*THE MAROONTuesday, April 22, 1969Sit-In Demands End to Urban ReUNIVERSITYOver Fifty Students Invade^jEeMerFor Urban Studies to Demand AnEnd to UC Destruction in Woodlawnhere because obviously you’ve gone thro¬ugh my files.”In 201, demonstrators argued with BrianJ. L. Berry, chairman of the trainingprogram in the center, and chanted “pigsout now” at policeman.As the temperature in the room rose,two members of the Students for Freedomand Capitalism, Pete Pranis, graduatestudent in business, and Chris Bamekov,graduate student in economics, enteredand argued with demonstrators.After most protestors had left, Meltzerand Berry discussed urban renewal withremaining students.“As a black person, I think it was ridi¬culous,” Mrs. Leona Cochran, one of threesecretaries trapped in the back of 201,said of the demonstration.“It was a peaceful demonstration. Thisis part of the democratic process,” saidFrederika Blankner, who was present atthe demonstration as the owner of a con¬demned building at 6043 Woodlawn.Assistant dean of students James Vicesaid shortly after the demonstration thathe expected no disciplinary action wouldbe taken. (Dean of students Charles O’Con¬nell was out of town.) However, Universityphotographers snapped pictures through¬out the hour-long occupation.The demonstrators had turned on theCenter for Urban studies after Universitypolice barred their entrance to the YoungMemorial Building, location of the officesof physical planning and construction.Intending to conduct a two-hour sit-in,more than 70 persons had marched froma rally in front of the ad building to theYoung building.Vigil and Crosses DramatizeObjections to 42 ExpulsionsSome 30 students planted crosses in frontof the administration building and held a 30minute vigil at noon Monday to protest theUniversity’s disciplinary actions last quar¬ter. The demonstration was planned bymembers of the committee of Public Af¬fairs.After assembling in Rosenwald at 11:30am the group marched onto the main qua¬drangle and planted 42 crosses, represent¬ing the number of students expelled by theOaks and Shireman committees, in the turf.After the cross-planting, the students stoodsilently until 12:30 pm. No faculty memberstook part in the demonstration.The group issued a statement during thevigil saying:“We stand, as others have already done,to express our concern with the effectswhich recent disciplinary actions are hav¬ing upon us as students and upon the Uni¬versity as a whole.“We oppose the irregular procedures ofthe disciplinary committee and the harsh¬ness and inconsistency of the sentences im¬posed. The crosses Which we have placedon the quadrangle express the significantloss we as students feel and which the Uni¬versity as a whole has suffered by the ex¬pulsion of 42 students.”Reese Peterson, 70, one of the organizersof the demonstration, said that it was “aND OUT OF ORDER demonstration of concern” for the dis¬ciplined students.The UC demonstration was conceived andplanned before the recent Harvard demon¬stration, which also included crosses to dra¬matize concern for students arrested therein the ROTC sit-in.Faculty Forum ToDiscuss DisciplineThe signers of the AAUP petition willsponsor a faculty forum to discuss Uni¬versity disciplinary procedures Wednesdayat 3:45 pm in Mandel Hall.Gilbert White, professor of geography,will chair the meeting. Speakers will in¬clude Richard Levins, associate professorof mathematical biology, and RichardLewontin, professor of biology. A speakerrepresenting the administration will alsospeak.The meeting is billed as a faculty for¬um, but student observers are welcome.Each speaker will give a short talk to befollowed by questions from the floor.Paul Sally, a spokesman for the group,said the purpose of the meeting is to “openthe issues to the entire University com¬munity.” No motions for protest actionwill be considered.Hunger Strike Enters 7th DayMorale Slipping; ColdRain, Hunger BeginTo Take Their TollLeaders of the hunger strike and tent-in met Monday with the committee of thecouncil of the University senate to discusstheir demands for revised student disci¬pline.However, morale dwindled among mem¬bers of the strike as some entered theirseventh day of fasting.While defending the strike’s demandsat the 90 minute meeting, Mary Leighton,69, called the Oaks and Shireman com¬mittees unjust. “(The council members)reacted as though they had never heardthat before,” she said later. The demands of the strike are that thedisciplinary procedures be revised in con¬sultation with students and that the re¬vision be retroactive for any suspendedor expelled students requesting a re-trial.“From their (the council’s) point ofview, we were just proving our emotion,not giving documented evidence,” SaraHeller, ’69, another leader of the strikesaid.Consequently, Miss Leighton, MichaelDenneny, and Jonathan Dean, the threestudent observers who resigned from theOaks committee last quarter, will preparea report detailing the alleged injusticesto present to the council later this week.Although 17 fasters remained as of Mon¬day and 15 spent Sunday night in thecamp’s nine tents, the occasional rains,cold, and the diet of juice, water, and vitamins were showing effects on thestrikers.“It hurts all over,” said Miss Leighton,who had been fasting since April 14. “Thehungrier I get, the less revelant everythingseems.”Another striker complained of dizziness,lack of concentratiin, and fatigure. “I’mnot hungry, but I can’t climb stairs or dohomework, and I keep falling asleep inclass,” she said.By Jim HaefemeyerMore than 50 demonstrators jammedtwo small offices of the Center for UrbanStudies for an hour Monday afternoon todemand that the University “end destruc¬tion, start construction” in Woodlawn.Three protestors first locked themselvesinto Kelly 203, office of center directorJack Meltzer for several moments. Mel¬tzer said the three entered his office, butdid not take anything important.Others crowded into Kelly 201 and shovedwith University police violently and re¬peatedly. The demonstrators attempted tospread out into the back of the smallroom and to secretaries’ desks, but wereblocked by the police.When 20 people then entered Meltzer’soffice and began firing questions to him,he said, “Obviously you have me corneredwith just brute strength. I will nottalk under these circumstances. I’m onlyDavid TravisNINE TENTS remain on the main quadrangles and the fast continues to attest topersonnel protest to unfair disciplinary procedures.42 CROSSES planted in front of the ad building symbolize the 42 students expolled by last quarter's disciplinary committees.COLLEGE STUDENTS'Part-time Employment2 to VQP.M. Shift;OnTyREVITALIZATION presents ' Tickets sootCHUCK BERRY May 6,PHIL OCHS May i98:30 P.M. Mandel : 8:30 P M. Mandel Same Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSw PER HOUR4 day mm. per weekCAll 263-0618 Chicago;; Custom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount 752-6933f? ""V ?* <:0;"And to ice the whole thing off, the pay is good. ' .And the time off to do what you want to do is great.So instead of j ust sitting around thinking aboutwhat’s happening everyplace else, why not ' ■ v r J'ijust fly off to everyplace else andmake it happen.Call (312) 332-5053 ( anytime day or night/aboutbeing a TWA hostess right now. Because the only:way to get away to it all is to get above it all.. • ■ " ' '‘ HYou can fly.* The Coop.As a TWA hostess.;v Which means the fantastic places you can go ohTWA are limited solely by the confines of thisfantastic planet.{And the people you can mingle with are limited"fp/solely by ybij^Willihgness to mingle.^And the regular 9 to 5 hassle is no hasslebecause there’s no 9 to 5.'SM It’s like no job on earth$>An equdt opportunity employer - - ^Chicago Maroon/April 22, 1969UC Announces Plan for Day Care CenterThe University is building a day carecenter in the Social Services Center on 61stand Ingleside, Gilbert Lee, vice-presidentfor business and finance, announced Mon¬day. Lee spoke in response to radical chargesthat the University was only interested inbuilding a playground for the lab schooland not in construction of homes or a daycare center for local residents. Ground was broken for the building inOctober 1968, and is scheduled for com¬pletion in February 1970.A group of University employees recentlyformed the Campus Committee for ChildAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYRound Table‘ Not to take a stand is to stake astand.” said Martin Marty, professor inthe divinity school in conclusion of adiscussion with Rev. Water Ong, visitingprofessor of English and Richard Stern,professor of English on “The Universityof Chicago Round Table,” the weekly pub¬lic television program broadcast Mondaynight at 10 pm on WTTM, Channel 11.During the discussion, Rev. Ong said■ The place of criticism in our humanisticstudies has soared higher than it ever wasbefore. Criticism has become itself a maj¬or subject, and there are many reasonsfor this. One of them is the richness ofpresent-day productions when you see thecross-cultural picture in the world, theTHE QUADS from a different perspective. necessity to interpret all the differentcurrents that ars flowing, and to help peo¬ple stir themselves through it.”Ombudsman ReportStudents who have been eagerly await¬ing the second report of the student om¬budsman don’t have long to go. The lengthyanalysis of the events of winter quarterwill be released in a 16-page College Chron¬icle Thursday.Those with comments for the ombuds¬man. John Moscow, ’69, may save themuntil the following Monday, however. Mos¬cow leaves Thursday for a weekend con¬vention of the National Student Associationin Milwaukee.GoodwinRichard Goodwin, author and adviser toPresident John F. Kennedy and SenatorsRobert Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy,will speak Thursday at 8 pm in Judd Hall.Goodwin’s lecture, one in a series on“Centralization and Decentralization” giv¬en by the Center for Urban Studies, waspostponed from last week due to a delayin Goodwin’s arrival at O’Hare.Gutmann MemorialA committee has established a memorialfund for Roy Gutmann, killed last springshortly before he was to receive his bach¬elor’s degree.The committee composed of faculty,students and Gutmann’s family will useBlack Militants Leave Cornell Union;Three NU Hunger Strikers CollapseOver 100 black students armed withrifles and shot guns at Cornell Universityin Ithaca, NY, ended a 36 hour occupationof the student Union Sunday afternoon inprotest of the University’s alleged harass¬ment and punishment of black students inprevious demonstrations.The students, representatives of the cam¬pus Afro-American Society left the buildingshortly after 4 pm as 2000 onlookerscheered.Vice-president Steven Muller said on thesteps of the building that the administra¬tion had agreed to drop actions againststudents in previous disruptitons. In addi¬tion it had agreed not to press criminalcharges against the students and to as¬sume responsibility for any damage to thebuilding. He said, however, that this wasnot a capitulation.Ithaca police stated that the studentswere not violating laws regarding carry¬ing firearms as they seemed to be un¬loaded.The students had occupied the building Saturday, forcing 70 people out of thebuilding.At Northwestern three students collapsedSunday during their hunger strike pro¬testing disciplinary actions against 21 blackstudents who invaded a fraternity houseon March 4.The students, black males and a whitefemale, were rushed to the hospital fortreatment as the remaining 18 passed the100 hour mark of fasting since their pro¬test began last Wednesday.Former president of the freshman Win¬ston Cenac summed up the strikers’ posi¬tion shortly before he succumbed saying“Two people have collapsed already. Isthe administration going to wait until theremaining 19 fall over with cramps andpain?”On Saturday the students cut their rationof liquids down to one quart a day. Thereason for 21 students is symbolic in thatthis was the number of students whowere suspended and put on probation afterthe charge over the alleged abuse of ablack co-ed working in the fraternity house.BOOKS AND RECORDS ^INSANELY DISCOUNTED\ DYLAN—ONLY $3.89AS ARE ALL*5.98 RECORDSat the Student Co-OpReynolds Club Basement Ji INGRID JOHNSON, 70, was crownedMiss UC at last week's belated WashProm.the money to “bring to the University com¬munity each year something Roy came tolove here: a poetry reading, a concert,film or speaker; or to give assistance toanother deserving student in the humanitiesdivision.”Donations may be sent to the Roy Gut¬mann memorial fund, The University ofChicago, 5801 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, 60637. Care (CCCC) to study day care centers inHyde Park and surrounding neighborhoods.Their study showed that, even with the pro¬posed day care center included, facilitieswere still inadequate. Only three of 13 sur¬veyed, with room for 135 children, are openfrom at least 8:30 am to 5 pm, five days aweek, including lunch hour. Fees average$18.50 a week. The hours of the proposedcenter, which will house between 100-150children, are not yet determined.In the Monday statement, Lee said thecenter is designed to provide “a com¬prehensive day care program to make itpossible for children to receive adequatesupervision and training while mothers areemployed, including foster day care foryounger children and after-school care forolder children as well as the operation of agroup day care program in the Social Ser¬vices Center.”The CCCC emphasizes the need for hun¬dreds of saces for children, and 24 houravailibility (for those on the night shifts).They would also like the child care centerto be provided for free, possibly with thebacking of federal funsd, and should be¬come a standard university facility.Becky McIntyre, a library employee,urges all interested people to attendCCCC’s next meeting on Wednesday, April23, at 7:30 pm in the home of Lois Williams,5448 Dorchester, 324-4814.THIS DECK WAS $150Now ONLYwith walnut baseSONY SOUD STATE STERECORDER '250-A"Own a record player? With this Perfect Playmate you can add the superior quality andscope of Sony 4-track stereo tape recording at an extremely low price. The new solidstate Sony 250-A has all the features of our expensive stereo units.Connect it to yourpresent sound system and tape music directly off the air. . .make startlingly improvedcopies of yciur favorite stereo discs.. .accumulate an incomparable stereo tape library. Inthe short time that it has been on the market, the Sony 250-A has become the largestselling instrument of its kind in the world. Neatly mounted in its walnut finish base, theSony 250-A is the most beautiful complement to your sound system.AlmiCtaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500April 22, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3\ ■« IV?*F .h VVi, i1■>3.>-V: ;■ iii EDITORIALSFacultyStudents on this campus are in a bad way. Scared to takemilitant action, apathetic about non-militant action, they feel thatthere is nothing they can do. To some extent this is true. Whatthey really want, for the most part, is not to tear down this place,but to get the people who run it to listen to them, to recognizetheir existent as members of the community. But the people theyare trying to address themselves to have said, in effect, “We’renot going to pay attention to what you ask as long as you embarrassus and won’t agree with us. Quit bothering us and then we’ll thinkabout it. But don’t call us, we’ll call you.” As long as this insolentattitude exists, and as long as students remain afraid — justifiablyso — of excessive punishments under unfair conditions they cando nothing.It is largely up to the faculty now. The people who run thisplace (and despite the interminable evasiveness about who holdsthe “power,” somebody must be running the place) could not dis-The crucial thing now is todetermine the sentimentsof the faculty/miss the opinion of its faculty as lightly as those of its students.They couldn’t pretend that the faculty just doesn’t exist, thatthey’re not going through a passing phase of dementia.The crucial thing now is to determine the sentiments of thefaculty. Several faculty have issued statements supporting extempdisciplinary proceedures. On the other hand, a petition calling forthe use of American Association of University Professors (AAUP)guidelines in disciplinary proceedures is attracting increasing sup¬port.This leaves a large majority uncommitted. Perhaps they arenot uncommitted in their minds but as far as we know they aresilent members of the community.Forcing a polarization of issues can be an ugly thing, leavingmany people unsatisfied. However, when an issue is of criticalimportance, this becomes necessary. And there is every indicationthat the situation is becoming crucial. Although most students areunwilling and afraid to protest, it only takes fifty to start the wholebitter mess of discipline going again. If you don’t beleive it, take alook at today’s lead story.At this point faculty must take a stand. The faculty petitionis a moderate one. Anyone who does not feel completely at easewith current disciplinary proceedures ought to sign it. The Univer¬sity could be on the brink of another disruption — although it’sreally the same disruption. The outcome of the current situationmay very well be in the faculty’s hands now. We as students askthem if they can now remain silent.FSACCSLSeveral recent letters to the editor have dealt with the elec¬tions for the faculty student advisory committee on campus life(whew!) now in progress. Some say FSACCSL is a farce and thatno self respecting student should be a candidate or a voter in itselections. Some say it’s a farce and that to prevent it from beingan effective student lackey group, we should elect students whowould gum up its works.We see little point to the first argument. The administrationseems to get increasingly insidious as it goes along. In FSACCSLthey have not only provided a sop to student power advocates,they may also be counting on the fact that the only students whomay want to serve on the committee are those who agree with suchtokenism in the first place. It seems a shame to hand would-belackeys the chance to function on such a committee. Therefore wedo urge all students to vote, and to vote for the candidate you thinkis least suited to serve on the sort of committee Charles O’Connellenvisions.4/The Chicago Maroon/April 22, 1969 LETTER TO THE EDITORSHungerLast Tuesday, April 15, a group of aboutten graduate and undergraduate studentsbegan a hunger strike and tent-in on themain quadrangle of the University. In twodays, the number fasting reached 20, whereit has remained. Throughout the week, des¬pite rain and cold, 12-20 students (and onestaff member) have maintained their vigilin the tents. The purpose of starting thisdemonstration was to prove to the facultythat students were still vitally concernedwith settlement of the issues raised in theFebruary sit-in: student-power, in¬stitutionalized racism, and discriminationagainst women. Our focus in this action hasbeen what might be termed the context ofthese issues — the University as a commu¬nity.We find that a problem central to thecrisis presently facing the University isfailure of the faculty to work with the stu¬dents in an atmosphere of mutual respect.As students, we have been deeply impli¬cated in the controversy in a variety ofways. From our diversity of perspectives,we are unable to see how this institutioncan continue to merit its reputation as "agreat liberal University”, how it can betrue to its tradition of educational enlight¬enment, without constantly reexamining itspolicies in light of current social problems.It is not enough to boast of supportingNorman Thomas 30 years ago or even GeneMcCarthy until the convention last August.We think that the very essence of the “mis¬sion” of the University demands constantvigilance. Those who would claim affilia¬tion must keep relevant the process of dis¬covering old knowledge and seeking newknowledge. We are all — students, faculty,administration, and staff — inextricably in¬volved in this educational process.We are all responsible for its contin¬uation. For this reason it is in the best in¬terests of this institution (the benefits ofwhich we all receive) that we all partici¬pate in its governance. It is imperative thatthe division of power in decision-making bemade e^ual to the division of responsibilityand labor. This is the least concession thatcan be made to the recognition of the worldas it is now — not as it was during the NewDeal or the Great Society.How is the hunger strike relevant to theseissues and why do we camp in the center ofcampus? In the past three months the tac¬tics used to put forward the issues haveallowed for much distraction from dealingwith their substance. The students chargedthat the University was racist and the fac¬ulty and administrators countered that theTHi: CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothAssistant Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Board:Disciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussUndergraduates: Wendy GlocknerNational Student News: Con HitchcockGraduate Students: Rob CooleyNews Staff: Jim Hafemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Bruce Norton, Steve Cook, Paula Szewzyk,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, John Recht.Production Chief: Mitch Kahn. Assistant: Rob-ert Swift. (Zowie.)Sunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 18«2. Pub-t-S lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through-Cjr «■"»• • . '.0,. .... vv„"-\ i; , i out the regular school. /V year and intermittentlythroughout the summer,A'J’/C? except during the tenth.... week 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 Business office: Midway3-0800, ext 3265. Editorial: ext 3260. Distributedon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhoodfree of charge. Subscriptions by mail $7 peryear. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III.Subscribers to College Press Service. students were violent and coercive. Ourprotest is neither disruptive nor physicallycoercive. It is a very personal and hopeful¬ly compelling demonstration of our com¬mitment. We feel that by acting in such aheavy-handed manner during and after thepast sit-in, the faculty has shown a gravedisregard for careful examination and ac¬ceptance of the many possibilities for con¬tributions to the life of the University. Theyhave unilaterally rejected a good number ofpeople who had proven, among otherthings, their serious interest in Universityaffairs. The manner of rejection was soclosed-minded and even retaliatory as tocast doubt in turn upon the faculty's owndedication to the “mission” of the Univer¬sity. They are doing no less than “star¬ving” the institution by refusing to admiiand retain those who helped to make this avital and stimulating center of learning.We chose to hunger strike because wewanted to show that students are still verymuch concerned with these issues and thatsome effort must still be made to deal withtheir “demands.” This particular form ofprotest is particularly suited to point outthe need for all deliberate haste in comingto grips with the problems. More than 100members of this community were speedilyand unfairly tossed out. We feel a signifi¬cant step toward the solution of crucialmatters — the most outstanding of which isbreakdown of community — would be a sol¬id demonstration of the good faith of thefaculty. Willingness to submit their actionsof the past months to the scrutiny of theirfellow members of this community wouldbe evidence of such good faith.Until such time as the faculty shows thiswillingness by heeding the request of thehunger strikers, and other groups oncampus, to allow that work which they didin the name of the University to be exam¬ined and reassessed by those who were alsoaffected, we shall continue to fast andmaintain our vigil. The goals of the Univer¬sity and the society it is supposed to serverequire at least this much commitment.Mary Leighton, '69Tuesday, April 227cmEETINgTCollege Faculty, Q7antreU Hill, 3:40 p.m.LECTURE "One Man's View of computer Science" andthe "Computer as an Experimental Tool," Richard W,Hamming, head of computing science department re¬search department, Bell TELEPHONE Laboratories.Rl C-113, 4 pm.DOC FILMS: "La Marseillaise," Cobb Hall, 8 pm.LECT8.RE "The other Side of the Grape BOYCOTT/Jack Angell, AMERICAN Farm BUREAU. Ida No6esHall, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: Folk and square dancing, Inter¬national House assembly hall, 8 pm,FOLKSONG WORKSHOP: instruments and songs of allpeoples, hitlel, 8 pm.RECITAL: Ed2ard Mondello, organist. Works by Bach,Buxtehude, Williams, Vierne, and Widor. RockefellerMEMORIAL ChSpel, 830 p.m.Wednesday, April 23SEMINAR: Clinical Seminar on Cancer of the Uterus:Diagnosis, Treatment and Complications. Frederick PZuspan, chairman, department of obstetrics d gyne¬cology, co-ordinator, CLI, Dora Lee Hall, 9 am-3 pm.concert: Performance of the Schubert quintet in C maiorand string quartet movement composed by a UC stu¬dent. Mandel Hall, 12:30 pm.LECTURE: "Operations Research in Action/' E. Leon¬ard Arnoff, principa land director of Operations Re¬search. Business East 103, 1 pm,LECTURE: "Structural and Functional Properties ofMitochondrial Problems in Neurospora and Yeast,'Dor O. Woodward, Stanford. Abbott Hall 310, 3 pm.BASEBALL: University of Illinois, Circle Campus, staggFIELD, ?:30 pm.MEETING Division of the physicSI sciences, Eckhart133, pm. -LECTURE: "The Development of Ottoman Historiogra¬phers," Fahir Iz, NATO Visiting Professor. Cobb 201,3:30 p.m.track; lewis College. Stagg Field, 4 pm.SEMINAR: Grant Smith, department* Of psychology,McMaster University. Experimental Biology Building,117, 4 pm.FILM: '‘Cosmic ray," and others. Cobb hall, 7:. .% !ND'/430 pm.FOLKSINGING: Folksong workshop, Hillel. 8 pm.folk dancing; british and Scandinavian, Country DANCERS, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Thursday, April 24CBW WORKSHOPS: Hear Marvin Stodolsky, depattmentof microbiology, discuss the Biological Arsenal, 2 pm,and DJnielanzen, biology depSrtment on THE Ecology of MasDefoliation, 3:15. Ida Noyes EAST Lounge.LECTURE "Visionary Art," Michael Polanyi, Oxtoro.LECTURE: "GenerSI and Site-specific Integrative recombination by Phage LJmba,", H 7CHOLS, Univesity of Wisconsin. Rickets 1, 4 pm, .FOLK DANCING: Israeli folk dancing, teaching anarequests, Ida Noyes hall, pm. ,. ..LECTURE: "Israeli Writers in Search of Their Ident -ty," AVRAHAM B. Yehoshua, isrSeli writer in resi¬dence, University of Iowa. Hitlel, 8 pm.FORUM Oh the responsibility of scientists. DiscussantsTheodore Rosebury, formJr Chief Airborne ,n,ec,i'Project, Fort Detrick, and Richard Levins, Biology uepartments. Rosenwald 2, 8 pm.1 tWHAT CHICAGORADIO STATIONHAS THE MOSTLOYAL LISTENERS?■ auto©leurope| Im ueu■ Gra^^AveSTUDENT/FACULTY GRANT ProgramSpecial rates in European overseas travelfor purchase, lease, & rental of cars. Fordetails and brochure write: UniversityGrant Dept., Auto Europe, 1270 SecondAvenue, New York, New York 10021. *II0) i : mmm■i\J Special!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!/0% Stuiient Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until to¬morrow if you call ustoday.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411BLACKFRIARS presents an original musicalbased on the life of TOLSTOYCHARGE April 25, 26May 2, 3Tickets $2.50, $2.00Stud/Fac discountOn sale atMandel HallBox OfficeSEE SOMETHING NEW AND REFRESHING THIS WEEK Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.ATTENTION PHOTOGRAPHERSWe are offering you plea¬surable weekend work pho¬tographing college parties; thepav is good and previous ex¬perience is not required; call685-7601 and ask for Bob.RESCHEDULED LECTURERICHARD GOODWINAPRIL 24, 19698:00 P.M.-JUDD HALLREMAINING LECTURESCENTRALIZATION VS. DECENTRALIZATIONAPRIL 28 KENNETH BOULDING. ECONOMIST, UNIVERSITY OF COLORADOMAY 1 SCOTT GREER. URBAN SOCIOLOGIST, NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYMAY 8 JAMES FARMER. ASS'T. SECRETARY, DEPT. HEALTH, EDUCATION & WEL¬FAREMAY 15 FLOYD HYDE. ASS'T. SECRETARY, DEPT. HOUSING & URBAN DE¬VELOPMENTPLACE: BREASTED HALL, ORIENTAL INSTITUTE1155 E. 58TH STREET (S.E. CORNER 58TH & UNIVERSITY)TIME: 8:00 P.M.ADMISSION FREE OF CHARGE 1. 1 ■■ 'iiniiiyat DOC FILMS this weektonight: Renoir’s LA MARSEILLAISEChicago Premiere! 8pm/Cobbtomorrow: Experimentals! by Connor,Hindle, McLaren 7:15/Cobb/9:30Thursday: Billy Wilder’s LOVE INTHE AFTERNOON 8pm/CobbFriday: Resnais/Robbe-Grillet LASTYEARATMARIENBAD 7:15/Cobb/9:30BRING DOWN DARKNESSa film by TC Foxwith: Robert Edelstein’s THE BOYS AND THEIR GIRLSand F. Herba’s PM A STRANGER HERE MYSELFApril 27th and 28th a 3 Roads FilmTfee SerfsThe Serfs stand proud nowIt is their landSounds of their livingAre the sounds of your lifeListen, bound to and transferredwith the soilNatural men singing of unrealizeddreamsSinging of love and joyThe Serfs, almost free nowBut never free of lifeMaking their musicOf this place, this timeBound to our daysThe SerfsKarly Bird CafeOn Capitol.CfyutoCApril 22, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5(The Maroon Classified Ads)LIFE'S LIKE THAT, YOU KNOWation. — Folksinging every Tuesdaynight at 8:00 P.M. AT Hiltel. - . FOTAday and Sunday nights April 25, 26,and 27, Shoemakers Hoiiday is hav-•-ing a Saturday matinee"1APARTMENT WANTED: 3 or moreb e d r o o m s. Occupancy; anytime.PRICE NO OBJECT. Carl/SunshineFA 4-9500 leaye message | : ' jEDITORIAL r ASSISTANT, full-time.Secretarial skills, U of C PressfeCall,Mr. Fowler, ext. 333'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 AD: Come with ormail payment to/-The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Roomi 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, till: 60637. Mail-in forms now available at /Cen¬tral: Information’. Reynolds/Cluband all dormitories. . C £» jNo ads will be taken over thephone or billed. ’DEADLINES They'll sendTravel ServiceShoemaker's Holiday is a Maroonfront organization—see it April 25,26, (plus a matinee) and 27.Esperanto notes are loan-proof.CLERK TYPISTS: opening in Uni-:versify Office. Daily, M-F,-12-5 p.m.-General, office ability. An interestingjob for a student wife. Call Ext.4444. An Equal Opportunity Employ-er. -/ /■//■- ,/;’/// mmen Hyde Park area?,WRITE:D. Borroff 520 Calhoun HalLiU C;,Cinti., Ohio 45221; (4755430’-Summer only.) FOTA — May 1-17 WOW! NEW DORMS RESIDENTS — ifyou're frumious with dorm food orcan't make Supper some nite,transfer your meal to the Band-ersnatch. get 60 cents credit plus 10cents towards any drink. Any nitebut' Sun. or- Wed. — check at thedesk the day before.Grapes make you virile.Series Body Consciousness &. DanceIda Noyes, 3rd fL;/T.’/Th. 1:30 Be¬ginners welcome.'.FOR RENTBeautiful broad wanted for GangBang. Call Frank. MU: 4-9573. v 5: ,2’ 2 rooms,f furnished ,i.: with'.‘v..ster-eo TV, 3 blocks from Quad withparking, to.'sublet from May to Sept.1,.,T.4|or portion, sfor $100 - month ./Ca11 288-Right arm Pretty sinister isn't it. 0031 ; _ , .Wote /Blau;-; Michaels,/ Pollack /‘for;radical change,-In- Faculty Students;/Life Committee ,1,,’ ' keep,your;;wicksELECTIONS Remember;trimmed.’ • BUTTERFIELD — MAGIC SAMdance tickets now on s$le $2.50each Mandel Hall box Office ITA M. to 5 P.M/THE PHOENIX (U.of C Student lit¬erary magazine)- is back! Typed/contributions of verse and offers of^artwerkvandfphotos'should^bei.sub-■mitted / by?. May;; 3;- to: Phoen|x,„ Ida nigms, a r.M.,,50 centsjpar„eg»Prof, man: RadiOdy/&tftv^?&;yrs experience, seekSint^^imale companion®n#S&r^psych, fencing,bowling, English .1 ,t >'/'days until 12:30Sfah'^5«i/:lfP.M. - 248-6952 J■ - " m:4-JSummer- sublet, furnished;:/* roomsand porch/.’;$90. mo./ length nego¬tiable, 955-6232 ?/,:FpFSEriday/s^ipa-,per, Wednesday -at./iL/Fpr Tues- ;day's.paper, Friday at S.V'i |j§.FOR FURTHER INFORMATIONPhone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.% Improve ytorld trade. Esperanto.RIDERS WANTED Sublet V s rm apt 52nd Kenwood thissummer, with option ‘till-;/3une‘ .'70:BU 8 6669 - -r ,.•/••‘To./ Oregon before May1 T' Peter/" -Kranz, Rosenwall; 103 324-1632 ; 684-->4n9_ ' :2 bdrm. Hyde Park apt. 363-5935; rm r- 2400 E.,7?S. 2nd fl-lg. apt.Uni, Bus goes by. RE 4-7332- v*PEOPLE FOR SALE Butterfield, Magic||^|Light Show,. May.^l^^lTickets ONLY! .$2:,SQMMandel Hall BOXloft^be a sell-Out. No ficketsjdoor.COUNTERREVOLUTIONSauthentic. :chinese. /cookingtaught in iovelyliChinese; home//T.ui-tion and mate rials ;.:$30.-,; B eg i n /May /19. Limited enrollment.,-7;, per class.324-8070 : . /This OTHER side of/the:Grape//8tonight Ida Noyes-— SCAF:; * - ; Furnished /rm, 493-3328.Rooms’available now and 'summer57th & Woodlawn PL 2-9647.. * - At PRE MED .00104/';'//C.F. Kttle, Dept Surge//diovascular sugery i O',*'24, 7• ?t 2 P.M. BillmgsgpiDON'T DROP/T/HjMiltMichaels, Pot»ack/3ByROOMMATES WANTEDFORTRAN EXPERT: - 3 years ex¬perience:; on 7094 IBSYS/FMS. Also360 JCL., Consulting at $5 hr.. Call-: i—* f —, ' Own room in nice apt near lake for;May I do your typing? 363-1104. fern over 21 beg June.-. Furn or. un-furn 493 2250 eves. . /’/Y~ ROOMMATE WANTED? male gradsdt to room with 2 others.' Large 7rm apt. on 53rd near lake Only $160per mo May-Oct. Option’on next yr:363-3546 * - , , dt* '2 grads, own';, rm; .$46 mon.5327 Dor¬chester, 643-4821 after 6 P.M. 15 rm . sum ;sublt 2 bdrm balconyKenwood nr 53rd furn 324-36233 -4 b d r ms u ms b I tW od I w; nr5 3 r d,- /furn porch $160 643-2752Large bedroom '-in , basement • ■apt.,*/Hyde Park and 53rd.: Semi-ficticious .roommate. $55 month. 363-27S2.->j3//g% Since their inceptiph‘S^^afffi|®have met with . hpayy^^oi/^s^J^pression. At the Sacrament^stration, severalon false charges.Vdf^Su»8k/gte-,^^^tions; andt ic ipation in the demonst^ri,t.:o%/a®a reported led,,. in'rpast®p/vocation of his paroie|!onl.p. "7grounds, and his subsequent.-/ , '> »’On October 28, -1967,-*;~(|ak*i.ind' 'piq>John Frey stopped <i •• •Huey Newton was :a;,passe1j@|^^r-dered Newton to oet^iiiiwppi^Tfe^^by police car/ Thr iincident are stillHun_ciMi|* .fitiir.-iiWresulted in Frey's-TdeafSi;HINES, HIS PlGMAtff MTiSiiWOUNDED. Huey, ^#1#ed in the abdomen, and£wars;Sh?Fg^Mwith Frey'sdieted by a Califbrnia^i^aqiS.'and is now spending^Ur^f/f^;^^^meda County. Jail.:g/T.Hfe4'!iiN®‘3giE%MENT SPARKED-^ggC:"Huey" . CamoaiQ'ri;^wf?^t- fa’.■going on. The campaignfefK)■; ;'.«fi;;|goals: to educate the/pfopfe ,ii^jit>tthe Black Pan-thers';V^ii^:jfe«^a'i'ife^funds for Huey's :def.ense^T.feg eStjc-paign emphastzes|ithe^msS&$ture of Huey's inij;ftmr/-;'- illegality of his Grand^ife i 'fiari; |and has gained incredibii*ig|;f.t.. fivwthe Bay area MgML .• f|Why was” that woman jauqT^/..;/'/ fWhy wasn’t j. frese'laugB^? i— '. ' y4t%-,,w ICOMPLETE SET OF. MAROONSFROM LAST QUARTER/AH you re-searchers. and historiographensK/nowis your/ chahce to get this valuable:sit-in'history, i.1Only/ $5/from".the capi¬talist'/’exploiters 'in-the Maroon Busi¬ness /Office, 1212/E: 59th. St. 60637. Spcaious. 7; rms, 2 ba.y|,Shore., Adults.,RE 4-2813.Roomer wanted, to” share .5 rm apt.avail/ immed. 7825 Yates/. Mrs/ R.Gonsky before 6 p.m. RE 4-7332.SHARE Trg 6 rm apt w 2 femalegrad students — call 288-3694. ; ■•///fNoyes Hall. 1212 E. 59th St. Improve MAROON trade. Buy acandleFOTA — May 1-17; WOW!STEREO COMPONENTS at MUSIC-CRAFT . Dynaco, A-T./- KLH, Dualat finest prices. Special savings onKenwood & Sansu'i./Campus, rep Bob■ Tabor-324-3005 reward ;// : $225.00. Bach Stradi-.yerfOW-V NO. 6095 SILVER STO-L E N TRUMPET. Call SchilkeTrumpet Co. . WA 2-0570 or PaulMeng BU 8-1100 /BLOOD, SWEAT;;/ - / ”/ /' /AND TEARSONLY $3.19 Israeli Folk Dancing is now at HiltelHouse every Thursday.Intellectual male * seeks meaningfulrelationship with, attractive®gii*r.:248-6952 1 2 A.M. 3— P;M.'Ws' J1965 MG-B;- /rebuilt/:,ehgine; .. brg;wire wheels/; good . condition; : 39,000■n,iee call Frank Leeds CA 5-7022weekdays or 684-6469 Bobby' King/and . Fred Betow areALL-STARS &|3. J-&. £ f *;"Notes Port St. Francis'', too*. Band;ersnatch. Wed, nite 1 FOTA May 1-17 WOW1965 Pontiac Lemans;.: Hard’op auto¬matic, power./brakes/' pbwer ,steer%ing,. AM FM one. owner,’well main¬tained, best offer over $800. RonMoore 643-0304 ■■ < - _ As afe/all|||4.98 records Walk in. Speak out. 1 hr: Esperantocrash,class 28th 102 7 P.M. ,FOTA — May 17, WOW!After Love in The' Afternoon (docfilms) make your, way to the Courthouse. /■ ■. /*, ■ ■ ■ 1 Shoemaker's Holiday has so manydouble entendres, you think you'reseeing two plays. - '//•/ .jr-i,'; WRITER S' WORKSHOP PL 2-8377-!CHGO'S OWN SWINGERSsend C$t - for .-52 page -illust. mega-‘zine:100s of..personals: MKS. Box3806. CHGO 60654.Sent in a’/. plain brown, wrapper‘clearly 'marked PERSONAL SEX•MATERIAL , * ‘a/,. fat the Student Co-OpReynolds Club BasementUSEDVOLKSWAGENS'61 Bug y t li£ ^'64 Bag, ", ^/- a i:'66 VW fastback very clean/ | / -167 Bug very clean ‘ *7“Reasonable and haggelable LesiyImports, 2235 S/ Mich 1 gan 326-255O. '/ Have l’got a dealFor. you! How often' ha ve you heard.thaf;,iine be f 0 re ?We 11;; i t's’ tr u e. seatsfor ,;youF Hgw oftenhave ybu” heard'that tine before?.(',Wetl,-it's true. Seats$2.00 not: .3.00 2 50 .as advertised onthe;' poster/. T here !s .a Iso a stud/fac:-discount April ,25. 26, May 2,3.Tickets at" Mandel -.Hall: Box .'Office.1949 HARLE Y/ DAVIDSON./ Fulfillyour 'childhood dreams -and buy this;completely /overhauled and restoredpower symbol.;,Ride it/to-believe it: 2 men ' to share spacious 6 rm aptnr 53rd st Cheap 643-4821. Clean refinished' apt. nr.- . lake E:0f/Exchange. 6 rooms/mod.'-kitchen&■ bath, garage/avail." Nr*Sl‘.C/greats/'pad for 4U of C/types ,$200 rnonr,? Read TR UE : forqn'. news 'Esperanto.Iff It",wall/ good enough for Queen•Elizabelh/it/should be good enough'for ;you -- .see Shoemakers Hoi iday ,.Apr, 25. 26. 27. . gv^By the RENAISSANCE PLAYERS*^llpAt the Cloister Club, Ida Noyes HallJ1212 East 59th Stieet ' ^■26c\ 2-at EIGHT THIRTY&nd TWO -THIRTY on the 26th;/196) Merc '6G£y.|.iclearian'ew*tiresNicalliBU 8 9106 after/7 P I/. Want 'someone»tp/take; May//lst 'rlease‘//.and sublet:-toCme thru June. 2'/z rms"fton*'E 53rd*St,j,a: few^'doors fromH yid'e?;P a1Fk>po~w%% 0 b.b/y;//f/;Hou/e:;Syitable::for9couplb‘br/indiv!d-fiSsi/Ual $9U'mo'.fWiil' relinquish; ahytihfie’■?/after June 1. Call 363-1328 ^.Summer sublet,: large-4 room, furn-/'ished air cond Apt • for $153 mo ut-^ii:ities ;paidis/WaIkV to / campti%#684-'»788 .sjtt&aakisi ... ua*>1 :WANTED TO RENTWright-sfy lel/FR'A I RE j|,Hb U S E §4.E /South Shore/:il0;;'mih''to /Campus/via:,C'';:W.,1'y:‘:buS/^7;#;iin/3{j,;bth//targbi^KREWAR'D;:-;$50'rbward^tybS/ FIFTY!lot, trees. Low- inf; F H A, mrtge avail: A/CAP I TALI ST OOLLAR S) for/findihgfSX3857 or288-7449. -, . ;• '-la 4 or 5 bedroom ant. or house FOTA/- 'May 1 17. WOW!The United States is the only coun¬try that progressed from barbarism'to dec ade nee without passingthrough a civilized stageDouble mattress $10“363-0551PEOPLE WANTEDDance fo’ the CHICAGO ALL-STARBLUES BAND at Pierce Tower Fri.7:30 P.M.- : . ' -.U-y:5 ;,responsible^ idealistic .'-stdnts'&heedfp5-6 ,rm Hy Pk apt. to, start *coll:f:'ective Rent from June., Mr si- Sa r n a V /271-5794 aft:Male '/for yr • round/"teach pos./ -,!elem gradrs) in, "H P — BA/needed, eff'*ct.X immed. -'$9000-'yr;^59ieave';/n®'rhb'^aTO?^^&>^^f6r/i;Bob1/ -Herman, 643-7300 fei PERSONALSEsperanto Banned m Rumania•iTbisfoy-'is/part-of/theestabiishrnent'B tackfriars7:a<t.jfngfvp^t^?~M./D/ 8.- wife desire ’roomy I or 2bdr: unfurn- flat or apt. within walk¬ing distance of, u,C.. Hosp for/June1 -23. 955-7180 eves: or wkend. ,Four/films -at the- Gargoyle “ News- /-"reel;f§ky>jv the/Chicken,.; .'Cyranos de-Bergerac :50c April 23, 8 P M. : ..* - *- «v,_Come hear-Avraham Yehoshua'f priz^&iAUDIO RECORDING-;ASST/ Hi Fior' home-tape baCkground/lto record^campus/:lectures, r 12-15" "hrs per■week;|SS2.06/.petr/hb/§a'nd/up/''Office1of Radio and TV, X3182. / Not my establishmentI -wish/he were - Sonya Tolstoy/ , .NicholasHOLIDAYWant;4 bdrm apt. Juhe or !Sept Call:684-0980.- : : - . ■ winning . ,Israeli writer, /'Doctoralj/work in lcomparative literature at U.i.of Paris. , ., . ..Ml never be •/’—•Leo Tolstoy.Thip Fine Arts Committee See CHARGE, r a musical- drarnabased on the life of Tolstoy.. Coming soon: FOTA .; .May 17 , . .'../::/',;:'®?:'-:/‘Look for our schedule of over 50..^events “soon to appear in the Ma- •!/ roon . - ... -CANDLES* —v all this ^week in /the//Maroon Business office/%/fT"FOTA — /VVay/l-l/WOW/Folksong •i-Wbrkshbp^;IS.ey.er-y*t:Ues'-iday night§iat/i8;00/p'.m.;: .HiilelSVbuse571 S/.Wood lawn , , . -- ^aj&iCan YOU say :Crap; in/ Esperanto/// Louis, and- Dave Myers are ALLSTARS ...//■:A two-hour collection of the finestexperimental and documentaryfilms being produced by exciting,new student filmmakers.Loyola L niversitv %,nnegan:;Aud,tor,um ,/•:• * >N. Shrridan R<I.I hurs<Ia\ — I riclav—SaturdayApnl 2 \. 25. 26 7:OO & 9:30 P. VI.•S1.50 students—$2.00 general271-3QOO Ext 617 CANDLES — out-of-sight colors and’shapes. Maroon Business-;Officev%-:!i| FOTA —/May 1-17 WOW!Did you hear the one about CicelyBumtrinket-whotartsin.her-.sleep?See Shoemakers sHoliday/. April. 25,26, and 27. The RIGHT Wing is alive and eatingGRAPES.— tonight at.8 Ida NoyesHalf SCAF.. /After La Marsellaise tonight at DocFilms, have a beer at the/Court¬house. //••? 4%/:,/’ That stands for Students for Capitalism/and Freedom , They look , likethey sound. //' *FOTA — May 1-17 WOW!COMING SOON: FOTA: May 1-17/..:/■■ .,///■;_Look for our schedule of over 50events soon to pear in the MA¬ROON. /:STUDENT,i/DISCOUNTS ON RENT:ING AND; BUYING CARS IN Eu¬rope. Call /.Larry Goldberg 493-8863FRI' at pierce Tower —Chicago All-STAR Blues. Band 8:30 P M./v CANDLES,’— all this: week; .in the.Maroon Business office. J Written /;v Thomas Dekkfr Cjent‘Directed by Thomas Busch.Read . Esperanto w, dicfionaryxiri5|l?ff^hr Crash class 28th C102 7 P.M.Wednesday . —, movie nite at the :• Bandersnatch. ; Sometime this Wed. :Robef. Benchley's "How to Take aVacation'' will burble across thew a be.//-’%/ t s*r „ ‘ * S\ /Louis land Dave^ Myers /are/;' ALL*/STARS > it! $& J m iFOTA.... My Dependable Service~’ on your Foreign Car:*/:/■ ' '-/■ i Pt "in .t << (I in an . _ .K tor\ tidiiu-d mechaimsli.iw iDin’t d us.- Om'c k'ci vcr\ k c. Open til H PAL,r>" -/ *•*• ./••-f-nin^s \>\ .ij.pt . -,: ...".Hyde J?irk'Auto Service • 7646 S/Stony Island */734-o393 Cut - I a n gtime; ESPERANTO;Looking for :a /groovy apt/ for thesummer? 2’/j-rm apt. available June15 to Sept. 15. Comes complete withcat. Call 643-3088.:•:-•■'•■—:■/,/- .—FOTA — May.1-17 WOW! /:/;// ^Tickets may be purchased at the DESK itr'f.tl^S'. REYNOLDS CLUB at 57th Street and £: i./; /j/ University Avenue and at the door of‘j • the THEATRE at a cost of f 1.1$ -$1.25 for students./' v / .The Right Wing is alive and eatingGRAPES/—, tonight, at 8 Ida NoyesThat stands for Students for Capi¬talism and Freedom. They look likethey sound. ' / /For all you social butterflies whoare doing something Friday, Satur- Join the Ad Hoc Radical StudentCommittee for the end of alien-6/The Chicago Maroon/April 22, 1969'PLANTS ALIVE!HARPER COURTirgmatas MAIL ORDERS NOW! Beg. Apr. 28 5 WEEKSONLYBEST PLAY OF 1968 T*-A CRITICS AWARD'TONY*' AWARDLIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.Telephone 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueSHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed reams from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveLIBERATIONIN THIS MONTH'STHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO AFFAIRAtS0 * Rte^won LynMUNI I ARMING WHITE RACISM IN PHILADELPHIA My Steve GoMNEW US STRATEGY IN VIETNAM by Deve OettmgwMEDICAL IMPERIALISM by Robb burls**US T V IN LATIN AMERICA by Jen FrappierBRINGING THE MOVEMENT TO THE UNIONS by J*m MettetWTTIfUM.MSpmiW nuOwn twtoscrwtion S6 Send to B “VERY FUNNY, VERYBRILLIANT. A MOSTREMARKABLE ANDTHRILLING PLAY.”—Clive Barnes,N.Y. TimesStudent RatesGroups 15 or moref^seNCRiratz.a Nil GuildeNsteRN^AReDead1“A SUPERB PLAY.”-“A SOLID -BIG TIME HIT!” —Life Mag.“A STIMULATING, FUNNY COMEDY.”-chaPman. NewsPRICES: EVES. (8:30): Mon. thru Thurs. Orch. $6.0Cf; Mezz.$6.00, 4.50; 1st Bale. $5.50, 4.50; 2nd Bale. $3.50. Fri. & Sat.Orch. $7.50; Mezz. $7.50, 5.50: 1st Bale. $6.50, 5.50; 2nd Bale.$4.00, 3.50. MATS. (2 PM): Wed. St Sat.: Orch. $5.50; Mezz.$5.50, 4.50; 1st Bale. $5.00, 4.50; 2nd Bale. $3.00. Enc.stamped self-addressed env. to Shubert Theatre, 22 West Mon¬roe, Chicago. For Group Sales and Special Student TheatreGroups call Blanche, CE 6-8240. Tickets also at 212 N. Mich¬igan and all Ward’s, Field’s & Crawford Stores.CIIIIDCDT 22 W. Monro* BOX OFFICE OPENSjnUPCItl CE 6-8240 MON., APRIL 21Watts, Jr., N.Y. Postauthorized BMC5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, Illinois 60615foreign car hospital & clinic, inc. aure You Need a Psycho-Social MoratoriumBut...WHAT YOU REALLY NEEDTHE sPERFECT SUMMEREMPLOYMENT(It should be outdoors, be challenging and excitingand should contribute to your career goals, beworthwhile AND be financially rewarding)WHAT WE REALLY NEEDArePerfect Summer EmployeesWe are a non-profit Inter-racial Co-ed summer camp located inthe Poconos and serving the Greater New York City area, sup¬ported by the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies.We have openings for experienced general counselors, andspecialists skilled in sports, nature St pioneering, arts Stcrafts, music, drama, etc.We have beautiful facilities on a private lake. We have veryhigh standards for staff, but we have excellent salaries for.those qualified. You must be intelligent; ydu must be eager towork with children; be interested in education, psychology,social relations, or planning a career involving work with peo¬ple; be mature, be willing and able to work hard, and be sensi¬tive to the needs and wants of children of all backgrounds.The length of employment is ten weeks, including a precamptraining session. CAMP POYNTELLE-RAY HILL for children8 to 14 years of age; CAMP LEWIS for teens 14 to 16 years in'x work and performing arts program.We still have openings for male counselors 19 yearsand up, and female counselors 23 years and up.For Information and Application contact!Steven Diner5221 S. Kenwood Ave.Chicago, 111., 60615 684-3744<2ORDON'SR LSI A UP ANTDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 r. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVERI RI E WEDDING CATALOG„ TOR THE BRIDE- TO-BEEverything for the wedding and re-cj-ption. Wedding invitations, gifts forthe bridal party, novel decorations,personalized bride's cake knife, toast¬ing glasses, napkins, matches anditems unusua*’ exci*'n* personalizedems. Creations by Elaine Dept.4655 W. 71st St. Chicago, 111. 60629 Student Co-Op50% Saleon all Humanities & Social Sciences Hardbound BooksSociologyAnthropologyHistory\LiteratureFictionPoetryetc. EducationLawBu sinessPolitical ScienceMusicPhilosophyetc.we have what you’ve been looking forHours: 9-10 Daily Sale starts today, Tuesday, April 221 ! h ' : 1 -1 :• 3 V . i•t'$ - V April 22, .1969/The Chicago Maroon/7• ' . * y, < •‘•'•'A1. .•♦‘iftin *A '• ■Ltjpri V- QLike to know what someone else says aboutthe new RENAULT 16 and RENAULT 10? MATHROAD TEST Magazine made a special issuejust about RENAULT - the bad as well as thegood./£Qir\UNIVERSITY"\ OF CHICAGO/\jtrduvesy K «1 BASS: A Igebra ic K - / heory1 DIEUDONNE: Foundations of Modern k8 Analysis■ KAPLANSKY: Infinite Abelion Groups K■ LEFSCHETZ: Topology 3■ PASSMAN: Permutation Groups 3flj ZYGMAN: Trigonometric Seriesk VON NEUMANN: Rings of Operators \i CHEVALLEY: Theory of Lie Groups 1| GAUSS: L ntersuchungen i her 18 Hohere A rithmetikCall or write with your name and addressand well send you a copy of the complete issuefree. 5 i| SEE THE MATHEMATICS SECTION |! FOR THESE & OTHER TITLES iimports, <tfnc.2235 SO. MICHIGAN AVE.. CHICAGO. ILL. 60516TEL 324*2550 at theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREELLIS &5STH