Academic trouble plagues 'special students'Steve AokiFRESHMAN FILING CABINET: The records on Inst year’s “special” freshmanshow nothing exceptional was done to improve their academic Success. This yearagain, 55% of die “special” freshman are in trouble. By CARL STOVALL and ELSA HERSHDean of the College, Roger Hildebrand,said November 23 that 55 percent of the“special students” admitted to the Collegein autumn, 1969, are currently on academicprobation.These students, 21 of the record 36 blackstudents admitted to the College last year,were admitted under a program whichwaived normal admission requirements.According to Adine Simmons, assistant tothe director of admissions, the special stu¬dents were admitted when the University’scommittee on admissions weighed highschool accomplishments more heavily thanCollege Board scores.This was done to test the theory thatboard scores do not necessarily indicatelearning potential, but rather, reflect a cul¬tural bias.In assessing the poor showing by the spe¬cial students, Dean Hildebrand and RobertClayton, master of the physical sciencescollegiate division, both noted that nothingwas done for the special students to im¬ prove their chances of academic success.Clayton said, “Most of the students I sawwere given the ‘sink or swim’ treatmentand this (the scholastic difficulties of thestudents) may be the consequence of it.”In an effort to improve the chances ofspecial students succeeding here, Dean Hil¬debrand said that the 30 who were admittedfor autumn, 1970, are being handled differ¬ently. He said that a summer program wasconducted for these students, which aimedat improving their mathematics and writ¬ing skills.While George Playe, dean of under¬graduate students, and Clayton termed theprogram generally successful, Hildebrandwas more skeptical. He said that associateprofessor of mathematics Paul Sally wasquite effective with the summer math pro¬gram, but that associate professor of Eng¬lish Joe Williams had difficulties relating tosome of the students in the writing section.This year’s special students also partici¬pate in reading labs and writing courses forcredit, and receive special tutoring. Never-Continued on page 6The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 22 The University of Chicago Tuesday, December 1, 1970Levi names 5 faculty to women's committeeBy LISA CAPELLThe committee of the council has ap¬proved five faculty members to sit on thestanding committee on women’s affairs.D Gale Johnson, spokesman for the com¬mittee of the council, said the names willnot be released until all the acceptancesare received. The majority of the com¬mittee will be women, he said. Committeemembers were appointed by President Ed¬ward Levi after consultation with thespokesman of the committee of the counciland the committee itself. The committeethen voted on the nominations.No student nominations have yet beenmade and the number of students to be ap¬pointed has not been determined, Johnsonsaid. The procedure for nomination and ap¬pointment of students is “essentially thesame,” he added.Student nominations will be left to thefaculty on the committee and a wide rangeof sources for recommendations will beused, Johnson said.Johnson assumes that students on thecommittee will have voting power sincethere has been no discussion to the con¬trary. The number of students will be fewerthan the faculty. This is partly due to theturnover problem. Said Johnson, “We arelooking for students who will be around fora while.”According to Johnson, staff representa-The Student Government (SG) assemblywill vote on a proposal for a student activi¬ties fee at its meeting Wednesday at 8 pmin Business East 103.If approved by a majority of the assem¬bly, the proposal would then be submittedto a referendum before it could be writteninto the SG constitution.Under the proposed activities fee plan,every full-time student would be assessed$5 per quarter for the use of all studentactivities. Part-time students would pay $2per quarter.SG would administer the funds collected“to improve SG’s ability to provide for thewelfare of students and further their inter¬ests,” and to improve “campus social ac¬tivities and student services.”According to SG president Mike Fowler,who made the proposal, the fee could beinstituted as an amendment to the SG con¬stitution if approved by a majority of stu¬dents voting in the referendum.Fowler added that the plan would stillneed the support of the University adminis- tion has been considered, “but there is aproblem in what we mean by staff. Thejurisdiction of the committee of the councilis primarily the academic area. The prob¬lem is defining what the academic areais.”Johnson added that some staff membershave been seriously considered but whetherone will be on the committee “may resteventually on who accepts or doesn’t.”EducationalPresident Edward Levi has appointed aneducational review commission to studypossible changes in direction at the Univer¬sity.Twenty-four faculty members will serveon the commission, including its chairmanChauncy Harris, professor of geographyand director of the center for internationalstudies.In announcing the formation of the com¬mission, Levi said “The work of such acommission will be difficult. It has beenasked to look at the University as a whole;to see the relationship among programs; toexpress its judgment as to what we shouldemphasize, and, perhaps, what to abandon;how to properly maximize the kind of aca-tration if SG were to collect the fee in coop¬eration with the University bursar’s office.He said he had discussed the plan withdean of students Charles O’Connell, who,according to Fowler, was “not opposed” toit.The University has rejected the counter¬proposal of the Organization of Black Stu¬dents (OBS) to buy for OBS the TenthChurch of Christ Scientist for their Afro-American cultural center instead of theChurch of Our Redeemer.University officials have offered to pur¬chase the Redeemer, 5558 Blackstone, andturn it over to OBS with a cash grant of$295,000 for rehabilitation of the church intothe cultural center.OBS members believe that $295,000 is aninsufficient amount to fully develop theRedeemer into the cultural center but that Staff member, Sara Heslep, called theappointment procedure “an exceedinglylong behind the scenes procedure.” Sheadded that any committee picked by thepresident and a group of senior faculty willbe compatible with their views of what isgood for the University.”Miss Heslep was a member of the delega¬tion from the New University Conference,Chicago Women’s Liberation Union andcommissiondemic strength we have; and what new di¬rections may help us better realize the val¬ues which should be paramount.”Other commission members are LloydFallers, professor of anthropology; JohnHope Franklin, professor of history; Ed¬ward Shils, professor of sociology; HenryTheil, professor of business and economics.Also: Ann Lawrence, associate professorin the Pritzker school of medicine; KennethDam, professor of law; Wayne Booth, pro¬fessor of English; Peter Wyllie, professorof geophysical sciences.Also: Constantine Trypanis, professor ofclassical languages and literature; NormanNachtrieb, professor of chemistry; JeremyAzrad, professor of political science; KarlWeintraub, professor of history; EdwardWasiolek, professor of humanities; LornaStraus, assistant professor of anatomy;Morrle Cohen, professor of physics.Also: Edwin Taylor, professor of biophy¬sics; Jonathan Smith; assistant professor inthe new collegiate division; Albert Crewe,professor of physics; Helen Perlman, pro¬fessor in the school of social service admin¬istration; Samuel Weiss, professor ofbiochemistry; and Joseph Schwab, profes-the Tenth Church of Christ, 5640 Black-stone, could be converted with a grant of$225,000 to $240,000.Walter Walker, vice-president for plan¬ning and an administration representativein negotiations with OBS, told OBS mem¬bers that the University was not preparedto negotiate about anything except theRedeemer.He said the University has an obligationto the neighborhood to bring the long va¬cant Redeemer up to city code standards.OBS members are meeting tomorrow todraft a reply to the University’s decision. Universtiy Child Care, Inc that recom¬mended to the council that the women’scommittee be elected and include staffwomen.Bernice Neugarten, professor and chair¬man of the committee on human develop¬ment, said “that as long as the appoint¬ments are discussed with the members ofthe committee of the council then it tendsto be a joint decision rather than an indi¬vidual one. This adds validity.”appointedsor of education.President Levi and Provost John Wilsonwill serve as ex officio members of thecommission.CHAUNCY HARRISChairman of educational review commis¬sion.PROVOST JOHN WILSONEx-officio member of commission.SG plans student activities feeOBS counter proposal rejectedABOUT THE MIDWAYFund driveThe Maroon f undra ising-dri ve-tcnpull-us-out-of-the-red is inching up towards themag $500 mark, Business Manager DonRainer announced Monday.The drive is an effort to pay off an olddebt which is preventing the Maroon frompublishing issues large enough to covermore news.Everyone giving up to $10 becomes a pa¬tron, and everyone donating $10 or morebecomes a benefactor. All gifts to the Ma¬roon are tax-deductible since the Maroon isa non-profit organization.The latest list of donors appears below:BENEFACTORS: Anonymous — 1, CyrusColter, Roger Hildebrand, India Associ¬ation, Cathryn A Levison, Y Nakazawa.PATRONS: JoAnn H Kaufman, UpperWallace, Peter Vasile. No workers and few students arrived atthe demonstration. SDS attributed thesmall turnout to the cold weather.Mideast dinnerA dinner and public forum on the MiddleEast revolution is being sponsored by theAnt i-Imperialist Committee at Inter¬national House tonight at 6:30 p.m.Iranian and Arab students will be presentto discuss the question of Palestinian revo-1 u t i o n , its relationship to revolutionthroughout the Middle East, and the cam¬paign of counter-revolution waged againstit.Other topics of discussion include the na¬ture of alleged counter-insurgency researchbeing done at the Adlai Stevenson Instituteand the proposed Pahlavi center for MiddleEastern studies. the pre-Christmas tournament, this demi-sesquicentennial plus five seasons shouldbe a real bouncer.SDS demonstrationSeven SDS members protested allegedhospital racism and unfair working condrtions Tuesday in front of Billings Hospital,950 E. 59th st.SDS cited firings of black workers, theseparation of the two obstretrics-gynecolo-gy clinics, and incidents of supposed mal¬practice in the treatment of black patients.SDS also criticized the Industrial Rela¬tions Center (IRC), 1225 E. 60th st., anddescribed it as a “racist, anti-working classresearch center.” Because of the policetraining program and the hospital-managertraining programs held at IRC, SDS de¬manded that the Center be thrown off Middle Eastern food will be served, forwhich a $1.50 donation is being charged.After short presentations, the floor will beopen to discussion. Slides recently taken inJordan may be shown. ARNOLD RAVINMaster of the biology colegiate divisionBasketball openerRavin reappointedcampus.John Furcon, field director of the Chi¬cago Police study done under the auspicesof IRJC said that “SDS is reacting to a ster¬eotype of the center.”He denied the rascist charge and saidthat the Center attempts to improve anddevelop organizations that will benefit theentire community. The Center does basicresearch that is in keeping with the spiritof the University, Furcon said.SDS advocated that workers and studentsunite to fight racist administrators in thehospital, the IRC, and the University. Arnold Ravin has been reappointed mas¬ter of the biology collegiate division for athree-year term. The new term will beginJuly 1,1971.Ravin will direct undergraduate educa¬tion in biology and coordinate the relation¬ship of undergraduate and graduate biologytraining. In addition, he will continue hisresearch in bacterial genetics and evolutionand in DNA-mediated transformations.Ravin is also associate dean of the Col¬lege and the division of biological sciences,professor of biology and a former dean ofthe University of Rochester College of Artsand Sciences.He is a member of the genetics trainingcommittee of the National Institutes ofHealth, has held a special research fellow¬ship from the National Cancer Institute forstudy in Belgium and France, and has beenpresented the Curtis award for excellencein undergraduate teaching. Ravin is the au¬thor of over 50 major publications. The University varsity basketball teamwill open its 1970-71 season at home tonightat 8 pm against Roosevelt university in theField House.This year’s team has eight returning let-terrnen, including co-captains Vukman Bo¬ride and Tim O’Brien. There are also sev¬en freshmen on the team.After the Roosevelt game, the Maroonsface Kendall and Niles colleges Decem¬ber 5 and December 12, both home gamesstarting at 2 pm.December 29 and 30, the Maroons willparticipate in the 10th annual Christmastournament, which alternates between Chi-c a g o and Colorado college, ColoradoSprings. This year the tournament will beheld in Colorado.For doers instead of watchers: the 80thannual Intramural winter basketball leagueentries are due Thursday in the intramuraloffice in Barlett gym. As usual there willbe separate tournaments for collegiate anddivisional teams.Intramural director Chester McGrawsaid that on the basis of the participation in University TheaterUniversity Theater (UT) is sponsoring anexperimental weekend of drama the fifthweekend of winter quarter. Directors andactors who have not been involved beforein UT and are interested in presenting aplay should contact Anne Clary, X3583.Peace actionThis weekend, the National Peace ActionCoalition is holding a national conferenceon the South Side to plan antiwar actionand strategy for next spring.The conference, which is being held inthe Packinghouse Labor Center, 4859 S.Wabash, will open with a rally Friday at7:30 p.m.Tentative speakers include Dick Gregory,labor leaders Patrick Gorman and HaroidGibbons, Alderman A A “Sammy” Raynor.Carol Lipman, West Coast coordinator ofthe Student Mobilization Committee, and aVietnam veteran and a speaker for theKent State 25.Organizers of the conference are ex¬pecting from 1,000 to 1,500 participants, andthey need places for people to stay. Thosewilling to house conference participantsshould call the SMC city office at 922-1068or the student government office (X3273) inthe afternoons.Fermi seriesEmilio Segre, a 1959 Nobel Prize winnerand physics professor at the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley and at the LawrenceRadiation Laboratory inaugurated the newEnrico Fermi Lecture Series at the Univer¬sity yesterday.The series, entitled “Highlights in the De¬velopment of Nuclear Physics” will consistof six more lectures by Segre December 2,4, 7, 8, 9, and 11 in Room 133, Eckhart hall,1118 58th Street.Segre is the first of a series of dis¬tinguished guest lecturers to be brought tothe University by the Fermi Institute underits new “Enrico Fermi Lectures” program.The lectures are open to the public with¬out ticket and without charge.Everything's New!The MidiGaucho Pants...JumpsuitsThe Complete Longeur LookTotal Look AccessoriesWE INVITE INQUIRIES FOR FASHION SHOWSHours 9:30 to 5:30 Monday thru SaturdaySundays, 11-4, starting Dec. 6 thru X-mas 1650EAST 53rd STREETPHONE 955-5291 MAROON CLASSIFIEDSARE THE WAYTO MOVE ITUNIVERSITY ORCHESTRAEugene Narmour, conductorMendelssohn: Hebrides OvertureStravinsky: Pulchinella SuiteMahler: Symphony No. 4Soprano Solo: Barbara PearsonMandel HallAdmission FreeIff December 5 8:30 pm 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 DAILYWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKS- AND HOLIDAYSDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.THURSDAY ♦ DECEMBER 3 ♦ 8:30 P.M,THE LEATHER BOYS■ Rita Tushingham & Collin Campbell IONE DOLLAR INTERNATIONAL HOUSE ♦ 1414 E. 59th Si. FREE COFFEE2/The Chicago Maroon/December 1, 1970' ■"> Stevfe AokiBLACK STUDENT IN HUTCH COURT: Black students feel they receive “undueridicule and discouragement from advisers. By CARL STOVALL and ELSA HERSH‘‘Black students receive (from advisers)an undue amount of ridicule and dis¬couragement when we express desires tocontinue our studies.”This charge and many like it. containedin a proposal for action to the Universityfrom the Black Student Ad Hoc Coalition,s p o t 11 g h t s the growing dissatisfactionamong blacks with advising and guidanceactivities in the College.The proposal was sent to members of theadministration October 20, and led to thenaming of a committee, chaired by associ¬ate professor of sociology Donald Levine, toinvestigate the charges and recommendpossible solutions to the dean of the Col¬lege.Among specifics in the student proposalwas an allegation that they must rely on“grapevine advisers” in order to learnabout fellowships, scholarships and otherprograms for minority students.They charge that they are told by theirCollege advisors that such information isnot available or that the adviser is too busyto talk to them on many occasions.The students also stated that there arecases where students have pursued an aca¬demic program which they were led to be¬lieve would satisfy all graduation require¬ments in four years, only to discover, in thelast quarter of their last year, that this wasnot so.According to the students, though manyof them are seniors, they are nonethelesscalled “risk” students and are disuadedfrom seeking further education.“We strongly suspect that white studentson this campus are not submitted to thiskind of bullshit, and (feel) we are beingtreated unfairly,” the proposal stated.While he did not speak to the specific al¬legations of the students, George Playe,dean of undergraduate students, stated in aNovember 18 interview that the College ad¬visers are “a conscientious group of profes¬sional people who try to do the best jobpossible.”He added that a recent check of advisers’schedules revealed that they see theirblack students two and a half times moreoften than is normal for white students. The students listed eight demands intheir proposal which they consider “reason¬able” and “necessary” to rectify the situ¬ation.Among these demands were that the fa¬cilities of career counseling be more acces¬sible, that the work-study program beimproved, and that an office of minoritystudent affairs be established to deal withtheir special problems.More than 20 black students, mostly sen¬iors, met with members of the Levine com¬mittee November 24 in Mandel Hall’ssouth lounge to discuss the proposal.In a heated exchange between the stu¬dents and members of the committe, thestudents said that an investigation of theircharges was not in order at that time.The students said that they had been ledto believe that the Levine committee wasestablished to seek ways to make thechanges recommended in their proposal.They also said that the proposal had beenin the hands of the administration for overa month, which was ample time for an in¬vestigation.In response, Levine said that the com¬mittee could hardly make intelligent rec¬ommendations to the dean unless they com¬pletely understood the problems.To this the students responded with at¬tacks of the College advisory staff, whichthey characterized as insensitive, and onthe admissions and aid office, which theycalled unresponsive. They also termed thecareer counseling office archaic.Levine said that he would draft a propos¬al for establishing an office along the linessuggested by the students to submit to theUniversity.Four students were added to the com¬mittee at the suggestion of Charlotte Goss,College adviser and member of the com¬mittee. She observed that many such com¬mittees fail just because they try to antici¬pate what is best for students instead ofconsulting with them.Students added to the committee includeseniors Gwen Bryant, Ingrid Johnson, GailWhitman, Rita Taylor and Clarence Peevy.Other members are George Kent, visitingprofessor of English and Humanities, andAnita Sandke, director of career counselingand placement.UC is failing students'; advisers inadequateBy CARL STOVALLThe University is failing black students,and. in a sense, is failing white studentsalso. The more immediate problems con¬cern academic advising and financial aid.No one will doubt that the College ad¬visers are, as Dean Playe said, profession¬al and conscientious, for they managesomehow to handle about 300 students eachper quarter. But the job they do is never¬theless inadequate.For many white students, shortcomingson the part of advisers are a nuisance, butthey have fathers and mothers who went tocollege before them who help make up forthe advisers. Yet most blacks are the firstfrom their families to attend college andhave no place to turn for help when theiradviser fails except to “grapevine ad¬visers.”Many students are able to excel here nomatter how their program is outlined, andno matter what course load they tackle.But many other students could also excel ifthe timing of their courses was properlyarranged. * - ‘ * ■'There are cases, - for instance,j Whereblack students have demonstrated t weak¬nesses in language and math skills andhave been saddled with math, physcVandSpanish and soc sci in the same quarter —they did not excel.Then there is the spectre of studentsrushing around at the last minute trying toget recommendations, applications, testscores and the like together for gradschool, when proper advice from their firstday here would have made this an easytask.These are the kinds of things that leadblack students to charge advisers with in¬sensitivity, for these are the kinds of thingsthat happen most often to black students.Admissions and aid and career coun¬seling do a good jpb for most of the stu¬dents most of the time. Again, students who ANALYSIShave few financial problems are apt to besatisfied with these offices. But studentswho have greater needs are failed, andlarge numbers of these students happen tobe black.Take a look at all of the scholarship pro¬grams, at the work-study program and atall other programs established to help stu¬dents meet their financial needs and youwill find that the student who most oftengoes wanting is black.Look at the most valuable work-studyjobs around campus, and you will rarelyfind a black student. This may have re¬sulted from the fact that white students gotthere first, and, no doubt, they too need themoney. But this is also an indication thatblacks are not augmenting their meager fi¬nances.Since there are few jobs available inHyde Park, and since working much far¬ther away would be impractical, you willfind that many black students are eithersuffering, or they receive relief through thefood stamp program.Large numbers of black students attend¬ed school over the summer and were thusunable to work. Many of them are fresh¬men from the South and are ill-equipped,for many reasons, to cope with a Chicagowinter. The freshmen were allowed $178 tomeet this quarter’s needs, but the Univer¬sity then charged thm $80 for the ori¬entation program.The University, for whatever reason,brought a group of black students here,watched them flounder for a whole year,and is now preparing to cast them out withthe stigma of failure attached. What wehave here is a seemingly clear demonstra¬tion of the University’s disregard for people, specifically blacks.Operating under the guise of helping theblack community, the University has usedthese students and will now ship them offto other schools.It is wrong for the University to bring .students here in the first place unless it isfirmly committed to doing everything nec¬essary to ensure they are educated. Thefacts are in and we know this was not thecase.We can expect that if the summer pro¬gram and the special tutoring for thisyear’s class of test cases proves in¬sufficient, they will probably get the sameshoddy treatment.One of the basic problems here, evenlarger than the injustice to these individualstudents, is that the University has not yetdecided what role it will play in providingquality education for the black community.Sure, small numbers of middle and upperclass blacks have always been in the Col¬lege, but what of the ordinary black fromBothwell, Mississippi, from the South Sideghetto of Chicago, etc.? Will the Universitytry to help undo the 12 years of mis-education these blacks have suffered? Thedebate still rages on.Robert Clayton predicts we will return toold standards, Dean of the College RogerHildebrand says there are other ways tohelp, others say keep admission standardshigh. Admissions office member AdineSimmons, on the other hand, thinks theUniversity can educate, but must makechanges.Miss Simmons has hit upon the problem— the University is perfectly willing andable to educate, but is unwilling to makethe necessary changes.Bridging the gulf between the deprivedstudent and a person who is educated, byUniversity standards, will mean a completeoverhaul of an inadequate educational ap¬proach. Steve AokiCHARLOTTE GOSSAdviser in college to all 30 special stu¬dents who entered in Autumn ’70.December 1, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3LETTERS TO THE EDITORBookstoreAs bookstore employee and student, Ihave had occasion to deal with the Univer¬sity bookstore from both sides of the count¬er. As much as I am disgusted by manyaspects of the bookstore, the dedication andefficiency of its employees are com¬mendable.The bookstore has weathered frequentchanges in personnel, management, and lo¬cation. In spite of these difficulties, thebookstore has become progressively moreefficient.If the bookstore “quietly discontinued itspractice of sending testbook requisitionforms to faculty members scheduled toteach the following quarter,” we did it soquietly that the employees themselves werenot aware of it.On the contrary, first week of the preced¬ing quarter, form 57’s are sent to each de¬partmental office with instructions thatthey be distributed to the professors withinthe department.Indeed, instead of depending on “1000 ab¬sent-minded professors” we call the depart¬ments to remind those professors whoseforms are overdue. Upon receiving late or¬ders, we 'call long distance to the pub¬lishers. If Mr Anders has not received hisform in several years, I suggest that heseek inefficiency within his own depart¬ment.I wonder also where Mr Anders get hisinformation that “the order itself oftendoes not go out for weeks.” There is rarelya two-day lapse between the time that therequisition is received and the time that thebooks are ordered.Far from making our order date a secret,we actually print it on the shelf card. Weorder the number of books which the pro¬fessor requests minus those which we haveon hand. Our records are occasionally inerror, but surely one case does not con¬demn the whole system.We have great difficulties with publisherswho lose orders, with titles out of stock, and with unexpected high class enrollment.But we have greater difficulty with unrea¬sonable people who vilify us without cor¬rect information and saddle us with a repu¬tation which is hard to refute.Roxanne Bailin, ‘71NUC replyIt is too bad that after years of reportsand research papers by SDS and othergroups on the left which have “nothingvaluable to contribute to the University andsociety in general” on the devastatingreal estate policies, discriminatory hiringand employment practices, counter-insur¬gency research, and racist medical prac¬tices at the University of Chicago, we stillare exposed to mealy-mouthed, pietistic ut¬terances such as Con Hitchcock’s “In a uni¬versity which represents the highest citadelof reason in our society, rational discoursemust be free to run its course, unhamperedby the threats etc, etc.”Perhaps bad style and banal ideas arepart of the price we have to pay for theright of “free speech. Lies and distortions,however, should not have to be included.Each time the University administrationis criticized or exposed, the Maroon is cer¬tain to make sure that it has solicited andprinted alongside the allegation a dis¬claimer from an appropriate functionary,no matter how valid the criticism or howfallacious the reply.If the Maroon extended this equal spacepolicy to SDS, we would have read lastTuesday that, contrary to Mr Hitchcock,SDS did not threaten a “mass demonstra¬tion” at the Maroon office at the timecited, and that the individuals that parti¬cipated in what action there was werecensured by SDS.Second, even if the “citadel” garbagewere true, it is hard to see what purpose isserved by rational discourse with a repre¬sentative of the Chicago police department— a group whose main mode of operation isforce and which shows no prospect of relin¬4/The Chicago Maroon/December 1, 1970 quishing that force through argument.The police department does not brutalizepeople because someone has convinced itthat it is a good idea; it brutalizes peoplebecause that is what it is paid to do. It hasa “right” to do so.To speak about the right of free speech,or any right, outside the context of politicalpower, for instance to treat Spiro Agnew’srhetorical attacks on students and the“right” thereof, is to substitute mindlessabstraction for concrete thought: “We’reall individuals ... American soldiers andVietnamese, Rockefellers, and Venezue¬lans, blacks and Chicago police ... if weall sat down and talked it out we couldreach a decision satisfactory to all.”Finally, NUC would have Kked to haveinvited Fred Hampton to exercize his rightof free speech on campus this week, but wewere prevented from doing so by circum¬stances beyond our control.Stuart NewmanNew University ConferenceCon Hitchcock replies:Mr Newman should be careful lest liesand distortions be included in his letter. Inthe first place the motion to censure thoseSDS people who marched on the Maroonoffice was defeated at an October 22 meet¬ing, although a motion to censure fourmembers who disrupted an October 15 autoworkers meeting was passed 18 to 6.As for his charge about “equal space”whenever SDS is criticized, the Maroon issure to check for SDS reaction and print adisclaimer no matter how valid the critic¬ism or fallacious the reply.And as any faithful reader of the Maroonknows, SDS’ position on any number of is-suse is always made ccear through newsStories or their statements and gadflies.If the police department really “bruta¬lize people because it is paid to do so,” asMr Newman charges, should this fact notbe brought out at a dinner? I am sure thatmany people do not accept this statement as fact, and if it is true, it should bebrought out.This can only be done through “rationaldiscourse” and if people were as close-minded about the police as Mr Newman is,I find it impossible to see how any commu¬nication with and honest evaluation of thepolice or any other organization could takeplace.'Med students muzzled'Last Tuesday afternoon, November 24,Dr. Luis Cibils and Deans Lloyd Fergusonand James Vice told us, to leave the WestOffice waiting room of Billings ob-gyn. orface disciplinary action. After some dis¬cussion, we left.We had been in the waiting rooms of eastand west offices since 10 that morning,serving coffee, quietly leafletting and talk¬ing individually with the waiting women.We were discussing the department’s dis¬criminatory practice of separating patientsinto two clinics, based on their ability topay-This has led, by and large, to a racialseparation and a two-class system of care.We pointed out that this sort of separationof services does not exist elsewhere in theUniversity Hospitals, and that we thoughtthat this separation should be ended andthe clinics merged.At about 11 am, the chief of security andthe director of personnel appeared in thewest office waiting room and spoke withsome of us.After some questions about our actionsand demands, they both stated that our ac¬tions did not appear to be disruptive of hos¬pital procedure and left. Until the appear¬ance of Dr Cibils and the two deans in theafternoon, we continued to talk individuallyto the patients.At 2:45 Dr Cibils and Deans Vice andFerguson suddenly appeared and told us toleave the west office waiting room. Dr Ci-Continued on page 6MAIL TOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: SO' por lino, 40* per each lino if tho ad is ropoatod in osubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University 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 freu.t—i—!—i—*—» r-1■—41 ■■ ■ 4- -4 f 4 4 ; t > 1 1 t TT ri TTT I i ——,—Li—,|ii| —i—f— H "T" j T —r—"T—I 1i . .1 i i —r~)—1 i H-H "■r t TT-4 j, 1 h— 1 ‘i.'1 H4—i — r* ♦1 t• I r-—i—j—i—i— LLLL — i 1 i L iL 111 1 i ]; 1 : . ! i i ■ r 1 7 i ! I 1.11 ,.i j i Li i-x.li-:: : i i — Li J r ■ ii jWALGREEN'S GRILLNightly Student Specials!Mon:Chili Mac roll-butterTues:2 pcs. Chicken, fries, rollWed:Beef Chop Suey & Rice, roll, butterThurs:Spaghetti-Meat Sauce, Garlic RollFri:Fish Dinner, fries, roll, butter“in the Hyde Park Shopping Center"Open Mon., Toes., Wed., & Sat. to 7:30 Thors., Fri. to 9:00 Son. 10-6PREGNANT? NEED HELP?PREGNANT? NEED HELP? Abortions are now legal in NewYork City up to 24 weeks. The Abortion Referral Service willprovide a quick and inexpensive end to your pregnancy. Weare a member of the National Organization to LegalizeAbortion. CALL 1-215-878-5800 for totally confidentialinformation. There are no shots or pills to terminate apregnancy. These medications are intended to induce a lateperiod only. A good medical test is your best 1st action toinsure your chance for choice. Get a test immediately. Ourpregnancy counseling service will providetotally confidentialalternatives to your pregnancy. We have a long list of those wehave already assisted should you wish to verify this service.COPY OUR NUMBER FOR FUTURE REFERENCE1.21 s «7R 5800. "BUT HEATH had yet anotheroutrage in store. The screamshad not yet died away when heannounced that, yes, he was infact going to supply some armsto South Africa, would do so,he said, because it was in Eng¬land's long-range interest to doso. England'sm for „ copfwhat?..." ■ national re■ VIEW, writ*: DeptI W, 150 E 35 StreetN. Y. 10016nwHA'i[PLATTER!" Pizza, Fried Chicken j• Italian Foods jJ Compare the Price! ia! 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 ,Lmm WEDEUVEg^. jLETTERS TO THE EDITORS BULLETIN OF EVENTSSoc-sci dinnerAfter all the dangers that were fearlesslyaffronted by young Americans in the dec¬ade between the freedom rides and theDemocratic national convention, I am sore¬ly disappointed to note the recent decisionof the council of the social sciences colle¬giate division to yield before a threat ofviolence.The free discussion of all issues is perhapsthe most important function of a university.It is one for which teachers risked the lossof their salaries during the California loyal¬ty oath controversy. It is one for which stu¬ dents risked expulsion and billy clubs dur¬ing the free speech movement.And it is one which almost all other in¬stitutions in American society today aresorely tempted to abandon in favor of phys¬ical violence and alliterated slander.Moreover, yielding to in this instance wasunwarranted as well as irresponsible. Allthe “outside forces” mentioned by theprotagonists are notorious for their indiffer¬ence or their antagonism toward the causesof campus revolutionaries — as a phonecall to the First Presbyterian Church or thePanther headquarters might have madeclear (both numbers are in the directory).Let us hope, then, that another dinnerwith exactly the same program is sched¬uled in the near future. For this time theentire student body and faculty will cer¬tainly be on hand — if for no other reasonthan for that of demonstrating the superior¬ity of a precious principle to timourous con¬cerns for personal safety.And they can be expected to turn up justas solidly the next time our current total-itarians try to silence anyone else on thiscampus — be he Ronald Reagan or ElridgeCleaver, Cardinal Siri or Rudi the Red.Eric CochranProfessor of history Tuesday, December 1BACKSTAGE AT THE ORGAN: A tour of the in¬strument with Edward Mondello, University Organist,Rockefeller Chapel, 12:15 pm.FACULTY LECTURE SERIES: Department of medi¬cine, cardiology, George Solti, conductor, ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, Billings Auditorium, p-117, 3 pm.COLLOQUIUM: James Frank Institute, P B Allen, BellTelephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ, "Spectrosco¬py of Electron-Phonon Excitations in Metals", Re¬search Institutes 480, 4:15 pm.FLICK: The Tin Star, Cobb Hall, 8 pm.BASKETBALL: Roosevelt University, Field House, 8pm.MEETING: College teaching and course evaluation com¬mittee to plan the distribution of questionnaires inclasses this quarter. Cobb Hall 102, 8 pm.REHEARSAL: Herod, Brent House. Court scene, 7:30,Shepherds, 8, and Angels, 9 pm.MEETING: U of C Riding Club to discuss trail riding,lessons. INH 3rd floor, 8 pm. istry division. "Recent Progress on the A Priori De¬scription of Chemical Bonding, van der Waal Forces,and Chemical Reaction Surfaces." Kent 103, 4 pm.FLICK: Carmen Jones, Cobb Hall, 8 pm.GAY LIB ACTION MEETING: Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pm.REHEARSAL: University Orchestra, full orchestra andsoloist, Mandel Hall, 6 pm.Thursday, December 3Wednesday, December 2BACKSTAGE AT THE CARILLION: A tour of the in¬strument with Robert Lodine University Carillonneur,Rockefeller Center, 12:15 pm.CHEMICAL PHYSICS SEMINAR: Department of phys¬ics, A C Wahl, Argorine National Laboratory, Chem¬ PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM: G F Chew, The University ofCalifornia, Berkley, and Princeton University. "A NewSmall Dimensionless Parameter for Hedron Physics.",Eckhart 133, 4:30 pm.FLICK: The Leather Boys, International House, 8:30pm.MEETING: Go-Club, Ida Noyes, 7 pm. »FLICKS: Rosenwald 2, The Buddha, The VanishingTribe, sponsored by the Indian Civilization Assoc., 7:30pm. —MEETING: Chess club, 2nd floor trophy lounge IdaNoyes, to organize team to play at North AmericanIntercollegiate Championship.LECTURE: Foundations for Mathematical Systems The¬ory, Professor Mihajlo Mesarovic, Case Western Re¬serve University, Systems Research Center, ResearchInstitute, R1-113, 4 pm.LECTURE: Uri Davis; "Zionists, Palestinians, and So¬cial Revolution," Hillel house, 8 pm.GAY LIB TEA PARTY: 5810J S Haper, 2 pm.Founded in 1892. 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 Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Hi. 60637. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per yearIf General Electriccan build an electric tractor,why can't they build anelectriccar?General Electric is marketing a14-horsepower rechargeable electrictractor capable of speeds up to 7miles an hour.We think it's a remarkableinnovation. But an electric car it's not.As a garden tractor for homeuse, Elec-Trak T can take advantage ofcharacteristics that would be distinctdisadvantages in an electric car.The availability of fuel is noproblem for Elec-Trak. It's designedfor limited use near electrifiedstructures, making overnightrecharging possible.The heavy weight of thebattery, which would slow down acar, means greater applied tractionfor Elec-Trak. ' k .».vBecause Elec-Trak must ffavelat slow speeds to do its jobs, thereare no aerodynamic energy tosses totake into consideration Still, one might expect Elec-Trakto be the forerunner of a pollution-free automobile. Perhaps it is. Butthere are many crucial problems leftto be solved.The most important one, ofcourse, is the development of asubstantially better electric battery.Any car built today would be severelylimited in range and performance,and probably prohibitively expensive.General Electric is makingprogress on new batteries, but there'sa long way yet to go.We've experimented with zinc-air batteries. Sodium-sulfur batteries.Silver-zinc batteries. Lithium-halogen batteries. And others. Thereare problems with all of them.Problems of life-span, cost,practicality.Despite the problems, GeneralElectric scientists and engineers areworking for the breakthrough thatwill make electric cars possible.Maybe the breakthrough iscloser than we think. But we'll continue to work and leave thepredictions to someone else.Why are we running this ad?We're running this ad, andothers like it, to tell you the thingsGeneral Electric is doing to solvethe problems of man and hisenvironment today.The problems concern usbecause they concern you. We're abusiness and you are potentialcustomers and employees.But there's another, moreimportant reason. These problemswill affect the future of this countryand this planet. We have a stake inthat future. As businessmen. And,simply, as people.We invite your comments.Please write to General Electric,570 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y.10022.GENERAL S* ELECTRIC DLAyDCr’S ALL-NIGHT StfCHPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREDEC . 4“THE PRIME OFMISS JEAN BRODIE"(12:00 4 2:00) DEC . 5"DOWNHILL RACER"(12:00 4 1:45 4 3:30)DEC.11"THE STERILECUCKOO" DEC.12"ME NATALIE"18"THE0UT0FT0WNERS"(12:004 1,45) 19"KING OF HEARTS"(12:00 4 2:00)25"BARBAREUA"(12:00 4 1:45) 26"THE WILD BUNCH"(12:00 4 2:15)JAN. 1"DADDY'S GONE A HUNTING"(12:00 4 1:45) JAN. 2"MONTEREY POP"(12:00 4 1:30 4 3:00)| TlCttTS 11.50 "“1EH PAISAN0Cheeses and spices and everythingnices—that's what our pizzas aremade of.Introducing"The Rebel Pizza"pineapple-peperoni§talian FiestaWe Deliverpzzeria MU 4-32621919 E. 71sr Streetfor yOUN(j COLLECTORSNOVEMBER ZJ - DECEMBER ZZ ,1970GRAPHICS * PAINTING 'SCULPTURE $Z to #300'rva sRE *JIenaiss/nce Society at the university 4 ChicagoGOODS PEED HAL L, 1010 EAST 59* ST.m-Fkl !0-5 <at-Ciih ifDecember 1, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5LETTERS TO THE EDITORS \ » tmContinued from page 4bils, speaking for Dr Frederick Zuspan,chairman of ob-gyn, said we were upsettingt h e patients and thereby “disturbing •patient care.”If indeed patient care is “disturbed” bypatients learning of the conditions underwhich they receive care, it is the conditionsthat must be changed.We were told by the two deans that ourcontinued presence would be declared “dis¬ruptive” and disciplinary proceedings in¬stituted against us.Thus the administration is saying that wecannot talk to or communicate withpatients on matters relating to the healthcare system or hospital policy. How couldit be that an institution so “renowned foracademic freedom” would try to muzzlereasoned discussion.It is now three weeks later and the Uni¬versity hospitals have learned that theproblems in the clinics and the people ex¬posing them will not just disappear.Thus, the University is trying to elimi¬nate the problems by silencing — withthreats — those speaking out.Brooks Mirrer the “right to free speech” might mean inthis situation.First, the exercise of the right to freespeech can be limited by circumstances.The most familiar example is the prohibi¬tion on shouting “fire” in a movie theater.Similarly, stopping a National Guard offi¬cer from ordering his men to fire on stu¬dents is saving lives, not abridging the offi¬cer’s right to free speech.Perhaps the remarks of Mr Nolan at theCollege dinner would not have resulted inan increase in the brutality of the Chicagopolice, but it is much less likely that theverbal expression of an ideology can be di¬vorced from how that ideology functions inthe street.Presumably the University communitywould not have tolerated in the name ofpluralism a live demonstration of how thepolice beat and intimidate the poor of Chi¬cago, so how could it have failed to respond when a University body sponsored the pre¬sentation of the ideology which is used tojustify that behavior.Second, equal rights can only exist in thecontext of equal opportunity. To argue thatI have the same right to manufacture andsell cars as General Motors is nonsense,since I have absolutely no opportunity to doso in an ogopolistic market.It is not true that I have the same“right” to national air time as Mr Nixon. Imay have a “right to free speech”, but it isa right which can only be exercised inmany situations if I have a great deal ofeconomic and political power, and whichdoes not exist if I do not have that power.Not everyone can be invited to speak atlarge, University-sponsored functions. Inthe seven years I have been associatedwith universities, I do not remember onecommunist having been invited to such afunction; frequently, the invitations go to men like Mr Nolan.The role of large universities in the politi¬cal economy, from urban renewal to gov¬ernment-sponsored research, make thisbias quite understandable.The issue is not one speech or one indi¬vidual’s rights, any more than it is the saleof one car by General Motors, but is rathera pattern which exists at the institutionallevel.To the extent that the University’s re¬sponsibility extends beyond its institutionalconfines, it seems necessary to “over¬represent” viewpoints which are woefullyunderrepresented in the society at large.As long as the University’s marketplaceof ideas continues to function in an ogopolis¬tic fashion, tacitly legitimizing the pow¬erful, I can see no alternative to the situ¬ation which developed over Mr Nolan’sappearance. Carlos DabeziesAnthropologyFaculty differs on admittance policiesJim SchwankeMark SteinhoffMedicine Vinton ThompsonEvolutionary biologyPat Scott'Free speech'The criticisms of the cancelation of thediscussion between Mr. Nolan and Mr. Ja-nowitz have centered on the denial by SDSof Mr. Nolan’s “right to free speech”. Butrights exist in situations, not in people, andthe purpose of this letter is to clarify what Continued from page 1theless, Hildebrand said, “preliminary in¬dications are that this year’s group willfare no better than last year’s.”The situation is not helped by what DeanHildebrand described as many facultymembers’ negative attitudes about admit¬ting these students. “Large numbers of fac¬ulty,” he said, “do not feel we should betrying to educate persons who do not meetnormal requirements.”MuwhaftFeaturing Chicago's Largest Display of KLH Music SystemsNOW IN STOCKTHE NEW STEREO TAPE DECK USINGTHE DOLBY NOISE REDUCTIONSYSTEMIIII1IIIIII ONE OF THE TWO NEWGREAT LOUDSPEAKERSFROM KLH —PRICEDFROM 55.00 TO 190.00 INBOOK SHELF UNITSNEW319MTHIS KLH IS THE BEST BUY IN THE AUDIO INDUSTRYOLD!!19995 OLD! BUT STILLTHE BEST PORT-ABLE VOUP viONEY CAN 8UV•fttu&i/jiaftrON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th $».-6/The Chicago Maroon/December 1, 1970 Miss Simmons said that the reasons whymany faculty members and administratorsthe special students is that most professorsdo not really teach. Clayton corroboratedher feeling that students in the College“are privileged to observe professors in in¬tercourse with their research and writingand must educate themselves.”The special student program is part ofthe University’s attempt to increase theblack population of the College. However,many faculty mambers and administratorsfeel that this approach, with no minimumallowable board score, is wrong.Mrs Enid Fogel, assistant dean of admis¬sions, is commonly quoted as saying thatpersons with board scores below 500 shouldnot be admitted to the College.Miss Simmons added that in many in¬stances, persons at the very top of theirhigh school classes have extremely lowboard scores. She said that this is an in¬ dication that while the students are highachievers, their high schools are inferior byCollege Board standards.Dean Hildebrand believes that there areother ways to increase the black populationin the College. “The University, he said, iscurrently trying to finalize an arrangementwith Wayne State university, Detroit,where large numbers of blacks are en¬rolled, to accept their best blacks after twoyears.”He went on to say that terms of the pro¬posed agreement include a provision forthe University to assist Wayne State withits advising functions.When asked what the University will doabout those special students who are cur¬rently on probation, and have little hope ofraising their averages by the end of thisyear, Hildebrand said, “The University ismaking every effort to help these kidstransfer to schools that they can handle.”Station JBD Restaurant^happily announces a new(5500 S. Shore Drive) andfreshly decorated location(Flamingo Hotel).Our Roast Prime Rib ofBeef has pleased the HydePark community since 1944.Our Red Snapper in capersor wine sauce is only one ofour fish specialties. HotCrabmeat au Gratin willreally challenge your appe¬tite AND your taste buds.(If you know a GOODcocktail when you taste it,you only need to tell us howyou want it.)Reservations are, recom¬mended, but not alwgy£ nec¬essary.fl jLS<STATION Call BL 8-9241II finv.neuncuuj..THE BESTFOOD AND DRINKSIN TOWN Buss BartoStation JBD11 ill I I 15 i i i H V ftMura V'Htf 1.1 it 111S ft k(The Maroon Classified Ads)LETTERS TO THE EDITORSfor saleVW '65, 29,000 miles, gd. cond.white. $650. PL 2-1664, Bruno. PAINTING &DECORATING Female roommate wanted for aptclean, quiet, close to campus & 1CReasonable. Call 288-2384Pea Coat Shipment Just ArrivedJohn's Mens Store, 1459 E. 53rd Reliable, quality painting and deco¬rating. Special student rates. Call •Art Michener, 955-2480. Furnished rm„ good location, cooking, 493-7443 or 493-622764 MGB wire wheels, good condi¬tion, best offer X4589, after 5 pm667-4490 PEOPLE FOR SALE 2 Bdrm apt. Share 2-1 fern gradPart furn $75-mo. 643-6549Viola (signed 8. dated), bow & case,$250. Lt-wt sleeping bag $10. 643-2516evenings. Student wife, exp. w. children willkeep child afternoons. Call EVE 234-2158 FLIGHT INSTRUCTIONBOTTOMSGOTBOTTOMS*5.90and UpBut Worth More5222’/? S. Harper Ave.Near Harper Court Female student will do house¬cleaning. Mornings or afternoons $10for 5 hours. Good references. ReplyBox HK Maroon. Can start January2. PEOPLE WANTEDFern, grad student with furniture &household things, looking for 2-bed-room apt. in Hyde Park & Grad, orworking roommate — beginningwinter quarter. Call Marsha LI 4-2584 evenings. Female roomate wanted for aptClean quiet 8. close to campus. Veryreasonable. Call 288-2384Typing Service AvailableMU 4-7394 R.M. Davidson Person to babysit two children sev¬eral nights a week, sleep over. 643-'6030 days.MOVING? Waitress wanted. See Niela MediciRest. 1450 E. 57th St.Licensed mover 8. hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480 Coders Wanted. 10-15 hrs-wkwks. $2.25-hr. Call ext 4794.SPACE Female to assist marketing director,daily 12-5. Must have personalityplus and office skills. Call 236-0092.Dining Room Set, Bauhaus StyleGerman craftsman made 221-1883 Room for girl in spacious apt. insafe area, near the lake. Lots ofwindows, modern kitchen. $82.50-mo.Call 493-9893 before 10 pm. Need part-time aft. ass't in Dentaloffice. Will train qual person. HPBk. Bldg. Ml 3-9607German Shepard Collie pup, 4 mo.old. $15. Housebroken. Has had allshots, extras included. x3775 4-12 pmor 768-2366 Spacious 3 rm apartment. Con¬venient to univ. & 1C (57th 8. Har¬per). Avail, to sublet 12-2 493-5975even., wkend. $145-mo College students needed 7 days aweek, 4-0. Experience preferred.Call DELI DALI DELICATESSEN.643-0500, 1522 E. Hyde Park.2 for 1 Discount Book, on sale atthe Maroon Office, $10.00 Apt. to share. 54th 8. Kenwood Ownroom, $65-mo. 363-1822HICKORY CAMPINGEQUIPMENTTents, sleeping bags, stoves, etc.Reduced interim rates 324-1499. Housing needed for emergency na¬tional antiwar convention in HydePark area Dec. 4, 5, 6. If you havecouches or floor space availablecontact U of C Student Government,ext. 3273. GOT SOME EXTRA TIME?How about spending it servingpeople in the community? Inter¬ested? Contact Office of Service Op¬portunity, Ida Noyes Hall, NoyesRoom, X3293.FEM ROOMMATE WANTEDOwn room large apt. 55th & Univ.from Dec 10. $70 955-9163MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50* par line, 40* par aach line if the ad is rapaatad in asubsaquant, consecutive issue. Non-University paopla: 75‘ parlina, 60* par repeat lina. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a lina. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: Thera is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are freu.1 ’ ' 1 1 ' ' 1 t 1 ' T I 1 r— 1 1 1 1 1.i,i.i i i.i.a 11:i LLl 1J: ' / 1 ; ’ : i* ’il.ii —; , j i 1 - - 7T ' ♦ • ! t ’ ♦ [ | ' ' '* ' 4 • t * I .ini'll.r ' i ; • • i • r i • * ■ i i i. i : : ; i i 1 'T , j ! » T T ! ' T T J J r T r » 1■ -L ■ i i 1, i, O.,,. 1 —J a k , - l 1 ill L ! a 1 1 I ii iABORTION COUNSEL, REFERRAL AND ASSISTANCEPrompt termination of pregnancy by licensedObstertricians and Gynecologists at accre¬dited hospitals. Reasonable fees - Completeprivacy - Advanced professional methods.Write - phone - or visit.ABORTION ADVISORY SERVICE, INC4 East 12th StreetNew York, New York 10003PHONE 212-249-6205 or 212-628-2029 IF YOU WANT TOSELL IT—or evengive it away, Letthe MAROON DOIT for you. Cheapand Easy.THE MAROONCLASSIFIEDS. ^A \MW tfm. ;M. 1nyAjg yLET THE FOLKS BACK HOME KNOW WHAT YOU'RE INTO.In touch with a Maroon subscription foronly $8. This sends all issues forthe academic year.CHICAGO MAROON 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637Name.Address.ZiP PART TIME SALESThe Maroon is looking for somequalified people to solicit ads. Luc¬rative commissions and establishedaccounts available. Should have car.Men and women. Call Don or Dianax3263.Tired of flying with indifferent in¬structors? Sick of landing fees andpoor equipment? Fly at Gary. CallGeorge Dawson 734-7619 pvt-comm-instrum. RIDE NEEDED TO NYCSCENESDig it, Next GAY LIB dance 12-12From Melanie Wilkes to Janis Jopl¬in: Ann Firor Scott speaks on 'thepsychological liberation of theSouthern Woman. Ida Noyes, Fridayat 8.CRAFT COOP now open at the BlueGargoyle Mon-Wed-Thurs Fri 11:30-2:30 Thur ev 7-10 pm.YOGA single/group Exerc. Mdtn.Contrn. Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155.Ionesco's, "Jacques," Dec 4, 5, 8< 6,8:30 pm. Reynolds Club.GESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPWeekend Dec. 11, 12, 13 Fri. 7-11pm Sat. Sun 10am-6pm. Limited to10. $25. Lorrie Peterson, ex¬perienced leader, has studied atEsalen. 288-3541.Uri Davis will speak at Hillel at 8pm, Thursday. "Zionists, Palesti¬nians, and Social Revolutions." 5715Woodlawn.RUNAWAY?Family Problems? Call the Depot.955-9347. . *MULTI-MEDIA THEATERis located in Harper Galleries 5210S. Harper. MU 4-1173CEF PRESENTSA film by Claude Lelouch (A Man &A Woman) Friday at Cobb at 7 &9:15 "Life, Love, Death".PERSONALSWhat the f - - k are these redsquares? George Val knows at Mul¬ti-Media Theater MU 4-1173Georgia on Her Mind: Ann FirorScott, author of The Southern Lady,raps Friday at 8, Ida Noyes Li¬brary.Female rjomate wanted for apt 57& Dorcht ..ter. Clen quiet & -eason-able. Cali 288-2384Tenor tonite at 8. Multi-Media The¬ater 5210 S Harper $1.50 Come Mu¬sic Buffs. Live a LittleATTEND ANEMERGENCYNATIONALANTIWARCONVENTIONDec. 4, S, 6Chicago Packing HouseLabor Center4859 S. Wabash* Housing Needed; you havefloor space available, contactU of C Student GovernmentMl 3-0800 Ext. 3273You owe itto yourself!1342 E. 55th493-6700 Don't Let the Bandersnatch DieBandersnatch Open Mon-Sun Band¬ersnatch open for lunch. Movie Wedat the Bandersnatch.SHH!!! Something Unspoken WedsMulti-Media Theater 7:30 and 9:00P.M. Right on! Mothers!!!I need a ride to NYC (Brooklyn) onor around Dec. 18. Will share driv¬ing 8, expenses. Call Diana, X3263days. 667-6130 evenings. Thompson Deviates: We never diddo much talking anyway — don'tthink twice its alright — LLA8.CLost Dog: Ten year old blond Lab¬rador, near UC. Call PL 2-9718Albee's American Dream Fridays atMulti-Media Theater 8:30 PM Contemporary European Filmsshows "Alice's Restaurant" on Sat.Dec. 12 at Cobb HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - Birch$45/TON DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESpecial Student RatesWriters' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)Two free films shown by CEF: JeanCocteau's "Beauty 8, the Beast" onDec. 9 and Leone's "Fistful of Dol¬lars" on Dec 14 both at Cobb at 7 89:15. Act your thing!!! PsychodramaThursdays at 7:00 pm. Multi-MediaTheater! Hurry!!!!!Duke University Prof. Ann FirorScott on the psychological liberationof the Southern Woman, Ida NoyesLibrary, Friday Dec 4, 8:00. Y'allcome, hear? ABORTION is legal in NY. For re¬ferral to accredited hospitals call212-633-9825 6 pm to 6 amGreat Holiday Gift Idea. 2 for 1 Dis¬count Book, at the Maroon office,$10.00"If you see nothingelse this year,you must seem mu pirn.It will not, I think,$ ever fade frommemory!"—Richard schickel. uitCOLUMBIA PICTURES Presents a BBS ProductionJACK NICHOLSON .» FIVE EASY PIECES ...»Karen Blackand Susan AnspaCh • Screenplay by Adrian Joyce • Story by Bob Raf»Produced by Bob Raieison and Richard WrrhsirrDirected by Bob Ra*e'son • COLORA WALTER READS THEATREme [squiresa I. OAK STRICT . 337-1117 THEA. PARK $1.0033 E. CedarSpanish Portuguese Dept,of Mundelein CollegepresentsThe Brazilian Film Classic"BLACK ORPHEUS"Tues., Dec. 1, at 4 pmGalzin Hall-Mundelein College"on the lake"subtitles, $1 donationSAVINGSSTURTLENECKS $1.99|Wranglers Jeans $4.99HOLIDAY SPECIALS DAILY1 970 Fashions for 1 950 PricesSAVINGSSAVINGSSA VINGSSAVINGS SAVINGSSSee our large selection ofNicon Cameras, Lenses,Accessories, and Binocu¬lars. STUDEBAKERTHEATRE410 S. MICHIGAN AVECHICAGO, ILL. (927 »7J|TUES., DEC 1 - SAT, JAN. 2myrna)¥romeLOY KILTYDEAR LQVE"A PLAY ABOUT ELIZABETH BARRETTAND ROBERT BROWNING•• AT LAST a PLAY THAT BRIDGESTHE GENERATION GAP ^SO% DISCOUNT WITH STUDENT I DfIi, Contemporary European FilmsLIFE, LOVE, DEATH Cobb Hall7 & 9:15 Friday, Dec. 4MMDecember 1, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7IIT'S A K/MD OF A WHO If FEoR-E'S CATA¬LOG (ACCESSTo FtV\JFR /) humdreds ofPHOTOS, DRAWINGS, DOCUMEMTS, AMDCARTOOMS (iQSfelb MOW) FROM Great speckled bird, liberation,RISING UP AM6RV, <SOOPTINAe5,TM£BLACK PANTHER HEY, YOU STILLTHERE-?rat; resist; old mole; ramparts,KALEIDOSCOPE, THE MEWYORKTTMLS'—*—?/ M-Y-T/MES7 \tfeystt m: oartooms —AMD NOT t-SPETADVRADICAL, either / J AcLL. THl‘.» RCCiJ SmF FOK C£E.’NR"ST.,MSOUR OA'M CMUTTvlEMT; Y'kmcvJ it'sA TEACH IMS TOOL, A PERSUASIVE PRTiA-SAMDA device/ a wav to convince tafborderline uncommitted/VEAM? well LETSSEE WFA’OWA 60^ 'WOW/ Pictures from every demo inHST0R9/ RSTETSS / CARTOONS BY RsCrumb s cobs/ heavy Tfipoey pieces./POETRY EVEN / OH CUTA-SISHl / ('LLTALE TWo/ ONE RxfME, AMD 0M6T0 oracAMrZ-E7 the Folks back home. IN THE SWAMP/-ASSEMBLED B/ MfTZH OOO^iC<Am/• STUCK TOETHEtEL 0V LO/AL ACCOM PUCKAMD THE OLD MOIT OofJ ECTfyT /CMLV (LKSTHAN 14 PER RASE /)AT LOCAL ecOKSTORES ACflES AMER1 LA /IT^S A FiegTEDmON RAFK33A7C./PL6RIM FREES, ITlLAALFRED A. LKJOP^N.Y.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEAVERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center15)0 E. 55th St.363-6363 ^jiiimiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^I CAFE II ENRICO II 1411 East 53rd |1 FIGHT |INFLATION |Student Discount =10% on Food 53 pm to 2 am |With ID Card I8/The Chicago Maroon/December 1, 1970niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiimmiiFi THEINCREDIBLESTRINGBANDin concertThursday, December 3NORTHWESTERNUNIVERSITYCahn Auditorium 8 PMTickets $3.50 at Scott Hall & at the doorWE'D LIKE YOU TO JOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITHas an ORDAINED MINISTERWITH A RANK OFDOCTOR OF DIVINITY’And ye shall know the truth and the truth shallmake you froo’ John 8:32We 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 con:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for exemption fromproperty and other taxes.3. 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