ifttifcillNiMkl• ‘$T ,. ...,.4.. ‘ t-T~ t^naiinrnMiinMmf—niniiin ir '■‘''r-'-'-r*****---******".to 500By Wendy GlocknerEnrollment for next year’s freshmanclass will be reduced to some 500 students.According to Wayne Booth, dean of thecollege, the reduction was “taken as partof a broad program to improve the qualityof teaching and student life in the Col¬lege.”The decision to limit the class to aboutseventy percent of the size of this year’sfreshman class was made at the most re¬cent meeting of the college council.Although theoretical discussion to cut thesize of the college has been going on forsome time, serious consideration first be¬gan in early January, in response to theUniversity’s critical housing problem.Booth explained the decision to reducethe size of the class in terms of the prob¬lems which recent freshmen have faced.‘They find themselves in classes largerthan they . . . expect,” he said. “Theirteachers are sometimes undistinguished,and their living arrangements make it quite difficult for them to concentrate on theireducation”Several improvements anticipated to re¬sult from the reduction of the entering classinclude:• Smaller freshman classes. College ad¬ministrators hope to further contact be¬tween faculty and students and possibly at¬tract more senior faculty members toteach freshmen by reducing the size of theclasses.• Less pressure on the dormitory sys¬tem and the overall housing situation. Thereduction anticipates more dorm singlesand more attractive suites for residentheads.• A more effective faculty advising pro¬gram to supplement the present adminis¬trative program. College officials hope thatthe size cut will increase extra-curricularcontacts between faculty and students.In his statement, Booth stressed that“adjustment of class size does not involveany change in the criteria of admission.” Several members of the faculty opposedthe reduction on the grounds that the quali¬ty of the college has improved with itsgrowth, and that the present housing situ¬ation does not necessitate the action of re¬ducing the college.The decision was recommended, how¬ever, by the faculty committee on admis¬sions and the executive committee of thecollege. Booth said that faculty in favor ofthe decision feel that “by determining tospend more money and more energy onfewer students we can ... make some im¬portant improvements.”“This decision is a useful step ... to¬ward the general attempt to improve theCollege,” said James Redfield, master ofthe new collegiate division. “Our sourcesare overstretched. We will be makingmuch better uses of our sources.”Charles Wegener, professor in the hu¬manities and new collegiate division point¬ed out that the college realizes that it“hasn’t been able to provide students with WAYNE C BOOTH“Important Improvements"the quality of education they want to have”and that they wish to improve it.Although several rumors have been cir¬culating recently concerning—sr^«mpleteclose-down of the college/^oo|frd^biea\herumor and stressed tluin no way a first step toTHE MAROOVolume 77, Number 50 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, April 1, 1969Parents Protest Disciplinary ActionsOVERKILLat the University of ChicagoChicago has just expelled more dissenting stu¬dents than Columbia, Berkeley and San FranciscoState combined.They did it in reprisal for a non-violent sit-inof students protesting the firing of a radicalwoman teacher.There are a dozen decent ways to disciplinestudents but the university powers chose expul¬sion of some forty people.That is overkill.To punish dissent by killing off a student’seducation, killing off his college degree, killingperhaps his future livelihood and career—that isoverkill.We who underwrite this advertisement(names and addresses on request) are parents ofsuch students and of others who may have escapedthis blast but who now live with the terrible fearthat comes inevitably with overkill.The fear o.f getting it next—that’s part ofoverkill.The fear of not toeing the line—that’soverkill. By Mitch BobkinA group of parents concerned about thecurrent disciplinary procedures have be¬gun an active campaign against the Uni¬versity Sunday by placing a one-quarterpage ad costing $2250 in the Sunday NewYork Times with the title “OVERKILL”.Mrs Laura Z. Hobson, a member of thegroup, novelist, author of the ad and moth¬er of expelled graduate student Chris Hob¬son said “I think that overkill is the rightword for it. For God’s sake, is this whatwe are coming to in this country?”Albert Polon, chairman of the group, list¬ed the aims of the organization as:• “To inform the public of the purictiveand vindictive aspects of the disciplinaryactions of the University of Chicago admin¬istration;• To petition the University for read¬mission of the students and a review ofdisciplinary measures; and• To disseminate as much informationas possible about the Chicago events to dis¬courage repetition of such extreme mea¬sures in other educational institutions.”Since the publishing of the Sunday adand of a press statement released onMarch 25, Polon has heard from other par¬ents in Buffalo, Indianapolis, San Fran¬cisco and New England, all in support ofthe groups actions and offering donations.The group plans to help other such orga¬nizations form in other parts of the coun¬try, publish their ad in Chicago papers andperhaps have direct negotiations with theadministration, according to Polon.The group, calling themselves a com¬ mittee of parents of students at the Univer¬sity of Chicago, is “of diverse views withvarying and even conflicting attitudes to¬ward student protests but united now be¬cause of the vindictive, unprecedented andpunitive actions taken against the stu¬dents” said Polon.The group had its origins in New Yorkwhen a meeting of concerned parents ofexpelled or suspended students was calledin the Polon’s apartment for March 20.Some 20-25 parents attended the meetingand voted to become an organization atthat time.At another meeting held on March 23 thead which appeared in the Times was readand approved by the group and the pressrelease was written by Mr. Joseph Clark ofthe American Cancer Society and a fatherof a suspended student. The release wassent to all Chicago papers.Mrs. Hobson said “The students shouldbe allowed to speak for themselves. I don’tthink that parents should represent stu¬dents. However, we parents have to speakfor ourselves. It is the generation gap in away.”She added, “Are we going to regress to akind of McCarthy ism, only this time thepurge is being carried out by one of thebest educational institutions in the coun¬try? I personally disagree with a numberof tactics used by the students but I thinkthat protest is a marvelous thing.”Polon said that all interested parentscould get in touch with him by writing toBox 10A, 305 West 86th St, New York,10024.Graduate Tuition RaisedThe threat that you’d better conform or else—that’s overkill too.There must be dissent if a nation is to livefree; there will be dissent in this nation—nobody’soverkill can silence it.This advertisement is proof of that.A Committee of Parents(names and addresses on request)Box 10A 305 West 86th Street New York, N.Y. 10024NEW YORK TIMES AD: Parents' attempt to spread cause (See Page Two). Tuition for UC graduate students will in¬crease by $50 a quarter starting next fall.The hike will bring total tuition cost forthe normal academic year to $2,250 forgraduate students. Tuition for under¬graduates will remain at $2,100 for the aca¬demic year, and students in the universityextension will be uneffected.Gilbert Lee, vice-president for businessand finance, said, “The increase is neces¬sary because of the continuing rise in thecosts of operating the University. In meet¬ing these costs, the selective increase intuition at the graduate level was made inrecognition of existing and increasing dif¬ ferentials in the cost of graduate comparedwith undergraduate education.”There will be a continuation of the Uni¬versity policy to increase student aid suf¬ficiently to insure that qualified studentswill not be denied an educational opportun¬ity because of the lack of funds.The University’s budget (expenditures)for the 1969-70 academic year is estimatedat $51,907,000, an increase of about sevenpercent over the 1968-69 budget.A large part of this increase is reflectedin salaries of faculty and University em-ployees, including both service and techni¬cal employees. * ' AOVERKILLat the University of ChicagoChicago has just expelled more dissenting stu¬dents than Columbia, Berkeley and San FranciscoState combined.They did it in reprisal for a non-violent sit-inof students protesting the firing of a radicalwoman teacher.There are a dozen decent ways to disciplinestudents but the university powers chose expul¬sion of some forty people.That is overkill.To punish dissent by killing off a student’seducation, killing off his college degree, killingperhaps his future livelihood and career—that isoverkill.We who underwrite this advertisement(names and addresses on request) are parents ofsuch students and of others who may have escapedthis blast but who now live with the terrible fearthat comes inevitably with overkill.The fear of getting it next—that’s part ofoverkill.The fear of not toeing the line—that’soverkill.The threat that you’d better conform or else—that’s overkill too.There must be dissent if a nation is to livefree; there will be dissent in this nation—nobody’soverkill can silence it.This advertisement is proof of that.A Committee of Parents(names and addresses on request)Box 10A 305 West 86th Street New York, N.Y. 10024(This advertisement is reprinted from The Nfew York Times as a public service)JOSEPHA recital of The New Music Wed. Apr. 9, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes, Si.50Same Day S Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERS1363 E. 53rd Custom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount 752-6933 SCHOONERSCHOOLFREDERICTON, N BCANAD-A Encounter groups, communication skill., dramatic •ducotion,vitually creative arts, mad music, sailing, watersports, sailingond more sailing in an eight week free school setting to turn onthe new young, help them meet academic and personalhangups. Junior School 12-16. Senior School I6-20+. Co-ed.Fees: Junior—$1000, Senior—$1200. Limited openings Applyearly. Brochure: Box 9769, Towson, Md., 21204 Phone:301—661-3284 or 506— 454-3907 onytmse *■movies .1 J!|FAR FROM VIETNAM/GodardGRAND ILLUSION/RenoirECLIPSE OF THE SUN VIRGINROBERT MAYNARD HUTCHINS' ZUCKERKANDLA PROPOS DE NICE/VigoGEOGRAPHY OF THE BODYSHORT SUBJECTBUFFERIN EXPERIMENTALPORTRAIT OF LYDIATHE PINK PANTHERBLOW- UP/ AntonioniPICNIC ON THE GRASS/Jean Renoir* * * */ Andy WarholWILL SUCCESS SPOIL ROCK HUNTER?LA CHINOISE/Jean-Luc GodardLA MARSEILLAISE/RenoirCOSMIC RAYVIVIANCHINESE FIREDRILLMOSAICRHYTHMETICTHE MOSTTRIP TO THE MOONLOVE IN THE AFTERNOONLAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD/ResnaisCRIME OF M. LANGE/RenoirNANA/RenoirFIREWORKSEAU D'ARTIFICEPEEP SHOWLA JETEEMAN'S FAVORITE SPORT?FAHRENHEIT 451/TruffautTHE ELUSIVE CORPORAL/RenoirUN CHIEN ANDALOU/BunuelBLOOD OF THE BEASTSDISCOVERY OF THE BODYTHOMAS TRISMIGISTUSTHE BRIDE STRIPPED BARETO PARSIFALTHE NUTTY PROFESSORREPULSION/ PolonskiBOUDU SAVED FROM DR OWNING/RenoirTHE LITTLE MATCHGIRL/RenoirFilms made by UC studentsHAIL THE CONQUERING HEROLEDA (WEB OF PASSION)/ChabrolWHAT'S NEW PUSSYCAT?/Clive Donner... and much more !All for only $6,00This quarter fromdoc filmsFACULTY: FRANCHISES AVAILABLE FOR 1970 SEASON THE130 MPH TIRE.For people who don’t do over 70, but want a ridiculousmargin of safety.A Pirelli Cinturato can do 130 mph. For 24 hoursstraight.It can cut corners at speeds your car can’t muster.It’ll stop your car faster than any other tire made.It’s less prone to skid than any other tire on theroad. Wet or dry.How do you make a tire as safe as this? Easy.You build a tire for American cars to Ferrari GTtolerances.Other radial plies use tubes. We’re tubeless.Other radials use two plies at the sidewall. Weuse three.By the time we’re finished laboring over aCinturato, it’s tough enough to withstand three timesmore road impact than an ordinary tire.Someday, every car will come equipped with atire as safe as the Cinturato. But until that dayyou can get it from us. ■ —■■■ ■—IflEuiFRONT ENDSERVICEBRAKE & MUFFLERSERVICE9200 STONY ISLAND AVE.CALL 374-1500 : __2/The Chicago Maroon/April 1, 1969,* \ » : t*. <* 4 • • ft.OnerousBy Leslie StraussThe University disciplinary committeeshave completed what dean of studentsCharles O’Connell called “their onerousbut necessary tasks”, by expelling 37 stu¬dents.Of the 164 students who were summonedto appear before the Oaks and Shiremencommittees,37 were expelled and62 were suspended:5 for six quarters,1 for five quarters,4 for four quarters,2 for three quarters,12 for two quarters (some with a secondquarter’s suspended suspension),17 for one quarter (some with a secondquarter’s suspended suspension, and8 for less than one quarter.Thirteen students received suspendedsuspensions,and 6 were put on disciplinary probation.Thirty-six had “no disciplinary action”recommended, one was fined the cost of abroken window, and none had chargee intheir cases dismissed for mistaken identityor insufficient evidence.Fourteen had not had their decisions re¬ported as of March 31, but O’Connell saidhe would make the decisions public in sev¬eral days.“Thirty-seven expulsions at the UC aremore than all those at Berkeley, Columbia,and San Francisco State combined. Itseems that the University overreacted just a little to a non-violent, non-successful sit-in,” remarked one of the students placedon probation by the Oaks committee.Faculty reactions to the committee deci¬sions have ranged from “I really thinkthat everyone, on both sides, went toofar,” to “if they don’t want to be in theUniversity as it is now, they should leaveanyway.”Student reactions have also covered awide range.One of the chief objections raised to thedisciplinary committee procedures hasbeen the issue of having open hearings.Originally, the hearings were all to beclosed, but the Oaks committee agreed to THE CRISIShold public hearings after more than 100law students presented a petition, and theChicken Shit Brigade and more than 130people staged a demonstration in front ofthe hearing rooms.Since then, objections have been raisedprincipally to the size of the hearingrooms. The first room in the law schoolheld about 150 people, the next held ap¬proximately 90, and the final room in Stagg field labs held at most 40 people.Many students stated that the small sizeof the hearing room offered proof that theUniversity was only making a token ges¬ture to pacify students.These students objected especially to thelarge number of faculty members presentat the hearings, especially the final ones,when faculty members occupied more thanhalf of the available observation space.Charles Wegener, professor in the NCDand humanities, stated that “there was acertain amount of effort made to makesure that there would be faculty present atthe hearings.”College Conference Plans Course ReformA College curriculum conference sched¬uled for April 11-15 proposes both to im¬prove faculty-student communication andto suggest reform for all College courses.The functions of common core courses,required civilization courses, and depart¬mental course offerings for majors will bediscussed.Co-ordinators of the conference are SteveCope, 70, and Holly Hartstone, 71. Fi¬nances are deans of the college and stu¬dents, Wayne Booth and Charles O’Connell,and possibly CORSO.Weekend seminars will discuss both obli¬gations between students and faculty and possible changes in ihe quarter system.Plans for the conference, initiated in De¬cember in response to complaints aboutseveral college courses, anticipate curricu¬lum reforms which each department is inthe process of making for next fall.Although the conference is not beingplanned in conjunction with departmentalreform plans, co-ordinators hope that de¬partment chairmen and faculty will findthe conference’s proposals compatible withand beneficial to their own plans for re¬form.To further promote student-faculty dia¬logue, students in both dormitories and apartments are encouraged to hold din¬ners, cocktail parties and sherry hours forfaculty members. Students will be given$1.25 for each faculty member they inviteto dinner, and will be provided with up to$10.00 for cocktail parties. (Interested stu¬dents may call X2825).Students who are interested in holdingdinners but who do not know which facultymembers to invite may call Cope or Hart-stone for suggestions at X4207.Each seminar and meeting held will berecorded in its entirety, so a guide tocourses and curriculum reform can bewritten.BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, April 1LECTURE: "Algebraic Categories of Mechanical Lan¬guages and Their Growth by Explicit Definition," SaulGorn, professor of electrical engineering. University ofPennsylvania, Rl 480, 4 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: "Halide Chemistry of Heavy TransitionMetals," Ray Colton, Professor of Chemistry, Univer¬sity of Melbourne, Australia. Kent 103, 4 p.m.MEETING: IHA board meeting, IHA office, 7:30 p.m.MEETING: UC Go Club. Bring sets. Ida Noyes, 7:30p.m.LECTURE: "Improvisation in the Renaissance," How¬ard M. Brown, director of the Collegium Musicum,assisted by Laurence Libin, harpsichord. BreastedHall, 8 p.m.LECTURE: "Richard Wright: Blackness and the West¬ern Adventure," George E. Kent, Social Sciences 122, 8p.m.Wednesday, April 2LECTURE: "The Archives of Paris," George Dettan,French ministry of foreign affairs. Swift Hall 1C6, 4p.m.HAVE YOU MADE YOURPASSOVER MEAL RESERVATIONS?LAST CHANCELECTURE: "Traditional Ethiopian Poetry,” Abram De-moz, visiting professor of linguistics. NorthwesternUniversity. Ida Noyes Library, 4 p.m.SEMINAR: "Atomic Resonance States via Multiconfigu¬ration SCF," Juergen Hinze, department of chemistry.Kent 103, 4 p.m.FILM: "A Thousand Clowns," Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:30p.m.LECTURE: "The Great Debate, Shapley Versus Curtison the Scale of the Universe, April, 1920," MichaelHoskin, Cambridge University. Robie Hoss, 8 p.m.LECTURE: "Black Fiction and the Complexity of theBlack Experience, with special reference to WesternUniversalism and Contemporary Revolutionary Pres¬sure," George Kent, Social Science 302, 8 p.m.Thursday, April 3SEMINAR: "Meaning, Lost and Regained: 'Sense Givingand Sense Reading' " Michael Polanyi, Oxford Univer¬sity. Social Science 302, 4 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: "Isotopic Studies of Rare Gases and thePrimitive Solar System,'' Charles Hohenberg, Berkely.Eckhart 133, 4:40 p.m.Hillel House5715 Woodlawn 752-1127 AlmiCiuft48 E. Oak St.-DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95tn St.-779-S500April I) 1969/The thicago Maroon/3MUSICRAFT SPECIALON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-3005SCOTT deluxe stereo compact Save $1204% W? 4% This is Scott’s top1 k compact. The 2503 boasts all the features offcaillthe other two Scott compacts, with the im-portant plus of greater tuner sensitivity andmore power. In addition, the 2503’s precision magnetic cartridgeincorporates a stylus cleaning brush to keep your records cleanand new. Big Scott S-10 extended range speakers are standardequipment, giving you the deep and vibrant sound associated withmore costly equipment. Optional smoky-gray plastic cover pro¬tects your compact while in use.INCLUDES: AM/FM stereo tuner with FET's 40 watt amplifier.2 Airsuspension speakers with 10 inch woofers.Garrad changer with Pickering cartridge.was$470 NOW ONLY $349.50EDITORIALCutting theCollegeThe recent decision to limit the size of next year’s enteringclass as part of an experiment to reduce the size of the College isa disturbing development. Not because of the actual reduction;anyone who has gone through common year courses recently, orlooked into the dormitory situation, or talked with unhappy andalienated freshmen knows that the College as it exists today isfar from satisfactory, and cannot be satisfactory unless its size isreduced. What is disturbing is the fact that the University cannotmaintain the present College, and that the only way out of thedifficulties the College is presently in, is to decrease the pressureon the facilities rather than improve the facilities to the pointwhere they can serve a college of the present size.One reason the College must be cut is the housing crisis; thereis simply no decent place to put 700 freshmen by next fall. Wood¬ward Court and Pierce Tower were unliveable the day they wereopened; now the University has to pay for its mistake by reducingthe number of people who require housing. The proposed plan toundouble most of the rooms in those residence halls will alleviateonly one of the more obnoxious aspects of the dormitories. Theywill still never be desirable places to live. When and if the Uni¬versity builds dormitories again, they would do well to make acareful investigation of why people won’t live in their two newestresidence halls unless they’re compelled to.Another reason to cut the size of the College is the compellingneed to improve the common core courses. With the possible ex¬ception of History of Western Civilization, they are not satisfactory.Many of the disappointing aspects of these courses are due to lessthan adequate teaching; it is hoped that with fewer people takingthe courses, it will be possible for a larger percentage of studentsto have classes with superior faculty.Perhaps the most compelling reason, and the reason leastdiscussed is something that makes the University of Chicago Collegeunique: walk up to any College student at any time, ask him howhe feels, and three times out of four the answer will be, “Miserable.”Obviously there may be many things contributing to this state whichthe University can do nothing about, and there may in fact be noway in which this institution can take corporate action that willalleviate the personal problems of its community. There is nodoubt, however, that ours can be a trying college to attend. Inan age of cutthroat competition to get into graduate schools, thisCollege makes it ridiculously difficult for its students, picked forintellectual excellence, to get excellent grades. Students feel remotefrom their faculty, cut off from other students. The proposedsystem of improvements in advisory procedures, possible only witha smaller student body, could at least provide more sensitive chan¬nels of communication for the needs of individual students.Looking back over these reasons for cutting the College, onething becomes apparent: they all point to deficiencies in the presentstuctures, but none points to an inherent deficiency in the idea of alarger College. The cut in the size of the College is necessary, butnot necessarily desirable. Indeed, there is reason to think that aCollege of 2000 is less desirable than a college of 2500 could be,if it were running as it should. Student activities already suffer froma lack of interested participants; this problem will obviously beaggravated by a decrease in the size of the student body. TheCollege student body presently enjoys considerable diversity; thistoo may suffer.Finally, many students may see in this move an attempt atfurther political suppression of what the University may view as“undesirables.” It is true that College students made up a dis¬proportionate percentage of the participants in last quarter’sprotest actions. It is true that the University has already exertedpolitical suppression in its disciplinary committees. So far, how¬ever, the rumors that the cut in the College is an attempt at morepolitical suppression are just that — rumors. The situation bearsinvestigation, but unless proof is produced, it must be assumedthat the cut in the College is an unfortunate but necessary moveto maintain the academic quality of this institution. LETTERS TO THE EDITORRaw Power PlayDuring the past few weeks what wasonce my amusement at the peculiar rea¬soning of Maroon editorials and “news”has slowly turned to fear and frustration.Perhaps the turning point was your criti¬cism (editorial, February 18) of the “eigh¬teenth century concept” that “you do some¬thing and you expect to take the con¬sequences.” Although my poor mind foundit hard to imagine a society in which thismight not be the case, I was willing toaccept that perhaps the writer had grownup in a family somewhat different frommine.Your latest editorial, however, was sim¬ply too much. Why, may I ask, were itsarguments not used back in January, whenthe Maroon was instead doing its best tocreate the atmosphere that made the sit-inpossible? What was the sit-in, may I ask, ifnot “a raw power play” a “deliberatemaneuver” of a group of students and non¬students to enforce their view of the uni¬versity and its role on the rest of the aca¬demic community—students, faculty, anduniversity employees alike?As a student—and I am not alone—I be¬lieve “that no person who values freedomof expression and difference of opinion inacademic life can passively accept theseactions,” no matter what their self-styledjustification or legitimacy. For any group,whether a majority or not, to resort tosuch disruptive tactics as sitting-in, ha¬rassing faculty and administrators, and oc¬cupying private offices and clubs, is toclaim that same right for anyone who canscream “Ah gotta grievance!” And it is toclaim that their views and opinions are tobe forcibly imposed on myself and others.Is that still difference of opinion?”For these reasons, as a student I whole¬heartedly support the existence and actionsof the present disciplinary committees asthe only existing protection for civilizedlife and discourse on this campus. Thesecommittees are my only protection as astudent from the violent and selfrighteousacts of any group; as a student, I abhorthe Maroon’s attempt at their destructionon the pretext that they are somehow acase of “political suppression” by the fac¬ulty of students’ “views.”This is not to claim that the existing bod¬ies are the best possible ones. But insteadof calling for their immediate destruction(or that of our other imprefect institutions)THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothManaging Editor: John RechfNews Board:Disciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussUndergraduates: Wendy GlocknerHistorian: Mitch BobkinGraduate Students: Rob CooleyThe Community: Bruce NortonNews Staff: Jim Hafemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Con Hitchcock, Steve Cook, Paula Szewiyk,Gerard Leval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Freida Murray, Marv Bittner, DebbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest, Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert.Senior Editor: Jeff KutaContributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel,Production Chief: Mitch Kahn. Assistant: Rob¬ert Swift. (Zowie.)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. simply because they are imperfect andevil, I should like to see some concreteproposals for a way in which studentsmight be fairly and representatively cho¬sen to sit on any new committees or ap¬peal boards. If the spectacle of the presentStudent Government (which is at least as“representative” as the Maroon) is anysign, this will not be an easy task-noreven a possible one in the present campusatmosphere. Rather than calling for anoth¬er sit-in, the Maroon should call on theconcerned parties to go home and think fora few weeks. And they might begin by ask¬ing themselves whether the idea of “dis¬cipline” and the notion that acts don’t nec¬essarily have consequences are really com¬patible at all.J. W. Moriss, 71Why?The implication of Mr Weiss’ letter re¬garding the demand on the University toestablish a child day-care center for chil¬dren of students, faculty and staff seems tobe that radical students were grossly negli¬gent in overlooking the Chicago Child CareSociety, which is “just a rock’s throw fromPierce Tower” (54th and University).Although he does not make the point ex¬plicitly, his letter reads as a guarded at¬tempt to discredit a legitimate movementon campus, inspired by WRAP and others,to create a University-supported day-carecenter specifically for children of Univer¬sity students, faculty and staff.He gives the impression that the exis¬tence of the Child Care Society is (orshould be) common knowledge: “I wouldhave supposed those who are interested inproviding child-care services would havespoken with people at the Child CareSociety...”The situation is, in fact, quite the re¬verse: working through University chan¬nels I discovered that neither the personneloffice nor the hospital nor University infor¬mation nor the College Dean’s office hadever heard of this or any like agency (savethe Laboratory nursery school, where tui¬tion is $725 per year for half-day care).Furthermore, the Child Care Society, ac¬cording to their public relations office, isChicago’s oldest charity, organized 120years ago, providing child care for thecommunity on a sliding-scale basis — afine institution, no doubt, but nonethelessone which is not affiliated with the Univer¬sity in any formal way, and thus is irrele¬vant to current demands for a Universitychild-care center.So why should we solicit solutions froman outside agency when there should be acenter on campus, which, by virtue of itsUniversity affiliation, would be known toall who may seek its services, and thusserve its function as a liberating force forwomen more effectively.Sue SimonsCollege Social Sciences OfficeApril Fools?In the true spirit of the “traditional”April Fools Day that we remember in ouryouth, we suggest the following pranksthat we feel might be appropriate only atthis time of year.• Breaking in the glass of PresidentLevi’s glass portico;• Expelling 37 students;• Reading the Maroon.Pumpkin Pie and BellsMaroon ElectionsThe election for editor of nextyear’s Maroon delayed from lastquarter is 5:30 p.m. Monday, April7.The current editor, Roger Black,announced in a memorandum Mondaythat he was not a candidate for re-election.4/The Chicago Maroon/April 1, 1969 * i •*You won't hove to putyour moving or storageproblem off until to¬morrow if you call ustoday.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411MM, 1, - S.. i* - ii- mmm—mm^,COLLEGE CURRICULUM CONFERENCE CEF PRESENTS15 FILMS FOR $5at Mandel HallSaturday, April 58:00 P.M.Tickets atMandel Hall Box Office dailyReserved Main Floor $3.00Unreserved Main Floor $2.50Unreserved Balcony $2.00 "ACCORDING TO the news clips,‘one of Russia's most conserv-ative papers' has gone yahoo-ing after Milovan Djilas, theYugoslavian writer and Tito-eater, for being an ‘enemyof socialism' like suchworms as George Wallace,Leon Trotsky and Barry Gold-iv a ter. Naturally, we can¬celed our subscri~p lion.We re conserv m For „ free copy ifalive, but not I Wm F Buckley'.that conserva- | NATIONAL RE-mat conseri a ■ v,ew write. Dep,live. ■ E, 150 E 35 Street.N YTheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED1)64-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.April 1,-1969/The Chicago M«r©oh/5WEDS., 4/2SAT., 4/5 A Thousand Clowns 7 & 9:30Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf 7 & 9:30(Law School Auditorium)SUN., 4/6 A Man For All Seasons 8:00 only (MandelHall) (Color)SAT., 4/12 Sundays & Cybele 7 & 9:30(Cinemascope)SUN., 4/13 A Taste of Honey 7 & 9:30SUN., 4/20 Forbidden Games 7War of the Buttons 9SUN., 4/27 School For Scoundrels 7The Flim-Flam Man 9 (Cinemascope inColor)SAT., 5/10 King of Hearts 7 & 9:30 (Widescreen inColor)FRI.,5/23 A Man And A Woman 7 & 9:30 (Color)SUN., 5/25 To Be A Crook 7Banana Peel (Cinemascope) 9WEDS., 5/28 Ashes And Diamonds 7Point of Order 9Plus Ten Shorts - Get A Series Ticket At Any Showingin theGift handmadecandles fromFinland. Denmarkand Piekencandlesnew sagasolid sili erjewelry—mu seamreproductions ofI iking pieces\othing quite like itThe Combistan Relax Chairrock it or lock it in 5 positionswith matching adjustable stool.from Westnofa. NorwayScandinavianInwtSystem 179'Hours:Dailv 10-9Sat. 10-6Sun. 1 2 - 6 53 rd&Lake ParkApril eleventh through fifteenth numerous conferences andcolloquia will be held under the general heading “College Cur¬riculum Conference”. A detailed schedule of those meetings andprograms will appear in this Friday’s Maroon. However, at this timewe would like to announce what we hope will be the most importantpart of the conference: informal gatherings of students and facultyat dinners, coffee and sherry hours. In order to promote this type ofactivity we have been given funds to subsidize dinners at the rate of$1.25 per guest and sherry and coffee hours at the rate of $10.00 pergroup. To receive a subsidy all that you need to do is call ext. 2825with your guest list. You will be reimbursed at the conclusion of theconference. (People in dormitories will have housing funds avail¬able for this purpose and should not apply as above.)We urge the faculty and students of the college to act, and actquickly in making this conference a success. Our funds are limited,but we will do what we can. Let us know if there is any assistance wecan furnish in arranging additional discussion groups.Do vour part to improve the college.Conference Committeec/o ext. 4207Revitalization presentsBUDDY BUYJUNIOR WELLSDependable Serviceon your Foreign Car\W’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicsha\e joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & o* 1 change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393LIVE!!BLUES CONCERT DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lenses1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644in theNew Hyde ParkShopping CenterMl ■ ■■■■■ —-U-.spring quarter opening hoursMONTUESWEDTHURFRISATMON MARCHAPRILAPRILAPRILAPRILAPRILAPRIL 31123457 8:00 - 7:008:00 - 7:008:00 - 7:008:00 - 5:008:00 - 5:008:30 - 3:008:00 - 5:00resume regular hoursBUY ALL REQUIRED &RECOMMENDED BOOKS &SUPPLIES ATThe University Of Chicago BookstoreOn Campus - 58th & EllisJason Robards inATHOUSANDCLOWNSWEDS, APRIL 2, COBB, 7 & 9:30 PM, $1, Series Ticket $5, CEF WHAT CHICAGORADIO STATIONIS LEADING TDKBROADCASTINGREVOLUTIONIN THIS CITY?i/^-whok fm 88.3SHORELAND HOTELOffice space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore Driveax /BrooksCLEANERS • TAILORS • LALNDERERSPhones serving campus since 1917Ml 3-7447 1013- 17 E. 61st ST., near EllisI 174 E. 55th ST., near WoodlawnFA 4*3500 >1.4 c. 55th ST..6/The Chicago Maroon/April I, 1949 authorized BMCmi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, Illinois 60615foreign car hospital & clinic, inc. Matching WeddingSetslerifloferte 3U ion s^ewe Lu\L for student discounts1422E. 53rd St. 363—0/6/PLANTS ALIVE!HARPER COURTn -| »* I living rod imarginototabout the midwayBeardsley RumlI The Beardsley Ruml colloquium on| *What Can Be Done to End White Rac-I ism”, postponed last quarter because ofI threatened disruptions by members of the[worker-student alliance has been resche¬duled for Friday, April 4 and Saturday,[April 5.According to Tim Lovian 70, student| chairman of the committee that planned[the colloquium, “We made some changes| in structure and personnel which we think[may make this a better colloquium thanwe had scheduled before.”Admission to the various lectures anddiscussions is open to the public withoutticket and without charge except for aninformal dinner at 6 pm Saturday. Reser¬vations for the dinner at $1 each can bemade by calling MI 3-0800, extension 2772.All colloquia scheduled for Saturday inQuantrell have been moved to the Lawi ilo auditorium.Among the speakers at the two-day con¬ference will be Richard Hatcher, mayor ofGary, Indiana; Warren Bacon, assistant di¬rector of Inland Steel Company and amember of the Chicago Board of Educa¬tion; Anna Koljeim, principal of the HydePark High School; Rev. George Riddick, amember of Chicago’s Operation Breadbas¬ket; and AI Raby, convenor of the Coordi¬nating Council of Community Organiza¬tions in Chicago.The colloquium will consist of dis¬cussions, panels and lectures featuringUniversity of Chicago professors, members of the Woodlawn community organizationsand members of other universities i n-cluding Harvard and Chicago City College.Hospital StrikeService workers at Billings Hospital haveratified a new contract by a two-to-onevote on March 22, four days after the wild¬cat strike at the hospital began.The contract, which includes a one-yearextension of the current two-year contract,contains concessions on each of the fourmajor items presented by the union’s bar¬gaining committee.First, it provides for a 30 cent per hour“across the board” wage increase for all800 union members. Over half of these arenurses aides, dietary workers, and house¬keepers at Billings but union members invarious cafeterias and other service areasof the University will also be affected.This pay hike will go into effect on orabout April 14, 1969, according to one Uni¬versity spokesman. Another 20 cent perhour increase is scheduled for April of thefollowing year.Secondly, there is a 12 to 15 cent perhour increase in shift differential pay orcompensation for working the late shiftsand a 15 cent per hour increase in the Sun¬day premium rate.Thirdly, the vacation period has been ex¬tended from two-to-four weeks to three-to-five weeks, length depending on time ofservice.Finally, an extra step has been added tothe now six-level salary schedule. Thismeans that workers now have one moreposition to which they can aspire.A no reprisal clause is included in the contract for the 320 or so employees whoparticipated in the strike.The workers are members of Local 1657of the American Federation of State, Coun¬ty and Municipal Employees of the AFLand CIO.PeopleRobert Uretz is becoming associate deanfor the basic sciences in the Pritzker me¬dical school. . . .Associate biophysics pro¬fessor Robert Haselkorn moves to Uretz’sold post as chairman of the department ofbiophysics....Dennis Hejhal, 70, won the Lowell Put¬nam math competition—the country’s high¬est college math honor... .James Capser,70, has been voted the year’s outstandingwrestler by his team....History professor Richard Wade hasbeen appointed a member of the ChicagoHousing Authority, by Mayor Richard Da¬ley, along with Mrs Lolitat Nevill, the firstwoman and the first CHA tenant to benamed to the board. ...John Hope Franklin, chairman of the his¬tory department has been appointed byDaley to the Chicago LibraryBoard... .Labor secretary George Schultz,former dean of the business school hasbeen voted “Chicagoan of the Year inCommerce and Industry” by the ChicagoJaycees.Masao Abe, professor of religious philos¬ophy at Nara University in Kyoto, is vis¬iting professor in the history of religionsthis quarter. .. .Population biologist Richard C. Lewontinhas been named chairman of the com¬mittee on evolutionary biology, replacingpaleozoologist Everett Olson who is going to Berkeley after 34 years here. ...Meanwhile Charles R. Goulet, director ofthe UC hospitals and clinics is taking off toLondon to visit hospitals....Don S. Samuelson, (JD ’67), former asso¬ciate in the Chicago law firm Kirkland,Ellis, Hodson, Chaffetz, and Master, hasbeen named assistant dean of the lawschool. He will head fund raising, alumniaffairs, the Law School record, and specialprojects at the school....Alton A. Linford, dean of the school ofsocial service administration has beenelected president of the Council on SocialWork Education.. . .Margaret Perry, asso¬ciate director of college admissions, wasrecently elected president of the Associ-a t i o n of College Admissions Coun¬selors. ... Psychologist Bruno Bettelheimtestified before a US House education sub¬committee March 20 that he sees a disturb¬ing similarity between present US collegestudent uprising and those he witnessed inpre-Nazi Germany....Population ControlThe Ford Foundation has passed on$929,995 to UC for work in population con¬trol. The program will include the trainingof social scientists, the development of newcontraceptive devices, and research in re¬productive biology.ElectionThose game enough to run for one of theeight student positions on Dean CharlesO’Connell’s Faculty-Student Advisory Com¬mittee on Campus Student Life should goto Administration 201, pick up petition, en¬dorse and return it to registrar’s office nolater than 5 pm April 10.Special!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!10% Stiulent Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0777-8*t* 4a 4a 4a 4a 4a 4fCOUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 So. Yates 363-9842 8 WEEKSIN EUROPE6 HOURS CREDITIN HISTORY OF ARTTour France - Italy -Switzerland - Austria -Germany - Netherlands •England - Belgium - SpainUndergrad Credit $1575Audit $1575Gradutate Credit $1635Include* air and land trans¬portation, hotels, meals, tips,taxes and tuition.Write or phene for informationto History of Art Tours, LOYOLAUNIVERSITY, Room 719, 820 N.Michigan Ave. WH 4-0800CANOE TRIPSInto the Quetico-Superior Wil¬derness. America's Greatest Ad¬venture by America's largest out¬fitter. Free folder and map - write:BILL ROM, DEPT C, CANOE COUN¬TRY OUTFITTERS, ELY, MIN¬NESOTA^IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. Chicago's most complete record store—Every label in our huge inventory always at adiscount—Every Record factory fresh and fully guaranteed—Large selection of importand hard to get records.STUDENTSBRING THIS COUPON TODISCOUNT RECORDS, INC.201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake)GOOD FOR 38«/<) S"ON ANY ONE TIME PURCHASE from our LARGE INVENTORYClassical • Jazz • Folk Music • Spoken • Show Tunes, Etc.BUY ONE OR A HUNDRED NOW3.693.08All labelsincluded:COLUMBIALONDONVERVEFOLKWAYSELEKTRARCAPHILLIPSEPICRIVERSIDETRADITIONKAPP. etc. | THIS COUPON GOOD FOR |138^^ off ust pr,ce* °n iAny One Time RecordPurchase Atdiscount records, inc.| 201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake) |CE 6-2187 |Good until April 30, 1969 =^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinTmni'HiiiiiiTfiiiiiiii^MONO OR STEREO All labelsincluded:ANGELDeutsche-GrammaphoneBACH GUILDVERVEVANGUARDPRESTIGEARCHIVEMERCURYATLANTICCAPITOL, etc.JUST BRING THIS COUPON!!Browse our budget binsDiscounts from 50% to 60%labels as VOX • RIVERSIDE • PRESTIGE • SCALAETERNA • MGM CLASSICS • VERVE • URANIAEVEREST • CONCERT DISC • PRESTIGE FOLK MUSICMONITOR • VERVE FOLKWAYS • COUNTERPOINT* Sorry, due to manufacturer's price policy imported LP's cannot be allowed in this offer.THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount1540 E. 55th ST. MI3-75I I Fast DependableServiceT.V. - Radio - Tape Re¬corder - PhonographCornell Electrodes ServiceI63S E. 55th St. PL2-7730i DiscountArt Materials• school, office &fi ling supplies• drafting materials• mounting - matting -• framingDuncan’s1305 E S3rd HY 3-41 I IvCvl ,' ,y\VvitV- ("5.V.V-. sf,..iMMM(The Maroon Classified Ads)SENSATIONAL ANNULMENT REVEALED!RATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AO: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-OSOO, Ext. 3266.FOR SALEFolk Guitar Fender Palomino DeArm. Pckup. Jerry or Bill MU4-9573.PEOPLE WANTEDWaiter or waitress needed at thenicest restaurant in HydePark—TheMad Hatter. Luncheon shift 10:30-3:00 daily except Monday. 1656 E.53rd Street.New York-based social agency sum¬mer camp needs counselors, special¬ists, supervisors. Low pay, hard butrewarding work. 643-7473.WANTED TO RENTWant 2-3 rm. apt. near UC for Sept.Call Margot BU 8-6610 XI416 orleave message.Where?FOR RENTRoom for girl in private home.S40/mo. MU 4-5076 5-9 P.M.Room for rent; board available, inlovely Hyde Park home, 3 blocks toI.C. Phone 288-3630 up to 4:30. Phone538-4121 after 4:30.NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO3-5 room apartments, all with tile-baths & showers. Ideal for students,interns, nurses, young couples. NOCHILDREN. Rental $85-105. Call RE4-4141. ANNULMENT REVEALED!Ken Sherman and his ex-wife, Flor¬ence Loeschhorn, are pleased to an¬nounce the annulment of their mar¬riage. Rumor hath it that thegrounds were non-consumation.Cards of condolence and/or con¬gratulations may be sent to BoxPox, Maroon.Hillel is serving Passover meals —lunches and suppers. Make your res¬ervations now. Last chance today.PERSONALSThe Mad Hatter — nicest restaurantin Hyde Park — Sauerbrauten everySaturday and Sunday dinner.''A prophet is not without honour,save in his own country, and in hisown house.'' And so with JOSEPHJARMAN — one of the most creat¬ive and talented musicians in theworld today ... a rave FIVE *****STAR rating in the March 6, 1969Downbeat and a breathtaking reviewin Focus/Midwest, volume 6, Num¬ber 41. See, hear Joseph on Wednes¬day, April 9, 8 P.M. at Ida NoyesHall. Tickets $1.50 at the door.Anyone wanting to take biology thissummer call Ann 288-6357.Try Charlie's new specials at Ah¬mad's — pepper steak & shrimpcreole Louisiana style. See an artistat work.WRITERS' WORKSHOP — PL2-8377.CHGO's OWN SWINGERS CLUBSend $1 for 52 page illust. magazine.100s of personals. MKS, Box 3806,CHGO 60654.TYPINGTyping — Greek symbols — equa¬tions stencils — Judy Herder, 238-6109.May I do your typing? 363-1104.LOOKING FOR A MEANINGFUL CHALLENGE?LOOKING FOR SELF-FULFILLMENT?If you are between 18 and 30PARTICIPATESHERUT LA'AM(Service Corps for Israel)PROFESSIONAL* SEMI-PROFESSIONAL(ONE YEAR)If you are o professional, college graduateor undergraduate, you are needed as ateacher of English, math, and physics, tutor,technician, nurse, group worker, chemical,mechanical, and civil engineer; arts andcrafts, music or sports director; draftsman,dentist, allergy specialist.DEPARTURE - July, 1969 KIBBUTZ PARTICIPATION PROGRAM(ONE YEAR)If you are a high school graduate, un¬dergraduate, or graduate, you can work inthe collective agricultural settlements, shar¬ing in the labor and culture of an imag¬inative experience in communal living.DEPARTURE - September, 1969ORIENTATION & UIPANKnowledge of Hebrew not essential. Before departure there is an orientation seminarfollowed by o three-month Ulpan, intensive Hebrew study in Israel.$670 round-trip air fare and orientation costs. Limited number of partial loans available toprofessionals only.SHERUT LA AM - ADDITIONAL PROGRAMS - SECONO YEARFollowing your one year of service and if you are a professional, college graduate orundergroduate entering your junior year, you con register to participate in a second year ofstudy ot on institute of higher learning in Israel. Yeor of study will be covered by adequatescholarship,* same cost as one-year program; same departure date as professional andsemi professional group (July, 1969).ORYou may continue on the program for a second year either in the assignment you had or in anew area where needed.SIX-MONTH KIBBUTZ PARTICIPATION PROGRAM (VIP)Living ond working on a Kibbutz or Moshov, with the possibility of Special Work Projects orborder Kibbutz placements arising from new circumstances in Israel. HEBREW, LECTURESAND SEMINARS AVAILABLECOST$570 round-trip air fare for six-month program onlyNEXT DEPARTUREJanuary, 1969 and approximately every four months thereafterCHICAGO ISRAEL PROGRAMS 220 S. State St - Rm. 1308 Chicago, Illinois 60604Tel: 939-6427.I-want to |oin □ SHERUT LA'AM □ SIX-MONTH PROGRAMPlease send meNAME □ MORE INFORMATION □ APPLICATION FORMSADDRESSCity Zip CAMERA DEPT.Par Rexall Drug1204 E 53rd StOpen Every Day9 am to 10 pmWe carry:AgfaPentaxRolleiYashicaKodakPetriMinoltaHoneywell ElmoAccuraBauerMamiya SekorMirandaStrobonarOlympusVi vita rSoligorMelicoPattersonRowiUltimaKobenaExactaPolaroidMinoxDurst288-1177TheRenault 16SedanWagon.The Renault lfi Sedan-Wagon isa sedan that can change into a station wagon, and back again to asedan whenever you want.It has front wheel drive.4-speed synchromesh transmission.4-wheel independent suspension.5 main-bearing engine.5 doors (the 5th door is in the back)Wet cylinder sleeves.Rack and pinion steering.A sealed liquid cooling system.Disc brakes up front.Self limiting drum brakes in back.Up to 42 cubic feet of haulingcapacity (when it's a station wagonFully reclining seats.It can get 28 miles to the gallon.And costs only *2445 P.O.K.2235 So. MICHIGAN AVETel. 326-2550 "Black and weird and beautiful . . .the e.e. cummings of iazz musicians... lonely and trembling .. . makessilence as compelling as sound .. .he extends the range of every in¬strument he touches . .. great . .."Joseph Jarman, Wed., April 9, 8:00P.M., Ida Noyes Hall.SPRING your hopes for travel toMarco Polo. 326-4422.Weekend, Godard's travelogue ofmodern man's violence and despair,is coming to the Three Penny Ci¬nema April 4th. Very difficult butrewarding.Also, be sure to check out StolenKisses, Traufaut's latest at the new¬est theatre in town.Do you want to be placed for a Se¬der? Contact Hillel office today.Middle-aged male office workerwishes to meet nympho type, fair¬skinned coeds for serious relation¬ship. Box 33, Maroon.STOP THE WAR MACHINE 11111!April 5th and 6th demonstrations.The theme is not only Gl support,but also it is against the entire warmachine, the war in Vietnam, thethreat of more Vietnam's in LatinAmerica, the ABM system, and notenough weird personals in the Ma¬roon.A whole new concept of child thera¬py, is opening up through the ex¬citing triangulation of neurology,philosophy and creativity. ChildWANTS to be good, not evil. Yet themore highly creative he is, the soon¬er he becomes that 1 out of every 6adolescents jailed before age 18.With the 90% increase in juvenilecrime now causing epidemic catas¬trophe incur once-proud nation; withthe most brilliant minds now turningto drugs and being lailed instead ofbeing saved as future though-lead¬ers, tragedy stalks the land. Hope¬fully, the tax-paying citizen will soonwake up to the social cost he is pay¬ing to destroy the best of Americanyouth. Teach self-remotivationthrough brain self-control. The stu¬dent, then, automatically, wil re-di¬rect himself toward self-perfection.It works. — T.O. Lingo. HEADCROSSWORDSACROSS DOWN1. Spanish tor Coco Cola9, The north moved. Harry, only infinitely better13. . dodn't bodder me a bid13. Add it to your motor18. Gad on* in my nod*22. a pillow (2 words)28 ...pickin'*32. Ralph J Wood. Jr35 H you con't spell it, you shouldn't not it43. High ... (sans *y«)47. A state (obbr )49 There's on* down under 2. You could odd on kcl* to thn on«3. H*’ll b* th*r* April Sth4. ..another, Andy5. That's o no no7. I'll tok* holt8. The; s cool. K*s*y15. Pretty sn*aky19. Add o be* ond drink vp Kiddiet25. Kimmot, with a t*a33. Add an E ond go34. Ravi’s brother39. .. .on youTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBEARDSLEY RUML COLLOQUIUMWHAT CAN BE DONE TO ENDWHITE RACISMFRIDAY, APRIL 4, 19697:00 P.M. • Mandel HallTOWARD ENDING RACISM: THE FUTURE OF BLACKPOLITICSHon. Richard Hatcher, Harold Baron, and Richard WadeSATURDAY, APRIL S, 196910:30 A.M. • Quantrell AuditoriumWHITE RACISM AND PUBLIC EDUCATIONWarren Bacon, Francis Cain, Roald Campbell,Anna Kolheim, and Meyer Weinberg, Jr.1:00 P.M. • Quantrell AuditoriumTO END EXPLOITATION IN THE GHETTOLeon Finney, John Kain, Jan Linfield, Calvin Lockridge,Arthur Saltzman, and George Tolley3:00 P.M. • Quantrell AuditoriumWHITE RACISM AND ECONOMIC PARTICIPATIONRev. George Riddick, Milton Friedman,and Robert McKersie6:00 P.M. • Hutchinson Commons—Informal DinnerTHE UNIVERSITY AND RACISMHarold Baron, Maynard Krueger, and Jeffrey Kuta8:00 P.M. • Mandel HallSUMMARYKenneth Prewitt, Ira Kipnis, and Al RabyAdmission free without ticket except to dinner. Reservations for dinnerare to be made in Gates-Blake 428, extension 2772; cost: $1.00.Bibliography and papers available in Gates-Blake 428 without charge.8/The Chicago Maroon/April l, 1969