Maroon football suffers Gatorade letdown'By MITCH KAHNThe Monsters of the Midway were thrownto the Christians Friday. With holy fervor,• Wheaton Crusaders punished the Maroon’ssins. When the fire and brimstone cleared,the score read Wheaton 19, Chicago 0.The Maroons’ sins were many: six fum¬bles and two interceptions. Their penancewas costly. All three Wheaton scores cameafter a Maroon mishap.The first Wheaton touchdown came whenMaroon punter Larry Woodell kicked theball into one of his own teammates whowas attempting to slow the onslaught of theCrusaders.The ball careened into the air, and fourplays later Wheaton forced their way intothe Maroon end zone. However, the Maroonballclub “got hard”, and the extra pointwas blocked.The Maroons almost tied it up on the lastplay of the first half. The Monsters of theMidway had the ball on the Wheaton 33yard line with 11 seconds to play. TheWheaton defense hung back expecting a* pass, but rookie quarterback, Bob Sullen-trup made an excellent call, a draw playthat caught the Crusaders hung on a cross.For a moment, it looked like Mike Vidaswas going all the way, but the Fates werenot so easily appeased. As Vidas made adesperate lunge for the flag, the refereeruled him down six inches short, and thegun sounded to end the first half.The 1200 fans were treated to a scintillat¬ing half-time performance by SVNA’s “BigEd and the 76 kazoos.”By the beginning of the second half, theMaroons’ lack of Gatorade was beginningto show. Wheaton recovered a fumble andscored their second touchdown. The foot¬ball freaks in the stands stood quietly as David RosenbushMAROONS IN ACTION: Despite a grand effort, the Maroons suffered a 19-0 defeat in their season opener against Wheaton.the thought of a possible upset rippledthrough their ranks.The final Wheaton touchdown came afterSullentrup was hit trying to pass and theball was picked off by a Wheaton lineman.Despite the score, the Maroon defensewas tough, blocking two punts as well as the conversion attempt. They allowed only73 yards passing, and only eleven firstdowns.Coach Walter Hass said that he was veryimpressed with the team in the second andfourth quarters. The game was a lot closerthan the score would indicate. “If we could have cut down on the mistakes and fum¬bles, we had the personnel to beat them,”he said.The Maroons are hoping to even up theseason Friday against Valparaiso on Staggfield, at 3:15 pm.*i £•The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 10 The University of Chicago Tuesday, October 6, 1970University enrollment decreases 10 percentby PAUL BERNSTEINA decrease of almost 10 percent in totalUniversity enrollment this year has puzzledadministrators and added to the Univer¬sity’s financial difficulties.The number of registered students on thequadrangles as of Monday morning was7391. Although the University expects thisfigure to increase to 7600 within the next two weeks, it will remain below last year’senrollment of 8163.Budget calculations for fiscal 1970 werebased on an expected enrollment of 8300.As a result, the University now stands tolose about $1 million in tuition revenues.Here are the enrollment figures for theCollege, graduate divisions, and profession¬al schools as of Monday: School Autumn '70 AutumnCollege 21 55 2338Bio Sci 238 278Hum 647 771Phy sci 540 624Soc sci 1208 1431Total graduate divisions 2633 3104Business 593 659Divinity 304 343Education 170 190Law 483 450Lib Sci 118 102Medicine 357 321SSA 347 409Total professional schools 2372 2414Students at large 231 247Total 7391 8163Reorganized SG defers referendumBy USA CAPELLDespite rumors to the contrary there willbe no attempt to hold a referendum to abol¬ish SG, according to Gerald Leval ’72, vice-president of Student Government (SG).Leval said that it is not SG’s responsi¬bility to initiate the referendum since it was only a recommendation from the stu¬dent ombudsman. He has no specific objec¬tions to holding it but he feels it was “bornfrom the wrong premise.”Leval feels the elimination of SG wouldnot cure the ills on campus but wouldcreate a vacuum. In order to solve the cur¬ rent problems besetting SG student apathymust be eliminated.To alleviate student apathy SG is ex¬panding its services and streamlining itslegislative organization. SG is planning toprovide a list of job openings and availablehousing in the Chicago area. The assem¬blies will be more efficient and more opento ideas and suggestions, Leval said.Mike Fowler ’71, president of SG, added,“Student government should look after stu¬dent interests, the standard of living of astudent and the quality of education he re¬ceives.”Considerable debate arose between Levaland Fowler concerning the role of studentsin the hiring and firing of faculty. Fowlerfavored a student voice in the selection andLeval objected.Fowler felt SG should be a forum for sug¬gestions from the students and should ex¬hibit leadership by articulating studentgrievances.According to Leval the new primaryfunction of SG will be coordinating studentactivities. However, he excluded any in¬volvement in “partisan politics.” Thisprompted differing opinions in SG but Lev¬al elaborated, “SG can supply informationand give assistance to people who want towork in campaigns but this should be theextent of political involvement.”In the event of a referendum Leval pre¬dicted that a revitalized SG will survive.MICHAEL FOWLER: The SG president feels that students should express grievancesand suggestions directly to SG. The total enrollment figure last week wasonly 7149. According to dean of studentsCharles O’Connell, an abnormally largenumber of students' are registering late thisyear, because they say they were unawareof the acceptance of a new calendar thissummer.The enrollment decrease has been mostnoticeable in the graduate divisions. Thefigures for the College are not surprising,because of the smaller freshman class, andenrollment in the professional schools hasnot decreased significantly.O’Connell speculated that the abolish¬ment of graduate student draft defermentsmay have taken its toll this year. He alsofelt that the reported lack of jobs for PhD’shad discouraged many candidates frompursuing their studies.Deans of students in the graduate divi¬sions are looking into reasons for the drop,and could not give any official explanation.Sol Krasner, dean of students in the phys¬ical sciences graduate division, said he waslooking into the discrepancy between theestimated number of students last springand the number presently registered. Hesaid that it seemed to be returning studentsrather than new ones who were not showingup.Nancy Helmbold, dean of students in thehumanities division, was also unsure as towhy enrollment was down. “This is a subtleand complicated question,” she said. “Idoubt that we’ll find any simple ex¬planation.”The graduate division of the social scien¬ces has been one of the hardest hit by thegeneral decrease in the number of gradu¬ate students. Dean of students ReubenSmith could see several possible ex¬planations.“First of all, there is the lack of suf¬ficient financial aid,” Smith said. “Thenthere is the relief from the draft pressure,”he added, explaining that because of safedraft lottery numbers and lower draft calls,many graduate student*! who had nhtainPddeferments on the basis of their studies nolonger needed them.Volunteers wantedThe Hyde Park Neighborhood Club, 5480S Kenwood, has issued an appeal for volun¬teer help.Tutors are needed to work with childrenfrom six to 12 in reading and math on Sat¬urday from 10 am to noon. The after-schoolprogram for that age group lasts from 2:30to 5 pm and will include small group activi¬ties in drama, creative writing, sewing, na¬ture study, music, games, photography andart.Volunteers are also needed to leadclasses in reading, algebra, geometry forhigh school and junior high students anyevening from 7 to 10 pm.For more information call Mary KayKreider, coordinator of volunteers at MI 3-4062.Student MobeThe Student Mobilization Committee(SMC) will hold a city-wide meeting at 1pm today on the University of IllinoisCircle Campus to plan their October 31anti-war demonstration.Sponsored jointly with the October 31Peace Action Committee, the meeting willalso discuss how to build the “anti-war uni¬versity.”At present, a march and rally in GrantPark are planned for October 31 in collabo¬ration with nation-wide demonstrations.Noam Chomsky and Sid Lens are alreadyscheduled to speak.Springing from a national conference af¬ter the Cambodian invasion, SMC has em¬phasized bringing a wide spectrum ofgroups into the anti-war movement, espe¬cially organized labor.Plans to broaden support among Third “On this rock I will build my church ..World, women’s liberation, labor, GI, andhigh school students’ rights groups afterthe demonstration will be discussed at to¬day’s meeting.Tenant unionThe first meeting of the Married StudentHousing Tenant Union will be held October11 at 7 pm in the recreation room of thePicadilly, 5101 Black^tone.The union will discuss organizationalplans, elect a steering committee and hearthe grievances of tenants of the marriedstudent housing system.An information and membership cam¬ paign will be announced to interest stu¬dents in the condition of their tenancy andinsure that they will not suffer manage¬ment abuse.The union’s major accomplishment lastyear was the negotiation of a new, moreequitable lease with University RealtyManagement. AppointmentsSeveral administrative appointmentshave been announced this summer.• Nancy Helmbold has been named deanof students in the humanities division.She is an associate professor of classicallanguages and literatures, and has studiedthe literature and history of the Ciceronianage. She succeeds Peter Dembowski, asso¬ciate professor of romance languages andliteratures.• Reuben Smith has been appointed deanof students in the social sciences division.Smith is an assistant professor of historyand an authority on medieval Islamic his¬tory. He succeeds Robert Rippey, assistantprofessor of education.• Walter Fackler will be the director ofthe management program in the businessschool. He is a professor of business spe¬cializing in industrial economics, monetarypolicy, and the impact of governmental pol¬icies on the operations of the economy.Fackler will direct the business school’stwo major programs of part-time studies,the executive program and the 190-MBAprogram.• Gary Palm has been appointed an as¬sistant professor of law and director of theMandel legal aid clinic.Palm, an attorney, was formerly with theChicago law firm of Schiff Hardin WaiteDorschel & Britton.Continued on page 6* Cornett TMoriil #* 1645 E. 55th STIttfV ** CHICAGO, IU. 5 *2 Rhone: FA 4-1651 ^Insanity Reigns: Tuesday 8 PMSamuel Fuller'sSHOCK CORRIDORCobb Hall Doc Films INEXPENSIVEOFFSET PRINTINGLeaflets, Booklets,Brochures.PostersFORMovement, CommunityStudent Groups, andProfessionalOrganizationsSizes up to 1 1" X 17"OMEGA POSTERS939-7672located in Hyde Parti EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372ABOUT THE MIDWAYHitchcock fireA small fire in Hitchcock Hall occurredearly Saturday afternoon.The cause of tne one-room fire is un¬known. No one was hurt in the blaze. Theextent of property damage from smoke andwater is still being determined.Neither of the room’s two occupants,Philip Solom and John Hughes, werepresent during the fire. Smoke was firstnoticed by another student who entered theroom through the firescape and put outmost of the flame with a hand fire ex¬tinguisher before firemen arrived.Books, clothes, and other items are beingsalvaged from room 50 in an attempt tolower the cost of damage as much as pos¬sible.University fire insurance does not coverany damage to personal possessions be¬cause no policy could determine the vari¬able extent of a student’s belongings in aroom. LOOK views MaroonsThe Maroon football team once againcatapulted into the national limelight whenLook magazine featured them in their Octo¬ber 20 article on “The small college answerto big time madness — Green and LeafyFootball”.Chicago, as the article explains, was oncea member of the Big 10, but dropped foot¬ball in 1939 after losing to Illinois, 46-0; Vir¬ginia, 47-0; Harvard, 61-0; Ohio State, 61-0and Michigan, 85-0.Look quotes Mitch Kahn ’71, team mem¬ber and Maroon sports writer, who lastyear asked a Chicago Daily News reporter,“Where else in the country could someonelike me come out and play college foot¬ball?”The article concludes “college is forlearning and it took the University of Chi¬cago only 30 years to understand that thereis green, leafy, fall afternoon football funavailable.”TICKETS: $2.50 Reserved2.00 General Admission1.50 U. of C. Connected1.00 U. of C. StudentsAvailable at:Woodworth's Bookstore1311 E. 57th StreetCooley's Corner5211 Harper AvenueReynolds Club Desk5706 University Avenue THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59TH STREET AND WOODIAWN AVENUEORGAN RECITALTuesday Evening, October 13,1970at 8:30David Craighead's musical training includes pianostudy with the late Olga Steeb, organ with ClarenceMailer and four years at the Curtis Institute in Phila¬delphia with Dr. Alexander McCurdy. He has heldpositions at the Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church ofBryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, the Westminster ChoirCollege, the Pasadena Presbyterian Chureh andOccidental College in Cos Angeles. He is head of theOrgan Department, Kastman School of Music of theLniversity of Rochester in Rochester, New York.PlayingTRIPTYCH, Op. 51ORGELSONATE, Op. 18, No. 2 .PRELUDE AND FUGUE IN A MINORSYMPHONY IN G MAJOR Marcel DupreHugo DistlerJ. S. BachLeo Sowerby “REMEMBER 'PSYCHO'?There are scenes with that kind of impact! Worth Seeing!”— John Schubeck ABC TVSIONfT BUZKIPRtSINIS\u/•"^CrystalnumageOoftmUly In The Hitchcock TndltlonTONY MUSANTE SUZY KENDALL . THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE”.,® EVA RENZIWritten & Directed by Oano Argento Distributed by UMC PICTURESProduced by Salvatore Argento Color A Division ol UNIVERSAL MARION CORPORATION oflte2/Thc Cliitdgo Maroon/uctoder 6, 1970* * I I •' I ' y ‘ *CARMC stages protest for workersHOSPITAL MARCH: 25 members of CARMC demonstrate in front of Woodlawn and BHlings Hospital. About 25 members of the CoalitionAgainst Racist Medical Care (CARMC)demonstrated at Woodlawn and Billingshospitals Saturday, chanting “Fight racistmurders, support hospital workers.”CARMC claims that medical practices atthese and other Chicago hospitals dis¬criminate against poor and working people,especially blacks and Latin-Americans. Ithas charged that discrimination resulted inthe deaths of Dennis Gray at Woodlawnhospital and University worker ClarenceMcKnight at Billings.They are also demanding better wagesand working conditions for hospital work¬ers.The demonstration began at WoodlawnHospital, where CARMC is calling for theremoval of armed security guards, one ofwhom they say shot and killed Gray. Thehospital has said that it will not commenton these allegations until the findings of thecoroner’s inquest have been released.Several police cars stopped near the hos-p i t a 1 during the demonstration, andplainclothesmen took pictures of the dem¬onstrators, most of whom were studentsand black residents of Woodlawn.At Billings, the group chanted its supportfor a demand that the hospital’s emergencyroom fee of $15 be abolished, because itforces community residents who cannot af¬ford it to go elsewhere for medical care.They maintain that McKnight died afterhaving been refused a bed at Billings.The Billings administration has disputedthese charges, saying that no one has beendenied admission to the emergency roombecause they could not pay the fee, andthat McKnight was never refused a bed.CARMC has been leafletting in the Wood¬lawn community. The group has been criti¬cized by the Woodlawn Hospital adminis¬tration for not representing “responsiblecommunity leadership.”Several of the demonstrators believedthat the groups the hospital was dealingwith, such as The Woodlawn Organization(TWO), did not speak for the interests ofWoodlawn residents.CARMC will hold a membership meetingOctober 18 at 7 pm, at 6720 Stewart.NSA votes to support UAW strike of GMBy SARA BEEBEThe National Student Association votedthis summer to support the United AutoWorkers’ strike on campuses across the na¬tion.The 1,000 delegates meeting atMcCalister College August 9 to 19 also nar-By JUDY ALSOFROM“The whole genius of the program thisyear is that it is going to come out of thepeople who use it,” campus minister RevCharles Bayer said of the Blue Gargoylecommunity center and coffeehouse, whichreopened Monday.The Gargoyle, located at 5655 University,opened three years ago as a joint effortsponsored by the University Church of theDisciples of Christ, other religious founda¬tions on campus, interested persons fromthe community, University students, andneighborhood young people.The Gargoyle, as “free space in a com¬pany town” according to Rev Bayer, is tofunction as “a small institution not underthe jurisdiction of a larger institution as theUniversity. In other words, we feel that thepeople ought to have a say in deciding whatgoes on in their institutions.”Last year the Gargoyle was overwhelmedby people and groups vying for the avail¬able space. This year the groups interestedwill get together with the staff to negotiatefor the available hours.“We want to bring the kids into the oper¬ation of the Gargoyle and off of thestreet?,” Rev Bayer said. “This will workto everybody’s self interest. It should alle¬viate some of the hassles encountered inpast years."The problems arose from the Gargoyle’s rowly defeated a proposal by Conspiracy 7defendant, Rennie Davis, to “close down”Washington DC next spring.The University sent four of five electeddelegates to the annual convention. Thefour students are Michael Fowler, ’71, pres¬ident of Student Government; John Siefert,12-hour “drop-in” policy. Groups obtainedmeeting space on a first come — firstserved basis.The operation of the center this year willfollow a flexible schedule, where lunch willbe served from 11:30 am to 2:30 pm and theafternoons will be closed except to thosegroups who wish to use it.Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays fromBy LISA CAPELLOn October 14 and 15 the Auto WorkerSupport Committee (AWSC) will be bring¬ing striking General Motors workers to thecampus. The object of these visits, accord¬ing to Mitch Kahn, graduate student in so¬cial service administration, will be to mobi¬lize support for the GM strike and to createa dialogue between students and workers.Kahn feels it is necessary to begin build¬ing a meaningful dialogue to offset “hardhat mentality.” This is also an opportunityto reciprocate the United Auto Workers(UAW) support of the campus strikes lastyear, he said.The AWSC, a group of students and facul¬ty of varying political ideologies, hope tohave a substantial number of workers vis¬iting classes on Octoher 14. October 15workers will be in the Reynolds Club southlounge from noon to 2 pm “to enable stu- ’71, chairman of NSA delegation; BernieGrofman, graduate student in political sci¬ence and former SG president; and Mi¬chael Rainey, ’71. According to Siefert, theworker-student rapport has four objectives.• To make students aware of the work¬ers’ feelings on the war and on society.free space'7 pm to midnight the “Garg” will be anopen coffeehouse with varied live entertain¬ment or films.“The staff hopes this new format will fallmore under the direction and sponsorshipof groups and persons who use the Gar¬goyle and less under the management,”Rev Bayer concluded. “It’s your place.We’ll try to do what you want.”dents to get a worker’s point of view,”Kahn said.The workers that are expected are youngand from minority groups, because AWSCfelt students would be more receptive tothis segment of UAW workers.Kahn said that the national UAW lead¬ership supports a dialogue between stu¬dents and workers but he had the impres¬sion of union hesitancy.Kahn felt, however, that the workerswant to meet students and will welcomeany form of support.The New University Conference, YoungSocialist Alliance, Student Mobilization,Young People’s Socialist League, StudentGovernment, and the South Side LaborCommittee support the AWSC. Programswill hp hpld at Northwestern university andUniversity of Illinois Chicago Circlecampuses. • To protest University stockholding inGeneral Motors Corporation and suggestthat the University turn over its next divi¬dend checks from GM to the auto workers’strike fund.• To protest the presence of GM recruit¬ers on campus.• To aid strikers when strike fund is ex¬hausted.The narrowly defeated Davis proposalstated that if the war in Vietnam had notended by May 1, 1971, students should par¬take in a massive act of civil disobedienceto close down the nation’s capital.Speakers on this proposal were Rev. Jes¬sie Jackson, director of Operation Bread¬basket and former NSA delegate; RamseyClarke, former Attorney General; andLeonard Woodcock, President of the strik¬ing UAW. Ratification of the proposalfailed by one vote.According to Siefert, the proposal was re¬jected because students didn’t believeDavis’s claim that there would be no vio¬lence, and because delegates wanted towork within the electoral system forchange.After the defeat of Davis’ proposal, stu¬dents met with auto workers in order tocreate a cooperation between students andstrikers against the corporate estab¬lishment and the war.Student-UAW activities have alreadybeen scheduled on campus. Carl Schier, In¬ternational Representative of the UAW,will speak at a spaghetti dinner Thursday.Teachers have been asked to invite unionleaders to speak to their classes about thestrike.The University is entitled to send fivedelegates and five alternates. This yearonly four of the five delegates attended be¬cause the normal transportation money($1,200) was not alloted to the delegates bythe Committee on Recognized Student Or¬ganizations (CORSO).October 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3Blue Gargoyle serves asUAW strikers will visit campusThe Chicago MaroonSTEVE COOK DON RATNEREditor Business Manager•CON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography Editor•JUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate EditorsStaffCAROL IN€ HECK DIANA LEIFERSenior Editor Assistant Business ManagerFounded in 1*92. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes HaH, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, HI. 40437. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3243.Distrtouted on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mall $8 per yearin the U.S. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III.Scholarship and dissentOne of the more popular tactics used by right-wing politicians tointimidate leftist students is the denial of state scholarship funds tothose who have been involved in campus demonstrations.An agency of the Pennsylvania government, in compliance witha recent State law, requested information from some 2000 schools onthe political activities of all students from that state.The University refused to sign an agreement which would compelthem to release to the agency information from the student’s records.Furthermore, the agreement would have forced the University to in¬vestigate the off-campus political activities of students.Student records have not always been sacrosanct here. Therank demonstrations of 1966 brought to light the University’s policyof rating draft-eligible students by academic standing and reportingthat information to draft boards. In 1968, after much study and dis¬cussion, the University stopped communicating with the Selective Ser¬vice System, and students now are responsible for their dealings withthe draft."Student records have not always been sacro¬sanct here. The rank demonstrations of 1966brought to light the University's policy of ratingdraft-eligible students by academic standingand reporting that information to draft boardsAt a time when governmental agencies are particularly interestedin the activities of students, it is very important that no information begiven out without the written consent of the students involved. Thisdecision is unfortunate for the Pennsylvania residents here who are nolonger eligible for state aid. (Some 50 students received this aid lastyear). But if Pennsylvania insists on information on the politics of stu¬dents before they will give out scholarships, there is no alternative todenying that information.FootballThere is a yellowing issue of the Maroon pasted to our office wallwhich, under the banner of the “Chicago Fibune” announces the returnof football to the University. That issue was a gag, but football reallydid return to this place. The downtown dailies continue to be amazedat the fact, but we have come to live with the shock to our egg-headimage. Frank Malbranche, Skip Landt, and the loyal kazooers havemade it easier to take, for sure; by all odds, we have the most bizarrehalf-time activities since the fall of Rome.Some campus theorists claim that the relative decrease of politica1activity on this campus last year was partially due to the mass outletof energy afforded by weekly football contests. There were, in fact,three times as many people at Friday’s game than ever set foot in theadministration building two years ago during the sit-in.While football can be fun, however, we must not let the insidious,creeping influence of the football freaks grow too large. Next to the“Fibune,” on the office wall, there are also Maroons inciting one to“pulverize Purdue” and announcing that the team is “Ready for theWolverines.”Can it happen again?Will there be slush funds, alumni rites, and team dormitories?Shades of Hutchins!In the meantime, it’s the best mass event south of the Loop on aFriday afternoon.4/The Chicago Marpon/Oc^oberA.WO’/,,, , ,.* V t • i t4 * A * •* * * ■* f •' * * * ‘ ■ > * * * » * * t *, » Revised perspective on sexism*uses ecological classificationBy RICHARD LEVINS -and DAVID CULVERAcademic interest in sex can be traced toJohn Arbuthnott (1710) who argued thatmore than 50 percent of live births weremale because males encountered danger inseeking food. Divine Providence, cognizantof this, created more males to compensate.As the science of biology matured, suchblatant male chauvinism was frownedupon, and discussion of unequal sex-ratiosbecame centered around genetic and statis¬tical arguments.We propose to return the discussion ofsex-ratios to the political arena. We willsuggest a coefficient of sexism that can bedefined for different ecological levels in acommunity;e g., producer, herbivore, andpredator. We will then use this coefficient GADFLY• " • . 1(faculty and administration), it is first nec¬essary to obtain a percentage figure for theavailable pool of women PhD’s. The per¬centage off PhD’s awarded to women at the“top 10” universities between 1962 and 1967suffices for our purposes.When this figure is compared to the per¬centage of untenured faculty that are wom¬en, the following figures emerge. The bio¬logical sciences and social sciences divi¬sions have a sexism coefficient of 1.0."The coefficient of sexism is simply the ratio ofthe proportion of females at one level to the pro¬portion of females at the next highest level.Thus, if women are completely denied accessto one level, the coefficient becomes infinite."to investigate sexism at the University ofChicago.Mac Arthur (1965) has shown that naturalselection will maximize the product of thepercentage of males and the percentage offemales that can he reared successful¬ly ;e.g., about haK of the children should befemales.In human populations, aberrant sex-ra¬tios are most commonly due to differencesin the care given male and female children.We will assume that the small number ofwomen at the University of Chicago is notdue to a lack of available women becauseof parental neglect and subsequent star¬vation.In ecological situations with a complextrophic structure such as the University ofChicago, one can measure the amount ofsexism incurred by moving up the trophiclevels. Since there is no basis for such dif¬ferences other than sexism, the termcoefficient of sexism is justified.The coefficient of sexism is simply theratio of the proportion of females at onelevel to the proportion of females at thenext highest level. Thus, if women are com¬pletely denied access to one level, thecoefficient becomes infinite.Approximately 50 percent of the staff arewomen, and approximately 50 percent ofthe people in the United States are women.We will use this figure as a baseline ;e.g.,the producer level. Approximately 40 per¬cent of the entering freshmen are women,and so the admissions department (first-level herbivore) has a sexism coefficientof 1.25.Approximately 30 percent of the Univer¬sity of Chicago graduate students are wom¬en, so the graduate admissions department(second-level herbivore) has a sexismcoefficient (rf 1.33 (.4/.3).When one considers the predator levels A qualified right on must be given, how¬ever, because some departments in thesedivisions;e.g., anthropology, have highersexism coefficients. The humanities divi¬sion has a sexism coefficient of 2.0, and thephysical sciences division has a coefficientof infinity.When tenured faculty (second level pred¬ators) are considered, the university^widecoefficient of sexism is 3.0. Needless to say,the administration (third-level predators)has an infinite coefficient of sexism.One final trophic level ccurs — lecturersand research associates. There is acoefficient of sexism of less than 1.0 here,which perplexed us until we recalledCharles Elton’s inverted food pyramid.Lecturers and research associates areforced to feed on the scraps of the predatorcommunity (faculty and administration),and are thus forced to be scavengers.Although the infinite coefficient of sexismof the University of Chicago administrationis well known, we have put it in a formal,analytic framework.Finally, we would like to point out that acommunity with this many trophic levels isinherently unstable. We leave it to thereader to calculate the coefficient of sex¬ism for his or her own department.ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSWe wish to thank the Center for Fossi¬lized Thinking for providing opportunity toparticipate in the intellectually stimulatingatmosphere of the Woodlawn Tap (Jim¬my’s), without which this study would nothave been possible. The Hugh Hefner Foun¬dation provided computer time, and the Af-Ford Foundation provided funding for thefield trips.Richard Levins and David Culver aremembers of the New University Confer¬ence.BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, October 6RECITAL: 12:15 pm Edward' AAondello will demon¬strate and play the organ, Rockefeller MemorialChapel.MEETING: Auto Workers Support Committee meetingat 12 pm, 5625 Woodlawn. Planning for AutoWorkers Day will take place.LECTURE: South Asia Seminar presents Gora. Gan-dhian Movement in India Today, 4:10 pm FosterHaH Lounge.TRAVELOGUE: International House Association, Spainand Portugal at the International House Home¬coming, 8 pm. Students 50c others $1.Wednesday, October 7RECITAL: Mr Robert Lodine will demonstrate andplay the carillon Rockefeller Chanel 1715 rvrv,DiSCUSSiOh: women's Liberation politics. Men wel¬come, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Theater. WORKSHOP: Vietnam and the Silent Majority: PublicOpinion on the War, Sidney Verba, Department ofPolitical Science, 7:3<F9:30 pm, Cobb 102.Thrusday, October 8LECTURE: Theory in Marx's Thought: Backgroundand Foreground, Joseph Cropsey, Department ofPolitical Science, Cobb 209, 11:30 am.LECTURE: Problems in Byzantine Musicology, Hein¬rich Husmann, professor University of Hamburg,visiting scholar. Library of Congress, 1 pm, Lex¬ington Studio, 5831 University Ave.LECTURE: Radical Alternatives to Peace in the Mid¬dle East, Uri Avneri, Hillel House, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: The System: Reform! How and Why,Peter Piotrowicz, candidate Board of Tax Appealsand Daniel Gallagher, candidate Board of CountyCommissioners, 7:30, Ida Noyes Hall.MEETING: Student Mobilization Committee R nmReynold* Ciuu aouni.FILM: The Pawnbroker, International House AssemblyHaH, 8:30 pm, admission $1.> Mtt * », « %. t 4 ■> \ ' tV rV 4 - i n f- * /V fi- />» *LETTERS TO THE EDITORS9*>' i»‘ 'fc*» ' »• Insurance woesI am writing this letter in the hope I canspare some other student from the grief Ihave experinecd through the fraud knownas ‘‘Student Health Insurance,” adminis¬tered by the Student Health Service.Each year, students can enter this planat the start of the fall quarter, and be in¬sured for one year. There are two plans,individual and family. My wife and I wereboth students last year, so we took out indi¬vidual plans.We had a child July 31. On August 4, Iwent down to change to a family plan, andfilled out a form to add the child. The wom¬an in Billings who administers this plan as¬sured me the child was covered.Three weeks later the baby went into thehospital. I checked with the same womanat that time. She then told me the childcould not be covered because, unlike mosthealth insurance policies that permit theP3fron to add a toby upon birth, the stu¬dent plan permits people to change to fami¬ly coverage only the first week of eachquarter.Of course, it’s too much for either BlueCross or the administration to put thisdown in writing. The “rule” does not existin any of the literature put out by theHealth Service nor in the insurance policiesthemselves.Foolishly, I thought there might be someunderstanding person in high position whomight see the justice of my complaint. Af¬ter all, the woman in Student Health Italked to on August 4 had three weeks tonotify me that my child was not covered.She failed to do so, thus robbing me of achance to get out another policy.So I went to see Dr George Leroy at Bil¬lings and Mrs Anita Sandke in the adminis¬tration. Need I say more? I am now stuckwith a huge hospital bill, and the attitude ofthe bureaucrats is: “it is indeed unfor¬tunate that you did not take steps tochange to the family plan at the beginningof the summer quarter . . .” My experience is the all too familiar caseof what happens when students have prob¬lems and try resolving them by rationaldiscourse with college administrators.Their attitude of “let’s give students theshaft” is what is causing the uproar on col¬lege campuses, contrary to what Nixon andAgnew seem to believe.Joel ASetzen*HistoryThis case has been submitted to the of¬fice of the student ombudsman.Replies to editorialThe editors of the Maroon appear to suf¬fer not so much from a lack of critical ca¬pacity (their analysis of the advisability ofthe election recess seems quite appro¬priate) but rather from an inability to viewthe past without the distortions of thepresent.True, probably most students do not wantthe pre-election break — now. But it wasprobably not true in early May.Oh, I know that the National Opinion Re¬search Center (NORC) did not do a surveyof a random sample of the student popu¬lation in May ; I know that mass meetingsare poorly attended; I know that many par¬ticipants in mass meetings never act afterthem — even right after; but if my senseswere working last spring, it seemed clearto me that most students wanted somethingdone and felt the recess was the most prac¬tical and dramatic thing that could bedone.It appears that the editors of the Maroonare aware of this. They talk about events oflast spring in the past tense but about theattitudes of students in the present tense, toquote: “most students ... had nothing todo with putting forth the proposal. It is safeto assume that they have no interest in po¬litical campaigning and are inconveniencedby a ten-day break in the middle of theacademic quarter.” (emphasis mine).Or later on: “Why did President Levi . ..approve a ten-day recess that most of the campus opposes.” (again, emphasis mine).The editors sound like a bunch of smallchildren, who, after persuading their par¬ents to let them stay up late one night, saythe next morning, “Mommy, why did youlet us stay up so late when we don’t likeit.”I hope most students are more mature inaccepting their own mistakes than the Ma¬roon editors seem to be.Mike KeplerSociologyMr Kepler implies that the Maroon edi¬torially supported the idea of a recesslast May and has since changed its mind.This is not the case. As for his view thatmost students were in favor of the pro¬posal in May, on what basis can he makethis claim? This is the same unwarrantedconclusion that the University made whenit approved the recess. —Ed.MNCTo the editor of the Maroon:I’d like to correct some of the mis¬information that appeared in the October 2Maroon editorial concerning the Movementfor a New Congress and students in elec¬toral politics.Consistent with our goal of involving stu¬dents in elections of peace candidateswhere student impact can be maximized,we are making extensive preparations forthe interim at the University of Chicago.For those students who wish to be awayfrom there then, we will provide informa¬tion on the most crucial races around thecountry and how UC people can participatein them.Meanwhile, Illinois MNC will be workingin the critical campaigns near Chicago, andwe will bring into this effort as many as wecan of the students who remain at UC forthe interim.The only two elections in the Chicagoarea which still hang in the balance andwhich involve peace candidates are the Senatorial races in Illinois and Indiana.In Illinois Stevenson is running againstSmith in a race most students are acquaint¬ed with. There is no question that Steven¬son wants student help.In Indiana, incumbent Vance Hartke isrunning against Richard Roudebush.Hartke is a strong liberal and one of theSenate’s leading doves. He was one of thefirst Senators to speak out loudly againstthe Vietnam war. Conservative Roudebushis running a well-financed law-and-ordercampaign and at present he holds a veryslight lead. Hartke needs all the supportstudents can provide.There is no doubt that students, properlyused, can be effective in campaigns. Thenotion that student campaigners tend to'becounterproductive is a myth. It is derivedfrom a superficial analysis of a few of theprimary races last spring.Immediately after MNC was founded atPrinceton last spring after Cambodia, agreat number of students were mobilized towork for Lew Kaden in his uphill primarybattle against incumbent Ed Patton. Des¬pite this intensive effort Patton won. Therace attracted considerable atention in thenews media, where it was widely inter¬preted that the students had actually hurtKaden.Princeton MNC was sufficiently con¬cerned about these reports to run a carefulfollowup poll to determine the real impactof the students. The study showed clearlythat hostile reaction to individual canvas¬sers was minimal — under one percent.While canvassers have only very limitedsuccess in persuading voters to adopt theirviewpoint or to vote for a particular candi¬date, they can be very effective in identi¬fying favorable voters.Lew Kaden was an unknown before thecampaign, running against a popular con¬gressman who had partially defused thewar issue by moving precipitously toward adovish stand after Cambodia.Nonetheless, he obtained 50 percent moreContinued on page 6f/ STATIONUnnouncuuj.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 Gratin 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 JBDi! i October 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5ABOUT THE MIDWAYContinued from page 2He has been active in volunteer legalwork with the Neighborhood Legal Assis¬tance Center, the American Civil LibertiesUnion, the Chicago Council of Lawyers, andChildren’s Memorial Hospital.Palm succeeds Philip Ginsberg, who willjoin the public defender’s office in Seattle,Washington. 5 pm Tuesdays through Saturdays, from Louis Pomerantz, is based on the premise The conservator relies on the specializedTuesday, October 6, through Friday, No- that what a person sees may not reveal the knowledge of the art historian and the mu-vember 6, in Goodspeed Hall. Admission is entire story behind a painting. It is the con- seum curator, and on the information pro-free. servator’s job to find out what has hap- vided by his techniques, ultraviolet, infra-The exhibition, organized by conservator pened to a painting. red, x-ray and microscopic examinations.LETTERS TO THE EDITORSArt exhibitWorks by Jean-Honore Fragonard, JanSteen, and Edgar Degas will be amongthose presented in Know What You See, anexhibition of the art conservator’s craft,presented by the University RenaissanceSociety.The exhibition will be open from 10 am toDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 Continued from page 5votes than any liberal insurgent in the dis¬trict had ever recived. Details of the fol¬lowup study may be found in Chapter 2 ofthe MNC handbook Vote Power. Copies ofVote Power are available at the Chicagochapter MNC office in Foster 316. In short, students can be an effectiveforce in the election this fall — Universityof Chicago students in particular becausethey have the opportunity to work for can¬didates full-time during the pre-election in¬terim.MNC is organizing around the interim, and there is still much work to be done. Weurge all those who wish to work with us forpeace candidates to come over to the chap¬ter office at Foster 316 or call us at ext2945.Adrian WadsworthAsst Illinois Coordinator for MNC* CARPET CITY4 6740 STONY ISLAND4 324-7998Jhos what you need from a SIOYuved 9 x 12 Rug, to o custom9carpef. Specializing in Remnants& Mill returns at a fraction of the^original COSt.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad.| FREE DELIVERYFOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY, stu¬dents can now subscribe to Na¬tional Review magazine at a spe¬cial low rate. NR's stimulatingcoverage of politics, world eventsand campus issues make NationalReview invaluable reading forstudents (useful both inside andoutside the classroom). For just$5.95, you receive 18 issues ofNational Review (9 months inyou! s#nd j j now to:$3.85 over the ■ NATIONAL RE-newsstandW VIEW, Dept. S, 150Brice' I E 35 Street, N. Y.■ 10016.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEAVERSCUSTOM QUAUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933Gene Kelly inVincente Minnelli'sAn American in ParisWed. Oct. 1 Cobb 8 PM 75Godard's Best: Doc FilmsSun. Oct. 11MASCULINE FEMININECEFBac* to School SaleSATURDAY OCTOBER 10107. DiscountHARPERS FERRYORDNANCE COBB7 - 9:15October8THE PAWNBROKERRod Steiger, Directed by Sidney LumetMusic by Quincy Jones8:30 P.M. International House Assembly Hall One Dollar59th Street & BlackstoneFree CoffeeNext week Oct. 15 NAZARIN and UN CHIEN ANDALOU6/The Chicago Maroon/October b, 1970 ALL WELCOMETO JO IAFOTA’TlTUES. OCT. 68:00 P.M.REYNOLDS CLUB S. LOUNGESOME OF THE OUTSTANDINGPRESENTATIONS OFTHE FESTIVAL INSPRING 1970:THE FINE ARTS QUARTETCSO VIOLIN AND PIANO DUETOUTDOOR BRASS CONCERTORGAN AND BRASS CONCERTU.C. CONCERT BAND✓ SUSANNE BLOCKLAKE COUNTRY STRING BANDINDIAN MUSIC \EASLEY BLACKWOOKSTUDENT-FACULTY RECITALCHICAGO ARTS QUARTETJ.P HUTTO BANDCORKY SIEGAL BANDCOLD BLOOD ROCK BANDOUTDOOR SCULPTURE EXHIBITSART EXHIBIT IN BERGMANREGIONAL PHOTO EXHIBITSHAKESPEARE FILM FEST.STUDENT FILMSJOSEPH SLOWIKRENAISSANCE PLAYERSCAIN COMPANYWAITING FOR GODOT (OUTDOORS)THREE BRECHT PLAYS (OUTDOORS)KINGSTON MINES CO.OUT AT SEA IN BARTLETT POOLTHEY SHALL NOT PASSMODERN DANCE RECITALTHE SYNTHETIC THEATERMODERN DANCE FILMSFOLK DANCINGCOLUMBIA COLLEGE DANCE TROUPECHICAGO CONTEMPORARY DANCE CO.MASTER CLASSES IN DANCE 'JEWELL MCLAUREN CO.MULTI MEDIA ROCK CONTATAALLEN GINSBERGNELSON ALGRENSTUDS TERKELMAYPOLE DANCINGKEN KEYSEY. CHALK-INCONTEST DAYCRICKET MATCHMIXED MEDIA HAPPENINGBEAUX ARTS BALLCALA PERFORMANCEFGTA 7i WILL til TUUK THINGTUES. OCT. 6, 8 pm R.C. LOUNGE .’ay»Ka (The Maroon Classified Ads)WHO STOLE FRANNY'S LEGS?rw.» *i ~ KNEW DEADLINES!!!PLEASE NOTEDeadlines for classified advertising are beingpushed back so that we may serve you better.Ads for the Tuesday paper must be in theoffice by Monday, 10:00 A.M.; Ads for Fri¬day must be in the office Wednesday, 4:00P.M. No exceptions will be made! As usualall ads must be paid in advance.Jean Luc Godard's finest film:Masculine-Feminine to be shownSunday at Cobb, 7 & 9:15.PEOPLE FOR SALEI will babysit mornings for 3-6 yearold. Call 955-3680.Substitute parent(s) for 2 schoolboys, 6 & 8, Nov. 15-30. Our home.548-0555 or Ext 3866Babysitter and Playmate (age 2)for your child. Mornings and/orafternoons. My place or yours. 51stat Kenwood. Call 373-0569I will do your typing in my home.Call Mrs. Tepper, 747-8465,Synapse Editorial Service. Profes¬sional editing, revision, proofread¬ing, critique. Mss, articles, teses.5 years experience. Phone 281-1366.SPACESunny spacious 3-rm apt. $145. 57 &Harper. Avail Immed. BU 8-1776.Room in 3 man apt at 57 & DrexelAvail Nov. 1, Call 324-8930.Live in Frederika's famous build¬ing. Nearby unfurn 2 rm apts. $95Light, quiet, free utils, stm ht,pvt bath. 6-7 pm. 6043 Woodlawn.WA 2-0411, x3ll, or 955-9209.South Shore area, near Lake 8. Uni¬versity bus. Deluxe 7 rooms, 2tile baths, modern kitchen. Avail¬able now $200. FA 4-334#72nd Street East, near |C, buses,6 large rooms, furnished, availablenow. Working 8. school adults. E.West, 766-5050SCENESInterested in C. G. Jung? Come tothe first meeting of the AnalyticalPsychology Club of Chicago on Wed¬nesday. Oct. 7 at 8 p.m. Basementof Brent House, 5540 S. Woodlawn.For information call 7S2-5769.There's a little for me and a littlefor you at Saturday's SUPER CON¬CERT. Tix start TODAY at Mandel.$3 50. $3, 8, $2.50.Anyone interested in Craft Coopmeet on Wed. Oct 7, at 4 pm atthe Blue Gargoyle. 9HITKICKERS! BLUESFREAKS!OLD TIMEY FIDDLING FANS!The day has come. Finally you arenot alone. Ida Noyes Library, Wed.8.UR I AVNERI, Israeli "dove," mem-her of Knesset, and controversialjournalist, will speak at HillelHouse Thurs, Oct 8, 4:30 pm, on"RADICAL ALTERNATIVES TOPEACE IN THIS MIDDLE EAST."If names like Buell Kazee, RalphStanley, Lightnin' Slim, or BruceKaplan mean anything to you, getyour body to Ida Noyes Library,8:00, Wednesday.SUPER CONCERTDig the Blues of Otis Rush andThe Country Rock of the FlyingBurrito Bros., Sat. 8 pm, Mandel.Do you know what it's like towork in a factory? Do you knowwhat It's like to be on strike? Comehear about the UAW strike againstGM. Speakers from the UAW andfrom the factories. Spaghetti din¬ner. Thurs. Oct 8, 6 pm, 5328 S.Greenwood, Apt 2B. Call Cindy orRita at 752-4077 for more info.Sponsored by the Yound People'sSocialist League.ATTENTION WOMENKIND! Whyis the tenured faculty 2.3% women?Hear the counter report to theNEUGARTEN REPORT on thecondition of university women. Wed,Oct, 7, Ida Noyes Theater, 7:30,Incredible live blues, country tapes.Folklore Society meeting, Wednes-day 8:00, Ida Library.BOOZE. New joint to sop it up.THE PUB, in Harper Court, openswith BONANZA PINBALL MA¬CHINE & jukebox (we'll add yourrequests) & STUDENT SUPER¬SPECIAL . . . all drinks 25c withID on Mon, Tues, 8> Wed. GoodFood. Bass, Guiness 8. Schlitz ontap. Dig it!Seven years in the college hasled Hart to the ultimate truth. THEPUB. Watch him pout weekends inHarper Court.Join FOTA '71Tues. Oct 6, Reynolds Club Lounge8 pmGora? Foster Hall today, 4 o'clock. YOGA single/group Exerc. MdtContrn. Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155.Revitalization presents Otis Rush8. The Flying Burrito Bros. Bewise. Buy your seats today.Gramdan & the Ghandian Revoltion today, 4 o'clock, Foster Hall.VISIT SPAIN AND PORTUGALVIA ARM-CHAIR TRAVELOGUEHome Room, International HouseTues, Oct 6, 8 pm. Students 50cOthers $1.00.It's easier with Good MusicKLH 23 $109DUAL 1212 $ 59.25AR 4X $ 42.95ADC 303AX $ 77.77Save on all components.All at Musicraft. Campus rep BobTabor. 363-4555,GODARDStrikes again Sunday at Cobb inMasculine-Feminine, his most far-out film that you can enjoy on afull stomach, at 7 & 9:15.PERSONALSFOUND: Ladies Watch under 1Ctracks. Call David. 493-2822.Meet some strange bedfellows?Religion and Politics . . ■THE PUB will mess with you atcompetitive prices. Large pitches-light & dark. Bass 8. Guiness ontap.Who'll win the strap this month?Render unto Caesar?Religion and Politics 1970What's the sexism coefficient ofyour department?5540 or FightGenuflect or ElectReligion and Politics 1970Encourage pollution. Get pollutedat THE PUB on Mon, Tues, 8.Wed. Student Superspecial ... alldrinks 25c with ID.The Time Schedule lied. There ISa Ukrainian Club on campus. CallBohdan Oleksiuk. PL 2-9718.Augustine, Shaull and Barth, Theirreligion and Politics. 5540 Wood¬lawn at 8:00 pm. Religion andPolitics.•- te*j|i («•»*»I 'IkIT MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59«h St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-Univ.rsity people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^.—1— ,»rl ! i — — 1 j ?—?—l — — ———mm"r -i —!—!—i i j —, ,I — ’j1 y 4- - L- ■> " T 1'1i — P*-1 f Tj i- ”♦ ~1 ' T fi 1 ' t1 i .~“i” — r ""7 r j1 1 —Hj - ,1 11 i ~i ! *L i 1ff|A Printed*^IUUcopies J* WHILE YOU WAIT!Letters, Forms, Reports, Bulletins.Daily 8 30 a m. - 5 p.mCash with order.v 667 2410WAY little 6 MINT.** s.evict1950 EAST 75th St. (At Jeffery) j PIZZA jPLATTER;• rv c-: I 1 AN ANNOUNCEMENTA Memorial meeting to honor thememory of FREDDY NOLLET willbe held on SUNDAY AFTERNOON,OCTOBER 11, 4:00 pm at HILLELHOUSE, 5715 Woodlawn, Chicago60637.Please pass this notice on tofriends you think might want toattend.NOTE: At the suggestion of agroup of friends, a Memorial Fundis 'being established at Hillel tohonor Freddy's memory. An ap¬propriate remembenance will bedesignated. If you wish to sharein it, please send your check to:Freddy Nollet Memorial Fund atthe above address.The God Squad meets the PrecinctCaptains at 5540 Woodlawn, Wed¬nesday at 8:00 pm.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)Poll watching in Woodlawn on Elec-tion Day helps stop vote stealingby Mayor Daley's men. If inter¬ested call Joe Cobb, 286-2270 eves.UC YR Club.Kerygma and the Kandidates Reli¬gion and Politics. 5540 Woodlawn,tomorrow nite.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.Is there a Christian Alternative?Religion and Politics 1970,CAMPING EQUIPMENTFor Rent: Sleeping Bags — Tents— Stoves — Lanterns — Pads CallHICKORY 324-1499.RUNAWAY?Family Problems? Call the Depot955-9347,PEOPLE WANTEDAU SECOURS - French tutoring(largely conversation) wanted forfamily planning year in Paris. Call538-0900 evenings.Subjects for Study - on effects ofsmoking on exercise performance.Must be male, healthy, smoke cig¬arettes. Will pay $50. For detailscall MU 4-6100, X5774. Ask for Dr.Krone.Want fem grad roommate to share2 bdrm apt with 1 other. Part.turn. Call 643-6649.The Black Spirit-Ritual Theaterseeks Black poets, actors, actresses.Call 324-2361,Go skydiving in Wisconsin, Oct. 17.Group rates. Call 667-1271.Two horn men need rhythm sectionfor jamming. Call x4234, Bob, orx3669, Hilly. Modern Jazz. 1 grad. fem. to share big beaut,aipt., own room, east Hyde Pk. $82.Many conven. 667-4526.Work for peace in So. Dakota's 2ndCong. District during the pre.elec-tion break. Jim Abourezk is en¬dorsed by McGovern and New Con¬gress He will pay your expenses.For more infer, contact DavidGoldston. 834 B-J. Ml 3-6000,Roommates wanted. $71. 56th &Kimbark. 324-2907,Staff, Students, Participate in ex¬periment on the perception ofspeech. $1.75 for an hour's work.On campus. Call x4710 for an ap-pointment.Female Roommate wanted to shareexotic, homey 9-rm. apt on campusbus line, nr. 1C. Share cooking.536-2225 evenings.Gay roommate to share old Vic_forian townhouse. 324-9358.Teaching staff of Counseling CenterPsychotherapy Practicum wouldlike to provide its students withopportunity to try to be helpful topersons with minor psychologicalproblems. We need volunteers whohave problems, concerns or anxie¬ties to discuss with a grad studentin clinical training. We have foundthat this experience tends to behelpful and interesting to bothvolunteer and student. Call Ml 3-0800, x2360.Roommates wanted. 643-3088 eves,DRAFT COUNSELORSDraft Counselor training. Wed. at7:00 for 4 wks. starts Oct. 14,Quaker Hs, 5615 Woodlawn. Needcounselors for hi-schools, under-priv. in Chicago. 363-1248. HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - BirchVeryReasonable RatesAny AmountDelivered & StackedArt Michener955-2480Special Student RatesSAILINGUC Sailing Club - Meets this eve¬ning, 7:30, Ida Noyes Library. BoatSchedule, Racing Films.REPUBLICANSFirst Club meeting Thurs. Oct 8.Topic is reform of County Gov't.Public meeting. Everyone come.Ida Noyes Library, 7:30 Thurs.FOR SALE'66 Pontiac LeMans, V-8, $900. Golfclubs, Spaulding, 8 irons, 3 woods,1 putter, and bag $35. 955-3055after 6 pm or weekends.VOLVO 544, 1961. $175-Offer. 752-8629 or X8149.GOOD BOOKS CHEAP - Manybrand new. Pol Sci, Phil, Soc, Lit.955-8829,Mattresses and Box SpringsSTUDENT SPECIALSBring your I.D. CardDressers, Odd ChestsFor your convenienceOpen Sundays 12 to 5 P.M.3150 W. 63rd St. 434-5815 AUSTIN-HEALY 3000, 1962, gd.cond. Must sell. Dan 243-3147, PL 2-0505.Baby turn., crib, hi-chair, plypn,buggies. Aft, 7 pm. 667-6314.Amplifier - Two 15" speakers $200.ph, DAVE, BU 8-9870, g<t cond,POSTER COLLECTORSSAN FRANCISCO ROCKCONCERT POSTERSFull color. Out of print. Full sizeoriginals from the Fillmore Audi¬torium. Guaranteed highest qualityor money refunded. Originally cost$1.50 ea. Limited offer 6 for $4.95.We pay postage.' Arbuckle Bros.3871 Piedmont Ave., Oakland., Cal.94611.Free cats & kittens. 324-9358Wide, strong wall shelves. Assortedother stuff. MU 4-0048.1969 Toyota Corona 2-dr. hdtp. Autotrans, buckets $1600 or best offerExt. 4686,'61 Porsche 356B, gd. cond. $1100-offer. 642-6143 eve, 829-6106 (fays.'65 Chevelle Sta Wagon, exc. cond.,6 cyl, auto trans, radio, heater.$750, Call 721-5302 after 5 pm.Huge Trunk, 1 yr. old, perfect cond.44x28x25". Holds anything. Will bar¬gain. 493-2205.57 VW Conv. Mech. Ex. $200, x2762.10 rms. 3Vh baths, 2 car gar., byowner. Ask $34,500. 752-3411.Girl's bike. 6 mo/old, 955-9380 eve.Will trade - 65 Impale, ps, pb,AM/FM, air - for 500cc bike. CallT. Jasik, Hitchcock, rm. 47.STEREO COMPONENTS at lowestprices. Save up to 40% on Sony,Kenwood, KLH, AR, DYNA, & Dualat Musicraft. Campus rep, Bob Ta-bor, 363-4555,Wrangler Blue Jeans. Special $4.98John's Mens Store. 1459 East 53rd.URI AVNERIIsraeli "dove",controversial journalistmember of Knesset“RADICAL ALTERNATIVES TO PEACE MTHE MIDDLE EAST”1"JhunJau Oct.HILLEL HOUSEMULTI-MEDIATHEATERin HARPER GALLERIES,5210 S. HarperMU 4-1173Mori: Eyen's "The WhiteWhore & The Bit Player.Tues: Beckett's "Krapp'sLast Tape. Wed: Folksinger& Lightshow. Thurs: Sensi¬tivity Group. Fri: 7 Playets.Plays at 7:30 & 9 $ .50Pizza, Fried ChickenItalian Foods Ij Compare the Price! II I11460 E. 53rd 643-28001I WE DELIVER I|* \*; J * 55034 ALHYDE PARKBLVD. VVfJf/uVriQc/iura&xvARMY SURPLUS OLDFUR COATSHEAD SHOP Favor-Ruhlis Art.That's better thanbeing*cal led Sue. 8 4:30 p.m.5715 WoodlawnWE'D LIKE YOU TO JOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITHas an ORDAINED MINISTERWITH A RANK OFDOCTOR OF DIVINITY'And ye droll know the truth and the truth ihallmake you free' John 8:32W« want men and women of all ages, who believe as we do, to joinus in the holy search for Truth. We believe that all men should seekTruth by all just means. As one of our ministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for exemption fromproperty and other taxes.3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiasticpowers.4. Get sizeable cash grants for doing our missionarywork.5. Seek draft exemption as one of our working mis¬sionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, theaters, etc.,give reduced rates to ministersGET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinity and I.D.card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use when you wish to ordainothers. Your ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere in thiscountry. Your money back without question if your package isn'teverything you expect ii to be. For an additional^ 10 we will sendyour Ordination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHBox 1393, Dept. G9, Evanston, III. 60204Name.Address..City StoteZip.$10end. □ (no frames) $20end. □ (frames)‘.V. .V.'.V. V. . Sf/SSS •>/.* * .» October 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7MVSICRAFT FOR SOUSD ADVICETOP RATED NAME BRAND SPEAKER SALEAR4xbookshelf speaker system, byAcoustic Research. Two-waysystem in oiled walnut.Regular price $63.00NOW W5This sp.jker systtm was just rated DYNA A25a best buy by a leading audio re- Dm11|(I_ «to «cviewer. Its large 10" woofer dellv-ers perfect bass response. Hand¬somely styled in oiled walnut.AR2AXThis three-way system hasa 10" acoustic suspensionwoofer and a 3'/2" mid¬range, with a specialhemispheric tweeter. Fin¬ished in oiled walnut.Regular price$128.00NOW$9450 NOW *4295ADC303Ax10" two way system Inoiled walnut. Top ratedby a leading consumermagazine. High fre¬quency control allowsyou to alter sound to fitroom acoustics.Regular price$99.95NOW$7777VILSICRAETGl \R ANTEES THE LOW EST PRICESPLl S 1 5 day cash refunds3 PLl S 30 day full exchange privilegesPLl S Free delivery for l of CPLl S Complete service facilities on the premises* MiuiCiaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500 as taught by Maharishi Mahesh YogiIntroductory meeting0C^*-6 ts- 7^> ?/’#> (u>t4)Students' International Meditation SocietyMALE 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 $50 OR MORE DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.MERIT ISNOT ON STRIKE!SAVE NOW ON LARGESELECTION OF 1970 CARS!PLENTY OF QUALITY USEDCARS FOR LESS1SEE‘%gjja£pVEGAWE RE DELIVERINGTHE 71 VEGA NOW! ^■■■ ™“m © _ MU 4-0400merit**?72nd and STONY ISLANDOpen till 9 Weekdays-Sat a Sun. til! 5 p.m.Chevy-mom8/The Chicago Maroon/October 6, 1970 Please Rush MeThe Questionnaire & DirectionsFor CUPID COMPUTER,U. of C's ComputerDating ServiceI understand that I am under no obligates to join.NameAddress.Cupid ComputerBox 67Champaign, III. 61820Our thing is your ring —$bltktn±bifwfifts >08 S« vf AffS119 N. 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