schoolfaculty for financial reasons voted to cutoff admissions to the first year of the DMin program and lo sharply reduce admis¬sions to the MA-PhD program next yearAt a meeting last week, the DivinitySchool (student) Association (DSA) votedto hold an all-day conference Wednesday todiscuss the issues raised by the faculty de¬cision. All divinity school students and fac¬ulty would be invited. Both the DSA andJerald Brauer, dean of the school, haverequested that faculty members suspendclasses in order that the greatest numberof people might attend.Highlights of the march included a “to¬ken" procession of the pallbearers, car¬riers of the cross and censer, and severalother marchers to the fifth floor of the ad¬ministration building — the location ofPresident Edward Levi’s offices — and amusical liturgical service outside the build¬ing which attracted 80 spectators. In addi¬tion to three satirical songs written espe¬cially for the service, participants sang"The Battle Hymn of the Republic,”“Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,” and “On¬ward, Christian Soldiers.”At the faculty meeting December 19, theelected Faculty policy committee present¬ed the proposal for the D Min moratoriumand PhD cutbacks in order to balance thedivinity school’s $800,000 budget. To contin¬ue the school's program as usual nextyear, dean Brauer estimated, would leadto an $80,000 deficit.The Swift Sword, newsletter of the 450-member DSA, explained that the crisis de¬veloped “when the faculty learned theirproposed budget increase of approximately14 percent had not been cut to an antici¬pated 6.5 percent, but 4.5 percent. Cost ofliving increases, the need for faculty re¬placements and salary increases, as wellas other factors. . .appear to make a dras¬tic cutback in program necessary."The budget, however, has not beenmade available to students.”The reasoning behind the decision, deanBrauer explained, was that the school hadtwo choices, given the financial situation:either it could accept more students than itcould adequately handle, or “responsiblyact toward the students in residency.”.The school did not have “the moral right,” thedean felt, to accept students if unsure itcould provide them with a top level Uni¬versity education.Glen Davidson, associate director of theD Min program, agreed with Brauer. “Ifwe have to establish a priority of funding,”he said, “top priority goes to students al¬ready here.”Marlin Gilbert, first year graduate divin¬ity student, expressed the demonstrators’point of view. “Priorities have made it sothat there will be no D Min class nextyear. We want our priorities pushed up.”Graduate divinity student Lowell Livezeysaid of the meeting, “As president of thestudent body (DSA) I had no word of this,and was told before winter break thatthere would be no faculty meetings beforethe first of the year.”Livezey’s statement is representative ofstudents’ concern over their lack of voicein important policy-making decisions. Asecond concern is that the moratoriummay signal the death of the D Min pro¬gram here. “The D Min program is a newone,” said Livezey. “Its first class willgraduate this spring. If this new program is not continued, then the degrees thesepeople receive will be from a program thatfailed.“Also, because the University was thefirst to have a D Min degree, it is seen asa pioneer.” As such, it has responsibilities,Livezey continued. “We owe it to the worldof theological education to see (this pro¬gram) pull through.”In response to the students' concern,dean Brauer said, “I respect their fearsand I sincerely hope this (death) doesn’thappen. I doubt very much that we couldkill (the program) — we’ve invested somany years of our lives in it.”The Wednesday conference will run from9 am to 5 pm, with a 90-minute break forlunch at noon. The morning sessions willinclude discussions with deans Brauer andSpencer Parsons, and faculty membersGibson Winter, Peter Homans, and. tenta¬tively, Jay Wilcoxen.The afternoon session, which may allowtime for caucusing of various interestgroups, will be used, in Livezey’s words,“for planning for the projects of researchand/or action which may be indicated bythe. . .morning session.” Dean Johnson's plan for the meetingcalls for opening short statements by him¬self. by professor Morris Janowitz. chair¬man of the department of sociology, andby professor William Henry, chairman ofthe committee on human development. Thefloor will then be open to comments andquestions from all present.Mrs. Dixon has maintained official neu¬trality about student efforts in her behalf.Dean Johnson originally circulated a state¬ment which said that she had requested“that her specific case not be discussed atsuch a meeting,” but this phrase waschanged by dean Johnson at Mrs Dixon'srequest to the more neutral sentence that“Mrs Dixon has not given written per¬mission for her specific case to be dis¬cussed at such a meeting.” The amendedstatement continues “The division of thesocial sciences believes. that it is in¬appropriate to discuss publicly the de¬tails of individual cases.”The meeting as proposed by dean John¬son does not satisfy the committee of 85.They had approached professor Janowitzlast Friday with a demand that an openmeeting of students and tenured sociologyprofessors be held to discuss Dixon's caseno later than Wednesday. A march ofabout 100 people in front of the adminis¬tration building on Friday dramatized thedemand.About 60 members of the committee metMonday night to discuss dean Johnson’sresponse to their demands. Former SGpresident Jeff Blum began the meeting bystating “we have a statement from themthat they will hold a meeting, but not theone which we requested.” Students ob¬jected to the inconvenient timing of thescheduling of the meeting for 4:30 Friday,to the lack of assurance that sociology fac¬ulty will be there and to the restrictionsagainst discussion of Mrs Dixon's particu¬lar case. Chris Hobson, graduate student inpolitical science, stated “the response bydean Johnson does not constitute aresponse to the specific issue.” The com¬mittee decided to hold a short rally Fridayafternoon and to demand that a student beelected by those present at the beginningof the 4:30 meeting to chair it. and that thediscussion be allowed to cover Mrs Dixon.The committee voted against a proposedplan to disrupt classes of tenured sociologyprofessors by standing up in groups ofthree and requesting that each class be de¬voted to a discussion of the Dixon case,and continuing to speak if refused. Theplan has been put off until after Friday’smeeting.70 of about 100 students and seven facul¬ty members in the committee on humandevelopment met Sunday and also passeda program. They planned to suspendclasses for two days next week and use thetime for a department-wide conference andworkshops on specific issues. Human de¬velopment students are seeking greaterstudent influence over hiring policy. Theyalso recommended to the faculty of thecommittee that they reopen Mrs Dixon'scase by re-recommending her to deanJohnson. Representatives to the meetingtook a petition signed by about three-quar¬ters of the students in the committee todean Johnson on Monday stating their wish* >/3 AMAROON—Phil Lathrap• FUNERAL RALLY: Divinity students entertain behind mock coffin at demonstration.January 14, ,1968 / The Chicago MaroonBy Bruce NortonD Gale Johnson, dean of the social sci¬ence division, called Monday for a meeting“to discuss the procedures and criteria forreappointment and promotion in the divi¬sion of the social sciences.” The meetingwill be held at 4:30 next Fridav in room126 of Judd Hall.REPRINTED FROMTHE DAILY ILLINI, Champaign, IllApril 27,1968Course Increases Reading SpeedStudents Can ComprehendAt 2,500 Words Per MinuteBy ED SEJUDDally Ill ini Staff WriterSpeed reading does have its lit-:le problems.As my hand hurried across thepages, making an audible "swish¬ing” sound, I became aware of acertain stillness in the library.Looking up from my book, I con¬fronted an assortment of stunned,bemused, disgusted and genuinelysympathetic countenances on theraces of my tablemates, all silentlyasking, “Hey fella, what’re you doing with your hand?”“Speed reading!” I cried, jump¬ing at my chance to show-off, “Ican read 2,000 words per minute(wpm), comprehend more, get lesstired, complete the assignment andSTILL log more drinking timethan ever before, FURTHERMORE—and so the lecture contin-led, ending with ", . . That’s no>rag — just plain fact.”“It’s true however. Wednesdaylight the Reading Dynamics Insti-ude graduated its first Universityilass, boasting that its students hadncreased their average readingipeed by five times and had madeubstantial increases in compre-tension as well. Other classes will>e graduated Thursday, Friday andnto next week with similar results- it’s the payoff on a gamble that takes nine weeks to pan-out.First of KindThe Evelyn Wood “Reading Dy¬namics” course is the first of itskind to be offered on the Univer¬sity campus. It works on a newprincipal which uses the reader sown hand as a “pacer," contending that you don’t have to mental¬ly repeat (“sub-vocalize”) all thatyou read, but rather that you can,when properly instructed, open adirect channel between your mindand the printed page. In theory, aperson can read (and comprehend') as fast as he can see, withhis top speed limited only by hisability to turh pages. Phenomenalresults have been obtained by exceptional students, many attainingspeeds in excess of 25,000 wpm—without sacrificing comprehensionStudents at the Reading Dynamics Institute learn to read DOWNthe page rather than across it.Their eyes flow across the pagesin soft-focus rather than in thejerky and old fashioned “single fixation” method.Dynamic readers actually learnto read lines BACKWARDS as wellas straight down! (At exceptionallyhigh speeds, it doesn't matter whatdirection you read a line — back¬wards or forewards, it’s all the same ) Dynamic readers soon learnto read groups of lines at a singleglance, often reading the secondhalf of a paragraph before evenseeing the first-half!Greater CommandReading dynamically, you obtaina gi eater overall command of thematerial, as especially evident inlong novels where one often forgets the beginning of the story bythe time he reaches the endInstead of bypassing "War andPeace.” dynamic readers can onlycomplain, “Oh hell. I’ll have towaste two hours reading it!”Ideally, such a concept offersprinted material as if it were apainting, a sculpture, or other workof art The reader considers it asa whole, as a complete, single entity rather than an agglomerationof pages, paragraphs or chaptersBecause such readers makefewer eye fixations and mental repetitions than ordinary readers, theyare less succeptible to eye fatigueand the usual headaches and drowsinessSince it is a manual skill ratherthan a function of intelligence, itdoesn’t matter what the reader’sIQ is. While P.E. majors still won'tunderstand texts on nuclear phys¬ics, they’ll be able to read non¬technical material at speeds equal| to their technically oriented class! mates. Paul Wilcher, super reader whoconducts the course, is an instruc¬tor equal or better than any you’llfind on the University payroll. Hisclasses are cheerful and competent with an informality that offerswelcome relief from the drearyUniversity classes which studentsare so steeled against.The price is a factor which dis¬courages prospective students, butit's cheap by any standards.If a student avails himself of allthe facilities offered by the Insti-tude and attends all the class ses¬sions, the price boils down to onlyabout $2 an hour, cheaper thanany private tutoring you’ll everfind Spread over four years, thecourse can save thousands of studyhours and can probably affect aboost in a student's grade-pointaverage. Assignments which oncetook days can be accomplished ina matte of hours, leaving moretime for other pursuits (fun, drink¬ing, girls, etc ). The Institute esti¬mates that it can save average students 350 hours of study time eachsemester — probably an understatement.Class SessionsClass sessions are two and a halfhours long and are held once aweek (for eight weeks) in LandoPlace. Optional drill sessions areheld free each day at noon in theYMCA, with private counseling available as often as necessary.After the initial payment (whichcan be made in weekly install¬ments) everything is provided bythe Institute. The student bringsonly the essential apparatus — hishand.I attended the course in mycustomary manner, coming late toclasses, often without the assignedhomework and without attendingeven a single optional drill sessionNonetheless, 1 managed to Increasemy reading rate by five times andcan now read average material atabout 2,000 wpm with good com¬prehension. More diligent studentsraised their reading rates by morethan 10 times, with accompanyingincreases in comprehension.You still feel a little silly in thelibrary, but finishing half a se¬mester's reserve-file readings at acrack is more than worth It. Thecourse (which carries a moneyback guarantee) seems a valuableinvestment for any student, or any¬one with great reading demands,and will undoubtedly gain popular¬ity as its reputation spreada.By the way, an average dynamloreader could have read this articlein about 30 seconds.Why not readas fast asyou think?You can. Incredible as it may seem, you don’thave to be satisfied any longer to read at 300,400, or even 500 words a minute. You can readby sight only and read without saying thewords to yourself, one at a time. You can doit, and quickly, using a revolutionary new,tested and proved reading discovery.It is called The Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics Course. It was discovered in 1945by a Utah schoolteacher named Evelyn Wood.Based on her findings and research, the Read¬ing Dynamics Course was established in 1959.More than 400,000 men and women fromall walks of life have successfully proved thatthey could triple their reading speed with equalor better comprehension and recall. Thousandsof college students have taken the Course andcan now read all of their assignments in one-third to one-tenth the time, and with betterunderstanding and recall.Accept our invitation to come to a FREEOrientation. We’ll show you a documented filmaf actual interviews with Washington Con¬gressmen who have taken the Course. Assenator William Proxmire of Wisconsin says,‘This was one of the most useful educationaljxperiences I have ever had.” We’ll demon¬strate how Reading Dynamics guarantees to:riple your reading ability or the Course won’t:ost you anything.Take us up on our FREE one hour Orienta¬tion offer. See the Orientation Schedule in thesox at the right.Ask about our special arrangements foron-site Group Classes in Reading Dynamics PHONE NOW!ST 2-9787FREE ORIENTATION!IN CHICAGO - at (he Reading Dynamics In¬stitute. 180 N. Michigan Avenue. Suite 400TuesdayWednesday. 12:15 PM January 14January 15Thursday... 5:30 PMJanuary 10January 17Friday 12:15 PMSaturday.... 12:15 PM. 5:30 PMJanuary 181:30 PMat 10540 S. Western Avenue. Suite 405Tuesday ... January 148:00 PMThursday January 108:00 PMSaturday January 1810:110 AMjIN EVANSTON - at the Carlson Building. 0:10Church Street. Suite 510Wednesday January 158:00 PM JUR POSITIVE GUARANTEE OF TUITION REFUNDThe Kvelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute willrefund your tuition if you do not at least triple yourreading index (reading rate multiplied by comprehen¬sion percentage) during the Course as measured by ourstandardized testing program. This policy is validwhen you have attended each classroom session andcompleted the minimum daily assigned home drill atthe level specified by your instructor.CM-114 |The Evelyn Wood \Reading Dynamics Institute j180 N. Michigan Ave.. Suite 400 . Chicago, III. 60601 j□ Please send more information. j□ Please send registration form and schedule of |classes. I understand that I am under no obligation. |Name.Street.City. .State. -Zip. —“I defy, anyone to heuncomfortablein this car.”Sli«ling Mo-|'I can t recall a car in which theseats alford such an astonishingdegree of luxury. Correction TheMercedes-Benz 600 does-hut itwill cost you 10 times as much asthis one. Covered in leather-cloththe Renault 16’s seats are filledwith thick foam cushions and giv,full support where you need it"The front ones are fullv recliningand are adjustable through a multitude of positions...”"The rear bench seat is also adjustable: in fact, you can take thewhole thing out if you want toSo said Stirling Moss in QU;i;.\Magazine, a British publicationHe was talking about the Renault16 Sedan-Wagon. The sedan thatchanges into a station wagon. Andback again, whenever you want.“. . . and I would like to offer mycongratulations for producing tinssensational motorcar for .a vmk>"'pric'" *2.11.-, IM I KaCcfilu V - M, I'.' ,7.-". v/i ICCH GAN AVI CM CAGOTEL 326 2550ORDON'SrestaurantRUNNING OUTof time for undergraduatestudents who wish to applytor financial aid for the1969-70 academic year.Application, including Par¬ents Confidential Form,must be submitted byJanuary 25. Forms may bepicked up now at Office ofAdmissions and Aid, 5737University. Ext. 4592You won’t have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAN0 STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411MUSICALSOCIETYCello—PianoRecitalLarry Stein, CelloLarry Mendes, PianoWorks by Beethoven, Faure,Bloch, Saint-Saens, & HaydnMANDEL HALLSat., Jan. 18,8:30 P.M.ED EE4 / The Chicago Maroon / Janua-y 14, 1969TWO Proposes Model Cities ProjectBy Jeffrey KutaWhile Mayor Daley's planners have yetto come up with a Model Cities plan forChicago, The Woodlawn Organization,TWO) this week sends to the printer itsown proposal for Woodlawn. the product ofseven months of discussions by Woodlawnresidents, technical input by Universityfaculty and students, and review by thecommunity.penalization of the proposal comes in themidst of open controversy over the legi¬timacy of the official city planning pro¬cess. In the past month individuals con¬nected with the city’s effort have chargedthat the four Model Area Planning Coun¬cils (MAPCs), appointed by Daley to fulfillthe Department of Housing and Urban De¬velopment (HUD) citizen participation re¬quirement. have in fact not been allowedto create plans for their neighborhoods butrather have been confronted by the may¬or's planners with already detailed plansawaiting approval.Two of these individuals are JosephSander, former chairman of the UptownMAPC, and the Rev Curtiss Burrell, for¬mer chairman of the Near South MAPCand chairman of the Kenwood-OaklandCommunity Organization. After resigningtheir MAPC posts, they late in Decemberfiled a petition asking HUD to establishnew, elected MAPCs; administer directlyall Model Cities funds presently channeledthrough City Hall; and withhold from Chi¬cago all other HUD funds until the citysatisfactorily meets citizen participationrequirements.Following a suggestion in an early Com¬munity Legal Counsel memorandum con¬demning the city’s procedures, they togeth¬er with TWO President Rev Arthur Brazierand others have threatened court suitsagainst HUD which would attempt to forcethe government agency to comply with itsown guidelines.Meanwhile, HUD officials at least public¬ly express confidence that the official cityproposal covering all four .model areas willsoon be ready for HUD approval, and thatno hitches will occur. The Woodlawn modelarea, however, presents a special case andthere is still talk of a compromise betweenthe city and TWO which would center oncontrol but would allow TWO to retain astrong role in the plan's implementation.The plan itself is summarized in the cur¬rent issue of The Center Newsletter, pub¬lished by the University’s Center for UrbanStudies.Its most important feature is a commu¬nity corporation with a governing board of100 members, 40 of whom are elected atlarge by the community on the basis ofpetitions signed by neighborhood residents,and 60 of whom are elected by TWO’s dele¬gates meeting on the basis of nominationsby neighborhood organizations.A preliminary summary of the plan re¬leased to the public, press, and govern¬ment officials at a November 18 meeting ofTWO delegate organizations had statedthat the 60 members of the governingboard would be elected not by TWO mem¬bers but by the community at large, thusgiving TWO effective control over theplan’s implementation only if it retainedwidespread community support. The gov¬erning board revision, as other, minor re¬visions, grew out of public meetings heldthroughout the community following com¬pletion of the preliminary draft by TWOand the University.TWO officials and University representa¬tives are reported not to have favored therevision, which could work against theplan’s acceptance by the city and by HUD.However, a compromise with the citywould probably do away with the specificprovisions of the revision.The plan goes on to establish a commu¬nity ‘convenor,” appointed by the govern¬ing board for a three-year term, who headsa Core component consisting of a commu¬nity school board, a housing and economicdevelopment corporation, and similar deci¬sion-making boards in the areas of healthand social services, financial assistance,legal aid, and environmental planning. Anetwork of outreaching offices called Pads furnish front-line services which the Corebacks up. In all areas, citizen advisorygroups complement professional advisorygroups and neighborhood residents assumeduties traditionally reserved for profes¬sionals.Specific proposals are made in all prob¬lem areas, often interrelated in horizontal,interdisciplinary (as opposed to verical,agency-related) fashion.The plan envisions, for example, a healthinsurance plan available to all Woodlawnresidents with cost based on ability to paywith a $200 maximum annual rate. ThePads, a community health center, a newhospital, and extended-care facilities pro¬vide various health services.Social services of all types are separatedfrom financial assistance and are availableto all members of the community regard¬less of financial status. Again, first-lineservices are provided at the Pads with asocial service clinic serving as a back-upfacility.Financial assistance is available to allwho need it without obligation to accept social services. An important part of theplan is a guaranteed minimum income,significantly increased from present aidlevels, with a sliding scale employmentpremiurh for incentive. Where a family offour presently receives a basic $2544 an¬nually. the new figure is $4078 with a max¬imum possible total income of $5250 beforethe family becomes ineligible for futherfinancial grants.A legal service program consists of sev¬eral agencies to handle ordinary and spe¬cial cases, arbitrate disputes, disseminateinformation, and improve and review po¬lice-community relationships.The plan views environmental planningas an ongoing process, dependent uponresidents’ own perceived needs, consistingof issuance of general policy statementsand referral of projects to a housing andeconomic development corporation forfunding. Specific proposals include a varie¬ty of kinds of housing, but with high-risestructures and public housing concentra¬tions avoided; encouragement of occupantownership; relocation only when improved housing alternatives are available; and theuse of rent supplements, code enforcement,and owner and tenant organizations.A community school board, based on thecurrent experimental school district, con¬tinues to function. Parochial schools, pre¬school centers, transitional middle schools,fluid schools following the health moaelwith classrooms located outside of formalschool buildings, and a cultural and lan¬guage arts center are included in thescheme.Finally, a housing and economic devel¬opment corporation handles intensive con¬tact with the hard-core unemployed, job-related worker preparation, several train¬ing programs offered by a career vocation¬al institute, development of black entrepre¬neurship. an industrial park, and commu¬nity financial ventures.A first-year action program oper¬ationalizes many but not all of the pro¬posed programs. Thorughout the five-yearplan, activities are constantly evaluatedfor effectiveness and revised or discardedas appropriate.Living Theater Presents Paradise NowThe Living Theater ended its run herewith its production of ‘‘Paradise Now”which turned out to be part revival meet¬ing, part political debate, and part spec¬tacle. After pleas from both the cast andthe rest of the audience, the doors wereopened to people who did not have ticketsand who wanted to get in. Spectators surgeddown the aisles, filling them and the stageon which they outnumbered the cast.The performance lasted more than fivehours, during which actors ran up anddown the aisles and over seats and largenumbers of the audience came up on stageto give a mass show of solidarity wih thecast.Early in the evening a woman in the au¬dience stood up to condemn the Hyde Parkcommunity for sentencing on “circm-stantial evidence” three black youths to150 years in jail each for the murder ofRoy Guttman. One of the cast memberscondemned an unnamed dean for having agovernment contract to produce chemicalwarfare. Later on, an unnamed, middle-aged man climbed up onto the stage tohave a 15-minute debate with a cast mem¬ber on ‘‘whether intercourse is a means ofstopping wars.” The rest of the audiencejoined in to heckle.Predicted nudity did not exist and Chi¬cago’s vice squad did not formally makeits appearance. On the crowded, hot stageone girl did strip completely but got lost inthe crowd. MAROON—David TravisPARADISE NOW: Audience joins actors for Living Theater's final performance.MAROON—David TravisBOTTOMS: Performers in "Paradise Now" prove that they can't take all their clothes off by only going to the legal limits.January - 14r 'V969- •/' The- Chicago- Maroon- •/* 5EDITORIALSMurphiesThe Murphy scholarships are this University’s attempt ata response to the problem faced by students engaged in extra¬curricular activities. They offer a small quarterly stipend to stu¬dents who cannot work due to extracurricular activities and whodemonstrate a need for extra money. Both the amount of thescholarship and the means of distribution demonstrate an insensi¬tivity to students’ needs that directly contradicts the administra¬tion’s professed receptivity to improving student life and creatinga more cohesive student community.It is not the University’s responsibility to set up and financeways to keep its students amused. When students spend majoramounts of time, however, on activities that are also services tothe University and the University depends on — publications,broadcasting, theater, sponsoring entertainment — then it is notunreasonable to expect the University to recognize these effortsand offer some recompense for the time and energy expended.This does not necessarily mean only money; a problem that isalmost never recognized by the University but which is much moreserious to students is the strain extracurricular activities put onone’s academic output.There are two ways the University might better deal withthese problems. First, revise the Murphy scholarships’ plan. Insteadof conferring retribution on needy students who have been cheatedof the chance to earn money, make the Murphy stipends in recogni¬tion of the job students are doing. Second, begin investigating someprogram whereby students who want to reduce their course loadin order to work on extracurricular activities without impairingtheir academic status can receive academic and financial assistancein making up the work, perhaps during a summer quarter. TheUniversity needs and profits from the services students provide;it’s about time they responded in kind.SWAP and STEPIn a time of racial recrimination and ethnic paranoia, thequiet renaissance of STEP and SWAP is an encouraging sign in theslow realization of a stable, socially and psychologically integratedcommunity. At the present time, University-community relationsare delicate and strained to say the least. STEP and SWAP willbe effective in changing them if they can enter into their workwith positive, open-minded attitudes.The tutoring programs must not be regarded as white mission¬ary endeavors. If they are to succeed, they can only be viewedas two-way propositions, with both sides gaining. The patronizingattitudes of the stereotypical social worker which may have pre¬vailed in the past will only serve to increase already bruised hos¬tility and prevent the achievement of sincere relations between theUniversity and Woodlawn.By their close contacts with the citizens of Woodlawn, Uni¬versity students will have the opportunity to observe firsthand thestructure of the community which has been so wrapped up inUniversity politics. By working on a one-to-one basis, and by sin¬cerely trying to learn as well as to teach, tutors may be able toovercome some of the racial barriers. Of course the programswill not solve the major problems which the University and Wood¬lawn face: these have stemmed from many years of psychologicalhang-ups and political and economic warfare. The programs mayhowever, pave the way for improved relations and understanding.Naturally, the fears which pervade the tutoring programs andwhich have prevented them from being active during the past fewmonths must be overcome before students will be able to achieveany kind of meaningful relationships with citizens of Woodlawn.Only when mutual respect exists in the programs will STEP andSWAP become useful either to Woodlawn or the Universitystudents. Mobilization Gives Callfor Counter-InaugurationBy Rennie Davis and Paul PotterThe conviction of the peace movementever since its beginning has been this: thatordinary people can learn to cope political¬ly and emotionally with any national andinternational emergency, and that ordinarypeople, that every one of us, will stop let¬ting other people do the job we should bedoing—namely, deciding what kind ofcountry America is going to be during ourlifetime and beyond.So, working against the war, talkingagainst the war by refusing to be inductedor refusing to pay taxes is really twothings at the same time: it is educatingother people by our personal example, andit is a way to free ourselves from the per¬sonal prison that is inactivity.The Mobilization came into being andhas continued to exist because there was asimple, powerful sense of urgency aboutthe war that was strong enough to bringinto a working coalition working groupswho had never had contact before with oneanother but who shared a conviction thatthe government’s war policies must becrushed.The Chicago demonstrations happenedbecause Americans, many of whom hadbeen in Vietnam and had experienced thewar itself, refused in large numbers togive up the objective of ending the warW e are calling for a counter-in¬auguration, an inauguration of the opposi¬tion to four more years of Johnson under anew name. We will begin Saturday THE MOVEMENTJanuary 18, with a conference on theMovement—some 50 workshops on G1 or¬ganizing, women’s liberation, Vietnam, lawand order under Nixon, imperialism inGuatemala, underground media, guerrillatheater, and so on.Sunday afternoon we are asking civiliansto join behind GIs coming from all parts ofthe country in a massive march to theCapital to bring home the troops. Sundayevening, in a giant circus on the Mall, wecelebrate—not like the staid celebration ofthe social elite, but with Phil Ochs, theFugs, Judy Collins, with the life-style ofthe Movement.On Monday, Inaugural Day, we go to theNixon coronation, not to celebrate Amer¬ica’s consensus around Nixon’s vision oflaw and order. We will be at the In¬auguration to remind the government, withflags and peace pennants, banners, slogansand chants, that we intend to put the nextPresident in the same crush of public pres¬sure that became too much for LyndonJohnson, until this country turns awayfrom the racist and violent policies of thepast.Rennie Davis and Paul Potter are lead¬ers of National Mobe. Their column wasdistributed by CPS.LETTERS TO THE EDITORSSelling BodiesOne of the sad experiences of last quar¬ter was looking at the Maroon ClassifiedAds and having them remind me of a TVcommercial. Just like on TV, there werethe pictures of human beings whose bodieswere being used for selling purposes. Andas usual, the bodies were those of the un¬derclass — women. They’re the ones whoare supposed to be useful in terms oflooks, not brains, Besides, they’ll work forless money. For instance, there was thewoman whose nude body (Yes, all the Ma¬roon Classifieds’ “selling bodies” werenude last quarter.) was supposed to giveyou the hots for Abyssinian kittens. Atleast she was not a Playboy fold-out type.This fact implied recognition that morethan one body-shape is beautiful. Presum-THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Fditor: Caroline HeckPhotographic Editor: David Travi*News Board:Student News: Wendy GlocknerAcademics: Sue LothThe Movement: Paula SzewczykCommunity: Bruce NortonSports: Mitch KahnSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaContributing Editors: John Welch, John Moscow,Robert Hardman, Barbara Hurst.News Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Marv Bittner, Deb-by Dobish, Chris Froula, Jim Haefemeyer,Con Hitchcock, C. D. Jaco, Kristi Kuchler,Chris Lyon, Sylvia Piechocka, David Steele,Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift, Leonard Zax.Production Staff: Mitch Bobkin, David Steele,Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Sunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of 'the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3269. Distributed on campus and in the HydePark neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptionsby mail $7 per year. Non-profit postage paidat Chicago, III. Subscribers to College PressService. ably the kitten-seller thought that Maroonclientele would have a wider sense of beau¬ty than would TV watchers. I suppose we’dhave to test that reality on the basis ofhow many kittens he sold via the Maroonad. Or better, we could test how many in¬quired whether the woman was also forsale. As long as human bodies, nude orclothed, female or male, are used for com¬mercial purposes we are not yet past theage in which the buying and selling of hu¬man beings is an accepted practice. Surelythe Maroon need not engage in this greatAmerican tradition.Not-For-SaleBarbara AlterStereotypesI should like to protest a number of thephotographs on the Maroon classified ad¬vertising page during last quarter. As awoman, it offends me to see my mental aswell as physical stereotypes displayed forvicarious consumption. My objections donot stem from any notion of prudery, butfrom a desire to see the relations betweenmen and women humanized.Human relations in their better aspectsdo not occur between superiors and inferi¬ors. By printing pictures which intensifythe attitude towards women as mindlessand inferior bodies, the Maroon does its bitin keeping women on the bottom and per¬petuating the brutalizing sex relationshipsof our society.The University is composed of both menand women. A newspaper which treatswomen’s bodies in a qualitatively differentway from men’s, is a male supremacistpaper. That some of the insulting pictureswere advertisements, and that the Maroonwas paid to print them, in no way absolvesthe Maroon from a racism against womenas upsetting to me as any glorification ofblack Uncle Tom’s and Mammies would beto a black person.Forgive my hysteria — it’s just a qaturalfeature of my anatomy.Fanny Q WitchWomen's Radical Action Project(Witch is an acronym for Women’s Inter¬national Terrorist Conpsiracy from Hell.)Continued on Page Seven6 / The Chicago Maroon / January 14, 1969letters to the editors of the maroonTragedySome tragedies move up and down thesides of the Aristotelian triangle. Otherssimply fizzle, stagnate or decay. This is atragedy of the University of Chicago,whose ideological bunkers stifle its in¬habitants in a manner reminiscent of aseventeenth century cloister of nuns.In “God and Man at Yale” William FBuckley made some frighteningly astuteobservations (for sadly misbegotten ends)about the nature of college faculties andadministrators. These people exist in anatmosphere whose point of reference is anindomitable predilection upon which theybuild various schema of abstraction. Itseems unlikely that they could imaginechanging their lives and beginning with anew point of reference, so to them wordssuch as convention, dissatisfaction, radi¬calism and contentment are pegs to stickin predetermined holes on a cribbageboard. They can never appreciate the truesentiment of the preverbial quality of suchwords. Gibralter may crumble, and eventheir academic structures, but never theirfoundations. Unfortunately, to comprehend“being-in-the-world” is not to be in it.This tragic flaw saturates the story(read manipulation) of Marlene Dixon.One need not deal with the inane constancyof the publish-or-perish doctrine. Perhapsit serves a purpose in that it can be aeuphemistic pat on the back to some sadlytry-hard but ineffectual instructor. Eventhat is questionable, but in any case it doesnot apply. Mrs Dixon fulfills the role of ateacher beautifully and her glory is thatshe also transcends the role. True, she isnot the only teacher who puts you at suchease that you might rest your feet on herdesk while you tilt the chair on two legsand have coffee and a cigarette, but she isone of few if any who does not plot a cer¬ tain number of “therefores” on the courseof her subject. She judges by human val¬ues, not structured ones, and one mighthope that she may be so judged. But atthis point, despair ambles jauntily in. Therules of the game as it is still played stateplainly that one may be an individual bothin and out of the classroom. The fine printon page 22 says, however, that individ¬uality is defined by the infinite variety ofways to say something, not by the infinitenumber of things that can be said.A few concrete questions must be asked.Why, to the detriment of Mrs Dixon, wasshe informed at the last possible momentthat her contract would not be renewed? Itseems her detractors had decided her fatewell in advance. Does the University be¬lieve that publishing establishes the valueof the teacher and the prestige of the Uni¬versity? Is prestige a characteristic ofquality? Does controversial disagreementwith the norm bring crucial financial harmto the school? Can’t grown-ups tolerate dif¬ferent kinds of people even if they don’thave the romantic sense of morality onefinds in Romeo and Juliet?(Please forgive the following breach ofartistry and sensibility.) Are some people\ intellectually stodgy and blind or even po¬litically chicken? Wrong or not in his ap¬proach, Senator McCarthy realized thatliberalism is now only an idea, not a meth¬od. and he said so. Many people agreed,but seem to fail now to realize that theyare again only talking.I am not in the least sympathetic withMrs Dixon’s political views, nor anyone’s,I suppose. At any rate, I do not give my¬self to actions which can be construed ormisconstrued by a group of peers whomight gracefully consent to my dislike ofthem. I might even be, unbeknownst tomyself, a practicing solopsist. I like somepeople and laugh at others, and some people laugh at me. I like money, sex,hard work, books, television, breakingrules, cars, etc. and I think I have gainedmuch of the freedom I want by ignoringthe administration, campus and nationalpolitics (problems of social consciencehere are not the point), and the police. Butneither my apathy nor the administrationcan succor the strange bitterness I feelabout these goings on. Mrs Dixon is anoutstanding teacher (“The facts, ma’m,just tell us the facts.”) and a good humanbeing. Her malice and inability rest onlyinside the shell of the big green tortoiselying at the bottom of the sea.Tuesday, January 14RECRUITING VISIT: Rauland Division of ZenithRadio Corporation, Niles and Melrose Park,Illinois. Chemistry BS, MS and PhD (inorganic,physical); Physics BS, MS, PhD (elementaryparticle). For appointments call 3284.RECRUITING VISIT: Army Headquarters Department,Washington DC. Certification by US Civil Serv¬ice Comm, is required for all positions. Forappointments call ext 3284.LECTURE: "Scorecards for Investment Performance",Eugene F Fama, Professor of Finance. ConradHilton Hotel, noon.LECTURE: Invitation Lecture Series Committee of thegraduate school of business presents a panelof the editors of Business Week. GraduateSchool of Business, room 103, 1-2 pm.LECTURE: "Caribbean Literature". Mr Cartey, Cobb209, 4 pm,COLLOQUIUM: "A Unified Scattering Theory of Pre¬dissociation and Unimolecular Kinetincs", Frede¬rick H Miles, National Bureau of Standards.Rl 480, 4:15.LECTURE: "Molecular Structure-Function Relationshipof Chrymotrypsin", Dr Paul Sigler. BillingsHospital, room M-137, 4:30.MEETING: VISA, for old and new members to discussways of helping the mentally ill. Reynolds ClubSouth, 7:30.MEETING: Musical Society for anyone interested inplaying chamber music. Ida Noyes main lounge.7:30.LECTURE: "Israel: Victor or Vanquished? Diplomacysince the Six-day War", Oscar Miller, Depart¬ment of Economics, University of Illinois. Hillel,8.DOC FILMS: "Exodus", Cobb Hall, 8. There are various combinations and per¬mutations of the words knowledge, ex¬perience, and humanity, and there are dif¬ferent ways to reflect upon how they corre¬late and govern each other. But there is aneasily perceptible, if vague and intuitivethink which overrides all of this. For wantof a better word, call it human. You knowwhat I mean.So, Oedipus, don’t go to Colonus. It isbest you should sleep like Duncan until youare reborn, blind, but not a victim of yourown circumstance.Wednesday, January 15LECTURE: "The Role of the one-bank holding com¬pany; the future of financial congererics", JHoward Laeri, Vice Chairman, First NationalCity Bank. Business East 103, 1.WRESTLING: Lake Forest, Bartlett Gym. 4:30.DOC FILMS: "Tillie's Punctured Romance", Cobb Hall,7:15 and 9:30.FOLK DANCING: The Country Dancers, Dances fromthe British Isles and Scandanavia. Ida NoyesHall, Dance Room, 8.LECTURE: "Alahan: A Fifth Century Monastery inIsauria", Michael Gough, Institute for Ad¬vanced Study, Princeton. Breasted Lecture Hall8:30.Thursday, January 16MEETING: Board of Pre-Collegiate Educate, Hutchin¬son Commons, Inoon.LECTURE: "Making the Grade: Educational Settingsand the Development of Work Identity", How¬ard S Becker, Dept of Sociology, Northwestern.Cobb 209, 11:30 am.TRACK: Frosh-Sophs vs Jr Colleges, Field House, 4.LECTURE: Johnson's Volpone and William Shake¬speare", James G Tulip, Classics 10, 4.DANCING: Israeli Folk Dancing, Ida Noyes Hall,7:30-10:30.LECTURE: "The Atmospheric Sciences in the SovietUnion", Dr N K Vinnicheno, Central Areo-logical Observatory, Moscow. Ryerson 251, 7:30.DOC FILMS: "The Night of the Hunter", Cobb Hall, 8.MEETING: Ski club; plans for Spring trip, movie.All Welcome. Ida Noyes, 8.Samuel L AlberstadtBULLETIN OF EVENTSSTARTING TODAYONE WEEK SALE TYPEWRITERS10% DISCOUNT-January 14-21.- 10% DISCOUNTALL NAME BRAND TYPEWRITERS - NEW AND USED.PORTABLES, STANDARDS, ELECTRICSONE YEAR GUARANTEE ON NEW MACHINESINCLUDING PARTS AND LABORSIX MONTHS GUARANTEE ON USED MACHINESINCLUDING PARTS AND LABORALL REPAIRS BY OUR FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS.TYPEWRITER DEPARTMENTTHE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE58th & ELLISJanuary 14, 1969 / The Chicago Maroon / 7STEP and SWAP Revise ProgramsBy Wendy GlocknerAfter a lengthy period of near stagna¬tion, the Student Woodlawn Area Project(SWAP) and Student Tutors ElementaryProject (STEP) are revamping and revita¬lizing their programs. According to in¬volved students, both tutoring groups arein the process of regaining contacts witharea schools, and hope this quarter toachieve once again the projects as success¬ful as past ones.Tutoring project co-ordinators attributethe groups' lack of activity in the past fewmonths to the “psychological problems . . .and identity crises which arise when awhite student teaches a black kid.” Stu¬dent tutors who have worked in the pro¬grams in the past cite as a major problemthe possibility of a black tutee developingan inferiority complex from experiencing asuperior-subordinate relationship with histutor.In hopes of reactivating STEP, however,tutoring program chairman David Chan¬dler, 70, cited psychological problems as“not as important as the chance kidsshould have to become literate and edu¬ cated.” Chandler stated that the programis starting from scratch: presently, con¬tacts are being reestablished with Wad¬sworth School at 65th St and UniversityAve and the recommencement of a sub¬stantial tutoring program is aimed for thisquarter.The major change in the SWAP pro¬gram, according to SWAP coordinator Ros-coe Giles, 70, has been the establishmentof a study center at 6042 South KimbarkAve to replace offices formerly located inIda Noyes. Although the study center is notyet completed, SWAP tutors hope that itwill provide Woodlawn students with a qui¬et, peaceful place where participants canstudy, meet people, and talk.Neither program, however, limits itselfto tutoring. STEP officials organize artsand crafts projects and field trips. SWAPcoordinators are planning classes in thestudy center for the tutees.In the past SWAP, which at one time wasone of the most active tuoring programsin the country, offered programs on highschool dropouts, parent-administration re¬lations, and college counseling. The college counseling program was dropped last yearbecause, according to Giles, other organi¬zations had greater resources.Tutors themselves have reacted quitepositively to the tutoring program. “It’s agood thing to do useful work,” said TomCyjan, 72, a member of STEP. “If wewant to help Woodlawn, we must do some¬thing ourselves; supporting the povertyprogram and giving money are not enough.We must work with the people and seewhat it’s really like.”Cyjan was only half-pessimistic over thepsychological fears which tutors empha¬size. “The fears are partially well-found¬ed,” he said. “But if we let them botherus, nothing will happen at all.” Cyjan saidthat he found relating to the student diffi¬cult at first, “but not once you get going.”Several tutors have faced crucial prob¬lems during their tutoring experiences.One SWAP tutor who works with a studentat a housing development says he has be¬come the dominant male figure withwhom his tutee identifies. Since his fatherand brothers are never around, the tuteehas begun to regard Lovain as a father image. “It scared me that the kid wasidentifying with me,” he said. “I was af¬raid that this would increase the kid’s feel¬ing of inferiority — and it wouldn’t be goodin the long run.”Another problem which tutors face isbeing able to relate to the tutees in ateacher-student manner. “You have to feelwhen the student isn’t following,” said C>-jan. “He will never admit it.” He addedthat tutee’s parents have a higher impres¬sion of the tutors as teachers that they de¬served. Tutor chairmen said that most ofthe younger students who are being tutoredgenerally don’t know how to read or dosimple arithmetic.Both school administrators and parentsof the tutees react favorably to the tutor¬ing programs. “Parents are concerned . ..and in favor of the tutoring programs,’’stated Mamie Holloway, chairman of theparent-teachers association at WadsworthSchool. Donald Prather, assistant adminis¬trator at Wadsworth, said that the addedassistance and aid which tutors give isquite helpful if a teacher is not able to geta certain point across to the students.We’ll give you a chanceto go out on a limb.With our High Risk/High Reward program for col¬lege graduates. If you qualify, you'll be put into achallenging management position immediately. You'llmake your own decisions. Take your own risks.If you can't handle the challenges, we’ll find outfast enough to keep from wasting a lot of your time.That's the risk. If you do well, you're on your way. Fast. That’sthe reward.If stakes that are a little higher and risks that are alittle rougher are your cup of tea, see our recruiteror write College Relations, 222 Broadway, NewYork, N. Y. 10038.A lot of hard work never hurt anyone.Jjjj\ Western Electric1 MANUFACTURING & SUPPtV UNIT Of THf BEll SYSTEMAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ax (Brook.CLEANERS* TAILORS* LAUNDERERSPhones CO.serving campus since 1917Ml 3-7447 1013* 17 E. 61st ST., near EllisFA 4-3500 * 174 E. 55th ST., near Woodlawnauthorized BMCmi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, Illinois 60615^ ‘—foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.THE FRIT SHOP hasKLH STEMO SYSTEMS«•« THK SOUND^JJUSTHK FURYHAIDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. S5th St.DO 3-7644RfMCMIEt THAT ONCEYOU COULDNT REMEMIEKREFLECT UPON THE TIMEWMB4 YOU Will FORGETAMO ME THE WEALTH OFTODAY8 / The Chicago Maroon / January 14, 1969f r * . / it ti ft; f t .* *«wi£v t'hAiitf.t t i■. 'about the midwayBlack ScholarshipsAn anonymous gift to the University willmake possible two full tuition scholarshipsduring each of the next four years for Ne¬gro students from Indiana public schools.Preference is to be given to Elkhart.South Bend, and northern Indiana students_ in that order — but qualified studentsfrom other areas will be considered if nosuitable candidates from the specified In¬diana communities are available for theawards. Each scholarship will cover thestudent’s full tuition of $2,100 for the schoolyear.The University recently launched a four-year $750,000 program to provide scholar¬ships and extra educational opportunitiesto Negro students. These additional schol¬arships will help significantly to promotethe University’s efforts to encourage thematriculation of Negro students.The initial step of the program was tak¬en last summer, when 100 students frominner-city schools on Chicago’s south sidewere brought to the campus to participate in a special course of studies. Other phasesof the overall program include a tutoringprogram for freshmen whose previouseducational preparation made them“risks” under the usual admission criteriaof the College; a special recruiting pro¬gram for freshmen to enter the College inthe autumns of 1969, 1970, and 1971; andthe offering of special scholarships by theUniversity and other sources to meet theneeds of those who plan to become residentstudents at the University for their under¬graduate years.College ForumThe College Forum will have its secondsession at 3:30 pm Friday in the CobbHall Auditorium. The topic: “How CanLiberal Education Survive in a ModernUniversity?”Charles Wegener, professor in the NCDand the humanities collegiate division willmake an initial statement; then his state¬ment will be torn apart by biology profes¬sor Richard Leowontin, associate historyprofessor Hanna Gray, and Peter Rabinow- itz, graduate student in comparative liter¬ature.The idea of the Forum, according to itsorganizer Donald Levine, associate profes¬sor of sociology, is to discuss topics of in¬terest to the College, in as interesting away as possible. The format will vary, hesays. Future topics will be the Barnes’ stu¬dent village plan and white racism.BasketballThe Maroon cagers, bouncing back froma loss to Judson last Wednesday outshotand outrebounded Colorado College Satur¬day night, 81-53. This evens out their recordto 4-4 for the season.Paced by Fred Dietz’s sterling perform¬ance, the Maroon starting five averaged ahot 63 percent average from the floor and88 percent from the foul line. Dietz leadthe scoring with 21 points, 70 percent fromthe field and seven of eight free throws.Other Maroons in double figures wereO’brien with 18 points and Daw with 11.The strong defence and rebounding forced 15 turnovers in the first half as thevarsity dribblers spurted to a 38-24 lead.Coach Joe Stamph suggested that the Ma¬roon’s improved fortunes were due to theirintensive work on rebounding and defenselast week. The offense was no slouch asthey had been averaging only 69 points agame.Next Saturday, Chicago will face North¬east State, which according to CoachStamph “is one of the toughest small col¬leges in the city. We beat them last year,but this year it should be very close.”Shapiro'sChagall’s, Miro’s, Picasso’s, Goya’s,Roualt’s and many other works by inter¬nationally known painters are now on viewin Ida Noyes Hall in ‘The Art to LiveWith” program of the Shapiro Collection.Distribution of the paintings will be held onFriday, Jan 17 but if you want one of themore popular paintings, be sure to getthere early. The charge will be $2, but thepaintings will not be due back until June.Make sure you bring your ID with you.Look what's at DOCFILMS: Tonight, PaulNewman inPreminger's EXODUS,tomorrow, Chaplin inTILLIE'S PUNCTUREDROMANCE; andThursday, Laughton'sNIGHT OF THEHUNTER, with RobertMitchum.Plus Donald Duck and Roadrunneron Wednesday. And still only 75c atDOC FILMS.LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.Telephone 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue Currency in aCommon Market nationis devalued.Help wanfed:How can we protect ourautomotive investmentson the continent?Situation: If a member nation of theCommon Market devalues itscurrency as the speculators appearto be betting, other CommonMarket nations may follow suit.Question: Faced with this possibility, couldyou develop a plan of actiondetailing how we can best protectour large automotive investmentsin each of the member nations ?Consideration: Remember the importance of theCommon Market agriculturalagreement concerning pricestabilization, cost considerationsand exchange restrictions. Needyour thoughts on this A.S.A.P.Thanks.VW’s encouraged now. 2have joined us. Quicker Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarF ac tory trained mechanicsservice. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & ni1 change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 /Want to work on an exciting assignment like this?A new member of the financial staff at Ford Motor Com¬pany does. Today his job may be solving a complex Com¬mon Market problem. Tomorrow, it might be an analysisof profit potentials.To help solve assignments like these, our people have agiant network of computers at their service. Complete re¬search facilities. The funds they need to do the job right,if you have better ideas to contribute, and you're looking for challenging assignments and the rewards that come.from solving them, come work for the Better Idea company.See our representative when he visits your campus. Orsend a resume to Ford MotorCompany, College Recruit¬ing Department. TheAmerican Road, Dear¬born, Michigan 48121. Anequal opportunity employer.January 14, 1969 / The Chicago Maroon / 9I AM NOT ALLOWED TO TAKE OFF MY CLOTHESinterludes with him. Write"Ramos, 2026 E. Pratt St.Md. 21231. Phone 301—-327-angry. There was little structure,just enough to get things feelingfor some of the people there, es¬pecially those on stage. They hadto do, feel, relate, and those whocould let their inner natures cometo the surface, even momentarily,will remember; for a long timewhat happened in the free theatreat Mandel Hall. : ;This year the folk festival is havingthe most- amazing ■; bunch of tradi¬tional performers/ ever. Buy up¬front seats . tomorrow • in ’Mandelwasher, washer, drispace, $52.50 a month1100 xl06 . M* FOTA] RATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line;!i For non-University clientele:| 75 cents per line, 60 cents perI repeat line. Count 28 characters;I and spaces per line. «TO PLACE AD: Come with or| mail payment to The Chicago| Maroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St„ Chicago, III. 60637. 'No ads will be taken over thephone. . v ‘'"’Y* . 'tjj:DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BEIN BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUST<BE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO3:30 P.M. DAILY.I FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:!Phone Midway:;3-0800, Ext. 3266.' H.E IS COMING!FOR RENTy <, Do you know who spouted that in¬ti credible load of bullshit? LENNY17 BRUCE. Ha, thought he really knewwhere it was at? Well, he did, .except for this irrational thing he ;had about this country,, that it wasgood in spite of the fact that every-‘-thing he looked at was shit. Well> v„ he paid his dues Let's move on. •fflaKS r .. / ~I fc&v! . . communism doesn't make itat all Not for me 'Cause it'si complete government control The■ capitalist system is the best, 'causewe can barter, we can go some-“" where else. Communism is one bigi ' phone company. That's it, man. »Can't go nowhere else, Jim Tell, the phone company,ftk -'I want a phone put in Monday at9 30 ■e - .'You'll have it at the end of thef- week'' K S ). Free -| want it at 9-301'record ■■ chang- * 'Alright, schmuck! Go'to Marshall.*campus Bob Fields for a. phone.''That's right, I'm screwed. Where'm_ I t,| qomg to go7 There's one desk toe fora’COurt> QO to./ That's what communism, is./JY 752 3393 • ' But a capitalist system is beauti-‘ul man 'cause we can go here. *■ I,;washer and; - there iand that's the barter system,cr merch - All- - you know And I want to keep myVi- 3445 ‘ y 'err2 rms. and bath on 3rd floor offamily dwelling in Hyde Park-’-Kitchen privileges. Suitable for 1 or2 . female students. Rent to bear-Wranged Call 324-9379 evenings: *• - Fed up with DeGAULLE?i' Large-furnished room, private bath,’ kitchen privileges.y.Madison' Park :$50.00 Rate may "be reduced by"-tending- two girls, aged two andt five Call Virgil Burnett, X4137 - If; ROBERT MITCHUM in CharlesLaughton's only film, NIGHT OFTHE HUNTER — at 8 Thursday,doc films. CAST YOUR VOTE.- Press, "thelever. FLUSH FOR . FREEDOMPr d brown LEATHER GLOVES,fur lined, label: Alexander's,. Re¬turn to info desk Adminis. , Bldg. CONDEMNING VOICE:' Whatyou doing? You're enjoyinq ,self? Sitting on the couch, Smokdope and enjoying yourself’ yvyour mother has bursitis! Andthose people in China are’’suffertoo! ' 'GUILTY VOICE: I'm enjoyinqLITTLE bit, but it's bad-dope away. And I got a headache andeating again from it. .Girl wants daily ride to-from 1500N. State. Arrive UC 8:45 leave 5:00Ext. 3604. 9-5. Will pay. No ballfreaks please.NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO3-5 room apartments, all with tilebaths 8, showers Ideal for students,interns, nurses, young couples. NO’CHILDREN Rental $85 5105 CallRE 4 4141 « " | MUSICAL SOCIETY MEETING.Tues., Jan. 14, 7:30 P.M. Ida NoyesMain Lounge or call M. Levy363-8211.ROOMMATE* WANTED 312 rm basmt apt ^S S , fully furn. s',‘i TV, kitchen utensils,r$70/mo. ,374-8241V or 2-.roommates .wanted Hi-rise , v or BA 1-8383 » ;4'2 rms Aft 6—667 4031 / « -*/ ~ w 1 J- ;.L-en Handelsman Jerry.-Lipsch 0;Fern rmt wtd c s-pn s, Harper Stu Govt recommend, nearby, eco-$70 mo Call 955 3873 ” “ - nomical, newly dec unfurn > apts":: & 3'. rms" S75, $89 50 Free gas'Roomma'. needed 551 " 4 & elec Clean Quiet Warm Wil-rooms.at 6106, Ellis contact Mussel-, lams, 6043 .Woodlawn Short-term,- • I'm a bust-out junkie. Startersmoking pot, look at me nowthe way, cellmate, what hapcto you? How'd you -get to mithose kids in that crap q,Where did it all start?Started with bingo in the CalChurch. ’l see.Students for Israel presents Prof.Oscar - Miller of the University ofIllinois speaking on "Israel Victoror Vanquished? Diplomacy Sincethe Six Day War" on Tues. Jan.14th at 8:00 P.M. at Hillel House5715 Woodlawn.Joss-sticks, n. Small '.sticks bur.eqby the Chinese in their paqa- •foolery, in imitation* of. certa’n .cred rites of our holy-religionNon-white/: Spanish-speaking youngman desires write girls of raIicaland/or liberal persuation to makehim feel EQUAL by having sexualNeed one ;in 3 man. Hv Pk apt 50:mCall l . CHARTER FLIGHTS f, PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP Be' ginners 8. • Intermediate; - 10 3- hr./;sessions- Richard - Gordon & Ken s.Raide- H 4487 before^l0:30’ P M ; | ' •. * ,,(’-'.i|COEDapt7'walk$32ownRm6674639 ,$50 reserves your seat on one of/ ' "v_. . - ^ // '■ /• !< 3' rm apt-.5730 Blackstone 643 3088 Visit rm 306, ‘ Ida ' Noyes Hall, 1-• :, : ’■ '/.Wanted Roommate female, 7 room .3598' 'See. ,our display ad for///apt , private, room ’and bath, dish- schedule.,'.',■- ■- ■■■ ’ - - ■ \ wanted%to|buy EXODUS, with Paul Newmantonight at 8, Cobb Hall; doc filmsfe|f|;was /exceptionally impressed by,'America ' Hurrah ' 'Motel',' is thebest one-act play I've ever seen—Norman Ma ler. - - 1Used VW or other car Will paywell ' Call 'John, 684-7027 . -,protests;,Vus <,i Sot < *y ccio piano recitalMandel Hall Sat Jan 18 8:30 P.Mfree ’ TRYOUTS for "America/ Hurrah'':‘ Thurs., .Jan 16 8-10 P M and Sat.,Jan 18 5 P V Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge ' 'g “HAPPY, now that YESTERDAY puts ^ lmy-,life and my worlcMnro focus," say ^ *.readers of’ thi^„ friendly \HHH monthly, visitor/crammed with * ' ,■ rpllickfng; humor, delightful ;/pomposities, tearierking romances, mcre-■ * A ! .■ .ids'/.-.i6k.es r; oorV, -/a !ui /.it':■ ■ planes/ sh.ps, trai ns,/plus lots/of; proof that■ our great era: ('.parents were smarter, andire fool ',Ma- we sometimes think■HIH* All from ;the, U.S. magazines read-in| | | :I M■ ■ I ACT NQVVM LAS T AD T HI S SEAS ON 1■■■ ' Prepared by Edgar Jones, author ofmm "Those Were the Good Old Days( EhJOY AIJC GIVE1' ■ ■ PROTEST French' anti-Israel posi¬tion'PICKET French Consulate 916N Mich. Wed 11.30 AM. DEMON-S*RAT,e* Who are these people?Freddies, Franklin George, the Pop¬lin Family, Robert Shaw, Dan Reno,Bill Harrell and the Tennessee Cut¬ups, the Pennywhistlers, Elizabeth-. Cotten, New Lost City Ramblers,’Ed and Lonnie Young, Sara Cleve-do your typing’ 363-1104’ ’ 'land, George 'Armstrong ■ ArchieGreen, Pete Seeger ' This investmentstarts paying diin three years.TYPINGPEOPLE WANTED The 9th Annual U: of C. Folk Festival is coming Feb 7-9 Tickets onsale in:;, Mandel Hall box office9.30 4 30 starting tomorrow.Briqrt ambitious student, needed as,campus .representative for /computerdating service May work for com-m 1 s'1 °.ri^Ktf*tfeKis^.'-W rite CupidUrbana, III. SHAPLIN <in Tilhe’s Punctured: Romance, Wednesday at 7:15 and9:30 - plus Donald Duck, Roadrunner- and other surprises doc.films.- ?; /G , .SHAPIRO COLLECTION on q.s>play Ida Noyes Jan. 13-17 ShapiroDistribution; Jan. 17th. \UPERSONALSFOR SALE '61 ^LINCOLN Extrlow; mil., : excellent looks; perform¬ance; new wiring, battery, exhaust,brakes; good paint/purchased fromW.; I llinois Sheriff' 4 weeks 'ago;long: owner), ALL LEATHER IN¬TER IOR !/ S800Z.363-5833; - SKIClub meeting. Spring: Plans,, MOVIE. All Welcome Ida Noyes,8 P M., Thurs., Jan. ‘ 16.Follow the Living Theatre to Europe. Marco Polo takes you. 326-4422„.TTI c nr- Ai r-,toe c ^ . It was harder Winter at Valley-BATTLE OF ALGIERS. Super docu-. Forqp eh George’mentary playing this week at the • 9 ' “ 9 •Afro-Arts Theatre /at 39th 8., Drexel8:00 PM Also’:Newsreel's BLACKPANTHER Sherman says to goand see these, flicks if you haveany revolutionary spirit H E. has said, "Mayor Daley is aimb?herf«na»rg| ;.f/ '« VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1There were many different reac-t ons to the Living Theatre in Para-,dise Now on Sunday night Gene■ rally the hostility was felt by those,V who were in the audience The word ,audience is significant. If. you- werepart of./an audience, expectingsomething , to , happen, then you-would be very disappointed/ evenFREE ' - v • : ..:/-,•/ /’’G u i d e. F R E E yyi thorders received by »jJan 29 1969 RUSSIAN taught, by nativeateacherRapid mo'hcd Free trial ’ lessonCE 6-1423, 9 5UC S cien ce F i ct i ontonight/Ida Noyes. /CHARTER FLIGHTSFlight numberAirline 69-A' - .t"AIR FRANCE (jet charterJune 21Chicago .London or Paris :Sept 20London or Paris ’ -ChicagoEstimated fare $265 $350 $285 $285 $275Payment date Feb 28 Ap„l 4 April 4 April 4 April 18. ■■■■ ■; 1 ■ '* ■■ >ity of Chicago (including students and employees) whose affiliation began before, ; r - ' ’ , . , -1r:m i' i 1 ident children who reside in the same household. Family members mayversify member. Brothers and sisters of members are not eligibleA deposit of $50 /s required tor each seat reserved, with the balance payable by the Payment Date listed above. Checks should be madepayable to U. of C. Charter Flights. Come to Room 306 Ida Noyes Hall between 1:00 and 5:30 pm, or mail your deposit with your name,69-BTWAgroupJune 24ChicagoParisSept 1LondonChicago 69-C2FINNAIRgroup 69-DAIR CANADAjet charterDeparts on „„ from June 24New YorkLondon or ParisSept 2LondonNew York June 25New YorkAmsterdamSept 2AmsterdamNew York August 5ChicagoParis or RomeSept 1LondonChicagoReturns onfrom10 / The Chi'cag6' Maroon / January 14, 1969about the midwayThe CabinetThere will be two UC men on PresidentNixon’s cabinet.• David M. Kennedy, 63, Secretary of theTreasury, a University Trustee since 1957and chairman of the Continental IllinoisNational Bank & Trust Co of Chicago, larg¬est bank in the city, eighth largest in thecountry, and, coincidentally, the Univer¬sity's bank.• George P. Schultz, 47, Secretary of La¬bor, dean of the University’s GraduateSchool of Business, on leave for the aca¬demic year working as a fellow of the Cen¬ter for Advanced Studies in the BehavioralSciences at Stanford. He had recently be¬come chairman of Nixon's task force onmanpower, labor-management relations,and wage-price policy.Midway CampaignThe University enjoyed a prosperousChristmas this year. It was two milliondollars in gifts and endowments.The largest grant was $1,600,000 from theFord Foundation for three University pro¬grams relating to population control, ofthis the foundation gave $929,000 toward aprogram in reproductive biology related tofertility control. The director of the pro¬gram will be Dr Fredrick P Zuspan. chair¬man of the department of obstetrics andgynecology.The second program $418,000 for re¬search in estrogen attracting proteins. Theresearch will be headed by Dr El wood VJensen, professor of physiology in thePritzker school of medicine.Another $189,000 was granted for re¬search on the side effects of oral con¬traceptives. The research will be con¬ducted by Dr George L Wied, Professor ofPathology in the Pritzker school of medi¬cine.A gift of $500,000 from Mr and Mrs Wil¬liam E Fay, Jr, toward the construction ofa brain research institute was given to theBrain Research Foundation. An additional$400,000 was given by an anonymous friendof the University and the Foundation. Thisgift is part of a program to raise $2,900,000for the institute.Two gifts of $100,000 each were made byR R Donnelly & Sons Company of Chicagoand by Weyerhaeuser Company Founda¬tion of Tacoma Washington. Both grantsare unrestricted and will be used as partof the Campaign for Chicago.New MenDr. Humberto Fernandez-Moran wasnamed A.N. Pritzker Professor of Biophy¬sics. The 44-year old doctor, internationallyknown for his work in electron microscopy,twenty years ago he developed a diamondknife capable of cutting starch into itscomponent sugars. .. .Mathematics professor Jim Douglas, Jrwill replace C J Roothaan (recently namedLouis Block Professor of Physics) as Act¬ing Director of the University’s Comput¬ation Center. Dr. Robert D Moseley, Jrwill serve as associate director of the cen¬ George P. ShultzNew Secretary of Laborter and as director of the biological scien¬ces computer facilities . . .English professor James E. Miller, Jrpresident-elect of the 133,000 member Na¬tional Council of Teachers of English, willassume office in late November.Fifteen professors were appointed to thePritzker school of medicine. The depart¬ment of medicine’s four appointments in¬clude Dr Leslie J DeGroot, professor, andDrs Henry Joseph Binder, Adrian Katz,and Dorothy B. Windhorst, assistant profes¬sors.The eleven appointments to the depart¬ment of psychiatry Dr Jarl E. Dyrud, asso¬ciate professor psychiatry and director ofclinical services; Dr Pieter Devryer as¬sociate professor of child psychiatry anddirector of the Pritzker Children’s Centerand Hospital; Israel Goldiamond, and Phil¬ip S. Holzman, professors of psychiatryand psychology. Drs John N Chappel, Pat¬rick Hughes, and Herbert Meltzer, assis¬tant professors of psychiatry; CharlesSchuster, associate professor of psy¬chiatry; John R Thomas, assistant profes¬sor of psychiatry and psychology; DrEberhard H Uhlenhuth, associate professorof psychiatry and director of outpatientsection; and Dr Joan B Woods, assistantprofessor of child psychiatry.In University Realty Management, PaulE. Petrie has been appointed manager andPaul M. Huckelberry, manager-properties.The position of general manager was dis¬continued.L/C Heart TransplantSpecialists at the Pritzker school of med¬icine have made their first attempt attransplanting the human heart. The oper¬ation preformed on Christmas day, wasnot successful.A team headed by Dr. C. Frederick Kit¬tle; professor of surgery, operated on eightday old David Whippie of Harvey, Illinoiswho had been suffering from numerouscongenital defects of the heart not correct¬able by any other surgical procedure.Other members of the surgical team wereDr. Robert L. Repogle, assistant professor David M. KennedyNew Secretary of the Treasuryof surgery, and Dr. Magdi H. Yazoub, in¬structor in surgery.Sex DeterminationAn extremely accurate method of pre¬dicting the sex of a fetus has been devel¬oped by doctors at the Fritzer school ofmedicine. In a study conducted on 63 preg¬nant women, the method has been 100 per¬cent accurate.According to Dr. Anthony P. Amarose,Assistant Professor of obstetrics and gyne¬cology at the school, the sex is determinedby removal of fluid samples from the fetalwater sac and examination of the cellswithdrawn for the presence of sex chroma¬tin. Only cells from the female fetus con¬tain sex chromatin.Chromosomesand DrugsA project is being set up at the Lying-inHospital of the University to discover ifthere is a relationship bewteen chromosomedamage and drug intake.The research involving the establishmentof an experimental system in animals willbe supported by a $68,549 two-year grantfrom the Pharmaceutical ManufacturersAssociation Foundation, Inc.Research will be conducted by AnthonyP. Amarose, and James L. Burks, both as¬sistant professors, in the obstetrics andgynecology department of the PritzkerSchool of Medicine at the University.ConvocationOn a cold, snowy Friday the 13th (De¬cember), the University awarded five hon¬orary and 349 academic degrees in its326th convocation.Among the academic degrees were 25BAs, three BSs, 121 MAs, one MFA, twoMasters of Theology, 24 MSs, four MATs,85 MBAs, 83 PhDs, and one Doctor of Com¬parative Law.Receiving honorary degrees were;• Fernand Bruadel, considered one of themost creative living European historians, and directeur d’ Etuudes, Ecole Pratiquedes Hautes Etudes, Paris, Doctor of Hu¬mane Letters.• Julius Comroe, Jr., director of the Car- ,diovascular Institute at the University of ’California Medical Center and physiologistwho has specialized in respiration and cir¬culation, Doctor of Science.• Jean Nougaryol, outstanding scholar inthe field of Mesopotanian diviniation. Doc¬tor of Humane Letters.• Curt Paul Richter, professor of emer¬itus at Johns Hopkins, and an expert onthe biological aspects of behavior, Doctorof Science.• John Hasbrouck Van Vleck, the theo¬retical physicist Hollis professor of math¬ematics and natural philosophy at Har¬vard, Doctor of Science.The convocation address was given byGale Johnson, dean of the division of socialsciences, on “The Conquest of Hunger.”Another CommitteeA five-man subcommittee of the FacultyStudent Advisory Committee on CampusStudent Life (FSACCSL) was formed bydean of students Charles O’Connell at ameeting Monday.The subcommittee, chaired by MitchPines, ’69 has been formed to reach a deci¬sion on the Barnes Plan (Student Village).They hope that their decision will be avail¬able by the end of January so thatFSACCSL can vote on the plan by Febru¬ary 10. Other members of the committeeare Gloria Phares, graduate student in theHumanities Division, Ruth Weissbourd ’71,English professor Mark Ashin and HaroldRichman, assistant professor in the schoolof social service administration . . .O’Connell says that the long-awaited Kal-ven Committee Report has been promisedby law professor Harry Kalven by the endof January. The committee, formed overeight months ago, is reporting on studentdisciplinary procedures to FSACCSL.Chris Honeyman, ’71, a member of theOpen Housing Coalition (OHC) disagreedwith the appointments, saying that thecommittee was being padded. He statedthat because the committee members arealready committed to one view, any re¬sponsible dissent will be squashed and thatno other voices will be heard. He addedthat there should be at least one OHC per¬son on the committee, as OHC has beenactive in the Student Village plans.Grape StrikeChicago students have reactedto the grape strike with picketlines and guerilla theater produc¬tions. Although student action perse has ceased, students are stillneeded to report stores whichhave not been cleaned of grapes.Anyone who finds a grocery storewhich has not stopped sellinggrapes is asked to call 427-4357or 427-7078.L'ouclietWe welcome long ttair>cJ^anief «2)(; j/*,v e.mn, an J StJina1552 £. Ph-9255appointment*authorized BMCmi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, Illinois 60615'TVforeign car hospital & clinic, inc.IDT OF ORDER IL SHORELAND HOTELOffice space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultySingle rooms from $8.00 dailyTwin rooms from $11.00 dailyLake ViewPlease call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveJanuary 7, 1969 / Tha Chicago Maroon / 7■ mmmALL REQUIRED & RECOMMENDED BOOKS & SUPPLIESFOR THE WINTER QUARTERUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORESSHOP AT THEBOOKSTORE AFTER 5:00IT'S UNCROWDED, QUIET, PEACEFUL,ALL REQUIRED & RECOMMENDED BOOKS & SUPPLIESWINTER QUARTER OPENINGHOURS:TUE. JAN. 7th. - - 8:00 A.M. — 8:00 P.M.WED. JAN. 8th. - - 8:00 AM. — 8:00 P.M.THUR. JAN. 9th. - - 8:00 A.M. — 8:00 P.M.FRI. JAN. 10th - - 8:00 A.M. — 8:00 P.M.SAT. JAN. 11th - - 8:30 A.M. — 4:30 P.M.MON. JAN. 13th — 8:00 A.M. — 8:00 P.M.TUE. JAN. 14th —REVERT TO REGULAR HOURSTHE UNIVERSITY of CHICAGOBOOKSTOREON CAMPUS - 58th & ELLIS8 / The Chicago Maroon / January 7, 1969 ELLISAVE.&58thSt.Divinity Funeral held in quads.Page Three Students act through MobilizationPage Six TWO prints Woodlawn proposal.Page Five Demonstrator picketsPage ThreeuniversityfcF ch^Kco^kirchihs /Chicago, Illinois, Tuesday, January 14, 1969The Chicago MaroonMAROON—Phil LathrapMUSICRAFT SPECIAL >89.95THE MODEL TWENTY-ONE. KLHIf you could plug it in and tum it on, it would tell you more about itself, about us, and about ourattitude toward our work—and toward you—than we could express in a dozen pages such as this.For instance, it gives the lie to several hi-fi shibboleths: That the quality of a music system'ssound is absolutely proportional to its size.t that the best ones are necessarily the mostexpensive, etc.t This is possibly true of Wagnerian sopranos. It is certainly not true of radios and phonographs. The mech -anisms are quite different. (Moreover, as the average modem home or apartment has no music room, there isevery reason for keeping the equipment small.)ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.-DE 1-4150 2035 W. 95th S1.--779-6500Coming:A new way toindulge inthe MaroonClassified Ads.Improvisation in Music: East & WestSCHEDULE OF LECTURE-RECITALS & CONCERTSTuesday, January 28Ml SIC OK THE WEST: Jazz and Contemporary MusicFrank Tirro with Jan Herlinger,flute,and Dean Hey, tromboneSaturday, February 1JAZZ COSCEKT / The Bunky Green SextetTuesday, February 11Ml sic OK THE WEST: From Improvisation to CompositionLeo TreitlerTuesday, February 25Ml SIC OK SOI TH INDIA / Harold PowersFriday, March 7CONCERT OK INDIAN Ml SIC/ Vstad A li A kbar Khan, sarode Tuesday, April 1MUSIC OK rHE W EST: Improvisation in the RenaissanceHoward M. Brown with The Collegium MusicumTuesday, April 15MUSIC OK INDONESIA / Mantle HoodTuesday, May 6MUSIC OK AFRICA / J. H. Kwabena NketiaSaturday, May 10CONCERTOKCAM^LA.Ni Ml SICThe University of Michigan Gamelan OrchestraTuesday, May 20THE KES ri\ AU Ml SIC OK JAPAN / William P. MalmDales and programs are subject to change.Tuesday, March 11MUSIC OK IR AN / Ella Zoniswith Manoochehr Sadeghi, sanlourLecture-recitals will be held in Breasted Hall at 8:00 P.M.; tuition for the series is $10; single tickets to lectures are$2.00.The concerts on February 1, March 7 and May 10 will be given in Mandel Hall; adm: $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 (50*discount to UC faculty and students.I ickets at Concert Office, 5835 University A ve; or at Downtown College, 65 E. So. Water St. Special!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!ICFo Sludent Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8FINANCIAL AIDUndergraduate studentswho wish to apply for fi¬nancial aid for the 1969-70academic year must submitapplication, including Par¬ents Confidential Form, byJanuary 25. Forms may bepicked up now at Office ofAdmissions and Aid, 5737University. Ext. 4592FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W ol McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-61 71Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400Arnett ATTENTION:Candidates for Teaching Fositionsin Chicago Public SchoolsNATIONAL TEACHER EXAMINATIONSfor Elementary (K-8)and Selected High School AreasCHICAGO N.T.E. REGISTRATION DEADLINE DATE:Friday, January 10, 1969, 4:30 p.m.Chicago Public Schools will use the scoresas part of their 1969 certificate examinations for:Kindergarten-Primary Grades 1-2-3(N.T.E - Early Childhood Education)Intermediate and Upper Grades 3-8(N.T.E. Education mthe Elementary Schools)Art Grades 7-12(N.T.E. Art Education)High School English(N.T.E. English Language and literature)High School Mathematics (N.T.EHomemaking Arts Grades 7-12(N.T.E Home Economics EducationIndustrial Arts Grades 7-12(N.T.E. Industrial Arts Education'High School Physical Education MeniN.T.E. Men's Physical EducationHigh School Physical Education WomeniN T.E Women's Physical EducationMathematics)All Candidates Must Take the Common Examinationand the Teaching Area Examination Relevant tothe Certificate SoughtApphcants'for teaching positions in theChicago Public Schools should:1. Register with the Educational Testing Service, Princeton, NewJersey to take the common examination and the relevant teachingarea examination Registration for N.T.E. closes January 10, 19692. Indicate on the N.T.E. form, line 10, that scores should be subnutted to the Chicago Board of Examiners.Chicago Public Schools.3. file application for certification examination (form Ex-5) withthe Board of Examiners. The following credentials should accompany the application (Ex-5), if not already on file: Official copy ofbirth certificate, official transcr of of all college work attempted.The application and credentials must be filed by Friday, February7, 1969, 4:30 p.m.The Notional Teacher Examinations will beadministered Feb. 1, 1969 on 400 college campusesFor additional information: Board of Examiners, Room 624CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS228 N. La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601or the Office of Teacher Recruitment,Chicago Public Schools or Teacher Placement OfficeGT ’W ’W' 'W' 'W'Please send me information about theNational Teacher Examinations for□ Kindergarten-primary grades 1-2-3□ Intermediate and upper grades 3-8□ High schoolisubiect areaNameAddressCityCollege Zip*£?*£*, -oSGck ddffiuJapanKARATEAssociationThe U. C. Karate Club is offering a new beginners' class on Mon.and Wed. at 7:30 P.M. starting Monday, Jan. 13.Intermediate and advanced: Mon. and Wed. at 6:15 P.M.$10 to join, $10 per quarter. Females half price.Information: 684-3998 or 363-4298, evenings. M. BERG FUR SHOPUnclaimed used furs, s25 up to s100. Settle forcharges, values up to s1000. Also fabulous minkcoats and stoles. Tremendous values.1619 East 55th Street HY 3-9413liSHAPIRO "ART TO LIVE WITHCOLLECTIONDistribution for Winter & Spring QuartersFriday January 17, 4:00 P.M.Ida Noyes HallNumber for Order of SelectionDistributed at 8:00 A.M.Rental: $2 Bring I. D.2 / THe Chich^O Maroon / ‘January 14,' lf9d9Students Protest in Favor of DixonBy Bruce NortonD Gale Johnson, dean of the social sci¬ence division, called Monday for a meeting“to discuss the procedures and criteria forreappointment and promotion in the divi¬sion of the social sciences.” The meetingwill be held at 4:30 next Friday in room126 of Judd Hall.The announcement came in response towidespread student dissatisfaction over thefailure of the University to rehire assistantprofessor Marlene Dixon, expressed for¬mally by the ad hoc committee of 85. acommittee of graduate human developmentstudents who met Sunday and graduatestudents in sociology who met Monday andagain Tuesday. Dean Johnson commentedthat “the timing of it may have been inresponse, but we had had it under consid¬eration” before the current controversy.MAROON—Bruce NortonDIXON RALLY: Students march past a fire on the Ad Building steps during the Dixon demonstration.Divinity School Mourns for Lost YearBy Sue LothMore than 50 graduate divinity schoolstudents marched through Swift hall andthe quadrangles Monday in a funeral pro¬cession marking “the death of the D MinClass of 73.”The 60-minute procession and serviceswere triggered by the actions of a Decem¬ber 19 meeting at which the divinity schoolfaculty for financial reasons voted to cutoff admissions to the first year of the DMin program and to sharply reduce admis¬sions to the MA-PhD program next year.At a meeting last week, the DivinitySchool (student) Association (DSA) votedto hold an all-day conference Wednesday todiscuss the issues raised by the faculty de¬cision. All divinity school students and fac¬ulty would be invited. Both the DSA andJerald Brauer, dean of the school, haverequested that faculty members suspendclasses in order that the greatest numberof people might attend.Highlights of the march included a “to¬ken" procession of the pallbearers, car¬riers of the cross and censer, and severalother marchers to the fifth floor of the ad¬ministration building — the location ofPresident Edward Levi’s offices — and amusical liturgical service outside the build¬ing which attracted 80 spectators. In addi¬tion to three satirical songs written espe¬cially for the service, participants sangThe Battle Hymn of the Republic,”"Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,” and “On¬ward, Christian Soldiers.”At the faculty meeting December 19, theelected Faculty policy committee present¬ed the proposal for the D Min moratoriumand PhD cutbacks in order to balance thedivinity school's $800,000 budget. To contin¬ue the school’s program as usual nextyear, dean Brauer estimated, would leadto an $80,000 deficit.The Swift Sword, newsletter of the 450-member DSA, explained that the crisis de¬veloped “when the faculty learned theirproposed budget increase of approximately14 percent had not been cut to an antici¬pated 6.5 percent, but 4.5 percent. Cost ofliving increases, the need for faculty re¬placements and salary increases, as wellas other factors. . .appear to make a dras¬tic cutback in program necessary.The budget, however, has not beenmade available to students.”The reasoning behind the decision, deanPrauer explained, was that the school hadtwo choices, given the financial situation:either it could accept more students than iteould adequately handle, or “responsiblyaqt, toward ,tl?q ^qefents. in rqsi<jqncy.” The. school did not have “the moral right,” thedean felt, to accept students if unsure itcould provide them with a top level Uni¬versity education.Glen Davidson, associate director of theD Min program, agreed with Brauer. “Ifwe have to establish a priority of funding,”he said, “top priority goes to students al¬ready here.”Marlin Gilbert, first year graduate divin¬ity student, expressed the demonstrators’point of view. “Priorities have made it sothat there will be no D Min class nextyear. We want our priorities pushed up.”Graduate divinity student Lowell Livezeysaid of the meeting, “As president of thestudent body (DSA) I had no word of this,and was told before winter break thatthere would be no faculty meetings beforethe first of the year.”Livezey’s statement is representative ofstudents’ concern over their lack of voicein important policy-making decisions. Asecond concern is that the moratoriummay signal the death of the D Min pro¬gram here. “The D Min program is a newone,” said Livezey.. “Its first class willthis spring. If this new program is not continued, then the degrees thesepeople receive will be from a program thatfailed.“Also, because the University was thefirst to have a D Min degree, it is seen asa pioneer.” As such, it has responsibilities,Livezey continued. “We owe it to the worldof theological education to see (this pro¬gram) pull through.”In response to the students’ concern,dean Brauer said, “I respect their fearsand I sincerely hope this (death) doesn’thappen. I doubt very much that we couldkill (the program) — we’ve invested somany years of our lives in it.”The Wednesday conference will run from9 am to 5 pm, with a 90-minute break forlunch at noon. The morning sessions willinclude discussions with deans Brauer andSpencer Parsons, and faculty membersGibson Winter, Peter Homans, and, tenta¬tively, Jay Wilcoxen.The afternoon session, which may allowtime for caucusing of various interestgroups, will be used, in Livezey’s words,“for planning for the projects of researchand/or action which may be indicated bythe. . .morning session.” Dean Johnson's plan for the meetingcalls for opening short statements by him¬self, by professor Morris Janowitz, chair¬man of the department of sociology, andby professor William Henry, chairman ofthe committee on human development. Thefloor will then be open to comments andquestions from all present.Mrs. Dixon has maintained official neu¬trality about student efforts in her behalf.Dean Johnson originally circulated a state¬ment which said that she had requested“that her specific case not be discussed atsuch a meeting,” but this phrase waschanged by dean Johnson at Mrs Dixon’srequest to the more neutral sentence that“Mrs Dixon has not given written per¬mission for her specific case to be dis¬cussed at such a meeting.” The amendedstatement continues “The division of thesocial sciences believes that it is in¬appropriate to discuss publicly the de¬tails of individual cases.”The meeting as proposed by dean John¬son does not satisfy the committee of 85.They had approached professor Janowitzlast Friday with a demand that an openmeeting of students and tenured sociologyprofessors be held to discuss Dixon’s caseno later than Wednesday. A march ofabout 100 people in front of the adminis¬tration building on Friday dramatized thedemand.About 60 members of the committee metMonday night to discuss dean Johnson’sresponse to their demands. Former SGpresident Jeff Blum began the meeting bystating “we have a statement from themthat they will hold a meeting, but not theone which we requested.” Students ob¬jected to the inconvenient timing of thescheduling of the meeting for 4:30 Friday,to the lack of assurance that sociology fac¬ulty will be there and to the restrictionsagainst discussion of Mrs Dixon’s particu¬lar case. Chris Hobson, graduate student inpolitical science, stated “the response bydean Johnson does not constitute aresponse to the specific issue.” The com¬mittee decided to hold a short rally Fridayafternoon and to demand that a student beelected by those present at the beginningof the 4:30 meeting to chair it, and that thediscussion be allowed to cover Mrs Dixon.The committee voted against a proposedplan to disrupt classes of tenured sociologyprofessors by standing up in groups ofthree and requesting that each class be de¬voted to a discussion of the Dixon case,and continuing to speak if refused. Theplan has been put off until after Friday’smeeting.70 of about 100 students and seven facul¬ty members in the committee on humandevelopment met Sunday and also passeda program. They planned to suspendclasses for two days next week and use thetime for a department-wide conference andworkshops on specific issues. Human de¬velopment students are seeking greaterstudent influence over hiring policy. Theyalso recommended to the faculty of thecommittee that they reopen Mrs Dixon’scase by re-recommending her to deanJohnson. Representatives to the meetingtook a petition signed by about three-quar¬ters of the students in the committee todean Johnson on Monday stating their wishthat Mrs Dixon be rehired.MAROON—Phil LathrapFUNERAL RALLY; Divinity.students, entertain behind mock coffin at demonstration.January 14, 1968 / .Jljq Chicago Maroon ./ .3—REPRINTED FROMTHE DAILY ILLINI, Champaign, Ill.April 27,1968Course Increases Reading SpeedStudents Can ComprehendAt 2,500 Words Per MinuteBy ED SEJUDDally IUlni Staff WriterSpeed reading does have its lit¬tle problems.As my hand hurried across theluges, making an audible ‘‘swish¬ing’* sound, I became aware of arertain stillness in the library.Looking up from my book, 1 con¬fronted an assortment of stunned,bemused, disgusted and genuinelysympathetic countenances on thefaces of my tablemates, all silentlyasking, "Hey fella, what’re you do¬ing with your hand?”"Speed reading!” I cried, jump¬ing at my chance to show-off, "Ican read 2,000 words per minute(wpm), comprehend more, get lesstired, complete the assignment andSTILL log more drinking timethan ever before, FURTHERMORE—and so the lecture contin¬ued, ending with . . That’s nobrag — just plain fact.”“It’s true however. Wednesdaysight the Reading Dynamics Insti-tude graduated its first Universityclass, boasting that its students hadincreased their average readingspeed by five times and had madesubstantial increases in compre¬hension as well. Other classes willbe graduated Thursday, Friday andInto next week with similar results— it’s the payoff on a gamble that takes nine weeks to pan-out.First of KindThe Evelyn Wood "Reading Dy¬namics” course is the first of itskind to be offered on the Univer¬sity campus. It works on a newprincipal which uses the reader’sown hand as a “pacer,” contend¬ing that you don’t have to mental¬ly repeat (“sub-vocalize”) all thatyou read, but rather that you can,when properly instructed, open adirect channel between your mindand the printed page. In theory, aperson can read (and comprehend!) as fast as he can see, withhis top speed limited only by hisability to turh pages. Phenomenalresults have been obtained by exceptional students, many attainingspeeds in excess of 25,000 wpm—without sacrificing comprehensionStudents at the Reading Dynamics Institute learn to read DOWNthe page rather than across it.Their eyes flow across the pagesin soft-focus rather than in thejerky and old fashioned “single fixation” method.Dynamic readers actually learnto read lines BACKWARDS as wellas straight down! (At exceptionallyhigh speeds, it doesn’t matter whatdirection you read a line — backwards or forewards, it’s all the came.) Dynamic readers soon learnto read groups of lines at a singleglance, often reading the second-half of a paragraph before evenseeing the first-half!Greater CommandReading dynamically, you obtaina gi eater overall command of thematerial, as especially evident inlong novels where one often forgets the beginning of the story bythe time he reaches the endInstead of bypassing “War andPeace," dynamic readers can onlycomplain, "Oh hell, I'll have towaste two hours reading it!”Ideally, such a concept offersI printed material as if it were apainting, a sculpture, or other workof art The reader considers it asa whole, as a complete, single entity rather than an agglomerationof pages, paragraphs or chaptersBecause such readers makefewer eye fixations and mental repetitions than ordinary readers, theyare less succeptible to eye fatigueand the usual headaches and drow¬sinessSince it is a manual skill ratherthan a function of intelligence, itdoesn't matter what the reader’sIQ is. While P.E. majors still won’tunderstand texts on nuclear phys¬ics, they’ll be able to read non¬technical material at speeds equalto their technically-oriented class! mates. Paul Wilcher, super reader whoconducts the course, Is an instruc¬tor equal or better than any you’llfind on the University payroll. Hisclasses are cheerful and compe¬tent with an informality that offerswelcome relief from the drearyUniversity classes which studentsare so steeled against.The price is a factor which dis¬courages prospective students, butit's cheap by any standards.If a student avails himself of allthe facilities offered by the Insti-tude and attends all the class ses¬sions, the price boils down to onlyabout $2 an hour, cheaper thanany private tutoring you’ll everfind. Spread over four years, thecourse can save thousands of studyhours and can probably affect aboost in a student's grade-pointaverage. Assignments which oncetook days can be accomplished ina matte of hours, leaving moretime for other pursuits (fun, drink¬ing, girls, etc ). The Institute esti¬mates that it can save average stu¬dents 350 hours of study time eachsemester — probably an under¬statement.Class SessionsClass sessions are two and a halfhours long and are held once aweek (for eight weeks) in LandoPlace. Optional drill sessions areheld free each day at noon in theYMCA, with private counseling available as often as necessary.After the initial payment (whichcan be made in weekly install¬ments) everything is provided bythe Institute. The student bringsonly the essential apparatus — hishand.I attended the course in mycustomary manner, coming late toclasses, often without the assignedhomework and without attendingeven a single optional drill session.Nonetheless, I managed to increasemy reading rate by five times andcan now read average material atabout 2,000 wpm with good com¬prehension. More diligent studentsraised their reading rates by morethan 10 times, with accompanyingincreases in comprehension.You still feel a little silly in thelibrary, but finishing half a se¬mester's reserve-file readings at acrack is more than worth it. Thecourse (which carries a moneyback guarantee) seems a valuableinvestment for any student, or any¬one with great reading demands,and will undoubtedly gain popularity as its reputation spreads.By the way, an average dynamioreader could have read this articlein about 30 seconds.Why not readas fast asyou think?You can. Incredible as it may seem, you don’thave to be satisfied any longer to read at 300,400, or even 500 words a minute. You can readby sight only and read without saying thewords to yourself, one at a time. You can doit, and quickly, using a revolutionary new,tested and proved reading discovery.It is called The Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics Course. It was discovered in 1945by a Utah schoolteacher named Evelyn Wood.Based on her findings and research, the Read¬ing Dynamics Course was established in 1959.More than 400,000 men and women fromall walks of life have successfully proved thatthey could triple their reading speed with equalor better comprehension and recall. Thousandsof college students have taken the Course andcan now read all of their assignments in one-third to one-tenth the time, and with betterunderstanding and recall.Accept our invitation to come to a FREEOrientation. We’ll show you a documented filmaf actual interviews with Washington Con¬gressmen who have taken the Course. AsSenator William Proxmire of Wisconsin says,‘This was one of the most useful educationaljxperiences I have ever had.” We’ll demon¬strate how Reading Dynamics guarantees totriple your reading ability or the Course won’tlost you anything.Take us up on our FREE one hour Orienta-ion offer. See the Orientation Schedule in theaox at the right.Ask about our special arrangements foron-site Group Classes in Reading Dynamics FREE ORIENTATION!IN (HKAfiO - at (hr Heading Dynamics In¬stitute. 180 N. Michigan Avenue. Suite 400Tuesday January 1412:15 PMWednesday January 155:30 PMThursday January 1012:15 PMFriday January 1712:15 PM. 5:30 PMSaturday January 181:30 PMat 10540 S. Western Avenue. Suite 405Tuesday January 148:00 PM\ Thursday January 108:00 PMSaturday January 1810:30 AMjIN EV ANSTON - at the Carlson Building. 030Church Street. Suite 519Wednesday January 158:00 PM PHONE NOW!ST 2-9787JUR POSITIVE GUARANTEE OF TUITION REFUNDThe Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute willrefund your tuition if you do not at least triple yourreading index (reading rate multiplied by comprehen¬sion percentage) during the Course as measured by ourstandardized testing program. This policy is validwhen you have attended each classroom session andcompleted the minimum daily assigned home drill atthe level specified by your instructor.CM-Im"!The Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute180 N. Michigan Ave.. Suite 400 . Chicago, III. 60601□ Please send more information.□ Please send registration form and schedule ofclasses. I understand that I am under no obligation.Name.Street.City. .State. -Zip.4 / The Chicago Maroon / January 14, 1969 “I defyanyone to beuncomfortablein this car.”"I can't recall a car in which theseats altord such an astonishingdegree of luxury. Correction TheMercedes-Benz 600 does-hut ,twill cost you 10 times as much a*this one. Covered in leather-cloththe Renault 16’s seats are tilledwith thick foam cushions and givefull support where you need it“The front ones are fully recliningand arc adjustable through a multitude of positions..."“The rear bench seat is also adjustable: in fact, you can take thewhole thing out if you want toSo said Stirling Moss in QUEENMagazine, a British publicationHe was talking about the Renault16 Sedan-Wagon. The sedan thatchanges into a station wagon. Andback again, whenever you want.“• • • and I would like to offer mycongratulations for producing thissensational motorcar for a veryRENAULT*<jL~r esl\f ni ports,12)5 SO M'CH'SAN AVE CH'CAGO i.l 6Ct tTEL 326 25SORUNNING OUTof time for undergraduatestudents who wish to applyfor financial aid for the1969-70 academic year.Application, including Par¬ents Confidential Form,must be submitted byJanuary 25. Forms may bepicked up now at Office ofAdmissions and Aid, 5737University. Ext. 4592You won’t have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us todayPETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411MUSICALSOCIETYCello—PianoRecitalLarry Stein, CelloLarry Mendes, PianoWorks by Beethoven, Foure,Bloch, Saint-Saens, & HaydnMANDEL HALLSat., Jan. 18,8:30 P.M.FREEORDON’SRESTAURANTBy Jeffrey KutaWhile Mayor Daley’s planners have yetto come up with a Model Cities plan forChicago, The Woodlawn Organization(TWO) this week sends to the printer itsown proposal for Woodlawn, the product ofseven months of discussions by Woodlawnresidents, technical input by Universityfaculty and students, and review by thecommunity.Finalization of the proposal comes in themidst of open controversy over the legi¬timacy of the official city planning pro¬cess. In the past month individuals con¬nected with the city’s effort have chargedthat the four Model Area Planning Coun¬cils (MAPCs), appointed by Daley to fulfillthe Department of Housing and Urban De¬velopment (HUD) citizen participation re¬quirement, have in fact not been allowedto create plans for their neighborhoods butrather have been confronted by the may¬or’s planners with already detailed plansawaiting approval.Two of these individuals are JosephSander, former chairman of the UptownMAPC, and the Rev Curtiss Burrell, for¬mer chairman of the Near South MAPCand chairman of the Kenwood-OaklandCommunity Organization. After resigningtheir MAPC posts, they late in Decemberfiled a petition asking HUD to establishnew. elected MAPCs; administer directlyall Model Cities funds presently channeledthrough City Hall; and withhold from Chi¬cago all other HUD funds until the citysatisfactorily meets citizen participationrequirements.Following a suggestion in an early Com¬munity Legal Counsel memorandum con¬demning the city’s procedures, they togeth¬er with TWO President Rev Arthur Brazierand others have threatened court suitsagainst HUD which would attempt to forcethe government agency to comply with itsown guidelines.Meanwhile, HUD officials at least public¬ly express confidence that the official cityproposal covering all four model areas willsoon be ready for HUD approval, and thatno hitches will occur. The Woodlawn modelarea, however, presents a special case andthere is still talk of a compromise betweenthe city and TWO which would center oncontrol but would allow TWO to retain astrong role in the plan’s implementation.The plan itself is summarized in the cur¬rent issue of The Center Newsletter, pub¬lished by the University’s Center for UrbanStudies.Its most important feature is a commu¬nity corporation with a governing board of100 members, 40 of whom are elected atlarge by the community on the basis ofpetitions signed by neighborhood residents,and 60 of whom are elected by TWO’s dele¬gates meeting on the basis of nominationsby neighborhood organizations.A preliminary summary of the plan re¬leased to the public, press, and govern¬ment officials at a November 18 meeting ofTWO delegate organizations had statedthat the 60 members of the governingboard would be elected not by TWO mem¬bers but by the community at large, thusgiving TWO effective control over theplan’s implementation only if it retainedwidespread community support. The gov¬erning board revision, as other, minor re¬visions, grew out of public meetings heldthroughout the community following com¬pletion of the preliminary draft by TWOand the University.TWO officials and University representa¬tives are reported not to have favored therevision, which could work against theplan’s acceptance by the city and by HUD.However, a compromise with the citywould probably do away with the specificprovisions of the revision.The plan goes on to establish a commu¬nity ‘convenor,” appointed by the govern¬ing board for a three-year term, who headsa Core component consisting of a commu¬nity school board, a housing and economicdevelopment corporation, and similar deci¬sion-making boards in the areas of healthand social services, financial assistance,legal aid, and environmental planning. Anetwork of outreaching offices called Pads• *.» J * furnish front-line services which the Corebacks up. In all areas, citizen advisorygroups complement professional advisorygroups and neighborhood residents assumeduties traditionally reserved for profes¬sionals.Specific proposals are made in all prob¬lem areas, often interrelated in horizontal,interdisciplinary (as opposed to verical,agency-related) fashion.The plan envisions, for example, a healthinsurance plan available to ail Woodlawnresidents with cost based on ability to paywith a $200 maximum annual rate. ThePads, a community health center, a newhospital, and extended-care facilities pro¬vide various health services.Social services of all types are separatedfrom financial assistance and are availableto all members of the community regard¬less of financial status. Again, first-lineservices are provided at the Pads with asocial service clinic serving as a back-upfacility.Financial assistance is available to allwho need it without obligation to accept social services. An important part of theplan is a guaranteed minimum income,significantly increased from present aidlevels, with a sliding scale employmentpremiurh for incentive. Where a family offour presently receives a basic $2544 an¬nually, the new figure is $4078 with a max¬imum possible total income of $5250 beforethe family becomes ineligible for futherlinancial grants.A legal service program consists of sev¬eral agencies to handle ordinary and spe¬cial cases, arbitrate disputes, disseminateinformation, and improve and review po¬lice-community relationships.The plan views environmental planningas an ongoing process, dependent uponresidents’ own perceived needs, consistingof issuance of general policy statementsand referral of projects to a housing andeconomic development corporation forfunding. Specific proposals include a varie¬ty of kinds of housing, but with high-risestructures and public housing concentra¬tions avoided; encouragement of occupantownership; relocation only when improved housing alternatives are available; and theuse of rent supplements, code enforcement,and owner and tenant organizations.A community school board, based on thecurrent experimental school district, con¬tinues to function. Parochial schools, pre¬school centers, transitional middle schools,fluid schools following the health modelwith classrooms located outside of formalschool buildings, and a cultural and lan¬guage arts center are included in thescheme.Finally, a housing and economic devel¬opment corporation handles intensive con¬tact with the hard-core unemployed, job-related worker preparation, several train¬ing programs offered by a career vocation¬al institute, development of black entrepre¬neurship, an industrial park, and commu¬nity financial ventures.A first-year action program oper¬ationalizes many but not all of the pro¬posed programs. Thorughout the five-yearplan, activities are constantly evaluatedfor effectiveness and revised or discardedas appropriate.Living Theater Presents Paradise NowThe Living Theater ended its run herewith its production of “Paradise Now”which turned out to be part revival meet¬ing, part political debate, and part spec¬tacle. After pleas from both the cast andthe rest of the audience, the doors wereopened to people who did not have ticketsand who wanted to get in. Spectators surgeddown the aisles, filling them and the stageon which they outnumbered the cast.The performance lasted more than fivehours, during which actors ran up anddown the aisles and over seats and largenumbers of the audience came up on stageto give a mass show of solidarity wih thecast.Early in the evening a woman in the au¬dience stood up to condemn the Hyde Parkcommunity for sentencing on “circm-stantial evidence” three black youths to150 years in jail each for the murder ofRoy Guttman. One of the cast memberscondemned an unnamed dean for having agovernment contract to produce chemicalwarfare. Later on, an unnamed, middle-aged man climbed up onto the stage tohave a 15-minute debate with a cast mem¬ber on “whether intercourse is a means ofstopping wars.” The rest of the audiencejoined in to heckle.Predicted nudity did not exist and Chi¬cago’s vice squad did not formally makeits appearance. On the crowded, hot stageone girl did strip completely but got lost inthe crowd. MAROON—David TravisPARADISE NOW: Audience joins actors for Living Theater's final performance.(WMKUun—u/cjviu mo»uBOTTOMS: Performers in "Paradise Now" prove that they can't take all their clothes off by only going to the legal limits... . . — * January 1-4, -1969 - / The Chicago Maroon / 5tiff ,>! ,/r/jTfJ J ?** : >mammaGives CallMurphiesThe Murphy scholarships are this University’s attempt ata response to the problem faced by students engaged in extra¬curricular activities. They offer a small quarterly stipend to stu¬dents who cannot work due to extracurricular activities and whodemonstrate a need for extra money. Both the amount of thescholarship and the means of distribution demonstrate an insensi¬tivity to students’ needs that directly contradicts the administra¬tion’s professed receptivity to improving student life and creatinga more cohesive student community.It is not the University’s responsibility to set up and financeways to keep its students amused. When students spend majoramounts of time, however, on activities that are also services tothe University and the University depends on — publications,broadcasting, theater, sponsoring entertainment — then it is notunreasonable to expect the University to recognize these effortsand offer some recompense for the time and energy expended.This does not necessarily mean only money; a problem that isalmost never recognized by the University but which is much moreserious to students is the strain extracurricular activities put onone’s academic output.There are two ways the University might better deal withthese problems. First, revise the Murphy scholarships’ plan. Insteadof conferring retribution on needy students who have been cheatedof the chance to earn money, make the Murphy stipends in recogni¬tion of the job students are doing. Second, begin investigating someprogram whereby students who want to reduce their course loadin order to work on extracurricular activities without impairingtheir academic status can receive academic and financial assistancein making up the work, perhaps during a summer quarter. TheUniversity needs and profits from the services students provide;it’s about time they responded in kind.SWAP and STEPIn a time of racial recrimination and ethnic paranoia, thequiet renaissance of STEP and SWAP is an encouraging sign in theslow realization of a stable, socially and psychologically integratedcommunity. At the present time, University-community relationsare delicate and strained to say the least. STEP and SWAP willbe effective in changing them if they can enter into their workwith positive, open-minded attitudes.The tutoring programs must not be regarded as white mission¬ary endeavors. If they are to succeed, they can only be viewedas two-way propositions, with both sides gaining. The patronizingattitudes of the stereotypical social worker which may have pre¬vailed in the past will only serve to increase already bruised hos¬tility and prevent the achievement of sincere relations between theUniversity and Woodlawn.By their close contacts with the citizens of Woodlawn, Uni¬versity students will have the opportunity to observe firsthand thestructure of the community which has been so wrapped up inUniversity politics. By working on a one-to-one basis, and by sin¬cerely trying to learn as well as to teach, tutors may be able toovercome some of the racial barriers. Of course the programswill not solve the major problems which the University and Wood¬lawn face: these have stemmed from many years of psychologicalhang-ups and political and economic warfare. The programs mayhowever, pave the way for improved relations and understanding.Naturally, the fears which pervade the tutoring programs andwhich have prevented them from being active during the past fewmonths mu$t be overcome before students will be able to achieveany kind of meaningful relationships with citizens of Woodlawn.Only when mutual respect exists in the programs will STEP andSWAP become useful either to Woodlawn or the Universitystudents. for Counter-InaugurationBy Rennie Davis and Paul PotterThe conviction of the peace movementever since its beginning has been this: thatordinary people can learn to cope political¬ly and emotionally with any national andinternational emergency, and that ordinarypeople, that every one of us, will stop let¬ting other people do the job we should bedoing—namely, deciding what kind ofcountry America is going to be during ourlifetime and beyond.So, working against the war, talkingagainst the war by refusing to be inductedor refusing to pay taxes is really twothings at the same time: it is educatingother people by our personal example, andit is a way to free ourselves from the per¬sonal prison that is inactivity.The Mobilization came into being andhas continued to exist because there was asimple, powerful sense of urgency aboutthe war that was strong enough to bringinto a working coalition working groupswho had never had contact before with oneanother but who shared a conviction thatthe government’s war policies must becrushed.. The Chicago demonstrations happenedbecause Americans, many of whom hadbeen in Vietnam and had experienced thewar itself, refused in large numbers togive up the objective of ending the war.W e are calling for a counter-in¬auguration, an inauguration of the opposi¬tion to four more years of Johnson under anew name. We will begin Saturday January 18, with a conference on theMovement—some 50 workshops on GI or¬ganizing, women’s liberation, Vietnam, lawand order under Nixon, imperialism inGuatemala, underground media, guerrillatheater, and so on.Sunday afternoon we are asking civiliansto join behind GIs coming from all parts ofthe country in a massive march to theCapital to bring home the troops. Sundayevening, in a giant circus on the Mall, wecelebrate—not like the staid celebration ofthe social elite, but with Phil Ochs, theFugs, Judy Collins, with the life-style ofthe MovementOn Monday, Inaugural Day, we go to theNixon coronation, not to celebrate Amer¬ica’s consensus around Nixon’s vision oflaw and order. We will be at the In¬auguration to remind the government, withflags and peace pennants, banners, slogansand chants, that we intend to put the nextPresident in the same crush of public pres¬sure that became too much for LyndonJohnson, until this country turns awayfrom the racist and violent policies of thepast.Rennie Davis and Paul Potter are lead¬ers of National Mobe. Their column wasdistributed by CPS.LETTERS TO THE EDITORSSelling BodiesOne of the sad experiences of last quar¬ter was looking at the Maroon ClassifiedAds and having them remind me of a TVcommercial. Just like on TV, there werethe pictures of human beings whose bodieswere being used for selling purposes. Andas usual, the bodies were those of the un¬derclass — women. They’re the ones whoare supposed to be useful in terms oflooks, not brains, Besides, they’ll work forless money. For instance, there was thewoman whose nude body (Yes, all the Ma¬roon Classifieds’ “selling bodies” werenude last quarter.) was supposed to giveyou the hots for Abyssinian kittens. Atleast she was not a Playboy fold-out type.This fact implied recognition that morethan one body-shape is beautiful. Presum¬ ably the kitten-seller thought that Maroonclientele would have a wider sense of beau¬ty than would TV watchers. I suppose we’dhave to test: that reality on the basis ofhow many kittens he sold via the Maroonad. Or better, we could test how many in¬quired whether the woman was also forsale. As long as human bodies, nude orclothed, female or male, are used for com¬mercial purposes we are not yet past theage in which the buying and selling of hu¬man beings is an accepted practice. Surelythe Maroon need not engage in this greatAmerican tradition.Not-For-SaleBarbara AlterStereotypesTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board:Student News: Wendy GlocknerAcademics: Sue LothThe Movement: Paula SzewczykCommunity: Bruce NortonSports: Mitch KahnSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaContributing Editors: John Welch, John Moscow,Robert Hardman, Barbara Hurst.News Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Marv Bittner, Deb-by Dobish, Chris Froula, Jim Haefemeyer,Con Hitchcock, C. D. Jaco, Kristi Kuchler,Chris Lyon, Sylvia Piechocka, David Steele,Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift, Leonard Zax.Production Staff: Mitch Bobkin, David Steele,Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Sunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago} III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3269. Distributed on campus and in the HydePark neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptionsby mail $7 per year. Non-profit postage paidat Chicago, III. Subscribers to College PressService. I should like to protest a number of thephotographs on the Maroon classified ad¬vertising page during last quarter. As awoman, it offends me to see my mental aswell as physical stereotypes displayed forvicarious consumption. My objections donot stem from any notion of prudery, butfrom a desire to see the relations betweenmen and women humanized.Human relations in their better aspectsdo not occur between superiors and inferi¬ors. By printing pictures which intensifythe attitude towards women as mindlessand inferior bodies, the Maroon does its bitin keeping women on the bottom and per¬petuating the brutalizing sex relationshipsof our society.The University is composed of both menand women. A newspaper which treatswomen’s bodies in a qualitatively differentway from men’s, is a male supremacistpaper. That some of the insulting pictureswere advertisements, and that the Maroonwas paid to print them, in no way absolvesthe Maroon from a racism against womenas upsetting to me as any glorification ofblack Uncle Tom’s and Mammies would beto a black person.Forgive my hysteria — it’s just a naturalfeature of my anatomy.Fanny Q WitchWomen's Radical Action Project(Witch is an acronym for Women’s Inter¬national Terrorist Conpsiracy from Hell >Continued on Page Seven6 / The Chicago Maroon / January 14, 1969T. =?- . ' ' "people laugh at me. I like money, sex,hard work, books, television, breakingrules, cars, etc. and I think I have gainedmuch of the freedom I want by ignoringthe administration, campus and nationalpolitics (problems of social consciencehere are not the point), and the police. Butneither my apathy nor the administrationcan succor the strange bitterness I feelabout these goings on. Mrs Dixon is anoutstanding teacher (“The facts, ma’m,just tell us the facts.”) and a good humanbeing. Her malice and inability rest onlyinside the shell of the big green tortoiselying at the bottom of the sea.letters to the editors of the maroonTragedySome tragedies move up and down thesides of the Aristotelian triangle. Otherssimply fizzle, stagnate or decay. This is atragedy of the University of Chicago,whose ideological bunkers stifle its in¬habitants in a manner reminiscent of aseventeenth century cloister of nuns.In “God and Man at Yale” William FBuckley made some frighteningly astuteobservations (for sadly misbegotten ends)about the nature of college faculties andadministrators. These people exist in anatmosphere whose point of reference is anindomitable predilection upon which theybuild various schema of abstraction. Itseems unlikely that they could imaginechanging their lives and beginning with anew point of reference, so to them wordssuch as convention, dissatisfaction, radi¬calism and contentment are pegs to stickin predetermined holes on a cribbageboard. They can never appreciate the truesentiment of the preverbial quality of suchwords. Gibralter may crumble, and eventheir academic structures, but never theirfoundations. Unfortunately, to comprehend“being-in-the-world” is not to be in it.This tragic flaw saturates the story(read manipulation) of Marlene Dixon.One need not deal with the inane constancyof the publish-or-perish doctrine. Perhapsit serves a purpose in that it can be aeuphemistic pat on the back to some sadlytry-hard but ineffectual instructor. Eventhat is questionable, but in any case it doesnot apply. Mrs Dixon fulfills the role of ateacher beautifully and her glory is thatshe also transcends the role. True, she isnot the only teacher who puts you at suchease that you might rest your feet on herdesk while you tilt the chair on two legsand have coffee and a cigarette, but she isone of few if any who does not plot a cer¬ tain number of “therefores” on the courseof her subject. She judges by human val¬ues, not structured ones, and one mighthope that she may be so judged. But atthis point, despair ambles jauntily in. Therules of the game as it is still played stateplainly that one may be an individual bothin and out of the classroom. The fine printon page 22 says, however, that individ¬uality is defined by the infinite variety ofv/ays to say something, not by the infinitenumber of things that can be said.A few concrete questions must be asked.Why, to the detriment of Mrs Dixon, wasshe informed at the last possible momentthat her contract would not be renewed? Itseems her detractors had decided her fatewell in advance. Does the University be¬lieve that publishing establishes the valueof the teacher and the prestige of the Uni¬versity? Is prestige a characteristic ofquality? Does controversial disagreementwith the norm bring crucial financial harmto the school? Can’t grown-ups tolerate dif¬ferent kinds of people even if they don’thave the romantic sense of morality onefinds in Romeo and Juliet?(Please forgive the following breach ofartistry and sensibility.) Are some peopleintellectually stodgy and blind or even po¬litically chicken? Wrong or not in his ap¬proach, Senator McCarthy realized thatliberalism is now only an idea, not a meth¬od, and he said so. Many people agreed,but seem to fail now to realize that theyare again only talking.I am not in the least sympathetic withMrs Dixon’s political views, nor anyone’s,I suppose. At any rate, I do not give my¬self to actions which can be construed ormisconstrued by a group of peers whomight gracefully consent to my dislike ofthem. I might even be, unbeknownst tomyself, a practicing solopsist. I like somepeople and laugh at others, and some There are various combinations and per¬mutations of the words knowledge, ex¬perience, and humanity, and there are dif¬ferent ways to reflect upon how they corre¬late and govern each other. But there is aneasily perceptible, if vague and intuitivethink which overrides all of this. For wantof a better word, call it human. You knowwhat I mean.So, Oedipus, don’t go to Colonus. It isbest you should sleep like Duncan until youare reborn, blind, but not a victim of yourown circumstance.Samuel L AlberstadtBULLETIN OF EVENTS j'• %Tuesday, January 14 Wednesday, January 15RECRUITING VISIT: Rauland Division of ZenithRadio Corporation, Niles and Melrose Park,Illinois. Chemistry BS, MS and PhD (inorganic,physical); Physics BS, MS, PhD (elementaryparticle). For appointments call 3284. LECTURE: "The Role of the one-bank holding com¬pany; the future of financial congererics", JHoward Laeri, Vice Chairman, First NationalCity Bank. Business East 103, 1.WRESTLING: Lake Forest, Bartlett Gym. 4:30. ■ r>** cRECRUITING VISIT: Army Headquarters Department,Washington DC. Certification by US Civil Serv¬ice Comm, is required for all positions. Forappointments call ext 3284.LECTURE: "Scorecards for Investment Performance",Eugene F Fama, Professor of Finance. ConradHilton Hotel, noon.LECTURE: Invitation Lecture Series Committee of thegraduate school of business presents a panelof the editors of Business Week. GraduateSchool of Business, room 103, 1-2 pm.LECTURE: "Caribbean Literature". Mr Cartey, Cobb209, 4 pm.COLLOQUIUM: "A Unified Scattering Theory of Pre¬dissociation and Unimolecular Kinetincs", Frede¬rick H Miles, National Bureau of Standards.Rl 480, 4:15.LECTURE: "Molecular Structure-Function Relationshipof Chrymotrypsin", Dr Paul Sigler. BillingsHospital, room M-137, 4:30.MEETING: VISA, for old and new members to discussways of helping the mentally ill. Reynolds ClubSouth, 7:30.MEETING: Musical Society for anyone interested inolaying chamber music. Ida Noyes main lounge.7:30.LECTURE: "Israel: Victor or Vanquished? Diplomacysince the Six-day War", Oscar Miller, Depart¬ment of Economics, University of Illinois. Hillel,8.DOC FILMS: "Exodus", Cobb Hall, 8. DOC FILMS: "Tillie's Punctured Romance", Cobb Hall,7:15 and 9:30.FOLK DANCING: The Country Dancers, Dances fromthe British Isles and Scandanavia. Ida NoyesHall, Dance Room, 8.LECTURE: "Alahan: A Fifth Century Monastery inIsauria", Michael Gough, Institute for Ad¬vanced Study, Princeton. Breasted Lecture Hall8:30.Thursday, January 16MEETING: Board of Pre-Collegiate Educate, Hutchin¬son Commons, Inoon.LECTURE: "Making the Grade: Educational Settingsand the Development of Work Identity", How¬ard S Becker, Dept of Sociology, Northwestern.Cobb 209, 11:30 am.TRACK: Frosh-Sophs vs Jr Colleges, Field House, 4.LECTURE: Johnson's Volpone and William Shake¬speare", James G Tulip, Classics 10, 4.DANCING: Israeli Folk Dancing, Ida Noyes Hall,7:30-10:30.LECTURE: "The Atmospheric Sciences in the SovietUnion", Dr N K Vinnicheno, Central Areo-logical Observatory, Moscow. Ryerson 251, 7:30.DOC FILMS: "The Night of the Hunter", Cobb Hall, 8.MEETING: Ski club; plans for Spring trip, movie.All Welcome. Ida Noyes, 8.STARTING TODAYONE WEEK SALE TYPEWRITERS10% DISCOUNT-January 14-21. - 10% DISCOUNTALL NAME BRAND TYPEWRITERS - NEW AND USED.PORTABLES, STANDARDS, ELECTRICSONE YEAR GUARANTEE ON NEW MACHINESINCLUDING PARTS AND LABORSIX MONTHS GUARANTEE ON USED MACHINESINCLUDING PARTS AND LABORALL REPAIRS BY OUR FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS.TYPEWRITER DEPARTMENTTHE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE58th & ELLISJanuary 14, 1969 / The Chicago Maroon / 7 ’ -f• i’ \, A*'} '4Uft11i*.By Wendy GlocknerAfter a lengthy period of near stagna¬tion, the Student Woodlawn Area Project(SWAP) and Student Tutors ElementaryProject (STEP) are revamping and revita¬lizing their programs. According to in¬volved students, both tutoring groups arein the process of regaining contacts witharea schools, and hope this quarter toachieve once again the projects as success¬ful as past ones.Tutoring project co-ordinators attributethe groups’ lack of activity in the past fewmonths to the “psychological problems . ..and identity crises which arise when awhite student teaches a black kid.” Stu¬dent tutors who have worked in the pro¬grams in the past cite as a major problemthe possibility of a black tutee developingan inferiority complex from experiencing asuperior-subordinate relationship with histutor. cated.” Chandler stated that the programis starting from scratch: presently, con¬tacts are being reestablished with Wad¬sworth School at 65th St and UniversityAve and the recommencement of a sub¬stantial tutoring program is aimed for thisquarter.The major change in the SWAP pro¬gram, according to SWAP coordinator Ros-coe Giles, 70, has been the establishmentof a study center at 6042 South KimbarkAve to replace offices formerly located inIda Noyes. Although the study center is notyet completed, SWAP tutors hope that itwill provide Woodlawn students with a qui¬et, peaceful place where participants canstudy, meet people, and talk.Neither program, however, limits itselfto tutoring. STEP officials organize artsand crafts projects and field trips. SWAPcoordinators are planning classes in thestudy center for the tutees.In hopes of reactivating STEP, however,tutoring program chairman David Chan¬dler, 70, cited psychological problems as“not as important as the chance kidsshould have to become literate and edu¬ In the past SWAP, which at one time wasone of the most active tuoring programsin the country, offered programs on highschool dropouts, parent-administration re¬lations, and college counseling. The college Revise P'counseling program was dropped last yearbecause, according to Giles, other organi¬zations had greater resources.Tutors themselves have reacted quitepositively to the tutoring program. “It’s agood thing to do useful work,” said TomCyjan, 72, a member of STEP. “If wewant to help Woodlawn, we must do some¬thing ourselves; supporting the povertyprogram and giving money are not enough.We must work with the people and seewhat it’s really like.”Cyjan was only half-pessimistic over thepsychological fears which tutors empha¬size. “The fears are partially well-found¬ed,” he said. “But if we let them botherus, nothing will happen at all.” Cyjan saidthat he found relating to the student diffi¬cult at first, “but not once you get going.”Several tutors have faced crucial prob¬lems during their tutoring experiences.One SWAP tutor who works with a studentat a housing development says he has be¬come the dominant male figure withwhom his tutee identifies. Since his fatherand brothers are never around, the tuteehas begun to regard Lovain as a father image. “It scared me that the kid wasidentifying with me,” he said. “I was af¬raid that this would increase the kid’s feel¬ing of inferiority — and it wouldn’t be goodin the long run.”Another problem which tutors face isbeing able to relate to the tutees in ateacher-student manner. “You have to feelwhen the student isn’t following,” said Cj-jan. “He will never admit it.” He addedthat tutee’s parents have a higher impres¬sion of the tutors as teachers that they de¬served. Tutor chairmen said that most ofthe younger students who are being tutoredgenerally don’t know how to read or dosimple arithmetic.Both school administrators and parentsof the tutees react favorably to the tutor¬ing programs. “Parents are concerned . .and in favor of the tutoring programs,’’stated Mamie Holloway, chairman of theparent-teachers association at WadsworthSchool. Donald Prather, assistant adminis¬trator at Wadsworth, said that the addedassistance and aid which tutors give isquite helpful if a teacher is not able to geta certain point across to the students.We’ll give you a chanceto go out on a limb.With our High Risk/High Reward program for col¬lege graduates. If you qualify, you'll be put into achallenging management position immediately. You'llmake your own decisions. Take your own risks.If you can't handle the challenges, we'll find outfast enough to keep from wasting a lot of your time.That’s the risk. If you do well, you're on your way. Fast. That’sthe reward.If stakes that are a little higher and risks that are alittle rougher are your cup of tea, see our recruiteror write College Relations, 222 Broadway, NewYork, N. Y. 10038.A lot of hard work never hurt anyone.Western ElectricMANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEMAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ax (Brook--.CLEANERS • TAILORS • LAUNDERERS ^servini; campus since 19171013* 17 E. 61st ST., near EllisPhones: Ml 3-7447FA 4-3500 ' 1 174 E* 55th ST., near WoodlawnDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644RCMCMtH THAT ONCEYOU COUIONT tEMEMIERREFLECT UPON THE TIMEWMN YOU WIU FORGETAMO ME THE WEALTH OFTODAY8 / The Chicago Maroon /• January-14,' 1969"f > 1 J Jj .,»,■».* -‘/G~ ». »**.»«»«ABOUT THE MIDWAYBlack ScholarshipsAn anonymous gift to the University willmake possible two full tuition scholarshipsduring each of the next four years for Ne¬gro students from Indiana public schools.Preference is to be given to Elkhart,South Bend, and northern Indiana students— in that order — but qualified studentsfrom other areas will be considered if nosuitable candidates from the specified In¬diana communities are available for theawards. Each scholarship will cover thestudent’s full tuition of $2,100 for the schoolyear.The University recently launched a four-year $750,000 program to provide scholar¬ships and extra educational opportunitiesto Negro students. These additional schol¬arships will help significantly to promotethe University’s efforts to encourage thematriculation of Negro students.The initial step of the program was tak¬en last summer, when 100 students frominner-city schools on Chicago’s south sidewere brought to the campus to participate in a special course of studies. Other phasesof the overall program include a tutoringprogram for freshmen whose previouseducational preparation made them“risks” under the usual admission criteriaof the College; a special recruiting pro¬gram for freshmen to enter the College inthe autumns of 1969, 1970, and 1971; andthe offering of special scholarships by theUniversity and other sources to meet theneeds of those who plan to become residentstudents at the University for their under¬graduate years.College ForumThe College Forum will have its secondsession at 3:30 pm Friday in the CobbHall Auditorium. The topic: “How CanLiberal Education Survive in a ModernUniversity?”Charles Wegener, professor in the NCDand the humanities collegiate division willmake an initial statement; then his state¬ment will be torn apart by biology profes¬sor Richard Leowontin, associate historyprofessor Hanna Gray, and Peter Rabinow- itz, graduate student in comparative liter¬ature.The idea of the Forum, according to itsorganizer Donald Levine, associate profes¬sor of sociology, is to discuss topics of in¬terest to the College, in as interesting away as possible. The format will vary, hesays. Future topics will be the Barnes’ stu¬dent village plan and white racism.BasketballThe Maroon cagers, bouncing back from*a loss to Judson last Wednesday outshotand outrebounded Colorado College Satur¬day night, 81-53. This evens out their recordto 4-4 for the season.Paced by Fred Dietz’s sterling perform¬ance, the Maroon starting five averaged ahot 63 percent average from the floor and88 percent from the foul line. Dietz leadthe scoring with 21 points, 70 percent fromthe field and seven of eight free throws.Other Maroons in double figures wereO’brien with 18 points and Daw with 11.The strong defence and rebounding forced 15 turnovers in the first half as thevarsity dribblers spurted to a 38-24 lead.Coach Joe Stamph suggested that the Ma¬roon’s improved fortunes were due to theirintensive work on rebounding and defenselast week. The offense was no slouch asthey had been averaging only 69 points agame.Next Saturday, Chicago will face North¬east State, which according to CoachStamph “is one of the toughest small col¬leges in the city. We beat them last year,but this year it should be very close.”Shapiro'sChagall’s, Miro’s, Picasso’s, Goya’s,Roualt’s and many other works by inter¬nationally known painters are now on viewin Ida Noyes Hall in “The Art to LiveWith” program of the Shapiro Collection.Distribution of the paintings will be held onFriday, Jan 17 but if you want one of themore popular paintings, be sure to getthere early. The charge will be $2, but thepaintings will not be due back until June.Make sure you bring your ID with you.Look what's at DOCFILMS: Tonight, PaulNewman inPreminger's EXODUS,tomorrow, Chaplin inTILLIE'S PUNCTUREDROMANCE; andThursday, Laughton'sNIGHT OF THEHUNTER, with RobertMitchum.Plus Donald Duck and Roadrunneron Wednesday. And still only 75c atDOC FILMS.LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.Telephone 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue Currency in aCommon Market nationis devalued.Help wanted:How can we protect ourautomotive investmentson the continent?Situation: If a member nation of theCommon Market devalues itscurrency as the speculators appearto be betting, other CommonMarket nations may follow suit.Question: Faced with this possibility, couldyou develop a plan of actiondetailing how we can best protectour large automotive investmentsin each of the member nations ?Consideration: Remember the importance of theCommon Market agriculturalagreement concerning pricestabilization, cost considerationsand exchange restrictions. Needyour ihoughts on this A.S.A.P.Thanks.Want to work on an exciting assignment like this?A new member of the financial staff at Ford Motor Com¬pany does. Today his job may be solving a complex Com¬mon Market problem. Tomorrow, it might be an analysisof profit potentials.To help solve assignments like these, our people have agiant network of computers at their service. Complete re¬search facilities, The funds they need to do the job right.If you have better ideas to contribute, and you're looking for challenging assignments and the rewards that come.from solving them, come work for the Better Idea company.See our representative when he visits your campus. Orsend a resume to Ford MotorCompany, College Recruit¬ing Department. TheAmerican Road, Dear-born, Michigan 48121. Anequal opportunity employer.January 14, 1969 / The Chicago Maroon / 9I AM NOT ALLOWED TO TAKE OFF MY CLOTHESRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 28 charactersand spaces »>er line.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over thephone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BEIN BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUSTBE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO] 3:30 P.M. DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.ROOMMATES WANTED*1 or 2 roommates wanted. Hi-rise.4'/2 rms. Aft. 6—667-4031.Fern. rmte. wtd, vie. 54th 8. Harper,$70/mo. Call 955-3873. washer, washer, dryer, garagespace, $52.50 a month. Cal BU 8-1100 xl06. FOTAFOR RENT2 rms. and bath on 3rd floor offamily dwelling in Hyde Park.Kitchen privileges. Suitable tor 1 or2 female students. Rent to be ar¬ranged. Call 324-9379 evenings.Large furnished room, private bath,kitchen privileges, Madison Park:$50.00. Rate may be reduced bytending two giris, aged two andfive. Call Virgil Burnett, X4137.Lge furnished rm. 493-3328. Wanted: Directors and Playwrightsfor F.O.T.A. drama festival thisspring. No experience necessai'y.First meeting Wednesday, January15, 8:00 P.M. Reynolds Club SouthLounge. Call Lee Strucker, 752-4427of you can't make it.LOST This year the folk festival is havingthe most amazing bunch of tradi¬tional performers ever. Buy up¬front seats tomorrow in MandelHall.Roommate needed. $50/mo. 4'/2rooms at 6106 Ellis contact Mussel-man 955-0412 eves.Need one in 3 man Hy Pk apt SO/mCall 1-2, 5:30-7. 684-3644.COEDapt7'walk$32ownRm66746393V2 rm apt. 5730 Blackstone 643-3088.Wanted Roommate female, 7 roomapt., private room and bath, dish¬ NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO3-5 room apartments, all with tile-baths 8, showers. Ideal for students,interns, nurses, young couples. NOCHILDREN. Rental $85-$105. CallRE 4-4141.3Vi rm basmt. apt. S.S., fully furn.TV, kitchen utensils, $70/mo. 374-8241or BA 1-8383.Len Handelsman, Jerry Lipsch ofStu Govt, recommend nearby, eco¬nomical, newly dec. unfurn. apts.2 8. 3’/2 rms. $75, $89.50. Free gas& elec. Clean. Quiet. Warm. Wil¬liams, 6043 Woodlawn. Short-termlease. Two weeks free.CHARTER FLIGHTS$50 reserves your seat on one ofS.G.'s summer flights to Europe.Visit rm. 306, Ida Noyes Hall, 1-5:30 P.M. weekdays or call Ext.3598. See our display ad forschedule. Pr. d. brown LEATHER GLOVES,fur-lined, label: Alexander's. Re¬turn to info desk, Adminis. Bldg.Tibetan Book of the Dead in yel¬low cart. Mary FA 4-7417.FOR SALE Do you know who spouted that in¬credible load of bullshit? LENNYBRUCE. Ha, thought he really knewwhere it was at? Well, he did,except for this irrational thing hehad about this country, that it wasgood in spite of the fact that every¬thing he looked at was shit. Well,he paid his dues. Let's move on. angry. There was little structure,just enough to get things feelingfor some of the people there, es¬pecially those on stage. They hadto do, feel, relate, and those whocould let their inner natures cometo the surface, even momentarily,will remember for a long timewhat happened in the free theatreat Mandel Hall.Fed up with DeGAULLE? interludes with him. Write to ChicnRamos, 2026 E. Pratt St, BaltnMd, 21231, Phone 301-327-7091H.E IS COMING!ONLY 33 CHOPPING DAYS LEFTRECORDS cost less at Rockowitz& Honeyman than anywhere elsein Hyde Park (e.g. THE BEATLES$7.65). Call 324-3005 around 6 P MSingle bed. $35. 363-5609 (eve.).STEREO COMPONENTS at largesavings. Jensen X-40 spkr 35% off(it's a good deal — K.S ). Freecartridges with all record chang¬ers. MUSICRAFT on campus BobTabor 324-3005.9 A/*'' Aav“HAPPY, now that YESTERDAY putsmy life and my world into focus,” saythe readers of this friendlymonthly visitor, crammed withrollicking humor, delightful **pomposities, tear jerking romances, incre¬dible ads, jokes, cartoons, nostalgic cars,planes, ships, trains, plus lots of proof thatour great grandparents were smarter, andmore foolish, than we sometimes think.All from the (J.S. magazines read in1850- 1950. Unbelievably entertaining —out of this world!ACT NOW! LAST AD THIS SEASON 1Prepared by Edgar Jones, author of"Those Were the Good Old Days.”EMJOY AND GIVE ! S3.50 a year for first subsorip-“tmT'Tc7wTrmi~irrn7”“i ii,o,n\ 83 *Th for,. , , I additional onrs.Market N|., Neumplon, (.onn |06111. My ( heck enclosed. Send |\ ESI I'.HI) A) for 12 months to.IDAY’S 19 1 2 CarGuide FREE withorders received byJan. 29. 1969. Steno mach. for sale for a courtreporter. EXCEL. BUY 752-3393.7 ft. sofa, auto. elec, washer anddryer, air cond., other merch. Allsolid quality. Steals. Ml 3-3445after 3.Leaving country must sell apt. fur¬niture: sofa, rug, table, bed, etc.363-2355.WANTED TO BUYUsed VW or other car. Will paywell. Call John, 684 7027.PROTESTS ", . . communism doesn't make itat all. Not for me. 'Cause it'scomplete government control. Thecapitalist system is the best, 'causewe can barter, we can go some¬where else. Communism is one bigphone company. That's it man.Can't go nowhere else, Jim. Tellthe phone company,'I want a phone put in Monday at9:30.' •'You'll have it at the end of theweek.''I want it at 9:30!''Alright, schmuck! Go to MarshallFields for a phone.'That's right, I'm screwed. Where'mI going to go? There's one desk togo to. That's what communism is.But a capitalist system is beauti¬ful, man, 'cause we can go here,there, and that's the barter system,you know. And I want to keep mysystem."PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP. Be¬ginners 8. Intermediate; 10 3 hr.sessions, Richard Gordon 8. KenRaider. Info 539 4487 before 10:30P.M. ROBERT MITCHUM in CharlesLaughton's only film, NIGHT OFTHE HUNTER — at 8 Thursday,doc films.Girl wants daily ride to-from 1500N. State. Arrive UC 8:45 leave 5:00Ext. 3604, 9-5. Will pay. No ballfreaks please.MUSICAL SOCIETY MEETING.Tues., Jan. 14, 7:30 P.M. Ida NoyesMain Lounge or call M. Levy363-8211.Students for Israel presents Prof.Oscar Miller of the University ofIllinois speaking on "Israel Victoror Vanquished? Diplomacy Sincethe Six Day War" on Tues. Jan.14th at 8:00 P.M. at Hillel House5715 Woodlawn.Non-white, Spanish-speaking youngman desires write girls of ralicaland/or liberal persuation to makehim feel EQUAL by having sexual CAST YOUR VOTE. Press the nolever. FLUSH FOR FREEDOMCONDEMNING VOICE: What areyou doing? You're enjoying your¬self? Sitting on the couch smokingdope and enjoying yourself? Whenyour mother has bursitis! And allthose people in China are suffering,too!GUILTY VOICE: I'm enjoying it aLITTLE bit, but it's bad dope, any¬way. And I got a headache and I'meating again from it.I'm a bust-out junkie. Started outsmoking pot, look at me now. Bythe way, cellmate, what happenedto you? How'd you get to murderthose kids in that crap game1Where did it all start?Started with bingo in the CatholicChurch.I see.Joss-sticks, n. Small sticks burnedby the Chinese in their pagan tom¬foolery, in imitation of certain sa¬cred rites of our holy religion.EXODUS, with P3ul Newman —tonight at 8, Cobb Hall; doc films."I was exceptionally impressed by'America Hurrah.' 'Motel' is thebest one-act play I've ever seen.—Norman Mailer.Musical Society cello-piano recitalMandel Hall Sat. Jan. 18, 8:30 P.M.FREE.PROTEST French anti-Israel posi¬tion PICKET French Consulate 916N. Mich. Wed. 11:30 A.M. DEMON¬STRATE.THANK YOU JAMES O'REILLY TRYOUTS for "America Hurrah":Thurs., Jan. 16, 8-10 P.M. and Sat.,Jan. 18, 2-5 P.M. Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge.Who are these people?TYPINGMay I do your typing? 363-1104. Freddies, Franklin George, the Pop¬lin Family, Robert Shaw, Dan Reno,Bill Harrell and the Tennessee Cut¬ups, the Pennywhistlers, ElizabethCotten, New Lost City Ramblers,Ed and Lonnie Young, Sara Cleve¬land, George Armstrong, ArchieGreen, Pete Seeger.PEOPLE WANTEDBright ambitious student needed ascampus representative for computerdating service. May work for com¬mission or franchise. Write CupidComputer, 1010 West Green No. 203,Urbana, III.DRIVERS for Mr. Pizza, part-time,good pay, HY 3-8282. The 9th Annual U. of C. Folk Festi¬val is coming Feb. 7-9. Tickets onsale in Mandel Hall box office.9:30-4:30 starting tomorrow.PERSONALS SHAPLIN in Tillie's PuncturedRomance, Wednesday at 7:15 and9:30 — plus Donald Duck, Road-runner, and other surprises, docfilms.SHAPIRO COLLECTION — on dis¬play Ida Noyes Jan. 13-17 ShapiroDistribution Jan. 17th.FOR SALE '61 LINCOLN. Extr.low mil., excellent looks, perform¬ance; new wiring, battery, exhaust,brakes; good paint; purchased fromW. Illinois Sheriff 4 weeks ago.(orig. owner). ALL LEATHER IN¬TERIOR! $800. 363-5833. SKI! Club meeting. Spring Plans,MOVIE. All Welcome. Ida Noyes,8 P.M., Thurs., Jan. 16.BATTLE OF ALGIERS. Super docu¬mentary playing this week at theAfro-Arts Theatre at 39th 8, Drexel8:00 P.M. Also Newsreel's BLACKPANTHER. Sherman says to goand see these flicks if you haveany revolutionary spirit.RUSSIAN taught by native teacher.Rapid method. Free trial lesson.CE 6-1423, 9-5.UC Science Fiction Society, 7:30tonight, Ida Noyes. Follow the Living Theatrerope. Marco Polo takes you. to Eu-326-4422.It was harder winterForge, eh George? at ValleyH.E. has said, "MayormotherfOMMr" Daley is aThere were many different reac¬tions to the Living Theatre in Para¬dise Now on Sunday night. Gene¬rally the hostility was felt by thosewho were in the audience. The wordaudier :e is significant. If you werepart of an audience, expectingsomething to happen, then youwould be very disappointed, even This investmentstarts paying dividend^in three years.\1o»l cars la>t a I mill as long as the loans that payfor them: three years.In Sweden, where it's tough being a ear, Volvolasts an average of 11 years.And while we don’t guarantee that a Volvo willlast 11 years in America, we do know that over95'' of all the Volvo* registered here in the last11 years are still on the road.So if yon buy a Volvo from us now, it'll still lieworth owning three years from now when you getit paid for. You’ll la- aide to stop making ear pay¬ments and start making payments to yourself. Andinstead of [raying interest to the bank, you’ll beable to have the hank pay interest to you.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1-3800S. G. CHARTER FLIGHTSINTO THE GREAT BEYI 3NDFlight number 69-A 69-B 69-C1 69-C2 69-DAirline AIR FRANCE TWA AIR INDIA FINNAIR AIR CANADAjet charter group group group jet charterDeparts onfromto June 21ChicagoLondon or Paris June 24ChicagoParis June 24New YorkLondon or Paris June 25New YorkAmsterdam August 5ChicagoParis or RomeReturns on Sept 20 Sept 1 Sept 2 Sept 2 Sept 1from London or Paris London London Amsterdam Londonto Chicago Chicago New York New York ChicagoEstimated fare $265 $350 $285 $285 $275Payment date Feb 28 April 4 April 4 April 4 April 18Participation is limited to members of the University of Chicago (including students and employees) whose affiliation began beforeDecember 1, 1968, together with their spouses, parents and dependent children who reside in the same household. Family members mayparticipate only when accompanying a university member. Brothers and sisters of members are not eligible.A deposit of $50 is required for each seat reserved, with the balance payable by the Payment Date listed above. Checks should be madepayable to U. of C. Charter Flights. Come to Room 306 Ida Noyes Hall between L-00 and 5:30 pm, or mail your deposit with your name,address and university affiliation to us. A contract will be returned to you.K> /■ The Chicago Maroon / .January 14, .1969, ^ 4 4i •* * * - > - , . j {t f f fj j., i ■ > > ».. • i j > •. i > < , , 1. . , /. ; v,v„%*Piaytex invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent... it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind...the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45% more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.Because it's different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. So the chance of a mishapis almost zero! _ _ r —.Try i. fast. |1 n|S£3Why Uve in the past? P ICAtamponsn*.ex<»*00®1 (.<> Jjywy®'SKIING atWT.f WUr .Always More FunWe Hour AllMidwest InkQerie Cards Always Plenty of SnowSKIING 7 DAYS A 7 NITES A WEEK12 RUNS TO 2,100 FEETALL DAY SKI-BUS PACKAGE(roa CHICAGO EVEKY SATURDAY i SUNDAYRound Trip—Tow Ticket—Leston—Lunch s10«GROUP &STUDENT RATES Only 75 Mlaitei from ChicagoFor Information EA 7-1220MT. f UOfr Lake Geneva, Wis. 414 248 6553PRO MUSICA SOCIETY OF CHICAGOpresents From MoscowBORODIN QUARTETTuesday, January 21, 1969, 8:30at Orchestra HallFIRST CHICAGO APPEARANCEProgram Quartet No. 1, A majorQuartet No. 7, F sharpminor. Opus 108Quartet in C major,Opus 59, No. 3 BorodinShostakovichBeethovenTICKETS AT BOX OFFICE, 216 S. Michigan. $5.50,Students $2.50 with I.D.—'"'/A"in” sanity south |5* 1463 E. Hyde Pork Blvd. ^Come see us from ••In” •»nl«yr ^cantguarantee youllbe aVice-Presidentin four and a half years,likejerryjarrett.But it could happen.Jerry came to Marine MidlandGrace in the summer of 1963,shortly after receiving his M.B.A.He was assigned to the NationalDivision the following spring andwas elected an officer in January,1965.HebecameanAssistant VicePresident in 1967 and in January1968 was promoted to Vice Presi¬ dent in charge of our entire Mid¬west District.Jerry’s rapid advancementgives you an idea of what’s hap¬pening at Marine Midland.We’re going to need 100 newofficers in the next five years. Menwilling to work hard and assumeresponsibility fast. I f you’d like to know more aboutthe opportunities in domestic, cor¬porate, international and trustbanking at Marine Midland,please add your name to ourschedule in the placement office.We’d like to see you on Feb. 3.But remember, all we can guar¬antee is the chance of a lifetime.MARINE MIDLAND GRACETRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORKMember FDICSmall Classes — Individual AttentionIntensive Tutorial-type InstructionMonterey Institute of Foreign StudiesUpper Division Graduate StudyLanguages and Area Studies—Arabic, Chinese, German, French,Japanese, Italian, Russian, Spanish—History, InternationalEconomy, Politics & Diplomacy—School of Education, School ofTranslation & Interpretation.SPRING SEMESTERJan. 29-Register Jan. 23-27SUMMER SESSIONJune 17-Register June 11-15For information •Write to REGISTRARP.O. Box 1978Monterey, California 93940A private liberal arts collegeAccredited by the Western' Associationof Schools and Colleges0*'tKKKV lffSA> S7x\£ %fpSH0RELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and Relatives FacultySingle rooms from $8:00 dailyTwin rooms from Si 1.00 doilyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive UNIVERSITYTHEATRETryouts forAMERICA HURRAHto be presented in the sixth weekTRYOUT Sr,,TThurs., January j 6, 8-10 P.M.Sat., January 18, 2-5 P.M.REYNOLDS CLUBSOUTH LOUNGETheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. ►CM ►<><«£INTERNATIONAL HOUSFGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th STREETGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLDTobaccos-Candie s-StationeryNe wspapers-MagazinesC osmeticsOpen M-F Noon-6 45www m . i . i f'p ■ i —“A computer has no mind of its own. Its‘brainpower’ comes from the people whocreate the programs,” says Rod Campany.Rod earned a B.S. in Math in 1966. Today,he’s an IBM Systems Programmer working ona portion of Operating System/360, ahierarchy of programs that allows a computerto schedule and control most of its ownoperations.A mixture of science and art“Programming” means writing the instruc¬tions that enable a computer to do its job.Says Rod, “It’s a mixture of science and art.You’re a scientist in the sense that you have toanalyze problems in a completely logical way.* Programming at IBMIt’s a chanceto use everythingyou’ve got!’12 / Th« Chicago Maroon / January 14, 1969It “But you don’t necessarily hunt for an ulti¬mate right answer. There can be as manysolutions to a programming problem asthere are programmers. That’s where the artcomes in. Any given program may work, buthow well it works depends entirely on theingenuity of the programmer.”Programmers hold a key position in thecountry’s fastest growing major industry-information processing. Business Week re¬ports that the computer market is expandingabout 20 percent a year.You don’t need a technical degreeIf you can think logically and like to solveproblems, you could become an IBM pro¬ grammer no matter what your major. We’llstart you off with up to twenty-six weeks ofclassroom and practical training.Visit yourplacement office 'Sign up at your place¬ment office for an inter¬view with IBM. CAMPUSJAN.An Equal Opportunity EmployerIBM