The Chicago MaroonVolume 82, Number 14 The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 13, 1973Shimer College to close in JanuarySHIMER: This former fraternity house was bought by Shimer College, which hasannounced its closing.The University announced Saturdayevening that it will accept the entire seniorclass of Shimer College as special students inthe College, after Shimer closes at the end ofthis calendar year. This will enable theseniors to complete course work at Chicagowhich will satisfy requirements for theirdegrees to be awarded by Shimer at the endof the 1973-74 academic year.In addition, the University will review theacademic record of all other Shimer studentsand it will accept, in the College, thosestudents who are specifically recommendedfor acceptance by the dean of Shimer Collegeand the University’s admissions office.University officials will go to Shimer laterthis month to administer placementexaminations to any students who want totake them, to facilitate their entrance intoChicago.Charles O’Connell, vice president and deanof students, who announced these steps, saidthe University will do everything it can tohelp the Shimer students complete theireducation. He said the University will makea special effort to make loans and additionalstudent aid available for the Shimer studentswho need help, to make up the differencebetween the costs of education at Shimer andat the University.O’Connell said, “Shimer College gave thegift of knowledge and of learning tothousands of people for 120 years. Theclosing of such an institution — the purpose,and the accomplishment, of which were to dogreat good — is a terrible loss to this stateand to the nation. Obviously, everyoneinvolved in teaching will feel that loss, but sowill the great number of people who have had better lives as a result of the work of men andwomen educated at Shimer, and so will thegreat number who now will not be able tobenefit from this multiplied wisdom.“Because Shimer College has had a longtradition of close relationships with our ownCollege, we want to do all we can to help itsstudents. They can be proud of the collegethey are attending and of the education theyreceived there. We hope that those who areadmitted to the University and who choose tocome here will also be proud of theUniversity.”The University does not usually accepttransfer students in the middle of theacademic year, but O’Connell pointed outthat this is a special situation and that theUniversity has had special relationshipswith Shimer College for almost 80 years.Shimer officials had consulted with officersof the University last week about the pro¬gram for Shimer students.The relationship between Shimer Collegeand the University dates to the days ofWilliam Rainey Harper, the University’sfirst president. In 18% Shimer transferredcontrol to a board of trustees and waschartered as “Frances Shimer Academy ofthe University of Chicago.”The direct affiliation eventually ended, buta special relationship was renewed in thepresidency of Robert Hutchins. During the1940’s and 1950’s the Shimer Collegecurriculum was modeled on that of theUniversity’s College. The University handledShimer’s admissions, and Shimer studentstook Chicago placement tests andcomprehensive examinations. They alsoused University syllabi and reading lists intheir courses. Some Chicago faculty even went on leave occasionally to teach atShimer. Shimer remained, nonetheless, anautonomous institution.With the end of the Hutchins era and thebeginning of a new administration at Shimerthe two institutions went their respectiveways, and recent relations between Shimer and Chicago have been limited. Shimerpurchased a fraternity house at 56th andWoodlawn recently as part of a plan thatwould provide its students with a semester inthe city. Arrangements were being madewhereby Shimer students would be enrolledas students-at-large at the University.Gitterman tells of Soviet harassmentBy JIM FUCHSSoviet anti-semitism falls especially hardupon Jews trying to emigrate, according totheoretical physicist Moisei Gitterman.Gitterman, who recently emigrated fromthe Soviet Union to Israel, told reportersFriday of the problems which caused hisdecision to leave, and of the troubles he hadleaving. High on the list of problems he hadwas Soviet anti-semitism, of which he gaveseveral examples.He referred to two boys who chose to enterthe University of Moscow. These boys, whowere subject to oral examinations, receivedlow grades only because they were Jewish.After examinations, they were forced to go toBy MARK GRUENBERGCongress has both the power to let JudgeSirica appoint a special Watergateprosecutor, and the power to prevent hisremoval by the President, according to lawprofessor Philip Kurland.Kurland, testifying last Wednesday beforethe Senate Judiciary Committee, noted,“Justice must satisfy the appearance ofjustice. The appearance of justice requiresthe separation of the investigator and theinvestigated.” He cited as a basis for hisopinion a 1954 Supreme Court decision, Offutvs. United States.Kurland added that the events of theprevious weekend (the Archibald Cox firingand the subsequent public outcry) “havemade it impossible to accept the possibilitythat any special prosecutor appointed by thePresident or the incumbent attorney general(Robert Bork) can have the appearance ofindependence which is vital to the function a higher official in the University andprotest. To support their position, they had towrite from their memories transcripts of thequestions which were asked and the answerswhich they gave.Gitterman explained, however, that hisanit-semitism was even more significant forJews requesting permission to emigrate. Hetalked of a distinguished scientist wishing toemigrate, Benjamin Levich, whose son,Eugene Levich, is in the army and is alsobeing subjected to intolerable conditions.Eugene Levich is stationed in a specialarmy in Northern Siberia which, because ofthe abnormally cold weather, is generallycomposed of residents of Siberia. Because ofthat such a prosecutor must perform.“However many assurances are providedthat such an administration appointee will beindependent, and however much faith onemay have in the integrity of the personappointed, these assurances and this faithcame too late to be persuasive,” hecontinued. “The interests of the White Houseare too closely tied to a restricted rather thana full investigation that would be the chargeof a special prosecutor.”Kurland cited several clauses in theConstitution and several Supreme Courtcases which defined the meaning of thoseclauses as the evidence that Congress hadthe authority to let Sirica, who is the chiefjudge of the U.S. District Court for theDistrict of Columbia, appoint a specialprosecutor to continue the investigationbegun by Cox.Specifically, he cited the “necessary andproper clause” (article I, section 8) of the the severe cold and the dangerous winds,Eugene Levich has become extremely ill. Hecan only sleep three to four hours a night,and he has been severely mistreated, ac¬cording to Gitterman.Governmental retaliation extends to mostcitizens, and certainly all scientists,requesting permission to emigrate. Such arequest is invariably followed, in the case ofa scientist, by dismissal from whateveroccupation which he held, and so thesituation becomes even more difficult forthat person.Before requesting permission to emigrate,Gitterman, theoretical physicist who dealshearingsConstitution, the District of Columbia section(article I, section 8) and most importantlythe appointments clause (article II, section2), along with court cases outlining the scopeof these clauses.Turning to the appointments clause, henoted that it reads, “Congress may by lawvest the appointment of such inferiorofficers, as they think proper, in thePresident alone, in the courts of law, or in theheads of departments.” He then quoted an1880 Supreme Court decision (Ex parteSiebold) which upheld this clause.“It is no doubt usual and proper,” Kurlandsaid in quoting Justice Bradley’s words of1880, “to vest the appointment of inferiorofficers in that department of government,executive or judicial, or in that particularexecutive department to which the duties ofsuch officers appertain. But there is noabsolute requirement to this effect in theContinued on page 5 with solids and liquids, left his position. Inthe second half of June, he participated in ahunger strike with Mark Azbel, a formerdepartment head at Moscow’s Landau In¬stitute for Physical and Technical Physicsand Alexander Voronel, a member of theMoscow Institute for Physical Technical andRadio Technical Measurements.In the weeks following the hunger strike,the Soviet government communicated withGitterman and informed him that if he didnot involve himself in a dissident manner, hewould receive his visa during the year.Despite this message from the government,he subsequently participated in the In¬ternational Magnetism Conference inMoscow, and, as a result of his dissidence, hewas allowed to emigrate.Gitterman added that he knows people whohave been waiting to emigrate for two tothree years, and he explains that Russiananti-semitism increases the incentive ofJews to emigrate. Of the participants in thehunger strike, he was the first grantedpermission to emigrate.Gitterman believes that pressure can beexerted upon the Soviet government toliberalize its emigration policy, and the aimof his visit to the United States is to convincethe American people of that fact. He believesthat businessmen can be particularly ef¬fective in this regard, and he strongly sup¬ports the Jackson amendment.Gitterman arrived in the United Statesfrom Israel, and he is very happy there. Hepoints out that the people are united, and heis extremely enthusiastic about thenationalism which he finds there.Gitterman will visit Washington and willmeet with a number of congressmen andsenators, including senator Stevenson ofIllinois. He hopes that he can convince theAmerican people to pressure the SovietUnion into recognizaing basic human rightsby allowing the Jews to emigrate.Kurland speaks atFood prices vary in Hyde Park areaBy DAPHNE MACKLINAny housewife can ten you that food pricesaren’t what they used to be, and never reallywere what they should have been. Thetypical impoverished student, caught in thedire straits imposed by tuition and livingexpenses, can also apprciate the increases inthe price of food. There are some people whojust give in and pay the higher prices, andthere are others who will just eat less.Neither of these alternatives has much long¬term merit, so the food-conscious studentmust spend more time shopping andcompetitively pricing food according toweight, nutritional value, and versatility inpreparation.The comparative pricing technique is athrowback to the foraging and hunting ofcenturies gone by. But instead of nets andspears, the twentieth century forager shouldbe armed with pencil and paper, and a littlearithmetic skill. On one Saturday armed assuch, a trip was made to three of the largergrocers in the University-Hyde Park area.The prices of identical items were noted ineach of the stores. As an indication of thegeneral mark-up percentage, a comparison was made of the price of a can of Campbell’sTomato Soup, which retails nationally at 12caents, in each of the stores.The Co-Op (Hyde Park Shopping Center)the largest of the grocers sampled, this storeoffers the widest variety of all kinds of items,from staples to the exotic. Some of theproblems with the Co-op are its normal stateof overcrowdedness, and there are few smallpackages of anything. The general feeling isthe bigger, the cheaper. Campbell’s TomatoSoup is 14*— about a 17% mark-up. Despitethis evidence, the Co-Op prices generallyvary only pennies from those of Mr. G’s. Co¬op prices of dairy products-milk, eggs, andbutter-are steep. Eggs, depending on thegrade, are from 87 cents to 99 cents a dozen.Milk is 81 cents a half-gallon for whole GradeA pasteurized, and only 51* for skim milk.Quaker Oats in the 18 ounce package is astandard 44 cents, and the bread by which itis supposed that man cannot live alone is aslow as 31 cents on plain large white flourloaves. Specialty breads are as high as 60cents. Instant coffee is $1.31 per jar. (It’scheaper to drink beer.)Mr. G’s: Smaller than the CO-OP, Mr. G’s (53rd & Kimbark) is something of aneighborhood grocery store on an enlargedscale, but it retains some of the elements of alarge supermarket. On Saturdays there arelines at the check-out counters (but nothingcan beat the lines at the Co-Op!). The store isbasically for staples only, but does provide avariety of brands for the discriminatingshopper.Though the difference in the price of twobrands of flour (Gold Meadow (1.03 vs.Pillsbury $1.01) is small, such differencescan add up considerably. Quaker Oats is asteady 44 cents, Maxwell House coffee is anickel less than the Co-op price, at $1.26 for a6-oz. can. Dairy foodstuffs are a bit morereasonable, with milk at 75 cents, skim milkat 49 cents. (Dieting might be a worthwhileconsideration. Margarine is much lessexpensive than butter anywhere, being 48cents a pound as compared to $1.02 for thesure thing. Besides, who needs thecholesterol?For the ecology minded, both the Co-Op andMr. G’s over-package their fresh fruits andvegetables. Many are outraged at paying fora lot of plastic, cellophane, and cardboard. It isn’t easy to examine the fruit when theprotective covering is so well enhanced, byhuman enterprise. On the other hand, it’smuch more of a challenge to shoplift agrapefruit in tissue paper in a cardboardplate, seal-wrapped in cellophane, than tojust pick up and pocket a grapefruit.Poullman’s: (1467 E. 53rd) If the intimacyof a small grocery is preferred, quiteuncrowded, with open fruit that can betouched, at rather moderate prices,Poullman’s Market is the place. On the otherhand, sometimes such comforts are costly.Poullman’s price for Campbell’s TomatoSoup is 2-for-39 cents - a mark-up of 64.5percent. The store doesn’t offer much morethan staples, and even that selection issomewhat limited. However, it is possible tofind smaller quantities that can be found atthe Co-Op. Dairy products are milk for 75cents and eggs are 79 cents a dozen. QuakerOats remains unswayed at 44 cents.Remember the price difference of flour atMr. G’s? Well, the same brands here areGold Medal 89 cents to Pillsbury $1.29. Andcoffee is $1.39 for Maxwell House, some 13pennies more than other stores.CALENDARTuesday, November 13RECITAL: Congratulations on fixing the carillon it soundsbeautiful again. Now everybody go hear Edward Mondello'srecital on the organ at Rockefeller chapel, 12:15 p.m.Tomorrow, same time, same place, you get to listen to thecarillon.BRIDGE: Duplicate bridge, for a price, Ida Noyes, 7 p.m.LECTURE: “The beginnings of agriculture and religion,"Mircea Eliade, Swift common room, 3:30 p.m.WOODWARD LECTURE: "Anxiety, new approaches to anold problem", Dr. Jarl Dyrud, Woodward Court master'sapartment, 8 p.m.FILMS: Chicago International Film Festival. For schedulesee last Friday's Grey City Journal.FILM: "Kiss Me Deadly", DOC, Cobb, 7:30 p.m.RECRUITERS: Peace Corps and VISTA recruiters ingeneral placement c ffice, Reynolds Club. Also Wednesday.MEET: IM wresting meet, Bartlett Gym, 7 p.m.CHICAGO REVIEWSPEAKER'S SERIESWith The William Vaughan Moody Committee And TheRoy Guttman Memorial Fund.PresentsTOM CLARKAuthor of: STONES, AIR, NEIL YOUNG,GREEN SMACK and JOHN'S HEARTReading His PoetryReynold's Club TheatreTuesday, Nov. 138:00 P.M.A Splendid Time Is Guaranteed For AllORIENTAL INSTITUTE DAVID WOLPER RETROSPECTIVE1155 E. 55th Street Shows at 3:00 pm and repeated at 6:30pm.TUESDAY November 13WEDNESDAY November 14THURSDAY November 15FRIDAY November 16SUNDAY November 18SATURDAY November 17 THE LEGEND OF MARILYN MONROETHE LAST TRIBES OF MINDANAOHOLLYWOOD: THE GOLDEN YEARSFOUR DAYS IN NOVEMBERTHE RACE FOR SPACEHOLLYWOOD: THE FABULOUS ERATHE MAKING OF THE PRESIDENT: 1960CHINA: THE ROOTS OF MADNESSMONKEYS, APES. AND MANSURRENDER AT APPOMATTOXSOPHIA ENTERTAINSTHEY’VE KILLED PRESIDENT LINCOLNA THOUSAND DAYSHOLLYWOOD AND THE STARSTHE JOURNEY OF ROBERT F.KENNtDYTICKETS AVAILABLE ATMandel Hall Box Office5706 S. University Ave.753-3581Film Festival Office12 E. Grand Ave. Rm. 301Chicago, III. 60611644-3400GENERAL ADMISSION: $2.50 per showMEMBERS & STUDENTS: $2.00 per show THE C'NC .MEETING: Open meeting of the Committee AgainstRacism, to discuss future projects, Reynolds Club lounge,7:30 p.m.FILM: "The Inheritance" a documentary of the Americanlabor movement, Blue Gargoyle, 75 cents, 8 p.m.READING: Poet Thomas Clark will give a poetry reading,Reynolds Club Theater, 8 p.m. The reading will be followedby a reception in Kenneth Northcott's apartment in PierceTower.Wednesday/ November 14RECITAL: Robert Lodineon the now-harmoniousRockefeller Chapel carillon, 12:15 p.m.MEETING' Table Tennis club, Ida Noyes, 6 p.m.MEETING II: Ruhani Satsang, Ida Noyes, 6:30 p.m.DANCE: Country dancers, Ida Noyes, 8 p.m.SEMINARS: The Chem Phys and the Biochemistryseminars have both classified the names and topics of theirspeakers with a "For Eyes Only" stamp. Maybe the two groups are sending the information to the President toprovide him with a respite from Watergate. Anyway, to findout what the men and topics are, show up at Kent 1-3 orCummings 101, respectively, at 4 p.m.LECTURE: Business school lecture series, with Xerox VPDouglas Reid, Rosenwald 15, 1 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: "Quasars as events in galactic nuclei", J.Kristian of Hale Observatories in the conference roon of theLaboratory for Astro physics and Space Research, 933 East56th, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: SIMS lecture, Ida Noyes, 7 p.m.FILM: “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers", DOC, Cobb, 7:30p.m.RECRUITERS: Peace Corps and VISTA recruiters all dayin the business school placement office. Also Friday.Thursday/ November 15MEETING:"GayXib, Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.MEETING: OBS, Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m. LECTURE: “The ceremonies of a de mythologized age,"Donald Levine, Harper 130, 4 p.m.BAND: Rosehip string band, at the Gargoyle, SI.50, 8:30p.m. Also Friday.MEETING: Christian Science Organization, Ida NoyesLibrary, 5:30 p.m.MEETING: Philosophy club meeting, Classics 16, 4:30 p.mFILMS: A night of comic nostalgia featuring "My LittleChickadee" with W. C. Fields and Mae West, plus "ReeferMadness", plus oodles of cartoons. This is what is known asrelaxation from the so called Life of the Mind, $1, Cobb, 8p.m. only.IM FOOTBALL: Zap vs Backrow in a playoff. See Zapelectrocute Backrow while Backrow tries to do thesame to the referees, on the Midway, 3:45 p.m.READING: Poet Robert Hayden reads from his collectedworks, Reynolds Club Theater, 8 p.m.2—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 13, 1973ABOUT THE MIDWAYSpecial electionSpecial elections will be held this Thursdayand Friday to fill existing vacancies in SG.Nomination forms are available in the SGoffice or in the Student Activities Office. Thedeadline for returning applications has beenextended to Wednesday, November 14 at nolater than 1 p.m.There will be a polling place open inRegenstein library from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.Thursday and from 10 to 4 on Friday. Otherpolling places will hopefully be open in Cobband Social Sciences around noon both days.Vacancies in the College houses are to befilled by house elections. The person electedmust present a letter signed by the housepresident and the resident head to theElections and Rules comm in the SG office. Itis requested that houses fill their vacanciesas soon as possible.StocksFor those who are interested, a fund to helppay the medical bills of assualt victim GaryStocks has been established. Those wishingto contribute should make their checkspayable to: “Fund for Gary Stocks’’ andsend them to the Lakeside Bank, 2268 S. Dr.Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive, Chicago.MessiahHandel’s Messiah will be presented inRockefeller Memorial Chapel, by theRockefeller Chapel choir and orchestra.Richard Vikstrom, director of chapel music,will conduct.The Messiah concerts are part of theUniversity’s oratorio festival series. Thesewill mark the 33rd and 34th time the Messiahhas been presented here.In addition to the present staff soloists,Susan Nalbach Lutz, soprano, Gerald Scott,tenor, and Monroe Olson, bass, counter-tenorDale Terbeek will perform the alto solos.Ticket prices are: $6 reserved; $5.50 forchancel seating; $5 general admission; and$2.50 for University students. Group ratesare available upon request to the chapelmusic office, telephone 753-3387.Tickets are now on sale at the ReynoldsClub desk, 5706 South University Avenue;Cooley’s Corner, 5211 South Harper Avenue;and at The Book Nook, 1538 East 55th Street.PoetryPoet Tom Clark will give a reading onTuesday, November 13, at 8 p.m. in ReynoldsClub Theatre. Tom Clark is the author ofmany books of poems, among them Stones,Air, John’s Heart, Niel Young, and Smack.He is also the poetry editor of “The ParisReview.’’ The reading is the second in thecontinuing series of poetry readingssponsored by the Chicago Review SpeakersSeries in conjunction with the WilliamVaughn Moody Committee and the RoyGuttman Memorial Fund.ChessThe Maroon Knights, undefeated last year,continued their winning streak by capturingthe first chess event of the new season, theChicago Intercollegiate Autumn Tornado.Chicago’s ‘A’ team won all four of itsmatches and scored 13-1/ 2 game points outof a possible 16. The ‘B’ team just missedtaking second place: entering the last roundtied with Northwestern, they lost toNorthwestern by one board. LoyolaUniversity placed fourth and Governors State University fifth while the ‘C’ team tooksixth ahead of Northeastern IllinoisUniversity and Loop College.High scorers for Chicago ‘A’’ were EricSchiller, 4-0, Robert Felt 3-0, and PaulCornelius, 3-1. The name Tornado describesthe fast time limit used in the tournament:players had to make 35 moves in an hour —when Bobby Fischer plays for the worldchampionship his time limit is 35 moves intwo-and-a-half hours.WoodwindsThe Hyde Park Woodwind Quintet opensits fourth season of chamber musicperformance on Friday, November 15th at7:30 p.m. The recital takes place in the HomeRoom of International House.The Quintet, which was founded by KurtFriedemann in 1970, was conceived from adesire to develop fine musicianship on a non¬professional level and to further expose theunique beauty of the small ensemble to themusical public. The members of the Quintetare all active in the field of music: KurtFriedemann, flutist, is an instructor of fluteat the American Conservatory of Music.Gregory Palm, oboist, studies with Ray Stillof the Chicago Symphony. Ralph Abernathy,clarinetist, directs the University ConcertBand and teaches instrumental music at thelaboratory schools. Paul Kelly, bassoonist,performs with the Roosevelt UniversityOrchestra and teaches music in the publicschools. Harold Arnett, hornist, studies withHelen Hirsch Kotas, former member of theChicago Symphony.The recital, which is free and open to thepublic, will consist of works by Handel,Danzi, Corelli, Loeillet and Arnold.RacismThe Committee Against Racism, whichrecently held a 4 day “Teach-in AgainstRacism’’ is having an open meeting,. Tuesday, 7:30 pm Reynolds Club Lounge.The purpose of the meeting is to providepeople with an opportunity to work on avariety of projects concerning the issue ofracism.Three projects being considered are: 1)investigating campus and communityracism; 2) putting together an on-goingspeakers program; 3) forming reading andstudy groups for people who want to knowmore about the IQ and racism issue andother issues.AssaultSunday night at 9:35 an undergraduatestudent was accosted and robbed by fivemen, ages 17-18 in front of Cobb Hall.The student was approached and asked formoney. He replied, “I don’t have anymoney,” but the men continued theiradvance, and surrounded the student,closing all chances for escape. They thenproceeded to reiterate their demand forcash and reached under the student’s coatfor his wallet. They extracted the wallet andsearched it, finding five dollars. They thenfled through the Harper and 59th streetarchway heading for the Midway.The student ran to the front of theAdministration building and called thecampus security police at 9:40. The securitypolice answered the call and caught the menon the Midway with the aid of the Chicagopolice at 9:45.The student was then taken to the 21stPrecinct Station and asked to identify thefive men in a line up of eight. He correctlyidentified three of the individuals andpressed charges for unarmed robbery.The case has been scheduled for sometimethis week. Visiting poetPrize-winning poet Robert Hayden willread from his works at the UniversityThursday evening, November 15.The reading, open to the public withoutticket and without charge, will be given at 8p.m. in the University’s Reynolds ClubTheatre.The reading is sponsored by theUniversity’s Committee on African andBlack American Humanities and the Moodyand Zabel Lecture Committees.Hayden won the grand prize for poetry atthe First World Festival of Negro Arts, heldin Senegal in 1965. He also has won theHopwood Award for Poetry and has receivedseveral fellowships, including a FordFellowship.Hayden is a professor of english at theUniversity of Michigan. He also has taught atFisk University. In his poetry, Haydenreflects both his black heritage and thegeneral modernist tradition in poetry asdeveloped by T.S. Eliot and W.H. Auden.Road rallyHave you ever had the desire to race yourCharger, Firebird or Cougar? Or woundn’tyou love to show up all sports car enthusiastsin a race with your 4-cylinder bug? If so,enter the 1st Annual Alpha Phi Omega RoadRally. It will be held on Sunday, November18 at high noon. We will meet at the mud lotbehind the gym at Loyola University at 6525N. Sheridan.Registration fee is $5 per car, 4 peoplemaximum per car. For $1 a man, you can getall the food and beer you can handle(Driver’s free!!). Sign up anytime inLoyola’s Lake Shore Centenniel Forum orcall Tom at 761-5825, Ex. 331 or Brian at 973-7850, Ex. 60.RadioAre you disgusted with the state of radio inChicago? Do you resent having nothing butthe Top 20 screaming meemies pushed at youday after day on 40 out of Chicago’s 43stations (give or take a few)? Or do youdislike the pusillanimous pussyfooting shownon the local TV news shows, featuring“happy talk,” Floyd Kalber’s funny stories,and only 11 minutes of news in every half-hour, according to the Chicago JournalismReview?If you dislike the state of the broadcastmedia in Chicago, it is time to take pen inhand. All Illinois broadcasters, whethervisual or auditory, had to file for renewal oftheir licenses this year. Their applications,which had to be received by the FeceralCommunications Commission (FCC) inWashington last month, are open for citizenscommentary—but only until this Thursday.In their applications, they claimed thatthey were offering diverse programming,with “enough” public affairs programming,and few enough commercials, to satisfy theFCC. Copies of their applications are on fileat each station office here in Chicago, if youwant to find things about the stations tocontest, including the lack of information(According to outgoing FCC commissionerNicholas Johnson, Chicago stations wereamong the worst).The place to protest is: The Office ofLicensing, The Federal CommunicationsCommission, Washington, D.C.HavighurstRobert Havighurst will be the speaker atthe meeting of the Midway of Chicagochapter of the American Association ofRetired Persons on Thursday, November 15at 1:30 p.m. at the United Church of Hyde Park, 53rd and Blackstone.Havighurst, who is professor emeritus ofeducation and human development willdiscuss his research on reminiscence in olderpeople. A pioneer in the study of humandevelopment and the life span, Havighurst iswell known for many services in the field ofaging. He is a member of the advisorycouncil of the White House Conference onAging and of the advisory committee of theCity of Chicago Mayor’s Office for SeniorCitizens.Havighurst, who is a member of thechapter and lives in Hyde Park, and EdMarcus, chapter president, attended theAnnual Conference of the GerontologicalSociety at Miami Beach, November 5-9.Everybody over 55 is welcome to attendmeetings of the chapter.RecitalThe Thomas Peck Studio will present aRecital for the benefit of the First UnitarianChurch Choir on Sunday, November 18, 1973at 8:00 p.m. in the church sanctuary, 57thand Woodlawn. Thomas Peck is director ofthe Grant Park Symphony Chorus and theFirst Unitarian Choir. Donation is $2.50, witha student rate of $1.50. For furtherinformation, call 324-4100 or 334-2556. Ticketsare available at the church office and at thedoor.ThanksgivingThe Community Thanksgiving Service,sponsored by the local council of churchesand synagogues and the University ofChicago, will be held in Rockefeller chapel,Woodlawn at 59th Street, on Thursday,November 22 at 11:00 a.m.The sermon, “Sacrifices of Thanksgiving”will be given by Philip N. Kranz, assistantrabbi of Chicago Sinai Congregation. Othersparticipating will be chapel dean E. SpencerParsons, Rabbi Simeon J. Maslin of K.A.M.Isaiah Israel and president of the council ofHyde Park and Kenwood churches andsynagogues, Miss Betty Schneider, secretaryof the parish council of the Church of St.Thomas the Apostle, Rev. Arthur C. Bryantof Augustana Lutheran Church, Rev. J. OtisErwin of St. James Methodist Church andRev. James K. Serrick of the Jesuit School ofTheology in Chicago.Over 300 children and adults from thechurches, synagogues and the ChicagoChildren’s Choir, will sing under theleadership of Gerald Rizzer, music directorof Congregation Rodfei Zodek, assisted byRev. Christopher Moore of First UnitarianChurch and Rev. Dennis O’Neill of theChurch of St. Thomas the Apostle. The musicwill be embellished by hand bells, trumpetsand vocal solos.The Community Service has been a longtradition in Hyde Park and Kenwood. Priorto 1928, two services were held, one inKenwood and one in Hyde Park. When theChapel was opened, Dean Charles W.Gilkey’s invitation to hold a community-wideservice in the new sanctuary was accepted.On only two occasions have the services beenheld elsewhere. In 1933, when Hitler waspersecuting the Jews, the service was held atTemple Isaiah Israel and in 1950 it was heldin 5350 South Shore Drive when Chicago SinaiCongregation moved into its new sanctuaryat that location.Staff meetingThere will be a meeting of all staffers ofthe Maroon (GCJ not included) thisWednesday at 8 p.m. in the Maroon office.Topics on the agenda will include: theMaroon party, deadlines, and guidelines onwriting. Attendance of all staffers ismandatory. Also to be discussed will be thenew Maroon style sheet.Thursday, Nov. 15 Ida Noyes HallRENNIE DAVIS7:30 P.M. Sponsored by SGThe Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 13. 1973—3LETTERS TO THE EDITORMachtingerDear Friends,I am writing to you from the WeatherUnderground. I was busted in New York Cityon September 19, released on bail, and chosenot to appear for arraignment in JuliusHoffman’s court in Chicago on October 9.It has been a very strange and intense lastmonth. The quickness at which experiencehappens can be surprising. Free one day,busted by the FBI, in jail for a night, in court,greeted warmly by old friends and comradesnot seen for many years. Walking out ofcourt, going home to my family that day.Visiting with my family, relearning familyhistory, discussing my life again with mymother. Brief moments with people to seehow they were surviving, living, working,thinking. Saying first hellos, and introducingmyself.At the same time: nervous, fearful,unhappy to be at the disposal of the samestate power which so ruthlessly attacked thepeople of Vietnam, and which in these lastweeks aided in the overthrow of the PopularUnity government of Chile.What should I do? Go to jail and do time -for how long? It was hard to tell, though itdidn’t seem it would be for that long. Do mypolitical work behind steel bars, get out andfigure a new way to integrate myself in therevolution? Or, if I had the opportunity,return to what I had been doing: trying tobuild secret—from the state power—bases ofstrength as one means of aiding in theoverthrow of the imperialist, sexist, raciststate. And return to the relationships I hadbeen involved in during the last years.There were risks and losses to each choice.So it was not easy to decide. How upset wouldmy family be if I disappeared again after soshort a visit? I barely had a chance to get toknow anyone, which made it more difficult tojudge what the real opportunities forpolitical and human work were if I dealt withimperialist “due process” and returned to“visible” political activity. There was alsothe prospect of going to jail, or if not that, alengthy, expensive legal battle with thestate. Even if I didn’t get locked up im¬mediately, there would be a tremendousdiversion of energy, time, and money fromother political work for who knows how long.The eight Vietnam Vets Against the War inthe Gainesville “conspiracy” trial were tiedup for 18 months in legal combat, and arestill left with large debts - even though theywere found “innocent”.It is important to note that I was notconfronting what Black and otb2r ThirdWorld freedom fighters face. They have beenmost viciously attacked by this govern¬ment’s offensive against resistance. Theyare assumed to be guilty in advance of trial,they have been murdered or locked up foryears, even if they are later judged “in¬ nocent”. Those convicted face unendingsentences, with the threat of murder byindividual prison authorities or Atticashanging over them.There were a lot of factors to weigh. Ifocused more and more on the followingconcerns, which, to me, were decisive. I wascarefully trying to figure out what I wantedfrom life and what I was fighting for. Whowere my closest comrades-in-arms at thistime, who did I need to work things out with?Where could I personally, given my ex¬perience and skills, most usefully function? Itried to understand where my own historybrought me to, now that I faced an importantdecision. The Vietnam War had stronglyaffected my life and work for many years.With the signing of the peace accords, it wasat a new stage. It was clear that the newstage was part of a new political situation inthe world, and therefore a new situation inthe lives and work of all the people I hadlived and worked with in the recent past. Istill wanted to be part of this working out ofnew directions.In the past few months I had been studyingand thinking about history - uncoveringfrom the boring history the Man teaches usthe long line of persistent brave resistance tooppression. The Movement of the last decadeis part of that tradition. The struggle con¬tinues in many forms.I believe in the continuation and growth ofwhat so many people fought so hard to buildover the last years. There need to be basesbeyond the reach of the state power - so thatpeople have alternatives to going to jail, sothat we can as much as possible meet, think,plot, study, work things out without the in¬terference of our enemies (without beingharassed, infiltrated or bugged). So that wehave a place to hide ourselves, our weapons,so that we can act without depending somuch on imperially controlled methods ofcommunication, and finally, so that we canbuild strong enough to someday help takepower away from those maniacs whonapalm, rape, and rob the people of theworld.This is one kind of work that needs to bedone to help build the world revolution. Theexperience of the last few weeks as well asthe last three years, is full of all kinds ofrevolutionary work that people are doingthat are powerful and important. During thetime I was figuring out my decision I saw aslide show of women in prison, went to abenefit to help relieve the drought in sixcountries in West Africa, visited a day-carecenter, saw a play about women written andperformed by women, signed a petition aboutpolitical prisoners in South Vietnam, metnew friends who wanted to support our trial.It was exciting, inspiring and strengthening.Also this month, Henry Brown, accused ofbeing a member of the Black LiberationArmy by the New York City police, escaped from his captors’ clutches, and was un¬fortunately recaptured while I was stayingwith my parents. His example and couragehad a strong impact on me.Finally, it is important to let people knowthat it is possible to live amongst love andsupport, and do energizing political workwhile being actively sought by the state. Thatthere still exists a source of strength that isdeep and full enough to return to. Andhopefully enrich with the experience of thelast few weeks.Love, power and solidarity,Howie MachtingerP.S. After finishing this letter, I heard thatthe 3-year-old Detroit “conspiracy” in¬dictment was dismissed. Power to thePeople!Mr. Machtinger is a former student atthe University.Reply to NCLCIn reading through the November 9th issueof the Maroon, I could not help but be struckby the comments of Don Jacobs on behalf ofthe National Caucus of Labor Committeesagainst Edgar Epps. I feel that if any realunderstanding of this article is desired somerebuttal commentary is necessary. I wouldlike therefore to address several of thealleged facts Mr. Jacobs presents.First he asserts the committee has indeedexposed Epps. He neglects to indicate whathe means by exposed, what the implicationsof such “exposure” are, and what thereactions of those present (his constituenciesin academia and the Black community)were. This is not surprising because theunanimous reaction to Mr. Jacobs andcompany was negative. He further neglectsto define the details of the propaganda whichEpps is allegedly disseminating and the wayin which anything Epps said in that forum orany other attempts to make minorities“proud of their poverty.” Again this isentirely understandable, as it is merely amyth created somewhere in the “minds”(for lack of a better work) of Mr. Jacobs andhis committees. He indicates that Epps is a“popular community spokesman” operatingunder the auspices of the CIA. Again, noproof or any sort of substantiation, merelyscare tactics familiar to anyone who livedthrough the Joe McCarthy era. Pick anunpopular group or organization andassociate anyone you don’t like with it...theresult (at least desired result) is thediscrediting of that person. Such tactics arean insult to the intellegence of the people Mr.Jacobs is addressing himself to. IndeedJacobs even submits that the call for“community control” (which emanates fromthe local populations) of the services and institutions that affect the lives of those inthat community are a function of the CIA“think tank.” Jacobs goes even furtherhowever in stating that a call for work-studyjobs is equivalent to fighting an organizedlabor movement and somehow precludes theability and/ or desire for ghetto "youth toobtain even a high school level education.The line of connection is non-existant at best,and to assuume that people who areconcerned with the realities of day-to-dayexistence; i.e. eating, having a roof overtheir heads, having clothes to wear; are to bedenied any type of job in the name of somenebulous labor movement is absurd in thepurest sense. Following from this pointJacobs mentions that Epps is activelypushing for Skinnerian type of methods to beemployed in the schools. This point is soridiculous that it almost defies belief.Anyone who has any knowledge of ‘whereEpps is at’ will realize that he is in factpushing for the opposite of rat-like climatesin the schools instructional programs. Theother points of contention which I could raiseare numerous and most do not merit beingdignified by response. There are severalquestions which I wish Mr. Jacobs, hisfollowers and those with whom he talkswould consider.Jacobs says that he is not surprised thatEpps received his training at Tuskegee (“thecounter-insurgency center of the South”)...Iwonder where, indeed if Jacobs received anytraining in the art of propoganda anddemagoguery. He practices it very well.Further, it is important to note that Jacobsand company are white and the people healleges to represent are primarily Black. Hisattitudes and methods are familiar to thoseof us in the Black community who have livedthrough many eras of paternal white“liberals” and “radicals” who, from aneconomically secure background and theoption of educational as well as occupationaladvancement, presume to not onlyunderstand the realities of Black life in theghetto, but in fact have the answer...whichthey are willing to give to Black people. Theovertones of superiority and even racism areclear and in a sense frightening in that suchpeople as Jacobs do believe (or indicate thatthey do) that they do in fact have a mission tolead the hordes of poor, ignorant, andpowerless Black people out of their povertyto a new Utopia. The insult that line ofthought carries is too great to be passed offas mere ignorance or not knowing anybetter.I also wonder how many people notice thatthe so-called programs which Jacobspromotes are never defined and instead existmerely as rhetorical platitudes used to drawthe unsuspecting into a dead end“movement” which will only lead tocontinued on page 6STENOGRAPHERSDICTAPHONE OPR'STYPISTSWork 3-5 DaysApply Tuesday thru Thursday9:15 A.M.-3:30 P.M.WESTERN GIRL, INCHyde Park Bank Bldg.1525 East 53rd StreetRoom914667-4087STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER •CHICAGO 2050 W. Devon Ave. CHICAGO JPreparatory courses for the following exams are now •being formed - Courses begin seven weeks prior to the #test - REGISTER EARLY. •LSAT 2-9-74 rE GRE 1-19-74 •MCAT 5-4-74 *T DAT 1-12-74 *2 yr. NatT Bds. 6-74 \ ATGSB 1-26-74 ••• Taped Lessons For Review or Missed Classes •• Course Material Constantly Updated *• Small Classes §• Compact Courses ®• Tutors From The Field of Your Test ^(312) 764-5151 •Established 1938 ® Say "I love you"with more lovethan money.For just $98, In fact.Yes. we have fine qualitydiamonds for $98. And on upto $3,000. You'll find them in anyoneof our stores. And you IIappreciate two rules everyHollands employee lives by:First, we never high pressure. Weprefer that you shop slowly andcarefully. Look at only thosediamonds that you can afford Wehave a large selection in your pricecategory. Ask as many questions asyou like We II give you all theanswers StraightSecond, since 1910 our policy ofreturning your money i f for anyreason you re not satisfiedSo. if you have the love, and a littlebitof money, wehavetherightdiamond foryoullollnmls .InvclrrsDowntown 119 N. Wabash Evrrf>reen Plaza ' Lakehurst/Woodfield STORAGEInternational House Resident CouncilCoffeehouseLocated in the Basement of International House1414 E. 59th St.Hours: Seven Nights a Week 9:30-12:30All Day Saturday 12:20 P.M.-12:30 A.M.Sunday 1:00-5:30 P.M.Huge Sandwiches, Drinks, Food, Music, Color TVOn Weekends753-22894—The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, November 13, 1973Cropsey speaks on politics of Judaism“Judaism has a trans-historicalmeaning,” according to political scienceprofessor Joseph Cropsey.Cropsey, speaking Friday night at Hillelhouse in a lecture titled “Judaism andPolitics,” said that it was this trans-historical meaning, given to Judaism by theTorah, which accounted for Jewish politicalvalues to a great extent.Anyone who had come expecting to hearCropsey speak of Jews and politics, andspecifically recent problems andpotentialities, was caught off guard byCropsey’s argument, as he searched for thedeeper reasons for Jewish politicalconsciousness. “I’m talking about Judaismapart from us disgraceful manifestations ofit,” he pointed out.Stating that he would raise more questionsthan he would answer, Cropsey posed thequestion of whether one can account for anypolitical beliefs held by Jews from theirreligious background or from externalcause.If external causes do have an effect onJewish political attitudes then, “This wouldmean that Jews can be Jews in one sense, butthey are changed in a crucial way in theirdispersed condition,” according to Cropsey.But this raises two questions, he continued.“Is Judaism a type of thing such that outsidecircumstances can be decisive? And if so,they are decisive for the meaning of Judaism.”If that was so, Cropsey implied, Judaismwas really a “neutral force”, with no specificeffect on modern lives whatsoever.However, if it were not so, then Judaismdoes have an effect upon its practitionerswhen they made political decisions,according to Cropsey. He traced the effect ofJudaism to precepts of the Torah, asinterpreted by the 11th century philosopherMaimonides.“Judaism must be fixed by the Torah or allis up for grabs,” according to Cropseyquoting one thought of Maimonides. “TheTorah is the principle of our regime and itdoes not fit in other regimes. It aims at theprospering of the soul and of the body.” Toachieve this prosperity—and to qualify aregime under the precepts of the Torah, andthus being worthy of Jewish supportaccording to Cropsey—it must fulfill threeprecepts, “the arrangement of order, noblemoral habits and, most importantly, reasonin act.”After posing the question whether all threeof the ends must be aimed at by all Jews injudging regimes, Cropsey answered itaffirmatively, saying that the Torah thus“defines a regime to support—one with aview to its end, not by its constitution.”However, Cropsey noted that this stillleaves unanswered the question of what typeof regime Jews shouldWatergate prosecutor mustbe completely independentContinued from page 1Constitution. . .He cited further justification forseparating the appointment of the prosecutorfrom the president by looking at Englishcommon law and at the practices in thestates. “The vast majority of them have beenunwilling to trust the administration ofcriminal laws to officials subordinate to thechief executive,” Kurland noted.Turning to the question of whether theCongress has the power to legislate the ideathat the President cannot remove the newspecial prosecutor, he cited three supremeCourt cases (Myers vs. U.S. in 1926,Humphrey’s Executor, in 1935, and Wienervs. U.S. in 1958) which laid down definitionsof who is or is not a removable official as hisguideline. “The important propositions are three,”Kurland stated. “First, where, as here,independence from the President isnecessary to the proper performance of thespecial prosecutor’s duties, the power ofremoval does not rest with the President.Second ... the Congress defines the termsand conditions of appointment, and third, thenecessity for independence would prohibitthe President from discharging a specialprosecutor except on grounds specified in thelaw.”According to the bill which he wastestifying on, S. 2611, the special prosecutorcan be removed only by Sirica, and then onlywhen he “has willfully violated theprovisions of this act or committed otherextraordinary improprieties, and for noother reason.” support—artistocratic, monarchic ordemocratic.“Apparently Jews have lived in such avariety of political arrangements, we beginto suspect that the whole debate doesn’tmean anything,” he mused. “If you look atthe record, the suspicion seems sustainedthat Jews can accomodate to any regime.They can be just as good a citizen of oneregime as they can of any.”However, he introduced a note of caution.“But someone who is just as good a citizen ofone regime as of any other regime, is just asbad a citizen of one as of any other.”As a result, “Being a Jew doesn’t tell youmuch about what to believe,” in specificinstances, according to Cropsey. “From the criteria laid down by the Torah, Jews canjudge regimes, but nothing follows afterthat.”“If that is true,” Cropsey warned, “Jewishleftism would have to re-examine itself, formany Jews have claimed that Judaism leadsthem in a leftward direction. So far as Jewshave taken on the mantle of the prophets,they have grounds to object to the prevailingorder, but they must speak as individuals,not as Jews.“One cannot say that Judaism stands forrighteousness, and imply by that thatJudaism stands for rejection of middle-classvalues. If the rejection of middle-classvalues depends on a Marxist concept ofjustice, forget the authority of Isaiah.”. A, -*•"»»»»>*-Students. Faculty, ft Staff contactvagabond *84442*tours \ CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a $10used 9x12 Rug, to a customI carpet. Specializing in Rem-> nants 4 Mill returns at aTraction of the original cost.) Decoration Colors and Qualities.1) Additional 10% Discount withthis Ad.! FREE DELIVERYCommittee on African and Black AmericanStudiesThe Moody and Zabel Lecturespresent SPECIAL ELECTIONSto fill the following vacanciesin the S.G. assemblyOther College-4 seats(undergrads not living in dormsorfrats)Divinity School-1 seatLibrary School-1 seatMed. School-1 seatSocial Sciences (grad)-4 seats Cbmfcctftfmet&Afttfttyfe bon* f byefaorr ocbeutnCenoctb hettKtof*mon curry mature to come an*gpueacounteof t&tyityuco dattyt* ttoilfte/atto to m manetof a rnoyau playe. *\READING HIS POETRY Nominations closeWednesday, Nov. 14 University Theatre PresentsevenyMANdirected by ^Nicholas RudallTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15,19738:00 p.m.Reynolds Club Theatre-5706 University Ave.Admission Free No Later Than 1:00 P.M.Pick up forms in Student Activitiesor in S.G. officeElections will be Nov. 15f16 Nov. 9,10,11 and 16,17,18 8:30 pmRockefeller Chapel$2.50 / $2.00 studentsFor information call 753-3581Tho fhirngn Mnrnnn—TiiPsHnv Nnvpmher 13, 1973—-LETTERS TO THE EDITORcontinued from page 4frustration and further hopelessness insearch of an undefined and probably non-existant Utopia. Further, to attempt topersuade Black people to follow suchprescriptions is to ignore all that we (Blackpeople) know about the realities of life inboth the ghetto and this country.Jacobs represents the essence ofpaternalistic, chauvinistic and indeed racistdogma that has plagued the Blackcommunity for too long. If we as Blackpeople are to survive and make anymeaningful use of our lives the basicprerequisite is that we be allowed todetermine in what directions we are to go,regardless of whether people like Jacobsthink that we are right in our choice. Theright of SELF-determination is; or shouldbe; a basic right of all people, and therhetoric and disruptive tactics employed byJacobs and company would indicate thatthey do not believe this to be the case forBlack people.Having lived the Black experience inAmerica for over 23 years...an experienceJacobs has only read about or casuallyobserved...I not only resent hisdetermination that he is the one to lead Blackpeople out of the “darkness,” but will fightsuch attempts where ever they occur.In attacking Edgar Epps, a man aboutwhom he obviously knows nothing, Jacobshas given notice that his position is one of adestroyer, not a builder. Black and otherminorities should beware of the NationalCaucus of Labor Committees, their goals andours are not in the same direction. If anyonebehaves like a member of the CIA. it isJacobs, not Epps. If Jacobs were half theman Edgar Epps is, he might actually bereally dangerous.Judson Hixson ChileSince the commercial press is inundatedwith Watergate, the Middle East, and wintersales, the atrocities committed daily by theChilean military junta escape our attentionand our conscience. Yet it is urgent that weextend help to all those whose lives arethreatened if they do not find a way ofleaving Chile and that we exert pressure onthe United States government to discontinueits assistance in the establishment of a facistregime in Chile. I hope that the followingexcerpts-from a letter written by a personwho was recently allowed to leave Chile andfrom Latin America, an independent weeklypublished in London--will prompt some ofyour readers to join the activities of variousChicago groups to save lives in Chile.The author of the letter from which I citewas a student at the Latin American Schoolof Sociology (LACSO). This is what theletter describes:“From my class, 28 of us, on the 12th ofSeptember, the day after the coup, theydetained Jorge Rios, a Bolivian exiled inChile. On the 17th we were requested toidentify his corpse; he was shot. On the 27thof September they detained Ignacio Soto andon the 28th it was necessary to identify hisbody; he “fell from a balcony during thecourse of an interrogation.” Four otherswere detained but fortunately we managedto rescue them and now they are exiled inPeru; , a professor, was alsoimprisoned and now is in exile; and as of nowa wife of one of my colleagues is stilldetained. Others already* found exile inforeign embassies.“The Western Campus of the University of ^ .Chile was completely taken apart ; the entire SpGQKGTSrenewal project of San Borja, in front of the 'UNCTAD building, was minutely searchedduring an operation that lasted more than aday. I have seen burning there impressive fires with books whose sin was to includepolitics in their titles. Burning in this fashionwere among others Weber, Rousseau,Constant, etc. and obviously the entireMarxist literature. To one of my friends theyburnt nearly the entire library but theyforgave her the Capital, probably because ofthe title or perhaps because they did notcatch the author. There are militarysupervisors in all universities and one doesnot have the minimum of security withregard to one’s life. Perhaps this letter willseem totally incoherent, but I still cannotcalm down...”Latin America, a weekly political andeconomic report published in London,reported in its issue of October 19:“...the junta piled up more odium for itselfabroad, despite its complaints of unfairtreatment, and of a deliberate communist-inspired campaign to give it a bad image.Nor was its international standing improvedby the report for the United Nations onhuman rights under the military junta. Thethree were Leopoldo Torres, Spanishsecretary general of the internationalmovement of Catholic lawyers; MichaelBlum, the French secretary general of theinternational federation of human rights^and Joel Nordman, the French internationalsecretary of the association of democraticlawyers. Their conclusion was that ‘humanrights are systematically violated,’ and theycited cases of summary executions andtorture. Torres told reporters that this camevery near to the United Nations definition ofgenocide.” Adam Przeworskiprofessor of political science serious omission—and a sexist one..It is hardto believe that not one woman poet of staturecould be found for the series.I would like to see an investigation of thisphenomenon by the Maroon staff.Janet HellerI was rather upset when I noticed that noneof the poets invited here by the ChicagoReview are women. I feel that this is a The Chicago MarooneditorMark Gruenbergmanaging editorJeff Rothnews editorTim Rudybusiness managerRich Bakerassociate editorsSteve Durbin Clara Hemphillphotography editorJohn Voi.sports editorMike Kraussassistant business managerAnn ThornestaffMarie Crawford Lisa VogelBarbara Foley Jim NachbarDave Blumberg Jim KaplanHarold Zeidmon Mike KlingensmithNorma Buchonan Brian McGohey• Joan Cecich Chip ForresterRobert Charkovsky Mike McMahonKurt Hanson Jonathan RobinsonJim Ihde Barbara ShapiroJoel Jaffer Michael RudyCharles Jonulis Mark SpeiglanMelinda Kanner Robin PrinceMiles Archer Louis NietoDan Wise jjm FuchsMichael SussmonCLASSIFIED AD FORMINSTRUCTIONS: Fill in the form, one letter or punc¬tuation mark per square. Leave spaces appropriately.CALL 753-3265 for more information CHARGE: ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE50* per line for UC people40* per line for repeat ads75* per line non-UC people60* per line for repeat adsNAME AND PHONE NUMBERHEADING(there is no charge for regular headings, i.e.. Space, People For Sale, etc. Your own heading costs $1.00 per 15 space line. 75* for repeat.)4J'6—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 13, 1973*MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSSPACE2 Room unfurn. apt. 54th & Harper Availnow. Call 764-9849. South Shore Community Services 2343 E.71st St.See Monica Block 667 2002 or 2004.Own room in large sunny apartment.57th 8. Kimbark. Rent $70 mo. Grad, orworking woman. Days call Shelia at 3295737, after 6 call 684-5498.RESPONSIBLE LAW STUDENTS wishto rent and care for your furn. apt orhouse in Hyde Park. As of Dec. or Jan 1.Now in prof's house. References avail.Call Jeff 324 3349.Live in Frederika's famous bldg.Nearby, furn, or unfurn. 2 and 3 rm.apts. for 1, 2, 3 people. Refrig., stove,pvt. bath, stm. heat. Quiet, Sunny. ViewParking, trans., $120.00 up. Free Utils.Latham, 6043 Woodlawn. 955-9209 or 4272583. Short term lease or longer.Apt. Sublet: 2 bedrooms, spacious inHyde Park Call 241-7335 or SU7 4435.CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APARTMENTS Near beach, parks I.C. trains,11 mins to loop U of C and loop buses atdoor. Modest daily weekly monthlyrates. 24 hr desk. Complete services 5100S. Cornell. Miss Smith DO 3-2400. Moving? Hire my van and me. Call Alanat 684 1175.APT. 8 1/2 ROOMSin top school district! Spacious condo.Hyde Park Blvd. Low assess. Low price.You decorate $27,500.QUIET HOUSECharming townhse 4 bdrms 2 1/2 bath. 8yrs. old. North of Kimbark PlazaFinancing no problem.FIRE YOUR LANDLORDIs one bedroom enough epee, if all roomsare large, clean 8< sunny? Beaut, cpnd.,elect, kit., cheaper than rent. Nr. 57th onStony.Call MRS. VIKSTROMBAIRD8.WARNER1525 E. 53rd St. 324 1855SCENESSON OF ROSEHIPS Return of Rosehipstring band to the Sanctuary at theGargoyle. Thurs. 8. Fri. at 8:30, 1.50.Dr. Susan Meschel will speak on"Growing up Jewish in Hungary, 19441956," Friday, 11/16 at Millet, 8:30 PM.TENANT REFERRALREASONABLE RENTALSDESIRABLE APARTMENTSFurn. and unfurn. Lake Front CommunityTHE FLAMINGOON THE LAKE3500South Shore DriveStudios from $158One bedroom from $170Furnished or unfurnishedShort term leases752-3800Mrs. AdelmanBudget |Rent a Canof Hyde Park5508S LakeParkAve$ 5 per dayplus 1 OC a mileand up493-7900ENJOY!NikkormatFTnHas the unique Nikon‘center-weighted” metersystem, built in. Usesfamous interchangeableNikkor lenses and Nikonaccessories./With Nikkor F: 2 lensGift aaaaaPrked 208°°Lay away planSee our complete line of Ni¬kon, Nikkormat, NixonosCameras, lenses and accesso¬ries1342 E. 55th493-6700Order your PhotoChristmas cardsNow! WALTER OF IDA NOYES HASRETIRED. We are giving a party.Friends, old 8. new, please call x 3591now.Studs Terkel and Jonathon Kozoldiscussing the crisis in AmericanEducation in a benefit for the SouthernVERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterWell Maintained SecureBuildingSublet lovely 2Vi roomStudioAt Campus Bus StopFA 4-0200 Mrs. Groak School of Chicago. Tues Nov 13 atFrancis Parker School 330 W. Webster atClark St. 8 PM Donation $3 students, $4others. 769-0185.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING everyThurs. 8:15 p.m. (Note new time). Hillel5715 S. Woodlawn PL2-1127.PEOPLE WANTEDJOBS IN ACTION. There is somethingyou can do for ACTION, and for yourself.Become a Peace Corps or VISTAvolunteer for one or two years. ACTIONis a growing concern. We need morevolunteers now for projects that startnext spring in 60 countries and all overthe United States; people with majors inbusiness, education, health, languages,liberal arts, math and sciences andmany other skills. ACTION volunteersare paid, but that's not the big thing.What they really get is a chance to helpthemselves while they are helpingothers. ACTION recruiters will be at theUniversity of Chicago November 13 14 inthe general placement office andNovember 15-15 in the business schoolplacement office. Find out what you cando for ACTION and whatACTION can dofor you.WALTER OF IDA NOYES HASRETIRED. We're giving a party.Friends, old and new, please call x3591now.Need extra money? Sell rubber stamps.A necessity for everyone. Call HU7-3158or 1791.WANTED: CLERK TYPIST Reliableperson with pleasant telephone voice tohandle clerical position, must type 50wpm,hoursare from8:30 AMto4:30 PMmust De punctual. For appt contact M.Bechtel, 1313 E. 60th St. Room 464 orcall 324 3400, Ext. 266.Mature woman or reliable studentneeded to sit in my home with my 2 1/2yr old daughter on Tues. and Thurs.afternoons. 7 8 PM 753 0450SweetDickBurchisgoingtoshake upChicago!Sweet Dick Burch for Originality!Sweet Dick Burch for Imagination!Sweet Dick Burch for Satire!Sweet Dick Burch for Mimicry!Sweet Dick Burch for the Big Put-On!Sweet Dick Burch for Sweetness and Slight!Sweet Dick Burch for Parody!Sweet Dick Burch for Wit!Sweet Dick Burch for Lampooning!Sweet Dick Burch Show6-10ani.Mon.-FiiRadb ROOMMATE WANTED: Male studentwanted to share apt in Hyde Park. Call241 7335 or SU7 4435 leave message.PORTRAITS 4 for $4 and up. MaynardStudios. 1459 E. 53, 2nd fl. 643 4083PEOPLE FOR SALENEED TYPING DONE? PHONE 5823088.Studt (w/ref) do housewk. Fri. Sat. aft.Call 947 9054 til 10 PMExp, typing on IBS Selectric. 947 6347 or955 4195.TYPIST exp. Call 752 8119 after 6 PMExperienced manuscript typing on IBMSelectric. 378-5774.Exp. typing. Neat work 947 0033.PRIVATE GERMAN TUTORING forbeginners and advanced pupils, alsoconversation. Call 363 4300. Apt. 417.Experty typing. Reasonable 667 0580. DESK LAMP LOX& BAGELSWANTED: Inexpensive study lamp for Brunch this Sun. 11:00 AM at Hillel 5715desk. Call 241 5438. Woodlawn, only $1.50.MEDITATION PAN PIZZADELI VERYRuhani Satsang. The technique of Surat The Medici delivers 5 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.Shabd Yoga as taught by Sant Kirpal Sun. thru Thurs. 5 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Fri.Singh. Weds, eves, 8:00 PM in Ida Noyes ancl Sat. 667 7394. Save 60 cents byHall, Rm. 213. picking it up yourself.TO THE PEOPLECHARGE OF THEMINIBUSSES IN STUDENT DISCOUNTWeeknights at the Efendi! 955 5151.PERSONALSFOR SALE Now that you are getting two NEWminibusses, and seeing that you havefour already, I have a request. 2 plus 4equals 6. SIX minibusses equal TWO oneach route, and no more 30 minute waitsfor the C bus in the middle of nowhere.How about it, fellas?REFORM -LIBERALCREATIVE FRIDAYEVE SERVICEMeeting, Tues Nov 13, 6 00 PM at Hillel,5715 Woodlawn, to explore thepossibilities of such a service.SF^MAGAZINESWANTED: Old cheap, SF Magazines,especially ASTOUNDlNGs, F 8. S)s, Call241 5438.HILLEL CLASSESConversation Hebrew is now meeting atHillel every Wed. Beginners 7:30 - 9:30PM. Intermediate 9:00-10:30.REFRIGERATORRENTAL,. .. ! . 71 ! T ITT Mini-frige: Pennies a day, BilledaRu'pmeJ2t- Mark 1 skis 204 month I y, call Swan Rental 721 4400.CM and Large Pro. Boots. Nearly new,you set the price. 947 8480 or 3-3618. WALTER OF IDA NOYES HALL HASRETIRED, We're giving a party.Friends, old 8, new, please call x 3591now.To my slightly emaciated friend, J.T. Ithink what you need is a decent meal for■ a change. Try the Gargoyle at 6:00. It'sgood, nutritious, and cheap.MIMI: Metyouat-PartyonNov.lOandfellinlovewouldliketosharemoreelderberrywithyoucallBenat BA61970.VW 64 Bug rebuilt engine new clutchgood body Sunroof needs some work.$375. 241 7463.Ford custom '66 very good condition for$425. Call 241-5121 evenings.Carpet, double bed, single bed, chairs,vacum, crib, baby's furniture, etc.Moving out. 947 8537.23" Color TV Penncrest console worksvery well $150. Call 684 2454 after 5.FIREWOODVOLUNTEER OBSERVERS needed forresearch project with chronicschizophrenics at a state hospital. Needto spend two days a week in an interaction situation. Car helpful, notessential. Starts Jan. first. For interviescall 793 5570 x 254, 514.Exper. pianist or guitarist who singssought by bass player to form duo. Peter 1966 Mustang Conv. Good body, engine Seasoned and Split hardwood 1, 1/2, or$275 Call 493 4190 Ev. 8, wknds. 1/4 ton. Bsmt 8. upstair. De. 241 5430.VW 69 F'back good cond. $495. 684 3200. PLAY TENNISHand Knit ICELANDIC SWEATERS, SM L-XL $60. Call Joe at 421 6240.Tapestry chair Victorian lamp walnutcahir tables 947 8909 753-2677.GAY LIBERATIONDESPERATE! Need someone to takethe office on Wed. PLEASE call 753-3274Mon nite or 324 7483 thru the week. 6 indoor courts, 3 outdoor courts. Privateand group lessons available South SideRaquet Club, 1401 E. Sibley, VI9 1235.STEP TUTORSStudent Tutoring Elementary Projectneeds volunteers to tutor biweekly.There are a lot of children who could usethe help if you are interested, please callJay Sugarman at 947 8804 or Mary LouGebka at 643 8266.Officeopen Sun.-Thurs. eve 7:30 - 11. IdaNoyes 301. Tues is women's nite. Comeup or call 753-3274.Unitarian Gay Caucus Get together. Fr.Nov. 16 Call Clark R. House at 324 0173For Details.Sexual identity discussion Group 7:30Thursdays Ida Noys. Straights,Bisexuals, Gays, undecideds, welcome.ASST SCOUTMASTERWANTEDFormer scout wanted to serve as anassistant scoutmaster of troop 599.Meeting Wednesday evenings at ChicagoSinai. Congregation 5400 South ShoreDrive. Call 752-7428. Or 363 5078.TO ROCKEFELLERCHAPELThank you for fixing the carrillon. RECORDERS!Apologies for the last ad. Come meetother recorder playing people MondayNov. 19 7:30 IDA NOYES27th LATKE -HAMENTASHSYMPOSIUMLOSTFOUNDDorothy Smith Beauty Salon5841 BlackstoneHY 3-1069Specializing in shaping of naturally wavyhair. Special o*ten*ion paid to con¬ditioning of hair:Use only the very bestof shampoos and conditioners - LOreoltints, bleoches and rinses.Member of National Hair Dressers AssociationOpen-Monday through Friday7:30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m.Closed SaturdayDorothy Smith MUSIC SOCIETYENTERENTERltheCONTESTCONTESTl PREGNANCY TESTING every Sat 10 45500 Woodlawn. Cost $1.50 Bring 1stmorning urine sample.Got a problem? Need information? Justwant to talk? Call Changes, 955-0700 M-F6-12. Blue Gargoyle.WRITERS' WORKSHOP (PL2 8377)MADWOMANDidn't it make you feel good to hearDon McLean sing that one song about theyoung lover from Yonkers taking hissweetheart out back and torturing her to"show her how much he loved her andhow anxious he was to get her consent tomarriage? Don't you just love such littletouches of comedy that lighten theevening's entertainment and give theaudience an insight into the real heart ofthe performer? How is it that Don.McLean, who seems nice enough, cannot just sing "Banks of the Ohio", wherethe murder could be attributed to oldfashioned forms of courtship, but mustsing an updated version in which thecomic note is the joy of misogyny?I kept hoping that when the lovertorturer had finished his chores, histortured lover would kick him in theballs, rip off her bonds and announce tohis prostrate figure, as she rode off intothe sunset, "Women don't stand for thatkind of shit anymore."MADWOMANTues. Nov. 20, 7:30 PM, Cloister ClubIda Noyes, Participants: Profs WayneBooth, Stephen Cohen, Donald Fischman, Stephen Kaufman, David Orlinsky.Moderator — Morris Jaowitz. Food atHillel, 5715 Woodlawn afterwards.Dark prescription glasses in doublecase. Call 753-2492.Electronic component in Bookstore.lobby. To claim please call withdescription. 753-3317.Chamber Music night Thurs. Nov. 157:30 Ida Noyes Hall 2nd floor Recorders,brass, strings, refreshmts.LOUIE'S BARBER SHOPWill style your hair as youwould like it done.1303 E. 53rd St.FA 4-3878 CONTRACEPTIVESTHROUGH THETHE MAILObtaining male contraceptiveswithout embarrassment can bea problem. Now SensitiveProducts Corp. has solved thatproblem. We offer a completeline of famous brand condomssent by mail in a tasteful plainpackage for absolute privacy.Now you can choose from awide variety of brands andlearn what the differencesreally are. We offer the famousTrogan, the exciting pre-shapedConture and ten other top-quality brands. All meet strictgovernment standards .ofreliability.Well be glad to send you ourillustrated brochure whichdescribes the products. Sendjust $3.50 for a sampler pack ofa dozen contraceptives-threeeach of four leading brands plusour brochure or send 25‘ for thebrochure only.SENSITIVE PRODUCTS CORP.P.0. Bax 562, Hopkins, MR 55343Please send me:$3.50 Sampler (12 Condoms)$5.50 Special Sampler (21 Con¬doms)Catalogue only: 25*(Enclose Cash, Check, or M.O.)NAMEADDRESSCITY STATE,ZIPJ's PIPE SHOPFine imported Briar Pipesandimported cigarsFine Men’s ToilettriesChristmas Lay-Away PlanHyd« Park Bank Bldg.1523 E. 53rd St.The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 13, 1973—7Booters beat Crusaders 3-2By JIM KAPLANThe perennially tough Wheaton CollegeCrusaders, winners of the last 7 out of 9NCAA Mid-Eastern Soccer Championshipswill not even be invited to participate in thattournament this year. The Maroon soccersquad saw to that Saturday when they upsetthe highly touted Crusaders 3-2 on StaggField, ruining Wheaton’s chances for anexpected post-season tournament bid.It was quite a way to end another winningseason for the Chicago booters who earlier inthe week dropped a closely contested matchin Deerfield to Trinity College 2-1. The final73 record thus stands at a respectable 7-4-2,the second best record for a Chicago soccerteam in history.“We finally played up to our potential”said a wet Bill Vendl after his jubilantplayers doused the coach in the showers aspart of their post game victory celebration.An inspired Maroon team that came up withChicago’s first win against a Wheaton soccerclub since 1952. Revenge was their motive asmany of the Maroons could still taste the bitter 9-2 defeat handed them a year ago bythese same Crusaders.Seven Chicago booters took off their spikesfor the last time in a Maroon uniform at theconclusion of Saturday’s sweet victory.Upsetting Wheaton made the entire season asuccess for these graduating seniors who hada hand in breaking or tying 22 team recordsin this, the final year of their careers.Most notable among these are the careerscoring marks set by senior forward and All-American candidate Dennis Ball. Ballregistered 22 assists and 49 goais in onlythree years of play. Senior co-captain PaulSchuster finished with 48 goals and a record326 career shots. Senior halfback John Chuends his career with two endurance records,52 games and 4150 minutes played.In Wednesday’s Trinity game, ArisStylianopoulos supplied Chicago with thelead 25 minutes into the first half when heheaded in a Dennis Ball pass. However, thehustling Trojans of Trinity were not to bebettered on that cold November day andcame back to tie the game before the end of the half. A second goal 6 minutes into thesecond half ended the scoring, sealing theMaroon’s fate.Saturday was another story as the bootersnever relinquished their lead. At 17:30 of thefirst period Ball scored his record-breakinggoal on a Schuster assist.The Maroons carried that 1-0 lead into thehalf-time intermission during which Vendlmade plans to go into the special Maroonfour-man “sweeper” defense. They stayed inthat formation throughout the second halfholding a potent Crusader offense to 2 goalsafter their own offense had increased thelead to 3-0.Chu scored at 3:30 of the second half on afine set-up by Ball and then Juan Luco scoredthe eventual winner on a flukey play. Luco’soriginal shot was stopped nicely by aCrusader defender. However, when he sawnothing but Maroon shirts bearing down onhim, he elected to pass the ball back for hisgoalie to punt out. Unexpectedly, he put alittle too much on the pass back and the ballcrossed the Wheaton goal-line for Chicago’s Jocks bring Diary toCobb Hall SaturdayDiary of A Mad Housewife, a film whichhas nothing to do with athletics, will beshown Saturday night in Cobb Hall. Therewill be two showings at 7:15 p.m. and 9:30p.m. Admission will be one dollar.The president of the Order of the C whenasked why his group was sponsoring themovie, he said, “We don’t want to be labeledas jocks so we decided to show a movie ofunredoubtable social value.”“You can miss the Backrow versus ZAPgame Thursday but don’t miss this movieSaturday night,” he concluded.third and final goal.The Crusaders made things nervous with 2goals of their own, but the Maroonsstubbornly held on for their finest victory inrecent years.In addition to Ball, Schuster, Chu, andStylianopoulos, who spear-headed this year’sMaroon offense, defensive stalwarts GeorgeSkibine, Mike Dotsey, and Tom Coleman willbe lost to graduation after a very gratifyinglast season.’’Psycho Idiot Kids" newIndependent UG champsBy MILES ARCHEROnce upon a time there was a tunnel. Avery long tunnel. And, for some reason, thosewho found themselves inside the tunnelbelieved there was an end to it. Even now,when the proverbial light should beappearing at the end of the Intramuralfootball tunnel and the league championspreparing for their p!?yoff contests, thebeleaguered undergraduates findthemselves with ties in each of theirresidence leagues and, are preparing to playplayoffs to get into the playoffs.The worst mess is the three way tie in theUndergraduate White League, whereShorey, Vincent and Lower Flint took turnsbeating one another and all ended the seasonwith 5-1 records. If you believe in omens, Lower Flint would be the one to put yourmoney on. Since determination of thechampionship will require two games, one ofthe teams had to get a bye. This wasdetermined by a drawing Friday in theIntramural office. When the Lower Flintcaptain was late, former Lower Flintian Bob“He’s still! around?” Yovovich drew the bye.In the Blue League, long time rivalsHitchcock West and Breckenridge areknotted at 5-1. Undoubtedly, Greg Balbierzhasn’t let his Hitchcock West legions forgettheir October 22nd 7-0 loss toBreckinridge. On the other side, it’sreported that Marty Delong hasn’t let PatLevitt eat or sleep (not to mention otherthings) for three days in order to get Patfighting mad for Tuesday’s showdown on IM PLAYOFFS BEGIN! These excited spectators can't wait to see if the Psycho-Idiot Kids disappoint us again. Photo by Janice Tepke.Stagg Field. Both teams will undoubtedly beready and it promises to be a good game.In the Red League, the two way tie wasresolved Sunday when Alpha Delt met Tuftson Stagg Field, where Tufts proved that theirprevious 2-0 victory was no fluke by winningconvincingly, 14-0. While all this commotion to pick anundergraduate residence champ is going on,Greg Roster’s Psycho-Idiot Kids quietly wonthe Undergraduate Independentchampionship and are patiently awaitingwho ever staggers out of the precedingmess to play for the college championship.Maroons unVail new offense; lose last game 20-6By MIKE KLINGENSMITHThe Maroons “unVailed” a new-lookoffense in their last game of the seasonSaturday at Stagg Field. Chicago, behindfreshman quarterback John Vail, opened upan impressive passing game which netted143 yards on the afternoon. The aerial attackwas not enough, however, as NortheasternIllinois emerged victorious by a 20-6 score.Vail, a 6’2”, 170 pounder from Raritan,New Jersey made his first start of the seasonat quarterback. He completed 8 of 19 passesand rushed for 33 yards, including a 9 yardtouchdown run. Four times he threw for goodgains to tight end Roger Tweed.Tweed, with two spectacular receptions,demonstrated to the home crowd why he hasacquired the nickname “glue fingers”. The 5’11”, 195 pounder is also a freshman and theVail-Tweed combination gives Maroon fanssomething special to look forward to incoming seasons.Defensively, youthful Maroons alsosparkled. Sophomore Paul Swiontkowski hadhis second consecutive fine game,contributing nine individual tackles.Sophomores Paul Duke and Dick Kovacsadded 5 and 6 tackles, respectively.Northeastern Illinois upped their seasonrecord to 4-5 largely by taking advantage of agood running game. Halfback RichChurnikovich gained 154 yards and had onetouchdown in 25 carries while quarterbackJerry Ollchwier gained 115 yards and hadtwo touchdowns in 13 tries. The Maroonsended the season at 0-6-1.Several Maroons played their last games on Saturday and will be missed. SteveKroeter, starting quarterback for the lastthree years watched the final game from thesidelines, as the coaching staff decided togive Vail some valuable game experience.George Yuhas, a standout defensive tackleall year, had seven individual tackles and aninterception to close out a fine career. TomYondorff and Mike Vidas also played theirlast games.However, the Maroon’s freshman andsophomore ballplayers will provide a strongnucleus for the 1974 season. Running backDenny Christen was undoubtedly theoutstanding UC performer this season.Christen is a sophomore. Mike O’Connor andRay Diaz will also bring experience to thebackfield. Offensive lineman Curt Spillerand Jack LeVan are sophomores and shouldanchor a strong offensive line. Defensively, Kovacs, Swiontkowski, and freshmanstandout Bill Verre will blend talent andexperience.The leadership of the 1974 squad will comefrom a small but strong corps of juniors. PatSpurgeon and George Jones will steady theoffense while Mike Krauss and Greg Pompeywill be the senior defensemen.The Maroons of ’73 scored six points in thefirst half of the first game and six points inthe last half of the last game and no pointsin between. Not exactly a performance torevive memories of Jay Berwangergalloping across Old Stagg Field. But theexcitement of that last quarter touchdownshould carry over and make 1974 a differentstory. If the Maroons can come up with asgood a freshman group as they did this yearto complement the returning lettermen, thefootball program should be on its way back.CHRISTEN: Halfback Denny Christen snags a well- SMILE: The Maroon offense finally gave statisticiansthrown pass to be greeted by three Northeastern Jane Zari and Nancy Sprick something to smile about,onlookers. Photo by Peter Mazareas. Photo by Leslie Travis.8—The Chicago Maroon—Tuesday, November 13, 1973 VAIL: Freshman quarterback John Vail en route togaining 143 yards passing in Saturday's game. Photoby Peter Mazareas.