olume 79, Number 6 Hie University of Chicago Friday, September 18, 1970'v'T-'-'i €th Hi %Steve Aoktf"' :1 * :$Bg|Resident masters enlighten, enliven dormsWAYNE BOOTH: Woodward Court resident masterBy Nancy ChismanEncouraged to come to the university by low student-faculty ratios, a list of emminent faculty members, andexciting academic opportunities, many freshmen soon findthemselves frustrated by a lack of contact with theirpeers, older students and faculty members.Part of the problem lies in the dormitory system,where the variety of activities diminishes rapidly after thefirst few weeks of school and the presense of interestingguests and faculty members on an informal basis is rare.The University, hopefully, provided an answer to someof these problems last January when President EdwardLevi announced the creation of the resident masters pro¬gram, a means of involving faculty families with the dor¬mitories. deling of an eight-room apartment in Mead House in Bur-ton-Judson Courts.Besides providing adequate living space for the mas¬ters, each apartment contains a large living room and din¬ing room where the masters can meet with students.Many of the objections to the masters program areeconomic. Besides initial building costs, the program pro¬vides a salary and expense account for each master. Somestudents maintained that the money should have been usedto improve student accommodations.Dean Vice thinks the masters program may be morebeneficial to students in the long run. “The university isfaculty oriented and economic priorities are determined byfaculty judgement. To have senior faculty members livingin the dorms increases the weight given in budget confer¬“ Anything that gets faculty and students together can’t helpbut be good.” - Wayne BoothThree senior faculty members, Kenneth Northcott,Wayne Booth, and Walter Walker, were selected by Levi tohead the large dormitory units Woodward Court, PierceTower, and Burton-Judson courts, respectively.These masters will work with resident heads and stu¬dents to increase cultural and social activities in the dor¬mitory units. Yet their most important contribution to lifein the dorms may be an impetus to relax.Dean of freshman James Vice, an advocate of theprogram, believes the masters and the guests they bringinto the dorms will help students recognize the legitimacyof cultural and social activities.“In this university the faculty often have more funthan the students,” Vice said. “Students often feel op¬pressed by the infinite work load and feel guilt riddenabout taking time out.“A student can’t put off learning how to live until hegets out of scvhool,” he said. “The faculty recognize that ifthere are to be moments of relaxation and joy, they haveto take time.”Initially theC ollege had sought to involve faculty fami¬lies only as residents heads. But the daily “den mother”job of the head resident and the cramped apartments inthe dorms attracted few.The alternative was a remodeling project costing morethan $200,000 to accommodate the masters and the enlarge¬ment of 10 resident head apartments.Alterations in the east cafeteria of Woodward Court andthe addition of an apartment to Pierce Tower were madeby George Hind, a professor of architecture at IllinoisCircle Campus. Estalle Gulat, an interior designer fromBeverly Hills with offices in Chicago, supervised the remo-2/TV Chicago Maroon/Scptembei 18, 1976 ences to the importance of life in the houses.” Manyfaculty members are unaware of the conditions in thedorms, he said.Whether students who object to the cost of the programmisunderstand its values or are justified is yet to be deter¬mined by the effect the program has on student life.If the program is successful, it will provide a rich andvaried cultural life for residents in the dormitories. In ad¬dition, Turkington thinks, the three different units maytake on a district personality because of the program,without conscious effort on anyone’s part.However, the masters and College administrators allretain a degree of “let’s wait and see” in their attitudetoward the program.The idea of spontaneity is an underlying feature in thephilosophy of the program. Each of the masters, in hisown way, denies the use of a rigid schedule of activities forthe year.Kenneth Northcott, head resident of Shorey House lastyear said, “There is a danger in rigid programs. I don’twant my apartment to be an extension of the institution.”Northcott, whose association with Shorey House dates backseveral years, believes his years spent in residence therehave showed him some of the problems existant in theuniversity houses.“Learning is not a process which begins and ends in theclassroom,” he said. “Education is achieved to a greatextent on the outside, in the dorms, and this has beenneglected here for too long. I’m delighted to see the Uni¬versity finally realizes it.”It is Northcott’s primary objective to expand education¬ al opportunities in Pierce Tower through the master’s posi¬tion. These opportunities, Northcott implied by his en¬thusiasm, lie not so much in the activities the program canorganize as the people involved. He also believes educa¬tion’s only hope for survival lies in a mutuality of contact.“Young people need contact with their peers, with grad¬uate students, junior faculty members and senior facultymembers,” he said.“We all have something to give toeach other.”Northcott jokingly boasted about his “flair for informal¬ity” and favors small gatherings and discussions. “It isterribly important to know individuals.” Long interested inthe theater, Northcott would like to develop the interest indrama at Pierce, and also provide a series of colloquiawith visitors to the tower.Besides improving student life in Pierce, he wants toimprove contacts with the employees of the universityworking there.“I hope the program will become more concerned withthe function of the dormitory, and the humane aspects ofassociating with the employees. The students have beenmuch too impersonal with Resident Halls and Commonspeople.”Northcott thinks his presence, and especially that of hiswife Pamela during the day, can mean a lot to students.“A big problem of freshmen is loneliness” he noted. “Thiscan be helped a great deal by the presence of older peoplethey can relate to.”Walter Walker, resident master of Burton-JudsonCourts has an idea of commitment that extends away fromthe dormitory unit away from the university, to embracethe whole city.“I think it is a shame if a student comes to the Univer¬sity, spends two years in BJ and never sees the Chicagobeyond Hyde Park,” Walker said.Intensely interested in urban affairs, Walker plans tocarry his interests into a program of guest visits and fieldtrips pertaining to urban involvement.He, his wife Sonia, and their children will be living inan eight room apartment in Mead House. While Walkerconcedes that becoming a master will cut into his life as ascholar he maintains that he will be helped as an adminis¬trator and that each experience will be made richer by theothers.“I regard myself as a generalist,” he said. “I want toexperience this whole institution.”Many of Walker’s attitudes toward academic life andcurrent political problems are tempered by maturity andinsight gained through years spent outside of the in¬tellectual community.“If you spend all of your life in the university, youbegin to think it is the world.” But. thp pvpprienrp of living* ** * rSteve AokrKENNETH NORTHCOTT: Pierce Tower resident master WALTER WALKER: Burton-Judson Courts resident master Steve Aoki)>»li ‘outside’ has enabled him “to integrate reality into whatI’ve been taught.”He feels strongly that the activities of the academicworld must be tempered by this reality.“I wouldn’t like to see the country run by universityadministrators. Intellectuals can be very inhumane.”Walker, an associate professor of social service admin¬istration (SSA), is concerned with genuine commitment.Resulting from the fact that many students have the moti¬vation to attend a university structured into them and be¬cause of the massive information explosion, many studentshave no idea of where they stand.The desire of many students and liberals to involvethemselves in the new culture through communes, welfarediets and proclaimed allegiance with the poor can indicatea lack of real commitment.“Education is achieved to agreat extent on the outside, inthe dorms and this has been ne¬glected here for too long,”- Kenneth Northcott“No one is ever able to experience a disadvantagedposition unless there is no pulling out. You can’t fake beingTVY'.r Yrui nan’t wir«» hnnrip far mnnev.” he saidpvv*. A vu : "•.* ***v“-w ; —-By introducing experiences of the reality of the city andits problems into the insulated life of BJ, Walker will try tohelp some students straighten out their commitments, be¬sides teaching them something.Wayne Booth, dean of the college from 1964 to 1969, hiswife Phyllis and daughter Allison just returned from Eng¬land where Booth was studying and writing under a Gug¬genheim grant, to assume the masters residency at Wood¬ward Court. Mr and Mrs Booth hesitated a long time before decid¬ing to accept the masters job, unsure of the extent of itsdemands. They are presently faced, like the other masterswith finding a balance between privacy and unit activity.“Nobody knows if it will be worth doing. We wanted tobe close to undergraduates,” Booth said.Booth, who feels his life is dedicated to making peoplethink, sees his job as that of a middleman between thestudents and the university because freshman often feelcompletely shut off from the university and confine them¬selves to routine experiences.“rrhey are overwhelmed by the opportunities here anddo nothing. Jesus Christ could appear on the quads and thefreshmen wouldn’t find out until a week later!” hequipped.Their problem seems to lie in acclimatization. “The in¬tellectual language is foreign to many first coming to theuniversity,” he said. “In European universities, studentseither sink or swim and the strong survive. That won’twork in the American situation.” To decrease the frustra¬tion inherent in becoming familiar with the university,Booth wants to bring people together.“I want to get more upper classmen and graduate stu¬dents together with new students. There are literally thou¬sands of interesting grad students living off campus whomthe freshmen never meet.”“The university can’t be a meaningless collection ofspecialists,” he said.Booth h'c wifeitaib uiiu UUUgijbV.1 '.»n “U -nnnmnlirnpricue an dU.uui{<iuia-U mu¬sicians and plan to make music, both performed andrecorded, one of the focal points of many of their gather¬ings with students.He said that the program can’t be measured in dollarsin reply to some objections to its cost. “Anything that getsfaculty and students together can’t help but be good,” hesmiled.The introduction of the masters program will be wit¬nessed by freshmen and in many ways judged by them,630 freshmen enter the since they make up a large percentage of dormitory resi¬dents.During orientation week, the masters program willmove the traditional introduction for freshmen away fromformal lectures to discussion and informal conversationwith administrators and faculty members.“If the style (of introduction) during O-week is set bylectures and formal gatherings, the freshman comes offwith the wrong impression of the university,” said Dean ofFreshmen James Vice.For the scheduled gatherings in the master’s apart¬ments, residents of the fringe houses: Breckinridge, Hitch-cock-Snell, Boucher, Greenwood and Blackstone will meetin a master’s residence in one of the three larger dormito¬ry units.During the year, however, members of these houses,though not excluded from activities in BJ, Pierce andWoodward, will not feel the same degree of involvement“I think it is a shame if a stu¬dent comes to the University,spends two years in BJ andnever sees the Chicago beyondHyde Park.” - Walter Walkeraiiu PGSSIDic cOiiiiiiuIliiy 1!! LilE Uiuoi£i S pi U^THITI.Instead, the three houses with freshman members, Bre¬ckinridge, Boucher and Hitchcock-Snell will have seniorfellows who will bring in guests and help organize someactivities, though not living in the house.Francis Straus, assistant pathology professor, and Lor-na Straus, assistant dean of undergraduates, are the seniorfellows of Breckinridge; Philip Hoffman, assistantpharmacology professor, of Boucher; and Karl Bemesder-fer, assistant to the President, of Hitchcock-Snell.UniversityBy Audrey ShalinskyThe freshman class this year reflects the“intensive efforts of the Admissions staff inrecent years to attract students from lowincome and varying ethnic backgrounds,”Anthony T G Pallett, director of the Col¬lege’s admissions and aid office, said Tues¬day.The 630 entering students come from 550secondary schools in 45 states and sevenforeign countries. Twenty-seven per cent ofthe class is from Illinois and almost 11 pcicent is from New York.Other states with large percentages of entering students in descending order arePennsylvania, Ohio, Mississippi, New Jer¬sey, Maryland, California, Oregon, Con¬necticut, and Indiana.The class is the largest since the 734-member entering class of ’72. Last year’sfreshman class contained 500, a 30 percentreduction so that more dormitory roomscould be undoubled and special programscould be planned.The Admissions and Aid Office hadplanned on a class of about 560 this year,but mole students accepted admission thanwas expected.Fifty-six freshmen come from small high schools in rural areas enrolled under theUniversity’s Small School Talent Searchprogram. Also, 15 students are enrolled un¬der the Urban Talent Search Programwhich is designed to encourage studentswith urban backgrounds to enroll.Pallett noted, “The Urban Talent SearchProgram is only one part of the College’sefforts to increase the number of freshmenwho come from urban, minority or low in¬come backgrounds.” In addition to thoseentering under that program, 6t’ otherswith similar backgrounds are memoers otthe new class.Pallett said that 84, or 13.3 percent, of the freshmen are black. This is believed to bethe highest number of entering blacks inthe University’s history.Fourteen of the freshmen are Oriental,one is an American Indian, two are fromLatin America, and 12 are from otherforiegn countries.The 260 new women comprise 41.3 per¬cent of the class.About half of the applicants to the fresh¬men class applied for scholarship aid. Allcandidates who were approved for admis¬sion and who needed aid received assis¬tance averaging $1,624. About 57 percent ofthe freshmen will receive aid this year. 7tI1tSeptember 18, 1970/TTie Chicago Maroon/3» /h-We are a men’s boutique.Just what the hell is a men’s boutique.By today’s definition, a boutique is a store cater¬ing to a special taste. For years, we have beencatering to the special taste of the University ofChicago student.Which means things were pretty Ivy, til now.Now things are not only not very Ivy, we have torndown the sign which read “TOWN & CAMPUSSHOP”, torn up our store, named half of it theHANG UP. We have installed various white •people, black people and girls, all of whom seemr» r* -mrm 1^7 r * T - * Urn -mr*r* C* -mr* •§• Vi IJ A 1W[ T Ji J fV 1 *.*! ml • •• • IV? itlull i 1 m.± 1 O •We will not attempt to describe the merchandise.(W^StovM In the Hyde' Park Shopping Center5 5th & Lake Park Phone 752-8100weekdays ^ Saturdays d to 0Thui shays d t u dFihlays 0 ?<, 74/The Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970PL •* *•« ■i5\»» m \sV .81Chicago: Second city has much to offerNEAR NORTH SIDE: Looking northwest from the Tribune buildtag plaza.Steve AokiBy Mitch BobkinChicago is the nation’s second city. Like many othersthat are number two (Avis, younger brothers and sisters,off-Broadway, etc) it tries harder. But like many othersecond-bests, Chicago has an enormous inferiority com¬plex, a complex so large (3% million people’s worth) thatit permeates much.of the daily life in Chicago.When riding down a freeway, you will see signs pro¬claiming Chicago as the “Nation’s Number One City.” Bill¬boards downtown announce “CHICAGO — The Nation’sFriendliest City.” Museums brag of having the nation’sfinest collection of impressionistic art. Tour-guides tell ofChicago’s more relaxed (and therefore, better) nightlife.Newspapers gloat over Chicago’s lower pollution index.Politicians promise that Chicago won’t have the racial dis¬turbances that other big cities do. Residents thank God forthe lower cost of homes. Tourists marvel at Chicago’s su¬perb airport and freeway system.The list in endless, but behind every example of thesuperiority of Chicago is the gnawing knowledge that Chi¬cago is really number two and that in time, it will benumber three. Los Angeles is rapidly approaching Chicagoin population (maybe number threes try even harder) and• when Chicago slips from the second position the excusesused to fortify the inferiority complexes will have to bereworked to explain why being number three is good and/or why Chicago is still, in quality, if not population, num-, ber one. Simultaneous with the slip will come a great num¬ber of nervous breakdowns, from the mayor’s office ondown.But even though it is number two, there is still a lot tobe said for Chicago.Although Chicago isn’t New York City, it isn’t Sheboy¬gan, Wisconsin either. Being the nation’s second largestcity, there are plenty of things to do, places to go andsights to see to keep anyone occupied for four years, if nota lifetime. The quality of some of Chicago’s sights mightnot always rank them among the world’s greatest, but theyare more than interesting enough to fascinate the casualobservor, and to captivate the layman.> The purpose of this guide is to serve as a starting pointfor your introduction to and investigation of Chicago. Rath¬er than try to cover everything in the city, a feat next toimpossible, I have chosen what I think are Chicago’s best> aspects and most interesting sights. Therefore, this guidewill be biased.To get an unbiased, but less in depth guide to the city,pick up the WFMT Guide (soon to be called ChicagoGuide, sold monthly for 75 cents. It lists, alphabetically,every museum, showplace, concert theatre, park, etc., ofany interest in the area. The Guide also has the city’s mostcomplete guide to dining, interesting articles and themonthly srhedulp of WFMT, a classical radio station.* The weekend editions of the downtown papers also list events happening in the area, though they are usually of acultural nature. The Daily News’ Panorama and the Sun-Times’ Showcase are much better than the Tribune’s andToday’s sections, just as the Daily News and the Sun-Times are themselves better papers. The Seed, Chicago’sbest underground paper, also carries a schedule of eventsin the city, mixed with heavy doses of politics. They toousually give cultural information.This guide will be void of all cultural information, be¬cause the Grey City Journal, the Chicago Maroon’s maga¬zine will print a cultural guide to the city in its first issue,next week. The Journal is also a fine place to find out whatis happening in the city, mainly in the-Culture Vulture, theJournal’s weekly Cultural calendar.Since this guide will be void of cultural information itcan spend more time discussing the city’s sights, from itsmuseums, stores, and parks to the lake, interesting com¬munities and architecture.Getting AroundBefore beginning an investigation of any city, it makessense to find out how to get around. For most students,public transportation is the only solution to the trans¬portation problem. Hyde Park’s link to the Loop, the down¬town area, is the Illinois Central (IC) trains which runevery 20 minutes or so to three stops in the downtownarea, Roosevelt Rd, Van Buren-Jackson and Randolph.The fare from Hyde Park is 55 cetfs and you can catch itat 59th-60th Sts, 55th-56th-57th iii and at 53rd-51st sts. TheIC may be grubby and the trains may jolt you a bit (theview is lousy too) but they are perfectly safe and quitereliable, if you follow the schedule available at all stations.The only problem with the IC is that it only goes northand south and it stops at the Loop. If you have to goelsewhere, you will have to use the Chicago Transit Au¬thority (CTA). The CTA runs “els” (elevated trains) andbuses all over the city and you get almost anywhere in thecity for 55 cents, if you use the transfer system.When you board your first CTA vehicle, a ride will costyou 45 cents (and have exact fare for the buses), but for adime more, you can buy a transfer ticket. With this ticket,you can switch to two other modes of transportation, aslong as they seem to be heading towards some logical des¬tination (you can’t use a transfer to go back to where youcame from). Read the instructions on your transfer to findout about stamping it and the rules for transferring.The most convenient means for using the CTA fromHyde Park is to catch a bus going west on 55th St whichwill take you to either the Howard-Jackson Park rapidtransit or the Dan Ryan system, just finished last year.The Dan Ryan train goes down the middle of the DanRyan pyproccway and takes you straight downtown.The Howard Street, going north, (Jackson Park comes back south), goes all the way to the northernmost limits ofthe city, (Howard Street) and another system from thatpoint will take you to Evanston, Skokie or a few othernorthern suburbs. To find out all about the CTA, pick up amap at most CTA offices.The Loop and the Gold CoastNow that you know how to get there, where will you begoing? The first stop for most students in Chicago is theLoop and Gold Coast area, home of Chicago’s financial,shopping and entertainment district. The Loop got its nick¬name. from the elevated train downtown which actuallydoes make a circle around the downtown area. The Loopactually refers to the area within this circle, but some ofthe outside area, particularly Michigan Ave has now beenincluded in the catchall, the Loop.Just north of the Loop, next to the lake is the areaknown as the Gold Coast, and it is golden. Most of Chi¬cago’s wealthiest citizens live here and the MagnificentMile, a stretch of Micnigan Avenue north of the ChicagoRiver splits the area in two.On Michigan in this area are some of Chicago’s fineststores, with the Chicago branches of such famous NewYork compands as Tiffany’s, Bonwit Teller, Peck andPeck and Cartiers. Also located on the magnificent mileare many of Chicago’s most prestigious office buildingshousing such companies as Newsweek, Time, Life, andmany airlines.The Loop is a scaled-down midtown New York, withmovie theaters, department stores, restaurants and officebuildings next to each other for blocks and blocks, endingon the south in a grubby, dirty-book-store stretch of smalldingy streets and, eventually, in slums. While you can’t getanything you want in the Loop, you will have to look andthink hard before you’ll come up with some of the thingsyou can’t.The biggest store in Chicago proudly sets off the northside of State Street (“that great street”) in the Loop —Marshall Field & Co. Field’s is Chicago’s Macy’s, Neiman-Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman all rolled into one, and it isalmost big enough to be all three! In the main store, amidnicely paneled aisles you can find anything from azaleas tozebras (stuffed, naturally) and everything in between.Field’s is more expensive than Macy’s, but you can besure that if anything goes wrong with a Field’s boughtitem, they will take care of it soon. Clothes are a bit highthere, but they carry many brand names hard to find inthis city. Across the street from the main store on Wabashand Washington is the Men’s Store (ah, chauvinism)whereall the men’s clothing is sold.If Field’s is a little out of your price range, other larppdowntown stores are Carson, Pirie, Scott at State and Mon-Continued on next pageSeptember 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5department stores is just that — cheap. If you’re luckyyou’ll be able to find what you want either cheaper orbetter at a shop somewhere in the Loop.Spend a few days just wandering around the downtownarea, getting to know the layout of the streets and wheresome of the stores are; this will prove valuable to you forat last four years.The Loop is also the home of the first-run movie restaurant are the best in the city). Su Casa, (49 K On-houses and Broadway road show theatres However, enter- tano. great Mexican food). Due's and Cno's (pizzerias runtainment in the Loop goes far beyond the typical movie- by the same people with the thickest, erunchiest crustplay syndrome. As in most large cities, walking around a you've ever tasted), and Kungsholm, (100 E Ohio, Swedishcity at night is more fun than can be imagined. Many smorgasbord with a puppet show, usually a musical come-stores stay open at night, especially record and (in ty book dy or opera following the meal),shops, and restaurants and snack bars are always open.Besides, there are many sights to see in the downtown ( jlCl 1 OWI1area, the most important of which is the Picasso Pablo A bit west of the (’.old Coast is Old Town. Chicago’sPicasso, besides being a war ddamous painter, has also vcrsjon ()f Gr0l.nwidl village, and like mueh of Clileagndone some unusual sculpting ( hicago has one ot the best cu|ture 0ld Twn „ phoni,.rand or rardcsL —■... . than Greenwich Village, 1300 to 1700 N Wells is the entiretyIn the Civic Centei aza (Was ing on ant car orn ()f Town. hut in these five blocks are crammed mores,ts a brown, rusting figure that has been called a baboon. kv and b.,rs can bl,|„.vi.a horse a bird and a mess, among many other things \ou 0n(.e ()ld Town was ,h(. h„mi, a,,-smay not like ,1. but you must see ,1. Other things worth milmU. but „ mori, and u. an / hroughtseem.. a w:-n -a- .tr<- *ru \udi!or;un. I beam Michigan ■ „PI) \ . ,and Congress not for thi shows m'cessanlv. but for the movt,ri'w|t k,.lvm„ Old Tu’wl' w thspVnY"hpmcTlUt''beautifully ornate goldel interiors the Board ol Trade „f and tourist's cr illlene tlioir cameras and^awaiianbuilding Jackson ami 1.. s., a mcc oats, bark, wheat |irint'^.'r,‘ »f„lc m.’irer -^lartha ll«kcitingeind\i (MFcdcril'Buildm' Doarbwn'atiiU tekson Comnnm merchandise lor an Old Town gap joint ' andcitm... and 111 I . . „. fcuean n am. JJtkson, wi„ ch |„t, ,,n, posU.rs Scven-Cp bottlesftm wast a(lZ■ " ft ' ' ' ' atroCtt> ou, I shape usable as vases, large 'can, ■„■Eating in the Loop is an experience, especially at garbage cans mugs incense, mobiles.lunch Bush........ n. won , • tl e suburbs in for some 1 b 1 .11 ari'. lK'kv' 'na> bl'shopping and assorted others crowd every imagineable Lve to search long and haT■ 5'S&9&ST , * 1,1 VTTz;\Z,sand 123 N Wabash,) rated as second best in the city by the lf^?hwf.nt such lhln8s °ld.T°.wn's |he home °fWFMT Guide), I s - ,tc and Randolph, the pecan pic . . ' h<'»om calher pants nidi shirts scene He-yummy . th( W Institut, dining room .Michigan and down I i[ier s Alley. 1600 N Wells, wh.ch ,sVI I .as: '. Hal,an Village. ,71 \V ■' “ I'"' "«<!«; wmd.ng alk, with a ew goods!,opsMo ■ the best Hal in food in town and the Blackhawk. ’ lllyn'l.> - thl-’ A.,"h ,u fe I hraicM hen• and there Also go1139 X Wat, t 0 it teal Bern,after, dining ’ N'”‘ g" •"* "i,'<" ls a" winatum s a ley thatInformation h it the WFMI Guide ls als" a, 1,11 "’ori' P't’ uresque than Wells Itself Don’t be■ Shopping m the Gold Coast trea is not such a dream S!'TT ** hassled on Wells (“Got any spareas you might think While it i true that there are many nf,b 111 1 M>meonc ofleis to sell you some hotstarts;tha will be out ol . price range .unless of ’ usl !)l' sur0 nul 10 bu>' f,om an.v»no <>" 'ho streetcourse .... namt i Rockefeller oi Getty), there are mug > <" >»" nH' B'''nri’Wmomans ■■ ■ shops all up and down the •• •‘xen though the streets ol ()ld I own are such a dragand the simps are such a gyp. many interesting liars and. v rth md Wal re r right in ^stauni^s have stayed m the area, pn.bnbh becausethe heart oi tl,. Magmiicent Mile' You should wander up ,h,‘v bu*,ness ,u tTass as well as to hipand down - t i ibout a mile or so, just to see *** N \Udls stru>s 24 van(',ll>s ofChicag . he o[ . the wealthyi and to stare in an( ovei Of) \juH’tms ol wunisthe store windows Low I and Roll. 124f> ,\ Wells, is a proa, ."place tor a••• Tl • its t« ee ; !uo Gold Toast are fascinating and <‘h(‘aP consisting of thick, soupy soup B.*t-I and B«,urplentiful. Foremost i. the Water-tower, .Michigan and ('In bon- 1,,.W) ^ Uells ls a l)lt m,,lv < ■••ponsiu- but the beef iscago,. an.old.water storage area and one ol the few build WOrth 1 ' A1f' takr a rhanco and vvander into ()ut ,,f ,h(“ings that didn't burn when Mrs O'Leary's cow hit the Ian- way' bans and ij.ints You might be pleasantly surton .A ra lawn.surrounding it is a nice place to relax ' ^nsl'd fi‘saPPoin,('(1- t)u! ,tiat ls ebanoo ypu take.)after w p the Mile ' Get 1,1 0Id r°wn bj taking the How «rd Stn'et Kl to ('InAs soon as you cross the river on Michigan Ave you cagJ Avenue and wa,k four blocks north and f°ur blockswill see the offices and buildings of Chicago’s four daily '‘vcs” i’ '.i.i) in,!. Ni’Wx mi the left, ]\T T fand tl . : 1 Today on the right (isn't that ap- a OH IIpropos‘d From ‘ Wl tey Building on the right, the pret- When the hip people leit Old Town, they regrouped inty white one, you can.see the News-Times CHICAGO RIVER AND WACKER DRIVE: The scene from the Tribune building.fantastic buys on items that will be incredibly expensive inHarper Court or downtown Handmade clothes are a spe¬cialty of. this area and some of the creations are trulysuperb There are also many list'd items stores that cansupply you with qualitv used goods ranging from dishes tochairsWander up and dm r.coln in the southern section ofNew Town and on ( and Broadway in the north.Browse in shops You’ll De surprised at the low-key sales¬manship., such a change from the hard-line at your localemporium. And talk to people — salesman, people waitingon a street-corner the same time you are, or anyoneYou’ll be surprised at the friendliness and good humorNew Town is the site of Chicago's experimentaltheatre and some of the best movie houses, but more aboutthat next week Entertainment in this area though goes farbeyond just this Most of the bars have live entertainmentand sometimes \oil'll-see people playing on the streetNew Town is known for its community spirit and manyactivities are planned by community organizations. Readthe Seed to find out abi.ut them Also, ice cream stands,hamburger joints and Colonel Sounder's abound in NewTown and do you remember the scenes of McDonalds inhigh school'1 Well New Town recaptures this with theirown. indoor McDonalds! Chicago's one and onl> Stop inforyour favorite horse-meat*.If hamburger joints don't appeal to \ou. New Townalso has some fine restaurants The Bakery, 2218 N LincolnIS very rxpen>i\e but I, is also recognized as Chicago’sbest restaurant, coming out number one m the WFMT rat¬ing-The Brataslava. 2f>27 N Clark only seats 40 people, butif you ge, m you'll eat some ol the best Czech food thisside of Prague The Casbah 514 W Diversey (2800 N) iscalled by the WFMT Guide, •‘quite possibly the bestMiddle Eastern restaurant m the countryAlso, try Grandma's at about 2900 N CM for great,hot apple pie Ge, to both parts of New Town by taking theHoward S, FI to Fullerton (2400 N>. Walk two blocks eastto get to Lincoln and six or seven to get to Clark.(iivek TownTwo ethnic communities in Chicago are more thanworthy of mention ‘ Greek town and Chinatown GreekTowr, on sou'!. Hoisted is small, but it has within it twoline restaurants, the Parthenon and Diana's The Parthe¬non is expensivt but you’ll eat bettei than i Roman ernperor. lie prepared to eat. and eat. and eat and eatDiana's is a favorite with PC student , because it is cheap•if)d exciting People regularly dance on the tables, singand clap while eating mini of the best baklawt made inthis country While m Diana's, cheek Out the grocery storein front Get to Greek Town by taking the 1C to the Roose¬velt S, station, walk we-d to Poose\rlt and Wabash andtake a Number 12 bu n Halstead. Then walk north aboutsix blocks or oChinatownChinatown is larger than Greek town and also hasgreat restaurants The best is King Wall. 22.V2 S Went¬worth Go with someone who speaks Chinese, if you canfind one, and yon'll'enjoy it much more Also, try grap¬pling. with the chop sticks and don’t give up until you’vemastered themWhile in Chinatown, see the sign at the Kuomantang' Nationalist Party ot Chian Kai-Chek) mad. by Kai-Chi khimself. Chinatown has many curiosity shops and littletomjrles which are a gas to wander into.Most ot tiie things you buy in Chinatown are authenticand some are quite beautiful Getting to Chinatown ishard, but you can get there by taking the Howard St Kl toCerrnak and catching a bus on Cermak going west.presses in ac-';■(!. o;h arid s< miGothic, was built following an. architectural contest in’LG ■ m, I i< ■ : z.o.m- er itself is a thing to be seen. SomeY ■ ' e ... i.,g whei tho inshines on it. its blue aura improves the entire near northside H)n Sg Patrid- Day it is dyed green) You cantake a water tour of Chi< ■. on the ri\er at Michiganthe sights in both the Gold (’oast and Loop■•■■'* '!! • If ' ' the IC downtown Cheek themap in your student guide or get a big one at a gas sta¬tionEating in the Gold Coast will probably be expensive, so: w Ch-ck prices Some oi the best places are theBontoi it,; N State, the pastries in this little bakery-6/The Chicago Marwn/Scptember 18, 1971)Parks and museums are the two most usual sights thatcities supply to make residents happy and to thrill touristsand Chicago is not deficient in either category. The fourbest parks are Grant, Lincoln, Washington and Jackson.Grant Park is situated just east of the Loop betweenRoosevelt Rd and Randolph St. The park borders the lakein this area and boating is a common thing. The mostfamous sight in Grant Park is Buckingham Fountain, atCongress, which has a beautiful light display between 9and 10 nightly. The fountain itself operates from 11:30 amto 3 pm, and 5 to 10 pm. Make sure you see the light showand get a little wet.Grant Park has some beautiful gardens, playing fieldsand is often the site of rallies and marches because of itswide-open spaces. The park also improves the look of thecity by giving at least one side of the Loop a grassy, greenappearance.Lincoln Park is the jewel of the city’s Park district.It’s so good that even students and parents go to it, togeth¬er. The best thing to see at Lincoln Park is the zoo, all 25acres of it. It houses a collection of 2600 animals, birds andreptiles, with feeding times (Tues-Sun): monkey house-1pm; flying cage in birdhouses and zoo rookery-1:30 pm;bears, wolves, foxes-2 pm; small mammal house-2:30 pm;sea lions and otters-3 pm; and lion house-4 pm. There isalso a children’s zoo with gentle domestic and wild ani¬mals that can be petted. The zoo is open daily from 9 to 5and Saturday and Sunday 10 to 6.The children’s zoo is only opened daily from 10 to 5.Lincoln Park also has some large open fields (often thesite for free concerts), a fine conservatory with palms andall, fishing facilities, a golf range and many other sportopportunities. But go to see the zoo. Get to Lincoln Parkby taking the IC to Randolph St and catching a bus onDearborn that goes up Clark.Hyde Park’s western border is Washington Park, andalthough the park may not be safe at night, it is more thansafe during thelday. It has some of the most unusual maze¬like gardens and lagoons in any park in the country andattracts visitors from all over the city. Sometimes it is funto go on a picnic in Washington Park (it’s only a fewblocks west of campus) and play ball and try to forget youare in the city. This is easily done because the park isquite large. Facilities are available for most sports andsomewhere near there horses are available, but talk tosomeone from the Riding Club about that.Jackson Park borders Hyde Park on the east andsome of the south. Much of Jackson Park was built for theColumbian Exposition of 1892, the World’s Fair of thatyear which introduced the ferris wheel and built the Mid¬way.In the middle of Jackson Park you can see a goldenwoman, a remnant of the Fair, and the La Rabida Chil¬dren’s Institute. The institute, a famous children’s diseasecenter which operates in conjunction with the University,is housed in a replica of the monastery that Columbusstayed in before he sailed to the new World that was alsobuilt for the Exposition. Other buildings and statues arealso left over from the fair.The Park now is large, grassy and hilly. Its manypaths are great for bicycling. Golfers at the University canwork on lowering their handicap there: the park has an 18hole course costing only $2. Fishing facilities are alsoavailable for the less enthusiastic.One note about parks: While all parks are nice, every¬one should realize that they are not so safe at night. Thelaws are that the parks close at sunset, so obey them andstay safe. Besides, the only people in parks after sunsetare there for no good reason.Steve AofciNORTH OF THE RIVER: Marina Towers can be seen atleft. U fg * i »-H » * .4 *Museums ,Good museums in Chicago are more plentiful thangood parks, and in more constant use. (Note: all art mu¬seums will be in the Journal next week.) Three of the best,all representing different aspects of knowledge, are locatedjust off Lake Shore Drive at Roosevelt Rd: the Field Mu¬seum of Natural History, the Shedd Aquarium, and theAdler Planetarium.The Field Museum is large, stuffy, smelly and fasci¬nating. Like New York’s Museum of Natural History, youcould spend days upon days at the Field Museum and nev¬er see all there is. The fields of knowledge included areanthropology, botany, zoology and geology. These areasare arranged systematically in different areas of the mu¬seum with little overlap.The anthropology area is particularly fascinating wthreimnants from many dead cultures on display. Also, thefamous statues of the races of man are housed in the mu¬seum (on the left as you go through the main doors) withtheir sub-varieties all on display in beautiful ebony wood.According to the WFMT Guide the museum houses“one of the world’s finest collections of primitive art” andI wouldn’t doubt it for a moment. Make sure to see thecollection of wall drawings and pottery from early man.The museum has special shows and displays every month.During September the main exhibit is “Illinois by theSea,” a show of Chicago area flora and fauna of 300 mil¬lion years ago. In Hall 3 during September is the mu¬seum’s 75th anniversary exhibition presenting the scope ofmany of the museums activities in the past, present andfuture through the themes “A Sense of Wonder,” “A Senseof History” and “A Sense of Discovery.” The museum isopen Mon, Tue and Thu 9-6; Wed, Fri-Sun 9-8. Admission ischarged on certain days.The Shedd Aquarium is right across Lake Shore Drivefrom the Field Museum. It is the world’s largest buildingdevoted entirely to aquarium purposes, and it houses over7500 living specimens representing 350 species of marinecreatures. Think of any sea animal, and you’ll find it atShedd Aquarium. Besides being big, most of the aquariumis also quite pretty with large viewing areas. The aqua¬rium is also on the lake, so you can spend some timewatching the water while not watching the fish. Make sure,when at the Shedd Aquarium, to see some of the beautifuldeep sea fish on display. The colors are unbelievable!Daily 10-4. The cost most days is $1, unless you can passfor 17 (35c).The Adler Planeterium is about a half mile from theAquarium, due east on a point sticking out into the Lake.From here, before you enter the Planetarium, you can geta fine view of the downtown area and of much of the Lake.The best feature of the Planetarium is the “Destina¬tion: Moon” exhibit in which all visitors take an imaginerytrip to the Moon while sitting in a newly renovated ampi-theatre-like hall. The show is held daily at 11, 12:30, 2, 3:30and 7:30 (except Mon) through Oct 5. Adults pay 75c, ages6-17 35c, children under 6 not admitted.Like most planetariums, telescopes and other in¬struments once used for astronomy are displayed. Photo¬graphs from Mariner IV, Luna IX, Ranger and Lunar Or-biter spaceships are also on display. Fifteen-minute dem¬onstrations of the Musser Copernican Planetarium are giv¬en as are demonstrations of a coelostat, an instrumentwhich traces the path of the sun.“Star Parties”, held at dusk are open to all interestedpersons, but they are only held if the weather is good. Theparties are held 9:30-9:30; Mon 9:30-5. Everything is freeexcept the Moon show. All in all it is a great bargain.All three, the Field Museum, Shedd Aquarium and Ad¬ler Planetarium can be reached by taking the IC to Roose¬velt Rd and walking east over Lake Shore Drive.Two of the cities best museums are located right herein Hyde Park, and one is even on campus. The Museum ofScience and Industry, 57th St and Lake Shore Drive is amonster museum, showing the advancements of mankindin, naturally enough, science and industry.See the submarines! See the steam-engined trains! Seeearly cars! See the coal mine shaft! Push buttons! S&I isa barrel of laughs and you might even learn something.Admission is free, the coal mine is 45c, the U-505 subma¬rine is 35c, and the nickelodeon is 5c.Even without seeing the pay items, you can spend dayswandering around S&I and be fascinated all the time.New additions to the permanent galleries are a displayof space probes and communications satellites in theNASA exhibit; Motorama’s “Research and Engineering —Today and Tomorrow” and other great titles; and a newtransparent manikin in the medical balcony. My favoritesare the old cars, but lots of girls like the doll room. Themuseum also has some movies, art galleries and specialchildren’s exhibits.The Oriental Institute, at 58th St and University Ave¬nue is one of the finest ancient Middle Eastern museumsin the world and you can stop by on your way to class.Countries represented in the Oriental Institute includeEgypt, Palestine, Syria, Anataolia, Mesopotamia, and Iran.The years represented range from 5000 BC to 1000 AD.Mummies, statues, jewels, ornaments, scarabs andmany other beautiful relics of these dead cultures are ondisplay daiiy from 10-5, Tues and Wed 10-12 and 1-5. Closedon Mondays. Stop over and look in the little store wherevnu can buy ynnr own souveniers from your visit, some ofwhich are very expensive, but you can find a cheap item like a 50c scarab, a coloring book or a replica of an Egyp¬tian idol.These are only the best museums. There are manyother smaller ones located all over the city that mightinterest you. A good idea is to utilize these museums inaccordance with your course work. If you are studyingancient art, go to the Oriental Institute dr, Fiel&Mwseumand see some of it, if you can. It will make tie coursework more realistic (and heaven knows it needs if) andenjoyable.ArchitectureSome native Chicagoans or those familiar with the citymay have noticed that some , important sights in the cityhave been neglected in this guide so far, like the HancockBuilding, First National Bank, Illinois Institute of Tech¬nology, etc. Fear not, and read on.Living in Chicago is like a crash course in modernarchitecture, mainly because most of the city is new, hav¬ing been rebuilt following the Chicago fire. After livinghere for a few months, you begin to notice buildings in away that you never did before, analyzing lines and angles,criticizing contrast, examining building materials. If youdon’t get this far, you will at least begin to really look atbuildings.To start now, look up, especially when you are in theLoop. Stores are actually housed in skyscrapers that areimaginative and inventive. Look at them, stare at them.The buildings downtown are a study in contrasts andwatching them will teach you a lot about how buildings areput together.Perhaps Chicago’s most famous building is the JohnHancock, 875 N Michigan. You cannot have missed thisblack, tapering tower; it is the world’s second tallest build¬ing. It has, “X’s” all over it and the two antennae on top.Many have called it a grasshopper, a phallic symbol, amasterpiece or a monstrosity. Half of it is offices, the restapartments and we hear tell that on a clear day, you cansee Michigan, not forever.Even so it is impressive, massive and Chicago’s tallestfor the time being. A bigger one, the world’s tallest will bebuilt by Sears some time in the near future.Another amazing building is the First National BankBldg at Madison and Clark. This light, modern brand newbank swoops up 60 stories with the most amazing curveever built into a building on purpose. Large windows helpto offset the canyon-like feeling you get standing next tothe bank with other buildings across the street. To get thebest view of it, walk a few blocks down Madison and lookup.The Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) is Mies Vander Rohe’s creation, using black steel and glass to give his“less is more” effect. Crown Hall is considered to be hismasterpiece but look for yourself. The Social Service Ad¬ministration Center on campus here (60th and Ellis) isanother Van der Rohe example of steel and glass in con¬junction. To see IIT, take the Howard El to the IIT exit;you’ll see the school on the west side of the El in thethirties blocks.Marina Towers, just over the river on State St, arefamous round buildings that are often used in Winstoncommercials and such stuff to symbolize Chicago. Thetwin towers house apartments on the top and have garagesfor the apartment dwellers on the bottom. The ground flooris a fine shopping area with many good shops and a fewnice restaurants. The ABC network still has its tower onMarina Towers while CBS and NBC are on the HancockBuilding.There are two architectural masterpieces here oncampus, the law school and Robie House. The law schoolon 60th St was designed by Saarinen and is generally rec¬ognized as the best building on campus with its windowlesscourtroom and black glass library.Robie House, designed and built by Frank LloydWright, is the prime example of Wright’s prairie house. Itis a national landmark and currently houses the Adlai Ste¬venson Institute for International Affairs, an internationalrelations brain-trust of sorts.Other great buildings can be found all over the city. Tofind the best, get a book entitled Chicago’s Famous Build¬ings, edited by Arthur Siegel, UC Press, 1965. Paperback,$1.50.FinaleBelieve it or not, Chicago has a piece de resistance —Maxwell Street. Every city has a little flea market, or ayearly big outdoor sale. Chicago however, does everyoneone better by having a weekly, immense outdoor sell-a-thon where you can buy anything you want. If you don’tsee what you want, ask. Also haggle, bargain, refuse tobuy and watch the prices come down. It is more fun thanyou can imagine and you get great buys sometimes. How¬ever, never ask where anything comes from. It’s not done,that’s all. Just buy and enjoy. Go early on Sunday and tryto get a car so you can carry all the junk you buy. If youcan’t get a car, follow the directions for Greek town butinstead of walking north, walk south to Maxwell St (1400 S)and you’ll be there. The sale stretches for blocks andblocks so look all around. This is the only Chicago ex¬perience that is not to be missed.Well, that’s Chicago, but only a start. Remember, allwuik and no play makes you a drag, so get away from thegrey fortress and do things, see things, enjoy.September 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7“Chicago has a piece de resistance - Maxwell Street. Everycity has a little flea market. Chicago however, does everyoneone better by having a weekly, immense outdoor sell-a-thon.* fillIf you wantmoderate rentals, good schools,play lots*, and more ...GREENWOOD PARKis for youOne-bedroom 8127Two-bedrooms *148Three-bedrooms 8170Greenwood Park inLake VillageA new direction in urban living Come seea dramatic newcommunity withina community:Greenwood Parkin Lake Village,the newestaddition toHyde Park-Kenwood.Finest livingin a totally newenvironmentconvenient tothe Universityfor familiesand young marrieds.One, two, andthree-bedrooms,large familykitchens,separate areasfor dining.New-style livingin low-profiletwo and three-storyapartments withsheltered, landscapedplay areas foryour children.Featuring:free cooking gas,free parking,modern appliances,ceramic tile baths,coin-op laundry rooms.Strategically located:on campus buslinewith six nearbypublic and privateschools.Furnished modelsnow openfor your inspectionweekdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.Saturdays and Sundays,noon to 5 p.m.model apartments at1141 E. 47th St.see them today.Draper & Kramer,Incorporated548-3595.her »8, !370*/■ ’ ( 'Political dissent, past and presentSIT-IN: Spectators mass in front of the administration building on the first day of the 1968 Dixon sit-in. Stove AokiBy Paul BernsteinPolitics, that ever more important aspectof college life, has certain unique featuresat the University of Chicago.In one sense, this is as political a campusas there is to be found. The number of po¬litical organizations is great (although thevariety is not, with almost all of thembeing far to the left of center), and thesigns of their activity are everywhere.The most obvious signs are the numberof leaflets and position papers distributedon campus, the amount of discussion on po¬litical issues, the frequency of rallies anddemonstrations. Even the most apatheticnewcomer cannot ignore all this and willsoon have formed opinions on it.Yet for a campus with so much politicaldiscussion and awareness, large-scale ac¬tion has been none too frequent, and eventsat other universities have been difficult tomatch here.Examples of this include the response tothe Chicago conspiracy trial, which did notcompare to what was to happen later atNew Haven; the strike of last May, duringwhich many students devoted more energyto arguing over what it should do than toactually doing anything at all; and the sit-in of 19 months ago, whose dimensionsproved to be something less than those of aColumbia or a Harvard.Part of the obstacle to unified and signifi¬cant action lies in the fact that there are somany political groups. Each one is com¬mitted to a particular ideology andanalysis, and compromises between themdo not come easily.The divisions become most apparent oncean important protest is already underway.It is then that political factions can presenttheir position before an unusually large au¬dience, and most take advantage of the sit¬uation. Each group tries to show that theprotest should be tied to their own cause,and this often proves to be detrimental tothe initial movement.This was the case for both the sit-in andthe anti-war strike. During the sit-in, thedebate centered on how radical the de¬mands and tactics should be; during thestrike, the issue was the extent to whichprotest should be directed against the Uni¬versity. In both instances the amount of ar¬gument hurt the over-all effectiveness ofthe action, although the strike later recov¬ered.Another factor in slowing things up, onethat is often mentioned by frustrated activ¬ists, is the mentality of many studentshere. An extreme sophistication makesthem wary of every opinion or proposal they hear; and they proceed to raise everypossible objection, even when the issue isnot of monumental importance.One mass meeting is enough to demon¬strate the degree of pettiness over suchthings as the wording of resolutions, andthe amount of disagreement and confusionabout as routine a matter as parliamentaryprocedure. Everyone seems to agree laterthat this bickering only wastes time, butsomehow it still happens.Perhaps the most important obstacle tomaking a political commitment is the cy¬nicism produced by past failures. On thenational level, efforts to change Vietnampolicy have been futile; with the Univer¬sity, two recent protest actions (the sit-inand the boycott of Hutch Commons) even-ually fizzled and resulted in expulsions orsuspensions. Given this past record, it isdifficult to be enthusiastic about in¬volvement in politics.The result of all this is a remarkableparadox. All the talk and argument and ex-peri ance with politics works against anyactivity. The campus is too political, if sucha thing is possible; it is too picky aboutwhom and what it will support, and tooaware of how futile its efforts might be, toengage in simple and unintellectual massaction.It is at more conservative schools that asuccessful mobilization of the student bodycan take place. Thus the activists who dur¬ing the strike decried the fact that therewas more action at places like North¬western and Circle than at the supposedlyradical University of Chicago had hit uponthe strange truth without realizing it.One organization that appealed so well tothe cynicism of last year was the Studentsfor Violent Non-Action (SVNA). Just whatthey stood for was unclear. What was moreimportant was their talent for making funof absolutely anything: politics, morality,football, intellectualism, etc. The com¬bination of humor, irreverence and apathywas an amazing success. When the largestcrowds of the year were to be found atevents like the SVNA-sponsored LasciviousCostume Ball, it almost seemed that satirehad become the new form of protest.All that changed suddenly with Cambodiaand Kent State, and an interest in politicalactivity reappeared. The question now is towhat extent the sense of commitment willcarry over this year. The 10-day interimbefore elections already represents a stim¬ulus for it, and future national develop¬ments may result in further action. Never-t h e 1 e s s , afer recent experience thesoothsayers should think twice about thelikelihood of a year of widespread politicalactivism on this campus. By Sue LothDissent, a tradition built into the founda¬tions of William Harper’s university, is nota practice confined to students alone. Vital,inquisitive professors have long encouragedintellectual dissent within the classroom;still, headlines grab at news of uncon¬ventional student dissent.The history of student dissent at the Uni¬versity of Chicago has come a long waysince 1910, when “mass meetings” and“rallies” boosted ticket sales for the nextsports event rather than the latest politicalfaction or issue.Organized student protest groups playedlittle role on campus during the 20’s, 30’s,and 40’s, according to the incomplete filesof the Daily Maroon.In the early 1950’s, however, groups wereorganizing to End the War in Korea or tohear pleas for anti-McCarthyite academicfreedom. The rest of the decade was noto¬riously quiet; faculty were even heard tohope for more student hell-raisers.With 1960 came a new University presi¬dent, Nobel prize-winning biologist GeorgeBeadle. His early campus “save the grass’ecology campaign inspired some studentsto quietly scatter com seed on the quad¬rangles, leaving astounded buildings &ground personnel to handle the unexpectedharvest.And three years later, students protestingprofessionalism in college sports staged asit-in on Stagg Field before cameras at¬tempting to televise a non-varsity footballgame.The 60’s also brought a new national ad¬ministration, and a growing awareness andsocial concern among students.Civil rights actions came through meet¬ings of the Congress for Racial Equality(CORE) and other groups. Organized re¬sponse to the escalating Vietnam war andits pimp, the Selective Service System, wasmore widespread, however.It was during 1966 that for the first timein a decade, organized dissenters seemedto aim political protest at the University.At that time the University was rankingmale students for the Selective ServiceSystem, which then based deferments onrank. A group called Students Against theRanks, some 250 strong, staged a four-daysit-in in the administration building in res¬ponse. Although the faculty largely dis¬approved of the action, no discipline re¬sulted from the protest.The University finally determined thatgiving out ranks was inconsistent with theirinstitutional neutrality; by then, the SSSi'd quit using the rank, anyway.. vear later, several leaders of the firstsit-i. had become leaders of SDS. Whenthey l ^covered that on a technicality, the University was still ranking male students,they again organized Students Against theRanks to hold another “study-in” in the adbuilding.This demonstration proved far less popu¬lar with students and administration alike.Only about 60 participated in the overnightsit-in; but discipline resulted for those whorefused to clear out.Following a mass hearing the last weekof spring quarter, 57 received suspensions(though 31 freshmen and graduating sen¬iors were later expected).More University-directed protest came inNovember, 1967, when students in SDScomplained about the University’s alleged¬ly “imperialist” ties with the Institute forDefense Analysis (IDA). To remain con¬sistent with its ivory tower ideals, the Uni¬versity did sever institutional attachmentswith the IDA, yet allowed individual facultyto continue work with the institute at theirdiscretion.Meanwhile black students began organ¬izing groups, including the Black StudentAlliance. When the administration failed torespond to their demands for an all-blackdormitory, a 12 percent black admissionsquota, and others, they staged a four hourad building sit-in in May, 1968. All but thedormitory demand were met, and no dis¬cipline resulted.Fall, 1968, following outbursts at Colum¬bia University and at the August Demo¬cratic convention, saw a new hardening ofcampus politics. UC’S explosion came inFebruary, 1969, when 400 students marchedinto the ad building to begin a two-week sit-in protesting the severance of radical soci¬ology professor Marlene Dixon.The discipline for participants in the sit-in and subsequent radical actions was theharshest to date; 42 were expelled, and 81were suspended. The discipline itselfsparked further protest, including an abort¬ive class strike and a tent-in hunger strike,but the University stood firm on its deci¬sions.In November, 1969, a faction of SDSblocked the doors of Hutch Commons de¬manding free meals for employees there.Diagnosis: disruption; prescription: 13 sus¬pensions.The next radical action came during theotherwise peaceful Cambodia strike ofclasses in May, when an SDS-inspiredgroup of radicals broke into and “evicted”an alleged “imperialist brain-trust,” theAdlai Stevenson Institute for InternationalStudies.Perhaps more significant was the forma¬tion of the Movement for a New Congress,which this fall hopes to direct student polit¬ical fervor within the system. WhetherMNC signals a new trend, or will be re¬jected for apathy or further radicalism, re¬mains to be seen.September 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9FIFTY-NINTH STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUEI3TH CONSECUTIVE SEASON1970' ORATORIO FESTIVAL -1971RICHARD VIKSTROM, Director of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRand members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRATUESDAY, 8:30 P.M.October 13 DAVID CRAIGHEAD, Organ RecitalChairman, Organ Dept., Eastman School ot MusicSUNDAYS, 3:30 P.M.November 15 EIN DEUTSCHES REQUIEM/NANIE by Johannes BrahmsDecember 13 MESSIAH by George frlderic HandelFebruary 14 B MINOR MASS by Johann Sebastian BachApril 4 ST. JOHN PASSION by Johann Sebastian BachMay 2 REQUIEM VESPERS DE CONFESSOREby Wolfgang Amadeus MozartSEASON TICKETS (5 Concerts and I Organ Recital)Reserved . . . . ... . . . * $20.00General Admission . * . ♦ . . , . 15.00U of C Connected/Alumni . . . . . 12.00U of C Student . . . 10.00, ... • ' • . ; • '0 iv; , • 'V ' ' ; ■ . ’On Sale; AH TICKETRON outlets including Marina City, and allMontgomery Ward and Marshall Reid StoresReynolds Club Desk, 5706 University AvenueWoodworth’s Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetCooley’s Corner, 5211 Harper AvenueMail Orders to: Chapel Music Office, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637Please make checks payable to The University of Chicago and enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope.For further information call; Midway 3-0800, Extension 338710/The Chicago Maroon/September 18. 1970————^-*h%««•s>»**<430t By Paul BernsteinHyde Park is one of those few subjectsabout which most students agree. The con¬sensus is that it’s grey, lonely, depressing,and the number one cause of alienation.To be sure, there are more cheerful andsafer places in which to live. Yet the neigh¬borhood is unique in many ways that areoften taken for granted, and the familiarcriticisms of it do not begin to tell thestory.For one thing, Hyde Park represents abastion of liberalism in the middle of May¬or Daley’s Chicago. Its liberal political tra¬dition goes back to the days of former sena¬tor Paul Douglas, a long-time Hyde Parkresident. Today it is represented by aider-man Leon Despres, a frequent critic of theDaley machine, and liberal congressmanAbner Mikva.Hyde Parkers are also liberal in their at¬titude towards differing life-styles. It is oneof the few places where commuting busi¬nessmen can tolerate longhairs, where oldwomen shop with students, and where in¬tegration is a living reality.The neighborhood’s ideology is perhapsbest illustrated by its many local commu¬nity organizations. These include tenantunions, anti-draft counseling, anti-pollutiongroups, etc., and the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference (HPKCC), whoseefforts to bring about community self-de¬termination go back to 1951.For all its liberalism and communityspirit, however, Hyde Park as it exists to¬day is the result of outside forces. The Uni¬versity, with the help of the South East Chi¬cago Commission (SECC) whom it fi¬nanced, obtained the city’s acceptance ofits urban renewal plans through the 1950’s.Slums were torn down and replaced withmiddle-income townhouses and high-rises.An area plagued by blight and a rapidlyincreasing crime rate became a stable andprosperous community.But the same is not true of the HydePark’s surroundings, and the ghettoes tothe south, east and north are a reminder ofwhat is being kept out of the neighborhood,and a cause for discretion during nighttimeexcursions.Although a certain amount of danger ispresent, it should keep no one locked up ina dormitory room or an apartment for fouryears, and the brave will find that whileHyde Park is no entertainment capitol ofthe world, there are a number of things tosee and do.The busiest street after dark is 53rd; onealmost has to walk that far to get a decent HARPER LIBRARY: The 59th St location will still house some undergraduate books after the Regenstein opens. Steve Aokimeal. At 53rd and Harper is Harper Court,a bi-level shopping area with some goodstores and restaurants and a weird-lookingcrowd of onlookers.Fifty-seventh Street features two student-frequented coffeehouses, the Medici andAhmad’s, several bookstores, and manyteenyboppers.About the best reason to go into Wood-lawn, other than to take the El, is Tai SamYon, one of the best Chinese reataurantsanywhere for its prices; it’s on 63rd Street.O’Neill’s, a favorite hangout of both Uni¬ versity students and Chicago policemen(that’s right), has reopened and is locatedat the corner of 61st and Ellis.The Museum of Science and Industry, at57th and Lake Shore Drive, is worth a visit.So is the Point, at 55th and Lake ShoreDrive, where one can fish, swim or paintgrafitti.There are two nice parks nearby: Wash¬ington Park (west of Cottage Grove Avenuebetween 53rd and 59th), and Jackson Park(Lake Shore Drive and 59th), which hassome fine lagoons left over from the Finally, there is the Midway itself, agood place to play ball or relax with abook, or to ice skate in the winter.These are only a few examples of whatHyde Park has to offer. The rest of it isn’tall good, and includes a bitterly cold winterwhich will leave many students freakingout in their apartments; but that onlymakes soring more welcome.In short, there will be times when a stu¬dent enjoys Hyde Park and times when hehates it. And through it all, he will alwaysadmit that he has never lived anywhereQjijtp lit? itRIGHT ON CAMPUSFOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE ORSMALL - AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAIL-MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY"AO" BUIUHN6TEL Ml 3-0800,EXT. 2301, 2302, 2303NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICESEXCEPT NOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETS•remmmwrmMmnwmrmmmi HAytey's all-night shgvvPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURESeptember 18 September 19WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A lnllnNAKED LADY? UT IT BESeptember 25 September 26UK GREAT RACE RONNIE AND CIYDEOctober 2WHO'S AFRAIDOF VIRGINIA WOLF? October 3BUUITTOctober 9 October 10THE ILLUSTRATED MAN THE WILD BUNCHOctober 16PETUUA October 17THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR| TICKETS $1.50 | THEFRETSHOPIn Harper Court• All FolkInstruments• Records• Books• Guitar Lessons• KLH StereoSystemsOpen11-6 Mon - Sal.NO 7-1060Hyde Park:an off-beatcommunitySeptember 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/llLEHNHOFF STUDIESof Music and DanceWuHC(For Children and Adults)Instruction by an Outstanding Faculty - members of Chicago Symphony, Grant Park,Lyric Opera Orchestras. Afternoons and evenings.Cello Saxophone Piano ViolinClarinet French Horn Recorder ViolaFlute Guitar Trumpet Voice2)anceFaculty includes internationally recognized performers and choreographers.Evening classes: Modern Dance - Mon. & Wed.Ballet - Tues & Thurs.Day Class for Women: Exercise and Danceinformation call or write: BU 8-3500 —1438 East 57th Street, Chicago 60637 5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113^ ^foreign car hospitalReynolds Club Barber ShopWelcomes YouStart the term looking rightEvery type of Berber ServiceWith Professional Skill.Beards welcome since 1904Open MONDAY& Tues. & Wed. & Thurs. & Friday 8 to 5with or without appointmentNO TIPPINGAlso Shoe Shine Service Available5706 University x3573"Directly across from Quadrangle Club" StudentDiscountModelCamera1342 E. 55th493-6700Most complete photo shopon South sideEQUINOX BOUTIQUE2058 E. 71st ST.667-8781HUTCHINSON COMMONSresumes its regular scheduleSeptember 23, 1970HOURS OF OPERATIONDining RoomMonday-FridayBreakfast 7-10Lunch 11-2Dinner 3:30-6:30Late Snacks 630-10:30Saturday 94 C-ShopMondayFriday10-3:30 CAFEENRICO1411 E. 53rdThis Week OnlyPilcher of Michelob^0 d* 64 oz.HI V Discount WithWr This CouponReg. Price .75Good Till 10/3/70*JOIN THE MAROON WITH THEUNINHIBITED SEVENTIESCOMESwe mA different hunk of youth. When hespeaks, you listen. You wonder aboutthe freaky things you hear and thepeople he raps with.I YOUR EYESWON’T BELIEVEALL YOU HEARI'N THEwNEWMANmu) GOULD dwwMULDALIR wjbihnCRLMEY toot COLBERTWritten b| SIONEY J FUHE and HAROLD BUChMAN Produced by BRAD DEXTER directed by SIDNEY J EURtE in COLORI 1 A PARAMOUNT PICTURE 'W> vANDmneiiHiMiMai?Robert RedfordKatharine RossRobert BlakeSusan ClarkTell Them Willie Boy Is HereBarry Sullivan • Written to* the Screen And Directed t)y ABRAHAM POLONSKY A )f NNINCS LANG PtevntjfKjnA PHILIP A WAX MAN Production A Universal Picture Technicolor* PanaviSKJn*HYDE PARKTheatre53rd & LAKE PARK666-9071COMING SEPT. 28One Night OnlyOh! Calcutta!Our thing is your ring —%r _are the student-edited and stu¬dent-controlled newspaper of the l niversitv ofChicago. And we are the onlv major studentmedium on campus, the source people turn tofirst for news.And we need vour help.W hether you were editor of vour highschool paper or you’ve never worked on anewspaper before, we need you. We have torely exclusively on the energies of studentvolunteers to keep the University informed. This is our first issue of the vear, and wehave another one coming out next Fridav, andthen we start regular Tuesdav/Fridav publica¬tion. If you are interested or just curious,come up to our office in Ida Noyes 303 (justsouth of W oodward Court) and give us a hand.Also we will be having an open house onStudent Activities Night, Fridav, September25, and we invite all students to come in andsee us.TTT Q AhrfhtmfcUNI ifwfifts »ON 59 vfAts119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVEROREEN PLAZAANCHOR CAMERA1523 East 53rd St. PL 2-2228FAST QUALITY PROCESSINGASK FOR YOURPROFIT SHARING BONUS CARDSAVE 20%12/The Cfaaeag* Msroon/September IB, ,£76 ^ V- IUC shows ‘incessant search for quality’Chicago’s coat-of-arms, a phoenix risingout of ashes, symbolizes tne rebirth of whatis now called the Old University, in-corporated in 1857 and forced by financialdifficulties to close in 1886.As early as 1889, though, negotiations be¬tween a number of prominent Bap.ists andsuch wealthy men as oil magnate John DRockefeller and industrialist MarshallField resulted in the incorporation of theUniversity of Chicago and the inaugurationof its first president, William Rainey Har¬per, in 1891.Harper, a professor of Hebrew at Yalewho had earned his PhD there at 18, insist¬ed that the infant Chicago be envisioned asa full fledged major university with a facul¬ty and facilities adequate not only for un¬dergraduate teaching.but for the pursuit ofadvanced studies and research.It would be a precarious financial ven¬ture, but Harper, at 34 on his way to be¬coming one of the most extraordinary fig¬ures in American education, was filled withthe energy and imagination to make it asuccess.He assembled a brilliant faculty of 103professors, including eight former collegepresidents stolen away from the best uni¬versities in the country with the promise ofsalaries fantastic for the time: $7000 a yearfor a full professor. Rockefeller, who origi¬nally contributed $600,000, was persuadedto cover immense deficits every year.Now fully in charge, Harper proceeded tomold Chicago into a dynamic university.Aside from its status as a graduate in¬stitution, the University was to contain jun¬ior and senior colleges, open its doors towomen students and faculty on an equalbasis with men, participate in a world-widesystem of exchange professorships, offerextension and correspondence work, andencourage sports only for the sake of theirparticipants and “not for the spectacularentertainment of enormous ccrowds ofpeople.” He scrapped the old September-to-June calendar, replacing it with the firstyear-round, four-quarter calendar, which is still in effect and permits a more flexibleeducation and a wider curriculum.But “Harper’s Bazaar,” as one jokesterhad called it, worked. A better character¬ization would hav ebee n“Instant IvyLeague.” Such was its arrogant pomposityin early days that a large percentage of itsmen and women regularly wore the capand gown to classes. Harper died in 1906and it wasn’t until 1929 that Chicago was tohave another president as remarkable ashe.The new pesident (later called chan¬cellor) was another Yalie “boy wonder,”Robert Maynard Hutchins, at 28 dean of itslaw school. Believing that “every studentshould obtain a liberal education beforebeing permitted to specialize” and envis¬ioning the College as providing terminalschool experience for many of its gradu¬ates, he transformed it into one of the greatpioneers of “general education.”The philosophy behind its structure wasto provide a broad curriculum that wouldprepare young men and women for theirrole as educated citizens. To accomplishhis aim, Hutchins created a single collegewith its own faculty and the four graduatedivisions that still exist today, separatestaffs and syllabi for each College course,voluntary class attendance, and require¬ments that allowed students to enter earlyand graduate in two years if they showedcompetence in a series of comprehensiveexaminations. Doing Harper one better, hewithdrew Chicago from the Big Ten andthen abolished football entirely. Varsityfootball returned in 1969, however, to awildly enthusiastic reception from the fanswho attended each game.But by 1950 the Hutchins BA programfound itseif in trouble since graduateschools could not look upon the degree asrepresenting more than two year’s work.Students who had spent three or four yearsat Chicago were not being given credit fortheir extra time. Callipg the Hutchins pro¬gram “the finest system of general educa¬tion that the U.S. has ever seen,” Chicago’sGOLD CITY INN***** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM -2:30 -PMdinner 2:30 PM-9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper(near Harper Court) 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) i noifiyrtenlfri&qO 3nyJol'tDSteve AokiFORMER DEAN: Wayne Booth helped plan a curriculum that integrated general andspecialized education.next chancellor discounted it because it didnot relate to “the total American educa¬tional process.”Over the next several years meri likePresident Edward Levi and former dean ofthe College Wayne Booth evolved a schemethat would provide close integration be¬tween general and specialized education atChicago.While the University’s graduate divisionsand its professional schools remained unaf¬fected, the College was further divided intofive collegiate divisions, each with its ownmaster and set of requirements.Such are the highlights of Chicago’s his¬tory. To quote author John Gunther, him¬self an alumnus: “Perhaps the single ele¬ment that best characterizes the Universityis its incessant search for quality, whichgoes all the way back to Harper.accentQftft<D3 “If a case need be made for the privateurban university in our contemporary life,surely Chicago makes it. Quality aside, thisis a school which stands for freedom of ex¬pression, freedom to speculate and ex¬periment, freedom for spacious inquiry,freedom to be a gadfly if necessary, andfreedom not only to be right but to take achance on being wrong . . .“It has unlimited reserves of energy andcreative talent for dealing with the truebusiness of a university, the pursuit andcommunication of knowledge, and, havingsurvived a passionate ordeal it has risen’ again to become newly typical of what auniversity should be, an unfrightened andpertinacious community of scholars.”Copyright 1970, Barron's Educational Series, Inc.Woodbury, New York. From "Profilerin-depth, Univer¬sity of Chicago."SEPT. 15th THRU SEPT. 30thFOR STUDENTSBACK TO CAMPUSSALE /1U333DTHE DKECTOR’S CHAIRFolding Hardwood Frames:Colorful Canvas Covers .. .* v.,L" IsREG. 18.95, NOW... 15”Choose From These Colors:FRAME COVERBLACK BLACK, ORANGE,NATURAL WOOD YELLOW, OLIVEACCENT/SHOP Inc.53rd Sf. & BLACKSTONE (M37 e. 53rd. st.)OPEN MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 'TIL 6 P.M. FRI. 'TIL 7 P.M., SAT. 'TIL 6 P.M.mBACK TO SCHOOLCOLUMBIA RECORDDIRECTIONS IN MUSIC BY MILES DAVISMILES DAVISBITCHES BREWINCLUDING:PHARAOH'S DANCESPANISH KEYJOHN McLAUGHUNMILES RUNS THEVOODOO DOWNSANCTUARY•GP 26/H2C 33ownaucx KONRAD MATHAQlomnc maJOEL GREYGEOfkG# N!j, t ANOvrRiCitrEeORGEM COHAN ■■ a* MICHAEL STEWaFFI[>OHN ano FRAN PASCAlHImm mmam m MARY COHANsupf RvtSKM tv LAURENCE ROSCNTNAIHAMVEY EVANS OAfMYCOMOU GEM CASTLEjciorrSooGEtJlSSfwnOP BAHTINACTIONANO OKMGVOCAL ARRANGEMENTS IY «Y SUPUWSORJOE LAYTON SALE ONLY AT LOWEHYDE PARK STORE1 WEEK ONLYOFFLISTPRICENBC-TVSeptember 12thAnd the original ^cast is onColumbia Recordsand Tapes. ALL 4.98 AT 2.99ALL 5.98 AT 3.59ALL 6.98 AT 4.19 M2 30070John Williamsph r»Spanish MusicAlbeniz. Falla. Granados Rodrigo. Sanz.Torroba. and others . .including first recorded transcriptions of CordobaAlWmz and Vaises Porticos ~M 30057J3e??ie SmithcJhecWor(dr Qreatest 73fue? SinterHemp? Jirsi 16 &. Cast leV&cordinp?including:Down Hearted Blues/Keeps On A-Ramin'Gulf Coast Blues/Tain't Nobody's Bizness If I DoI Need A Little Sugar In My BowlGP 33 COMPLETE COLUMBIA CATALOGINCLUDING NEW RELEASES* All MULTIPLE SETS ALL AT 40% OFFSTOCK UPNOW AND SAVE VWId Premiere RecordingI irM ( implctt \cr«i»n inJuJinj.' the l.mi.-li’MWaldmarchenBOULEZ CONDUCTSMAHLERDAS KLAGENDELIEDLear/HacfligerSoederstroemAnd OtherVocal SoloistsThe LondonSymphonyOrchestraAnd ChorusM 2 30061$A98 $099“W Only ■■ Per Record 40% >5“ .'3.59 Per RecordParamountPRICES ARE LOWESTNEWSTORE1444 E. 57th OtML AT LOWES!!!OPEN SUNDAY 12-5RECORDSPhone MU 4-1505C 30221* INCLUDMQUESTIONS 67 AND 6USTEN/UBERATKXALKOOPEREasy Does Itincluding BLOOD,SWEAT& TEARSincluding:Symphony For The Devil-Sympathy For The DevilSomethin' Cornin' On The Battle40,000 Headmen Hi-De-Hoducting:Riki Tiki Tavi Clara Clairvoyant'Ranges Season Of FareweilBOB DYLANSELF PORTRAITincludingWigwam / Days Of 49/LittleCopper Kettle/Early Mornin' Sadie1 Rain INCLUDINGTHE TRAIN KEPT A R<LITTLE GAMES/I AIN’T IDRINKING MUDDY WJEFF'S BOOGIE The New York Rock EnsembleRoll OverINCLUDINGRUNNING DOWN THE HIGHWAYTRADITIONAL ORDER/FIELDS OF JOYDON T WAIT TOO LONG /GRAVEDIGGERJOHNNY WINTER ANDINCLUDING:ROCK AND ROLL HOOCHIE KOONO Time to LIVE AIN T THAT A KINDNESSPRODIGAL SON LOOK UP Contains 24 Page IlkFuM Color Poster A Howard W Koch-Alan Jay LernerST” Production StarringSOUNDTRACK=-Barbra WesStreisand Montand°4c/iear14/The Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970SMEDLEYSENGLISH PUB5239 S. HARPER AVE.Near Harper CourtHome Of The Extra LargePITCHER BEERSchlitz On TapSPECIALCocktail Hours4 P.M. to 7 P.M.PIZZA-SPAGHETTIvS TEAKBURGERS-CHIUTUES. & WED. LADES NITISAll LadiesDrinks 25 C fa.Alt The Peanuts You Can Eat Compliments Of The HouseMoke us your student headquarters!tucsoav. wioniioAv. sat o-6 thuss Em. S-S ciosiD sun. mon sorry, no phone or mail ordersSpika!Great budgetstretchersGreatspace saversUnpainted, easy-to-assemble chipboardfurniture from Sweden.Convert a room to alibrary for under $50;* astudy-comer, with desk,for under $26. Handsome‘as is,* easy to paint.Unbelievably low cash &carry prices.ACT hi bookcase $8.5082* hi bookcase 15.50desk 16.75table-bench 12.00trill S2NO & HARPER * 324-9010 • IN HARPER COURT. ATTENTION!PRE-LAW STUDENTS %PLANNING TO TAKE WOCTOBER 17th or DECEMBER 19th LSATCLASSES FOR THE OCTOBER 17, 1970 LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST REVIEW COURSE BEGINTHE LAST WEEK OF SEPTEMBER -AT THETIMES AND PLACES LISTED BROW.REGISTER NOWTimes & places for Classes far the December 19,1970 Exam provided on requestThe LSAT Review Course con improve your score several times. It will thoroughly and completelysignificantly. Familarily with the LSAT can and shoud familarize you with the LSAT so that you can scoreimprove the second of two scores. Admission Officers higher without having a previous score recorded. Ifrealize this fact and give second exam less weight. you have previously taken the LSAT and plan to takeThe LSAT Review Course is designed to place you in it again, the course will help you to see your areas ofthe same position as if you had taken the exam weakness and learn from your mistakes.COURSE IS BASED UPON MOST RECENT AUGUST 1970 EXAMIT WILL PUT YOU ON A SCHEDULE TO BE PROPERLY PREPARED RIGHT UP UNTIL THE TIME OF THE EXAM.Teaches question answering and time sav- Promotes confidence and lessens tension,ing techniques, verbal and non-verbal rea- Avoid such pitfalls as reading into ques-soning, logic, reading comprehension, le- tions, making false assumptions and sec-gal reasoning and how to profit from your Qnd guessing,own mistakes.INSURE THAT YOU ARE PROPERLY PREPARED FOR THE LSATCLASSES FOR OCTOBER 17, 1970 EXAMRamada Inn first Class:Bsenhower Expy. Tuesday eveningat Canal Street September 29,1970Chicago, III. at 7:15 pmREGISTER BY USING THE ATTACHED FROM or CALL 312 - 298-5075THE LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST REVIEW COURSE.9205 Potter Rd., No. 1-E Des Plaines, III. 60016NAMEADDRESS.PHONE#Please enroll me For class located atstarting on□ Check for □ Check for $10 enclosed. □ Please provide$75 enclosed Balance to be paid on or me with furtherprior to first class. information.Registration Fee -$75.00MAM. YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 90637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* per lino, 40* per each lino if tho ad is ropootod in asubsoquont, consecutive issue. Non-Univorsity people: 75‘ perlino, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL AOS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^.—1— I ! i 1 j" —1—'—'—1—'—1—'i i 1 :i 1 Tl—H— 1 1 liiT [ill —i— — i—r-J t f i—1r 1 1 1 1 I 1*i L — j h-U -—I t—^ •—i— r1 r1 • t t1 r r » —* —r«ji Hr—i "H T ■1 T "1 7till*!. L1 -j 1 - -• ! 1 i |— 1i—f. ■— _ . ,| —»——t—. 1. .1 . i. i. i.. —i—1—1—L—J— 1. . BiographTheaterl2433 N. Lincoln Ave.September 18-24 The Road to Glory 1936directed by Howard HawksHello Sister 1933directed by Erich von StrouheimDl 8-4123September 25October 1October 2-8October 9-15 How Green was my Valley 1941directed by John FordUnfaithfully Yours 1948directed by Preston SturgesSunrise 1927directed by W. F. Murnaywith Janet GaynerIt's one of the great silentclassics with a musical scoreMe and My Gal 1932directed by Roaul WalshKing of HeartssubtitlesA Thousand ClownsGeneral Admission $1.25(No Student Rates)September 4.8,, l^O/Tb^ Chicago Maroon/15A walking tour of Hyde I^oJVashin£ton^arkMIDWAY PLAISANCETo Jackson Park —MIDWAY PLAISANCE 2—>“ —>• JoWashin^lonJPat^MIDWAY PLAISANCETo Jackson ParkEAST 60TH ST.Indusiriat nnationsCrnler-lMptl Bulldii Center for ITomtlnuing EducaltonXW///////KParking La! I ?Mlc IhasIEAST 61 ST ST. EAST 61 ST ST.FOUNTAIN OF TIMEMidway Studios, 6016 Ingleside, are theformer hcunts of sculptor Lorado Taft, whosework can be viewed downtown at the ArtInstitute, or more spectacularly at the west end of the Midway. There tftis magnificentsculpture draws countless Gray Line bustourists, most likely made nervous by thehooded Spectre who watches a human tideroll in — and waits. “Time goes, you say;alas, no. Time stays; we go." 1Tin- Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970To Illinois Central StationHE MIDWAYesigned for the Columbianosition of 1892, the\way was intended to;e as a Venetian canal,lete with gondolas, thatild connect WashingtonJackson Parks. Theis were scrapped when,leir horror, the engi-'s discovered that byng the Lake into theway, they would alsoi most of the South. The Midway now islying field, a skating, and occasionallyeeting place for gangs,my ways its is a/, with sloping grassstately trees. i „ BROBIE HOUSEOne of famed architectFrank Lloyd Wright’s class¬ic contributions to Chicagoarchitecture, Robie Housedeserves to stand longafter its young neighboracross the street, Wood¬ward Court, has crumbledin ruin. It currently housesthe AcUai Stevenson Institutefor International Affairs, atarget of radical activitylast year.CBENCH 5Photos by Steve Aoki3ROCKEFELLER CHAPELAs the name imples, a gift of the Rockefeller family and,by law, the tallest structure in Hyde Park. Costing f7 millionwhen it was built in 1929, it was the site of the John Rocke¬feller IV-Sharon Percy wedding of 1966, although in recenttimes it has housed moratoria and concerts. The carillon,second largest in the country, rings out occasional quarterhours an$ weekly recitals.The last re¬minder of thedays when AmosStagg and JayBerwangerwalked tall atChicago: the CBench in frontof Cobb Hall. Inthose days nocommoners satupon this bench,as it was thespooning spot forseniors or varsityletter winnersand their sweet¬hearts. No othersallowed underpain of death.Underclassmenneed not worrytoday, however.Stagg Field has’ fallen, and BigBertha, theworld’s largestbass drum, be¬longs to theAggies of theUniversity ofTexas.4 THE HENRY MOOREUnveiled in December 1967, this sculpturemarks the 25th anniversary of what many re¬gard as this university’s claim to fame, “thefirst self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction,”which took place on that site. The statue,“■Nuclear Energy,” is as dubious as theaccomplishment. Is it a mushroom cloud?A skull? Crawl in it and decide for yourself.September 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/17Call for private& Christmas PartiesRestaurant and LoungeAtop the Hyde Park Bank Building53rd Street and Lake ParkFor reservations call 955-5151Featuring Shishkebab * TalashkebabV * Lulekebab * Kilich Shish • Karides ShishEtceteraThey're all delicious. What's more,you can afford them.TRYour after-theater snack menu accent SEPT 15»h THRU SEPT 30thFOR STUDENTSBACK TO CAMPUSSALE /|U9))DSTUDENTDESK LAMP200 WATT BULB SUPPLIED. 13"DIAMETER, WHITE PLASTICSHADE. CHOICE OF BLACK ORWHITE BASE. ■« ^59REG. 12.00 NOW IUREADING FLOOR LAMP. 1 C95REG. 20.00 NOW I D10% OFF ALL OUR REGULAR LINEOF DESK, WALL OR FLOOR LAMPS,ACCENT/SHOP Inc.53rd St. AND BLACKSTONE. <1437 e 53*1 s. )OPEN MONDAY THRU THURS 'TIL6 P.M., FRI 'Til 7 P.M., SAT 'Til 6 P.M.Ml 3-7400///atT4'CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN FILMSAUTUMN QUARTER SCHEDULESun. Sept. 27Wed. Sept. 30Sat. Oct. 3Sun. Oct. 11Sat. Oct. 17Sat. Nov. 7Sat. Nov. 14Sun. Nov. 15Sat. Nov. 21Sun. Nov. 22Fri. Dec. 4Sat. Dec. 12Series Tickets $5.00Single tickets $1.00The Two of UsCool Hand LukeThe Ritual (In Mandel Hall)Butch Cassidy & the Sundance KidJuliette of the SpiritsThe Red and the WhiteSleeping Car MurdersLadybug, LadybugHunger (7:00) & The East is Red (9:30)UgetsuLife, Love & DeathAlice's RestaurantAll films but Ritual in Cobb HallFilm times: 7:00 and 9:3048/The Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970■§ • • ■ . , - p P .1 4 \ At *8 4" «? •**'» 4 4Come Underground! fs¥ISTUDENT COOP BOOKSTORE9500 Titles (most at half price)New and Used RecordsPart-time Job ListingsThe Harvard Coop or City Lites we're not.But then you're in Chicago now, Bunky.Reynolds Club Basement9 AM-10 PM Mon.-Fri.9 AM-6 PM Sat.MULTI-MEDIA THEATERlocated in Harper Galleries,5210 S. Harper Avenue,Chicago MU 4-1173Starting: September 14, 1970 for Six WeeksMondays thru FridaysEach Night -Something for EveryoneMONDAYS -TUESDAYS - "The White Whore and the Bit Player”by Tom Eyen, with Janet Bremer &Margie Stosur; 50 cents! - 7:30 and 9:00P.M."Krapp's Last Tape” by Samuel Beckett,with Zachary Cyr; 50 Cents! - 7:30 and9:00 P.M.WEDNESDAYS -THURSDAYS - Folk Singer & Guitarist Barbara BollmanC a light show; 75 cents! - 7:30 P.M. onlyIntroduction to Group Encounter,presented by Barb & Bernie Friedmannand other faculty of the CommunityHuman Relations Institute,* $3.00 for 3hours (7 to 10 P.M.)LIMITED to 25 persons - to assure a space, call aheadMU-4-1173 or 538-8093__ __ Seven Playlets concerning the humanrK DAYo ■ condition by Feiffer, Rechy, Larson, etc.with Al Von, Carol Gregory, Jay Happ,Janet Bremer, Marion Scott & JoyceThurwanger,* 50 cents! - 7:30 and 9:00P.M.Doors open at 7:15 and 8:45 P.M. each nightNo reservations neededOnly the first 50 will be seated for each performance(Except see the special conditions for Thursday nights)New production in NovemberGeorge Val -Director SMEDLEYSENGLISH PUB5239 S. HARPER AVE.Near Harper CourtHome Of The Extra LargePITCHER BEERSchlitz On TapSPECIALCocktail Hours4 P.M. to 7 P.M.PIZZA-SPAGHETTISTEAKBURGERS-CHILlTUES. & WED. LADIES NIIESAll Ladies25‘DrinksAll The Peanuts You Can Eat Compliments Of The HouseMake us your student headquarters!September 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/19accentSEPT 15th Thru SEPT 30thFOR STUDENTSBACK TO CAMPUS~ SALE|U99)DDIMMERCONTROLDESK LAMP ... ALL METAL SHADE INBLACK WITH FLEXIBLE STEM. FULLYADJUSTABLE DIMMER CONTROLSLIGHT FROM ZERO TO FULL 100WATTS.REG. 20.00. NOW... 16”accent/shop Inc.53RD ST AND BLACKSTONE (1437e.53rost.)OPEN MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 'TIL 6 P.M. FRI 'TIL 7 P.M. SAT TIL 6 P.M.Ml 3-7400111 SMEDLEYSENGLISH PUB5239 S. HARPER AVE.Near Harper CourtHome Of The Extra LargePITCHER BEERSchlitz On TapSPECIALCocktail Hours4 P.M. to 7 P.M.PIZZA-SPAGHETTISTEAKBURGERS-CHILITUCS. & WED. LADIES MITESAll LadiesDrinks 25 ( Ea,All The Peanuts You Can Eat Compliments Of The HouseMoke us your student headquarters!COMPARE PRICESCorolla Pinto Volkswagen Vega4942“ *2292“ l2334K *262815(Volkswagen 1970 prire; all others 1971 price)The Corolla price includes only stan¬dard equipment; the other prices in¬clude options which must be added tobare cars to make them equal to theCorolla, such as whitewall tires, wheeldiscs, tinted glass, reclining seats,opening rear vent windows, bumperguards, tool kit, etc.ON WESTERN INC6941 SO WESTERN -776-4016 FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY—WEEKLY—MONTHLYNOVAS • MAVERICK • FULL SIZED CHEVROLETS‘ AS LOW AS $4.95 PER DAYPLUS 13'/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd St. Ml 3-1715NONESUCHCOFFEE SHOPWieboldt - 4th FloorTea - Coffee - Orange Juice - LemonadePastries - Cookies - YogurtOpen Thursday, September 24 Hyde Park has al kindsof heads... roiiidheads,fatheads,eggheads,squareheads,potheads...hmer Sanctum is HydePark’s headquarters servingthe needs of al “heads.”Pipes, papers, Incense, Posters,Blacklights, stash bags, chokers,Patches, Buttons, Rings, India PrintsINNER SANCTUM51st Near Harper955-3614Open daily noonto 10 p.m.Support your local headshopANTHONY AND THE IMPERIALSOrientation tickets on sale now at Mandel,70 A.M. to 2 P.M.20/The Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970Land*Pallet!EDWARD LEVIPresident of the UniversityThe man who runs it all, Levi is about the coolest customer you will ever meet, ifyou get the chance to meet him at all, that is. Former dean of the law school, Levi hasbuilt a reputation for firmness in dealing with student demonstrations and his prowessat persuasion is a well-known and respected trait on campus.ROGER HILDEBRANDDean of the CollegeHe has the overall responsibility for the academic program in the College. In¬augurated last October, Hildebrand has overseen a study of curriculum reform andsought to bring many interesting people to speak on campus. A noted physicist, anexcellent lecturer, and an avid outdoorsman, Roger Hildebrand is one of the mostpopular and respected men on campus.CHARLES O’CONNELLDean of studentsA sympathetic and often misunderstood administrator, O’Connell oversees all stu¬dent activities and grievances, though he is usually not very accessible to students. Hecoordinates the deans of students for the graduate divisions and College, as well as thebudgets for various student projects.GEORGE PLAYEDean of undergraduate studentsHe has overall charge of the technical aspects of academic life in the College, and isin charge of registration, advisors, and such special programs as Rhodes Scholarships.He is the man who is in charge of problems such as decisions to drop out, and hehandles minor disciplinary actions.JAMES VICEDean of freshmenA good man to see for problems academic or otherwise, Vice has a sympathetic earand plenty of time to listen to freshmen.ANTHONY PATIFTTDirector of College admissions and aidThe man who admitted you, he is also responsible for determining financial aid.Scholarship cutbacks are the most often heard complaint against this office, and manystudents end up dealing with Pallett or one of his staff. See him for any financialproblems.EDWARD TURKINGTONDirector of student housingAs the title implies, he is in charge of what you are living in and resident headsreport to him. Although personally amiable, many students consider the housing officeone of the University’s hardest bureaucracies to deal with.TONY GRAFTONStudent ombudsman“The buck starts here” is the motto of the ombudsman’s office, and it is veryappropriate. A student himself, Grafton knows the ins and outs of the administration andthe operation of the University, and he can set up channels of communication or help tosolve any problem a student might have. He is the best person to see first in anysituation. His office is Reynolds Club 204.DAN ‘SKIP LANDTDirector of student activitiesHe is in charge of the cornucopia of student activities on campus. See him if >ouwant to start an organization.September 18, 1978/The Chicago Maroon/21S* v«oimV '•'itii.OTurkingtonPlaye O’ConnellGraftonfreshman’s guide to the administrationThe University of Chicago prides itself on the fact that many of its administratorsire not professionals, but rather professors who have been persuaded to take aniministrative post for a limited period of time. In an effort to introduce freshmenLevi 111to some of the ways of the ibureaucracy, the (Maroon presents a selective who’s whoof administrators they are likely to enedunter.ViceISTATIOND.flnnouncuuj..THE BESTFOOD AND DRINKSIN TOWN Station JBD Restaurant happily announces anew (5500 S. Shore Drive) and freshly decoratedlocation (Flamingo Hotel).Our Roast Prime Rib of Beef has pleased theHyde Park community since 1944. Our Red Snap¬per in capers or wine sauce is only one of our fishspecialties. Hot Crabmeat au Cratin will reallychallenge your appetite AND your taste buds.(If you know a GOOD cocktail when you tasteit, you only need to tell us how you want it.)Reservations are recommended, but not alwaysnecessary.Call BU8-9241Buss BartoStation JBDA MEMORANDUMTO: STUDENT AND FACULTY WIVESRE: UNIVERSITY EMPLOYMENT (An Invitation)At the University of Chicago, wives of students, faculty, residents and interns, constitute a highly appreciated group among theseveral thousand people employed on the regular staff.Despite tradition, University SALARIES are fully competitive these days, with provision for regular merit increases and frequent payrange improvements.University regular employment BENEFITS are better than competitive, including 3 WEEKS VACATION, PAID SICK LEAVE,REDUCED TUITION for Universitv courses. FREE BLUE CROSS - BIJJE -SHIELD and many others Fmrslnv"®' DCrtideate \r. fheUniversity's many activities and functions.There is a great variety of employment opportunity at the University. Typical positions include:Office Positions of many kinds for those with typing, shorthand, bookkeeping or related skills. Also some clerical positionswhich do not require special skills or background.Administrative or professional positions for those whose experience or specialized field of training qualifies them.Technical Positions from time to time, we have openings in research and clinical laboratories for those withexperience or with courses in chemistry, biology, microbiology, etc.Although we have some openings for part-time workers, the greatest choice of employment is for those who can work fulltime, andwho plan to work for a year or more.You are invited to explore your employment opportunities by contacting the University Personnel Office at 956 E. 58th Street;hours 8:30 to 5:00, Monday through Friday. Or call Midway 3-0800, Extension 4440.Of course the University is an equal opportunity employer.22/The Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970 ' ■.7^ “ nTTm< ,> r 01 .»» IHJ.Ilt K4I M I .»■*.*•*wmmm... invite youto shop at, enjoy,and share the savings ofform, co-op furniture,5201 south harperand the cu-op super mart,55th street & lake parkhyde park co-operative society, inc.1526 EAST 55TH STREET/NO 7-1444 -LLLLLDOMT.IG6EDby car repairs/Surjf’cJx */&•••BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTOSEWVite4401 S. ARCHER A/E.+?br ^3a4rsfac4*en io 5em*oe ^call254-3840 254-5071 254-5072ATTENTIONVOLKSWAGENOWNERS!!!Complete clutch installed 1200- 1300V.W.1500- 1600 V.WShocks installed 1200 V.W1300- 1500-1600 V.WMufflers installed 1200 - 1300 V.WMufflers transporter installed 1500 - 1600."Brake service with our modernmachinery" all four wheels 100%guarantee $42.00 on 1200 - 1300 - 1500V.W. sedan transporter brakesKing link pin replaced - Front wheelsalignedSteering damper installed $52.00$65.00$9.50'$11.50'$28.00$34.00$46.00$44.00$11.50*TUNE-UP SPECIAL... $16.00(Includes parts & labor) « . «t f - X *;CHECKERTAXIHASTHE IDEAL JOBFOR THECOLLEGE STUDENT• WE CAN ARRANGE AWORK SCHEDULE TO FITANY CLASSROOMSCHEDULE• WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS 2 TO 6 PER WK.• WORK CLOSE TO HOMEOR SCHOOL AT ONE OF 9GARAGES• WORK DURING SUMMERVACATION, SEMESTERBREAKS AND HOLIDAYS• EARN AS MUCH AS FULLTIME WORKERSMALE OR FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 18APPLY845 WASHINGTON8:00 to 4:30 DAILY8:00 to 11:00 SAT.CALL 421-1314PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTECLEANERSCUSTOM QUAUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 &accent SEPT 15th Thru SEPT 30thFOR STUDENTSBACK TO CAMPUSSALE /|U8»DBUTTERFLYCHAIRlOMFORTABLE, DURABLE CHAIRrITH WROUGHT IRON FRAME,ASHABLE CANVAS SLING.|CHOICE OF ORANGE, YELLOW,>LIVE OR BLACK.REG...16.00...NOW 12”ACCENT / SHOP Inc.53rd ST & BLACKSTONE. (1437 e. 53rd st>OPEN MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 'TIL 6 PM ... FRI 'TIL 7 PM ... SAT 'TIL 6 PMMl 3-7400 "I want everyone to savorour year-round art fare, sobrowsing is always encour¬aged/' says Nathan H. Morris,the Chicago HorticultureSociety's editor. Mr. Morrisruns a shop in Harper Courtwhich features the midwest'slargest selection of exoticplants and hand-made pottery.PLANTS ALIVESeptember 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/23NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER•17 stores of diversified goods and services* free parking for over 1000 cars* all stores open Thursday evenings 'til 9Hyde Park's BestSelection Women'sFashionsCelbertsMen's Fashion Scene..•Everything from Levis to outer wear -Levi's, Gant, bass, shoes, Fashion,Clothing, etc. for the man on campus.Cohn & SternLadies FashionBoutiqueSUSAN GALEBest Bakery for Pastryor DessertBurny Bros. Hyde Park'sLargestVARIETY STOREFood-lovers will be especiallypleased by the extensive selec¬tions. High quality meats and pro¬duce . . . frozen foods . . . every¬thing for your meals and enter- W00LW0RTHS•taining.The Co-OpSUPER -MART Men's & Ladie'sSHOESThe•FLAIR CLEANERS Shoe Corral• CURRENCY EXCHANGE• WIMPY GRILL•FANNIE MAY CANDY• NUMODE HOSIERYThe Book NookHyde Park's LargestDRUG STORE BooksRecordsDrug store, Pharmacy, LiquorDepartment and Grill.WALGREEN'S The PleasantShop• HYDE PARK FEDERAL CREDIT UNION•SHOE REPAIR SERVICE• Dr. Zimbler... 0PT0M0TRIST LingeriesportswearAccessories• Medical Center24/The Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970y Steve Cook Five step registrationto continue three daysRegistration for first-year students andentering transfer students will take placenext Wednesday through Friday. Accordingto Registrar Albert M Hayes, registrationprocedure will be the same as last yearwithout last year’s complication of havingRevised schedulefor fall quarterFollowing is the academic calendar forfall quarter:Undergraduate registrationbegins Wed, Sept 23Graduate registrationbegins Thurs, Sept 24Registration for undergraduatesand graduates indivisions ends to register all upperclassmen at the sametime.If all goes well, freshmen can completeregistration in five easy steps. First, themust consult with counselors to select sub.jects for the year. At that time, placementtest results will be evaluated to determineappropriate courses.From the crowded corridors of Gates-Blake, the students, with course schedulesin hand, will move to either Cobb 107 or 105to secure class reservation cards. The thirdstage takes place across the hall as theymeet with physical education personnel toregister for required PE instruction.set within the plushstudents will completesheet which will corn-programs. They willout the usual registra-confirming address,and other socially ir-Professional schoolregistration endsInterim; no classes Fri, Sept 25Tues, Sept 29Sat, Oct 24 throughTues, Nov 3Thanksgiving, a holidayAutumn convocationQuarter Ends Thurs, Nov 26Tues, Dec 22Tues, Dec 22 During step four,confines of Kent 107,an optical scanningputerize academicalso be asked to filltion questionnaireprospective major,relevant material.From Kent they will drag to BartlettGym, the final step of registration, to sitfor University identification card photo¬graphs. This step, as well as step four, isalso required of all returning students inthe University. Due to the check-out proce¬dure in the new Regenstein Library, all stu¬dents will be issued a new identificationcard which will be mailed to them about 10days after registration.Letter from the editor to freshmen THE CHICAGO MAROONYou are brave people.You are entering the University of Chicago for a fouryears dose of concentrated academia. You have decided[that college in general and this place in particular arevorth four years of your life.May I suggest that within the next year you keep look-png this place over, as you are doing now. Find out what itlike, then decide if it is for you., Perhaps the most tragic figure here is the student whops convinced that the place is unpalatable, and that there isno hope in changing it, yet cannot bring himself to leave.As every quarter brings one closer to graduation the deci-Ision becomes more difficult. It is harder to reconcile theinvestment in time, money, and energy, as graduationlooms nearer, and it is increasingly difficult to transfer, orreconcile oneself to dropping out.You must also consider what being a student today hasIcome to mean.You have been told that the campuses are battle-.rounds, that there is struggle for control between studentadicals and embattled administrators. There is such a[struggle here, but it is now more in terms of rhetoric thanaction. If you should ever have the honor of attending amass meeting, you will know what I mean.The new challenge that faces us, that is eclipsing splitsbetween administrators and students, is the attack on freespeech on the campus being presently perpetrated byright-wing politicians after getting elected. To be a studentin college today is to be on the outside of the power system,with little more recourse to charges of “campus violence”than the very acts which stir politicians to cut off govern¬ment scholarships and initiate committees on campus dis¬ruption. It is a vicious cycle, as evidenced last year whenstudents responded to the invasion of Cambodia and theKent State-Jackson murders with strikes and demonstra¬tions which stunned the country. Meanwhile, massive stu¬dent lobbying efforts for the McGovern amendment to endthe war failed when that effort was voted down last month.It is imperative that students now be prepared to de¬fend the autonomy of their schools and their communities,for the warnings of radicals like attorney William Kunstlerthat we are entering an era of repression of dissent ringmore true every day.To be a student is to attempt to meld the classroomand the life outside in the dormitories, apartments, andptreets of the neighborhood. Bridging the gap betweenacademia” and “relevance” is a challenge which finallyleads many students to leave this place. The emphasis onheory and thought over action in the classroom, which is typical of this school, makes that gap more difficult tocross, yet every student here is confronted with the prob¬lems of urban America — racism, crime, police in¬sensitivity, poverty.“Life of the mind,” “mission oi the university,” and“value-free U of C” have become catchwords among stu¬dents here. They see academia attempting to isolate itselffrom the problems around it, making it more difficult forthe institution and the individuals within it to deal withthose problems.So think it over. Find out as much as you can as fastas you can from upperclass students and faculty. Makeyour decision. Then be prepared to be a student. STEVE COOKEditor DON RATNERBusiness ManagerCON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography Editor•NANCY CHISMAN, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALIN5KYAssociate Editors•Founded in 1892. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdaysand Fridays throughout the regular school year, except during examinationperiods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices in rooms301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Parkneighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S.Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III.Adult Books and Magazines. FRENCKY'S BOOK STORESa72 North State 412 South State LAST WEEKS!A visionary effort - a film of horror andStrength, of madness and normality.”Roger Ebert, Sun-TimesA HIT!“A bewilderment of riches...demands to be seen!”- Newsweek“One of the more chilling episodes amongfictional treatments of a woman’s life and love!"-Ntw Yatk Timkt“WILDLY FUNNY!"-*.//s.«“BRILLIANT!"-,*,*,“One of the best films of the"Dazzling... Stunning...“Devastating and riveting!” Megetmewspsfier*tmenuet L Wort prosoniiAM AU«0 AAT4TS FlMendef Rood*sift KUO. MRUS nut NMTir EMLJMB-Z-EMTSM HU ARmTaVAKMN maxima! TERRYSOUTHERNwSTEPHENF.KESTEN2424 N LincolnFree ParkingTel.: 528-9126 Student RatSI. 50ut all times "AN IMMENSELY ROMANTIC MOVIE WITHSTYLE AND CRITICAL INTELLIGENCE. TheVirgin And The Gypsy’ is satisfying because it realizesits goals!” —Vincent Centof. N V Times"A BEAUTIFUL AND ENGROSSING FILM.NOTHING SHORT OF MASTERLY. PUREPLEASURE.” —Judith Cntt. N#w York Mofesine°D.°H.cLawi&ice'sTHE VIRGIN AND THE GXPSYColor Print, KAW* AOHK^WON PrrumRf lew »divow of CuKomCxpontwi [R]fa§ PREMIERE WEDNESDAYNOW WORLD WIDE !THE MAIL BOXSUPER DISCOUNT SOUNDSLowest overall prices anywhere on 8-tracktapes, cassettes, & provocative & groovyposters at super—low discount prices. Speed¬iest delivery & completely guaranteed. Sendfor our current catalog of selections & theirlow prices. We have a complete line of rock,pop, blues, soul, country-western, folk, jazz,classical, gospel & soundtrack. For free cata¬log mail your request to:The Mail Box. P.O. Box 2417San Fr nn i-r r*. * ') 11MiasSeptember J8. !97U/The ChicaFu Mnroon/25THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS BUS SERVICEEFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 18, 1970Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS." Upon signal from a patron,buses will stop to take on or discharge passengers at any intersection. The "N," "E," and "S"Buses will operate as stated below, Monday through Friday, except on official University Holi-WHO MAY RIDEchasing tickets. One-ride tickets at 15 cents each and MonthlyCommutation tickets at $4.50 each for the "N" and "E" routes,and at 25 cents each ride or Monthly Commutation rate of $7.50each for the "S" route, are sold at the following locations:days. The "C" Evening Bus will operate 7 days a week except on University Holidays. Schedulesare subject to change without notice.Because of legal restrictions, use of the above transportationservices is limited to members of the University faculty, staff,and students. Passengers will be admitted to the vehicle uponsurrendering a ticket to the driver, except on the "C" Bus, whereUniversity identification must be presented. The driver will not bepermitted to accept cash or to sell tickets. Identification as astudent, faculty member, or employee will be required when Pur- Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E. 59th St.)University Bookstore (5802 Ellis Avenue) Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th St.)International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th St.)(NO refunds on lost or unused commutation tickets,tickets are accepted on all routes). 'S" routePICK UP YOUR MULTICOLOR MAPS AND SCHEDULESAT THE TICKET SELLING LOCATIONS.*— ROUTES AND SCHEDULES —(E) EAST-WEST-BROADVIEW(15 cent tickets)Approximately 30 minutes round tripMonday through Friday except onUniversity HolidaysUpon signal from patron. Buses will stop to takeon or discharge passengers at any intersection orUniversity Building on the route.> ROUTEStarting at 59th and Stony, bus proceeds West toCottage Grove; North to 57th St.; East to "StonyIsland; North to 56th St.; West to Lake Park; Northto East Hyde Park Boulevard; East to South HydePork Boulevard; South to 57th Park Drive; West on57th Park Drive to Stony Island; South on StonyIsland to 59th St.; the Starting Point.NOTE: All runs make pickup stop at the Broadview.SCHEDULE* "E"—A.M.E-1 E—2 *Starts at 59th & Stony6:156:457:157:458:158:45Bus proceeds to 59th & Ellis after last round trip.7:007:308:008:30"E"—P.M.E—3*1:30 (Tues. Only)*2:00 (Tues. Only)*2:30*3:00*3:304:004:305:005:30 E—44:154:455:15 Ends at 57th& Stony* These runs will not be madeDecember 21st through January 3rdnorMarch 22nd through March 28thInterim Period.(N) NORTH-SOUTHMonday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under normaldriving conditions. Stops at all intersections uponsignal from patron)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 48th and Greenwood, pro¬ceeds East on 48th to Dorchester; South on Dorches¬ter to 53rd; East on 53rd to Harper; South on Harperto 54th Place; West on 54th Place to Dorchester;South on Dorchester to 56th St.; East on 56th to LakePark; South on Lake Park to 57th St.; West on 57thto Dorchester; South to 58th; West to Kimbark; Southto 59th & Kimbark (The P.M. Starting Point), thenWest on 59th to Ellis; South on Ellis to 60th; East on60th to Woodlawn; North on Woodlawn to West¬bound Midway Drive; West to Ellis; North to 57thEast to University; North to E. Hyde Park Blvd.; Eastto Woodlawn; North to 49th; West to Greenwood;and North to 48th St., the A.M. Starting Point.NOTE: P.M. Buses start at 59th and Kimbark butrun the same route.SCHEDULE"N"—A.M.N—1 N—2 N—3Starts at 48th & Greenwood7:20 _ _7:50 7:51 7:52*8:20 8:21 8:22*8:50 8:51 8:52*9:20 last trip ends at"N"—P.M. 59th & EllisN—4 N—5Starts at 59th & Kimbark12:00*12:30* 2:41'1:00* N—4 Cant'd. 3:26*1:35* 4:10 4:112:05* 4:40 4:412:40* 5:10 5:113:25* 5:40 5:41Last trip ends at 57th & Dorchester* These runs will not be madeDecember 21st through January 3rdnorMarch 22nd through March 28thInterim Periods. THE UNIVERSITY OF (HICA60CAMPUS BUS ROUTES.FAIL, WINTER AND SPRING QUARTERSSeptember 18, 1970-June 19, 1970Further information may be obtained from the Plant Department, 960 East 58th Street, Mr. A. Herbster, Midway 3-0800, Extension 3082. iE. L. MILLER, Director, Plant Operations26/The Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS BOS' SERVICEEFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 18, 1970Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS." Upon signal from a patron,buses will stop to take on or discharge passengers at any intersection. The "N," "E," and "5"Buses will operate as stated below, Monday through Friday, except on official University Holi¬ days. The "C" Evening Bus will operate 7 days a week except on University Holidays. Schedulesare subject to change without notice.Because of legal restrictions, use of the above transportationservices is limited to members of the University faculty, staff,and students. Passengers will be admitted to the vehicle uponsurrendering a ticket to the driver, except on the "C" Bus, whereUniversity identification must be presented. The driver will not bepermitted to accept cash or to sell tickets. Identification as astudent, faculty member, or employee will be required when pur- WHO MAY RIDEchasing tickets. One-ride tickets at 15 cents each and MonthlyCommutation tickets at $4.50 each for the "N" and "E" routes,and at 25 cents each ride or Monthly Commutation rate of $7.50each for the "S" route, are sold at the following locations:Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E. 59th St.)University Bookstore (5802 Ellis Avenue) Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th St.)International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th St.)(NO refunds on lost or unused commutation tickets. "S" routetickets are accepted on all routes).PICK UP YOUR MULTICOLOR MaPS aND SCHEDULESAT THE TICKET SELLING LOCATIONS— ROUTES AND SCHEDULES(C) COMBINED EVENINGROUTE(7 days per week except on University Holidays)NOTE: This service is free to University of ChicagoStudents, Faculty and Staff upon presen¬tation of University identification.(Approximately 50 minutes round trip under normaldriving conditions. Stops at all intersections uponsignal from patron)ROUTEStarting at 59th and Dorchester, bus proceeds Easton 59th to Cottage Grove; South on Cottage Groveto 60th; East on 60th to Woodlawn; North on Wood-lawn to Westbound Midway Drive; West to Ellis;North to 57th; East to University; North to 53rd;West to Greenwood; South to 55th; West to Ingle-side; North to Hyde Park Blvd.; East to Dorchester;South to 53rd; East to Harper; South to 54th Place;West to Dorchester; South to 55th; East to HydePark Blvd.; South to 56th St.; West to Lake Park;South to 57th; West to Dorchester; South to 59th& Dorchester, the Starting Point.SCHEDULES'arts at 59th & Dorchester 57TH STREET6 00 P.M.6 507 403:30 93510:2511:1512:05Last trip ends at 57th & Dorchester about 12:50Specific Pick up Stops at:59th & KimbarkIda NoyesHarper Library59th & Ellis60th & Ellis Law School57th & EllisRegenstein LibraryReynolds ClubBoucher Hall(S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTHCAMPUSMonday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 60 minutes round trip under normaldriving conditions. Stops at all intersections uponsignal from patron)A.M. ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery and proceedsSouth on Jeffery to 76th Street; East on 76th Streetto Coles Avenue; North West on Coles to 73rdStreet; West on 73rd Street to Luella Avenue; Northon Luella through 71st St. onto Crandon, then Northon Crandon to 68th Street; West on 68th Street toStony Island; North on Stony Island through Jack-son Park Drive to 59th and Stony Island Ave.; (theP M STARTING POINT), then West on 59th St.; toUniversity Ave.; North on University to 57th St.;West on 57th St. to Ellis Ave.; South on Ellis Ave.to 60th St.; East on 60th Street to Stony Island; thenSouth East through Jackson Park Drive to 67th andJeffery, the Starting Point.P.M. ROUTEThe P.M. bus starts at 59th and Stony Island Ave.and follows the same route as the A.M. bus exceptthat at 60th and Stony, the bus goes South on Stonyto 63rd St. the Elevated Station; then the bus pro-S-)6407:408.40S—4*1:302303304:305:30 the Normal route it again re-SCHEDULE"S"—A.M.5—2 S-37:00 *7:208:00 *8:209:00 *9:20"S"—P.M._*3:25 —4:10 —5:10 *5:116:10 —(Tues. Only) —* These runs will not be madeDecember 21st through January 3rdnorMarch 22nd through March 38thInterim Periods.(Last trip ends at 60th & Stony) (S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTH CAMPUSFall, Winter, and Spring Quarters 1970-71Monday through Friday except on University Holidays59TH STREETMIDWAY PLAlSANCiztern sneer 263RD STREETthen South East through Jackson Park Drive to67th and Jeffery, the Starting Point.P.M. ROUTEThe P.M. bus starts at 59th and Stony IslandAve. and follows the same route as the A.M.bus except that at 60th and Stony, the bus goesSouth on Stony to 63rd St. the Elevated Station;then the bus proceeds East on 63rd throughJackson Park to 67th and Jeffery where the Nor¬mal route is again resumed.SCHEDULE"S"—A.M.Starts at 67th and Jeffrey BUS ROUTE AND SCHEDULEEFFECTIVE 9-21-70A.M. ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery andproceeds South on Jeffery to 76th Street; East on76th Street to Coles Avenue; North West onColes to 73rd Street; West on 73rd Street toLuella Avenue; North on Luella through 71st St.onto Crandon, then North on Crandon to 68thStreet; West on 68th Street to Stony Island;North on Stony Island .through Jackson ParkDrive to 59th and Stony Island Ave'.; (the P.M.STARTING POINT), then West on 59th St.; toUniversity Ave.; North on University to 57th St.;West on 57th St. to Ellis Ave.; South on Ellis Ave.to 60th St.; East on 60th Street to Stony Island;JACKSON PARKS-7 S-2 S-36t40 7:00 7:20*7:40 8:00 8:20*8:40 9:00"S"-P.M.Starts at 59th and Stony 9:20*S—4 S—5 S—61:30* (Tues. Only) — —2:30 3:25* —3:30 4:10 —4>30 5:10 5:11*5:30 6:10 —* Those runt will not b« madeDecember 21 st through January 3rdnorMarch 22nd through March 2SthInterim Periods.(Last trip endt at 68th & Stony)Further infarmatian may b. obtain*) from th. Plant 0.partm.nt, »60 Ea.t 58th Strwt. Mr. A. H.rb.t.r, Midway 3-0800, Extenrion 3082. E. L. MILLER, Director, Plant OperationsSeptembci IS, 1370/The Chicago Maroon/27STRAVINSKYCAG°OSCAGOSYMPHONYORCHESTRABRAHMSSYMPHONY NG 4V 0tf>sRtCv-JPETROUCHKA*1MEflRfiBRDCHCAGOSYMPHONYORCHESTRAROMEO AND JUUET 5.98LISTONLY3.59ATLOWE'SSAVE 40% OFF LISTON CAPITOL AND ANGELONLY AT LOWE'SOPEN SUNDAY 12-5Album Buy of the Year!The Seraphim GuideToThe ClassicsSeraphim has created the authoritativeguide to classical music. 10 stereo recordstrace the evolution of music: From “TheMiddle Ages and Renaissance" in Volume 1.through to a study of "New Music" inVolume 10.For instance, Volume 4 covers “Declara¬tions of Freedom"- Beethoven, Schubert,Berlioz, and Verdi. The album notes discussthe forces which produced these titans,500 years of musical history.10 stereo records10 musical eras...1 spectacular set and the forces which they in turn producedto shape our music. The recording presentscomplete works by each composer.Five centuries of music. Over 60 composers,in sequence and in context. Unsurpassedperformances by world music's greatestartists. 10 top quality, individually jacketedrecordings in handsome slip-case. All atour incredibly low Seraphim price.LIST 29.80 only at LOWE'S * 17.90 per setNOT SOLD SEPARATELYLOWE'S NEW LOCATION1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505 HOURSWEEKDAYS12-8SATURDAY10-628/The Chicago Maroon/September 18. 19700i*\r.e»nr.K op/mriO ? fr <\V tU rxtri'xtq*?,Assisting in the new de-apartment will beMARJORIE JANSEY.Assistant Vice-PresidentAssistant Cashier Miracle One-Size Pauly HoseTo initiate our Women's Banking Center, the bank Chairman has madespecial arrangements with the world's leading hianufacturer of pantyhose. The Hazelon brand represents a break-through in the technologyof nylons, as weli as high fashion in panty hose. One - size fits all ...CenterWe got the message overthe back fence that manyladies feel a bank is baf¬fling.What to do? How to han¬dle it?Well, we thought the timehad come to set up abanking department justfor the ladies.The new Women's BankingCenter will be headed byAnetta Purka, Vice Presi¬dent Womens BankingCustomer RelationsHere, in a comfortable andcasual atmosphere you cantake care of all your mon¬ey needs . . . checkingaccounts, savings, loans,safe deposit boxes, familyfinances . . . with yourown personal banker. stretches to give a comfortable, sculptured feeling. These are fine quality,100% nylon panty hose with a retail value of $3.00. Available in fourfuSnion CdiCrS—ucige, taupe, Drown, of off white.To get your free pair of Hazelon panty hose, open a new account for$250 or more; or add $250 to your present savings account.UNIVERSITY national RANK1354 East 55th Street Chicago, Illinois 60615 684-1200September 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/219Freelesson.You'll increase yourreading speed on the spot!HERE’S A GREAT OPPORTUNITY: EvelynWood Reading Dynamics offers you a freeglimpse of what it is like to be able to read andstudy much faster. At our free introductorylesson you will actually participate in tech¬niques that will improve your reading andstudy speed on-the-spot. See what is holdingback your reading rate and see how you caneasily read much faster.WHAT YOU’LL LEARN: At our introductorylesson you will see that Reading Dynamics is acomprehensive reading improvement program.You’ll learn that our students not only readfaster but also comprehend more, and remem¬ber better. You’ll learn how our study methodcan cut study time in half. In short you willhave an opportunity to see uhat we teach andhow we teach it.OTHERS HAVE DONE IT- SO CAN YOU:Seeing the instant results of your progress atthe introductory lesson will help you under¬stand why our average graduate increases hisreading speed 4.7 times with improved compre¬hension. You’ll see why over 500,000 peoplehave improved their reading skills through theReading Dynamics techniques. You’ll under¬stand why Reading Dynamics has been taughtat the White House to staff members of Presi¬dents Kennedy and Nixon.COME SEE FOR YOURSELF: We want you todecide for yourself the value of becoming arapid reader through the use of the EvelynWood Reading Dynamics techniques. Plannow to attend a free introductory lesson; theyare informal and last about an hour. Come asyou are, even bring a friend.Come to your free lesson.Call Today!ST 2-9787for times and locations.Q Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute Saper's Store For MenINVITES YOU TO THEGrand OpeningOF OURKimbark Plaza 1216 E. 53rdIN-DEPTH SELECTION OF CONTEMPORARY NtWFASHIONSChargeAccountsInvitedAff n'$Store for MenINHYDE PARK1216 E. 53RD. INSOUTH SHORE2100 E. 71 ST.1 xjKT MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.30/The Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970 Attention - Men Under 25Save $$ On Auto Insurance.S23.000 U. <md P.D. *1.000 AWdkol Farand Uninsuiod Molortsls FvolecfiociSingi# MoltAy# 21-25- 1139 SIX MO.Mdmad MoiaAge 21-25 176 SIX MO.WITH GOOD STUDENT &YOUNG DRIVER DISCOUNTSENTRY. TpN.SURANCE Jim Crane238-0971MOTORS AUTO SERVICESpecialists :n VOLKSWAGEN repairs, body &paid, modern mechanical work. Also special¬ists in American cars. Quality service workdone for less than the dealer.1536 East 71 st Place288-3434The Maroon Classified AdsWELCOME TO BUMMER CITYINSTRUCTION SPACERUSSIAN by highly experienced na¬tive teacher. Trial lesson-no charge.Call C€ 6-1423 from 9 to 5 p.m.Evenings 363-2174.Guitar Lessons at the Fret ShopStart October 1. "In Harper Court"NO 7-1060for sale ~2 air cond. in exc. cond., 2 whitebaked enamel cab. Prices nego¬tiable. Must leave & sell. Call 324-0480 after 5:30 pm.4 rms. gold nylon crptg., 4-pc. din.rm. set, incl. exten. tbl.» lamps,cocktail tbl., chair, TV set. See 8.make offer. Call aft. 6 pm. 375-2834.Complete furnishings - 4 rms S.Shore Dr apt plus air cond & fir.fan. Reasonable - We're leavingtown. 375-5666 after 7 pm or week¬end.KLH Stereo Systems at the FretShop. "In Harper Court"NO 7-1060 Beautiful spacious homelike apt. 7Ige. rms., 2 sun parlors, 7 largeclosets. Available now. Must beseen to be appreciated. $215 month.9S Chamber of Commerce. NO 7-2004 or 2002.5405 Woodlawn 2 & 3 rm. furn apt.Mrs. Green Ml 3-2760, 667-5746.Sublet lovely 1 bdrm. apt., E. HydePk, nr. Museum. Rent $110. Call324-0480 after 5:30 pm.Room for girl in priv. home. Nr.lake, transportation. No cooking $45per mo. NU 4-5076, 6-10 pm.S.S.A. graduate seeking roomer *nhuge apartment. Furnished bedroomwith private bath 8. use of kitchen.$80 month. Call Mrs. Furguson,651-3900 between 9 am and 5 pm.3 rm. unf. apt., nr. Ik., 1C, UCBus, drapes. 768-7609. Eves, call799-6641.Furnished room. 493-3328.SCENES WANTED LEARN HOW to use the systemfor its own good. Come to a can¬vassing training session Saturday at1 at 5625 Woodlawn to hear BarbaraO'Connor, former RFK staff mem¬ber, tell how it’s done. Work laterfor Frontlash '70 and the Movementfor New Congress.Wanted: Subjects 21 years and overfor medical experiment concerningdrug effects. Subjects must havetwo four-hour periods free per weekfor 12 weeks. Subject fees will bepaid on completion of the experi¬ment. Interested persons please callX5809 Mrs. Smith, between thehours of 9 am to 3 pm, Mondaythrough Friday.Need p-t aft. ass't in dental ofc.Will train qual. person. Hyde Pk.Bk. Bldg. Ml 3-9607.Man for full-time bookkeeping, cap¬able of making monthly financialstatements, ability to handle allfacets of bookkeeping managementfor foreign auto agency, NW sideof Chicago. Insurance benefits, pen¬sion plan, excellent beginning sal¬ary. Call 227-3200.Don't be on the Outside Looking InExchange that voucher! Anyone willing to sell Kottke OnOblivion? 493-4811 aft. 5.GROUP September 25-27. EncounterGestalt Awareness Creativity teachBody Dynamics. $25 students. 6844056."By clinging to obsolete behavior8. hang ups we deny our unique,unbored, positive, open-ended self.’'Gestalt AwarenessCreativlty teachfrom LA, Diane Berghoff, leadsDemo grp. $4. Info: Jack, 643-3627after 5.GAY LIBERATION - Open House9/21 Mon. - 7:30, 5310 S. Harper.Everyone is Welcome. Don't MissGay Lib Stu Act Nit.Hyde Park's Only HeadshopINNER SANCTUM51st nr. Harper 955-3614YOGA sjngle/group Exerc. Mdtn.Contrn. Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155.Curious About the University Wood¬work? Be at Ida Noyes, Friday,Sept. 25, 7:30 pm.That makes three big hints. Inplain language, Student ActivitiesNight wants you. If you think aboutit, you'll want it. INH, Frl., 9/25/70.7:30 pm.PEOPLE FOR SALEWill babysit mornings for 2-5 yr.old. 955-3680.SPACE WANTEDUndergrad seeks place to live 70-71.Under $65, 55-61st St., Cottage-Kim-bark. Strange but gentle roommates(pref. thinking) Write Amos Bien,325 Central Pk. W„ NYC 10025 orc/o A. Burson, 1400 E. 57th, Chgo. RUNAWAY?Family Problems? Call the Depot.9S5-9347.REVITALIZATION SCENEWe need workers to help makethis season a smash. Benefits in¬clude t ckets. See about us on Ac¬tivities Night. Please?Anthony and the Imperials AREclassic Rock 8i Roll. Dynamite.Remember how great they were?See how great they are. LittleAnthony and Ihe Imperials.LITTLE ANTHONYGet your tickets before the upper¬classmen arrive and grab the bestseats. On sale now at Mandel, 10a.m. - 2 p.m.Will there be violent non-actionSeptember 25? Maybe . . . 7:30 pm.Ida Noyes. Babysitter wntd. 1 aft/wk in myhome (S. Sr.): agile, healthy yng.to m.a. women. 768-0477.Student to live in Kenwood homein exchange for 15 hours/week baby¬sitting. Spacious room with- bath.Call 624-8363.Any student organization desiringspace at Student Activities Nightshould call Paul Barron (955-2079)or Jeff Schnitzer (363-5918).Gay roommate wanted to share apt.in H.P. 493-7118.BABYSITTER WANTED at myhome. Grad student mother nds.someone loving to care for wonder¬ful 15 mo. girl. Approx. 15 hr/wk.Days flexible. 2-3 days/wk. CallAnn, 684-4215.Loving and responsible babysitterneeded for l-yr old boy Mornsand/or afts, 12-24 hrs/wk thruoutschool yr. Nr. campus. Call 667-7512 Keep trying.The Maroon needs help to deliverits papers. If you have a bus ortruck or some other type of vehiclecapable of carrying a bog load 8,can work for a few hours on Fri¬day morning, you may have your¬self a well-paying job. Call theMaroon office any time 8> leave amessage for Don. X3263.PEOPLE WANTEDPost doc or faculty to share 6 rm.furn. apt. in Hyde Park. 363-7387,mornings best.Female grad to share 7’/» rm. apt.in E. Hyde Pk's. friendliest bldg.Own room, well-equip. kitchen, 2baths. Community 8, privacy. 667-6130 eves., or Ml 3-0800 X3266 days,Diana. Roommate. Share large, bright, 2bedroom apt. Fully furnished withTV, radio. $75 per man. Prefermale grad - Reasonably quiet. Al¬lan 973-1164. Leave message.The Maroon needs two people towork semi-regularly during thequarter. Excellent pay - approx. $5/hr. Car is necessary. Call Don orDiana at X3263 for information.Hyde Park fam. desires mother'shelper. Free room and board forservices rendered. 955-0224., '*• YTTa--New Management!.OOP RECORDSells the Cheapest Records Aroundand we gottaSALE! d dRecords in stock and anything orderedfrom the Schwann Catalogue10% OFFUsual SaleList Price Price4.98 3.29 2.965.98 3.99 3.596.98 4.49 4.04And not only that - the first few freshmen to spring for 5or more records gets Absolutely Free one of the awfuIp's the previous manager dumped on us and we can tsell. Offer Limited! Sale ends with First Week, so hurry ondown. STUDENT COOPeynolds Club^Basernent^~3Fo —r—t jpf i J ramSllilLET THE FOLKS BACK HOME KNOW WHAT YOUR IN TO.In touch with a Maroon subscription for only $8. This sendsall summer issues and all issues for the academic year.CHICAGO MAROON 1212 li. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637Name....Address.Zip.PERSONALSPHIL AND THE FASTBACKS arenow booking greasy gigs. No wed¬ding, bar mitzvah, or new carbeura-tor dedication is inappropriate forthe oldies sound of Phil 8. Co.Contact: 288-6610 X3202. Leave mes¬sage.Students-Europe for Christmas,Easter or summer? Employmentopportunities, charter flights, dis¬counts. Write for information (airmail) - Anglo America Association.60a Pyle St. Newport, I.W., Eng¬land. Support Your Local HeadshopINNER SANCTUM51st nr. Harper. Open 12-10pmSHIMMY SHIMMY KOKO BOP toyou. Go Out of Your Head and drythose Tears on Your Pillow. 8 pm.Sat., September 26.Think about winters m Hyde Park.What if there were student organi¬zations? Sept. 25, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes — your chance to investigatestudent radio, theater, music, dan¬ce, judo, religion, politics, news¬paper, sports, and more. MANAGER NEEDEDTHE VERSAILLESAPARTMENTSAn 8-story hi-rise elevator buildingat 53rd and Dorchester. Will trainmarried woman/or faculty wife.Fine salary plus 3 bedroom apart¬ment with dishwasher. Wonderfulopportunity to supplement familyincome.IRMCO HOTELS CORP.Call Mbs Moran 248-8300SMEDLEYSENGLISH PUB5239 S. HARPER AVE.Near Harper CourtHome Of The Extra LargePITCHER BEERSchlitz On TapSPECIALCocktail Hours4 P.M. to 7 P.M.PIZZA-SPAGHETTISTEAKBURGERS-CHILIIUES. & WED. LADIES NITESAll LadiesDrinks 25 < fa.All The Peanuts You Can Eat Compliments Of The HouseMake us your student headquarters!<L(.I.M,U« M.I t:.U.ULI<i *-»-* l|,H September 18, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/31* ' M - • » H.4. . . >, L1listen.'.'I uakt youJ'JtOUt-O C© Vl^^T /*Y £<>W£5euI CATCSSAN)6U68€MHj(He'» A W«3t (tyi/ityANotflC)' WAVg SINAI HOTG0*Afe& &££? ON RoS€#£Rye Orr K°*n$idb TflAT v//alfAWT/tize W /teflirer..* /3A MAiv\6 T*> tiefY\€m&eK\*HZ Dzli-DHy& furk'c Ofjjy ICtskcH Bcliafetai tfakwyIII Tkt VilUyt Cultrt, S‘l*f +J La.i( fijk.J**tw ,wOTKc ®erT floj /*/ XkM), W« Os Jt -J" tnTtt1,,l<irht<,af rala"'v F-^ JS^k« RH^ k L - /aj* * 0",aW *#// V,tt A Wo*/ Jiu* iU1vMcL t., 0fr * L<fe ^ ^ * J~*^UtL Ow x,m« % aa/t _ p r 3/FatWV ^ *Y\JucL z,„y;_ . SC5 Ccw*Hot r<ket? cLt 1* ?J ***} ******* c*m* & Art fail If!Ope/i 7 ^WKr / W€€K-7311 Am. tot zm, to*, wni RidftibNt * ryj- OSOOfjMDty) Ccme fuk*f A A«w X>«fc 7»m^ AT %Jo/in* AT rfiyAtewom^r-Aiv t4.iy <&rT-ri«t uu M-/W otoor^.^i fd\32/Tuc Chicago Maroon/September 18, 1970