! Volume 78, Number 26 The University of Chicago Tuesday, January 6, 197013 Suspended After Hutch DisordersCrowd Fills Reopened Bookstore granted a collective defense were given in¬dividual hearings.The eleven all chose public hearingsheavily guarded by University security inthe C S Mott building, 1225 E 60 St. At thehearings, most of which took no longer thanten minutes, the defendants read an identi¬cal SDS statement.Emphasizing thj political significance oftheir actions, they did not deny that theyphysically blocked entrance to the C-Shopand Hutchinson Commons. Part of their de¬fense stated “The University found us guil¬ty of fighting racism, we found them guiltyof practicing it.”Only in the case of one defendant accusedof kicking a secretary were further eye-wiit-ness statements submitted countering thecharge which “was resolved in her (the de¬fender's) favor,” the committee reported.Five suspended Students living in Univer¬sity dormitories have received letters fromthe housing office requiring them to vacatetheir rooms by Thursday since they are nolonger eligible for student housing. Shouldthey appeal the committee’s decision, theywill be allowed to remain while their ap¬peal is pending.The five students in University housingplan to stay despite eviction notices in or¬der “to maintain contact with the studentbody.” Most suspended students plan tostay around the University to audit coursesand continue their work in the movement.Some have made special arrangements withtheir teachers to continue work while undersuspension and receive grades for it later.Suspended students are also barred fromemployment in any capacity by the Univer¬sity, director of personnel Fred Bjorling ex¬plained. He cannot hire people whose ac¬tions would have subjected them to dis¬missal if they had been University employ¬ees, he said.Some demonstrators were surprised bythe sentences, explaining that they had notcontemplated discipline while planning thedemonstration. Others expected stiff pun¬ishment because of the political nature oftheir actions.The committee’s report explains “twoquarters (suspension) was decided upon asmoderate under the circumstances, beingsomewhere in the middle range of suspen¬sions of persons charged with last year’sobstruction of the University’s operation.”Members of the disciplinary committeeare law professor Jo Desha Lucas, com¬mittee chairman; physics professor Her¬bert Anderson; and professor of romancelanguages and literature Bernard Wein¬berg.David TravisSPRING: There are seven subtle differ*ences between the point now and Inspring. Can you find them?Steve AokiPUSH, SHOVE, CLAW: Students line up to purchase books in Stagg Field Labs,new home of the bookstore which was gutted in October. By Carl SunshineThirteen students have been suspendedfor their militant November boycott of Hut¬chinson Commons and the C Shop. Threeother students originally summoned forparticipation in the demonstration had theircases dropped for lack of evidence beforethe disciplinary hearings finals week lastquarter that resulted in the suspensions.Nine students received two-quarter sus¬pensions, two received three-quarter sus¬pensions, and one received a seven-quartersuspension, all to begin this quarter. Thethirteenth student’s suspension was sus¬pended. A report issued by the three-manLucas disciplinary committee explainedthat the longer suspensions resulted fromthe students’ previous participation in otherdisruptive activities.At a meeting Monday night, most sus¬pended students announced plans to appealtheir punishments. One senior has alreadyhad her suspension reduced to one quarterin a meeting with dean of students,Charles O’Connell.A special amnesty committee was chosenat the meeting to write a pamphlet explain¬ing their position, and the whole SDS chap¬ter on campus will contact students andfaculty to win support for their position.They see the suspensions as a racist act bythe University directed against those tryingto fight that racism.After committee members walked out ofa scheduled collective defense meeting De¬cember 2 because of allegd disturbances,a smaller room holding 25 spectators wasselected for hearings and all students in¬cluded the eleven who had originally beenBy Nancy Chisman“Our distinguished bookstore is onoeagain open, for business, right by the atom¬ic pile — it took them 20 years to get theradioactivity out,” a professor remarked.Most students and professors howeverseem simply relieved that after a monthand a half of scrounging for books and sup¬plies there is finally a bookstore, thoughsmaller and slightly less centrally located.Three weeks ago, the 1000 E 57 street en¬trance to the temporary bookstore in StaggField Labs was little more than a hole inthe wall. Though 2000 square feet smallerthan the former bookstore, which was dam¬aged by fire October 23, the present loca¬tion offers all the services of the old book¬store including lunchcounter and typewriterrepair service. The stacks and cashier areais cramped into a noticeably smaller spacethan the old bookstore’s. Dozens of studentsmilled through the stacks, January 5, try¬ing to find books in the typical confusion ofthe first day of the quarter. A girl leavingthe store described the crowding as a situ¬ation where “You have to say ‘excuse me’a lot.” Periodically, the overhead lightswould go out, plunging the stacks into shad¬ow, probably due to someone brushingagainst the switches.CorrectionThe headline appearing in the De¬cember 5 news issue reading “UWAFinds No Discrimination” was in¬correct. Hie committee on Universitywomen chaired by Mrs Bernice New-garten found no discrimination in thedenial of tenure to Judith Long Laws,assistant professor of sociology. UWAis the University Women’s Associ¬ation, an association of graduatewomen, and did not concur with theNewgarten committee. Many students were having difficultyfinding their course books. One moaned re¬signedly, “I have four courses — I can’teven find the books for two, and the profes¬sor for a third hasn’t even ordered thebooks yet.”Students found it difficult to decide wherethe lines waiting to pay for books ended, asthey seemed to fade away into the stacks.A student emerging from the aisles ofbooks asked in a horrified voice, “Is thisthe line?”A bodiless voice from the crowd de¬scribed the situation as a “seething mass ofhumanity.”Despite the ‘hurried’ checking of books,the cashiers and attendents seemed cheer¬ful, though harried. One who has workedThis quarter the campus moratoriumcommittee is planning several small ac¬tions designed to show the relevance of do¬mestic issues to the Vietnam war. At thesame time, the campus committee is work¬ing for the election of Alderman A A (Sam¬my), Rayner for Congress from the firstdistrict. Rayner is being opposed by Demo¬cratic machine Alderman Ralph Metcalf.Hie moratorium dates for next quarterinclude January 15, “Peace Action Day”which is to commemorate the birth of DrMartin Luther King Jr, February 15, andMarch 15, which has been designated “dayof resistance.” National moratorium leaderDavid Hawk will be going to jail for draftresistance around March 15.During December, the moratorium com¬mittee here lay dormant. However, com-. « i 1 : for the University for nine or ten years (shewasn’t sure) said she was glad to be backat work, and that she had learned a greatdeal about the University during the sixweeks since the Ellis Avenue locationclosed and locked its doors. “I like thisplace, it’s smaller, but it’s all the sameto me. But it’s the students that matter.”Some of the workers in the new locationhad complained that there was no place togo for their coffee break.The bookstore office which handles newstudent charge accounts as well as recordsis located two blocks away in the adminis¬tration building, second floor.A permanent locatiwi for the bookstorehas not yet been decided upon. Julian Gold-Continued on Page Sixmittee members distributed the “Peace onEarth, Now” buttons which were designedby former student government presidentMichael Barnett, and sold peace Christmascards.The tactics for the moratorium dateshave not yet been finalized.This evening on channel 11 (WTTW),there will be a discussion on the war. Twen¬ty places have been reserved for studentsinterested in asking questions or makingstatements during the broadcast. Interestedstudents should be at 5625 Woodlawn at 5:15pm for a ride to the studios. Panelists forthe 7-9 pm program, include Milton Rosen¬berg, professor of psychology at the Uni¬versity, Alderman Sammy Rayner, and BillCurtis of WBBM news.Moratorium Campaigns,Plans Future ActivitiesPLAyfcCVS ALL-NIGH I JHCMHHOSIIUNUS ItiDM fUipUDIT IQItOWIHG llil UGUUII MA'UII «.vion 9Richard BenjaminAliMacGrawGOOD-IYE COLUMBUS Jan 10Allan Bata*Dick BogardeTHE FIXERJan 16Joanna WoodwardRACNfl, RACHEL Jan 17RALHDOSCOfCJan 23Paul NowmanTORN CURTAIN Jan 24Burt LancasterTHE SWIMMERJan 30Gregory PockTO KILL AMOCKINGBIRD Jan 31IFThe GreatPantsExplosion153: V WLLLS(upstairs)Chicago. Oldtownonr stuff:B£LL BOTTOMSSHIRTSLEATHERSVESTSBELTSGLASSESHAIRY CHICKENS^S-DUSS^FROM S6.50THEIguys pants'that girlsLOVEThe GreatPantsExplosion110', DISCOUNT WITHlSTUDENT I DHours.11 10 Daily12 6 Sunday Feb 6Clint EastwoodFISTFUL OF DOLLARS Feb 7John CassavottosFACESMoney can do fantastic things foryour personality. If you have a alibtongue or are a master of the "fastbuck and a shady deal" come andhype people into advertising in theMaroon. Generous commissions,good spare time work, car pre¬ferred but not necessary.Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.But the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.RENADW2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550A BETTERLIFE THROUGHBUDDHISMA10 Week Lecture-SeminarSeries Conducted by theVen. G. M. KuboseWed. Eve s 7:30 - 9 PMJan. 7 thru Mar. 11Fees: Series $15, $25 percouple. Single tickets $2.(Consideration given toStudents)BUDDHISTEDUCATIONAL CENTER1151 W. Leland Ave.For Information & RegistrationColl 334-46612/The Chicago Maroon/January 6, 19701, V '.'d "If You Don'tKnow Who HeIs, How CanYou Fight Him?' ,T * V nXh *!fVcan you answerthese quest ions?What are the underground films saying?What and who is legitimate theater?What new movies should you see?Who is "The First Edition"?SHOW FOR 1970Show Magazine begins the 70 s with afresh new insight into the world offilms and the arts.Today as never before we believe youare intensely interested in the entirescope of entertainment. Questions oftaste, realism, of sensitivity aridexpression, and especially of what'savailable, are important to you Legiti¬mate and underground theater,movies, art forms, music, play newroles in your way of life. You probablyspend twice as much time as yourparents did in leisure occupations, andan increasing amount of your timeenjoying the arts.WH AT SHOW ISShow is designed to be the new probeinto the entertainment field. Allaspects of films will be covered, fromYOL K FREE SHOWShow begins with the publication of the january, 1970 issueA special Charter offer is available now —12 full monthlyissues of Show at a Charter rate of $6 And.YOl N EED SEND NO MONEYFill out the coupon below and we will send you Show's Char¬ter Issue-and enter a trial subscription in your name. If youfind Show exciting and informative, your subscription startsautomatically If not, notify us and keep the Charter Issuefree. But you must act now, before we order the CharterIssue printed screen-writing to financing, fromdirection to the designing of credittitles. A special slant will be towardthe young "Film Generation." Therewill be color, and fine graphics"There is no reason for a magazine offilms and the arts to be less graphicthan the material it covers "-EditorDick Adler There will be profiles andinterviews that cover people involvedin making films, from the head of astudio to the teenage director whoedits in the cameraShow is subtitled The Magazine ofFilms and the Arts." Theater music,dance, the visual arts—all will begiven expert, exciting coverage on aregular basis. Show will present theprocesses, decisions and heartbreaksof artistic expression It will add newdimension to your entertainment lifeSHOW P.O. Box 2963Clinton, Iowa 52732Please send me SHOW’S Premier Issue and reserve my trialCharter subscription If I am pleased, the next 11 monthlySHOWS are reserved for me automatically-And at the SpeCial $6 Charter rateIf I am not pleased, I may simply notify you, the PremierIssue is mine, free.NAMEADDRESS .n Bill meQ My payment is enclosed |i-aw-»-|lHHHT»|MUSICRAFT asksARE YOU OUR STEREO TYPE?SPECIAL SYSTEM SA VE $71.50SONY 6040AM/FM Stereo receiver32 \\ atts IMF at 80 Ohms3 Year GuaranteeGARRARDSL65with baseShure VI93E CartridgeA. R. 4* Speakers in W alnutCOMPLETE SYSTEM ONLY$349.95 Free DeliveryAll Service on PremisesMUSICRAFTCAMPUS REP. BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. OAK 2035 W. 95thDE 7-4150 779-6500 EASY RIDINGTRAVEL EUROFf IY CYCLEAM CYCLE H»*t you to London to pick upyour B.S.A.. Triumph or othor fin* bika atlowoit cod.Insurance RegistrationAccessories Spore partsSonic# Air height to U S.All arranged before you leave for LondonFor information, writ# or coHam erasSuite 1-A10 Weet 90th StreetNew Yerk, NY. 10024(111)700-9319SS Membership fee refunded on departureCornett Tltorisl i1645 E. 55th STtfET *CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *Phone: FA 4-1651 7UC DRIVERSSentry tries to ease the highcost of auto insurance foryoung drivers with thefollowing reductions:GOOD STUDENTDISCOUNTYOUNG DRIVERDISCOUNTIf you are a good student21-25 with a good drivingattitude, you've got itmade. Even if you don'tthink so, give me a call.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY VINSURANCEAsk about the Executive Speciallife plan made to order for stu¬dents.Victorian World To Be Shown Tor 8 WeeksHypothetical Moon Just AfterCreation of the Sea of TranquillityThin crust (5-20km)underlain by liquidImpacts createlarge lava lakes(seas)toEorth Plagioclase- richrock and basaltsp = 2.8-3.1 gm/cm3Liquid ferrobasaltp ~ 3.3 gm/cm3(drawn to nearsideby Earth’s gravitydue to high densitycompared to overlying crust.) Farside-Thick Crust,little or nounderlying liquidImpacts createdeep craterswith little orno lava.? thin layer of sulfideand ilmenite-richrock, pz 5Proportions of Mineralogic ShellsBased on Analogy with ChondriteWhy the Moon RangThe moon rang, as a piece of iron does,when the Apollo 12 rocket struck it becauseit is a solid body with little or no liquidinside, said Joseph V Smith, professor ofminerology and crystallography, and one ofsix University scientists investigating moonrocks brought back by Apollo 11 last sum¬mer. ' * "The scientists also asserted that• the moon’s surface formed at a muchhigher temperature than that of earth• after the moon was formed, its surfacebecame white hot• nearly all the gold on the earth’s sur¬face was deposited by meteorites• a fragment of rock from the lunarhighlands may have been discovered in theIHC To SurveyStudent attitudes on coed housing will bepolled this week in a short survey releasedby the Inter House Council (IHC) com¬mittee on coed dorms.All students in undergraduate housingand the graduate houses of Burton-Judsonwill receive the survey, committee chair¬man Steve Harris, 70, said.The first page of the confidential ques¬tionnaire explains the floor, room, andbathroom setups in various dormitories. Thesecond page asks where and under whatconditional setup a respondent would bewilling to live, including his preference,and the student’s sex, year in school, andintentions to live in the housing system nextyear. Sea of Tranquility by the Apollo 11 astro¬nauts• the earth’s gravity may have been amajor force that shaped the face of themoonOther University scientists working onthe moon rocks are Edward Anders, profes¬sor of chemistry; Robert Clayton, profes¬sor of geochemistry and chemistry; An¬thony Turkevich, Franck professor ofchemistry; Stefan Hafner, associate pro¬fessor of minerology and crystallography,and George Reed, Jr., senior scientist atArgonne national laboratory and researchassociate in the Fermi institute.A chart showing Smith’s idea appearsabove.Coed HousingIn a statement released to housing resi¬dents Monday, director of housing EdwardTurkington said “While there are a numberof problems which would have to be re¬solved before coeducation can be instituted,I do want to say that I know of no Univer¬sity policy which would preclude coeduca¬tion if the problems, particularly that ofsecurity, can be worked out satisfactorily.The survey will be returned in two enve¬lopes, so that the IHC may keep arecord ofrespondents, and replies can be kept con¬fidential.The faculty-student committee on co¬educational dormitories includes seven stu¬dents, two faculty, and Turkington. The University of Chicago will plungeinto the 19th century for eight weeks withthe opening of an exhibit in the Bergmangallery of Victorian photography today. En¬titled “Victoria’s World”, the eight-weekseries of exhibits, lectures, drama, con¬certs, and films will coordinate various de¬partments and schools of the University aswell as independent organizations in re¬lated activities to present a major reviewof many aspects of Victorian England.The photographic exhibits from the Gem-sheim Collection of the University ofTexas is “a fantastic collection of old photo¬graphs no one has ever seen before — atleast in the Chicago area,” according toStudents To SeeSenate CommitteeThe committee of the council of the facul¬ty senate will meet with students over aca¬demic questions if a written statement issubmitted to it, Knox Hill, secretary of thefaculties, announced Friday.On the basis of these written statements,the committee may decide to meet with“appropriate student representatives.” Dis¬cussions may be carried to the council onmotion of the committee.The committee, presently chaired byNorman Nachtrieb, chairman and profes¬sor of chemistry, considers the use of theprocedure to be appropriate for groups thatwish to present views about the recent re¬port of the subcommittee on disciplinaryprocedures, chaired by Charles Wegener,professor of humanities and in the new col¬legiate division.The Wegener committee recommendedcommittees to decide discipline for studentsinvolved in disruptive demonstrations, suchas last year’s sit-in, that would include fourfaculty, one member of the law faculty, andtwo students, to be chosen from studentcouncils.Committees AppointedTo Examine CurriculumDean of the college Roger Hildebrand inconjunction with his student advisory coun¬cil, is forming student and faculty com¬mittees which will hopefully deal with cur¬riculum problems and make recommenda¬tions to the dean.The separate student and faculty com¬mittees will be expected to keep in touchwith each other regularly. Both studentand faculty recommendations will carryequal weight.According to a member of the student ad¬visory council, the committee will deal withproblems in the common core courses andin the psychology undergraduate program.The student advisory council is now seek¬ing recommendations of individual studentsfor the committees. Interested students arerequested to leave their names in GatesBlake 132, by Friday of this week.The student advisory council recently an¬nounced the results of last quarter’s fresh¬man elections. New first year students onthe committee are John Zyskind, MichaelNg-Quinn, Richard Scotch, and JeanettePlatt. Virgil Burnett, associate professor of artand director of the Bergman gallery.The events following this exhibit will in-,elude lectures beginning January 12, with“Barabbas in the Age of Victoria — SomeObservations on Publishing and Author¬ship,” by Royal Gettmann, professor ofEnglish at the University of Illinois at Ur-bana, and author of the Bentley Papers.The lectures will conclude with a poetryreading by John Betjeman, critic and poet,March 2, the closing event of the entireseries.The film senes, sponsored by the Docu¬mentary Film Group on Thursday eveningsin Quantrell auditorium at 7 pm, will beginwith “David Copperfield,” Thursday,January 8. The films will include “NicholasNickleby,” D.W. Griffith’s “Enoch Al ien”and James Young’s production of Le oldLewis’ “The Bells,” “Alice in Wonder-land,” “Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyd,e,”, and con¬cludes with “Far From the MaddeningCrowd” February 19th.“Victoria’s World” will also present dra¬matic and musical events, such as a Victo¬rian parlor concert on January 9; selectedpieces from later operas of Gilbert and Sul¬livan, and a “concert of music in the tradi¬tion of the 19th century brass band” per¬formed by the University Concert P 1. tobe presented sometime in FebruarDuring “Victoria’s World,” the C > Halldisplay cases will show Victorian a 1 Ed¬wardian sheet music and early ta-phone music. In Harper Library, e ex¬hibits “Victorian Embellishment: P :n inExcess,” “The Century of Progress,” and“Victorian Amusements” will be op dis¬play.Degrees Gi venIn DecemberThe University awarded one honoraryand 449 academic degrees at its 330th con¬vocation, Friday, December 12, in Rock¬efeller memorial chapel.The Convocation Address was delive 1 byRobert Uretz, associate dean of the divisionof the biological sciences and the Pritzkerschool of medicine and professor of biophy¬sics at the University.Martin Kamen, professor of chemistry atthe University of California at San Diegoand an alumnus of the University receivedan honorary doctor of science degree.The 449 academic degree candi.were: bachelor of arts, 4; master c s,203; master of fine arts, 3; ma fscience, 36; master of arts in teachhmaster of business administration, >j,master of heology, 3; doctor of ministry,2, and doctor of philosophy, 90.Kamen’s contributions to science, pub¬lished in approximately 200 scholarly pa¬pers, extend from nuclear physics tobiochemistry and microbiology.He is acknowledged internationally as anexpert on hemeprotein chemistry. He is theco-discoverer of the long-lived radioisotopecarbon 14, the use of which has been large¬ly responsible for the rapid expansion incontemporary knowledge of metabolicbiochemistry.EAT LUHCH AT THEBANDERSNATCH12:00 - 2:00 P.M. Mon. - Sat. 7.7—■■i ' » ' H ■ 1 inn i.fjiu i. >.ii lJanuary 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3EDITORIALThe HearingsWe were very sorry to hear of the decisions of the Lucasdisciplinary committee, which issued two quarter suspensions tomost of the students charged with disrupting University functionsat a militant boycott of Hutchinson commons this fall. We thoughtthe charges were excessive then; obviously we must find the punish¬ment excessive now.At the time, we called the University’s reaction of disciplinean excessive response to an admittedly deplorable situation. TheUniversity’s charges were made in an atmosphere of emotionalismand exageration concerning alleged violence by the demonstrators.Statements by certain administrators, public and private, referredto physical assaults and fears for the bodily safety of bystanders.We tried at that time to indicate that closing down a cafeteria didnot interfere to a considerable extent with the functioning of thisUniversity, but this argument was lost in the emotionalism andrighteous indignation that followed the vague allegations of peoplebeing stomped, punched, and kicked.Now the trials are over, and the one lone official charge ofpersonal assault has been found false. No other personal violencewas ever accused, except in unofficial inference, and none wasever proven.These people are being suspended for two quarters — andbecause of the disruption of sequence courses nearly every Collegestudent takes, this is a substantial interruption of their lives —for preventing people from eating lunch in a certain cafeteria oneday. Now we don’t think it’s very nice not to let people eat theirlunch where they want to, and we know there is a certain deplorableabrogation of an individual’s freedom in such an action, but wasthis disruption so serious as to merit such harsh punishment?We have heard some people — Univc ity administrators chiefamong them — argue that the degree of i. > disruption ;c not soimportant as the fact of the challenge to the University's authority.We found this to be a particularly frightening argument, for itshows that the University has agreed to play this game with itsopposition by the protesters’ own somewhat horrifying rules. Thetactics of student protest are based on polarization: clearly separatethe two sides, line them up on opposite extremes, and have themfight until one falls down dead. Terrifyingly, the University seemsto have decided they like this game, equating all acts of disruptionas the same affront to them. The Lucas committee report statesthey decided on a uniform punishment “somewhere in the middlerange of suspensions” resulting from last winter’s disciplinaryactions. Clearly, this means to us that the committee has decidedthat blocking a door to a cafeteria is roughly equivalent to occupy¬ing the administration building for two weeks.We think that this is not the case. We think that there can bedegrees of disruption, there can be grave affronts to authorityand there can be affronts that are more dangerous and moreunjustly treated by their being punished than by their being over¬looked. We think the recent cases fit into this category.Some will charge us that this represents a compromise. Weagree. The concept of compromise is not fashionable on campusestoday; it’s too closely associated with the dread words “sell out”and “liberal.” The time has com 3, however, when we must bewilling to be called such names, must cease to play the games of“more-doctrinally-pure-and-righteously-holier-than-thou” and re¬evaluate the concept of compromise, of reconciliation rather thanpolarization. If the students refuse to reconcile, to understand theother side, that is no excuse for the University to make the sameobstinate and evil refusal.The administration as faculty whose profession is reason, thesynthesis of warring facts into a progress of ideas, has a special dutyto listen to hostile doctrines and seek to understand, not to conqueror eliminate them. We hope that every student who received a} usp^nsion will appeal it, and that the faculty will consider theirppe< \s with more reason and desire to understand and reconcileJrrn they have yet shown. LETTERS TO THE EDITORS1ChauvinismTTiere has been much discussion on thiscampus about the many subtle, and not-so-subtle, ways in which women are dis¬criminated against and otherwise op¬pressed by this society and this University.Obviously the Maroon, like other estab¬lishment institutions, has heard none ofthis.How else could you naively confuse thestudent University Women’s Associationand the faculty Committee on UniversityWomen to come up with so preposterous aheadline as “UWA finds no dis¬crimination”?How else could you print 33 photos of stu¬dent life in your recent special on “HydePark is a State of Mind” with pictures of 27men, four children, numerous buildings andonly one woman — and that is a traditionalpose with her boyfriend over a caption onthe sexual revolution.From the pictorial image presented of thiscampus by the Maroon any outsider wouldjust naturally conclude that this was one ofthose elite, segregated, for-men-onlycampuses which dominate so much of high¬er academia.Hmmm? On second thought, maybe the Maroon is more perceptive than we gave itcredit for?Jo FreemanGraduate StudentPolitical ScienceMore ChauvinismCreeping male chauvinism has infiltratedyour ranks. Tut, tut.An outsider glancing through your De¬cember feature issue “Hyde Park is astate of mind” would conclude that the Uni¬versity of Chicago is an all-male school.Out of 14 photographs with one or a fewstudents, 11 show only males, two show afigure whose sex cannot be determined,and one shows a boy and a girl together bythe lake. In this last picture, the girl couldbe a date from a nearby women’s college,brought in as an accessory to the male. Intrying to depict typical University of Chi¬cago students, the photographs presentsuch scenes as a male reading in his room,a male at the newsstand, two males eatingbreakfast in an apartment, and sevenmales at an orientation picnic. No photo¬graph shows a woman as a University ofChicago student.Women’s liberation must be a losing pro¬position.Margaret ProctorABOUT THE MIDWAYCheckmateThe Maroon Knights, US champions lastyear, once again outscored all other Ameri¬can college chess teams but finished no bet¬ter than third place in the North Americanchampionship held December 26-30 in Mon¬treal. McGill won the tournament with 26points out of 32; Toronto took 2nd with 23%;Chicago scored 23 points and edged outCCNY on tiebreak. Forty-three teams com¬peted (208 players) from universities in Ca¬nada, USA, Puerto Rico, and the Domini¬can Republic.Gary DeFotis, graduate student in Chem-isftry, and Richard Verber, graduate stu¬dent in art history, were the high scorersfor Chicago. Each had 6- records. SavilliStrakhoy, ’70 and Harry Ploss, graduatestudent in physics, both scored 5% pointsout of 8. Team captain Harold Winston,graduate student in history, had a “poor”4-4 score, he speculated because his lug¬gage was missing throughout the tourna¬ment.The chess team’s participation was made possible by a grant from dean of studentsCharles O’Connell at the request of CORSO.Other strong teams included MIT, Uni¬versity of Texas, Berkeley, Columbia,Carleton University, and the University ofSanto Domingo.JazzThe contemporary jazz and improvisationensemble will present a concert in MandelHall at 8:30 p.m. Friday,' admission onedollar.The group is led by Thomas McKinley,assistant professor of music at the Univer¬sity, who will play piano, accompanied byRodger Ryan on drums and Roger Cookeon bass.The ensemble has performed on nationaleducational television, in Carnegie Hall, atTanglewood, and at several major jazz andart festivals.A question-and-answer period on newmodes of musical improvisation and therelevance of jazz in the mainstream of con¬temporary concert music will follow theconcertTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BabkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve Aoki, Phil LathropFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steva Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Robot BlockStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChism an, Allen Friedman, Sarah Olazar, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Gordon Katz, SusanLeft, Gerard Leval, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Ellen Sazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, DavidSteele, John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mika Brant, Steve Currant,Richard Devis, Monty Futch, Bon Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauor, Jerry Levy,David Rosonbush, Paul 5 totter.Founded In tm. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students dally dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices In Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago. III. 40437. Phono Midway 3-0600,Ext. 3243. Distributed on campus and In theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mall $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. AppointmentsAlan Donagan has been appointed profes¬sor of philosophy effective this quarter.Donagan is currently a professor at theUniversity of Illinois. He is a native of Mel¬bourne Australia and received his graduateContinued on Page SixTuesday, January 6MEETING: Outing Club, Ida Noyes Library, 8 p iWednesday, January 7MUSICAL SOCIETY CONCERT: A Shubert Lieder re¬cital (Robert Holst, Tenor, Robert Winter, Piano).4:15 p.m. Admission is free.FLICK: CEF, Ulysses. 4:30, 8:30, 10:30. <1. Cobb.Thursday, January 8 _LECTURE: "What Makes-4Js Think?" Hannah Arendt,professor of Philosophy, New School for Social Re¬search and Visiting Professorial Lecturer, Committeeon Social Thought, Breasted Hall, 1155 East 58th,8 P.m. ...FOLKLORE SOCIETY MEETING: Ida Noyes Library,8 pm.FILM: David Copperfletd, Doc, Quantrell, 7 pm, free.Friday, January 9COLLEGE FORUM MEETING: Discussion of the Weg¬ner Report with sherry hour to follow. Swift Com¬mons, 3:30 pm.CASTING CALL: "Next Time I'll Sing to You pro¬duced by The Last Stage theater group; four mwand one woman needed; Harper Theater, 5238 »•Harper Ave., 8-10 p.m. Technical and set assistanceneeded «lso.A/The Chicago Maroon/January 6, 1970 .w * •In view of the changes that have taken place this year instudent housing, it seemed appropriate to have a retro¬spective survey of student residence at The University ofChicago, one which not only brought together data fromscattered reports of recent years but also dealt with someof the issues—sociological and even philosophical—involvedin planning student housing. Some weeks ago I asked BenRothblatt, Assistant to the Provost, to write a report ofthis kind, and the following essay is the result. I think itwill be of considerable interest to both students and faculty.JOHN T. WILSON, ProvostStudents in a large urban university in the East, theNew York Times, reported recently, decorated the doorsof neighborhood apartment buildings last spring withmimeographed notices offering $150 rewards for “informa¬tion leading to the rental of an apartment” in the univer¬sity area. “The more enterprising, or more desperate,students charge through the neighborhood block by block,asking each building superintendent about vacancies.”One student looking for an apartment to share said heplanned to “stick around after final exams and talk toevery landlord in the neighborhood until we get some¬thing.” Although no similar activities have yet been re¬ported in The University of Chicago area, they may verywell exist, and perhaps more ingenious methods have beeninvented or are on the way.The student apartment is a quite recent phenomenonat The University of Chicago, as elsewhere. Forty yearsago, 47 per cent of University of Chicago students lived athome with parents and commuted to the campus. Only 11per cent lived in University dormitories; 9 per cent livedThe student apartment is a quite recent phe¬nomenon at The University of Chicago, aselsewhere ... As late as the mid-fifties,about half the student body commuted fromparents' homes.in fraternity houses; and 30 per cent lived in furnishedrooms. Of the undergraduates, 59 per cent lived with par¬ents and just 9 pfer cent lived in dormitories. As late asthe mid-fifties,"about half the student body commutedfrom parents’’homes.1The dramatic reversal of student residence patterns isexhibited in data collected last year by the Office of theRegistrar. In 1968, 31.7 per cent of students on the Quad¬rangles (and 59.7 per cent of undergraduates) lived indormitories (including International House) and only 3.1per cent lived with parents. The group living in frater¬nities had shrunk to 1.9 per cent, and even fewer students(1.7 per cent) lived in furnished rooms or rooming houses.Of all University students, 11.5 per cent lived in Universityapartments for married students; nother 12.2 per centStudents in Mosd House of Burton-Judson Dorm¬itory talk about forthcoming chemistry test. were married students in private apartments; 33.1 pencent of the student population were single students occupy¬ing apartments or houses. Two striking facts emerge. Oneis that the percentage of students in University dormi¬tories had nearly trebled. The other is that by 1968, 52.2 percent of the student population lived in apartments (bothUniversity and private) with another 4 per cent in privatehouses — a total of well over four thousand students. It isIt is hardly surprising ... that the com¬petition for neighborhood apartments is in¬tense, if not at times virtually savage.hardly surprising, therefore, that the competition forneighborhood apartments is intense, if not at times vir¬tually savage.Changes in the patterns of student residence reflectThe University of Chicago’s shift in recent decades from acommuting institution with a sizable number of studentsliving at home to an institution which now draws most ofits students from other areas of the country and fromabroad. But other factors may be equally salient, in¬cluding the growth in financial support available to stu¬dents and corresponding changesj in students’ conceptionsof what constitutes adequate housing. The decline of fra¬ternities and the fading away of the rooming house alsoreflect shifting norms and life styles.Concepts of suitable housing not only change with timebut are subject as well to the usual vicissitudes of con¬sumer preference. The double dormitory room, untilConcepts of suitable housing not onlychange with time but are subject as well tothe usual vicissitudes of consumer prefer¬ence-recently considered an acceptable standard, now surviveslargely because of* economic necessity. Similarly, the cur¬rent proliferation of “4 plus 1” apartment buildings inThis supplement has been prepared and paidfor by the University’s Office of Public Information. some areas of the city may one day come to be regardedas a passing aberration, as ephemeral and inexplicable asthe American passion in the 1950s for tailfins on automo¬biles. But buildings, unlike motor cars, tend to survivelong after the fashions and customs that helped producethem have faded, and the many bizarre monuments topast ignorance and folly often last as long as the relative¬ly few products of wisdom and taste. The job of planningstudent housing, therefore, involves the frank recognitionThe job of planning student housing ... in¬volves the frank recognition and costly recti¬fication of past error as much as it requiresprophetic judgments about the future.and costly rectification of past error as much as it re¬quires prophetic judgments about the future.Planning is further complicated by differences in therequirements and preferences of single and married stu¬dents, graduate students and undergraduates, and menand women, as well as by the special needs of freshmen.When the contingencies of financing and the pressures ofLights in students' rooms in Pierce Tower shineout at dusk. 4 \- —» * Y'EkQNtfli/ v»*f \*ft Students walk along sidewalk of WoodwardCourt by Wallace House.Couple strolls through lobby of Woodward as two residents wait to receive their mail from clerk at desk.Students Set Tone in Dormitoriesother University priorities are also considered, it is smallwonder that much housing for students at the Universityand elsewhere has necessarily been the result of thechance encounter between need and available funds al¬most as often as it has proceeded from rational planningand articulated principle.Universities in general have taken four basic ap¬proaches to the problem of housing their students. One isto provide no housing at all, leaving students free to findtheir own housing in the open market. A second is toThe policy underlying recent housing prac¬tices is a policy of diversity, containing as amajor component a structured House system,mandatory for freshmen but also includingother undergraduates.provide mass housing, typically high rise, with a min¬imum of space, privacy, and common facilities. A thirdapproach conceives of housing as integrally related to the students’ academic, cultural, and social lives and providesfacilities of high quality with a wide range of activitiesfocused in the student residence hall. Since residence inthis system is seen as a part of the education of thestudent, it is fairly uniform and mandatory. The fourthHarper's commitment to the House systemresulted in building the entire group of resi¬dence halls on the Quadrangles in the firstdecade of the University's ife.approach provide a variety of housing types and a rangeof options and may incorporate elements of the otherthree models.In many respects the first alternative is the most at¬tractive one, since the University takes small pleasure inthe management of housing properties and derives evenless satisfaction from the necessity of subsidizing them.But this laissez faire approach is posible only in a univer¬sity in which most students are drawn from the localFIGURE 1IStudent, who has built screen made of strings ofbeads, studies at his desk in Pierce Tower.2/Public Information Supplement/Janua0y A».il97O>^/R\In* im'co-j.’ .6 Inventory of Single Student Housing, 1969-70House Number of SpacesSingle One Room Two RoomRoom Double Double Total College. Division,or School SexWoodward:Lower Wallace 24 30 54 College FUpper Wallace 26 32 58 College FLower Rickert 18 24 42 College FUpper Rickert 19 28 47 College FLower Flint 18 48 66 College MUpper Flint 26 40 66 College FTotal 131 202 333Burton-Judson:Dodd 28 28 College MMead 36 36 College MChamberlin 56 56 College MVincent 52 52 College M'Coulter 43 43 Graduate MMathews 53 53 Law School MLinn 38 38 Law School MSalisbury 41 41 College MTotal 347 347Pierce:Tufts 24 36 60 College MHenderson 24 38 62 College MThompson 25 32 57 College MShorey 25 30 55 College MTotal 98 136 234Hitchcock 32 56 18 106 College MSnell 57 57 College FBoucher....- 95 2 97 College MEleanor Club 40 52 2 94 College FBlackstone 2 76 * 78 College FGreenwood 30 68 98 College MLaughlin 77 77 Graduate School ofBusiness MHarper 71 71 Graduate FEllis 6 84 90 Graduate FBroadview 197 197 Graduate MGrand total 1,153 478 248 1,879Per cent (61%) (25%) (13%) (09%)Students from all over the world live and study inInternational House.FIGURE 2Inventory of Married Student andAuxiliary Apartments, 1969-70Number ofBuilding Units5107 Blackstone (Piccadilly) 765316 Dorchester (Gaylord) . 865659-61 Drexel; 908-10 E. 57th 125700-02 Drexel; 845-47 E. 57th 125715 Drexel (Phemister Hall) 81®6022-24 Drexel 70b6051-57 Drexel 24804-12 E. 58th 31b816-24 E. 58th 125233-37 Greenwood; 1100-1110 E. 53rd ... 275482-88 Greenwood 445345 Harper (Harper Crest) ;..... 501215 E. Hyde Park 601310-16 E. Hyde Park; 1311-17 E. MadisonPark 25131*8 24 E. Hvde Park; 1319-25 E. MadisonPark .' 251334-40 E. Hyde Park; 1335-41 E. MadisonPark 271369 E. Hyde Park (Fairfax) 891401 E. Hyde Park (Carlson Hall) 45*5545-55 Ingleside; 932-42 E. 56th 306044-52 Ingleside 186054-56 Ingleside; 920-34 E. 61st 215110 Kenwood (She!bourne)-. 925135 Kenwood (Chicago Arms) 515220 Kenwood (Grosvenor) 565428-32 Kimbark 185601-5 Maryland; 835-39 E. 56th .’. /. 195645-49 Maryland .;. • ’ 95410-18 Ridgewood Court 31Total 1,141* Occupied primarily by residents and interns of the Hospitalsand Clinics.b Occupied primarily by nurses.FIGURE 4Single Student Housing and Food Service Operationsfor Year Ended June 30, 1969Single Student Housing OperationsBudgetIncome from operations $1,128,901Operating expenses:Salaries and retirement expenseUtilitiesBuilding and service costsRepairs and maintenanceManagement and generalNet income or (loss) from operationsNonoperating costs:Debt service and sinking fund ,.Replacement reserves and depreciation.Total nonoperating costs Actual$1,116,792Operating expenses:FoodSalaries and retirementUtilitiesBidding and service costsRepairs and maintenanceManagement and generalNet income or (loos) from operationsNonoperating costs:Debt service and sinking fundReplacement reserves and depreciation.Total nonoperating costs 377,487143,652130,609272,82487,685 359,538128,652134,658279,87572,1461,012,257 974,869116,644 141,923207,339110,363 209,363107,031317,702 316,394$ (201,058) $ (174,471)’ations*Budget Actual$ 873,866 $ 840,272353,915333,80425,05633,25859,86464,595 332,270317,07024,04432,66253,14253,967870,492 813,1553,374 27,11739,48217,632 37,05818,62857,114 55,686$ (53,740) $ (28,569)=====* Not including Hutchinson Commons. U.C. Housing Heavily Subsidizedcommunity and continue to live with parents while com¬muting to the campus or one in which private housing forstudents is both plentiful and inexpensive. It rests eitheron a narrow conception of education as limited to theclassroom, library, and laboratory, or it may take theview that living in the community has important educa¬tional advantages.The second alternative of providing low-cost, masshousing assumes that students need little in the way ofspace, privacy, quiet, and common facilities, or that suchamenities are too costly for either the university or thestudent to support.The completely mandatory house system is based onthe notion that students should have a common experiencethroughout the undergraduate years and leaves little roomfor individual differences in preference or life style. Italso involves a heavy financial commitment to facilitieswhich are often opulent but relatively difficult to modifyin response to changing conditions and needs.The University of Chicago has had a varied approach.Although it has always contained a modified House systemas a major element, the system currently requires resi¬dence only for freshmen, and approximately two-thirds ofother undergraduates (or about 40 per cent of the totalundergraduate body) live in non-Upiversity housing. Thereis a fairly wide variety of housing types available: dor¬mitory, apartment, furnished room; on campus, offThrough the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, only10 to 15 per cent of undergraduates couldbe accommodated in the residence halls.campus; high rise, low rise; expensive, inexpensive. TheUniversity’s commitment to variety is reflected in the 1965report of the Faculty-Student Committee on Student Resi¬dences and Facilities (the Blum Committee).II i'I I Li I The policy underlying recent housing practices is apolicy of diversity, containing as a major component astructured House system, mandatory for freshmen butalso including other undergraduates.The House system has been in existence at Chicagosince the University opened in 1892. In his first DecennialReport in 1902 President Harper described the House sys¬tem as “the distinguishing factor in the social life of theUniversity.” It is evident that the Houses were consideredpart of the University’s educational program. Residentheads of the Houses were appointed by the President andincluded among their number several distinguished facultymembers. James W. Thompson, an eminent medievalist,was director of University Houses. Fraternities, whichHarper and most faculty members opposed, were finallyorganized at Chicago only as components of the Housesystem. “I do not hesitate to say,” Harper declared, “thatIn absolute numbers, the total of under¬graduates in the House system has trebled inthe past two decades. In these years the shiftfrom what was primarily a commuting col¬lege to one which is largely residential hadtaken place.ideal college and university life will be attained only inthose cases in which the life of the individual is broughtinto closest contact with the lives of many other individ¬uals, and this is impossible when students violate them¬selves and maintain association in large measure withthose who have no connection with the University.”Harper’s commitment to the House system resulted inbuilding the entire group of residence halls on the Quad¬rangles in the first decade of the University’s life. GatesHall opened in 1892, followed in 1893 by Blake, Foster,:[i j ii M1;i ■ ii i 1 Li fi• • >m«• •*iB * « » *$ 3• n - □ 5 •»,— >.r□ n J «PH1=’ft□ 4uf pa!i 9Uf —r, 1.Iit “i => ■* -i- jii-. iTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO AND ENVIRONSOffict Of Phytic tl PlanningPATTERN OF STUDENT RESIDENCE - FALL 1967Each individual dot > ona atudantEach larga circla a 20 to 400 studontaFigure 3Map of Student Residence, Fall 1967.*.' <v, IV tirckl A.'iVJanuary 6, 1970/Public Information Supplement/3WNmm Im .... -a rJj'i •Jr KeSfW ■ JiaCHfc <■> • -y* lj KorltJf "P jGraduate English student John Foster studies at dining room table of his campus apartment. Meanwhile,in the kitchen, his wife Judith gives their daughter Susan, 3, a drink of water.University Needs Gifts, Loans for UpkeepAfter lunch, youth practices piano in lounge ofBurton-Judson.Student living in Burton-Judson Court lies on hisbed and reads.4/Public Information Supplement/January 6, 1970 Kelly, Beecher, and Snell. Green was built in 1899 andHitchcock in 1902. Nevertheless, most students in the earlyyears lived off campus, many at considerable distances.There was not enough dormitory space. Nor was housingavailable in the community. For Hyde Park at the turn ofthe century was a suburban outpost of the city, with beachcottages along its eastern border, a few hotels and apart¬ment houses built for visitors to the Columbian Expositionin 1893, and only scattered housing elsewhere. Althoughplans existed for additional residence halls, funds wereunavailable and after 1902 no further dormitories werebuilt until Burton-Judson Courts opened in 1931.Through the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, only 10 to 15 percent of undergraduates could be accommodated in theresidence halls. About half the undergraduate body com¬muted from their homes, with a substantial percentageliving in furnished rooms and fraternity houses. By 1950-51, 32.1 per cent of undergraduates lived in the residencehalls, and the figure nearly doubled in the next decade. By1961-62, 60.5 per ce.nt of undergraduates were housed inresidence halls, a level which has been maintained to theTo the degree that a House is successful ittends to develop a special ambience whichdifferentiates it from other Houses.present time. In absolute numbers, the total of under¬graduates in the House system has trebled in the past twodecades. In these years the shift from what was primarilya commuting college to one which is largely residentialhad taken place. This shift was formalized by the in¬troduction in 1961-62 of undergraduate residence require¬ments, initially four years for women and two years formen, but later reduced to one year for both. The ex¬pansion of the residence system was made possible by theconstruction of Woodward Courts (1957-59) and PierceTower (1960-61), the last major dormitory to be built.Since the opening of Pierce, the only new constructionhousing undergraduates has been the apartment buildingat 1400 East 57th Street, although recent years have alsoseen the purchase and renovation of existing neighborhoodapartment buildings and hotels for student use.Along with the growth in dormitory facilities went theexpansion of the House system. The system is currentlyorganized into twenty-six Houses (which range in sizefrom 28 to 106 students), all but five for undergraduateHouses are for women.Activities in the Houses vary rather widely. Althoughall Houses participate in the program of intramuralsports, more variation is exhibited in social, cultural, andintellectual activities. Houses have sponsored evening lec¬tures, debates, poetry and dramatic readings, and creat¬ive writing contests, as well as film series, dances, andgroup excursions. Almost all Houses invite faculty mem¬bers on a fairly regular basis to lunch, dinner, and specialdiscussion hours; and a few have developed programs ofFaculty Fellows who maintain a continuing involvementwith the life of the House. Distinguished visitors fromoutside the University and alumni have also been guestsin the Houses. To the degree that a House is successful ittends to develop a special ambience which differentiates itfrom other Houses. Thus, for example, one House maydevelop a variety of musical events, another may foster Mock p:iper diaper and pink booties on front doorof apartment tells of the birth of the Fosters' se¬cond daughter, Kathleen Marie.literary activities, and a third may become known for itsintramural teams.Responsibility for the development of House activitiesrests largely on the student members. Students in theHouses also have the primary responsibility for makingand enforcing House rules. Each House has an electedHouse Council and the Inter-House Council is composed ofelected representatives of all the Houses. In Autumn. 1969,following the recommendations of a special Committee onHouse Autonomy with a majority of student members,social regulations have been placed entirely in the handsof the individual Houses — subject only to thosesafeguards required to protect individuals and to mediatepossible conflicts between Houses. To perform this reviewfunction, the Inter-House Appeals Committee, composed ofseven students, two faculty members, and one adminis¬trative representative, has been established.Assistance in the development of House activities andin the management of House affairs is provided by theResponsibility for the development of Houseactivities rests largely on the student mem¬bers. Students in the Houses also have theprimary responsibility for making and en¬forcing House rules.residence staff of the House system. Each House has aResident Head, often with one or more assistants, whoprovides advice and counsel to individual students as wellas to the House as a whole. A few are faculty members;most are graduate students. In an effort to attract morefaculty members to serve as Resident Heads the Univer¬sity, in the summer of 1969, enlarged and remodeled sixapartments in the Houses for Resident Heads and theirfamilies, further enlargement of Resident Head apart¬ments is planned for the coming year.In the current year the House system has a capacityof 2,007 spaces for single students. (See Figure 1.) Ofthese spaces 1,879 are in dormitories and 126 are in apart¬ments and town houses. In addition, a reserve of 100figure sMarried Student and Auxiliary Housing, 1968-69Income from operations Budget$1,878,191 Actualft,903,048Operating expenses:Housekeeping costsBuilding service costsMaintenance and repairsManagement and genera) expensesInsuranceProperty taxesCooperative assessments 59,979480,733396,600174,58826,56222,709 57,283492,224496,863168,82138,06213,232Total operating expenses 1,161,171 1,266,485Net income or loss (—) from operations 717,020 636,563Rehabilitation and Improvements 42,484 57,654Net income or loss (—) after rehabilitation and im¬provements 674,536 578,999Net nonoperating costs—Expenses:Debt service and sinking fundGround and other rentReplacement reserves and depreciationProvision for income taxContingenciesCredits:Married student housing charge distributed toHHFA financed propertiesCapitalization of operating expensesNet nonoperating costs 554,0478,400-27,070- 4,07253i'305 543,4558,40015,000- 4,072562,783Net gain or loss (—) on Teal estate operations 143,231 16,216Transfers to special reserves and funds -27,231 -27,231Net gain or loss (—) to regular budget $ 116,000 S (11.015)Lunch time in Pierce Tower always means lively discussions.Students Assist Blum Committee with Planssoaces is available at the Blackwood Hotel, with rentalssubsidized by the University. Beyond this, InternationalHouse has a capacity of slightly over 500 rooms, most ofwhich are rented to University of Chicago graduate stu¬dents. Finally, over 100 students live in fraternity houseson campus.In Autumn, 1969, the dormitories had space for 1,310undergraduates and 569 graduate students. Of these stu¬dent spaces, 478 ( 25 per cent) are in double rooms; 1,153(61 per' cent) are in single rooms; and 248 (14 percent) are in two-room doubles. This represents a signifi¬cant improvement over 1968-69, because of the conversionthis autumn of 133 double rooms in Woodward and Pierceto single occupancy. Occupancy was reduced from 423 to333 in Woodward, where there are now 131 single rooms(compared with 49 last year) and 101 double rooms (com¬pared with 187 in 1968-09). Similarly, the capacity ofPierce has been reduced from 291 to 234, with the numberof single rooms increasing from 47 to 98 and double roomsdropping from 122 to 68. Of the remaining dormitories onlyHitchcock and the former Eleanor Club have significantnumbers of double rooms.This program of conversion to single occupancy hasbeen under way for several years. The original capacitiesof Woodward and Pierce were 486 and 324 respectively;their combined capacity has been reduced 30 per cent,This program of conversion to single occu¬pancy has been under way for several years.Clearly the University is fast approachingthe time when the single bedroom will bethe standard, although double occupancywill always be available for those studentswho prefer it.from 810 to 567 — a loss of 243 spaces. Revenue loss fromthis year’s conversion alone will amount to almost $150,000annually, at current rental rates.In 1970-71, further conversion of double rooms to singleoccupancy will take place. Clearly the University is fastapproaching the time when the single bedroom will be thestandard, although double occupancy will always be avail¬able for those students who prefer it.The increase in available housing for single studentshas been accompanied by a sharp rise in the supply ofUniversity apartments for married students. Twenty-fiveyears ago, when World War II ended, the Universityowned 83 apartments for married students. Housing forcarried students in the postwar decade was for the mostPart provided by 389 prefabricated temporary units builthy the government in 1946-47 for the primary use of stu¬ dent veterans and their families. The last of these wasdemolished in 1959, when the Chicago Building Depart¬ment refused to permit them to remain.Meanwhile the University had begun in 1955 to pur¬chase and renovate neighborhood apartment buildings forThe increase in available housing for singlestudents has been accompanied by a sharprise in the supply of University apartmentsfor married students.married student use. At that time only 376 Universityapartments were available to married students, includingabout 340 temporary prefabricated units. By 1962-63, threeyears after all prefabricated units were removed,the number of married student apartments totaled 1,089, providing housing for over 50 per cent of the marriedstudent enrollment. In 1964 a poll of 54 universities andcolleges conducted by Princeton University showed thatThe University of Chicago’s percentage of married stu-Most married student apartment buildingscontain more than 20 units and several arehigh rise, elevator buildings.dents housed (50 per cent) was by far the highest of theinstitutions surveyed, more than twice the average for allinstitutions (22 per cent). The number of married studentapartments has remained at about this level, as Figure 2shows. Although some apartment buildings have been pur¬chased in the past five years, others have had to be demo¬lished (to make way for the new athletic fields, for ex-Collegians lounge on grass outside Snell Hall, shortly after it was first opened in the Autumn Quarter of1893. At the time, it was the only dormitory assigned to undergraduate men.• * January 6, 1970/Public Information Supplement/5Shown above is scale model of proposed North Quadrangle, which will consist of dormitories, apartments, a small book store, and other facilities. The center forstudent and community life was designed by Edward Larrabee Barnes, the New York architect.ample) and a few have been sold. Most married studentapartment buildings contain more than 20 units and sev¬eral are high rise, elevator buildings.The rapid growth in the supply of married studenthousing reflects the coincidence of the University’s needwith the availability in the mid-fifties of private apart¬ment buildings and hotels on the Hyde Park housing mar¬ket. Many of these properties had reached a point atwhich major renovation was necessary and they could nolonger be operated at a profit. Some were apartment ho¬tels, once rather elegant. These were extensively reno¬vated by the University after purchase. In general thestandard of renovation has been high. Renovation at theShelboume (5110 Kenwood), for example, cost $610,583 in1967-68.The University’s acquisition since 1955 of a large num¬ber of apartment and hotel units for both married andsingle students, in addition to the construction of Wood¬ward Court and Pierce Tower, has enabled the great ma¬jority of students — apartment dwellers as well as dor¬mitory residents — to live in fairly close proximity to thecampus. This had not been possible through most of theUniversity’s prior history. The latest available data on thedistribution of student residences were collected in 1967and published in 1968 as part of a comprehensive reporton student housing prepared by three students — AlanJaffe, Bradley Rogers, and John Wertymer — and pub-Not only do most University of Chicago stu¬dents live in the neighborhood, but, on thebasis of recent data, most are reasonably sat¬isfied with their housing, whether Universityor private-lished by the Center for Urban Studies. The report showedthat a total of 43 per cent of all University of Chicagostudents lived in University housing and 82 per cent of allstudents lived in the immediate University area — HydePark, Kenwood, and Woodlawn. An additional 7 per cent(nearly all of them graduate students) lived in SouthShore.As Figure 3 shows, students were fairly well dis¬tributed throughout the Hyde Park-Kenwood area. A largenumber, mainly single students, were concentrated in theimmediate campus area and adjacent subdistricts. Thesmallest number resided in northwest Hyde Park andKenwood. Six hundred eighty-seven students lived in• Woodlawn, about two-thirds of them in University housing.According to the Registrar’s survey the number in Wood¬lawn dropped to 523 in 1968. The 1968 student population inSouth Shore held at about the same level as in 1967. Al¬though data for the current year are not yet available, thepattern of residence is likely to be basically the same,except for some further drop in the number of Woodlawnresidents.Not only do most University of Chicago students livein the immediate neighborhood, but, on the basis of recentdata, most are reasonably satisfied with their housing,whether University or private. An extensive survey con¬ducted in 1968 for the Jaffe, Rogers, Wertymer reportshowed that 82 per cent of all students surveyed expressedat least moderate satisfaction with their housing. Thisl l ' i • ' i • t t i * i i < > "V'T ( > • .v*/Public Information Supplement/January 6, 1970 finding tends to confirm the results of an earlier surveyby the Registrar in 1965 which reported that 64.1 per centof the students were “fully” or “rather” satisfied, with17.1 per cent expressing themselves as “neutral” (a cate¬gory not included in the Jaffe, Rogers, and Wertymerstudy). If the neutral responses are divided evenly, theresults of the two surveys are not dissimilar. What littlevariance there is indicates that student satisfaction wassomewhat higher in 1968 than three years earlier. TheRegistrar’s survey also showed a higher level of dis¬satisfaction on the part of students with private housingthan with University housing. The evidence does not,therefore, support the rather frequent claim that there iswidespread student dissatisfaction with housing.Nevertheless, student housing is not infrequently thefocus of some dissatisfaction. Such dissatisfaction hasbeen of two kinds. On the one hand student criticism hadAlthough second-year students, fresh fromtheir first year of dormitory life, gave highratings to the residence halls on "con¬geniality," "freedom," and "safety," the dor¬mitories ranked low with respect to "quiet,""privacy," and "food."been directed at the facilities and service — food, quiet,space, privacy, costs, and provision for activities. The oth¬er species of complaint has had to do with housing policyand planning in general.The Jaffe, Rogers, Wertymer study does give evidenceof considerable dissatisfaction with meal arrangements inthe residence halls. Only vending machine service rankedbelow the meal contract plan in popularity. Students pre¬ferred a meal ticket arrangement, a cafeteria system, orfacilities to do their own cooking. Although second-yearstudents, fresh from their first year of dormitory life,gave high ratings to the residence halls on “congeniality,”“freedom,” and “safety,” the dormitories ranked low withrespect to “quiet,” “privacy,” and “food.”Efforts to improve the situation in the residence hallswith respect to privacy and quiet have been made in thepast few years, mainly by the conversion of double roomsEfforts to improve the situation in the resi¬dence halls with respect to privacy and quiethave been made in the past few years, main¬ly by the conversion of double rooms tosingle occupancy and the carpeting of hall¬ways and lounges.to single occupancy and the carpeting of hallways andlounges. Such measures have helped greatly, but it shouldalso be noted that the dormitories were built anticipatingneither the technology that produced high fidelity stereoequipment ncr the affluence that made its ownership bystudents widespread. Conversion to single occupancy iscostly, but it will continue. Less certain is the possibilityof doing away with food contracts. If this were done thelikelihood is that either deficits would mount or the priceof meals would have to go up.In general, existing student dissatisfaction with hous¬ ing must be viewed within the context of ever-increasingfinancial constraints. The University subsidizes studenthousing of all kinds — both dormitories and married stu¬dent apartments. Food service in the dormitories also op¬erates with a subsidy. In 1968-69 the subsidy for singlestudent housing and food operations combined was over$200,000 (as Figure 4 shows), not including the substantialunderwriting of Hutchinson Commons. Nor does this in¬clude the cost of rent subsidies for non-University housingIn general, existing student dissatisfactionwith housing must be viewed within thecontext of ever-increasing financial con¬straints.— an emergency measure begun in the mid-sixties whichguarantees a reserve supply of student rooms in neighbor¬hood hotels. In some instances these rooms have beenrented to students at rates lower than those paid by theUniversity. In 1968-69 these subsidies amounted to nearly$30,000. Still another kind of subsidy is represented byfinancial aid to students, both in and out of the Housesystem. Married student housing appeared to operate onsomething closer to a break even basis, sustaining a lossin 1968-69 of $11,015 (see Figure 5). But the actual subsidyis much greater than this figure indicates. Not reflected inthe operating statements is the sum of $5 million spentfrom University funds for the purchase and rehabilitationof married student housing properties and in effect “writThe annual operating loss is only a part ofthe subsidy to student housing. The full pic¬ture includes the University's investment inplant and equipment and special appropria¬tions for renovation, as well as other subsidyfactors deriving from the University's tax-ex¬empt status.ten off.” Annual operating deficits for all student housinghave been the rule rather than the exception in recentyears, as Henry Field’s “Student Housing History” (TheUniversity of Chicago Record, Volume III, Number 1)shows in detail.The annual operating loss is only a part of the subsidyto student housing. The full picture includes the Univer¬sity’s investment in plan* ard equipment and special ap¬propriations for renov ; jn, as well as other subsidy fac¬tors deriving from t’ <j University’s tax-exempt status. Thetotal investment in dormitories and apartment buildingsfor student use amounts to about $26 million, almost even¬ly divided between the two categories. This does not in¬clude dormitories built prior to 1931; nor does it includeall capital improvements to housing facilities.As a tax-exempt institution the University does notpay property tax and water tax on its housing facilities.This advantage is estimated to amount to about 20 percent of the market rate in the case of student apartments,as shown by a 1966 study. Although no currently reliablecomparison with market rates exists, rent increases inUniversity married student housing have not kept paceStudent in Burton-Judson dormitory takes a breakfrom studying and tinkers with his tape recorder.with rent increases in private housing. Commercial apart¬ment rates in Hyde Park increased by 5 to 8 per cent inspring, 1969; there has been no increase in Universityapartment rates since autumn, 1968. Dormitory rates werelast increased in autumn, 1966.The current operating budget of the University con¬tains a planned deficit of over $9 million; it includes nofunds for building purposes, whether renovation or newconstruction. Nor is depreciation included in operatingcosts, except where legally required in the case of build¬ings with government loans. This means that improve¬ments must be paid for by gifts or loans rather than fromAlthough no currently reliable comparisonwith market rates exists, rent increases inUniversity married student housing have notkept pace with rent increases in privatehousing.rents. Further construction or purchase of student housingalso depends on the University’s ability to raise substantialgift funds beyond those needed to support the budget. Gov¬ernment loans are increasingly unavailable for these pur¬poses and in any case place cost limitations far below thestandards of construction, space, and amenities that theUniversity has adopted. The prospects, therefore, of fi¬nancing major student housing projects are, at best, un¬certain. Nevertheless, planning for new student residenceshas continued.In the last few years the Student-Faculty Committeeon Student Residences and Facilities (the Blum Com¬mittee) has carried a large share of the planning burden.The Committee was organized as a faculty committee inJuly, 1964, and students were later added as members. Itsoriginal function was “to advise on a new college resi¬dence hall or halls and also to advise on new studentfacilities,” but in practice the Committee has dealt withthe entire range of student housing, old and new, and hasalso concerned itself with many aspects of student life.In addressing itself in 1965 to the inadequacies ofexisting student housing the Committee put forth a seriesof recommendations including the creation of new floorlounges at Woodward Court, conversion of double rooms tosingles, carpeting of corridors at Woodward and Pierce,and redecorating and refurnishing in several residencehalls. All of these recommendations were subsequentlycarried out.The primary work of the Blum Committee has in¬volved the development of a ten-year program of studenthousing for the decade 1965-75, and this was the focus ofthe detailed report by the Committee in June, 1965, follow¬ed several months later by a supplementary report. (Bothreports were subsequently published in The University ofChicago Record, Volume II, Number 1, January 23, 1968.)As guidelines for future development, the Committeeadopted the following: 1) the quality of facilities was toeQual the best schools; 2) student residences should pro¬duce “traffic flow” through the campus and should not beconcentrated in one location; 3) student facilities shouldThe prospects ... of financing major studenthousing projects are, at best, uncertain. Nev¬ertheless, planning for new student resi¬dences has continued.be diversified and decentralized; 4) married student hous-’ng should be in several locations in Hyde Park; and 5)Private commercial development should be a part of thetotal plan.\ V.v. v .svu'. y.vct-f. WvM» Plan Hurt by Rising CostEarly in the life of the Committee the concept of a“New Area” emerged, a concept which eventually devel¬oped into the plan for the North Quadrangle — a complexof housing, athletic, and academic facilities. A “StudentVillage,” housing over a thousand students primarily inorganized houses of from 40 to 60, clustered in largercommunities of from 200 to 300, formed the heart of thedevelopment. Also included were new athletic facilitiesand a thea'ter-art-music complex, as well as a coffee shopand other student facilities. The University commissionedthe architect Edward Larrabee Barnes to work with theCommittee in developing a design for the complex.The plan, as it developed, embodies the Committee’soriginal conception of the Student Village in remarkablyfaithful detail. It covered the entire six-block area bound¬ed by Cottage Grove Avenue on the west, Greenwood onthe east, 55th Street on the north, and 56th Street on thesouth. This “North Quadrangle” was to include new ath¬letic facilities on the west end, and a Center for the Artsconsisting of a theater, music building, and art center onthe east end. At the center of the entire development isthe Student Village.As designed by Barnes, the Student Village is a groupof interconnected buildings unified around a large centralplaza on the European model. The buildings include sevensix-story towers with long low rise wings connecting them,looking out on either the central plaza or on one of fourenclosed landscaped courtyards. Facilities serving the en¬tire Village include a dining commons, a coffee shop andsidewalk cafe, a common kitchen for students wishing tocook, and a Rathskeller. Also planned are a photographyA "Student Village," housing over a thou¬sand students primarily in organized housesof from 40 to 60, clustered in larger commu¬nities of from 200 to 300, formed the heartof the development.lab and darkrooms; a small bookstore; music rooms; typ¬ing rooms; an indoor recreation area for billiards, pool,and ping-pong; offices for student activities; and radiostudios. A branch post office is also included in the plan.In addition, residents of the Villiage will have easy accessto the playing fields to the west as well as to the Art'■’•enter on the east.As presently conceived the Village will house about900 students in a variety of accommodations: efficiencyapartments, one-bedroom apartments, five-man suites,and corridor rooms. About 16 per cent of the students willbe in double rooms. The architectural plan allows the or¬ganization of residences into as many as 17 Houses offrom 30 to 60 students each; but perhaps only 10 to 12Houses will be established, leaving for a significant num¬ber of students the option of living in the Village but not inthe formally organized Houses system. The Village willinclude graduates and undergraduates, both men andwomen, and a few faculty members; facilities are de¬signed to-be flexible enough for all categories of students. the Village will be organized in the House system, a sig¬nificantly large segment of it will not.Students, faculty, and administrators have partici¬pated not only in the initial development of the plan, butalso in extensive modification and review, along with ar¬chitects, site designers, and professional planners. All arenecessary to the production of a successful plan. Adminis¬trators must be involved in planning because of the neces¬sity to finance projects and to evaluate expenditures in thelight of other priorities. Faculty members must be in¬volved if the educational dimension of hous g is to re¬ceive proper attention. Students, because of their specialcircumstances as current residents, should also be part ofthe planning process. But the long time lag between in¬itial planning and eventual construction means that thosestudents who have participated in early planning will haveno direct relationship to the finished product, except possi¬bly as alumni donors. Therefore, like faculty membersand administrators, they too are planning housing for oth¬ers to live in.Eventual construction of the Student Village will de¬pend on very large gifts from individual donors. Such giftshave not yet appeared, although some substantial giftshave been pledged in support of other components of theNorth Quadrangle. The enormous sums required make itevident that the Student Village, if it is to be built at all,will be built in stages. At the same time as the fund¬raising effort for the Student Village goes on, funds willalso have to be raised to support the renovation of Snelland Hitchcock and further necessary improvements inexisting residence halls.Meanwhile other plans for housing develop. Sub-com¬mittees of the Blum Committee are investigating variouspossibilities for new apartment construction as well as theestablishment of student housing cooperatives, and furthernew ideas will no doubt emerge.All of this must proceed within a context of uncertain¬ty and change. The life styles of current students are quitedifferent in many respects from those of earlier students,and future generations of students may be expected todiffer from the present one. Changes have taken place aswell in the University itself and in the surrounding neigh¬borhood, and further change can be anticipated, though itsprecise nature is not easy to predict. Lea§t certain of allis the future availability of funds.The construction of new housing must proceed in theface of costs which are already very high and rising rap¬idly. Construction costs, in fact, have* been rising at therate of about 10 per cent annually and may be expected tocontinue to go up. These cost factors also affect the pros¬pects of purchasing and renovating older .neighborhoodproperties. In addition, few properties suitable for con¬version to student housing are any longer readily avail-The Barnes plan for the North Quadrangle was enthu¬siastically endorsed by the Blum Committee and in thespring of 1968 was endorsed by the Faculty-Student Advi¬sory Committee on Campus Student Life. Although therehas been opposition to the plan on the part of some stu¬dents, other students have made useful suggestions formodifying the Student Village, and the plan now has fairlywidespread support. Although further revisions and modi¬fications are necessary, the remaining obstacles to itseventual realization are largely economic — which is tosay that they are immense.The cost of the Student Village is currently estimatedabout $20 million, with the total cost of the North Qua¬drangle project estimated at perhaps $31 million. The costper student housed in the Village will be over $20,000. Thisis roughly at, or somewhat above, the level of studentresidences of the highest quality recently constructed at,As designed by Barnes, the Student Villageis a group of interconnected buildings uni¬fied around a large central plaza on the Eu¬ropean model.for example, Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Tech¬nology, and Stanford, and four to five times the cost perstudent housed of the typical state university dormitory.The proposed Student Village exemplifies several prin¬ciples of planning which experience at The University ofChicago has shown to be sound. It is a unified plan, withhousing well integrated in a complex with academic, ath¬letic, and communitiy facilities. The Village will containhousing of high quality and sufficient diversity to supporta population which can be broadly representative of theentire University community. Although a major portion of> . »i ■ t <' i tSlS11 8 r I . « V. . » ii. • ■ . It . 1 ■ The proposed Student Village exemplifiesseveral principles of planning which ex¬perience at The University of Chicago hasshown to be sound.able, and the general shortage of rental housing would inany case make the relocation of tenants in the communitydifficult, if not virtually impossible. If, therefore, the Uni¬versity were to buy existing housing, it would replace non-University occupants with students only as vacancies oc¬curred; conversion of private apartments to student usewould be a slow process, if it were possible at all.For those students who choose to live in private apart¬ments the situation may become more difficult. Rentshave been rising and, as a recent Student Governmentreport notes, private landlords do not generally regardstudents as highly desirable tenants. Although the Univer¬sity has provided financial aid to some students in privatehousing, a general policy of subsidizing private rentals isnot economically possible, quite apart from the question ofwhether the University should intervene in the housing ofstudents who wish to remain independent of the Universityresidence system. Such intervention might also have un¬desirable side effects on apartment housing for the com¬munity as a whole.The problem, therefore, of providing students with thephysical environment in which communal intellectual ac¬tivity and personal growth can take place is a difficultone; moreover it is a problem which does not easily lenditself to permanent solution. At the present time the Uni¬versity has a plan which has evolved through many yearsof discussion and has been repeatedly re-examined. It hasboth the necessity and the will to proceed. But the fundsare lacking. The objective, however utopian it may appearat any given moment, is nevertheless well worth pursuing.January 6/ 1970/Public Information Supplement/7German Scholar Finds Life in ShoreyHouse Is Good for Himself, StudentsKenneth J. Northcott (with beard), Professor of Older German Literature and Chairman of the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures, sits in his livingroom in Shorey House of Pierce Tower and talks with three students (from left), Paul Preston, Ronald Proschan, and Jacques LeSourd. At right are Northcott's sonMichael, 10, his wife Pamela, and his daughter Felicity, 9. photos by uoyd e. SaundersThis year, for the first time, a senior member of TheUniversity of Chicago faculty is living with his family asResident Head of a dormitory.He is Kenneth J. Northcott, Professor of Older Ger¬man Literature and Chairman of the Department of Ger¬manic Languages and Literatures.He is spending this academic year (1969-70) as Resi¬dent Head in Shorey House, a dormitory unit on the toptwo (ninth and tenth) floors of Pierce Tower, 5514 SouthUniversity Avenue. The other Resident Heads are juniorfaculty or graduate students.Northcott lives in a three-bedroom apartment with hiswife and two of their four children. The other two areaway at school.“I don’t think my presence there is regarded as anuisance by the students,” Northcott said. “But I think atfirst they did wonder how this was going to work out.”Northcott is Resident Head for the 56 male students inShorey House, where there are 31 freshmen and 25 secondand third year students.One student, Paul Preston, a sophomore from Shore-wood, Illinois, believes the dormitory residents look uponNorthcott’s residency as “a great experience.”Preston, cultural chairman at the house, said:“The Northcotts are very warm and witty. Both areoriginally from England and this is an added benefit most students feel.“Their apartment is always open to us, and we takefull advantage of it — possibly too much so. Many’s thenight Professor Northcott is still talking with some of usat midnight.“Right now, I don’t think you’d be able to find a singlestudent criticism of the faculty-house resident program.We think it’s a fine idea.”Northcott has been a member of the faculty at TheUniversity of Chicago since 1961. He was appointed a fullprofessor in 1965 and was Dean of Students of the Divisionof the Humanities from 1966 to 1968.He was born in London in 1922. He received B A. andM.A. degrees from the University of London in 1950 and1953. He served with the British Army from 1942 to 1946.After teaching at the University of Glasgow and theUniversity of Sheffield, he was appointed a Visiting Assis¬tant Professor at The University of Chicago in 1958-59. Hereturned to the University of Sheffield and then he joinedthe faculty at The University of Chicago in 1961.His academic fields of special interest are bibliogra¬phy and Medieval German language and literature, inwhich he has published several works. His recreationalinterests are in the theatre, as actor and director.“I won’t pretend it’s not hard work, being a ResidentHead,” Northcott said. “But it does result in a sense of satisfaction, I feel.”Northcott explained that he thinks having faculty fam¬ilies live with students is beneficial both to faculty#andstudents.“Situations of this sort help to build a sense of con¬fidence between students and faculty,” he said.“Many times my wife has been asked by these stu¬dents to administer minor first aid or to lend a needle andsome thread She really is looked upon, as a. house motherby~these boys.”Northcott and his family usually eat breakfast withthe students in the dormitory’s dining hall. Theyfrequently invite the boys, in small groups, to their apart¬ment for dinner.“Our own two children living with us get along verywell with the students,” Northcott said. “Michael, 10, hasplayed touch football often with the students.”The other two Northcott children are always at school,but they get home to the apartment for holidays.As Resident Head, Northcott serves primarily as aninformal adviser. House rules and regulations are madeby the students themselves. He acts only as an adviser,when he is asked for advice. He can call for house meet¬ings when he wishes, and he has been invited by thestudents to attend their regular meetings.“The 56 students in Shorey House,” Northcott said,“are all individuals. They need assistance in forming acommunity. This is where I can help.”Northcott believes it is good to have both liberal andconservative-minded students living together.“It’s true that a conservative can grate on the feelingsof a liberal after a while — and vice versa — but this is agood thing ultimately, especially if they can finally learnto respect each other’s views,” he said.Northcott has worked for some time with graduatestudents in German at the University, and he finds livingwith undergraduates “an educational experience.”“The undergraduate is a different type of studentfrom the graduate,” he said. “He has different problemsand expectations and different ways of expressing himself.“I would recommend this type of experience for allfaculty. But I would caution that it is an exhausting task.My time with my own children, for example, has been cutdrastically because of the time I spend with students.”Northcott said one of the most urgent needs in dormi¬tories like Shorey House is some place for the students towork off their frustrations and excess animal spirits.”An exercise area for each dormitory would be ideal,he said: .“Something with a trampoline, perhaps, and possiblysome weight-training equipment. We have such devices mour gym, and they are fine. But often students need some¬thing closer at hand, something they can use on the spurof the moment. Even a ping-pong table is a great help.Northcott and the students have made a ping-pongtable for their recreation area, and the parents of one stu¬dent have donated another. — Richard D. KnotStudents Paul Preston (left) and Ronald Proschan (center) discuss Shorey House affairs with Northcott in hisstudyi . i i ; » 1 j i f i i i ». ( (t.8/Public Information Supplement/January 6, 1970 This supplement has been prepared and paidfor by the University’s Office of Public Information.•: R * f '* 9 <r v ►*%AX- *.t*.*v ,BOOKSTORE IS OPEN!(ALL SALES DEPARTMENTS HAVE BEEN RETAINED)NEW LOCATION — 1020 E. 57th STREET(BEHIND THE WALL — NORTHEAST CORNER OF ELLIS AVE. & 57th ST.)ALL REQUIRED & RECOMMENDEDBOOKS AND SUPPLIESFOR WINTER QUARTERWINTER QUARTER OPENING HOURS:JAN. 5th - JAN. 8th — 8:00 - 8:00JAN. 9th — 8:00 - 5:00JAN 10th 9:00 - 3:00JAN. 12th — REVERT TO REGULAR HOURS8:00 - 5:00 MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAYTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE1020 EAST 57th STREETJanuary 6, 1970/Thu Chicago Maroon/5* t * »u» i»t.i.i t»i r jtcrrr rr e.r.et r r r t tTtrt.Tjtft.frt r rrt.ttt vr rt n * 11 tit* ft a rn »11 >» »'»*♦> w, . ,Group To InvestigateProblems of WelfareAn academic attack on the problems ofwelfare will be launched by the new centerfor the study of welfare policy establishedat the University and directed by Mrs Mar¬garet K. Rosenheim, professor in the schoolof social service administration (SSA).In a dinner December 15 marking thecenter’s establishment, Mrs Rosenheimsaid the center will• encourage sustained interdisciplinaryefforts to evaluate existing welfare pro¬grams and institutions and to explore newapproaches• sponsor research and discussionamong policy makers about the purposesand policies underlying welfare programs• investigate the impact of specific regu¬lations applied by governmental and volun¬tary agencies• promote training and curriculum de¬velopment in the social policy field.In research, Mrs Rosenheim explained,the center will seek development of a socialservices model and conduct a study of wel¬fare recipients to assess the impact of aidto families with dependent children.In the development of program the centerwill be assisted by Harold Richman, deanof SSA, and advisory groups, including acommittee made up of faculty from differ¬ent parts of the University, and one whichis representative of business, philanthropy,and public service.The faculty advisory committee has al-Committee To SuggestLocation for BookstoreContinued from Page Onesmith, head of a committee to make recom¬mendations on the location to the Provostsaid the matter was “completely up in theair.” Goldsmith said the faculty-studentcommittee had suggested the adminis¬tration building as a location, but that ob¬jections had been raised.The Goldsmith committee is holding fur¬ther meetings within the week or as soon aspossible this quarter. Goldsmith said theobjective of the committee was to have “agood bookstore in the best possible place... as fast as possible, but as expedi¬tiously as possible.” ready been appointed. The initial groupconsists of:Morris Janowitz, professor and chairmanof the department of sociology; Julian H.Levi, professor of urban studies and execu¬tive director of the South East ChicagoCommission; Bernard D. Meltzer, profes¬sor of law; Jack Meltzer, professor of ur¬ban studies and director of the Center forUrban Studies; George Tolley, professor ofeconomics, and William B. Cannon, vice-president for programs and projects.Politicians FightAirport on LakeThirteen south side public officials, in¬cluding US Representative Abner Mikva,State Representative Robert Mann and Al¬derman Leon Despres, have joined forces tooppose a proposed airport in Lake Mich¬igan. The site for the jet port in the lakehas been set eight and one-half miles offSouth 55th street.In a joint statement announced Decem¬ber 29, the officials said that “It (the con¬struction of the airport) threatens the sur¬vival of Lake Michigan as a valuable recre¬ational and natural resource. It jeopardizesthe way of life of every person, every fami¬ly and every community at the south end ofLake Michigan.”The statesmen pointed to lake pollutionas the detrimental effect of the constructionof the airport.“Our concern for past and present pollu¬tion damage is surpassed only by our dreadat the damage that will come from a lakeairport by way of additional pollution,shifts in lake currents, stagnation of ourbeaches, and destruction of the valuablefish and animal life of the lake.”The officials proposed that the city ad¬ministration seek an alternative locationfor the city’s third airport. They did not,however, offer a specific recommendation.Other signers of the statement were StateSenators Daniel Dougherty and RichardNewhouse, State Representative Philip Col¬lins, Bernard Epton, Henry Lenard, JamesMcLendon and Samuel Maragos, AldermenNicholas Boling (7th), John Buchanan(18th), and William Cousins, Jr. (8th). Continued from Page Fourdegree from Oxford University. . .Governor Richard Ogilvie announced theappointment of Charles Olmsted, profes¬sor of biology, to the Illinois Nature Pre¬serves Commission for a term of two and ahalf years. Ogilvie also asked Olmstead toserve on the Governor’s Advisory Counciladvising the governor on various subjectsconfronting the state. . .Dr. George LeRoy has been appointedprofessor of medicine and director of theUniversity’s health services. Dr. LeRoy is agraduate of the University medical schooland is currently on the faculties of WayneState University and the University ofMichigan. . .Ben Rothblatt has been appointed assis¬tant to the provost, John Wilson. Rotbblatthas been associated with a variety of posi¬tions in the University, most recently asassociate dean of the University’s extensiondivision and assistant professor of huma¬nities. . .Paul Armento has been appointed to thenew position of assistant to the director ofpurchasing and auxiliary services. The po¬sition was established to further the univer¬sity’s efforts to buy and contract with busi¬nesses owned by members of racial minor¬ities. . .Robert McKersie, professor Of industrialrelations in the graduate school of business,has been appointed to President Nixon’scouncil on minority enterprises. . .Norval Morris, Kreeger professor in lawand criminology and director of the centerfor studies in criminal justice, has beennamed to a 14-member task force on pris¬oner rehabilitation appointed by PresidentNixon. . .President Edward Levi today announcedthe appointment of Sidney Davidson asdean of the graduate school of business.Davidson has served as acting dean sinceAugust.Davidson, young professor of account¬ing, succeeds George Shultz, who resignedas dean in January, 1969, to become Secre¬tary of Labor in President Richard Nixon’scabinet.Davidson is a member of the AccountingPrinciples Board of the American Instituteof Certified Public Accountants. In 1968-69he was president of the American Account¬ing Association. SIDNEY DAVIDSONBusiness School DeanGifted TeacherSheldon Sacks, professor of English andlinguistics, was named a prize winner ofthe 1970 E Harris Harbison award for giftedteaching.Through this award the Danforth founda¬tion seeks to honor outstanding teachersand to call attention to the qualities ofteaching which encourage effective learn¬ing on the part of students.Each of the prize winners receives a cashgrant to be used for study or preparation ashe deems helpful to his teaching or scholar¬ship.Books by Sacks include Fiction and theShape of Belief and the forthcoming For¬mal History of the English Novel.Bread PartyGeorgia legislator Julian Bond and GaryMayor Richard Hatcher will be present at abread party for 6th ward Alderman A. A.(Sammy) Rayner Sunday from 5 to 7 pm atthe Colonial House restaurant, 914 E. 79thSt.Rayner is campaigning for US Represen¬tative from the first district, a 9 percentblack district surrounding Hyde Park. Hisopponent in the Democratic primary thisMarch is Ralph Metcalf, a runner in the1936 Olympics and the Democratic machinecandidate.Admission to the party will be a min¬imum contribution of $5 to Rayner’s cam¬paign funds. Drinks will be available.5C Xerox Copying Service SG Outer OfficeaiuarehouseBELL BOTTOM SLACKS FROM $4.0010% DISCOUNT WITH STUDENT I.D.HOURS: Monday thru Friday -12 to TOSaturday - 11 to 9Sunday - 12 to 62837 N. BROADWAY6/The Chicago Meroen/January 6, 1970CHICAGO, 60657 SEND A SUBHOME TOMOTHERTHE DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC presentsCONTEMPORARY JAZZ AND IMPROVISATIONENSEMBLEW. Thomas McKinley ♦ DirectorFRIDAY MANDIL HALLJANUARY 9 8:30 P.M.Following the concert there will be a symposium and discussion of jazz imporvisation in which the audience willparticipate.Adm.: $1.00. Tickets at Concert Office, 5835 UniversityAvenue; or at Mandol Hall on evening of concert.(Maroon Classified Ads) V , , . . . wnever carry more than you can eat »\y» tv‘ipJe^dvkTMoggie Maroon,Box 101, c/o MaroonIdo Noyos HollDearMaggi*:What am I going to do? I amlosing my boyfriend to something Ican't fight: hard drugs. For hisown good I nag him about it. Anddo you know how he responds?He just nods off into euphoria.How do you compete with eu¬phoria? FranticDear Frantic:Who wants to compete witheuphoria. Obviously some peopleare better equipped for this ex¬perience and I should really betalking to your boyfriend. De¬termine if you fit into his life re¬flection and learn to groove on hispersonality. Be euphoric not fren¬zied.Dear Maggie:A rather simple problem:people have the tendency to in¬terrupt me whenever I try to ex¬press myself. I talk slowly in wellthought out sentences and amrarely a spontaneous con¬versationalist. People break in onthese well thought out sentencesand as a result I'm incoherent. AmI a social stone or are the people Iknow just rude?MargePoor muddled Marge. Everyoneknows women are meant to bekept barefoot, pregnant andabove all SILENT. What you as awoman are after in life is notconversation, or self-expression,but GETTING A MAN. Wake upand remember your ploce. SI¬LENCE IS GOLDEN. That is, staySILENT (and sweet) and you'll getyour man, and more importantlyyou'll get his GOLD, and everyonewill live happily ever after. Didn'tyou know thats the way thingswere meant to be?SCENESLunch at the Snatch is going tobe a good thing this quarter, andgetting better all the time. StartsWednesday at noon.BBC film interview with C.G. Jungdiscussing his psychology. Kent 107,7:30 pm Tuesday. Free.BANDERSNATCHBANDERSNATCHthe BanderSnatch opens for thedecade at noon on Wednesday 12-2lor lunch, 5-12:45 eve.Wake 1970 the Year of the People.The New Democratic Coalition willhold its first National conventionFeb. 13-15. Beds and peanut butterneeded for hundreds of students.Cali Ml 3-0800 ext 3275 to volun¬teer.Free Swimming Instruction begin¬ner 8, intermediate. Ida Noyes PoolMonday night 7-8 PM. BLUE BLUE BLUE BLUE BLUEGAR GOYLE GOYLE GOYLEGOYLE BEAUTIFUL BLUE GAR¬GOYLE Reopens 6 PM Friday Jan9. Come See.Special AACM Concert (Assn, forthe Advancement of Creative Music)TONIGHT 8 PM BLUE Gargoyle.Work and Get Folk Festival Free¬bies Thursday 8:00 Ida Noyes Li¬brary.Saturdays Women for Peace Vigilon east side of State St betweenMadison & Washington II am to 1pm.BREAD PARTYJulian Bond asks that you joinhim at a Bread Party January 11at 4 pm A.A. (Sammy) Rayner,Candidate for Congress, needsbread. Call Ml 3-0800 ext 3275 fortickets. UC/NDC.SHOVE IT OR HEAVE IT!Spiro Agnew PosterSend $1 to FREE Chicago40 N. Ashland, Chicago, III.THE PLAY OF HERODA Medieval musical drama forEpiphany, presented by allegro con-spirito at Disciples Church, 5655University. A panoply of Medievalsplendor 8< mysticism, with angels,candles, brilliant costumes, proces¬sions, psaltery, krummhorns, rausch-pfeife, bells, and breathtaking me¬dieval stagecraft. Jan. 9, 10 & 16at 8:30, Jan. 17 at 7:30 8. 9:30.Tickets are $2.00, $1.50 8. $1.00.Write 5655 S. University, call ext.3392, or buy them at the door.JOFFREY BALLET50% off box office price on alltickets for Tues., Wed., 8, Thurs.nights:Thurs. Eve. 1/29Moves, Pas Des Deese,Animus, Viva VivaldiWed. Eve. 2/4Konservatoriet, ThreeConer Hat, AstarteThurs. Eve. 2/5Three Conered Hat, PasDes Deese, The Green Table$8.50 main floor ticket $4.25, etc.Tickets Available at Chicago Ma¬roon, 121? E. 59th St., Ida NoyesHall, Rm. 304FOR RENTTo Sublet 2-Bedroom Apartment InHyde-Park, (From Mar. 1, 1970)Call MU 4-7336.2 rm apt $85 per month near camp¬us 752-2150.Furnished Rm. 493-3328.Freshly Painted; 54 8, Woodlawn$45-Own Room Female w/2 others324-1705 or 493-7038 Iv. message.For Rent Eff. Apt, Furnished, inHarper Ct. $85. 667-4037 After 5.HOUSE FOR RENT10 room house Hyde Park Jan 1-Aug 1, 6 br, 3 bath, laundry, $320+ ht + utilities, 538-7353.ROOMMATES WANTEDFern Student Wanted to Share Apt53 8< Univ Own Room Avail ImmedCall 667-8179.Fern Rmmate to Shr Apt Own Rm65/Mo 51st 8, Blkstn 924-4691.Wanted: 2 female roommates forhuge, beautiful Hyde Park apt.$65 mo. 643-8148.FEMALE Roommate wanted. Largeapt. at 51st and Woodlawn. Ownroom. 752-6274.Fern. Rmmte Wanted. $46. 288-4303.3rd fern roommate to share fur¬nished apartment with own room1 Blk from cam-us $66/month Gradstudent pref 493-J018.Need girl to share attractive apart¬ment w/ small family, 51st nearcampus. Own room, $45. 667-6866 PEOPLE WANTEDACTORS: Choral Parts Still OpenFor UT Production of HippolytusContact x3581 for Details.Desk clerk, no experience neces¬sary, pref. man staying thru sum¬mer, 3 nights a week, 12 mldnight-8 AM or 4 PM • 12 midnight, ap¬ply in person. Quadrangle Club.Theater Manager wanted for HydePark Theater. Experience Not Im¬portant. Call 726-9293.Babysitter Wanted from 3:30-5:30Weekdays for 8 & 9 year old atyour House. Must be within walkingDistance of Lab School (1-5 Blocks)Call 684-2086 Nights. at ext. 3263 or 944-4798 between 6 &9 PM.RIDESLEAVE NOW! Riders Wanted toS.F. - Berkeley 667-8769.Rider Wanted to Pittsburgh leaveThurs or Friday. 752-2150.DRAFT INFORMATIONKNOW YOUR RIGHTS! Hyde ParkDraft Info Center. Tu, W, Th:7-10 Fr: 2:30-5; 363-1248 Happy Winter Quarter to all in¬volved in the yearBox.Midnight Coffee. BanderSnatch.People Against Racism is workingfor Conspiracy if you want to helpcall 243-2205 or 583-2992.GET UP FRONT at Folk FestivalFree By Working for Tickets IdaNoyes Library Thurs. 8:00.ACLU needs office volunteers duringthe day. Call 236-5564 or stop in6 S. Clark.Vietnam Moratorium needs helD,call 427-3072 to find out what youoan do.ONLY ONE THING- CAN GET THESE HANDS CLEAN...*CPSType Tables for University ResearchProject. Straight Copy. No Set-Up.Could tvpe at home. Phone Mi'sBloch, 543-8090.Need fern, part time afte .ioonasst, in dental Office. WiP trainqualified person. Location HydePark Bank Bldg. Phone Ml 3-9607.Wanted: Campus Rep; UnlimitedCommissions, No Investment, NoPaperwork. For Info: Miss BarbaraKumble, College Bureau Manager,Record Club of America, 270 Madi¬son Ave, NY, NY 10016.PEOPLE FOR SALEExpert typing 15 page minimum.955-4649 pm's 8. weekends."May we do your typing? . .363-1104. PERSONALFOR SALET ape/recorder Webcor-Coronet-Ster-eo; HiFi Consul Grundig+Record-Player; Bedroom Set 4- 2 TwinBeds; 9x12 Carpet. Call MU 4-7336.AR, DYNA, DUAL At Discounts atMUSICRAFT. Campus Rep 363-4555.5« Xerox Copying Service. It's halfthe price but you have to wait overthe weekend to get your copy back.Great for books and papers whereeach page is copied only once. SGOuter Office — the only place youcan do it for 5c a page.'59 VW Sedan, high mileage butrecent engine overhaul, new brakesand drums, and new clutch andclu’ch assembly, clean interior,runs perfect, radio, no-rot, body ingood shape, everything works, per¬fect student transportation . . .promises many years of life . . .made when Volkswagens were stillas Hitler designed them. $425. Joel Julian Bond at Sammy Rayner'sbread party. Colonial House restau¬rant Jan 11 4 PM Call Ml 3-0800ext 3275 for tickets.See Roy at the Folklore SocietyMeeting, Neighbor. Work for FreeTickets Thurs Ida Noyes 8 PM.Eat dinner at the BanderSnatchmore often. Its the only placearound with hamburger fries &shake for $1. peoplefoodmusic.Please poster distributors, spareour trees!About 10 oclock when your roomis really getting to you come tothe BanderSnatch. Warmth.'59 Volkswagen, clean, radio, ex¬cellent running condition, completenew clutch assembly and motoroverhaul . . . needs new home . . .$450.PEACE FLAG DECALSPeace dove superimposed overAmerican flag or flag in black &white hands. For window or bump¬er. The Peace Flag Decal Co, 3 EOntario, Room 24, Chicago, III. 50ceach. If you want to do something aDOUtall the shit floating around inthe air contact Citizens RevoltAgainst Pollution (CRAP) at anew number 463-0308.THE MOTHER EARTH NEWS tellsyou how the new life style/home¬steading communes/free land/livingwithout working/natural foods/freetransportation/solar energy wind tn-gines/tipis/domes. 1 yr. $6 2 years$10 The Mother Earth News. Ittells you how. Box 38C, MadisonOhio, 44057.WHAT YOU CAN DO TO AID THEAMERICAN INDIAN: Send lettersof support to the American IndianCenter, 3189 16th Street, San Fran¬cisco. Send checks or money or¬ders to the American Indian CenterBldg Fund or Alcatraz Relief Fund.Bank address for funds is Bank ofCalifornia, Mission Branch, 306016th street, San Francisco.POLLUTION IS KILLING YOU.ACT NOW.For Complaints on pollution call793-2562. And help WMAQ-TV amassletters and petitions about pollutionto send the attorney general bywriting WMAQ-TV, MerchandiseMart, Chicago.SCLC (Operation Breadbasket) hasa free breakfast program everymorning Mon-Fri 7-10 am at St.Anna Church 55th 8, LaSalle Stssnd also at Christ the King LutheranChurch 3700 Lake Park if you wantto help call Mrs. Bell at 723-2226.ARRRGH! SOME SOUND ADVICE! StereoComponents at Savings. MUSI¬CRAFT. CAMPUS REP BOB TA¬BOR 363-4555.Gurdjieff reading group meetsThursday evenings. Anyone inter¬ested call 945-4829.5c Xerox Copying Service. Its halfthe price but you have to waitover the weekend to get your copyback. Great for thick books andpapers you have to make a copyof each page of and there's no rush.Marilyn Monroe didn't wear safetybelts because they dirtied her dress.Sending in for mass shipment ofBullwinkle and/or Dudley DoorightWatches for all you that work bestin this media. 17 jewel Hamiltonwatch with your choice face ie.Dud or Bull, $25.00. Leave yourbread at the Maroon Office, IdaNoyes Room 304. Ideal Investmentfor those who know how muchthose Micky Mouse watches youpicked up at Disneyland are worth.The politics of participation live!Let It Bleed$3.99A dear the ShelvesRECORDSALEBeginning TomorrowWednesday, at 10AM approximately1 /2 of our stock ofnew display copiesAT COSTi.e.$4.98 albumsonly $2.69$5.98 albumsonly $3.19other list pricessimilarly marked downBOOKS YOU HAVE TOREAD AND BOOKS YOLWANT TO READatUNIVERSITY AVENUESFINEST BOOKSTORE"WE SELL NO BRAS"STUDENT CO-OPREYNOLDS CLUBBASEMENTLive/Dead/TheGreatful Dead $6.58MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75c perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free.January 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/71TV T*r f ; i'r'You are invited to accept thisimported teakwine rackfreewith Charter Membership inSeinesInternationaleI New York • Pans • Marseille * Athens * London • Rome * MidndVienna * Antwerp * Buenos Aires * Montreal * Singapore • TokyoThere is no obligation to purchase anything. Decorator designed imported teak wine rack. Hand crafted Elegantcustom finished appearance Holds 10 full si/a bottles in only twosquare feet of space A useful and distinctive addition to any homeNOW LEARN TO JUDGE FINE WINES LIKEan expert ..and enjoy the bestvintages in your own home (directfrom Overseas) lor as much as a full40% below U S. prices.Which Bordeaux would you choose—a 1962Chateau Lafite Rothschild? Or a 1959 St.EmilionlOr is Bordeaux all wrong for 8oeuf Bour-guignonne anyway?And while you're at it, what kind of winegoes best with Fettucine Alfredo? Filet ofsole? Porterhouse steak? A wedge of PortSalud cheese and fruit?Why will a restaurant's wine steward some¬times respect you more for ordering a shylittle $3.00 Beaujolais hiding at the bottomof the wine list instead of the smug $16.50Chamberlin at the top?Should you select different wines for eachcourse? Which ones? And what are thewines you may properly enjoy with allcourses'Which approved'' advice about the rightglasses (o use, the right way to pour, chillinga wine, letting it 'breathe ", etc.-should youalways ignore>How can you start your own small (or large)wine cellar? And use it to invest in wine(possibly even safer than diamonds andmore profitable than stocki by purchasingwines young, storing them till maturity, thenselling off at 500% profit?Most important: How can you get all of theworld's finest wines (virtually any vintage,from any country, in any price range, and inany amount available from one bottle to ahundred cases) delivered direct from Over¬seas. FOR UP TO 40% BFlOW RFCUlARUS. PRICFS>Interesting questions And interesting an¬swers to all of them can be yours as a Char¬ ter Member of WINES INTERNATIONALE:an exciting new Society for people whoenjoy good wine, and want to learn moreabout it.Created with the cooperation of the gov¬ernments and vineyards of France, EnglandSpain, Austria and the 26 wine producingnations of the world, WINES INTER¬NATIONALE entitles its members to ex¬traordinary privileges Many never beforeextended to citizens of the United StatesFor example, the famous CORRESPOND¬ENCE COURSE in Winesmanship which in¬cludes the witty (and jdstly famous) "QuickGuide to Wine" by famed author R ) Mischthat tells you everything you need to knowabout wines in less than an hour. So thatyou may order them with confidence whendining out. And serve them with elegancewhen entertaining at homeYou also receive the Society's lavishly illus¬trated 80-page Magazine, which is printedand mailed to you bi-monthly from London.And the famous Bordeaux News of Vini¬culture (delightfully anecdotal), which ismailed to you direct from France. And fullytranslated into English.But-to know wine you must drink wine.And Society membership entitles you toenjoy the very finest wines in the world forup to 40% below regular U S. prices. THISPRIVILEGE IS AVAILABLE TO MEMBERSONLY. It is possible because the Society isone of the largest wine organizations inthe world.. And because your orders arefilled Overseas at Overseas prices. Theninspected by our experts, insured againstbreakage and spoilage, and shipped directfrom our central warehouse in Belgium TheSociety absorbs all overseas shipping costs(you pay only tbe nominal in-U.S. shipping)And there are no "extras" added on. TheSociety takes care of EVERYTHING. Youmust be completely satisfied or your money will be promptly refunded from our UnitedStates headquarters.Please note: The Society is NOT a wine pro¬ducer. It offers you all wines, from all na¬tions, without favor. However, as a serviceto you, our Board will continually seek outand advise members of special buys andvalues - which vintages are at their peak,past it, or need maturing. When to buy andwhat to buy. How to buy wisely and eco¬nomically. You are free to follow theiradvice, or ignore it, as you wish.One important point to stress is: THERE ARENO PURCHASE OBLIGATIONS. Buy as muchas you like, or as little, or nothing at allThe Society s main purpose is to promotea greater understanding and appreciation ofthe world’s fine wines. Therefore, if yousincerely wish to make the joys of wine apart of your life, mail the Charter Mem¬bership Certificate today.hpuUMMn.tH , I C Hvwr WMct. * «. tcoa .Unix of »!M. Oil ot Solo I Cxminoo mi rSupotix it Wioos ( Spuiti ‘to too HotIM Of Lxn ot ttio•ntisll Porttooum . 0 100OCHO A Co LOA00O •III* Afncol*S V t'Cbard l Horowitz,Presidentinternational Perchesin* Acents JH mines.InternationaleP.O. Box 2993Clinton, Iowa 52732Please enroll me as a Charter Member otWines Internationale Enclosed is my mem¬bership fee of only $12 00 good for life Itentitles me to order virtually any of the world’sfine wines direct from overseas (in any quan¬tity) for up to a full 40% below regular U Sprices I will also receive « complete COR¬RESPONDENCE COURSE plus a Wine Refer¬ence Library in color comprising thousand', ofpages, brochures, charts, vintage guides inter¬national price lists, and maps of th« world’sgreat wine districts in color I witl also receivethe Society’s illustrated 80-page Magaamemailed from London and a subscription to theBordeaux News, mailed to me regularly fromFrance If not satisfied with any wine shipmentI may return it for a refund To cancel Societymembership I need only return my free winerack within 30 days and my membership feewill be refunded without obligation. But theWine Reference library will be mine to keep.Nam*AddressCity State 2ipl | 1-323-11- [1 |4l>| 1111Wtnts International SociOt* Ltd.• — — -DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644Where's the 3 largestwedding ring selection?119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOODEVERGREEN PLAZAHkdhm^b»INE 'CWftfIS »OR 59 YfARS Skiers!!GIGANTICSKI SALESove 25 to S0°/tand more.Big Selection — Big BrandsSkis — Boots — BindingsSweaters — Pants — JacketsSPECIAL COMPLETESKI OUTFITIncludes: skis,boots, polesand bindingsWE RENT SKIS • TAKE TRADES609 N. LaSalle 337-6151Ski Hoodquortori • Downtown CMcofo—Smack between Ohio St. exit and OntarioSt. entrance to Dan Ryan-Kennedy X-wayt.Froo Ski Tits To Shidonlt Wltk Tkis AdiSEMINARY CO-OPBOOKSTORE, Inc."Patronage refunds dividends on shares."5757 S. University Ave. (Basement)Course Books in Divinity, Philosophy,Political ScienceAlso books in Social Sciences andrelated fieldsStore Hours: 11 AM - 4 PM Mon - FriPhone Hours: 8 AM - 4 PM Mon - FriPhones: 75243811 PL2-5757 x32 SPANISH IMPORTS WARNINGBEFORE BUYING A GUITAR ORAMPLIFIER, COME TO THE WORLD’SLARGEST GUITAR STORE.CHICAGO GUITAR GALLERY216 SO. WABASH AVE. (DOWNTOWN)WE BUY, REPAIR, TRADE, & SELLHA 7-8434 HA 7-042322ND CENTURY PRESENTSTHEGUTTEfiFIELOGANOJANUARY 16 • 8:30 P.M. • AUDITORIUMTICKET PRICES: $6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50Tickets now available at he Auditorium Theatre bo* office,all Chicagoland Marshall Field and Montgomery Wards Stores,Paralunes af 2659 North Clark Street, Flip Side Records at3314 West Foster Avenu.e and other Ticketron outletsLISTEN TO WCFL FOR LATEST 22ND CENTURY CONCERT INF0RMATI0N J HARPER COURTCHANCES IOUR SPECIALITYWorld-famous choicest steakburgerdraft beer -*} free peanuts k--e| Open daily forcocktails, lunch, dinnerand in between5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454Closed Mondays ftj PIZZAPLATTERI Pizza, Fried ChickenI Italian FoodsI Compare the Price!I11460 E. 53rd 643-2800I WE DELIVERL.YOU REMEMBER YOUR FAMILY ...GIVE THEM SOMETHING TOREMEMBER YOU BY...SEND HOME A MAROON SUB NOW.NAMEADDRESS ZIP□ Rest-of-the-school-year subscription $6.00□ Yearbook Issue $1.00Non-Profit Org.ll.S. POSTACEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 79318/The Chicago Maroon/January 6, 1970< I i . j t t,iii