Volume 80, Number 6 The University of Chicago Thursday, September 30,1971The ABCs ofUniversity LifeThree nice things we dofor staff and studentsof our favorite UniversityAll University Bank checking account holders are issuedcheck identification cards. That makes it easy for you tocash a check anywhere, not just at the bank.At University Bank, all members of U of C payroll staffare eligible for free checking account service. Saves youa couple bucks every month on service charges. Twentyfour dollars a year may not sound like much, but why payit when you don’t have to? We also cash all of U of Cchecks without charge, another “little’’ service that canmean a lot to you.Ride a bike? Great. Our new bicycle pedal-up windowlets you bank while you take a pleasant, healthy whirlaround the neighborhood.The rest of our services would run easily from D throughZ, but you get the idea. We want you to do business withthe bank that serves your school more than in name only.Good luck in the new school year!The flew University Bonk (J)University National Bank of Chicago / 1354 East 55th Street / Chicago. Illinois 60615 / Telephone 684-1200 / Member FDIC2/The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September ju, 1971The Chicago MaroonVolume 80, Number 6Thursday, September 30,1971Special Orientation IssuePAUL BERNSTEINMITCH BOBKINCON HITCHCOCKEditorsMIKE COHENBusiness ManagerJUDY ALSOFROMManaging EditorFRED WINSTONNews EditorSTEVE AOKI, DAVID FOSSEPhotography EditorsKEITH PYLEAssociate Managing EditorDIANA LEIFERAssistant Business ManagerPHOTOGRAPHY CREDITSPat*c one David posse Page three: David Posse Page live: SteveAoki (Roger Hildebrand) Page seven David Travis Page II DavidTravis (P.dward Levi). Prank Gruber (Anne Moses) Page I V SteveAoki (Anthony Pallet!) Page 14 Steve Aoki Page IS: David Posse(Michigan Avenue, wall with posters). .Steve .Aoki (the polluted citv).Page 16: Steve Aoki Page 17: Steve Aoki Page l<> Steve Aoki(Wriglev Building) David Travis (Museum of Contemporary Art)Page 21 David Travis ()ohn Hancock Center Pirst National BankBuilding). David Posse (Water lower). Scott Carlson Lake PointLower) Page 24 Steve Aoki (P.dward Levi speaking in Nlandel).David Travis (Wayne Booth speaking at Liberal Arts Conference)Page 2S David Posse Page 27: David Posse (Fountain ol l one).Steve Aoki (George Beadle) Page 2*> David Fosse (55th Street). SteveAoki (repairs on 57th Street) Page 52 David I ravis Page 55 (onYuen Page 57: Jon Yuen Page 5‘) David Fosse Page 41 David Posse(chess plavers). Steve Aoki'(studying) Page 45 David I ravisFounded in 18S»2 Published by l niversitv of Chicago Students onTuesdays and Fridays throughout the regular school year (exceptduring exam periods) and intermittently during the summer Officesin rooms 505 and 504 Ida Noves Hall 1212 Fast 50|h Siree! < hicago.Illinois 60657 Telephone (512) 755- 5265 Distributed on campusand in the Hvde Park neighborhood free of charge Subscriptionsby mail Sl> per year in the l nited States Non profit postage paidat (:hi<ago. Illinois GreetingsFour Chicago notables offer theirgreetings to new students at the University.Page 5.Profile of New StudentsWhere do the new' students come from, howmany of them are there, what do they thinkafter their first five days here, and more.Page 7.A History of the CollegeThe University of Chicago College: what itwas and how it got to be the way it is today.Page 9.A Short Guide to theAdministrationA brief introduction to the vagaries of theChicago administration by Maroon co-editorCon Hitchcock. How decisions are made andwho is in charge of what. Page 11.Chicago!Now that you’re in America’s second city,what can you do with your time. Maroon co¬editor Mitch Bobkin, a confirmed NewACCENT / SHOP lm.FALL SALESEPT. 29TH THRU OCT. 16THCHAIRS GIFTWARE LAMPSBUTTERFLY CHAIR, BLACK WROUGHT IRONFRAME! CANVAS SLING, CHOICE OF FOUR COLORS; OLIVE,YELLOW, ORANGE OR ELACK. REG. 16.95■g accentmaccent <o f14 ?7 E. 53 rd SI.Ml 1-7400M0N yHRU F»I, TO A> ONSALE73.75UCENT SHOP INC.7 <37 E. 53 RD. IYI13-7400f '3rd & BLACKSTONE)3 4 P.IVI ; SAT, 9 A.IV). TO b P M. J Yorker, describes many of the interestingplaces to go and things to do here. Page 14.A Student Looks atAcademicsAnthony Grafton graduate from theCollege in June and is now a graduatestudent in Renaissance history. A member ofPhi Beta Kappa and former student om¬budsman, he describes the Collegecurriculum and offers some advice toCollege freshmen. Page 23.The Chicago Experience:Two ViewsIn a message to the freshmen Sundayreprinted here, University President Ed¬ward Levi discussed the relationship bet¬ween teaching and research. In a companionarticle philosophy professor Knox Hill asks ifthere is a rationale for the many changesthat have been made in the programs in theCollege. Page 24.A High Class Guide toPeople and PlacesOr, as one.wag put it, “Who’s who in the zoo.” An informal guide to the importantpeople and places at the University. Page 27.What to do in Hyde ParkHyde Park is many things to many people,and since you’re going to be stuck for thenext couple of years, you might as well findout what’s here. Managing editor JudyAlsofrom describes many of the features ofLiving in Hyde Park. Page 29.Politics at ChicagoThe day of the big demonstrations is over,says Maroon co-editor Paul Bernstein. Hedescribes the history of University politicsand some of the aspects that have broughtabout the political cooling. Page 31.Through Hyde Park with aBottle of BromoArmed with their trusty Bromo bottle, theMaroon staff fanned out across Hyde Park’sgustatory wasteland to sample the food at allof its eateries. Their report, with ratingsfrom four stars down to none, will help voufind out where to eat and where not to. Page35.NEKA & MESpecializing in Imports &-The Unusual-Clothing, Jewelry & GiftsfromIndia, So. America,Spain, Israli & PersiaRugs of various sizesImported fromPersia & So. RussiaHYDE PARKS NEWEST BOUTIQUEHOURS: Tues. Thru Fri. 11-9Mon. & Sat. 11-6, Sun. 12-5 INHARPER COURT1613 E. 53rd St. Ml 3-1111 OUR SPECIALITYWorld-famous choicest steakburgerdraft beet -> free peanuts 4e-r' Open daily for(Z) A.cocktails, lunch, dinnersand in between5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454LET THE FOLKS BACK HOME KNOW WHAT YOU'RE INTO.In touch with a Maroon subscription foronly $9. This sends all issues forthe academic year.CHICAGO MAROON 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637Name.Address.ZipThursday, September '10,19! i/ 1 he Chicago Maroon 3mtotoMSr*MMmMM THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREStocks ALL Required & RecommendedBooks For All U. of C. CoursesTextbook Dept. - First FloorOur General Books Department stocks 40,000 titles, stockedby disciplines, in alphabetical order by author. If you cannotfind any title, ask any clerk in a striped jacket. Also inGeneral Books Dept, are special sections for reference books,best-sellers and new arrivals in fiction and non-fiction, anda children's book section. >«:k&sEh■XatXMMMPNrTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE«■OE*sHHME»S¥totoP:*«5HHttKM¥ Stocks ALL Required And RecommendedStationery And SuppliesFor All U. of C. CoursesStationery Dept. - Second FloorAlso on the 2nd floor is an attractive food dept., news¬papers and magazines, records, cameras, and photography sup¬plies, typewriters and office machines, sweatshirts and t-shirts,U.C. jackets, U.C. seal and shield items, candy and tobacco,jewelry, watch repair, greeting cards, and a very attractiveand unusual gift department. We rent typewriters, recorders,TV's, radios, and a wide variety of equipment - 2nd floor.ON SAT., OCT. 2, & SAT., OCT. 9 - OPEN 9:00-3:00OUR REGULAR HOURS - 8:00-5:00, M - F9:00 -1 :00, SAT.THE UNIVERSITYOFCHICAGO BOOKSTOREEllis Avenue at 58th St. HUHMtoMHNM:«u?tototoKMptotoHHMMMHtotoMtotoKtoNSi• V *-7.v ,V?« ,5%.*?«, V*»!5N,V.«*4 /The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September 3j, 1971•ooilM ov&DiiO sdV r\Pf ,0< 'odmoiqoc ¥UtomtoMMtoMHtomMMHtoMtotototoM**toHH'MtoHtoHtototoMtotototoM:to¥Notables Welcome New StudentsDaleyIt is a pleasure on behalf of all the people ofChicago to welcome the freshman class tothe University of Chicago. The educationalinstitution you are entering has contributedsignificantly to our city’s standing as one ofthe great educational and cultural centers ofthe nation. You have a right to be proud ofjoining such a tradition.The purpose of a college education is tooffer the individual an opportunity tobroaden his horizons, to make him aware ofthe sources of information, so that he mayform opinions based on his own investigationof facts. This educational process isnecessary in order to have an informedelectorate on which our style of democracy isbased.My best wishes to the members of the newclass and I hope you will benefit from at¬tendance at the University of Chicago andfrom your association and involvement in thecity of Chicago.Richard J. DaleyMayor, City of Chicago StrausWelcome to the new students in theCollege. The dean of undergraduate studentsoffice is located in Gates-Blake, and you willall have made your first visit at the time ofyour registration appointment with youradviser. That is almost certain to have beenrushed, with no time to get acquainted or toask the many questions you have about theCollege programs, courses and majors.Please come back soon, when we all willhave more time. Your adviser and the deanswill be glad to answer questions wheneverthey occur to you.I would like to take this opportunity toannounce that beginning this fall Mr. RobertStein (Assistant professor of English andhead resident of Thompson house) will beassistant dean of undergraduate students. Inaddition, Mrs. Enid Rieser (Adviser) will beassistant to the dean. I look forward toworking with both of them.We hope that all of you will have a suc¬cessful and rewarding year.(Mrs) Lorna P StrausDean of undergraduate students Arf elderStudent activities are essential to themaintenance of human dignity in HydePark. By the sweat of a few dedicated brows,the grey iron door of winter is forced to opena few inches, revealingOh hell, what can I say? Getting involvedin student activities is like taking a dive intoa wringer washing machine. When walkingthe thin line between mental calm andhysteria, student activities is there to lickyou one way or another.The University has provided the inmatesof the institution with $38,000 to betributed by the committee of JOY ANDLIGHT, CORSO (Committee on RecognizedStudent Organizations.). Because more than$100,00 worth of requests are yearly laid atCorso's feet, the Committee must operatewith a smile and a swift hatchet chop.The University has provided forour mental nourishment, but has almostforgotten that our heads are supported byour bodies. When an outlander asks fordirections to the student union, we mustchoke down a smirk.But the point of this is to rope you bozosinto this circus. Maybe if I told you that youmight have fun, you’d believe me.David AffelderPresident, Student Government HildebrandWe have reason to welcome you withspecial cordiality. You know, better than thestudents of the sixties, why you are here. Youhave ccme for the right reasons and with theright expectations-and that is a considerableadvantage. You know that the automatic“sale value” of a diploma is down, and thatthe intellectual value of a formal educationcannot be guaranteed; the endeavor to gainthat value is as non-automatic as ever.We will provide opportunity and en¬couragement. We want your efforts to berewarded by discovery and by growingcapacity to enhance human culture. We wishyou the satisfaction of finding new friends,new interests, and new abilities.Roger HildebrandDean of the CollegeA MEMORANDUMTO: STUDENT AND FACULTY SPOUSESRE: UNIVERSITY EMPLOYMENT (An Invitation)Atthe University of Chicago, spouses of students,faculty, residents and interns, constitute a highly appreciated group among theseveral thousand people employed on the regular staff.Despite tradition, University SALARIES are fully competitive these days, with provisions for regular merit increasesand frequent pay range improvements.University regular employment BENEFITS are better than competitive, including 3 WEEKS VACATION, PAID SICK LEAVE,REDUCED TUITION for University courses, FREE BLUE CROSS- BLUE SHIELD and many others. Employees also participate in theUniversity's many activities and functions.There is a great variety of employment opportunity at the University. Typical positions include:Office Positions of many kinds for those with typing, s h o rt h a n d, bookkeeping or related skills. Also some clericalpositions which do not require special skills or background.Administrative or professional positions for those whose experience or specialized field of training qualifies them.Technical Positions: from time to time we have openings in research and clinical laboratories for those with experienceor with courses in chemistry , biology, microbiology, etc.Alrhough we have some openings for part-time workers, the greatest choice of employment is for those who can work fulltime, andwho plan to work for a yeat or more.You are invited to explore your employment opportunities by contacting the University Personnel Office at956 E. 58th Street; hours 8:30 to 5:00, Monday through Friday. Or call 753-4440.{Ot course the University is an equal opportunity employer.Thursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago Maroon 5FLEETWOOD MACBLACK MAGIC WOMANincludingAlbatross Black Magic Woman Stop Mev>' RoundJigsaw Pu/.'le Blues Merry Go RoundLOWE'S PRESENTS COLUMBIANEW RELEASESKRISKRISTOFFERSONTHE SILVER TONGUEDDEVIL AND IincludingJody And The Kid/Epitaph (Black And Blue)Loving Her Was Easier(Than Anything III Ever Do Again)When I Loved Her/The Taker KRISKRISTOFFERSONME AND BOBBY McGEEincludingHelp Me Make It Through The NightFor The Good Times/Sunday Mornin Cornin'DownBlame It On The Stones Casey s Last RideZ 30679 Z30817THE RHODES SCHOLAR SINGS:PRICE, ONLY $2.99 (40% OFF)MOOLI? MUMM (HUB IJEIRV CRHC1II NEW RIDERS OF THEPURPLESAGEincludingLouisiana LadyI Don t Know Vou Portland WomanWhatcha Gonna Do Last Lonely Eagle$4.19 micuusKZ 30859' $3.39THE GRATEFUL DEAD SPINOFFSVERYNEWTEN YEARS AFTERA SPACE IN TIMEincluding:One Ot These Days Hard Monkeys / Uncle JamI'd Love To Change The WorldOnce There Was A Time POCOfrom the inside•| :df i. - IT: tW V.iuAreThfOui-■V« AndV,,, Wn.it I* I Shi . iid Say Hi ye YouKC 30801* KF 30753-COMPARE AT A MERE $4.19mxluvishnuJohn mdAnqhlinmyo,OAr$Kcyoi\1includingPeace One. Peace Two, Blue In GreenSoiX) For My Muthei/Something Spiritual BARBRA JOAN STREISANDin, IikIiiv ;v i.ve C* ’ Al nendOne Less Bell T Answer A Hi .use Is N. it A HomeV tllei Be l, ltd il WheleVn, Lead$3.59 KZ 30766' $3.59 KC 30792- WHILE YOU WERE AT HOME FOR THE SUM¬MER, COLUMBIA PUT TOGETHER MANY NEWRELEASES. NOW THAT YOU'VE COME BACKTO SCHOOL, LOWE'S WANTS TO INTRODUCEYOU TO THESE NEW ITEMS; SOME 40% OFF.SO DRIVE THEM OUT OF OUR SHOWROOMTODAY!SPECIALLY PRICED 2 RECORD SETSFOR $4.19 (ALSO CTA& RASCALS)GiiLu ’Paul/(foinq £a5t' includingilf You Let Me Make _ove To You Then!Why Can t1 Touch YouCompared To What Magic Carpet Ride EastThere s A Small HotelC 30754 Z 30580$3.39 APIECENEW SANTANA!*4.19Jim HENDRIXJOHNNY WINTER ANDSiy&IHE FAMIIVSIDNETEN YEARS AFTERMILES DAVISKRIS KRIST0FFERS0NMOUNTAINTHE flLM BROTHERSPOCOPROCOL HARUMIIIHIIAUIItltMUtonilKSCACTUSLEONARD COHENDAVID BROMBERGC 30737' A specially priced 3 record set G3X 30805$2.99 (40% OFF) $5.98 (40% OFF)ALL $6.95 LIST CASSETTES AND 8 TRACKS FOR $4.95CHARGEWITH Sank Americard-Vi-RECORDS HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505OPEN SUNDAY 1 2 TO 56/'The*Chicago Maroon /Thursday, September 30,1971Less Freshmen Entering This YearA smaller than expected freshman class of70 has allowed space for approximately 115ransfer students this year, three times asnany as last year.“We didn't end up with quite as manyfreshmen as we wanted.” said RobertMason, assistant director of admissions andaid, ‘‘so we decided we were in a postion toadmit more transfers.”Mason said that freshmen applicationswere down from last year so there werefewer students qualified for admission to thefreshman class. Exact figures on the numberof applicants and the number accepted werenot available.The number of transfer applicants jumpedfrom approximately 280 to approximately875, Mason said, so the College was ‘‘able toadmit more transfers of the same quality aslast year.” This year 180 transfers wereaccepted as compared to last year’s 60, with119 accepting admission this year, 40 lastyear.Of the 570 new freshmen there are 375 menand 195 women.The students come from 45 states and 12foreign countries. Approximately one-thirdcome from private and parochial schools andthe rest from public high schools.Nineteen students were admitted to thef reshman class before completing their highschool requirements. The number ofstudents applying for early admissiondoubled over last year’s numbers.According to Anthony Pallett, director ofadmissions and aid, the increase in thenumber of early applicants may have comeabout because many school boards had to cuthigh school budgets and many of the cutshave affected special honors programs andadvanced courses.“When students found they could notlonger take advanced courses in high school,many of them decided to apply for collegeentrance early, without waiting for their diplomas,” Pallett said.Pallett also noted that more studentsapplied for deferred admission. This meansthat the students, after being accepted forcollege admission, elect to wait a year beforematriculating.‘‘About 52 percent of the freshmen arereceiving aid from the University,” Palletsaid. ‘‘Average financial aid for freshmenthis year is $1,634.”Pallet added that 33 of the students areenrolled under the University’s Small TalentSearch Program, designed to encourage stu¬dents from small, rural area high schoolsto enroll.Another 13 students are enrolled under theUrban Talent Search Program, designed toencourage students with urban backgroundsto enroll. This program concentrates on theMiddle West, particularly the urban areas ofChicago, Detroit, St. Louis and Milwaukee.Fifty-four of the freshmen are children ofUniversity alumni and 26 are children ofUniversity faculty members, officials, oremployees.Pallett also said that 20 freshmen werenamed by a faculty committee as UniversityScholars, the highest honor available to anentering freshman.University Scholars are named withoutspecial application by the student andwithout consideration of financial need.Each Scholar is awarded an annual stipendof $500 in recognition of this honor.Freshmen interviewed during orientationchose the University for a number ofreasons,- the most common being theUniversities reputation and financial aid.Many freshmen admitted that they onlycame to Chicago after being rejected at otherschools such as Harvard, Stanford, Pamonaand Haverford.One freshmen girl confessed that sheapplied here ‘‘to prove to my boyfriend I couldget in.”AVOCADO:BY BERNICE A GUIDE TO CITY ANDBURSON & WAYNE CAMPUSLIAOFREE AT ACTIVITIES NIGHT- 50' AFTERWARDSNORTHWESTTOWERHigh RiseApartment Homes forBudget Minded Families.Spacious living and low rentsthat include water, gas,heat, electricity, mainte¬nance, kitchen appliances,master TV. and parking.1 bedroom from $135.2 bedroom from $167.3 bedroom from $200.Office and furnished modelopen weekdays from 10 to6, and Sunday from 12 to 6.Closed Friday.NORTHWEST TOWERLocated on the tri-corner ofOgden, Erie, and the Ken¬nedy Expressway.Phone HA 7-6560Another development byMcCormick Beatty Co.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist•ye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363I ~ ^ ' 1Thursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago Maroon/ 7FINE JEWELERS FOR 61 YEARS119 N WABASH I wo people le.ilk logethei, laughing,loving, looking loi tomorrow'.See loi \ outsell out selection otquality i mgsI o .issure vout satis!,iction we w illexchange or lelund lull value.You won't he hassled at Hollands.WOODFIELDEVERGREENLAKEHURSTWOW!Low, Low driving Instruction Rate nowavailable. 10.50/hr. AH new air con¬ditioned instruction cars.The School that gives you the best for less.Why Pay More?John Hancock School of DrivingCal! TU 9-5678 GIANT SALEREDEEM THIS COUPON FOR:BODY SHIRTS $4.44LEVI JACKETS $7.98BLUE JEAN BELLS $4.98WORK SHIRTS $2.98TURTLENECKS. $1.99JOHN'S MEN’S WEAR1459 E. 53rdf RIGHT ON CAMPUSFOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE ORSMALL - AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAIL-MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY" AD” BUIIDM6TEL. 753-2301-02-03NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICESEXCEPT NOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETS■HieHankout v*'Go Y<Hir own wjiy.lie YmirsclfYou’ve found a way to make your statement.Part of that statement is in the clothes youwear. The Hang Out will help you make it loudand clear.Your kind of threads:Skinny rib shirts, sportsman suits, double knitwalking suits, a whale of a lot of jeans, jumpsuits, bulky sweaters, embroidered work shirts,peasant shirts, tank tops, denim suits ... and alllike that.The Hang Out just might be your kind of place.Come see.8/ The Cbjcagp Mftrpop / Thqrsd^y, Sep,t,erpJ>er 30,,1971 Han<j-ou+ i$ a part of Cohn 4 sterrjH'fde Park Shopping center/ParkUniversity's Past One ofChicago’s coat-of-arms, a phoenix risingut of ashes, symbolizes the rebirth of what$ now called the Old University, in-:orporated in 1857 and forced by financiallifficulties to close in 1886. As early as 1889,legotiations between a number of prominentBaptists and men like John D. Rockefellerand Marshall Field resulted in the in¬corporation of the University of Chicago; itsfirst president, William Rainey Harper, wasinauguarted in 1891.Harper, a professor of Hebrew at Yale whohad earned his PhD there at 18, insisted thatthe infant Chicago be envisioned as a fullfeldged major university with a faculty andfacilities adequate not only for un¬dergraduate teaching but for the pursuit ofadvanced studies and research. It would be aprecarious financial venture, but Harper, at34 on his way to becoming one of the mostextraordinary figures in Americaneducation, was filled with the energy andimagination to make it a success. Heassembled a brilliant faculty of 103professors, including eight formeer collegeand University presidents and the firstAmerican Nobel laureate in science. Stolenaway from the best universities in thecountry, they were promised salaries thatwere fantastic at the time ($7000 for fullprofessors) and unmatched research op¬portunities. Rockefeller, who had made anoriginal contribution of $600,000, was per¬suaded to cover immense deficits everyyear.Now fully in charge, Harper proceeded tomold Chicago into a dynmic university.Aside from its status as a graduate in¬stitution, the University was to containjunior and senior colleges, open its doors towomen students and faculty on an equalbasis with men, participate in a world-widesystem of exchange professorships, offerextension and correspondence work, andencourage sports only for the sake of theirparticipants and “not for the spectacular UC PAST AND PRESENT: PresidentsRobert Hutchins and Edward Levi. entertainment of enormous crowds ofpeople.” He scrapped the old September-to-June calendar, replacing it with the firstyear-round four-auarter calendar, which isstill in effect ana permits a more flexibleeducation a wider curriculum.But “Harper’s Bazaar,” as one jokesterhad called it, worked. A better charac¬terization would have been “Instant IvyLeague.” Such was its arrogant pomposity ineary days that a large percentage of its menand women regulary wore the cap and gownto classes. Harper died in 1906, and it was notuntil 1929 that Chicago was to have anotherpresident as remarkable as he.This president, later called chancellor,was another Yalie “boy wonder,” RobertMaynard Hutchins, at 28 dean of its lawschool. Believing that “every student shouldobtain a liberal education before beingpermitted to specialize” and envisioning theCollege as providing terminal school ex¬perience for many of its graduates, hetransformed it into one of the great pioneersof “general education.” The philosophybehind its structure was to provide a broadcurriculum that would prepare young menand women for their role as educatedcitizens. To accomplish his aim, Hutchinscreated a single college with its own facultyand the four graduate divisions that stillexist today, separate staffs and syllabi foreach College course, voluntary class at-tandance, and requirements that allowedstudents to enter early and graduate in twoyears if they showed competence in a seriesof comprehensive examinations. DoingHarper one better, he withdrew Chicagofrom the Big Ten and then abolished footballentirely.But by 1950 the Hutchins BA programfound itself in trouble since graduate schoolscould not look upon die degree asrepresenting more than two year’s work.Students who had spent three or four years atChicago were not being given credit for their extra time. Calling the Hutchins program‘ the finest system of general education thatthe US has every seen,” Chicago’s nextchancellor discounted it because it did notrelate to “the total American educationalprocess.”Over the next several years men likePresident Edward H. Levi and past dean ofthe College Wayne C. Booth evolved a planthat would provide close integration betweengeneral and specialized education atChicago. While the University’s graduatedivisions and its professional schoolsremained unaffected, the College was fur¬ther divided into five collegiate divisionseach with its own master and set ofrequirements. Chicago still does not offerprofessional programs at the undergraduatelevel, and general education is todayachieved through an interdisciplinarysystem between departments and divisions.Such are the highlights of Chicago’shistory. To quote author John Gunther,himself an alumnus: “Perhaps the singleelement that best characterizes theUniversity is its incessant search for quality,which goes all the way back to Harper. If acase need be made for the private urbanuniversity in our contemporary life, surelyChicago makes it. Quality aside, this is aschool which stands for freedom of ex¬pression, freedom to speculate and ex¬periment, freedom for spacious inquiry,freedom to be a gadfly if necessary, andfreedom not only to be right but to take achance on being wrong...It has unlimitedreserves of energy and creative talent fordealing with the true business of a univer¬sity, the pursuit and communication ofknowledge, and, having survived apassionate ordeal it has risen again tobecome newly typical of what a universityshould be, an unfrightened and pertinaciouscommunity of scholars.”Reprinted with permission of Barton'sEducational series. Copyright 1971 Barron'sEducational series.THE HYDE PARKCO-OPSUPERMARKET1526 E. 55 St.GOESdiscount!!NOW YOU CAN SAVEEVERY DAYAND STILL GET ALLTHE CO-OP SERVICES* Budget, Nutrition, Menu planning & NewProduct information from ou.* Home Economist.* Local Delivery Service* A pre-registration Check Cashing Service* USDA Choice meat, plus special attentionfor specific cuts* A full selection of fresh fruits & vegetables,including foreign items, year 'round* Gourmet and Exotic Foods from 'round theworld* Full Service Delicatessen Counter§ COMING SOON!Burny Brothers Self Service BakeryFull Service Fresh Fish Dept.Magic Prices to save you Dollars.ARE YOU A MEMBER OF THEHYDE PARK CO-OP?See Gladys Scott for more information.10/ The Chicago Maroon/Thursday, Septemh^ r 30,1971 1 / ai/T O.'ii i ; •>,r/ ‘ j *«' •' - . i / . 4 . , - . > - >An Informal Guide to UC’s BrassThe University administration has beencompared to the Ancien Regime, Dante’sInferno, and the Romanoff dynasty. Whetheror not these analogies seem fair is a decisionevery student must make on his own,because, like it or not, he is bound to come upagainst the bureaucracy some time oranother in his career here. In the interests ofexplaining why-they-do-things-the-way-they-do, and offering some advice that will helpstudents cope with it, the Maroon herewithoffers an informal guide to the ad¬ministration of the University of Chicago.The most important aspect about thisUniversity is that it. is faculty-run. Thepractice began when founder John DRockefeller entrusted Chicago to its firstPresident, William Rainey Harper, and thetradition has carried on ever since.The board of trustees officially has finalsay in all policy matters, but they willusually approve what has been previouslydecided by the administration. Thus you willnever hear of the Chicago board of trusteestrying to step in and enforce a rigid ad¬missions policy against student protestors orcut off funds to the student newspaper. Thefaculty has the decision-making power, andit is zealously guarded.The faculty is organized into the Univer¬sity senate, to which belong all faculty whoare at least assistant professors and whohave been here at least one year. The senatemeets annually to hear the President’s stateof the University address. The legislativework is handled by the 51-member council of.the University senate, to which 17 people areannually elected by senate members tothree-year terms.The executive body of the council is calledthe committee of the council and has sevenmembers, elected by the council. Thiscommittee is the center of the decision¬making process at the University, and itsmeetings, as well as those of the council areclosed to students.Most decisions are made by committees.When there is a major University policy to bedecided, such as discipline, housirg, By Con HitchcockTHE PRESIDENT: Levi speaks at inaugu ANNE MOSES: Student ombudsmanral dinner. helps students solve the bureaucracy.discrimination against women, federalgrants, etc, a committee of several facultymembers is formed to study the issues and tocome out with a series of recommendationsthat is then reviewed (and often approved)by the council of the University senate. Inaddition to these special committees thereare many “standing” committees whichhandle matters that come up for study andrequire a decision.Why committees? One professor, writingin “Harper’s” a while back, offered theplausible suggestion that academics justaren’t executives. They cannot practice thefirst rule of a good executive, which is to make decisions quickly and be sometimesright. Obviously this rule cuts across thegrain of the academic tradition. Can youimagine writing a scholarly article rapidlyand being only sometimes correct? Acommittee is clearly the best way to put off adecision as long as possible and to avoid thepossibility of error by one person. A com¬mittee also assures that every one will havethe right to make his opinions known and(hopefully) incorporated into the decision,which is absolutely necessary in such anegalitarian set-up as a University whichspreads power and decision-making amongmany. At the top of the administration heap is th<President, Edward II Levi. Levi, 60, is a trueUniversity of Chicago product. Grandson of aHyde Park rabbi, he has lived here all his lifeand, except for several years at Yale lawschool, has been at the University since pre¬school. True to the tradition of keepingdecision making by the faculty, thepresidency is not an office endowed withmuch power, and Levi uses his skill of per¬suasion to influence faculty and to achievehis goals.Before his inauguration in 1968, Leviserved six years as provost, and prior to thathe was professor and dean of the law school,during which time the law school rose ineminence and prestige until it is now rankedas one of the best three or four in the nation.As provost he revamped the College set-upto the present five collegiate divisions, eachheaded by a master; promoted inter¬disciplinary course offerings; and institutedstudent councils in the various divisions thatevaluate courses and teachers, examinecurriculum, and report student opinion aboutfaculty members being considered for tenureor reappointment to the faculty.But let’s get one thing straight. Levi is noKingman Brewster. You’ll never find himchatting with Gloria Steinem or LeonardBernstein on the Dick Cavett Show or sittingdown on the grass with some students andrelieving himself of some random thoughtson truth, beauty, peace, etc. That’s just nothis style.Levi is very inaccessible, and without toemuch effort a student could avoid seeing himuntil graduation. College freshmen will havethe chance to breakfast with him, which is anopportunity that should be experienced andsavored. Levi is difficult to talk with, notbecause he has nothing to say, (quite to thecontrary, in fact) but because he is veryprecise and will cut you to ribbons if you aresloppy in logic or expression. Thus itbecomes an intellectual exercise to speakwith him, to phrase your remarks so that youhave said exactly what you mean and so thatyou can get a good answer. Some may winceCliff $ Notes ate great any time youneed help in literature' Werecommend buying early so thatyou can use them as you studythe assigned play or novel and asa helpful review prior to examsGet the Cliff's Notes you needtoday You'll see why they're thepreferred study aid of millions ofstudents nationwide (P S ) If yourdealer's out of a title, he can getanother fast with Cliff's "Hot Line"Cliff SLvNQtes.Nearly 200 titles-always availablewherever boohs are soldOnly S ] eachL Hyde Park's Oldest & Most CompleteArt Supply StoreDUNCANDISCOUNTARTISTS’MATERIALSSCHOOL SUPPLIES1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111KIMBARKLIQUORSiWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINEST^^s^^^IMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC1214 E. 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355 Friday!Activities Night in Ida Noyes HallAn opportunity for both new students and returning students tovisit with some 75 student organizations. Free information and litera¬ture will be available and tickets will be on sale for various activitiesduring the quarter. The Office of Student Activities (Room 209) will bedistributing free copies of the just-published Avocado: A guide to cityand campus by Bernice Burson and Wayne Liao. (They will be on saleafterwards at various University locations). Free bookbags will be dis¬tributed courtesy of University National Bank.Among the organizations exhibiting: The Musical Society, OutingClub, Society for Creative Anachronisms, Students International Medi¬tation Society, University Women's Association, Folklore Society, De¬bate Club, YPSL, Archeology Club, Brent House, Blackfriars, JudoClub, Daily Granite, Contemporary European Films, the Rugby Club,Club, Da Daily Granite, Contemporary European Films, the RugbyClub, McClosky for President Club, Students for Capitalism and Free¬dom, Calvert Club, The Campus Coalition, Eco Sex, The Ski Club, TheRadical Libertarian Alliance, The Table Tennis Club, The UniversityOrchestra, Young Republicans, Students Against Irresponsible Spend- \ing, The Karate Club, Festival of the Arts, Country Dancers, The Con-cervative Club, The Chicago Maroon, The Ski Club, Concert Band, The jfUniversity Chorus, College Teaching Evaluation Booklet, Club for Re- '■sponsible Individualism, & the Natty Bumppo Society. Most groups in¬volve both undergraduates and graduate students.TJiFree bookbags will be distributed in the Student ActivitiesOffice courtesy of The University National Bank, 1354 E. 55th. *Activities Night begins at 7 pm; booths close at 9:301 1 • j ■ . » i > i iThursday, September 30, i97i / The Chicago Maroon /mmXXv>: Hyde Park Shopping Centeris many things tomany people!...Namely, of course, Hyde Park Shopping Center is a wonderfulplace to buy things, from the Co-op Food Store to Cohn & Stern. 18 fine storesserve every shopping need with the traditional good values to the unique and un¬usual. Free parking, attractive surroundings and an un-hurried atmosphere en¬hance the enjoyment of making your selection at the Hyde Park Shopping Center.HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERIS THE PLACE TO BE!It is easy to meet here at Lake Park and 55th Street.Easily park your car in our lighted lots and stop for a cupof coffee at Walgreens or Wimpy's, Woolworth or the Co-Op. Plan to meet at the kiosk in the center of the HydePark Court. Perhaps you'll see something you would liketo buy, sell, trade or an announcement that is of interestto you. Hyde Park allows you to place your notice on ourkiosk at any time. Even if you can't use the service, it islots of fun to browse through hundreds of different noticesposted on the board. HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER ISACTIVITIES THE COMMUNITY CAN ENJOY-Band concerts, Henry Branndon's 15 pieceorchestra will perform at the Center on Oct. 15at 7 P.M. as a part of their 12th Anniversary.Also there have been auto emission testingprograms, recycling programs, arts and craftsexhibits, square dancing free theatre and FashionShows.It's happeninng at 55th and Lake Park.We thank you for coming to our shoppingcenter and hope to see you often and if you have any suggestions on how we can better serve you, just tell us andit will be discussed. Perhaps one of your ideas will be incor¬porated at Hyde Park Shopping Center to make it even bet¬ter-better for you, our favorite customer.12 / The Chicago Maroon/Thursday, September 30,1971at this, but it a worthwhile experience andprovides an excellent introduction to the typeof thinking you will be forced to do atChicago. And if you are unprepared to dothis, you will have a miserable time here.Just below Levi are five vice-presidentsand the provost, John Wilson. These are theprofessionals of the administration, andstudents are not likely to have much to dowith them in their official capacity, as theyare concerned with matters that do not oftentrouble student minds - fund-raising, publicrelations, getting government funding forfaculty research, business, and planning. Ifyou get the chance, however, you should talkwith them, as they are all interesting men,and conversation with them will provide awelcome break from Social Thought or life-of-the-mind.Below this upper echelon, there is aphalanx of deans and assistant deans whomstudents will meet often and who areresponsible for much of the day-to-dayrunning of the University. True to traditionall of these deans are members of the facultywho agreed to serve as dean for several ANTHONY PALLETT: director of admissions and aid for the College.years and most of whom still teach duringthis term.In charge of the College, every graduatedivision and professional school is a dean,who is responsible generally for theacademic program in his division, main¬taining the quality of the various depart¬ments, recruiting new faculty, etc.Under each dean is a dean of students whois responsible tor more specific, technicalareas, of the academic life. They are incharge of registration, advisers, graduation,financial aid in the College (under dean ofundergraduate students Lorna Straus,special programs such as Rhodes scholar¬ ships, Danforth fellowships and the like.The College has a seperate office offinancial aid, whose director is AnthonyPallett-the man who also admitted Collegefreshmen. As is natural in hard times, thisoffice is not one of the more popular oncampus, and it seems to be an annual rite ofspring to sweat out how much yourscholarship has been cut.At the head of the deans of students for theindividual divisions is the dean of students,Charles O’Connell. A sympathetic and oftenmisunderstood administrator, he overseesall student activities and grievances,although he is sometimes not very accessibleALSO AVAILABLE ONSTEREO 8 TRACKAND CASSETTE TAPESHERBERT VONKARAJAN In addition to coordinating the dean:students of the divisions, O’Connell hanbudgets for student activities and ischarge of non-academic affairs gener;And speaking of student activities,director is Skip Landt, whose office is inNoyes. He is responsible for Friday's stutactivities night. See him if you want to ssomething. )Another person who will affreshmen in particular is housing dire*Edward Turkington, who has overall chaof the dormitory comple:All right, you may say, but how doesexplanation help me when the bursar’s ofsays I haven’t paid my tuition even thoujhave? What if they want to throw me outhe housing system for a crime I didn’tWhat do I do then? There is a person whohelp you whenever you find yourselfagainst the bureaucracy-the student <budsman, Anne Moses.A College senior, Miss Moses is responsifor helping students who feel that they h.suffered an injustice and who want it itified. The ombudsman is respected amiadministrators and can get results. She <suggest policy changes and can clear ujsituation when A sends you to see B antsends you to see A. It is a good idea to seeombudsman first when you have any typ<administrative or policy problem and canfigure out which dean to take care of it. 1office is in Reynolds CluD 204.One person who can help freshmenparticular is James Vice, the dean of fremen (Gates-Blake 122). Vice is a good nfor freshmen to talk to about any probleacademic or otherwise. He has a s>pathetic ear and plenty of time to listenfreshmen.So there, very roughly sketched, isadministration at Chicago. This descriptis, of course, somewhat brief, for it is ipossible to boil such a complex system doto a few well-chosen paragraphs idescriptions, but it is, I believe, fairlycurate nonetheless. Since you cannot esc<the bureaucracy, you have got to live withand it is a good idea to get reconciled to tnow. Find out how they do things in ax'ithat affect you most, such as financial aidregistration, because that is one waymaking life easier. But most of all, don’tafraid to complain, and don’t let it get jdown.OCTOBER SPECIAL!WHILE THEY LAST!ALL DEUTSCHEGRAMMOPHONRECORDINGS 38% OFF LISTBY VON KARAJANALL OTHER $>179*DGG RECORDINGS 4Don't miss this unusual opportunity tosical recordings available.* Multiple Record Sets Excluded purchase some of the finest clas-THE BOOK NOOKHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERThursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago Maroon/A GuideExaminingLife in theSecond CityBy Mitch BobkinDepending on your point of view, Chicago is either athriving metropolis or an overgrown small-town. Newstudents from the Midwest or small Eastern farm-towns areusually awed by Chicago-“It’s so big!’’--while their new¬found friends from THE CITY, New York, snidely examineChicago like a bastard cousin--“It’s so hokey!” However,whether looking at the Second City with wonder or sarcasm,most students tend to forget that there is a large city outsidethe confines of Hyde Park. They either think that there is toomuch to see and do or that there is nothing here to interestthem.Actually, they are both right. Chicago is a city ofparadoxes: a metropolis with a small-town feel; a city wherewealthy businessmen and ghetto mothers rub shoulders onbusy downtown streets, a city with many first-run movietheaters, but no legitimate stage presentations to speak of; acenter for fine dining but the only major city I know thatdoesn’t have good, fresh, Jewish rye bread readily available;the home of Marshall Fields’s, one of the nation’s finestdepartment stores and of the Spiegel catalogue, MontgomeryWards and Sears, the farmer’s mail-order friends; a greatsports city that avoids tennis and golf competitions; a park-lover’s wonderland but an art-museum-lover’s desert withone oasis; a city of some of the world’s most cultured peoplebut a city where money and power talks and class comes in apoor second. For me, Chicago will always be epitomized by adisturbing sight on North Michigan Avenue. Tiffany’s, thediamond supermarket has a Chicago branch, but right up thestreet is Walgreens. Chicago has money, but it is washeddown with Pepto-Bismol.Within this paradoxical city, there are a variety of things todo and see. Jaded New Yorkers may well be surprised at howgood some of Chicago’s sights really are and if Chicagostrikes you as that thriving metropolis, then prepare to beawed even more. Chicago is an alive city, perhaps not asexciting as New York, but much more realistic of the feelingof the United States and its people than New York could everbe. This is the Midwest, heartland of America and Chicago isthe heartland’s largest city. The stock-yards may be closed,but all roads in the center of this nation still run to Chicago.The purpose of this article is to serve as a starting point foryour individual exploration of Chicago, the city. Rather thantry to cover everything, I have chosen what I think areChicago’s best aspects and most interesting sights.Therefore, this guide will be biased. For more complete andless biased views, pick up the “Chicago Guide”, a monthlymagazine on sale for 75 cents that includes listings ofChicago’s cultural events and most of its interestingplaces. Also, a fine book on the city is “Chicago: An Ex¬traordinary Guide” by Jory Graham.Other good places to learn about Chicago are all of thedowntown papers, particularly the weekend section in theSun-Times and the Tribune, the Grey City Journal’s calendarand articles (the Journal is the Maroon’s cultural magazinewhich will start publication next Friday), and in the varietyof community papers throughout the city. Hyde Park has twosuch papers, The Herald and the Voices.Getting AroundBefore beginning an investigation of any city, it makessense to find out how to get around. For most students, publictransportation is the only solution to the transportationproblem. Hyde Park’s link to the downtown area is theIllinois Central (IC) trains which run every twenty minutesor so to three stops in the downtown area, Roosevelt Road12th Street, Van Buren-Jackson, and Randolph-South Water.The fare from Hyde Park is 55 cents and you can catch the ICat 59-60th Streets, 55-56-57th Streets, or at 51-53rd Streets. TheIC may be grubby and the trains may jolt you a bit (newtrains are on the way, however), but they are perfectly safeand very dependable. Schedules are available at all stations.The only problem with the IC is that it only runs northas’far as the Loop. If you have to go anywhere else, youwill use the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA). The CTA runs“els” (elevated trains) and buses all over c«ty and youget almost anywhere in the city for 55 cents, if you use thetransfer system.14/The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September 30,1971 When you board your first CTA vehicle, a ride will cost 45cents (exact change required on buses) but for a dime more,you can buy a transfer ticket. With this ticket, you can switchto two other modes of transportation as long as they seem tobe heading towards some logical destination (you can’t use atransfer to go back to where you came from). Read the in¬structions on your transfer to find out about stamping it andthe rules of transferring.The most convenient means for using the CTA from HydePark is to catch a bus going west on 55th Street which willtake you to either the Howard-Jackson Park el or to the DanRyan rapid transit that runs down the middle of the DanRyan expressway. The Dan Ryan el stops downtown whilethe Howard (northern stop) line goes to the northernmostreaches of the city From the Howard el you can transfer toanother el or to a bus which should put you near every pointin the city. To find out more about the CTA, pick up a map atCTA offices or call MO 4-7220. * -!Loop — Gold CoastChicago is a city made up of a number of neighborhoods.Each neighborhood is almost like a small-town.and peopleidentify themselves as residents of their neighborhoodsrather than as merely Chicago citizens. Hyde Park is onesuch neighborhoods but there are many others and an in¬vestigation of Chicago might well start out as an in¬vestigation of these neighborhoods.The most famous neighborhoods are the Loop and the GoldCoast. The Loop, home of Chicago’s business and financialdistricts, got its nickname from the elevated train whichactually does make a circle around the downtown area. TheLoop refers to the area within the circle, but some of theoutside area, particularly Michigan Avenue has now beenincluded in the catchall phrase, the Loop.Just north of the Loop, next to the Lake is the Gold Coast,and it is golden. Most of Chicago’s wealthiest citizens livehere and the Magnificent Mile, a stretch of Michigan Avenuejust north of the river, splits the area in two. On Michiganin this area are some of Chicago’s finest and most expen¬sive stores along with the branches of such famous NewYork companies as Tiffany’s, Bonwit Teller, Peck andPeck and Cartiers. Also located in the Magnificent Mile aresome of Chicago’s most pretigious office buildings housingsuch large companies as Time, Newsweek and manyairlines.The Loop is a scaled-down midtown New York with movietheaters, department stores and office buildings sitting side-by-side. while you can’t get everything you want in the Loop,you’ll have to think long and hard before you can come up with )the missing items. The largest store of all proudly sets off theeast side of State Street (“That great street”)---MarshallField & Co. Field’s is Chicago’s Macy’s, Neiman-Marcusand I. Magmn all rolled into one. In the main store you canbrowse almost forever through everything from books tobedspreads, stuffed bears to stuffed aitichokes.Field’s is rather expensive but you can be assured that ifanything goes wrong with a Field’s product, they will remedythe situation quickly and politely. Clothes are a bit stuffy atField's but they do carry some hard-to-find brands. Acrossthe street from the main store in the Men’s Store (ah,chauvinism) where all men’s clothing is sold.If Field’s is beyond your price range, other large depart¬ment stores downtown are: Carson, Pirie, Scott at State andMadison (also a bit expensive with a smaller selection thanField’s; Montgomery Wards, State and Adams (just like theone back home!); Goldblatt’s, State and Van Buren (theugliest and cheapest); Weiboldts, State and Madison (alsocheap but not so grubby); and Sears, State and Van Buren(home of the famous mail-order catalogue).Before buying anything in any downtown store, it makes >sense to do some shopping around in the smaller, morespecific shops, especially if you are looking for value at acheap price. Most of the cheap stuff in the department storesis just that--cheap. If you’re lucky you’ll be able to find whatHESTRAOrman'AUDITORIUM THEATRE4 WEEKS BEG. 1UES. JUNE I JUNE 6REELECTCHICAGOFLOWER PfiARDFiSHOW MARCM 2°!FEBRUARYPOSTERS: On a wall, paper advertising announces a variety of Chicago cultural events.you want somewhere in the Loop for less than Field’s ischarging.Spend a few days wandering around the downtown area,getting to know the streets and the stores. This informationwill prove to be vital in later years here.The Loop is also the home of most of Chicago’s first-runmovie houses and of the very few Broadway road showtheaters. However, entertainment goes far beyond theselimited spots in the Loop. As in most large cities, walkingaround at night is more fun than can be imagined. Manystores stay open late, particularly record and dirty-bookstores, and many restaurants and snack bars are open intothe wee hours of the morning. Besides, there are many sightsto see in the Loop, the most important of which is the Picasso.Pablo Picasso, besides being an internationally famouspainter, has also done some unusual sculpting. Chicago hasone of the best and/ or weirdest.In the Civic Center Plaza (Washington and Dearborn) sitsthis brown, rusting figure that some have called a baboon, ahorse, a bird, a woman and a mess among other things. Youmay not like it, but you must see it. Other major sights worthseeing downtown are the Auditorium Theater (Michigan andCongress) which has a golden, ornate interior and presentsmost of Chicago’s best cultural events; the Board of TradeBuilding (Jackson and LaSalle) where oats and barley gettraded before your very eyes; the Federal Building (Dear¬born and Jackson), home of the infamous Conspiracy trial;and the Conrad Hilton (Michigan and Balbo), the nation’slargest hotel and site of the famous police charge during the1968 Democratic National Convention.U TiONI: An ae rial \ :ow of t; t ' j : omolete Eating in the Loop is an experience, especially at lunch.Businessmen, women in from the suburbs for some shoppingand assorted others flock to every imaginable spot, evenWoolworth’s lunch counter. So for lunch, eat early or late, notat noon. Fine places to go include the Berghoff (17 W. Adamsand 123 N. Wabash) rated as among the city’s best; Flo’s(State and Randolph) which has the best pecan pie in thecity; the Art Institute Dining room (Michigan and Adams)amid beautiful gardens and world famous* art; theBlackhawk (139 N. Wabash), the place for steak; and ItalianVillage (71W. Monroe) for the city’s best Italian food in threedifferent rooms. Complete dining information can be found inthe Chicago Guide.Shopping in the Gold Coast is not as impossible as you maythink. While most of the stores in the Magnificent Mile will beout of your price range, unless your name is Rockefeller orGetty, there are many other, less expensive shops all alongthe street. There is even a Walgreen’s and a Woolworth’s.Wander up and down Michigan Avenue north of the Chicagoriver, stare at the people and pine away in front of Tiffany’sand Bonwit’s.The sights to see in the Gold Coast are fascinating andplentiful. Foremost is the Watertower (Michigan andChicago), an old water storage area that is one of the fewbuildings that didn’t burn down when Mrs. O’Leary’s cowkicked over that famous lantern. A grassy lawn surroundsthe tower and makes for a comfortable resting stop afterhiking up Michigan Avenue.As soon as you cross the river, you will see theTribune/ Today office on the right and the Sun-Times/ DailyMICHIGAN AVENUE; Looking north from South\ A | n n tImperfect in Original News building on the left (how apropos, politically). Fromthe Wrigley Building on the left (a beautiful white Italianlooking masterpiece) you can see the presses running in theSun-Times building. The Tribune Tower across the street isold and semi-Gothic. Raymond Hood won an architecturalcontest with his design for the Tower with Frank LloydWright along the losers.The Chicago River itself is a thing to be seen. Some days itis muddy, ugly and repulsive but when the sun shines on it, itsblue aura engulfs the city. On St. Patrick’s day, it is actuallydyed green. You can take a water tour of Chicago on the riverfrom Michigan Avenue. All the sights in the Loop and theGold Coast are within easy walking distance of the IC stops.Check the map in your student guide or get a larger one at agas station.Eating in the Gold Coast can be quite expensive, sobeware! Some of the best places to go when you can dig upthe change are the Bonton (1153 N. State) for the best pastriesin town; Su Casa (49 E. Ontario) where Mexico lives inChicago; Due’s and Uno’s (Both on Wabash around Ontario)where great pizza with thick crust is cheap and filling; and 95(atop the Hancock Building’s 95th floor) where Frenchcuisine and the Chicago skyline meet.Old TownA bit west of the Gold Coast is Old Town, Chicago’s versionof Greenwich Village, and like much of Chicago culture, OldTown is more commercial and much phonier than theVillage. Wells Street between 1300 and 1700 North is the en¬tirety of the Old Town shopping district, but in those blocksare crammed more junk antique stores and Go-Go bars thancan be believed.Once Old Town was home of Chicago’s hipper community,but as more and more people learned about this hip area oftown, the hippiest people moved out leaving Wells Street tocops, stoned-out runaways and lots of cheap hookers.Tourists still flock to Old Town thinking that it is where it all“happens” and Martha and Irv in their Hawaiian print shirtsand Burmuda shorts are a sight to see. Still, Old Town isthere as recently some have speculated that when the wordgets around that Old Towm isn’t hip anymore, it may return toits former splendor.Today though, the stores are mostly rip-off joints. Commonmerchandise are posters. Seven-Up bottles stretched out ofshape to make them into vases, large Campbell soup cansusable as waste-baskets,- mugs, incense, mobiles and but¬tons. The stores all try to look “groovy”, but the floors areclean and the kids are actually in from the suburbs for a dayin the big city. Fake-hipness abounds. There are some nicethings to be found in Old Town, but you must search long andhard to find them. It’s taken me three years, and I’m still notalways sure where to go.The only things to go to Old Town for specifically are those“cool threads” that you see advertised in Esquire sometimesbut more commonly in much more underground magazines.Old Town is the home of Chicago’s bell-bottom, body-shirtscene, but a word of warning here. This University is notexactly a Beau Brummel s paradise so don’t be surprised ifpeople stare if you show up on campus looking like you jusfstepped out of a store window.Be sure to wander down Piper’s Alley just north of NorthAvenue (1600 North) on W7elis It has a few good shopsVolume One for books, especially) and it is a qua nt little.,reet over, if it is full of the typical Old Town crowd Maideni :mt a an ;ni'abmi »>; Piper’s \iiey and if is tu t os good.• • The t h ra via >oi 15•V'* .v ,,*•?« »>.».' UJl. >i o & ’ nDon’t be surprised if you get hassled on the street (“Got anyspare change man”) and don’t buy anything from thosestreet venders who specialize in gold rings that turn green intwo days and genuine leather belts that shred apart in a weekor two. Also, don’t ever buy any dope on the street. Enoughsaid.Even though the streets of Old Town are such a drag andthe shops are such a rip-off, many interesting bars andrestaurants still are in the area. I suppose even crass com-mercialists have to eat. Bowl and Roll (1246 N. Wells) servessoup and sandwiches and it is quite good; Beef and Bourbon(1560 N. Wells) is a bit expensive, but the beef is worth it; TapRoot Pub (1765 N. Larabee. a few blocks west of Wells)serves lobster and other great things including steamedclams. Also, stop into out of the way bars and joints. Some ofthem are worth investigating. Get to Old Town by taking theHoward el to Chicago Avenue, walk four blocks north andfour blocks west.16/The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September ju, iy/i*■ :\ ncon.M »rtT\ FT''?f vHinvHqiBr' tl£ug£ntAUDITORNew TownWhen the hip people left Old Town they regrouped a bitfarther north and for want of a better name, this areabecame known as New Town. New Town is actually in twosections--on Lincoln Ave. between 2000 N and 2600 N and thelarger section on Clark between 2200 N and 3200 N includingall adjoining streets, especially Broadway between 2800 Nwhere it starts and 3400 N. This is an area that any newcomerto this city should become familiar with. It is as important tomany people as the Loop or Hyde Park. New Town is whatOld Town may have been ten years ago.The streets in New Town are lined with fascinating littleshops, real antique stores, hand-made clothing boutiques,cheap record stores, leather and craft-good stores and manyothers that ride off the waves of popular culture. The antiquestores are my favorite, with old poster and gramaphonesintersperced with real old clothes, not modern imitations.There are also some fun used-clothing stores on Clark Streetwhere great bargains can be found. I got a cashmere coat for$7.50!One of the best things about New Town is that the people inthe stores and on the streets are friendly. Old Town is besetby a paranoia that is frightening, but New Town is open andcheery and an afternoon on Clark Street is more than enoughto clear up any anxiety that I can think of. Also, there are anabsence of cops on the streets in New Town which is awelcome change from the 1984-ish Big Brother scene here inHyde Park. This open feeling in New Town is fortified bymany of the community groups which abound here. Theysponsor many events and help to organize the communityboth politically and socially. New Town is the only area inChicago besides Hyde Park that did not vote for Mayor Daleyin the mayoralty election earlier this year.Go to New Town to buy things. Go to New Town to seepeople. Go to New Town to relax. Shopping in New Town issuch a pleasure. There are few keyed-up salesman to botheryou, such a change from your local emporium. Also, pricesare sometimes cheaper in New Town than they are downtownor in Hyde Park. This is particularly true of clothes andrecords. (A note: The best record stores are Ears, one blockoff Clark at 2200 N and Gramaphone at 2600 N on Clark. Most$4.98 lists are $3 or $3.10).Wander up and down Clark Street particularly. A favoritehang-out on Clark Street may be the same one that you hungout at in high school-your friendly neighborhood McDonalds.This is a new-fangled indoor job, but the hamburgers are stillthe same, and they have got the world’s best french fries.If hamburgers don’t appeal to you, New Town has some ofthe city’s finest restaurants. The Bakery (2218 N. Clark) isperhaps the city’s best. For a fixed price of somewherearound $9 you will eat like a king with food fit only for a king’spalate. The Brataslava, 2527 N. Clark is a small-home Czechrestaurant that only seats about 40 people. But the food isworth any wait you have to experience to get inside. Ratso’s(2464 N. Lincoln) is a spaced-out freak place but it has goodhealth food dishes. Frances (2456 N. Clark) is a greatcafeteria with employees who nag just like Mom does; andThe Casbah (514 W Diversey) called by the Chicago Guide“quite possibly the best Middle Eastern restaurant in thecountry.” Get to both sections of New Town by taking theHoward el to Fullerton (2400 N.) and walk west two blocks toLincoln, about six blocks to Clark. fHE PICASSO: Pablo's Civic Center Plaza Sculpture in late day sunlight.N eighborhoodsLike most large cities, Chicago is divided into a largenumber of ethnic neighborhoods. When immigrants arrivedhere, instead of melting directly into the city culture, theybanded together in small communities to keep their own,foreign cultures alive.Today, while some of these neighborhoods are gone,particularly the Jewish ghettoes, there are still manyvestiges left of the strong ethnic ties that are so important tothe character of Chicago as a city. Any invetigation ofChicago, therefore, must include some wandering throughChinatown, Greektown, Germantown and some of the othermore obvious ethnic neighborhoods.Chinatown is large, sprawling out in many directions fromits center at Cermak Road (2200 S) and Wentworth Ave. It isperhaps best known for its restaurants, as most of the ethnicneighborhoods are. The best is King Wah, 2252 S W Went¬worth. Luncheon here is a really cheap good meal. While inChinatown, see the sign at the Kuomantang Headquarters(Nationalist Party of Chiang Kai-chek) made by Kai-chekhimself. Also, there are a number of great fresh vegetableand fish stores and some curiosity shops.Greektown is smaller than Chinatown, but it is alive and vi¬brant as any neighborhood in town. Located on Halsted Streetat about 500 S, Greektown has two great restaurants,Di¬ana’s and the Parthenon. Diana’s is cheap and grubby, butexciting. They even dance on the tables! Parthenon is ex¬pensive and you will eat like a Greek king, Theseus perhaps.Also, check out the Greek Islands, another fine restaurant.Diana’s also has a Greek grocery store so you can buy yourbaklava and lamb.Germantown is even smaller than Greektown, but it toohas some interesting shops, particularly some fine littlebakeries.Located on Lincoln Ave at about 4200 North, Germantownhas the best German restaurants in the city gracing itsstreets. The best are Ueidelberger Fass with its specialsauerbraten and schnitzel; Der Salzburger Hof which isactually Viennese, but who’s splitting hairs; and Zeller Stuberl which surprisingly enough also has some MiddleEastern dishes to sample.Mexico and Cuba tended to band together in Chicago,probably because they speak the same language. Located inthe Clark St and Belmont Ave area and north onLincoln and Broadway, these Spanish speakingneighborhoods feature tacos and the like along withsome more exotic dishes. You can even get the PhilippineTimes if you search carefully. The best restaurants in thisarea are Acapulco which features enchiladas, banderillasand tacos; Gran Colombia, which is Colombian and has someunusual dishes; and Liborio which is cheap, most meals for$2 and which has the best paella in town for the priceOther ethnic neighborhoods exist. There is a small Italianarea on the south side which does have one good restaurant,Toscano, 2439 S Oakley, and there are black neighborhoodsall over the city, some featuring soul food. However, most ofChicago’s major ethnic groups, the Irish, the Jews and thePolish, have mo.ed out of their old neighborhoods and havespread out throughout the city and the suburbs. There aresome restaurants left that feature these cuisines, but they tooare all spread out. They are worth finding, however.ParksParks ana museums are the two most usual sights thatcities supply to make residents happy and to thrill tourists,and Chicago is not deficient in either category. The four bestparks are Grant Lincoln, Washington and Jackson.Grant Park has some beautiful gardens, playing fieldsand is often the site of rallies and inarches because of itswide-open space'!. Located just east of the Loop betweenRoosevelt Road and Randolph St, the park borders the lake inthis area arvi bo> mg is a common activity. The most famoussight in Grant 1 <rk is Buckingham Fountain, at CongressAve, which has - beautiful light display between 9 and 10nightly. TK fou tain itself operates from 11:30 am to 3pm and 5 e pi . Make sure \ ou go see the light show. It isfantastic ao - yo- vill get sprinkled just a little.Grant Pa. ;r off the entire downtown area in a wreath ofgreen. Or >.*r v.*ys, I he view of the city from the east end offpumCHICAGOthe park is one of Chicago’s most enjoyable.Lincoln Park is the jewel of the city’s park district. It’s sogood that even students and parents go to it, together. Thebest thing to see at Lincoln Park is the zoo, all 25 acres of it. Ithouses a collection of 2600 animals, birds and reptiles withsome of the greatest monkeys imaginable. Check out thefeeding times when you get to the zoo. There is also achildren’s zoo where gentle animals can be petted.Lincoln Park has some wide open spaces (often the site offree concerts), a fine conservatory that has some of the mostcolorful flowers in the world, fishing facilities, a golf rangeand many other sporting opportunities. One of my favoritespots in the park is the rookery, a rock garden with a smalllake. It is peaceful and beautiful. Lincoln Park is located nextto the lake from about 1600 North to 2600 North. Buses willtake you right to its gates.Hyde Park’s western border is Washington Park, andalthough the park may not be safe at night, it is more thansafe during the day. It has some unusual maze-like gardensand lagoons. Sometimes it is fun to picnic in WashingtonPark (it’s only a few blocks west of campus) and play balland try to forget you are in the big city. This is easily donebecause the park is quite large. Facilitieis are available formost sports and somewhere near there are horses you canride, but talk to someone in the Riding Club about that.Jackson Park borders Hyde Park on the east and some ofthe south. Much of Jackson Park was built for the ColumbianExposition of 1892, the World’s Fair which introduced theferris wheel and built the Midway.In the middle of Jackson Park you can see a golden woman,a remnant of the Fair, and the La Rabida Children’s In¬stitute. This institute is a famous children’s disease centerwhich operates in conjunction with the University. It ishoused in a replica of the monastery that Columbus stayed inbefore he sailed for the New World. Other buildings andstatues and also left from earlier times.The Park now is large, grassy and hilly. Its many paths aregreat for bicycling. Golfers at the University can sharpen uptheir games on the 18-hole golf course for only $2. Fishingfacilities are also available for the less athletically inclined.One note about parks: while all parks are nice, everyoneshould realize that they are not so safe at night. The lawsstate that the parks close at sunset, so obey them and staysafe. Besides, the only people in parks after sunset are therefor no good reason.MuseumsGood museums in Chicago are more plentiful than goodparks and more constant use. Three of the best, allrepresenting different aspects of knowledge are located offLake Shore Drive at Rossevelt Road: the Field Museum ofNatural History, the Shedd Aquarium and the AdlerPlanetarium.The Field Museum is large, stuffy, smelly and fascinating.Like New York’s Museum of Natural History, you couldspend days upon days at the Field Museum and never see allof it. The fields of knowledge included are anthropoiogy,botany, zoology and geology. These areas are arrangedsystematically^ different areas of the museum with littleoverlap.According to the “Chicago Guide”, the museum housesone of the world’s finest collections of primitive art’’ andwho am I to disagree? Make sure to see the collection of walldrawings from early man. The museum is open Mon. Tuesand Tiiurs 9-6; Wed. Fri-Sun 9-8. Admission is charged oncertain days.The Shedd Aquarium is right across Lake Shore Driveirom the Field Museum. It is the world’s largest buildingdevoted to aquarium purposes, and it houses over 7500 livingspecimens representing 350 species of marine creatures.Think of any sea animal and you’ll find it at the SheddAquarium. Besides being large, the aquarium is quite func¬tional with large viewing areas.The aquarium is located on the lake so you can spend sometime watching real water when not watching the fish. Makesure, when at the aquarium to see some of the oeautiful deepsea fish on display. The colors are unbelievable! The costmost days is $1. unless you can pass for 17 < 35 cents).The Adler Planetarium is about a half mile east of theaquarium, on a jetty shooting off into the lake. From here,before you enter the building, you can get a great view of thedowntown area, all of it visible above the lake.Currently on display on the main floor is the Apollo 12exhibit which shows the orbital path from the earth to themoon and back Other exhibits inciude a world-famouscollection of antique instruments such as astrolabes, ar¬millary spheres, sundials, nocturnals, watches and clocksdating from 1131 AD to the present.The planetarium is open daily from 9:30 to 4:30, Tuesdaysand Fridays to 9:30 pm.Two of the city’s best museums are located right here inHyde Park, and one is even on campus. The Museum ofScience of Industry is at 57th Street and Lake Shore Driveand features more exhibits of man’s drive to technologicaladvancement than you can imagine. See the submarine!See the steam-engined trains! See the coal mine shaft! Pushbuttons! S&I is a barrel of laughs and you might even learnsomething. Admission is free except for special exhibits.New exhibits arrive almost monthly at the museum so keepgoing back to keep up to date. Also, you will never see all of itin five visits, much less one or two.The Oriental Institute is at 58th St and University Avenueand it is among the world’s best collections of Middle East artand artifacts. Countries represented in the institute includeEgypt, Israel, Syria, Mesopotamia and Iran The yearsrepresented range from 5000 BC to 1000 AD.Mummies, statues, scarabs, ornaments ana many otherbeautiful relics of these dead cultures are on display Par¬ticularly impressive are large sections of tombs andmonuments that were brought over to this country andreassembled for the institute.Hours: daily from io-a, lues ana Wed 10-12. 1-5. Closed MARINA TOWERS: Cars parked with the new IBM building in the background.Thursday, September 30,1971 / The Chicago Marooii ISTFN V. S V/AWT youswould Co Vi^tr ft y Sons5 6 UI CATE SSAN) i3 ueMH>A Met 8a/jNty To^.».ANoTfl®' /Mve siwa* Her^ coftneb Utf ON RoS€N's^PHAf\ tW'fiye Orr kurntrn,at vmxr^nnuze. yoUfk Rums••• i//^ hJAme Tfi> f{ein&K&€K'r6 - Ci-f"0^ALlfi/At Park r Oviy forked Mvtatetra* *-Aa,keny|n’ Tike V»IUat G„*ftrc Flst *J L<it£J>*t</rT^<- fiwT bVf fig /V %W/U, MM €v<!Jtyik*y Cm Jt —Amd T&c'ty Ktfishtfla*rll ralotr^V Fresh SinoktO Fifl\Swum 3n pa\y - fall 6*J6J) ty Ivy LetMtf JlAoo/r ofH** ^ 04 OtiiOK foil With A Mtdii Sm#fiCkcL-T^ orr A rr^ Atf* wrft 4Skwiwtti Oh) $6rA6 £jf chak — Coffl6 S&Z fll/STzwf^' s0 c°~ *«T*TAKE HOME A CARTON OF WAN1ER S TRIM-LINE MILK OR CHEESE ..FOR THOSE WHOTHINK THIN SUT FIRST...COME IN AND NOSH!!!OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK: 7.00 AM - 9:00 PM, SUN. UNTIL 5:30 PMphone; 643-0500We feature Deluxe Sandwiches and Lazy SusansFriday Sr Saturday October 1 & 211'‘n^r»«w<<i>l«i ■*»'«»*♦ i^KOrii i~ W* -1 Carton of Wanzer s Chocolate Milk «tj> i nor customer oniy) roupen18/ Thp Chicago Maroon/Thursday, September tU, 1971trooisMntiOii! 9 *»riT\r*£T .07 ledfT'v;.;>€!:•I> CHICAGOMondays. Stop at the gift shop and buy yourself a littlescarab or some other more expensive but equally beautifulpiece.Fine art museums are a rarity in Chicago but there is oneshining light, glowing brightly all over the nation: the ArtInstitute. At the Van Buren IC stop (actually at Michigan andAdams), the Art Institute is one of the nation’s best artmuseums with a particularly noteworthy collection of 19thcentury impressionistic art. Its other collections cannot beignored however and new exhibitions arrive and leave everyother month or so. The Institute asks for a donation at thedoor, students usually get in for 50 cents or so, but Thursdaysare usually free.At the front of the museum is a store selling art posters for$1 and some for much more and many books of art, par¬ticularly on the pieces in the institute.The Art Institute offers annual membership for $15 whichallows you use of their extensive library and admission to allspecial exhibits for free. Also, members do get to see somefilms that the Institute shows from time to time. The ArtInstitute is open daily from 10-5, Thursday til 8:30 pm, andSundays from 1-6. The Art Institute is one of Chicago’s mostimportant cultural happenings and it is not to be missed.Chicago's “other” museum is the Museum of Con¬temporary Art at 237 E Ontario (625 North). This museum isnew and alive, sometimes even wrapping up the entiremuseum like a package, complete with bow. It stages hap¬penings and last year had mural artists work on the premisesso visitors could watch them at work. The museum is veryflexible, being a truly modern art museum unlike theMuseum of Modern Art in New York which has picked itself aperiod ending around 1950 for the most part. The Museum ofContemporary Art is open Tues-Sat from 10-5, Thursdays til-8and Sundays 12-5 pm. Admission is $1. students pay 25 cents.The ArtsThe arts struggle to survive in Chicago, some almostsmothered, some breathing new life these days. Theater,film, music and dance are here, to be sure, but some aremore alive than the others.Musically, Chicago is first-rate The Chicago SymphonyOrchestra under the musical direction of Georg Solti isamong the world’s most respected musical bodies. Centeredat Orchestra Hall, 220 South Michigan, the most popularconcert series for students may well be on Friday afternoonsas opposed to Thursday or Saturday nights. Get your ticketsin advance as popular concerts sell out quickly.The Lyric Opera is probably the nation’s second finestopera company with a season of eight presentations an¬nually. The season has already begun with performances of“Semiramide”, a Rossini opera starring Joan Sutherlandand Marilyn Horne. Other operas to be presented include“Rigoletto”, “Tosca”, “Das Rheingold”, “Werther”, “DonCarlo”, “The Barber of Seville”, and “Salome”. Stars whowill be here for these operas include Ghiaurov, Silja, Kraus,Bergonzi, Gobbi and many others. Tickets are expensive, butthe spectacle is worth it. All operas are shown at the LyricOpera House, 20 North Wacker.There are other classical music groups that present con¬certs in Chicago on a regular basis. One of these is the FineArts Quartet which will be beginning its annual series Oc¬tober 11 and 12 with the world premiere of a major work byone of today’s leading composers, Pulitzer Prize winner,Charles Wuorinen. Concerts are in the Goodman Theaterdowntown but they are entirely sold out. Tickets areavailable for concerts presented the day after the Goodmanconcert at the Howard Auditorium in Wilmette.Classical music also centers around the University cam¬pus. The University Symphony Orchestra presents a concertat the end of each quarter. Auditions are being held now ifyou are interested in joining. See the ad elsewhere in today’sMaroon. The Collegium Musicum is a choral group thatpresents concerts every quarter. Their taste runs to oldermusic, while the Contemporary Chambers Players play newavante-garde selections. Electronic music, world premieresand happenings are all possible from the CCP. A chambermusic series is presented annually and freshmen havetickets in their orientation packets Many of these concertsare worthwhile. Don’t let your tickets waste away. There arealso a llniversitv Chorus and Concert Rand Contact themusic department for more information about both of them. MUSEUM: Contemporary art in its Chicago home on Ontario Street.Thursday, September 30,1971 / The Chicago MaroonKimbark PlazaAlso in South Shore at 2100 E. 71st StreetPIZZAPLATTERPmo. Fn«d ChickenItalion FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd 643-2800J/IWESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-69330/The Chicago Maropn/Thursday,, September 30,1971 the]THE PRACTICAL TIGER welcomes back it'sold friends and extends a big hello to allnew students and faculty. Visit Hyde Park'smost unusual shop designed with the studentin mind. ■ .,I, Weare basically an unfinished furniturestore but with a difference. Quality at lowprices shown with flair.' We feature such things as:PARSONSTABLES from $16.95 & up inmany.sizes.HARDWOOD CUBESfor Storage, seats, rec-„ ord cabinets, etc. only $ 1 4.95.BOOKCASES in- 10 styles from $18.95 to$26.95.STOOLS T8"j 24", 30" from $6.95 to $8.95.WORKBENCHES 22 : X60"X34 V' high only'$29 95:"“r BOSTON ROCKERS...$29 95\ ’and that's not all...LAMPS from $3.95 and up.CRANE NECK DESK .LAMPS in red, white or ,yellow $7.95BEDSPREADS from Pakistan - twin anddouble $10.95 & up. • 'SNACK TABLES in teak with self storinglegs $4.95 or 2 for $8.00.PLUS a wide range of gift items from some20 countries,We also carry a complete line of paints,stains and antiquing kits.THE PRACTICAL TIGER was set up with you/_in mind. Why not stop in and check us out.It's the PRACTICAL place to shop.THE PRACTICAL TIGERin Hyde Park's Harper Court5225 so. Harper Court: 667-6888Now open 7 days a weekMONDAY THROUQH SATURDAY/ * 10 - to - 6 P.M.THURSDAYS AND FRIDAY10 - to - 9 P.M.SUNDAYS 12 - to - 5 P.M.CHICAGODance is Chicago’s poorest art with no regular per¬formances or company in town. Many companies travelthrough the city during the year, particularly the JoffreyBallet who usually spend over a week here in late January.The only regularly planned dance event is the Harper DanceSeries which last year moved from the Harper Theater (nowthe Hyde Park II) to the Civic Theater on Wacker. Theypresent about four weeks worth of dance activities by anumber of foremost dance troupes. Except for that though,dance fanatics will have to go crazy.Pop music is only slightly better. Every rock hall that hasopened in this city has closed within a few months. Thereseems to be some sort of curse on them. Now individualpromoters present concerts in the Auditorium Theater of theOpera House or the Amphitheatre. Check the papers. Thereis sometimes music on campus, but prospects look bad at themoment. Cross your fingers.Theater lives in Chicago — almost. On campus there are afew theater groups, most notably University Theatre whichpresents a variety of shows each quarter. Nick Rudall is thenew director and he will be doing “Rosencrantz andGuildenstern Are Dead” this quarter. Other shows will bepresented, I am sure. Blackfriars presents an originalmusical every spring, the Collective does guerrilla-typetheater, Cain’s Company presents plays by non-producedplaywrights (Blake, Yeats, etc) and that is about it forcampus theater.The city offers few truly fine professional theater op¬portunities. Broadway road shows stop in Chicago every nowand then. Brian Bedford’s ‘‘Show for Wives” is opening at theStudebaker Theater soon. The Shubert Theater will show‘‘1776” in about a month. Others will surely follow.The Goodman Theater is the city’s professional repertorycompany. They will present about five shows this year forabout five weeks each. At the moment they are showing ‘‘APlace Without Doors”, a pre-season show which is onlyrunning for a few more weeks. Mildred Dunnock stars. TheGoodman is sometimes quite fine, but they do lack technicalexpertise. They also have a drama school there that presentsshows. Check the papers.The most exciting theater of a professional bent in the cityis presented at the Ivanhoe Theater, 3000 N Clark. Justrecently they premiered the brand new Tennessee Williamsplay, “Out Cry”. Past shows have included “VirginiaWoolf”, Lillian Heilman’s “Another Part of the Forest” andmany others. The productions are of high calibre and thedirection by George Keathley is always outstanding.Currently they are premiering “Status Quo Vadis”, a newwork that I have not seen.Chicago’s north-side has a variety of experimental troupeswho present some very fine theater. The most famous ofthese is Second City, 1616 N Wells, the Mike Nichols-ElaineMay-Barbara Harris Shelley Berman-Paul Sills humor/ sat¬ire show that is still one of the city’s finest attractions. Sillshas been around Chicago for a long time and his now famous“Story Theater” began at the Body Politic, 2256 N Lincoln, anorth-side theater.The Body Politic now houses the Organic Theater, myfavorite experimental troupe in the city. They are currentlyshowing “Poe”, a horror story about the last five days in thelife of Edgar Allen Poe. Last year they showed a modernversion of Voltaire’s “Candide” which the Public Theater ofNew York brought to the big city for a limited engagement.Across the street from the Body Politic is the KingstonMines Theater which is currently showing two productions,“Terminal” and “The Whores of Babylon”. Look for reviewsof these two shows in the Grey City Journal soon. The youngKingston Mines troupe recently pesented a nostalgic look atthe ’50s entitled “Grease”.The Chicago Repertory Company, 315 W North and theChicago City Players, 510 W Wellington, are two other groupsworth watching. The Journal will report happenings of thesetwo groups in the future.Film may be Chicago’s most prolific art form, but thereare still some problems involved in its presentation. Chicagois perennially far behind New York in presenting newmovies. Sometimes we have to wait weeks and even monthsafter a new movie has opened in New York before it getshere. Art films of limited interest that survive in New Yorkfor awhile sometimes do not even make it to this city.On campus there are two main film groups, Doc Films andContemporary European Films. Doc presents films threenights per week, are very interested in film as art and are apretty esoteric bunch. Associate membership for $6 is worth HANCOCK, The tallest buildingit if you like movies. They show an enormous number of them.CEF shows fewer films, are less esoteric but are closer topopular taste. Their movies are often crowded favorites andmake a lot of money. Other groups present films on occasion.Check Maroon ads to find out when and who.Chicago has one repertory film theater, The Biograph, 2433N Lincoln. Recently they presented “Citizen Kane” and“Streetcar Named Desire.” That’s what you’d call first-rate.Across the street is the Three-Penny Cinema, one of the city’sartier theaters.Chicago has a Film Festival, this year presented aroundNovember 1. The festival includes feature films, studentfilms and other categories. Call 644-3400 for information forinformation or to get on the mailing list.There are a number of first run theaters downtown and onthe near north-side. They fall into very specific categories.The Loop shows sex movies. The Oriental shows action flicks.The State-Lake and United Artists show good popular art mov¬ies. The Cinema, Carnegie, Playboy and Esquire show lesspopular but more arty art movies. The Chicago loves cowboysand “Love Story ’ ’. The Roosevelt caters to the black audience.And on and do. There are a few cheapy theaters in the city,The Howard and the Bryn Mawr particularly that are lessthan $1.ArchitectureSome of Chicago’s most famous sights can only beclassified as architectural masterpieces. Since Chicagoburned down in the 19th century, the entire downtown area isnew and modern.Living in Chicago is like a crash course in modern ar¬chitecture. After living in this city for a few months you beginto look at buildings in a way that you never did before. Lines,angles, building materials, and designs will pop out at you.Especially when in the Loop, look up. Stores are actuallyhoused in tall modern buildings that are a treat for the eyeand an experience for the mind.Perhaps Chicago’s most famous building is the JohnHancock, 875 North Michigan. You cannot have missed thisblack, tapering tower; it’s the world’s second tallest com¬pleted building (The World Trade Center is under con¬struction in New York). It has “X’s” all over it and two an¬tennae at the top. It has been called a grasshopper and amess. Half of it is offices, the other half apartments, and wehear tell that on a clear day you can see Michigan.Two taller buildings have just been started in Chicago, theSears building and the Standard Oil of Indiana. They shouldboth be complete in about two more years. They should bothbe buildings well worth waiting for.Another amazing building is the First National BankBuilding at Madison and Clark. This light, bright modernbank swoops up 60 s'.ories with the most amazing curve everbuilt into a building on purpose Large windows help to offsetthe canyon-like feeling you get standing next to the bank withother buildings across the street. To get the best view of it,walk a few blocks down Madison and look up.Marina Towers, State and the river, are famous roundbuildings that are often used to symbolize Chicago. The twintowers house apartments on top and garages below. The WRIGLEY, The prettiest building.ground floor is a fine shopping area with many good sho, „and a few nice restaurants. The ABC network still has itelevision antennae on Marina Towers though CBS and NEhave moved to the Hancock Building.Lake Point Tower at Ohio and the lake is an odd-shapt vbeautiful apartment building designed by devotees of tl :*Mies van der Rohe school of architecture. It is an amazingneat looking building that is also the closest any tall buildir-has ever come to the lake.McCormick Place, Cermak and the lake, is a large co -vention center that reminds me of an overgrown warehousIt houses Arie Crown theater, the city’s newest concert ha ■The Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) is Mies Van dr* IRohe’s design, a campus of glass and steel in Mies’ famou;“less is more” style. Supposedly the masterpiece on th>; 1campus is Crown Hall, but go and see for yourself. IIT isthe Howald el and 3500 South.There are two architecturally amazing buildings on oi *own campus, Robie House and the law school. Robie House; t58th and Woodlawn is Frank Lloyd Wright’s most famor >prairie house, a low brick and wood structure that sets off tl icorner in style and elegance.The law school, designed by Saarinen is general /recognized as the finest building on campus. Its blac -windowed library and window-less courtroom are set behir*ia reflecting fountain with a lonely sculpture at one end.Other great buildings can be found all over the city. To fit d ;the best, get a book entitled “Chicago’s Famous Buildings ”edited by Arthur Siegel, UC Press, 1965. Paperback, $1.5 J.Maxwell StreetEvery city has a flea market. Well, Chicago may have tl enation’s best. Every Sunday hundreds of street-side mt'-chants set up booths on and around Maxwell Street sellir gused material for unbelievable cheap prices. If you don’t S'-ewhat you want, ask. And don’t be afraid to haggle. That spart of the style. Refuse to buy; they’ll probably drop the rprices. However, never, ever ask where something com?-sfrom. It’s just not done. Rugs are a great specialty nMaxwell Street. I got a great Oriental for my bedroom f- ronly $15. Furs are also available and they are fun to try c »,but watch out for fleas. Go early on Sunday because t: emerchants set up at sun-up. Maxwell is 1400 South and fr ebazaar is around Halsted Street. A Halsted bus will do fine. V55th Street bus will get you to Halsted. A car is better to hepcarry home your loot. But do go; Maxwell Street is a re iltrip.ConclusionChicago is a city that you should not regret having come t >.It will fascinate you for a time, interest you even longer. T! sopportunities for enrichment and entertainment are n*tlimitless but they are very wide. Perhaps you will be bore*..,but definitely not within a four year stretch of time. Dor tturn into an academic groundhog, burrowing into Regenste ilibrary. Leave Hyde Park, examine this city fully ar 1thoroughly. 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CHICAGO 60615 • PL2-7800EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESOR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(S3 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372K£rIN wt\* HARPER COURT * watch repairwedding ringsdiamondssilver jewelrystudent discountsupremejewelers1452 E. 53rd St. FA4-9609LCHANCES 1OUR SPECIALITYWorld-famous choicest steakburgerdraft beer -sj free peanuts ;s-. 1 t Open daily forcocktails, lunch, dinnerand in between5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1434 A Dr. Theodor RoseburyWill AutographHis New BookMicrobes And MoralsATThe Book NookHYDE PARE ^HOPPING CENTER" ■'Still. •, rVunher 2i ,0L .4:00 u VI. On October 3. 1971.there will be a motorcyclerace held on the GrandPrix track at Turtle Park,in Elkhorn, Wisconsin.Entered are ProfessionalWorld Champion Ridersfrom Russia, Germany,Czechoslovakia, Japan,England, Belgium, Sweden,ana the United States.STARTING TIME: 1:QQAMA SANCTION$ 3.00 StudentTickets: $4.00 advance$ 5.00 at gateChild ren under twelvefree\wi mu i cii ui iyyuiyc, freeINTERNATIONAL: MOTOCROSSSTUDENT &ADVANCE TICKETSany Ticketron Outlet dial TI-C K E T S for information, or bywritina to Motorsoorts Racina Circus Box 297 Twin Lakes.Wis. 53181W_-/ The Chicago Maroon /Thursday, Sepiember 30, PJ71The College nas at least two intellectual purposes: toprovide a general education (that is, to teach students toread, reason, speak and write effectively) and to providebasic training in an academic discipline which will allow astudent to pursue that or another discipline or a profession infurther study; it is hoped, of course, that pursuing a singlediscipline will strengthen one’s general education.The intellectual life of students is both curricular andextra-curricular; and while it’s easy to discuss the form ofthe curriculum, it is harder to evaluate its success.In his first year, the student will probably take generalcourses not too closely related to what he thinks will be hismajor (what he thinks first year is all too likely to be farfrom what he ends up in).These courses will probably include a general course inhumanities, one in social sciences, and others varying ac¬cording to skills and interests, in mathematics, language,biology, physical sciences, etc.For some majors, notably the sciences, students will find itnecessary to take and pass certain specific courses during/ their first year; others may find some gen ed courses (forexample, first-year biology) to be closely related to whatthey decide to study.But for most students, their first year courses will bevaluable less as introduction to specific areas of study thanas practice in basic skills of interpretation and writing;fortunately, there has been a trend of late towards teachinggeneral skills through very specific courses, which hashelped considerably to interest students in what they aredoing.Many students, finding the common core too dull or toosimple, will take one or more advanced courses; this prac¬tice makes considerable sense, especially in the humanitiesand social sciences, where first year students may take asupper level a course as the instructor will allow (in the moreexact sciences, of course, advanced placement is more amatter of preparation than permission).At the end of their first year, students will be expected tochoose a Collegiate Division. The five divisions (biology,humanities, new, physical sciences, social sciences) vary ineverything from entrance requirements (the new collegiatedivision NCD must be applied to and reserves the right toy reject applicants) to flexibility (biology, with its three op¬tions and NCD are probably the most flexible; I suspectwithout proof that physical sciences is the least).The divisions have masters, who play a greater or lesserpart in the life of the students, and student committees,which range from near dead to active and significant.Those divisions which have active student committees,masters committed to the providing of an education designedfor College students rather than miniature graduatestudents, and conscientious faculty members can play agreat role in the lives of students both socially and in¬tellectually.The second year varies greatly; in some divisions it isdevoted to upper level courses in the division in general, butnot necessarily to courses in a discipline, and is expected toform a sort of general education in the concepts and methodsof one set of related disciplines in other areas, especially inthe physical sciences, the second year student is beginninghis major.In the third and fourth years, students will decide on their, majors, if thev haven’t already done sn; they will alcn Hoarup elective courses both inside and outside their divisions. In following their majors, students will take upper levelcourses involving very precise study of small areas of theirdiscipline; upper-level courses generally are open tograduate students and are sometimes as demanding of timeand work as first-year graduate courses.Students will find that considerable time must be devotedeither to research and writing or to lab work; in addition,many students will end up doing individual research underthe direct supervision of a faculty member.While all majors are intended to serve as the crown ofgeneral education, some (such as analysis of ideas and studyof methods) are more clearly related to the acquiring ofskills rather than a specific body of knowledge; others (eg,economics, not to mention most of the physical sciences) arevery carefully designed to prepare students for highlydemanding graduate education.It is really impossible to assess how well the College fulfillsits two aims through its curriculum; I would tend to suspectthat the better-designed programs are more likely to providegood training than anything recognizable as a generaleducation, while those programs which are poorly-designedare hardly likely to provide either.I certainly doubt that general education has been wellenough defined for the College to ensure its ability to provideit ; and I hardly see how extradivisional electives which oftenamount to nothing more than foreign language sequences, orgeneral courses of vastly different nature and quality, areeffective means to a common and well-defined educationalgoal.The curricular intellectual life of College students maypossibly equip them for life; but in those areas in which thecurriculum is, by consensus, of highest quality, students aremost clearly prepared for gratuate school (is that life?).The extra-curricular intellectual life of the College,however, is exceedingly rich, and many students find it vitalat least in their general education, and sometimes in theirtraining as well.Conversation with faculty is a vital component of this life.Many faculty members can provide not only advice aboutprofessional training but intellectual guidance and evencompanionship; the casual recommendation of a book oroosing of a question may be as stimulating as many courses.There are also many organized intellectual activities oncampus; some, like the College Forum (a distinguishedseries of lectures and discussions) have provided manystudents with opportunities for significant thought anddiscussion about matters not touched on in the curriculum(such as why there is one, and what its aims should be).Conversation with other students, whether on Collegedivision committees, or in living quarters or anywhere elseprovides challenges to convictions, put-downs of sloppyreasoning, stimulus for creativity.Many will find the intellectual life of the College veryunsatisfying; more, I suspect, will be happy with parts of itand very unhappy with the rest.Some may graduate with the feeling that general educationis honored more in the idealogy than in the classroom; otherswill be surprised at the inadequacy of the training they havereceived from a distinguished faculty.Careful study of the alternatives and as much research aspossible are advisable before deciding on a course, let alone am«*joi, the intellectual resources of the college nave to oeexploited intelligently if they are to be used to the full.Thursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago Maroon / 23Work, StudyGet Ahead:Making Itin CollegeBy Anthony GraftonTeaching inResearch andBy Edward Levi“The University has honored the diversity ofindividual scholars and the structure of sepa¬rate disciplines. But it has constantly searchedfor an understanding of a common mission.”24/ The Chicago Maroon/ Thursday, September 30,1971It is with genuine pleasure I greet you today and welcome you to the University ofChicago. I am conscious, of course, that I am speaking not only to entering students, but inthe presence of many of the parents. This combination heightens the meaning of this oc¬casion. There is a sense in which the parents now become observers. They are witnesses tothe coming of generations. Societies and the individuals in them have few more importanttasks then the transmission of the cultures of the past, the ways of thought and exploration,which will add to man s comprehension and skills, and help us to understand and translatevalues into practice.The parents are observers of an important new stage in the careers of a generation towhich they have ties of affection and concern. To some extent, parents are always ob¬servers. If it is true that no man or woman is an island, it is also true that each individualhas his own integrity and contains a mystery. I can only sympathize with, and yetcongratulate, the parents on the fact that the mystery of which they have always beenaware will grow with accelerated pace.I have spoken of the parent-observers as witnesses, and witnessing is not passive. I amsure their presence today not only bespeaks affection, but reaffirms their own commitmentto that process of learning and understanding which is an everlasting moral duty forone of us, and which I know is exemplified to an unusual degree in many of them. I am surethat many of the parents-whatever their accomplishment-and perhaps the more so thegreater their accomplishments- will envy the opportunity which lies ahead for thesestudents. That commitment has meaning for each one of us. It is an affirmation not only oflife, but a way of life.But the parents are observers, and they will understand that what I have to say is spokento our entering students.I am sure you wonder what kind of a University this really is, and what the life of an un¬dergraduate in it will be like. If this is of any help to you, let me say I have often wonderedwhat kind of University this is. It is an institution of many qualities which, by its verynature, depends to a considerable extent upon the quality of the individual who relates to it.I say this even though I believe it to be true that this University knows more about itselfand is more determined about its own direction than any other comparable university. Thekind of a university you will find this to be, and the kind of life you will lead in it to a largedegree will depend on your own interests, your own evergy, your own ability. This can besaid of many institutions. I think we can say something more.The original idea of this University is instructive. This University was founded as acollege, and did not grow into being a university. That was the normal pattern until thisUniversity was created in 1891 as one of the major events in higher education of that time.This University started both as an undergraduate college and as a major center forgraduate and professional study. It placed its emphasis both on the liberal arts and upon theoverwhelming importance of investigation. This combination of undergraduate andgraduate work, of teaching and research, was regarded as a bold but foolhardy experiment-an attempt to put together the special but different attributes of the English colleges and ofthe German centers of learning-and to do so in a most unlikely geographical place. Many ofthe experts were sure the experiment would fail. The parts of the institution, it was believed,hardly could exist together. They would not make for a common strength. The place wouldfly apart. The institution was called a veritable monstrosity. It was known as “Harper’sBazaar.”And yet I believe all informed persons would agree that from the very beginning, thisinstitution has found the closest relationship among its parts, and the greatest interactionamong its scholars and between the disciplines. “The University has honored the diversity ofindividual scholars and the structure of separate disciplines. But it has constantly searchedfor an understanding of a common mission. It has attempted to make pervasive throughoutthe entire institution, and at all stages, its dual emphasis on the liberal arts and on in¬vestigation.In short, it has never accepted the dichotomy which is supposed to seperate teaching fromresearch. It believes that discovery, itself, is the greatest form of teaching, and that mutualefforts to understand, whether in the classroom, the seminar, the laboratory or the library,not only give the institution its unity, but link scholars over time and across nationalboundaries and disciplines. Mind you, I have not said utopia has been achieved, but ratherthat the idea has been deeply felt and is compelling.This University has in it considerable diversity. It believes in this diversity. But probablymore than any comparable university, it has achieved a unity of purpose and practice andcommon endeavor.I have suggested that this idea of unity and intellectual borrowing from one area foranother has unusual strength here because it was so much involved in the original con¬ception. I cannot help but think of a striking although perhaps a typical example of thisTiginal spirit as it showed itself in the early years. James Breasted, distinguished Egyp¬tologist, was engaged in excavations which revealed for the first time much of the culture,a story and economy of the ancient Middle East. Natural scientists in the laboratories of thel niversity were classifying species, finding new chemical reactions, discovering truthsabout cellular growth. Albert Michelson was performing his experiments which were one ofthe factors in the later development of the theory of relativity. John Dewey was pursuing histheories of education in the primary grades of the Laboratory School of the University. TheUniversity Record of those years shows the alertness which the Laboratory School had ofalmost instant infusion into the teaching of the primary grades of the discoveries ofBreasted and of the scientists. One gets the impression that no building could be discoveredand excavated in Egypt without having, in not more than several months, a model made ofit by children in the Laboratory School, and that no significant work could be reported fromthe laboratories without having the experiments explained and sometimes duplicated in theprimary grades.One could suggest that this show the conceit of a simpler time when truth was beingdiscovered and packaged for immediate delivery. On the contrary it was a way of showinghow inquiry and doubts and problems should move together. Nor was this a one-wav street.Dewey published monthly, sometimes weekly, in the University Record a long — and Imust admit — often boring account of what the children were doing hour by hour in theirclasses for all the faculty of the University to see. It was Dewey’s way of saying that re¬search on the learning process, itself, is one of the areas where discovery is most needed.To those who would allocate research to graduate study and teaching to the undergraduatecollege, this University responded by denying the wisdom of such barriers, and by insist¬ing the theory of inquiry must by made to work at all levels.There are two other related ideas which I should mention. One of these is occasionallyunder a cloud during this period of change; the other is very popular, although thelimitations and implications from which it gains meaning and strength are frequently notContinued on page 39 Wayne Booth addresses 1Edward Levi speaks to freshman class in Mandel hall Sunday.fi the College: Two ViewsBy Knox Hill“I doubt that any university surpasses ours inthe extent to which its individual members andparticular areas are concerned about theUniversity as a whole.”Anyone who has been a member of the College faculty for thirty-two years can recallmany different programs that have come and gone. His reflections need not lead him toconclude that the changes have been aimless, and that no progress has been made. Yet, hewill call to mind some vanished features of former days that he wishes might be restored.When I began to write this piece I was struck by the thought that I do not know as much asI used to about the College program. I used to know the materials and objectives of all thecourses in the three-year Humanities sequence. I taught all three courses at one time oranother, as did several other persons. I also taught the course called, “Organizations,Methods, and Principles of Knowledge”. I knew a good deal about the content and ob¬jectives of the three-year sequence in the Social Sciences the course in English com¬position, and the course in “The History of Western Civilization.” I knew more about thecourses in the natural sciences and mathematics than I do today--I even studied “NaturalSciences 2,” a general biology course, in a special faculty section. My knowledge of thecurriculum was not unusual among faculty members. Many of my colleagues had at least asmuch, and some of them taught more of the courses than I did. Today there is much lessconcern for the curriculum as a whole. The change is significant and is surely to beregretted.Another feature of the old College that has virtually disappeared is the staff-taughtcourse. Courses which are no longer taught, Humanities 1 and “OMP”, have no coun¬terparts today (perhaps the closest likeness is Humanities 107-8-9). In Humanities 1 eachinstructor, no matter what his special field, taught the same section throughout the year,leading his students in discussions aimed at developing their capacities to appreciatemusic, literature, and the visual arts. No single instructor claimed a high level of com¬petence in all three of these fields, but the staff included persons competent in each of them.When a particular unit was taught during a particular set of class meetings, a staff memberwho was competent in the relevant area became, in effect, the teacher of less competentcolleagues who, in their turn, taught him when the course turned to subjects in which theywere competent.I know that some professors cannot believe that such a course could result in anythingexcept superficial dilettantism. They do not, I think, take sufficient account of the purposeof such a first-year course in a three-year sequence. Its success required and received ahigh degree of enthusiasm from its staff members, and a willingness to learn from oneanother. The members of the OMP staff had similar attitudes, but there were importantdifferences between the two courses. OMP was intended for fourth year rather than firstyear students. And its staff was not composed of persons supposed to be expert in particularsubjects pertinent to the course. It was not designed to introduce students to traditionallyrecognized fields, but rather to reflection on problems that were likely to be taken forgranted or ignored in the various studies that made up the rest of the curriculum.It is not the passing of such courses that I lament, but what they were instances of-enterprises carried on by enthusiastic groups of people interested in learning from oneanother and putting their common learning to use in the education of students.In spite of such losses the College has made progress and the changes in its programshave not been aimless. Its aim has been to design and carry out the program which, giventhe character of the University of which the College is a part, best serves the needs of itsstudents. The character of the University has been consistent and its aim steady. The needsof students and the circumstances in which the College functions have continually changed.It has had, we might say, a moving target, and steady aim at a moving target requirescontinual changes in direction. I shall now suggest some circumstances that have com¬pelled us to change direction. Then I shall turn to my main concern, some fundamentalcharacteristics of the University that have controlled our changes in direction, and thathave made important features of the College programs constant while these changes haveoccurred.A given program might be a good one and might fit the character of the institution forwhich it is designed, but it could succeed only if the academic marketplace could supply thekind of teachers the program needs. During the 1950’s it became increasingly difficult andperhaps impossible to find and keep enough of the kinds of teachers that were needed for thesuccess of the program of the 1940’s. There are features of the current program that aregood precisely because they are suited to the strong points of present faculty members.The character of the student body has changed, and changes have been caused by changesin the University itself, and in the society it serves. The sheer numbers of students are animportant factor. A sharp decline in enrollment around 1950 was a principal reason forfundamental changes that were made in the College in 1953 and later. Changing objectiveshave also made a difference. In the 1930’s many of our undergraduates finished their formaleducation with a bachelor’s degree. By the late 194G’s few planned to do so. For the formergroup it was reasonable to plan an undergraduate program toward a “terminal degree.” Itwas less reasonable in 1950. More recently there has been a change with respect to blackstudents at the University. In former years no particular thought was given to recruitingblack students as such. If they applied (and few did) not many applicants met the prevailingcriteria for admission. It has become increasingly hard to defend admissions criteria thatrejected black applicants, so it became necessary to reconsider admission procedures. Thepresence of more black students on campus now is having effects on curricular planning,primarily because that presence is making the College aware of curricular shortcomingsthat have not been noticed before.The character of the University, to which I now turn, is complex, but two of its featuresdeserve special attention. First is the orientation toward research that it has had throughoutits history. This characteristic animates individual faculty members of the University theyare primarily dedicated to the discovery of truth.The second characteristic is what I shall call the cohesiveness of the University. I doubtthat any university surpasses ours in the extent to which its individual members and par¬ticular areas are concerned about the University as a whole, and the extent to which theydiscuss together matters that affect the excellence of the University as a whole. Itscohesiveness has special importance for its undergraduate work, for it is the chief means bywhich the resources of the various parts of the University are applied to the needs of un¬dergraduate students, and without it the first characteristic, orientation toward research,could prevent the University from doing anything at all at the undergraduate level.It might be thought that these two characteristics are incompatible and rival, and thatvarious changes in undergraduate programs resulted from the dominance of one charac¬teristic at one time and the other at another. That would be wrong, for they are not in¬compatible. But when they come together, as they inevitably do when efforts are made todesign and carry out a program of college education well suited to a research orienteduniversity, controversies arise and debates are intense. The two characteristics combine togive the University a restlessness, a restlessness which is an expression of the spirit ofContinued on page 41Thursday, September 30,1971 / The Chicago Maroon /25You could call themthe greatest hits of 1970,’71, and 72.Distributed by Columbia RecordsZ 30817 KRIS KFWSTOFTO3SONME AND BOBBY McGEEincludingHelp Me Make \t Through The Nigh!ForTneGoodTtmes SundayiMon*.Co™00«"BlamenOnTde Stones CaseyaU^M^KRIS KRISTOFFERSONTHE SILVER TOUGHEDDEVIL AM) IincludingJody And The KidlEpitaph ©lack AndBluelLoving Her Was taper .(Than Anything V\\ Ever Do Again)When \ Loved Her |TheTakerIn the last year Kris Kristofferson’s songs have been allover the hit charts.Only now he’s singing them.He’s the me in “'Me and Bobby McGee." And he’s the“Silver Tongued Devil."The Village Voice said that he sings “some of the mostbeautiful songs around today." And both his albums bear that out.His latest. “The Silver Tongued Devil and I,” includes“Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’ll Ever Do Again).”And nine other songs that everyone else will be singing.Rolling Stone said, “It’s one of the better albums to be releasedthis bleak year, and one that has the capability of reaching anawful lot of people. Try it.”And the “Me and Bobby McGee” album hasalready reached a lot of people. It includesfour of last year’s biggest songs.Only now Kris Kristofferson sings thoseKris Kristofferson hits.And he seems to have a lot of them.On Monument Records7 30679(W illnS 1Hu uJJJJ LI LZILISUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCould you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their new disability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you'renot able to.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD, Jr.01One N. LaSalle St.Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470 NOW PLAYINGfilm festival or all time great hits.TWO HITCHCOCK MASTERPIECESTHE LADY THE 39VANISHES Sf- STEPSTWO OF THE GREAT CLASSIC HORROR FILMSTICMOKMICCOSCMCDQDOfNIGIfT MICHAELREDGRAVETHEHISTORY Mm*RATING ”SEXIN THE CINEMAS^^B^MERIAN C. COOPER'S Th« 0RIC^MNCBONCTh« ORIGINAL udUNCUTVERSION| MARINA CITY • 300 N. State St.W 329-0450Attendant Theatre Parking 4 hrs. $1.25DESKS-B00KCASESSWIVELCHAIRS-LAMPS-TABLESNEW& USEDEQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount For Studentsand Faculty with l.D. cord Leather GarmentsEXPERTLY CLEANED& REEIMSIIEDBeat the Fall & Winter Rush. Have yourleather garments cleaned now.Alterations & repair also available.The Town Cobbler1458 E. 53rd752-0402Pick-up & Delivery ServiceMALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJUST TELEPHONE CA 5-6692 ORAPPLY IN PERSON AT 120 E. 18th ST.WE HAVE WEEK END WORK FORYOU.LAST SUMMER STUDENTS EARNEDUP TO $50 OR MORE DAILY.WORK DAY OR NIGHT OR DURINGSEMESTER BREAKS.Work from a garage near home or schoolhe Chicago Maroon /Thursday, September 30,1971UG’s High Class People and PlacesFOUNTAIN OF TIME: Lorado Taft statue at west end of theBy now you’ve heard all the platitudesabout the University’s tradition of academicexcellence, but you probably still don’t knowthe people and places that make it up. Thefollowing is an alphabetical directory tosome of them. It is, of course, biased, and itprobably doesn’t include everyone andeverything it should. But it does give someidea of who the stars are on this gray cam¬pus.Adlai Stevenson Institute of InternationalAffairs — Housed in Frank Lloyd Wright’sRobie House, it has been a frequent target ofcampus radicals because of its allegedlyimperialistic research. But last year one ofits fellows, Eqbal Ahmad, was charged withconspiring to kidnap Henry Kissinger.A Adrian Albert — math professor andformer dean of the physical sciencesdivision. One of the University’s mostdistinguished scholars and former liaison forthe Institute for Defense Analysis.George Beadle — Nobel prize winner andformer president of the University. He’s nowinto gardening and corn genetics research(his corn field is at 55th and Ellis).Saul Bellow — the great novelist studentsare longing to meet. But they never get achance to; he might faint if he ever looked atan undergraduate.Bruno Bettleheim — professor of educa-cation, psychology, psychiatry and direc¬tor of the orthegenic school on 60th Street.Nationally famous for his theories onchild-rearing, he’s also well-known amongstudents for his diagnosis of protestors asparanoids.Easley Blackwood — professor of music,pianist, composer. He’s one of the fewpracticing musicians on campus.Daniel Boorstin — Controversial historian,he’s due back on campus this fall after twoyears as director of the National Museum ofHistory and Technology. A flaming radicalonce told him he was a “piece of shit;” helater remarked in typical UC style, “Whatwas I supposed to say, ‘what kind of shit?’ ”Wayne Booth — professor of English andformer dean of the College, and an outspokenbeliever in rational discourse and life of themind. He’s also one of the most respectedmen on campus.S Chandrasekhar — professor ofastronomy and physics, and one of theforemost in the country. He knows moreabout stars than anyone else on campus.Albert Crewe — physics professor anddean of the physical sciences division. Hemay win a Nobel prize for his scanningelectron microscope, which he used tophotograph single atoms for the first time.Enrico Fermi Institute — It’s named afterthe man who produced the first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction, underold Stagg field across the street, and itdoes a lot more along those lines.John Hope Franklin — American historyprofessor and one of the most distinguishedblack scholars in the country. Formerchairman of the department.Milton Friedman — There is no biggername in economics today. He’s best knownfor his unqualified support of the free en¬terprise system and his monetarist ap¬proach. He’s still fuming over the wage-pricefreeze.Julian Goldsmith — chairman of thegeophysical sciences department. He’s oneof the men who analyze moon rocks.Hanna Gray — associate professor ofhistory. She’s one of those few women whomade it big in academia, but she’s leavingafter this year to be dean of the college atNorthwestern.William Rainey Harper (deceased) — theUniversity’s first president, and first in lineto implement his revolutionary theories ofeducation.Philip Hauser — professor of sociology.He’s the University’s population expert, andhas done work for the census bureau andother federal departments.Harold Haydon — associate professor ofart, director of Midway Studios, painter, andSun-Times art critic.Albert Hayes — An English professor withan unpopular job: he’s the registrar. You’llremember his name after waiting on lineinterminably in Kent, Bartlett, etc.Roger Hildebrand — dean of the Collegeand physics professor. He enjoys areputation as a fine teacher and a devotedadministrator, and is implementing manycurriculum reforms in the College.Robert Hutchins — the University's mostfamous president. His ideas on generalc'dht'aVmu-afHi Hie t oilege common core are as influential as ever. He’s now director ofthe Center for the Study of Democratic In¬stitutions in Santa Barbara.Morris Janowitz — professor and chair¬man of sociology. He’s definitely a liberal,but his work is none too popular with theradical set. He recently testified for avolunteer army.D Gale Johnson — accomplishedeconomist, but better known to students inhis administrative capacities. He’s formerspokesman for the committee of the council,former dean of the social sciences division,chairman of economics department andacting director of the library.Harry Kalven — one of the prominentnames in the University’s law school.Maynard Krueger — economics professorin the College, and another liberal who’s outof favor with campus radicals. He ran forvice president on Norman Thomas’ ticket in1940.Philip Kurland — professor in the lawschool. One of the foremost experts onconstitutional law and the Supreme Court, heoften testifies before congressional com¬mittees.Edward Levi — University President. He’squiet, uncolorful, and inaccessible, but heruns the show well. Nationally known for hishandling of student protestors, he hasrecently proposed a two-year BA in generaleducation.Julian Levi — the president’s brother, andevery bit as competent in his own ad¬ministrative area As executive director ofthe South East Chicago Commission, he triesto preserve the neighborhood's stability andusually gets results. Many blackorganizations remember him none too fondlyfor his role in the urban renewal program ofthe 50’s.Richard Levins and Richard Lewontin —two of the few prominent radicals on thefaculty, both of them in biology. Theyrecently applied for a research grant fromNorth Vietnam. Many students rememberthem for their easy grading policies.Theodore Lowi — political scienceprofessor. An animated, colorful teacherwith some unconventionally liberal viewsand very respected research.Richard McKeon — philosophy and Greekprofessor. He knows almost all there is toknow about Aristotle, and concentrates onteaching the Aristotelian method to hisstudents. He is known to produce reactions ofan extreme- nature. Wiliam McNeill — history professor andauthor of books on the rise of the West andthe history of the world. He now teaches theworld history sequence.Soia Mentschikoff — professor in the lawschool, and one of the most distinguishedwomen lawyers anywhere. If a womanmakes it to the Supreme Court, it might beher.Gerhard Meyer — the grand old man ofsocial science. Now holding a post¬retirement appointment as economicsprofessor in the College, Meyer is one of thenicest faculty members you’ll ever meet.The Midway — It was designed as aVenetial canal for the Columbian expositionat the 1892 world fair. It’s now a playing field,a skating rink, and the point from whichyou’re told not to walk south (unless you livein B-J, of course).The Henry Moore Sculpture — Unveiled in1967, it marks the spot where Fermi’snuclear chain reaction took place. Somethink it’s a mushroom cloud, others a rottentomato.Kenneth Northcott — professor andchairman of Germanic languages, residentmaster of Pierce tower, and a good friend ofstudents. He’s on leave until winter quarter.Charles O’Connell — a friendly ad¬ministrator with a difficult job. The morecynical students called him “Chuck theKnive” after the sit-in, but you’ll find it hardto agree if you meet him.Oriental Institute — one of the finestMiddle Eastern museums in the world,housing pieces made in 5000 BC. It’s ourbiggest tourist attraction.Anthony Pallett — director of admissionsand aid for the College. He’s a very busy manthese days.E Spencer Parsons — dean of Rockefellerchapel, and one of several politically in¬volved ministers in Hyde Park. He’s leadingthe fight for abortion reform.James Redfield — Born and bred at theUniversity, he absorbed all of its academictradition at an early age.He’s former masterof the New collegiate division.John D Rockefeller (deceased) — Like it ornot, his oily millions founded this place.Nicholas Rudall — assistant professor ofclassical languages, better known for hiswork in the theater. He’s now director ofUniversity Theatre and remains a goodfriend of students.Joseph Schwab — professor of naturalsvidhees arid education. He always nas the Midway.last word on the curriculum.Edward Shils — one of the great Chicasociologists. He too has incurred the wratlradical students.George Stigler — another of the great *economists.Lorna Straus — assistant professoranatomy and now dean of undergraduatespopular teacher, curriculum reformer, aveteran of student-faculty committees.Lorado Taft — a famous sculptor vworked at Midway Studios. His “FountairTime” can be seen at the west end of tMidway.Anthony Turkevitch — chemistprofessor who helped NASA get informat .from the moon. He’s planning to do the sa<for Mars.Edward Turkington — director of studehousing. He’s the tall man who decuwhere you’re going to live.James Vice — assistant dean of studes -and dean of freshmen. He’s probably tbest friend of freshmen in the a 'ministration.Walter Walker — vice president hrplanning, associate professor in SSA, and Eresident master. He’s one of two black veeand the University’s chief negotiator wiblack students.Walter — His full name is Jeschke, bireveryone calls him Walter. He’s dean of INoyes and he’s been here forever. He >easily the least controversial figure *campus: everybody, but everybody likWalter.Charles Wegener — Another of the gre ,academic minds, now master of NCD. Lcareful when you talk to him, he can go <-forever.Karl Weintraub — history prof and guidirlight of W’estern Civ. His section is the mepropular class in the College. Good lucV.getting into it.Warner Wick — philosophy professor ardevoted administrator. He’s former deanstudents, and now master of the humanitiicollegiate division.John T Wilson — former dean of facultie.he’s now University provost and is in chargof the academic budget. Another very bu*man.Albert Wohlstetter — renown politic*scientist with considerable influence. Hedue back on campus this year, but don’t bton it.William Zachariasen — physics professoA famous scientist who enjoys teachirundergraduates.Thursday, September 30,1971 / The Chicago Maroon/accentaccent to1437 E. 53rd St.Ml 3-7400 FALLLAMP SALESEPTEMBER 29th -OCTOBER 16th"THE GRADUATE" DESKLAMP. ALL METAL COLUMNAND BASE. CHOICE OF BLACKOR BROWN. DUAL SOCKETFOR USE WITH TWO -100WATTBULBS. 12" DIAMETER WHITESTYRENE SHADE...REG. 15°°ON SALE 12”.10% OFF ALL OUR REGULAR LINEOF DESK WALL OR FLOOR LAMPS.ACCENT! SHOP INC.53RD ST AND BLACKSTONE (1437 E. 53)By the time Phil got through paying fortuition, late registration, student fees, books,and an outrageous deposit on his apartment,he didn’t have a whole lot left for a stereo.BSR McDonald makes the RTS-40A forpeople like Phil. It’s a complete AM/ FM/ MPXPhono component stereo system. The receiverI delivers an honest 50 watts and boastsexcellent sensitivity and separation specs.The turntable is our best-seller, and comescomplete with a matched base, tinted dustcover, and Shure magnetic cartridge. Thespeakers are true two-way sealed acousticsuspension, with amazing bass response.We invite you to see the RTS-40A at yournearest BSR McDonald dealer. If you think itsounds good on paper, wait’ll you hear it. BSR (USA) Ltd.Route 303, Blauvelt, N.Y. 10913Please send full-color catalog ofyour stereo component systemsM nmUAin and automatic turntables.MCUUnlALU I enclose no money whatsoever.III NameI| Semi-permanent addressCityState ZipBryn Mawr CollegeBOOK SALEFirst \1«*th«dist Church16.30 Himnan A\e.Evanston. IllinoisThursday. Sept. 3(1. 5-10 pmFriday October I. Illam-OpmSaturday. October 2. V-12 noonThou*ands of old and nett booksat an average of 30 cents each.A professionalABORTIONthat is safe,legal &inexpensivecan be set up on anoutpatient basis by callingThe Problem PregnancyEducational Service, Inc.215-722-536024 hours—7 daysfor professional, confidentialand caring help. - „ ••ANCHOR CAMERA1523 East 53rd St. PL 2-2228FAST QUALITY PROCESSINGv -9ASK FOR YOUR ,PROFIJ SHARING BONUS CARDSAVE 20%Term Paper Research"We Give Results" UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.Unlimited, Inc.Quality reference materialoriginal work, typing, and CLOSED MONDAYcopying. Thousands of pa¬pers on file. 684-3661Hours: 9-4, Monday-Friday407 South Dearborn Street FRASk PARI SISuite 790proprietorChicago, Illinois 60605(312) 922-0300 MI3-7400PAPER BACKSSPECIAL SALEUP TO 90% OFF!WHAT?WHY?WHEN?HOW? More than 4100 Harper & Row, Penguinand Shocken Paperbacks.Why not?12 Noon Friday October 1st, thru 9 pmSaturday October 9th.Sale books are 50c each with the purchaseof any one of our other 7200 titles at regu¬lar price.imjrpr? The BOOK CENTER (Naturally!)WnLliL. 5211 So. Harper CourtCourt Ml 3-: 900Short on ready cash?—ask us about our credit plan.Sunday N.Y. Times? -- Read The Personals28/ The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September 30,1971Helpful Guideto Fun Livingand Shoppingin Hyde ParkBy Judy AlsofromYou are now living in Alderman Leon Despres’ liberalfifth ward community Hyde Park. Its liberal ambiance hastranscended politics through the decades to touch all aspectsof its residents’ lives.Way back in the twenties Hyde Park was famed for its 57thstreet art colony which housed such notables at ClarenceDarrow Edgar Lee Masters and Carl Sandburg. Though thevestiges of that period may only seem to be in the 57th streetart fair held outdoors in June, we’re still a communityteeming with liberality and the big names which go with it--Dick Gregory was seen just the other day coming out of theUniversity National Bank on 55th Street.Of course, if walking the shady streets and alleys of HydePark soaking in the academic atmosphere does notsatisfactorily fill your free hours there are places to go ifyou’ll leave the safe confines of your room. Although ahardened veteran of about five days at UC said that all hecould see that was worthwhile to do was throwing stones atthe I.C. (Illinois Central) tracks, there is more.People who have been here longer than that “veteran” willtell you something different about the IC - that it is best usedto get you downtown Loop. If you are too lethargic to takeadvantage of downtown Chjcago, there are some easilyaccessible (walking distance from most student housing)shopping areas in the community.If you are not on a meal contract with the University, theURBAN RENEWAL: The scene is a familiar one inHyde Park 55TH STREET: Lonely, stark urbanismHyde Park Co-op at the New Hyde Park Shopping Center on55th St. and Lake Park is one of the most gigantic grocerystores this side of the Chicago River. It has every conceivablefood, dairy, gourmet, and sundry kitchen products, besidestoiletries, magazines, a check cashing privilege, and theopportunity to buy a share in this enormous concern. If youwant to avoid the chaos of almost all the professors and gradstudents who descend upon the Co-op on Saturdays, try Mr.G’s on 53rd street in the Kimbark Plaza shopping center.Short lines, reasonable prices, opened until two on Sundaymakes Mr. G’s a nice place to shop. Avoid if possible theCertified’s scattered about the city which are known to manyas “the goniffs,” which translates as rip-off in any language.Are your tastes more exotic? Try either Franklin’s FoodStore for Japanese grocery products, or the Health FoodStore. Both are on 53rd street between Kimbark and Ken¬wood and be warned that both are expensive (and also thatthe Health food store does not have real home grown flour).If you imbibe you can get liquor from a wide selection atthe Kibark Liquors in the Kimbark Plaza, and you can get iteasily at Walgreens in the Hyde Park shopping center. To topoff any appetite try one of the 32 fabulous (really) flavors ofice cream at Baskin-Robbins in Harper Court at 53rd andHarper. And if you dig spending money, the most expensiveice cream in the world ($1.09 a pint) can be found at Sarnat’sdrugstore on 57th and Backstone. It is hand packed Valas iceNATURE: The Point at 57th St. cream and the brandied blackberry is really delicious.Having provided yourself with sustenance, you’ll raturallywant, yes-food for thought.There are two movie theaters in Hyde Park, calledsuprisingly The Hyde Park I and the Hyde Park II which aremore expensive than the weekly campus films and as ex¬pensive as those downtown.If you do have a phobia about money (as in wanting to keepit) remember that the University Bookstore is not the onlybookstore in the community. Woodworths on 57th east ofKimbark and Stavers on that corner, The Booknook in theHyde Park Shopping Center, and the Book Center in HarperCourt all sell new books. The Student Co-op in the basementof Reynolds buys and sells used books as does Powell’s andO’Gara’s both at 57th and Harper. The best deal’s at ReidMicheners’ opened only in the evenings, at 53rd and Kim¬bark. For your leisure time reading pick up a Sunday NewYork Times or Comix at Bob’s newstand on 51st and LakePark.For your aural pleasure you can get records at the StudentCo-op for reasonable prices, or at Loew’s at 57th andBlackstone for decent prices when they have a sale. There’s ashop which sells musical instruments in Harper Court-TheFret Shop: and for really good buys try Life Rhythms at 1701east 55th.Trying to fix up your room? For candles, posters,wallhangings and general paraphernalia shop at either thePractical Tiger or Stix and Stones, both in Harper Court. Ifyou have a large budget, Accent on 53rd street has unusuallycreative expensive items. For prints and etchings you can goto the Waller gallery and the Hyde Park Art Center, both on53rd and near Blackstone, or the Harper Galleries in HarperYou can buy picture hingings at the hardware store in theKimbark plaza. And if you simply want to look, on campus toto either the Bergman Gallery on the fourth floor of Cobb, orthe Renaissance gallery in Goodspeed hall on the first floor.Want to outfit your body? Mostly avoid the clothing storesin Hyde Park as rip-offs; however, Radical Rags on 53rdbetween Dorchester and Kenwood is good for army-navysurplus and some fur coats at super cheap prices ($15 pluswhatever you pay for de-lousing). There is a jeans shop on53rd just past the IC tracks and one in Harper Court but thecheapest buys are at Goldblatt’s downtown. There is also anexpensive custom-made sandal shop in Harper Court. If youhave the time and talent, you can buy fabric and sundries atthe Sewing Circle on 53rd past the IC.Now that you are dressed and fed and getting into the rootsof Hyde Park get yourself a new or used bicycle at Ace CycleShop at 55th and Cornell (or one at the shop across the streetwhich I don’t know the name of because I never used it) andpedal off the see the duck pond behind the Museum of Scienceand Industry on 57th street. If you go farther south you’lleventually wind up at the yacht club and some rarely usedtennis courts.Or. 58th and Woodlawn you may be able to get a tour of theRobie House (the home of the Adlai Stevenson Institute ofInternational Studies). It is Frank Lloyd Wright’s innovativeprairie house of early twentieth century vintage. Going westto the Midway you can usually find on the Midway a myriadof frisbee games and footballs being tossed. In the winter it isflooded over and you can ice skate there for free. Be sure andsee the concrete Cadillac at the Loredo Taft Art Studio at 61stand Ellis. It’s almost as much fun to play on as Henry Moore’sstatue dedicated to the first atomic fission reaction on theoriginal site at which it took place at 56th street and Ellis.Many would concur, however, that the Point, at 55th on theLake and its surrounding area is among the best relaxationon eyes and mind in Hyde Park. The Lake can be very pic¬turesque, and there are bicycle paths winding around it forabout 5 or 6 miles. The Nike missies which used to be housedthere have been moved, but that’s a plus for Hyde Park.And if you haven’t found any other plusses in Hyde Park toinduce you out of your room this winter, don’t forget, thereare always the IC tracks, at which to throw stonesThursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago Maroon/29i L r.Vij'u.f-' oy*oirO-.wT 3L31 Movies for $6!DOC FILMS BEGINS ITS FALL SEASON...Peter Brook'sTHE BEGGAR'S OPERAfrom the director of MARAT/SADE, with Laurence OlivierTuesday, October 5th 7:15 & 9:30andFrancois Truffaut'sTHE WILD CHILDFriday, October 8 7:15 & 9:30COMING:THE KNACK, VAMPYR, L'AVVENTURA, FREAKS,LONESOME COWBOYS, METROPOLIS, THE BOYSIN THE BAND, LA GRANDE ILLUSION, MY FAIRLADY, THE BIRDS, THE CIRCUS, DIARY OF AMAD HOUSEWIFE... and many, many moreBuy your series DOC tickets before any showHYDE PARK SUPER MART1346 E. 53rdBACK TO SCHOOL SALE‘Welcome to all Students’"Yogurt . . . 5.29Cottuge Cheese .39Vi & Vi Cream .29Ground Beef .59 Lb.Whole Chicken 33 Lb.Porter House Steak 1.49 LbItalian Sausage 69 LbCentrella Bread .19Pepsi Cola (8 Bottles-16 Oz.) . . . . 79Kotex . . . Reg. . . . save 40 1.19Wanzer Ice Cream 4 Pts 1.00Bananas 10Lb.Peaches 4 Lb 1.00Apples 4 Lb 1.00BEST QUALITY-LOW, LOW PRICESDaily 9 AM-7PMSunday 9AM-2PMFREE! i! NAMEWin a Knife & Scissors Sharpener I1 iRegister your name, j ADDRESSaddress, and phone number at jI PHONE!My^jr SU C* rjj-f30/ The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September 30,1971Three years ago, University of Chicago freshmen came toa campus seething with political activity. But this year’sclass may well find it quieter than their old high school.Yes the days of mass dissension in the form of sit-ins andstrikes seem to be over. A wave of calm and indifference hasset in, and left are but a few dejected activists and manyrelieved administrators.To be sure, a sudden lack of interest in politics hasemerged at campuses everywhere, as the news media keepstelling us. But here that indifference has taken on such apervasive character that it is no longer a phenomenon butsomething of a trademark. If Berkeley and Wisconsin arehotbeds of radicalism, Chicago might be called a hotbed ofapathy.The apathy is not based on ignorance or on principle, but ona very profound cynicism. Most students hold liberal toradical views on almost every national and local issue, anddon’t hesitate to voice them But persuading them that somegood may come from their involvement in a particular causeis another matter; the experience of the past few years hastaught them better. The result is a lot of arm-chair radicalsand little evidence of activity.It wasn't always so quiet. Chicago had its share of studentrebellion during the turbulent 1960’s. Students staged sit-insin both 1966 and 1967 to protest the University’s ranking ofmale students for the Selective Service System, which thenbased deferments on class rank (the University eventuallyagreed to stop the practice;.Student protest also led the University to sever its tieswith the allegedly imperialistic Institute for Defense Analysis(IDA). Black students held their own sit-in in May, 1968, todemand a black admissions quota and an all-biack dor¬mitory.The ciimax came on .January 31, 1969, when some 400students took over the administration building to protest thefiring of Marlene Dixon, a sociologist with Marxist views. ButChicago’s greatest sit-in soon fizzled. University PresidentEdward Levi refused to negotiate with the demonstrators butcarefully refrained from sending in .police to evict themDemands issued from the ad building grew increasinglyradical and lost the support of the liberal student majority.The most committed demonstrators waited two weeks, andthen saw no alternative but to leave the building.Severe disciplinary action followed immediately: 42participants .n 4he sit-in were expelled and 81 weresuspended, over Use oppo- fton of ;r>- ny students and facultyThe sit-in's lallure and consequent <?> cnanged the tone ofcampus politics Although many of the di n ipiined studentsreceived lighter sentences on appeal and returned the By Paul BernsteinCAMBODIA PROTEST; Students demonstrate on May 4,1970.following fall, their enthusiasm and sense of purpose weregone. Their mood was instead one of passive bitterness, andmost of the school year went by without any significant ac¬tions or burning causes.Finally, in May, 1970, American entry into Cambodiasparked protest here as it did at so many other campusesBut a class boycott soon fell apart because of confusion overits purpose. Most students took advantage of an easier gradingpolicy without getting involved in any of a wide range ofpossible activities. One significant development did occur:the University accepted a proposal for a 10-day recess in thefall to enable students to participate in election campaigns.The 1970-71 school year was still more uneventful As ex¬pected. only a small group of students chose to campaignduring the recess Another political, event of sorts was astudent referendum on the People's Vietnam Peace Treatyand related issues. The majority of voters could not acceptthe radical demands of the referendum's organizers, andmost of its points were soundly defeated.Why the sudden advent of relative peace and quiet after,years of radical activity0 For one thing the great political organizers of the past are gone, most of them expelled afterthe sit-in. These students were artists at mobilization of thecampus, determined to find the issues that would bring thema broad following. Today’s activists are not only fewer butmore dogmatic and divided, less willing to put pragmaticsabove personal ideology. It is hard to imagine them sittingdown and planning as major an event as a sit-in. which isapproximately what happened two and a half years ago.Also gone-and this may be still more important-is themystique that used to surround radical acts. When politicalmarches and rallies were the new trend and memories ofColumbia or the 1968 Democratic convention were still fresh,the impulse was strong to create the same excitement atone's own school. By now. however, there is nothing veryexciting about the idea of a peace demonstration or a classstrike: they have been all too frequent, and for the most partfutile. And as political awareness filters down to the highschool level, more and more students have done their shareof demonstrating and organizing before they attend college.Another source of apathy is the University's attitudetowards radical activity, which has become increasinglyobxious in recent years. While Chicago has proudly sup-CHAIRS .GIFTWARE. LAMPSFALL SALESEPT. 29th THRU OCT. 16thACCENT SHOP INC.1437 E. 53RD. ST COR. 8LACKSTONEM! 3-7400 I THE WALLER GALLERY>j WELCOMES STUDENTS & FACULTYAn exciting experience. Posters ga¬lore, Fine original graphics, andCustom framing at prices you canafford.FOLDING CH AIR,WALNUT FRAME, WOVENHEMP 8ACK 8, SEAT COM¬FORTABLE, DURABLE!REG. 3 1.00...ON SALE27.95 eachTWO FOR49.95 53G0 South Blackstone AvenueDO 3-7446CRAFT GALLERY1552 E. 53rd (Under the I.C.)Pipes bv CtelliniImports Candles by Designers. Inc SAINT MARGARET'SCHURCHThe Episcopal Church ofSouth Shore2555 East 73rd St., at Coles Ave(1 block west of So. Shore Dr.)The Rev. Albert F. Peters, RectorSERVICE SCHEDULESUNDAY9:00 a.m. Family Mass& Church Schoolj Photographs b\ Kl.\ LOYFOct. I-Oct. 15» r aHUMi nuisuttv, 6tpit*..iuei m>, 1971/ i ht? Cbicago MdTOCin/31l l :00 a.m. Low Massand SermonWEDNESDAY 6 p.m. MassFRIDAY 9.30 a.m Mass,Healing ServiceELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERSV620 E. 53rd St2|8 2900UC Politics: The Action Is OverPoliticsported the right of its students and faculty to dissent, it hasnot tolerated forms of dissent which it considers disruptive orcoercive., The discipline for participants in the sit-in is but oneexample of this: 57 students were suspended after the secondanti-draft demonstration; participants in the black sit-inwere threatened with suspension if they did not leave by acertain hour (they did); and 13 students were suspended inNovember, 1969, after they blocked the doors of a cafeteriafor an afternoon demanding free meals for its employees.Nor has the University shown a willingness to endorsepartisan causes. It has consistently refused to cancel classesfor Vietnam moratoria, for example, or to vote its stock infavor of corporation reform causes, always arguing that suchactions would violate the principle of a university’s in¬stitutional neutrality.Both of these attitudes have convinced many activists thatthey are dealing with an immovable object and havediscouraged their efforts. The alternative has been to try toshow that the University is hypocritical in calling itselfneutral, but that familiar argument has failed for want of astrong issue.Just who are the politically active on campus at present?Although they belong to a host of different groups, all ofwhich are hypersensitive about being lumped with one AD BUILDING DEMONSTRATION: demonstratorsprotest housing shortage in 1968. another, they fall more or less into three general categories.On the far left is a small group of hard-core radicals,members of SDS or the Progressive Labor Party (PLP). Nolonger the potent force on campus that it was three yearsago, SDS now concentrates exclusively on building analliance with workers. Its main target last year wereUniversity employment practices, particularly iay-offs ofstaff employees.Next is a larger, more diverse group of “radiclibs,” mostof whom favor some form of socialism but have yet to give upon electoral politics. Some of them joined the Movement for aNew Congress to campaign for peace candidates last year.Others have organized Vietnam moratoria or helped bringprominent anti-war spokesmen to campus. As a general rule,they are more oriented towards national issues than SDS andPLP. and less oriented towards fighting the University.Many of them will take part in next year's presidentialprimary campaigns.Finally, the last two years have seen the growth of con¬servative and moderate forces on campus. Students forCapitalism and Freedom (SCAF) argues the case forlibertarianism. The Campus Coalition exists to defend theconcepts of academic freedom against the values and actionsof the campus New Left. Jt campaigned strongly against thePeople’s Peace Treaty referendum last year.All of these groups have at least one thing in common: theyare fighting a losing battle. SDS and PLP alienate moststudents by their tactics or the narrow issues they focus on.The radiclib group’s views are similar to those of the studentmajority, but their crusades are too familiar to generatemuch enthusiasm. As for the conservatives, they have noradical threats to fight but too many liberal minds to change.Yet it would be very wrong to suggest that politics aredisappearing completely from the campus scene. If massrallies and protests are on the way out. tiiere is still intensepolitical life on a smaller scale, both at the University and inthe Hyde Park community.This constant activity is the form of women’s lib and gaylib rap sessions, ecology groups, anti-draft centers, abortioncounseling, health reform organizations, tenant unions, etc.Behind the widespread apathy on major issues is an interestin very specialized causes. It may well be that more newmovements get started in Hyde Park-a neighborhood thatwill tolerate almost anvthing--than in any other community.This kind of involvement attracts only a dedicated minorityof students and seldom makes news headlines, but it isnonetheless an important feature of University life.We have reached, then, a curious stage of radical apathyHow long will it last" Some campus trends are short-lived,but there are no signs that this is one of them. Each newfreshman class seems less interested in political in¬volvement, and more concerned about the mundane thingslike rising University costs, financial aid, the quality ofstudent activities. For better or for worse, the next stage justmight be normalcy.COBBEXTERMINATING ANGELNOVEMBER 2DECEMBER 5DECEMBER 11 LAW SCHOOLCOBBA MAN FOR ALL SEASONSMIDNIGHT COWBOY| CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN FILMS| AUTUMN QUARTER SCHEDULE )\<\ OCTOBER 6 ULYSSES COBB) OCTOBER 9 GIMME SHELTER MANDEL s| OCTOBER 17 THE RISE OF LOUIS XIV COBB jI OCTOBER 23 MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM COBB jj OCTOBER 30 WILD STRAWBERRIES COBB1 NOVEMBER 7 IKIRU COBB }* NOVEMBER 13 RIDER ON THE RAIN COBB 11 NOVEMBER 14 FIREMAN'S BALL COBB (iNOVEMBER 21 BEFORE THE REVOLUTION COBB )32/ The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September 3U, 1971Look What Opened Near CampusWhile You Were On VacationA Great Selection of fabrics,ribbons, trims, buttons, and allthe patterns you need to sew-upa terrific wardrobe that’sall your own.We also have smashing homespuns,burlaps, cottons, and batiks fordecorating walls and windows.Come See UsOpen Mon-Sat 10:30 - 6:30Sun 12:00-5:001604 EAST 53rd STREETJUST EAST OF THE I.C.363-5237 NOW...ENJOYLAKE SHORE DRIVELIVING.SOUTHLAKE SHORE DRIVECHICAGO BEACH TOWERSOutstanding Luxury ValueIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCYENJOY the locationLakefront Hyde Park — fineestablished community withexcellent cultural and educationalfacilities.ENJOY special featuresWall-to-wall windows. Unobstructedlake and skyline views. Individually-controlled central heating and air-conditioning. Central dust filtration.Electric kitchens. Self-cleaningovens. Dishwashers.ENJOY the funBoating, sailing, bicycling at yourdoorstep. Two tennis courts.Beautiful recreation decks.ENJOY the service24-hour doorman. Commissary.Thorough security. Indoor parking.Receiving room.Limited numberfurnished ExecutiveApartments available.telephone < 3 1 2 > 233 5700J RtUTO RADIO • AIR CONDITIONINGSPtEDOMETLR • BURGLAR ALARMSSTEREO SYSTEMS • STEREO TAPESR540 SOUTH ASHL AND AVE.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60620KATSA&OS p u a r m a (y.mc• Complete Prescription Needs• Prompt Delivery Service1521 E. 53rd ST. Phone 288-3700 THE 1925 SILENT HORROR FILM CLASSICLon Chaney, Sr.,"THE PHANTOMOF THE OPERA"Featuring f" .. STAN KANNplaying the Mighty Wurli’tier OrganFRIDAY, OCT. 1 8:30 PMALL SEATS S3.50 (Bloc Seating Avail.)Tickets now at TICKETRON Dial T UC-K-E-T SAD APflil 1106 W. LAWRENCEAll All UN LO 1-9500 SEE OURDESIGNERMODELSDaily 10 A.M. to 6 P.MSTUDIOS1, 2 or 3 BedroomsBedroom Apartmentsfrom $2404 Bedroom»Thursday, September 30,1971 / The Chicago Maroon/ 31• . i iTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS BUS SERVICEEFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 20, 1971Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS.” Upon operate as stated below, Monday through Friday, except on officialsignal from a patron, buses will stop to take on or discharge University holidays. Schedules are subject to change without notice,passenqers at any intersection or University Building. Buses willWHO MAY RIDEBecause of legal restrictions, use of this trans¬portation service is limited to members of theUniversity faculty, staff, and students. Passen¬gers will be admitted to the vehicle uponsurrendering a ticket to the driver except onthe "C" Bus where University identificationmust be presented. The driver will not bepermitted to accept cash or to sell tickets.Identification as a student, faculty member, oremployee will be required when purchasingtickets. One-ride tickets at 15 cents each and Monthly Commutation tickets at $4.50each for the "N" & "E" routes and at 25cents each ride or Monthly Commutation rateof $7.50 each for the "S" route are soldat the following Locations:Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E.59th St.)University Bookstore (5750 Ellis Avenue)Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th St.)International House, Information Desk (1414ROUTES AND SCHEDULES E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 Uni¬versity Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E.60th St.)Maps and Schedules available at the abovelocations.(NO refunds on lost or unused commutationtickets. "S" route tickets are accepted onall routes).NOTE: The "C" Combined Evening Route Service Is Free.(E) EAST-WEST-BROADVIEW(15 cent tickets)Monday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip)Upon signal from patron, Buses will stop to take ori or dischargepassengers at any intersection or University Building on the route.ROUTEStarting at 59th and Stony, bus proceeds West on 59th to Cot¬tage Grove,- North to 57th; East to Stony Island; North to 56th;West to Lake Park; North to 55th; East to Cornell; North to E.Hyde Park Blvd.; East to S. Hyde Park Blvd.; South to 57thDrive; S. W. to 57th & Stony; South on Stony to 59th St., theStarting Point.SCHEDULEAM. & PM. runs start at 59th & StonyA.M.E-l E-26:15 7:45 - 7:306:45 8:15 - 8.007:15 8:45 7:00 8:30Bus proceeds to 59th & Ellis after last round trip.P.M.E-4(lues. Only) 4:00(Tues. Only) 4:305:005:30E-31:251:552:252:553:25 4:154:455:15Last trip ends at 59th & Stony* These runs not made during interim periods, December 20ththrough January 3rd and March 20th through March 26th. (N) NORTH-SOUTH(15 cent tickets)Monday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under normal driving condi¬tions. Stops at all intersections upon signal from patron.)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 48th and Greenwood, proceeds East on48th to Dorchester; South on Dorchester to 53rd; East on 53rdto Harper; South on Harper to 54th Place,- West on 54th Placeto Dorchester; South on Dorchester to 56th St.; East on 56thto Lake Park; South on Lake Park to 57th St.; West on 57thto Dorchester; South to 58th; West to Kimbark; South to 59th& Kimbark (The P.M. Starting Point), then West on 59th toEllis; South on Ellis to 60th; East on 60th to Woodiawn; Northon Woodlcwn to West-bound Midway Drive,- West to Ellis,- Northto 57th; East to University; North to E. Hyde Park Blvd.; East toWoodiawn,- North to 49th; West to Greenwood; and North to 48thSt., the A.M. Starting Point.NOTE: P.M. Buses start at 59th and Kimbark but run the sameroute. SCHEDULEA.M.Starts at 48th & GreenwoodN-l7:20 8:507:50 9:208:20Last trip ends at 57th & UniversityStarts at 59th & Kimbark P.M.N-411:55* 1:30* 3:20* 5:0512:25* 2:05* 4:05 5:3512:55* 2:35* 4:35 N-27:518:21N-5 8:512.36i 3:21’4:064:36 5:06Last trip ends at 57th & Dorchester* These runs not made during interim periods, December 20ththrough J anuary 3rd and March 20th through March 26th.(C) COMBINED EVENINGROUTE(7 days per week except on University Holidays)NOTE: This service is free to University of Chicago Students,Faculty and Staff upon presentation of University identification.(Approximately 45 to 60 minutes round trip under normal drivingconditions per schedule. Stops at all intersections upon signalfrom patron)ROUTEStarting at 59th and Dorchester, bus proceeds West on 59th toCottage Grove; South on Cottage Grove to 60th; East on 60th toWoodiawn,- North on Woodiawn to Westbound Midway Drive; Westto Ellis; North to 57th; East to University,- North to 53rd; West toGreenwood; South to 55th; West to Ingleside; North to Hyde ParkBlvd.; East to Dorchester; South to 53rd; East to Harper; Southto 54th Place,- West to Dorchester,- South to 55th; East to HydePark Blvd.; Sou+h to 56th St.; West to Lake Park; South to 57th;West to Dorchester; South to 59th & Dorchester, the Starting Point.SCHEDULEStarts at 59th and Dorchester5:00 (Saturday Only) 9:156:00 10:006:45 11:007:30 12:008:30Last trip ends at 57th and Dorchester about 12:45 A.MSpecific Pick up Stops at:59th & KimbarkIda NoyesHarper Library59th & Ellis60th & Ellis Law School57th & EllisRegenstein LibraryReynolds ClubBoucher Hall (S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTH CAMPUS(25 cent tickets)Monday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 60 minutes round trip under normal driving condi¬tions. Stops at all intersections upon signal from patron)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery and proceeds South onJeffery to 76th Street; East on 76th Street to Coles Avenue,-North West on Coles to 73rd Street; West on 73rd Street toLuella Avenue; North on Luella through 71st St. onto Crandon,then North on Crandon to 68th Street; West on 68th Street toStony Island; North on Stony Island through Jackson Park Driveto 59th and Stony Island Ave.; (the P.M. STARTING POINT),then West on 59th St.; to University Ave.; North on Universityto 57th St.,- West on 57th St. to Ellis Ave.; South on Ellis Ave.to 60th St.; Fast on 60th Street to Stony Island; South on Stony to63rd St., the Elevcted Station,- East on 63rd through JacksonPark to 67th & Jeffery, the A.M. Starting Point.Further information rrrav be obto ied from tbr -’unt Department, */60 cj- -»H. b AM. Starts at 67th & JefferyS-l SCHEDULEA.M.S 2 S36:10 8:10 6:40 8:40 6:557:10 7:40 7:55Last trip ends at 60th & StonyPM. Starts at 59th & Stony P.M.S-4 55 5-61:25* (Tues. Only) 4:30 5:102:25 5 30 3:15" 6:103:25 4.10Last trip ends at 68th & StonyThese runs not made aur!na interim period-. Deedthrough January ?rd a'r.d Menrch ?0rh through < n h.r A Hm-ster. 753-308? t A r 'irpt<0ri *!.-v ’ 8:555:0534/ The Chicago Mar? Hi. 1-bit.'A Guide to Eating Out in Hyde PariThere are many things you simply cannot do in Hyde Park.One of them is eating a wide variety of great meals. HydePark might have an unlimited supply of dry cleaners andbars, but there is a dearth of eating establishments worthmentioning. Over the past few years we’ve been to every oneof Hyde Park’s eateries, often accompanied by a bottle ofAlka Seltzer, and after these long hard years of experience,indigestion and constipation, we are ready to give our annualreport, complete with star ratings of zero to four. Ready?Bon appetit!CAMPUSC-Shop, Reynolds Club; Even though it was remodeled lastyear, the C-Shop is still no joy. Food cooked there has atendency to “back up on you” as one employee aptly put it.Fruit okay. Prices too high. 1/ 2*Hutch Commons, Reynolds Club; More variety than the C-Shop’s burger and fry, but still only barely palatable. StuffyOxford atmosphere, prices too high. *Billings Hospital Cafeteria, Hospital basement; Not badfor a cafeteria and the prices are reasonable. Atmosphere areal zero but it still gets *1/ 2.Woodward Court Cafeteria, 5825 Woodlawn; Dorm food forsale at high prices. Need we say more? 1/ 2*CTS Cafeteria, 5757 University; Food good butoutrageously overpriced. Be careful or you may discussKant’s theory on religion over baked salmon. *International House Cafeteria, 59th and Blackstone;Another cafeteria. *CCE Cafetaria, 60th and Kenwood; Better than averagefood but $1.25 for a lousy hamburger? C’mon! *Bandersnatch, Ida Noyes, first floor; THE hang-out,decorated in early U-High bopper. Real grease. Sometimeson the food. *Nonesuch, Fourth floor Wieboldt; The best coffee shop withyogurt, pastries, sandwiches and the best coffee. Alsofriendly. Also cheap. Also pretty. ***1/ 2Burning Shame, Third floor mezzanine, Harper; Smallerthan Nonesuch, but same food. **1/ 2Mandala. Cobb basement; Part your way through thesmoke, kick the dogs away from your doughnut, and just tryto find the counter. Terrible coffee, no selection of rolls andthey still run out early. You’llinhabit it though, no matterwhat anyone says. 1/ 2*Judd Coffee Shop, Judd hall; Pleasant surroundings,decent coffee and rolls. ***Blue Gargoyle, 5655 University; Cheap good food for lunch,chili sometimes. Friendly and relaxed, and you can eveneat in the church itself. ***Pierce Tower SnaCk Bar, Pierce basement; Nothing to BAUMY'S: Overpriced and indigestible. brag about but has ice cream delights. *Hot Dog Man, In front of bookstore, Oriental Institute.Regenstein: When he’s not being arrested, the best hot don campus with the works, except the $50 special. 35 centsbecause of lousy decor.Bookstore, 58th and Ellis; Stale sandwiches, mediofood, but they do have kosher sandwiches, bubelah. *Soc Sci Tea, Second floor social sciences; A coffee sinservice with a smile. *1/ 2OFF CAMPUSAhmad’s, 57 east of Blackstone; Persian cuisine, grcutcream sundaes including one with almond sauce and evreasonable prices. Dull atmosphere. **Baumy’s, 57th and Kenwood; Food incredibly overpric*Grilled cheese for $1.10? Avoid the coffee — it’s a grea ctfor the runs. Open late. 1/ 2*Buiko and Morgan’s, 57th and Cottage, 53rd and Harp*Grocery stores open til midnight. Great for that late snack.Cafe Enrico, 53rd and Blackstone; A lot to eat, with a ouftable; good veal on occasion. Don’t go on weekends linkyou like live, loud entertainment (?) for an extra 50 cent:head. ***Chances R, Harper Court; Greasy hamburgers wpeanut shells in them unless you’re careful when you thrthem on the floor. A lot of beer, and they card carefullyCornell Lounge, 53rd and Cornell; Good food, large mereasonable prices but frequented by drunk divorcees. **l •Court House, Harper Court; Hyde Park’s only clairrgustatory fame. Tremendous Sunday brunch which ifor all the food you get. Also, try it after 10 p.m. for a silate-night menu but still great service and good. Beef fora speciality. Reasonable wine list. Prices are a bit high!student budgets. THE BEST. ****Deli-Dali, 51st and Lake Park , Good though overpricedfood with some of Hyde Park’s best fresh baked goodstake out. Avoid Saturday noon time when all the Yidrmamas are filling up on bagels, lox and chive cheese. *Eagle, 53rd and Blackstone; Small selection of goodHamburgers and sandwiches only. Atmospherenostalgic. Service deliberately slow, so be forewarn*good place for casual drinking. Tom Wolfe approves.Effendi, 53rd and Lake Park; Turkish food atop the lbuilding with a phenomenal view. Also a bit out of the tystudent’s price range, but a Sunday champagne bruncvdelicious treat. Choban salad is a specialty that we remend. ***1/ 2 normally, **** for brunchFar East Kitchen, 53rd and Hyde Park; Ordinary Chfood. Why did they close the Mad Hatter? *1/ 2Gold City Inn, 53rd and Harper; Best Chinese food no.the midway. Ask about daily specialities, and dishes orwe KNOW YOU NEED THOSEFALL COURSE BOOKSSo Come to Us FirstWhat We've Got IsVi PRICEHurry on in, our supply is limited,but we've got lots of Western Civ.,Soc. Sci., Hum., etc.STUDENT CO-OPin Reynolds Club Basement5706 S. UniversityToday 9:30-8:30, Friday 9:30-7:00, Saturday 11:00-5:00Next week 9:30-8:30 Monday thru Thursday, 9:30-6:00Friday, Saturday 1 1:00-4:00.We are also buying used books—Buyers will be available M-W-F 1:00-5:00, T-T 9:30-12:30Or leave books for overnight service.See Us At Student Activities NightThursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago MarotOFFICE OF SERVICE OPPORTUNITY"Community Involvement is Our Bag"We, the community of The University of Chicago, have bothan obligation and an opportunity to aid the Chicago community.On one hand, it is very difficult for us to comprehendthe problems which exist in less privileged segments of oursociety.Yet, on the other hand, we are extremely aware of thevalue of a basic education and of the security which springsfrom knowing that most of our goals are within our grasp.Most of us were born into this "privileged class;" that is,most of what we now enjoy was given to us at birth. We onlyhad to depend on our own potentials to become the individualsthat we are now.What it all adds up to is we got a heck of a lot of"breaks." There are many people in this world today who havethe same, if not more, potential but did not get the same"breaks." The result is that this "unit" which we call societyhas many divisions.Moreover, as privileged members of this social "unit" wemust assume our share of the duties with regard to closing thenow existing gaps.Hence, our ultimate objective is to do what little we canto make opportunities more plausible and real to people of theculturally separated community.The thought here is not to pull anyone out of the mire, butto strengthen the already existing means. O.S.O. supplies us withthe opportunity to fulfill our obligations to our fellow man.Another effect of our program is to overcome our owncultural separation; to increase our understanding of an un¬familiar society.We should always remember the VISTA adage, "If you'renot a part of the solution, then you're part of the problem."Office of Service OpportunityThe University of ChicagoIda Noyes HailNoyes Room, Right over the BandersnatchHours: 10:00-12:00 and 1:00-5:00Ext. 3293 or 3294NICKY'S PIZZAAND RESTAURANT"ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THEUNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Oven5 p.m. until closing1208 EAST 53RD STREETWhether you relax in the friendly atmosphere ot our rest-aurann or in the comfort of yor own home, you'll find thefolks at Nicky's eager to serve you with a pizza that is ai rmet's delight and still...the "Crown Delicacy of Hyde Park."Drop, by or give us a call and see for yourself. We appreciateyour patronage.PHONE FAIRFAX 4-5340OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK- HOURS 11:00 A.M. TO 2:00 A.M.SUNDAYS - 12 NOON TO 2 A.M.FREE DELIVERY TO STUDENT HOUSINGIiViclet;’ s October Special jFree RC-Nehi Colaiwith purchase Nicky’s famous pizza jI6 cans with large pizza j2 cans with medium pizza1 can with small pizza36/1 he Chicago Maroon /Thursday, September 30,1971 A NOTE ABOUT BOOKS AND BOOKSHOPSYOU CAN:SAVE 50% On Paperbacks and at least 40% on Hardbacks.SAVE 75% By Reselling your books to us at a Guaranteed 25%SELECT from 10,000 paperback titles & 5000 Hardbacks,— to which are added daily 200 new titles.TEXTBOOKS and Text Related Materials at the Same Discounts.OPEN 9 AM til 11 PM Everyday, on 57th & Harper, near the1C Tracks,POWELLS' BOOKSHOP1503 East 57th Street955-7780There is an old saying that advises:“It's better to light a candle than tocurse the darkness."Candles...hand reds of them-overtwenty-five sizes and overone hundred color combinations.Wrought-iron candle holders f rom Sewden,wood holders, hanging holders...As well as our posters, pillows,chairs, glassware, pottery,kitchen gadgets, games, mugs...from all of us at Cooley'sSherlee41K i mJanetJoeLizzi jRestaurantsprepared in advance. Decor is far from Canton however,centering closer to rumpus-room modern. ***1/ 2Harold’s Chicken Shack, 53rd and Kenwood; Not yourtvpical student hang-out. Chicken for carry-out. ColonelSanders, where are you when we really need you? 1/2*House of Eng, Expensive Chinese food with a view. Just tryto keep your mind on the food. **1/ 2House of Tiki, 53rd and Cornell; Hyde Park’s bestwatering-hole if all you want to do is get sloshed. Great fish ’nchips too. Try a Singapore Sling. It’ll fix you up fine. If thereat night, ask for Carol, Hyde Park’s finest waitress. ***1/ 2Hyde Park Coffee Shop, 53rd and Hyde Park; Skokie livesin Hyde Park. See plastic people; see dull decor, see ordinaryfood. Open 24 hours a day. *Jackson Inn, 55th and the IC; Dull Chinese. Don’t orderanything that you can’t pronounce. *Jane Lee, 53rd and Kimbark; A bit better than JacksonInn. Also to carry out. *1/ 2Jimmy’s, 55th and Woodlawn; See every student you knowget drunk and fall under the table. Terrific saloon at¬mosphere complete with flying bodies. Not exactly the placeto go to sit and think. Good grill food. They check ID’s, andUC ID is not good enough. **** COURT HOUSE: Hyde Park's best.Kim Thomas, 53rd and Blackstone; A drug store counter.Blah!!! *La Russo, 53rd and Cornell; Hyde Park’s most underratedrestaurant serving good Italian food (chicken Marsala ourfavorite) with pleasing red-checked table cloth atmosphere.Not too expensive. Make sure you get the roquefort dressing.***1/ 2Lung Hing, 51st and Blackstone; Hyde Park’s newestChinese eatery and among its most expensive. Who neededit? Avoid pressed duck which is often cold. **Medici, 57th and Harper; Currently being remodeled butopening soon. Hamburger haven with a coffee shop at¬mosphere like you always dreamed you’d find. Wood, burlapand espresso. ***1/ 2 Mondo Mia, 51st and Harper; Substantial Italian food thatis just a bit too bland. Good garlic bread and big sodas. ***Morry’s, 55th and the IC; Take-out of the best lunchbargains in the city. Hot dog with everything and fries for 49cents, big sandwiches for less than a dollar. We cannotrecommend Morry’s highly enough. It is exactly what thedoctor ordered. ****Mortons, 56th and South Shores Overpriced but good. Idealfor graduation weekends if your parents are too cheap totake you to the Bakery. Slow service. ***Mr. Pizza, 51st and Blackstone; Not so hot, pi.7za to go. *£■Nicky’s, 53rd and Woodlawn; A joint, but fun. Great specialgarlic bread, but pizza is only so-so. A real trip. **1/ 2Pizza Platter, 53rd and Harper; See Mr. Pizza.Ribs and Bibs, 53rd and Dorchester; Opinions vary. Theydo deliver and they aren’t a lousy pizza joint, so that’s onepoint in their favor. As for the food, it’s better than nothingbut not as good as you could make yourself. Don’t inhale. **Staion JBD, 56th and South Shore; Once Hyde Park’s bestand still near the top of the heap. Fish and steak. Newquarters. ***Surf and Surrey, 50th and Chicago Beach; Out of the wayand maybe okay for Mumsy and Popsy when they come tovisit baby. If you get up for breakfast, they are open. **1/ 2Tai Sam Yon, Kimbark and 63rd; Finest Cantonese food inthe city. So many delicacies we can’t begin to list them, butwe are partial to sweet and sour pork and shrimp in lobstersauce. In that neighborhood, it is advisable to drive or go inlarge groups. ****Tannenbaum’s, 55th and Cornell; Best drugstore counter inHyde Park with good eg£s and orange juice. Check out themagazine rack for erotic fantasy time. **1/ 2The Dove, 57th and Kimbark; Varies from day to day.Some reports indicate good pancakes, others seem to thinkdinners are poor. It’s new, so try it yourself. **Unique, 53rd and Harper; An interesting note: mediumsodas are bigger than large ones. The Production is an in¬teresting dish. Unique’s is a restaurant-deli, but the best foodis not of the kosher variety. **1/ 2Valois, 53rd and Harper; Hyde Park’s bowery crowd butcheap nonetheless. Food plain but substantial. Great forthose on a limited budget. **Wah Hing, 53rd and Kenwood; Chinese take-out. **Walgreen’s, Hyde Park Shopping Center; Terrific whenthey’ve got student bargain dinners. Not bad for a snack. Askfor Gloria. **Wimpy’s and Woolworth’s, Hyde Park Shopping Center;From bad to worse. It’s like playing gastro-intestinalRussian roulette. 1/ 2*FALLSALEATACCENT1437 E. 53 rd. ST.LAMPSCHAIRSCOOKWAREGIFTWAREALL AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES■h accent§§M§accent co1437 E. 53rd Si.Ml 3-7400 MI3-7400MON THRU FRI10 AM. TO 6 PMSAT. 9 AM TO 6 PM SWING ARM FLOOR LAMP,DUAL SOCKET FOR TWO-100WATT BULBS, REG. 25.00ON SALE AT 19.95 MORRY’S DELINothing to equal it in HydePark. A full line of sandwiches--featuringCorned Beef, Pastrami, & Roast Beef.We have the best and largestsandwiches at the lowest prices in the city.We also carry Fried Chicken, Shrimp,Perch, & Sole.Eventually everyone comes to Morry's.Why not NOW?1603 EAST 55th STREET684-6514Thursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago Maroon/37imulaiE L9 FOR MFRS LISTi- PRICE OF\^,pwsAPawyf7 DAY SALESTARTS TODAY PARREXALL VILLAGE PHARMACY53rd Kimbark Plaza 1527 E. 51st. KIM THOMAS1428 E. 5?rdOne Tablet Daily with Iron MULTIPLE VITAMINS (1 OO's) $2.88 $2.89SHAMPOOS—Emerald Brite & Brite Conditioning (7 Oz.)(lenzo ANTISEPTIC (16 Oz.) 99*EXALL Timed Action DECONGESTANT CAPSULES (1 O s) .1.39IEXALL TOOTHPASTE (Family Size-6% Oz.) 99\SPIRIN (5 gr., 100) 79!edi-Spray Dry ANTI-PERSPIRANT DEODORANT (5 Oz.)*ite Set HAIR SPRAY (13 Oz.) 89OFFERED ASPIRIN (100 s)*i-31 ANTISEPTIC (16 Oz.) 99AILK OF MAGNESIA (Plain & Flavored-12 Oz.) 79ledi Shave SHAVING CREAM (11 Oz.) 1.09EAF & GRASS BAGS 791C PENS 49/DOT POWDER (4 Oz.) 75jngi-Rex FOOT OINTMENT (1 Vt Oz.) l .29UBBING ALCOHOL (16 oz. plastic bottle) 83RE-SHAVE LOTION (5 oz.) 98OLD SORE LOTION (K oz.) 65YDROGEN PEROXIDE (USP 3%, 10 V0I.-I6 oz.) 55Mfr's ListPrice 2 FOR.$2.88 $2.89. .99 1.00. .99 1.00.1.39 1.40. .99 1.00. .79 .801.19 1.20. .89 .90.1.17 1.18. .99 1.00. .79 .801.09 1.10. .79 .80. .49 .50. .75 .761.29 1.30. .83. .84. .98. .99. .65. .66. .55. .56 Mfr's ListPriceDECONGESTANT EYE DROPS (15 cc.) 1 29COLD CREAM (1 lb.) 2.25COLD SORE OINTMENT ('/s Oz.) 65EYELO DROPS (25 cc.) 1.29EYELO EYE LOTION (4 Oz.) 89.EUDICAINE SUPPOSITORIES (12 s) 1.35FIRST AID SPRAY ANTISEPTIC (Aerosol 3 Oz.) . . . ! 1.39BORIC ACID CRYSTALS (3% oz.) 53BUBBLE BATH (Lorie Floral Asst., 16 packs) 69BEEF, WINE & IRON TONIC (16 oz.) . 2.29MINERAL OIL (16 Oz.) 83Cool Blue ROLL-ON DEODORANT (2 oz.) 99ALCO REX (Rubbing Alcohol-16 oz.) 63CONTACT LENS WETTING SOLUTION (2 oz.) 1.75CONTACT LENS SOAKING SOLUTION (4 oz.) 1.75GLYCERIN SUPPOSITORIES (12 s) 57WITCH HAZEL (16 oz.) 89AFTER SHAVE LOTION (5 oz.) 79PHOTO CUBE (Holds 6 Instamatic photos) 98 2 FOR1.302.26.661.30.901.361.40.54.702.30.841.00.641.761.76.58.90.80.99SPECIAL BONUS BUYS3LAROID SUPER COLORPACK CAMERA (Reg. 44.95) 39.773LAROID SQUARE SHOOTER CAMERA (Reg. 34.95) 31.88RANSISTOR RADIO (Reg. 8.98) 5.99.V. ANTENNA (Reg. 1.29) 69EAD PENCIL 01COTCH TAPE (Reg. 98‘roll) 1 per customer.33COOP SEAT 4.99WIVEL STOOL 9.98HAMPOO & BATH SPRAY 69ALLtKtJI MS 10 PIECE FONDUE SET 8.88TEA KETTLE (Aluminum—2 quart) 2.92FLASHLIGHT 1.39PINKING SHEARS 1.59BAR UTILITY STOOL 3.99MAX—The Mini Hair Dryer by TONI 11.27MONACET (100 s) 69ALUMOX (Liquid Antacid Gel)-12 oz 79ALUREX ANTACID TABLETS (50 s) 79^BRYLCREEM SOFT HAIR% DRY SPRAY 11 02.Reg 1 892 for 50c 2 for 1. 9 *““■Reg. 49c_ — — kt- Coupon Good 9/30 t0 6EFFERDENT TABLETSReg. 1.192 for 1.20 it MBM#!A y ■ mnaurt 11- - 'Mil J s JVISINE1/2 OZ-Reg. 1.502 for/ TheChicago Maroon / Thursday, September 30,1971 vtV ..V.-. • v-.v.v V.v.. . ,..Discovery of truth demanding: LeviI :0ntinued from page 24understood. The idea under a cloud is that a university of this type must place intellectualI excellence as its principal standard. Now, of course, everyone in some sense is in favor of* excellence, and all would agree there are areas of life which are not primarily intellectual,I. but which are extremely important, good and sought after. One must ask as to these otheri areas, however, and the answer is not always clear, what particular competence thisI University has to give them.So far as excellence, itself, is concerned, there is a great and understandable desire tof moderate such objectivity as it has-to make it mean doing the best a particular individualt can do. This is a worthy and necessary goal for each one of us. But the discovery and un-- derstanding of intellectual truth is more demanding. It means the commitment to a process1 of inquiring, explaining and responding to criticism, and requires the integrity and com-f petence of knowing the discipline within which one works, or answering for the disciplineI which one creates. It requires unusual ability, boldness and good fortune to create new ideasj or to make new applications, and it requires the highest morality to subject these ideas andtheir proof to the criticism of an on-going process.You may say this is all very discouraging. Few among us will achieve that standard ofexcellence which will actually enlarge the knowledge and appreciation of the world and theunderstanding of mankind. But it should not be discouraging. The standard sets themeasure of endeavor. It gives meaning to the distance we and others can go. It links theworld of scholarship. No scholar, not even the best, has stood alone. Each has left muchundone. And each has received the essential support of the inquiring minds of his own time.Your class may be a significant part of that group which may influence the climate for in¬tellectual endeavor in future years. Some of you, indeed, may be of that privileged few whomake the great contributions to knowledge and understanding which will influence theworld of ideas and of practical affairs. That has been the history cf this place. In any event,you can understand why a university which has placed teaching and learning in the contextof the new discovery of truth and understanding, should place before itself this standard ofachievement.I said there was a related idea, much popular and perhaps misunderstood. Foremostamong the beliefs which have given this University its style and viability is our confidencein the individual scholar. It is the individual mind, never quite alone, trained by thedisciplines but prepared to change them and to go it alone, which can take the forward stepsto understanding and knowledge, reawaken pur appreciation for the old, and make us seewhat we have not seen before. Groups are important, but education is for the individual. Nomatter how the University is orgamzed, or in a sense not organized at all, it is the individualwho counts.I have suggested the University will appear in different aspects to you from time to time.But you know a good deal about an institution if you can find the ideas to which it is respon-t sive. The idea of teaching and learning as an adventure is discovery, with the unity whichthis implies, the belief in the actuality of discovery which will add not only to our knowledgebut to the knowledge of mankind, and the emphasis on the individual scholars, are, in myview, central among these ideas. Alas, but perhaps fortunately, these ideas can all be stateddifferently. I have not claimed they are always realized-of course they are not-and the list isnot exhaustive. Thus I am aware, as you must be, that I have not deprived you of the ad¬venture of finding out for yourself. But these ideas perhaps may illuminate your first view.You have come to an institution which always has had an outstanding record in researchand in undergraduate and professional education. Some of the new sciences, such associology, found here their most creative period. Many of the faculty you will meet aremaking unique advances in man’s efforts to understand. They will welcome you for yourbrightness, your ability, your tenacity to overcome obstacles and, in part, because they seethe future in you. It should mean something to you-it does to me-that the Dean of yourCollege, Roger Hildebrand, partially interrupted a distinguished career in high energyphysics, not to devote his time to teaching in the College (he had been doing that anyway)but to the job of administration to bring about the arrangements for the best undergraduateeducation, and that his predecessor, Wayne Booth, whom many of you will come to know,took on the same assignment, interrupting work in literary criticism which had alreadyproduced a classic. Through the Dean and the Masters, the College has the most ex¬traordinary leadership of any college in the United States.When Albert Crewe, who is Dean of the Physical Sciences Division, thinks of the students1 in the College and their introduction to research, he, no doubt, thinks also of the more ad¬vanced students who helped him develop the electron scanning microscope which enablesthe world — and what a teaching that is — to see individual atoms within molecules.I have spoken very little about students or faculty as separate groups-one as learners andthe other as teachers. And the reason for this is that in a university of this type, all facultyare students. There is perhaps more meaning in this phrase than I have made clear. Itmeans, for one thing, that many of the difficulties which all students face-self-doubts, theneed for persistence and energy, are shared with all of us.You have not come to a giant-size institution, largely undergraduate. The total institutionis small, as universities go, about 7,500 students, and somewhat less than 1,100 faculty. Ofthis number, the Cellege will have about 2,000 or 2,100 students. About half of the Univer¬sity’s faculty will take part in teaching at the undergraduate level. I do not mean that eachof these members will find all or most of their teaching in the College. Most of the College faculty have joint appointments in various graduate areas, and many of the graduatefaculty who happen to have no College appointments will, nevertheless, teach Collegestudents.We believe most strongly in the importance of the separate College-in the opportunity thisgives, and the necessity it imposes, to view knowledge in a wider context, helped greatly bythe exchange of learning which takes place. The College is always at the frontier of lear¬ning, with die sometimes frustrating experience of having to master the disciplines whilepursuing new insights. But this experience is genuine. In varying degrees, it is at the heartof the learning and discovery process at all levels. One should not run away from theproblems of over-generalization and over-specialization. The College is always at thefrontier of learning, with the sometimes frustrating experience of having to master thedisciplines while pursuing new insights. But this experience is genuine. In varying degrees,it is at the heart of the learning and discovery process at all levels. One should not run awayfrom the problems of over-generalization and over-specialization. The College and theUniversity must continually confront these problems, and one should not forget that thevery idea of the liberal arts implies both a versatility and a mastery. The same thing, Ishould add, can be said and must be said about graduate and professional education. Webelieve most strongly that the interrelationships within the University, including theCollege, have provided us with the basis in the past, and will provide us with the basis now,for substantial imporvements in the structure of higher education. I have no doubt you willhear many discussions along this line. I have no doubt many of you will take part in them.It is often said-and not because it is said it makes it at least somewhat true-this is a par¬ticularly difficult time to come to a university. The world is wither too much with us or weare too remote from the problems to be solved. It is one of the characteristics of our age thatwe think we are unique in having terrifying problems. We do have terrifying problems.Many, although not all, are man-made. But other periods of history also thought they wereunique, and also had terrifying difficulties. The progress of mankind is tortuous. There hasnot always been progress. The greatest inheritance which mankind has is the ability toknow and to understand. That very ability has given new and frightening forms and strangecomplexities to the problems to be overcome. But these problems, and the effort to un¬derstand them and to solve them, are a challenge to your abilities. They also challenge yourability and willingness to help preserve and perfect for mankind those powers and insightswhich should be a reflection of mankind’s better self. The search for knowledge to ac¬complish, and for discovery to understand-is your inheritance. I welcome you to this en¬deavor.HYDE PARK THEATRE U\ HYDE PARK THEATRE #253rd & Lake Park NO 7-9071 5238 So. Harper ' 493-3493STARTS FRIDAYOCT 1STStewSrdesses \Kohlberg Theatres(ASTMANCOlOftWITHCHRISTINA HART • MICHAEL GARRETT(KCUTiVE PRODUCER WRITTEN AND 0IRECIE0 BrLOUIS K SHER • ALF SILI.IMAN JR STARTS FRIDAY_ OCT 1STg MATINEE SPECIALg Sat. & Sun. $1.50 to 5 p.m.§*0TM book faai}IS nOW /J®JW/ Swart1 i-The [Urn! «gTtom Court. fScium SC O fil A FTEAMCMO PRODUCTIONALSO"ROMANCEOF AHORSE THIEF'Yul BrynnerEli WallachIN COLOR NEW YORK'S IK PHOENIX THEATREpresents1971 TONY AWARD WINNER-BEST ACTORBrian BedfordinMoliere’s ComedySchoolfor WivesEnglish Translation by Richard WilburStephen PorterFUNNY, BLITHE ANO TOTALLY ENCHANTING A TREASURE!'Owe Barnes NY Times$3.00 SPECIAL STUDENT-STAFF ADMISSION $3.00for the BEST AVAILABLE SEATING at time of purchase.$3.00 rate applies only Monday thru Thursday at 8:00 P.M.and Wed. and Sat. matinees at 2:00 P.M. Regularly pricedat $6.50 to $4.00 weekdays and $5.50 to $3.50 matinees.Redeem this Coupon for One Reserved Seat at the BoxOffice only, 10:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M..after Sept. 20, 1971S«pt. 28 FOUR WEEKS ONLY! Oct. 23STUDEBAKERTHEATRE, 418 S.Mich, Chicago60605. 922-2973WW1wwmwwwmmmmmmThursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago Maroon / 39w. c;U.s. CHOICESIRLOINSTEAK$1 191 lb. COUNTRY DELIGHTBREAD^ 1 Lb. Loaves $ ^ 00COUNTRY DELIGHTBUTTTERMILKVi Gal. For ^ 9 ^ COUPON iiiRedeem this coupon .for 10C toward pur- jchase of Vi gal. or 1 |1 gal. Homogenized 1MILK or Vi gal. 11COUNTRY DELIGHT ]iICE CREAM jii(Expires Oct. 5, 1971) J FASHION FESTIVALjftP’ty rmsmTanoBetmar£% Ally CATHanes 1 TightsLeotardsHandbagsScarfsGlovesFashionensemblesKnee HighsAlive Panty HoseOUTSTANDING VALUE!Opaque Panty HoseEight Fashion Colors - Small Medium Large 1.49REG. 1.98BoutiqueNew Hyde Park Center55th and Hyde Park324-7285HoneywellI FREE 1SERVICE CLINICBRING IN YOURPEZTAX PENTAXADJUSTMENTS & MINORREPAIRS BY FACTORYTECHNICIANSSATURDAY OCT. 9th10 AM -5 PMPENTAX EQUIPMENTAT LOW SPECIALPRICES DURING CLINICSPENTAX SP 500 TTLSLR COMPLETE WITHHONEYWELL STROBONARMODEL 100 ELEC. FLASHLIST$224.45 S164SIMANY OTHER BARGAINSMODELcamera1342 E. 55th St.493-6700 CHICAGO’S OLDEST AND MOSTDISTINGUISHED COFFEEHOUSETAc tic&UiiWILL SOON BE THE NEWEST® HAMBURGERS ® PIZZA 1SANDWICHES 8 ICECREAM @ COFFEES 9 CHOCOLATES ® GOOD PEOPLE 9 PEACE!—► FOURTEEN- FIFTY EAST FIFTY SEVENTH STREETBAUMY’SServing Breakfast, Lunch,Dinner & Late Snacks.Complete Dinners SandwichesFountain Service57th & Kenwood324-1300 2 Reynolds Club Barber ShopWelcomes YouStart the term looking rightEvery type of Barber ServiceWith Professional Skill.Beards welcome since 1904Open MONDAY& Tues. & Wed. & Thurs. & Friday 8 to 5with or without appointmentNO TIPPINGAlso Shoe Shine Service Available5706 University x3573“Directly across from Guuurunyle Club"40/ The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September 30,1971Spirit of cohesion necessary: HillContinued from page 25research, especially as that spirit is aroused by the awareness that the different parts of theUniversity have of one another. The University is never long satisfied with its ac-complishments--it is always seeking a better way of doing something. This restlessnessalone goes far to explain why our programs are always changing, but it cannot explain theforms the changes have taken. It is a productive restlessness controlled, especially withreference to the work of the College, by discussions involving persons from all areas.Dedication to research can have favorable and unfavorable influences on the develop¬ment of undergraduate education. A distinguished research university can be vigilant inmaintaining standards of excellence in all areas. Distinguished specialists, even when theyare not actively engaged in undergraduate teaching, can be available to help plan coursesand to assess them. Their involvement in the planning of the curriculum can help insure thatit is well balanced and comprehensive. Less obvious is an important influence that theCollege feels more strongly now than ever before. Students have never had so much class¬room and personal contact with persons actively engaged in research. This contact is boundto give students a sense of what intellectual activity really is in its various fields. Aneducation in which the student merely absorbs a sample of the results of previous inquiriesbecomes less and less satisfactory as the pace of inquiry increases, and the results ofresearch become obsolete. A liberal education should help the student keep pace with in¬tellectual activities that are actually going on, and he will be better able to do this if he haslearned the nature of the activities, not just their results.Concentration on research can have unfavorable influences upon undergraduateeducation. One of them has not been a serious threat at the University since 1923. Just beforethat date serious thought was given to the idea of abandoning undergraduate education,when the University Senate adopted the view that the University’s primary concern forwork in the graduate and professional schools called for a limitation of undergraduate in¬struction. In 1923 President Burton reaffirmed that “the University is dominated by the ideaof research,” but concluded “that such research must be carried on in all the social sciencesand surely not least in education.” Under his brief leadership commitment to un¬dergraduate work was reaffirmed and has never really weakened.Under the leadership of Presidents Burton, Mason, and Hutchins committees worked todesign a new undergraduate program which was put into effect in the 1930’s. The programwas not altogether what might have been expected in a university dominated by the idea ofresearch, because the most novel features of the program emphasized not specializedresearch but general education. The aim was to provide not only a foundation for futurework in a special field, but also an introduction to all of the major fields of knowledge. Yet itwas not out of character for the University to develop such a program.Success in research had itself stimulated interest in educating “the whole man.” It cameto be recognized that the specialization that is necessary for distinguished research canpresent obstacles to communication by making it more and more difficult for specialists indifferent areas to talk with one another. It was nevertheless characteristic of different partsof the University to talk together, especially when the talk was about a problem they wereall interested in, undergraduate education. It is ironic that conversations among scholarsdistinguished for research produced an educational enterprise with characteristics sodifferent from those of research. The more successful the enterprise was the more it took ona life of its own, and it became the primary interest of some very able people. Developmentsled in the 1940’s to the establishment of an autonomous College faculty whose responsibilityfor the undergraduate program was nearly absolute.The new faculty worked out a remarkable program consisting of a comprehensive set offourteen one-year courses which were required of all undergraduate students. I shall notdescribe the program in detail nor praise it, although of ail the programs I have known it isthe one I should most like to have gone through myself as an undergraduate. It is my pur¬pose tc stress the character of the University as a closely knit institution primarily in¬terested in research, in order to show that any undergraduate program, if it is to be viable,must conform to that character.The chief respect in which the development of this program was not in line with thecharacter of the University was that the College faculty became isolated from the rest of theUniversity. Communication, particularly important for the one faculty concerned with allthe fields of knowledge, broke down. Without communication it was difficult for persons andareas distinguished for their research to make contributions to undergraduate teaching. Itwas natural that in a university which favored the existence of a variety of views thereshould have been opposition to the College program, and the isolation of the Collegestrengthened that opposition. Outside the College there were persons concerned aboutundergraduate education who felt that they had no voice about it. They pressed for areorganization that would put an end to the isolation of the College, and a reorganizationoccurred in the early 1950’s.In the years that followed the programs were called joint-degree programs, becausedegrees were awarded on the basis of joint recommendations by the College faculty andsome of the other faculties. The joint-degree arrangement did give more members of theUniversity a voice on undergraduate education, but in each case the voice was appliedprimarily to only one part of one program. Each program was always in danger of havingtwo unrelated parts (the College part and the Divisional part) and the total number ofprograms presented to restore the College’s authority over each part of the undergraduateprograms. The change was intended to avoid isolating the College from the rest of theEagle: Blackstone south of 53rd. Somewhat higher pricesand ostantatious, UC faculty may be found imbibing here.Maroon Restaurant ReviewIf you’ve got it, Haunt it!THE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .BANQUET ROOM5311 BLACKSTONE HY 3-1933 University. Many members of other faculties were added to the College faculty. By thismeans all of the University’s areas of expertness gained opportunities to speak on allaspects of the programs, and the College faculty became a body competent in a very greatrange of disciplines. The change was a step toward a more promising organization, but initself the enlargement of the College faculty resulted in a babel of tongues. There werevarious strongly held views on all issues, and the voices supporting them were so numerousthat it became difficult for any view to win the amount of support needed to put it into effect.The College then suffered from a kind of paralysis which was a major reason for theestablishment of the present college Council consisting of forty members—a body muchmore capable of reaching decisions than an unwieldy body of several hundred members.I have been giving emphasis to some different directions that have been followed in theCollege, in order to show how they can be understood in the light of certain features of theUniversity’s character. I want now to mention three points that are not indicative ofchanging direction. First, the University has consistently tried, since the early 1930’s, toeducate its undergraduates as full human beings, rather than as specialists or futurespecialists. This effort is of the greatest importance but I shall make no further commentabout it because it is well known. The second point is not so generally realized, and that isthat the College has stressed, more than other colleges have, the importance of the naturalsciences for all of its students, even though teaching science tonon-sicence students is a taskbeset by great pedagogical difficulties. This point too is very important, and I wish ourundergraduates could give even more time to the natural sciences, and particularly tomathematics, which is a less important part of our program today than it used to be.The third point concerns something which has not always characterized our un->dergraduate work, but toward which I think we have been steadily moving. Orientationtoward research is bound up with the conviction that truth is something to be continuallysought for, not something to be acquired and stored up. The sciences are activities, notstorehouses of information. The University has been trying, in different ways and withvarying degrees of success, to develop this conception of knowledge in its students. Thesurvey courses of the 1930’s had great merits, but they did encourage the idea thatknowledge is a storehouse. In the 1940’s the College turned away from surveying the worksof the mind and tried instead to use materials and methods of teaching so as to developunderstanding of the processes by which these works are produced. In recent years theeffort has taken on a different form. More College faculty members than ever before areactively engaged in research, and they have more freedom than before to teach what theywant to teach in the way they want to teach it. The hope is that their teaching will reflect thenature of their research, since that is what interests them most, and thus communicate theconception of knowledge as continuing inquiry. The development of the conception will befurther encouraged to the extent that the resources of the entire University are engaged onbehalf of undergraduate education. The development can succeed well only in a smallcollege which is part of a great research university.I think, however, that the College has gone too far in relinquishing control over theteaching of individual faculty members. We still need to find effective ways in which theinstitution as a whole can view the undergraduate enterprise as a whole, and to insure thatall the parts really belong to the whole. I have emphasized, and it should be emphasized, theUniversity’s dedication to research. But the University’s spirit of cohesion should bevigilant about the ways in which concentration on research affects undergraduate work.President Levi said in his address on “The State of the University,” on February 24,1971, “Ido not believe that if each faculty member does what he prefers to do this makes a goodcurriculum.” I share his disbeliet."FINE FOOD PREPARED WITH LOVE"theDOVEon57th1321 EAST 57th STREET PHONE: PLAZA 2-9251CHICAGO, ILLINOISThursday, September 30,1971/ The Chicago Maroon 141Sometimes,it's a soft sound thatmakes you listenhardest And that’s just the kind of musicCymarron does. It speaks gently^ and carries a lot of feeling. It® doesn’t need to be loud to make’Academy Award WJnrflfKfci"The Shop on Main StrSeff ■Introducing PauU PRirdiCTTIf ^ouve f<pj«Hen Haf wKai y«u ea±h y««r cuhart as •*•/! asyaur* mca/TAeuyou #rieJson^linenew. A°n(VlcA-iuW/nMttjSgSWrkcarry •«service4&7m97ffOpen 5 P.A/. - / /4.M.Closed Monday o ©cat?WANTEDSTUDENT DRIVER$2.50 hour & up10-15 hours weekQualifications:Must be UC studentJunior, Sennior, or Graduate studentPark Shore Cleaners1649 E. 50th St.324-7679 cAtm/cRUSH at OAK ~ TELEPHONE 944-2066MIDWEST PREMIERESEE IT NOW“...A FILM SO RICH WITH PERSOHAL FEELIHGTHAT OUR PRIVATE EXPERIENCE MUST FORM¬ULATE THE RESPONSE.”"Radar is a true master... totally consistent arhshy!”—Archer Wins ten, New York Post"Adrift is as beautiful to hefcald as Elvira Madtgan ami projects considerably greater depth!”-Playboy ?"Extraordinary! Exceptionally sWHfuJ m&Imaginative new ' J;,.aA bicycle puts youclose to nature - Thusspake ZarathustraTurin in, Turin on.drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh. Robin Hood,falcon. Peugeot, Citane,Merrier, Radius and f)aw>.Factory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spasmod¬ically. FIv-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8Tin* carpetbaggers from Old TownTHEFRETSHOPIn Harper Court• All FolkInstruments• Records• Books• Guitar Lessons• KLH StereoSystemsOpenI I - 6 Mon - Sat.!NO 7-1060 WDistributed by Columbia Recor. a lasting impression.The songs are all rich blendingsof melody and rhythm. Backed byfull, clear harmonies. And put intomellow but solid arrangements.So the quiet strength of the musicnever gets lost.Cymarron. A soft sound thatleaves your mind free to provideall the volume you’ll ever need.On Entrance Records and Tapes42/ The Chicago Maroon /Thursday, September 30,1971ABOUT THE MIDWAYRegistrationAll returning pre-registered un¬dergraduates must register today or Friday.Hours are from 8:30 am to 4 pm.Print-outs are picked up in Kent 107, andID validation, selective service and thebursar are in Reynolds club.Summer NewsThe following is a summary of majornews items that happened over thesummer:Nicholas Rudall, assistant professor ofclassics, has been appointed director ofUniversity Theatre (UT) beginning in theautumn quarter.Rudall, the first academic to hold the UTpost, will continue his teaching assignmentsin classics and in the committee on generalstudies in the humanities.This year. Rudall, will be teaching a three-quarter theater course the University's firstserious study of the techniques andphilosophy of drama;An investigation of sex discriminationcharges against the University by the USdepartment of health, education and welfare(HEW) began August 9.Michael Cohen, an HEW staff membersaid the investigation was a combination ofroutine checking and specific complaints.According to Hilda Smith, history, of theUniversity Women's,Association, the HEWaction is in response to charges made by JoFreeman, political science, in JanuraryAccording to Hilda Smith, history, of theUniversity Women’s Association, the HEWaction is in response to charges made by JoFreeman, political science, in January 1970:Izaak Wirszup, professor of mathematicsand in the College, has been appointed thenew resident master of Woodward Court.Wirszup. also the director of the NationalScience Foundation survey of recentEuropean mathematical literature, succeedsWayne Booth. Pullman professor of English,who is leaving the position after one year asresident master.Wirszup's appointment was by UniversityPresident Edward Levi. The resident masterprogram, initiated last fall, attempts toprovide closer contact among senior facultyand students living in the dormitory;Hanna Gray, associate professor ofhistory, has been appointed dean of thecollege of arts and sciences at NorthwesternUniversity in Evanston, effective September1972.Mrs. Gray, a specialist in Renaissanceintellectual history, will be the first womanto head Northwestern’s largest un¬dergraduate school, composed of 550 facultyand 3,000 students.Her husband Charles will continue to teachat Chicago, where he is an associateprofessor of history, specializing in Britishhistory. At Northwestern Mrs Gray will be atenured full professor. She has been tenuredhere since 1964.The University will construct a new four-story Brain Research Institute and SurgeryBuilding on Ellis Avenue between 58th and59th Streets.The $8.5 million structure will be financedby funds from the Brain Research Foun¬dation of Chicago, by a gift of $2 million fromDr. Clarence Reed, an alumnus, and by othergrants and University funds.Five new members of the board oftrustees at the University were announced inlate June by Gaylord Donnelley, chairman ofthe board.They are:Charles Brown. Lake Forest, Illinois,president of the Illinois Bell TelephoneCompany;Margaret Bell Cameron, Ann Arbor.Michigan, daughter of Nathalie and LairdBell, late chairman of the University boardof trustees;Marvin Chandler, Glen Ellyn, Illinois,chairman of the executive committee of theboard of directors of the northern Illinois GasCompany:W Leonard Evan. Jr. Chicago, presidentand publisher. Tuesday Publications. Inc.and FOOTBALL BEGINS: Maroons play Wheaton Friday at 3 pm.Hart Perry, New York. . xecutivevice-president-finance and a member of theboard of directors of the InternationalTelephone and Telegraph Corporation, and aUniversity alumnus.Their election brings the number ofUniversity trustees to 44.The seven members of the committee ofthe council, the main executive organ of theUniversity, were elected early in the sum¬mer.Elected in a mail-vote conducted by theoffice of the secretary of the faculties were:Allison Dunham, professor of law; JulianGoldsmith, Merriam distinguished serviceprofessor of geophysical sciences and in theCollege and chairman of the department ofgeophysical sciences; D Gale Johnson,professor of economics; and Paul Meier,professor of statistics and a member of thecommittee on mathematical biology.Also: Peter Novick, associate professor ofhistory and in the College; Stuart Tave,professor of English and in the College; andKarl Weintraub, Donnelly professor ofhistory and in the College; director oftutorial studies in the new collegiate divisionand chairman of the committee on history ofculture.Scholarship GrantA bequest made more than 30 years ago bya prominent Chicago businessman hasestablished a new $1,027,186 fund to supportstudent scholarships and faculty salaries atthe University.Edward H Levi, president of the Univer¬sity, said the bequest by Ralph Isham, will beused to create the Ralph Isham Scholarshipand Salary Fund. Isham willed one-quarterof his estate to the University.He left a similar amount to the ChicagoYMCA, with the remaining half of the estategoing to Mrs. Isham. His estate was to left intrust and the fund for the University to beestablished upon the death of his widow,Mary Otis Isham.Mrs. Isham died March 24. 1971, at the ageof 99 in Santa Barbara. California. By thetime of her death, the trust had grownconsideraoiyIsham started his career in 1889. when theUniversity was still in the planning stages.His success as a railway official and thegrowth of his private business paralleled theperiod of growth of the University as one ofthe preeminent institutions oi higher lear¬ning. Library GrantsThe Joseph Regenstein Library at theUniversity has received a large gift ofmaterials on Russian and East Europeangeography from a member of the Universityfaculty.Chauncy D Harris, the Harper professor inthe department of geography and director ofthe center for international studies, hasgiven the library more than 1,000 volumes ofmonographs and extensive runs of serialpublications dealing with all aspects of thegeography of the USSR and related areas.The collection, one of the largest and mostcomprehensive of its kind in the nation, will beknown as “The Chauncy D Harris Collectionon the Geography of the Soviet Union andRelated Fields.’’According to D Gale Johnson, professorand chairman-designate of the departmentof economics and acting director of thelibrary, the collection will greatly enrich thelibrary’s holdings and enhance theUniversity’s position as an outstandingcenter in the United States for Slavic studies,including geography.Hatcher HereMayor Richard Hatcher of Gary will makea major statement on “Black Politics and thePresidency’’ as guest preacher at a Mead-ville Theological School-Unversity ofThursday, September 30StJKKAH BUILDING: B'nai B nth Hillel house, 5715 Woodlawn,10 am.Friday, October 1SUKKAH DECORATION Hillel house, all dayACTIVITIES NIGHT Ida Noyes hall, 7 pm.Saturday, October 2 Chicago ingathering service to be heldSunday, October 3, 10:30 am, at thecongregation of First Unitarian Church, 57thand Woodlawn.Meadville, which is also located at the 57thand Woodlawn corner, and cooperatesclosely with the church in the training ofUnitarian-Universalist ministers. Theservice will be conducted by the church’ssenior minister, the Rev. Jack Mendelsohn,with participation by both undergraduateand graduate students.Mayor Hatcher is widely viewed as amajor linkage figure between black politicalaspirations and serious social change.Hatcher’s election in 1967, after a bittercampaign in which he ran without partysupport in a city that had voted 77% forGeorge Wallace in the 1964 presidentialprimary, gave him instant national staturein a new era of black political power.Symphony TicketsSeries tickets to the Chicago Symphonywill be sold in Mandel hall from 11 am to 2 pmtoday through Oct. 4. These enable a studentto attend ten concerts for $29 at a savings of$6. This year there will also be a discount onsingle ticket sales for students on tickets soldwithin twenty-four hours of the concert.The Chicago Symphony under the directionof George Solti and Carlo Maria Giulini willfeature such work as the Beethoven 9thSymphony, the Bach B minor Mass, andMahler’s 5th Symphony.Sunday, October 3SUNDAY SEMINAR: Discussion led by Rev Bernard Brown,assistant dean of the chapel. Rockefeller chapel under¬croft, 9:45 to 10:45 amUNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Rev E. Spencer Parsons,dean of the chapel, "Transcendence and the Human Enter¬prise," Rockefeller chapel, 11 am.OPEN HOUSE: Hillel, 5717 Woodlawn. all dayRUMMAGE BARGAINS & BAKE SALE: Hyde Park Neigh- v_rM\iLLwm ivunuiu rviymc,6:30 pml hursdav, September ju, 1971/ I he Chicago Maroon /BULLETIN OF EVENTSborhood Club, 5480 Kenwood, 9 am to 5 pm.■'WW<W'V»«5'*3September 30,1971Far East KitchenCh inese & AmericanFOOD & (COCKTAILSOpen Daily l*2 10'Fri & Sat 12 12Closed Monday *.53rd & Hyde Park Blvd^955-2229 ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★“BRILLIANT. THE AUTHOR WOULD RELI§II SOFAITHFUL AN INTERPRETATION OF HIS WORK.A BEAUTIFULLY MADE FILM—Judith Crist, NBC-TV ^REIC N /AACAZINeS?// *ZAP comix?!! *OVER 1000 ^,F£^f0’ Iyu At az rives/f/Jw IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICHBy the winner of the 1970 Nobel Prize for Literaturepresents( TOM COURTENAY inAlexander Solzhenitsyn's“ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH” with ALFRED BURKE/JAMES MAXWELL/ERIC THOMPSONM.»ic by ARNE NORDHEIMIScreenpiay by RONALD HARWOOD/from • translation t>v Gil LON AITKENof a novel tty ALEXANDER SOLZHENITSYNedited by THELMA CONNELL lPhcto«raoby by SVEN NVKVIST/ E.ecutive Producers RICHARO PACK. HOWARD G. BARNES FROMProduced and Oirected by CASPER WREOE1A LEONTES PRODUCTION with NORSK FILMS in EASTMAN COLOR «CINE R AMAr=T1 vSiP RELEASINGMIDWEST PREMIERECINEMACHICAGO AT MICHIGAN 787-8722 FRIDAY" ★ ★ ★ ★"Roger EbertChicago Sun TimesDalton Trumbo’s .johnny Vgot his gun Woodworth’s Book StoreSee us for School and Office Supplies,Sporting Goods, Typewriters & BooksMonday-Friday: 9 AM - 6 PMSaturday: 9 AM - 5 PMClosed Sunday1311E. 57th 363-4800 ****.********************+***Jf *★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★kst.116$ ********ITAt-/; f?USS^£TNCLA</%CrOATlA; *£<T* Gre/nAryj *HAnri;x».ro®N-^ .Tw€0€A),/?<0C««iia *VfcTWAm; JAPAll; /WAW/T5X6X 1 *•'BchWlfa tfewMMeviyoKKImts QSZZ-&2cu**£kt CooNT*tts:FfiA*cej SNDiA/srxitty‘ |MAN/ TtTL£S ljriii>ivT** —r'*’*’ — a^ • SAT- ^A/n-f AJP •• • So*/ 7Afl> 5*^2! *PLAYBOYT M E ATE Ft V)1204 N DEARBORN • PHONE 944 34345424 KimbarkMl 3 3113^JUSTIR HMU* foreign car hospital FIRST FALL CONCERTGORDONLIGHTF00TARIE CROWNTHEATRETOMORROW8:30 P.M.Tickets: $5.50, 4.50, 3.50At Box Office and AllTicketron Outlets Drinkpositive4KANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC • ST. LOUIS The first malt liquor good enoughto be called BUDWEISER.44 / The Chicago Maroon/ TlTG6EDby CAR REPAIRS /SurjfcA 4c.-.BRIGHTONForeign auto szm\tM4401 S. ARCH ERMT.>4rSUMMKwkfc«A(;<'call254-3840 254-5071 254-5077ATTENTIONVOLKSWAGENOWNERS!!!A reminder to WINTERIZE your car NOW andprevent MAJOR CAR REPAIR COSTS AND INCON¬VENIENCESWe will SAVE you MONEY and give you SATIS¬FACTION for ONLY$28.36(on 1200, 1300, and 1500 sedans and buses)$30.28(on fastbacks andThe above prices include:1. Tune-op2. Compression test3. Adjust valvesA. Inspect f< <-belt. .adjust if needed5. Change Oil6. Clean oil filter and air filter7. Lubrication8. Inspect rear axle Trans. Oil Level9. Inspect and adjust brakes10. Inspect clutch free-play11. Inspect battery and Acid levelodd disti-’ed water if needed squarebacks)12. Ch^ck electrical systems:a. starting systemb. charging systemc lighting systemd. stop-light systeme. directional signal systemf. wiper systemInspect heating systemadjust if neededInspect exhaust system15. Inspect front-end16. Inspect tire pressure and Wear1314SPECIAL TIRE SALEGOLD CITY INNMaroon$**ww**w***™*********%*| ****JL* New Hours:Q Open Daily* From 11:30 a.m.^ to 9:30 p.m.* "A Gold Mine of Good Food”*•fa* Student Discount:* 10% for table service* 5% for take home| Hyde Park's Best Cantonese Food*£522* Harper 493-2559 £ft (near Harper Court) l3f* ** Eat more for less. *(Try our convenient take-out orders.) #******************** IhCKVVXIBD SiriEII^PRESENTSAUDITORIUMTHEATRE70E.CONGRESS PKWYTHURSDAY,OCTOBER 7 at 7:30pmTRAFFIC$3 50. $4 50 $55044650THURSDAY^ FRIDAY,OCTOBER 21.«22at 7:30pmGRATEFULDEAD$350.$4 50&$550THURSDAY.NOVEMBER 4 at 7:30pmCAT STEVENS$35Q $4 SO. SSS0& $6 SOMONDAY.NOVEMBER 15 at 7:30pmJEFF BECK$asa$4so.ss.so&$65n AMPHI¬THEATRE43RDAND HALSTEDTUESDAY.OCTOBER 26 at 8pmJETHRO TULL$350 $4 50 $5 S0& $6 50SUNDAY.OCTOBER 31 at 8pmGRANDFUNK$65044750WEDNESDAY,NOVEMBER 3 at 8pmTENYEARSAFTER$350 $4 50. $5,506 $6 50TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED AT FLIP SIDE RECORDS, 3314FOSTER AND 732 ELM. WINNETKA; ALL MONTGOMERY NURDSTORES; SOUND SHOPPE, DES PLAINES. ILL. AND ALLTICKETRON OUTLETSAUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILYAMPHITHEATRE BOX OFFICE OPEN DAY OFPERFORMANCE ONLY®T1CKETBQNTHEART TILLERSCLASSESinPAINTINGPOTTERYDRAWINGDESIGNCALL gfl363-9429 or 752-8905 THE LUTHERAN CHURCHAT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOA Co-operative Lutheran ProgramALC. LCA, LC-MSWELCOMES YOULUTHERAN CAMPUS PASTORSThe Rev. Arthur BryantThe Rev. Wayne SaffenThe Rev. David Meier Office: (LCA) 493-6451Home: 363-0781Office: (LC-MS) 363-3518Home: 947-9886Office: (LC-MS) 955-6033DIETRICH BONHOEFFER HOUSELutheran Student (’.enter5554 South W oodlawn Ave.Telephone: 363-3518OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY. OCTOBER 3. 6-9 P.M.LUTHERAN CAMPUS CHURCHESLCA: Augu&tana Lutheran Church of Hyde Park5500 South W oodlawn Avenue. 193-6451The Rev. Arthur BryantSunday Services at 9:15 and ! 1:00 AMLCMS: St. Gregory of Nyssa Lutheran ChurchThe Rev. Wavne SaffenThe Rev. David MeierWorshipping on Sundays atChicago Theological SeminaryUniversity at 58thHolv Eucharist at 10:00 AMRockefeller Memorial ChapelUniversity Religious ServiceSunday, October 3, 1971 11 o'clockE. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“TRANSCENDENCE ANDTHE HUMAN ENTERPRISE"SUNDAY SEMINARRockefeller Memorial Chapel Undercroft 9:45 to10:45 a.m. Discussion led by The Reverend Ber¬nard O. Brown. Assistant Dean of the Chapel.CARILLON RECITALSunday. October 3. 6:30 p.m. Guest Carillonneur,Milford Myhre. Mr. Myhre is the Carrillonneaurat the Bok Tower. Mountain Lake Sanctuary. Lake^ ales. Florida.WE’RE ON THE AIR AGAINWHPK *FM88.37:00-1:00and9:00-12:00 Every EveningSunday MorningBRENT HOUSEEcumenical University Center5540 Woodlawn AvenueOPEN HOUSESunday 5-7 p.m. Buffet SupperALL WELCOMEEpiscopal Church CouncilMethodist FellowshipRockefeller ChapelFOOTBALL GAME AND CALLIOPEMusic begins 3:00- free to studentsTomorrow Oct. I Stagg Field, 56th and Cottage Grove.Thursday, September 30,1971 / The Chicago Maroon/4*I .‘Hi' • I i :• . v, n-■ :ir, •>- o»4THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSHELP!!!THE MAROON needs a DELIV¬ERY MAN to deliver some of its issues.Good pay for a few hours work. Musthove van or bus.Call Mike or Diana at 753-3263FOR SALESALE on Old Fur Coats atRADICAL RAGS. 1375 E 53rd St.LIVING RM FURNITURE SALE-nrnorth, vinyl hide-a-bed & rockingchairr, dinette & kitchen tables,phono, misc. items. Reasonable 788-9805 eve 8. wknds.'68 Vette. 327 4-spd. 474-1131 Silverw/ blk interior, ExCOOP APT for sale. 6 rooms, 2 baths.Mod. kitchen. Ray School dist. Lowassessments. Early occupancy. Mid. 20's. 752 3457.Name onething thathasn't gone upsince 1950.1Try. Try hard.The only thing we can think ofis what we make. The Swingline"Tot 50” Stapler. 980 in 1950.980 in 1971.And it still comes with 1000 freestaples and a handy carryingpouch, it staples, tacks andmends. It’s unconditionallyguaranteed. It’s one of theworld’s smallest staplers.And it's the world’s biggestseller. Could be that’s why ithasn’t gone up in price in21 years.If you’re interested in somethinga little bigger, our Cub DeskStapler and Cub Hand Staplerare only $1.98. Both Tot andCub Staplers are available atStationery, Variety and CollegeBookstores.The Swingline “Tot 50”980 in 1950. 980 in 1971.If you can name something elsethat hasn't gone up in pricesince 1950, let us know. We’llsend you a free Tot Stapler with1000 staples and a vinyl pouch.Enclose 25c to cover postageand handling.O'Dept F32 00 SLIIman Ave , long liland City. N Y. 1! 101 Wollensak3M stereo tape recorder. 21/ 2 yrs old; very good condition $80(originally $200). Phone 955 9608.New 3 volume Encyclopedia Brittanica Dictionary complete with 7Foreign Languages. Reas. 779 0381after 6PM.My theses is typed & I'll never typeagain! Get a 9month old Smith Coronaelectric exc. cond for $175 (229 atbookstore). Also chairs, tables, cheap.375-5184 mornings or nights.Books bought &-sold. Powells'Bookshop, 1503 E. 57th, 955 7780.New Pipes & Tobacco by Cellini UsedDunhill-Savinelli.Talisman Under the 1C1552 E 53rd 324 0837.1 sofa bed, bookcase, 752 7256If this years school load is draggingyou down...carry your books in a BackPack from RADICAL RAGS, 1375 E53rd.Apartments and Rooms, fully furnished. All utilities. Good location.5129 South Harper, Pl.2-4190. Qualified 16mm. sound projectoroperator needed for VERY part-timework for African Studies. Call SueKaply, 9 00am to 1pm, X3-41S3.CAMPUS REPSOpportunity for sharp businessminded student to earn top cash andget unparalleled experience workingfor self on campus. Start immediately.Send brief resume and phone numberto. Mr. C.R. Danforth, Box 75,Swampscott, MA, 01907.BABYSITTERS for HospitalHousestaff, days/ evenings. Registerwith Hospital Personnel, 947 5218.Bright, ambitious student needed ascampus representative for computerdating service. May work for commission or franchise. Write CupidComputer, Box 67, Champaign,Illinois.Occasional typing of stencils needed.Must have 12-inch carriage. 493 5558.Student wanted to babysit on Thur¬sdays and occasional other times. Call624 7920.Roommate wanted to share spacious 2bedroom apt with law student (Male) -So.Shore 5 min. drive from campus77.50/ mo unfurnished. Call Steve 6840652 or 752 5746.Wanted: A reliable baby-sitter,Monday thru Friday, 8 AM to 5 PMGood pay, paid holidays. For furtherinfo call 225 6367.Need someone to fix 1949 TV setworking perfectly yesterday todayPHFFT. Will pay but can't afford regrepairman. Call 667-2507. Please!Thanks.Male companion for schizophrenicchild. Tues & Thursday afternoons.HY3-7973.Student wanted to care for Syr olddaughter in our home 1-4:45 pm week¬days. $20/ wk. 363 6387. Male rmmate wtd. Share my quietsunny, airy 9th fl. E.Hyde PK apt. NewDec. Avail Immed. 493-4841.TYPIST WANTED - PART-TIMEMath manuscripts. Should havetypewriter with math keys. Canarrange campus pickup and deliveryof copy. Give page and hourly rateswith sample and availability in reply.R Mansfield 10226 S. Hoyne, 60643.Part-time radio-tv stereo service manand benchman. Hyde Park Radio, 1463E 53rd St., PL2 2700.Lite Switchboard 2 evenings per wk inreturn for fully furnished apt. 5129 S.Harper, PL2 1400Mother's Helper Mon and Thurs. afternoon 11:30 5:30. Call 288 0844 after5.One full 8i one part-time employee.Must type 60wpm. On campus. Call753 2067.Woman w/ two children seeks peoplewilling to live with children. 955-1797.Female to share furnished apt 57th 8,Blackstone. $58.75/ mo. 288-1315.STUDENT ROOMMATES WANTEDfor apartment close to campus.Kosher available. 324 3060, 3 9PEOPLE FOR SALETyping in my home-Chatham AreaTerm Papers Theses DissertationsPhone 487 2743.Dorothy Smith Beauty Salon 5841Blackstone HY3 1069 Expertly givenpermanents tints - haircuts Mentionthis ad. Evening hours.RUSSIAN INSTRUCTION by nativeteacher. Trial lesson, no charge. CE61423 office; 472-1420 home RIDES WANTEDUC Staff member needs ride to 8, fromUniversity, Monday-Friday, arrive9am, leave 5pm. From 2900 North, Willshare expenses. Call 929 1016evenings; x3 3264 days.Sec'y needs daily ride to 8, frm Lansing, III. Sh exp. 474 1131. 2 rms for girls in priv home. Largerroom (very large) $55/ month.Smaller room $45/ mo. No cooking.Walk-in closets both rooms. 684-5076eves or weekends.SUBLET: Own bedrm, 5400 Harper$80/ mo. Kris, 324-6800 daysLovely 2 bedrm So. Shore apt. 4 rent.Lease can be cancel lea with 2 mos.notice, but you'll love it! $155/mo.Call Judy at 324 5339 after 6.FA 4-0633-34 CATERING SERVICEUnique fiestaurant•[— ine Delicatessen150; EAST FIFTY-THIRD STREETCHICAGO. ILL.. 60615SPECIALIZING IN LAZY SUSAN TRAYSWANTEDMan 8> woman's bicycle, cheap, shouldbe in good condition. Call Mrs. Ratner467 6000 or 375 5397.Seeking one or two rooms with peopleable to slow down enough to relate tomy 2 children as people at theminimum - willing to take someresponsibility for children atmaximum. No forced babysitting orforced relating. 955 1797.PEOPLE WANTEDBlack female grad student looking forblack female student to share apt. 2682191.Play RugbyU of C RugbyClubPracticeTues. & Thurs.4:00 P.M.Stagg Field NADERANDROYKOA BENEFIT FOR CITIZENS FORA BETTER ENVIRONMENT.MON., OCT. 4, 8P.M.ARIE CROWN THEATRETICKETS: PATRON SEATSS10, ADULTS S3, STUDENTS $2.50TICKETS AVAILABLE AT:UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOK STORE57SC S. ELLISCHICAGO, ILL PLUS FASHIONS5225 S. HARPERCHICAGO. ILL.FOR FURTHER TiCKET INFO CALL 248-1984 ROOMMATE WANTEDYour own room in a large, furnishedhouse with 4 other people. Availablenow Call 667 0082 after 6pm or 753 3263during the day.Roommate wanted to share with twoother grad students (female) Ownbedroom. Furnished and in safe area.Kenwood 8, 561h. Call 955 7819.Seeking roommates on somewhatcommunal basis able to slow downenough to relate to my 2 children aspeople at a minimum Willing to takesome responsibility for them atmaximum. No forced babysitting orforced relating. 955 1797.COLOR BLINDNESSCOLOR BLIND PEOPLE wanted asresearch subjects. About 10 15 hrs.$1.75 per hour. 947 6039.SPACELive in Frederika's Famous Building.Nearby turn, or unfurn 2, 3-1/ 2 rmapts 'or 1, 2 or 3 students. Refrig.,Stve., Pvt Ba., Pvt. Porch., Stm. Ht.Quiet, sunny, view. Parking. Trans$120 up. Free utils. 6043 Woodlawn.955 9209 or 427 2583.TAKEAM-Y&NCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M.TO8:30P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU4-106?All our Art brushesreduced 30%Canvas .69/yd.Gessol39/£|t.Read on!ZIPPER CARRYING CASE 20x26. .6.95WOODEN SKETCH BOX 12x16. . .4.45CIRCLE TEMPLATE 0.49LEAD HOLDER 0.39ALL PACER PADS 50% OFFWe oiler STUDENT AND PROFESSIONAL DISCOUNTS on oilnon-sale items. Come to our Bock-to school Sale, cn nowBring This Ad For FREE GIFT! FAVOR-RUHLART, CRAFT, DRAFTING SUPPLIES14 South Wabash(312) 782-5737 THE JEFFERY TOWERS7020 So. JefferyExcellent transp. & conv. shpg.Furnished. Mgr. R.Jones on PremiseREASONABLE RENTALSCALL MI3 2383DIANE APARTMENTS5424 CORNELLElevator Bidg. Newly decorated &furnished 1-1/ 2 8, 2-1/ 2 rooms. Excel,shpg & trans. MI3 1432.HIGHLAND APARTMENTS7147 SO. JEFFERYElevator building. Near 1C 8. BusNewly decor. 8, turn. Studio 8. 1bedroom. Mrs. Roff FA4 7501.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S Cornell DO 3 2400Beautiful Furnished Apartments Nearbeach park I C. trains U of C buses afdoor Modest daily, weekly, monthlyratesCall Miss SmithDO NOT ENTERo• You like people• Are willing to listen totheir problemsWant to learn how tohelp themAre not looking for com ¬pensationsa > But are willing to pre¬pare for a life of dedication toothers by bringing to them the“good news” of Jesus’ life,death, and resurrection. Thismeans prayer, work, study, andcontinued self-giving,Iife of theContactBro Kevin O'Malley, C PPassiurvst Community Dept A5700 N Harlem Ave.Chicago, 'll 6063146/ The Chicago Maroon/ Thursday, September JO, iy/1:oii * ' *'• or 'SPACE WANTEDWanted: Coach House, 3 4 rooms bystore owner. 493-5458.r •Apt wanted to share, fern grad fromNYC needs room for Fall. Pleasewrite/call: Ingrid Thomspon, 86 E. 7Street, NYC, NY 10003, 2 2 254 8454. Fern. Grad stud, needs an apt or roomto share. Please call Marcy 363 5221 or256 1487.2 gay men went to share an apartmentwith others, straight or gay, male orfemale, 'deally we'd like 2 hooms in alarge apartment, one for printmakingand photography workshop. 324 2779eves.TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL10% STUDENTDISCOUNT Woman w/ two children seeks roomw/ people willing to live w/ children.955 1797.A NEW SERVICEActivities Line: Current informationon what's happening on campus forstudents, including films, concerts, artexhibits, and facilities. Dial 753 2150.FPOTBALL GAMESTomorrow, October 1, is the occasionof Chicago's first gridiron threat of theyear at Stagg Field.Ask yourself this question: If RalphGeer and his fearless calliope arego ng to be there, should I? in fact,who is Ralph Geer, and what is thisthing he calls calliope? What is themeaning of the mysterious wordsinscribed on it, "Pangley, mfg. in Muscatine, Iowa"?Tlje truth will be revealed and rightwill triumph tomorrow at Stagg Field,56th and Cottage Grove Avenue.Calliope concert beginning at 3PM.SCENESFood, abortion, peace, prison reform,draft resistance: The Quakers. 5615Wdlawn 10/ 3 6:30Photographs by Ken Love TALISMANGALLERY, 1552 E. 53rd Oct. 1 thruOct. 15.Art Classes by the Art Tillers Stretchyour rrird Get Dirty Feel Good. Call3639/24,3905GESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUP for7 weeks. $30. Tues. 7-llpm. Begins Oct.5 Lcrrie Peterson, experienced leader.288 3541.John Woolman, a living commune atKINGSTON MINES THEATRE2356 North Lincoln AvenueLive on StageWHORES OF BABYLON „ TERMINALStaged by Eleven Direc“d b» jMn« P»skasek„ Fri., Sat,, & Sun. at 8:30Thursday at 8:30Fri. & Sat. at MidnighfFor reservations call RO 1-4400 Tickets at the DoorCall 525-9893 for reservations Special For Limited TimeSlab Ribs 3.50 - Vfc Chicken .99Rib KOOP, Inc.1342 East 53rd St., Chicago, Ill. 60615955-9007TAKE OUT, EAT IN, AND DELIVERY SERVICEGet It, All Together^!* In Hyde Park’s urSHarper Court tyl))J)5'2‘25 So. Harper ’ Naked‘FuTrniiure* '**And “With ItT Things667-6888OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEKMONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY10 6 PMTHURSDAY AND FRIDAY TILL 9 P MSUNDAY 12 to 5 P M Quaker House. Come 8, see 5615Woodlawn 6:30 Oct. 3 FoodPipes & tobacco by Cellini New &used Dunhill Savinelli, etc.TALISMAN. Mrs. 11 9:00. 1552 E. 53rd.324 0837.NO MORE STRANGERS Know yourlocal church. The Catholic communitywelcomes new students: Oct. 3, 10:30Mass in Hutchinson Court (weatherpermitting) open house afterward atCalvert House, 5735 S. University.Jung Study Group. Brent House 8p.m., Wednesday, Oct. 6.Quakers. Oatmeal, right? Wrong It's asimple supper 8< AFSC movies. 5615Wdlawn 10/ 3 6:30Bonhoetfer Community and LCUCinvite new and old students to anevening of Disorientation 6pm Oct. 3,5554 S. Woodlawn.Nixon a Quaker? Come 8< discuss overbreak & cheese with the Society ofFriends. Quaker House, 5615Woodlawn 10/ 3 6:30INDIAN COOKINGClasses begin October. Call 9559812before 10am or after 8pm. Eightclasses, $40COMP CENTERComp Center classes will introduceyou to the IBM 360 Computer - itsphysical characteristics andcapabilities. Learn to program inFORTRAN and write the controlstatements to run jobs. Come to CompCenter C B12 for course descriptionsor call 3 8049.GAY LIB OFFICEThe Gay Lib Office is open again:every night (in Principle) from 6pmmidnight. All are welcome to get andto give support, to revel in ourgayness, or, if you need that, to worryabout it-at least with someone you canbe open with. Until our famed cof-feeshop reopens (soon, we trust), thisis our only meeting place in HydePark. Ida Noyes 218, Phone: 753 3274.Join us Student Activ. night 8. at thestreet dance following. GROOVY NEWSSTANCFOREIGN MAGAZINES?? ZAPCOMIX? OVER 1000 DIFFERENTMAGAZINES? Bob's Newsstand; 5100Lake Park Ave, carries all that andthe SUNDAY NEW YORK TIMES(daily 6am, Sun: 8:30AM...Current Countries: Spain, France,India, Italy, Russia, England, Croatia,Serbia, Germany, Israel, Brazil,Haiti,...Soon: Sweden, Red China,Vietnam, Japan.MANY TITLESHours: Mon Fri 6am 6pm; Sat.6am-lpm, Sun 7am 5pm.PERSONALSCHILDCAREAre winsome pretty girls and handsome noisy boys really necessary. Ifyou don't think so, call us at 734 3195.Couple with Irg. SoShore apt willprovide full-time day care for thesmall person in your life.First Unitarian Church of Chicago57th and WoodlawnTel: 324-4100Meadville|University of ChicagoIngathering ServiceSUNDAY - OCTOBER 3, 197110:30 A.M.Pulpit GuestMayor Richard G. Hatcherof GaryBLACK POLITICS and the PRESIDENCYORHELPING TO SAVEAMERICA S WHITE PROBLEMCoffee & Discussion Hour FollowsALL WELCOME !! University Orchestra AuditionsThursday, Sept. 30 10-2Friday, October 1 1-5Saturday, October 2 10-2Monday, October 4 10-2Tuesday, October 5 10-12Wednesday, October 6 10-12Prospective members sign up for auditions in Lex¬ington 12First rehearsal: Wed, Oct. 6, 7:30 pm, Man-del hall.First concert: Mozart, Magic Flute Over¬ture; Beethoven, Fourth Piano Concerto;Dvorak, New World Symphony.Information: 3-3612 NOTICE TO NEW AND RETURNINGSTUDENTS: Plus is alive and lookinggreat in Harper Court. Check it oorwhile the quarter's young. New Hyde-Parkers: Plus means unreal fashionsfor men and women. 5225 Harper.TO SEEK A NEWER COMMUNITY:Not like the "Church back home." Doyour human thing: Calvert House Oct.3, Mass in Hutch Court 10 30 food andfriends afterwards.Ready for Pickup or Delivery Kittens324 2 16 or 363 4540.ready for Pickup or Delivery Kittens324 2016 or 363 4540.U of C blowing your mind? Blow yourown. Pipes 8i Papers at RADICALRAGS. 1375 E. 53rd.The Christian Science Monitoravailable to read or purchaseStudent and FacultyDiscount on SubscriptionsChristian Science Reading Room1448 East 57th StreetTalisman Craft Gallery, Imports,Mexico, Spain, Haiti, Israel, India, theNorth Side.1552 E 53.1552 E 53. 324 0837.IS THIS A CHURCH? Worship anddiscussion in small groups. Classes forchildren. A welcome to all who desiretp know God. Living Peace BaptistChurch, 10:44 Sundays in YMCA, 53rc*& Dorchester. For info 548 1824.Photographs by Ken Love at ttuTALISMAN GALLERY, 1552 E 53rOct. 1 thru 15.BECOME ORDAINED:Join our religious society as an O;dained Minister with a Doctor oDivinity. Completely legal. Get alcertificates and ID. WriteMISSIONARIES OF THE NEVTRUTH; PO Box 1393, Dept. M2Evanston, Illinois, 60204.Roll back the prices! Sunday NvTimes 60c with any book purchase cBOOK CENTER 5211 Harper CourSingle mother seeks apt any size fcself and children and maybe roormates. 955 1797.KAPITAL you've read the book. Nosee the Movie. Come to NUCNUC Unity of theorty 8. practice.Kick the Ass of the Ruling Class wi*NUC, Gargoyle, Tuesday.NUC Educational sector of ttREVOLUTIONARY MOVEMEN10/ 5 8pmSmash Sexism. Join NUC WomerCaucus or Gay Caucua 10/ 5 8pmGargoyle 57th 8, University.NUC (New University Conference) 1Meeting 10/ 5 Gargoyle 8pmEverything you've wanted to kn<about the Church but have been afrito ask. Come to Calvert House for frrolls, coffee, and talk - after SundMasses, 10:30 & noon.MAftYOWCLAUHBTOIIiaUMM12121. SMS!., CMcag*, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* par lino, 40* par oath Kna if tho ad Is lopoatod in asubooquont, consocutiva issua. Non-Univarsity Raopla: 75* parKna, 60* par rapoat Kna. Thora aia 30 lattars, spacos, andpunctuation marks in a Kna. All ADS RAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: Thora is an axtra charga of $1.00 far your own hooding. Normalanas (For Salas, ate.) an froo.l11Contemporary European Films presentsULYSSESWednesday, October 66:30 8:30 10:30Mandel Cobb^7:00 & 9:15GIMME SHELTERSaturdayOctober 9Thursday, September 30,1971/The Chicago MaroonWINE AND CHEESE PARTYA PARTY IDEA FROM THE PARTY MARTSUGGESTION ISHARP, TANGY, ANDCREAMY TEXTURENEW YORK HERKIMER1970 BEAUJOLAIS (MOULIN-A-VENT) GREATEST WINEOF THISDISTRICT $1 29X lb.$C*98fifthSUGGESTION 2■fcT¥7/~i riT TTC TTT rm A SOFT AND CREAMY, SLIGHTLY SWEET,INJJiLi rLUo UL1KA with a touch of kirsch1959 CHATEAU L’ ARIESTE * richly sweet sautekne-A COMBINATION TO SERVE WITH FRESH FRUIT $qi9lb.$098THE GREATEST VINTAGE fifthSUGGESTION 3MOT T Avrn r OTTO A firm texture, mild, andflULLAlM U uU U UA delicately flavoredLIGHTLY FLAVORED1966 CHATEAU DU COURONEAU AND DRY RED WINEOF EXCEPTIONAL QUALITY $929lb.a 5eoo$198JL fifthSUGGESTION IFOUR TYPES TO SELECT. $045PARTY MART SPECIAL CHEDDAR SMOKED^B^ANIMLD Y ^ lb'OR SHARP1960 VINTAGE PORT CURRENTMARKET PRICES *42THE PARTYMART2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210Daily: 10 am-11 pm Sunday: Noon-9 pm 351 East 103rd Street568-1811Dail> :9 am-lOpm Sunday: Noon-9 pm$/The Chicago Maroon / Thursday, September 30,1971