Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL) - Class of 1970 Page 1 of 364
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Anxiety ( ) What is the Problem Long in coming Widespread Growing larger and more intense Where are we now? Where are they Where are you What is the Solution What must be done. Why is it the way? Come with us now! Look back for the last time. Be always drunk, nothing else matters. If you would not feel the horrible burden of Time weighing on your shoulders and crushing you to the earth, Be drunken continually. Drunken with what? With Wine, with poetry, with virtue, as you will. But be drunken. And if sometimes on the stairs of a palace. Or on the green side of a ditch. Or in the dreary solitude of your own room. You should awaken and the drunkenness be half or wholly slipped away from you, Ask of the wind, or of the wave, or of the star, or of the bird, or of the clock, of whatever flies, or sighs, or rocks, or sings, or speaks. Ask what hour it is; And the wind, wave, star, bird, clock, will answer you: It is the hour to be drunken! Be drunken if you would not be martyred slaves of Time; be drunken continually! With wine, with poetry, with virtue, as you will. Charles Baudelaire I ■A V - n T SHITHS DRUG STORE ' .fi- ' - . fcs r ? : M ■■■■x All this mess in the world that at one time had got me so politically involved and another time so depressed was for a very important reason and that is that when there is less in the world for man to take faith in. when the world is at one of its low points like today, it forces man to go inside himself to find real values and transcendent values to live on. I ' ve been in manv situations in the past three years - traveling, not- ing, studying - and in every walk of life, in every place, I can see people involved in the same search. The intensity of the search is different but the search is always the same. It ' s you yourself that wants to become awake and you yourself that spins out this world of destruction, like in a dream. You ' re in bed at night and vou dream. A little man walks up and says, Number one. you ' re dreaming; number two, you ' ve created all this here; and number three, you and I are not we but one, we ' re all one consciousness, we ' re all one being. And you say, Dreaming? This is real. I didn ' t create all this. You wake up and it was a dream. You created the whole thing, then you destroyed the whole thing. The bizarre thing about it is, in order to wake up, you yourself took a part in that dream which was something you saw as separate from yourself which told you to wake up. Ellis Pines, past leader of student power, present follower of Meher Baba. I have come not to teach, but to awaken. Meher Baba ROTC. MUST GO as It were Revolutions take place In vacant spaces, In empty mud lots Overgrown with Trampled leaflets. I do not believe The lots are Really lawns And gardens. I do not believe They are framed By sidewalks And streetlamps. ACTION . ' - J S l S! - , ' v The University Disciplinary Committee (UDC) went on trial in April along with 21 black students allegedly involved in a confrontation at Triangle fra- ternity in March. An agreement between University Counsel and the accused blacks prom- ised to reduce original charges and sentences in exchange for a plea of guilty. The accused students accepted and the university accepted — to save face some said. The agreement suspended six blacks for a month and placed 15 others on disciplinary probation for two months. It infuriated most of those involved. Triangle called the lenient punishments a travesty of justice. For Members Only (FMO) claimed the accused had accepted the agreement because expulsion was the only other alternative offered them. Blacks and whites alike balked at the judiciary that had confused justice and negotia- tion. No one proved or disproved that a Triangle brother had insulted a black sister. This issue, stated as the cause for the raid, faded beneath the torrent of criticism levelled at UDC from all sides. Our quarrel is with the University— the way it handles problems of both blacks and whites, said Milt Gardner, FMO spokesman. The preliminary hearings held in closed sessions came under attack first. Sympathetic whites formed Concerned White Citizens and circulated peti- tions demanding the formation of a campus judicial body that could then try the case. FMO held a week of firesides in white housing units. On April 16, 21 black students representing the 21 who had been sen- tenced began a hunger strike they planned to continue until the sentences were revoked or lessened. Onto the plaza at Rebecca Crown they brought blankets and radios and signs that read: Feed us justice. While about 300 students participated in a candlelight march down Sheri- dan Road in the rain, while Julian Bond and Fred Hampton rallied the strik- ers, while Concerned White Students picketed, the administration re- mained silent. Students and faculty signed petitions, many organizations on campus wrote letters pleading with the university to make some statement, SDS joined with a sympathy strike and then split over the apparent failure of non-violent tactics. The administration did not support the sentences, it did not revoke the sentences. The administration remained silent. Four strikers were carried to Evanston Hospital Sunday. The rest went home Monday after 121 hungry hours. Milt Gardner said it ended because there was no reason to let these people starve any longer. m . -4 . Ih .A i 5 V In May, UDC punished four members of SDS for disrupting a regularly scheduled class of NROTC during an anti-ROTC demonstration on Deering Meadow. The university has used academic means in defin- ing Deering Meadow as a classroom in order to re- press political dissent on the campus, Defense Counsel Barb Caulfield said. Six hundred students rallied to an SDS demonstra- tion protesting the UDC action, the largest such force Northwestern has seen. But SDS anti-ROTC polemics were overshadowed by the general indig- nation of those present that a judicial body declared inadequate had again been allowed to exercise power. The Daily pointed out that Dean Hinz acted as both a prosecutor, since his staff members had been at Deering helping identify offenders, and as a member of the judicial committee. Associated Student Government reported that no midshipmen had said their rights were violated, and that Col. Baylor Gibson said he saw no disruption on the field. The case was appealed, UDC dissolved into the Student Hearing and Appeals Board — but for the four, the sentences held. Northwestern University stands for freedom of speech, freedom of inquiry, freedom of dissent and freedom to demonstrate in peaceful fashion . . . and stands for the right of all faculty and students to pursue their legitimate goals without interfer- ence. . . . This University, therefore, will not toler- ate any attempt by any individual, group or organi- zation to disrupt the regularly scheduled activities of the University. ... if any such attempt is made to interfere with any University activity, the lead- ers and participants engaged in disruptive tactics will be held responsible and will be subject to ap- propriate legal and disciplinary action, including expulsion. — Board of Trustees , . aware , Inere is so much to know ignorance hides in vour spine as ling re ■our conditioned respgiware give you security. You are in the know and with h c J vd and still an individual Our illua(WsarBe 5k our need for humility in a fea fuj white fac illusions mask I xa iWacTQi lElto Washington. I ' m closer to there now. a war dead :aced i-FUSt TO A WAR- ' ite.1-. WAtf fftsisrt ' H,. Cahn auditorium ove rflowed and spilled 2,000 people into Deering Mead- ow. Controversial historial Staughton Lynd spoke there, placing responsibility { for the war on big ' corporations and the universities that in- vest in them. Others spoke on war crimes and war games. Six hundred Northwestern students leafletted Evanston. There were classes, too — about a third of those normally scheduled — but audiences were small. Young Americans For Freedom demanded refunds for cancelled classes, but most of those who didn ' t participate in the Moratorium did not begrudge a day off. SDS marched in a torchlight parade of sixty against ROTC and scuffled with fraternity men that night. The Civic Center in Chicago over- flowed. The crowd spilled across the plaza and the base of Picasso ' s rusted bird onto LaSalle St. Traffic was de- toured. Office workers watched construction workers watched and police encircling the base of the Civic Center Building watched. But housewives and hippies, businessmen ana students, blacks and whites and vet- ' I Si illg erans participated. j -— . -:;-= «i Defendants in the Conspiracy Eight trial spoke, wearing black arm bands. Members of the Hair cast sang. And in a moment of silence, everyone bowed his head and raised his arm fingers stretched into the V for peace. Over 15,000 students from neigh- boring universities leafletted the city and a white-jacketed corps of North- western med students carried a mock stretcher splattered with mock blood into the American Medical Association offices. At the University of Chicago, a bell tolled 38 times for the 38 weeks the Nixon Administra- tion had failed to end the war. But in the White House, Nixon was busy discussing Latin American and economic problems. Bring The Action Home Washington overflowed the next month. The protesters from the cities and the campuses spilled around the White House and the Justice Building and down Constitution Avenue. Some reports said 250,000 and some said a million people were there. It ' s too bad. The first thing anyone said when you asked him about Wash- ington was, Well, I was teargassed. The gas came Friday night after SDS called a march to the South Vietnamese embassy to serve an eviction notice. It ' s too bad because 47,000 people participated in a 40-hour March Against Death before that, each marcher calling out the name he was carrying as he filed past the White House. The voices harmonized with funeral cadences beat- ing from six drums. The strands of people wound from the Capitol to the Washington Monu- ment in the official march organized by the New Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam. Some placed the estimate of marchers near a million, but of course that ' s still a minority. The silent majority remained silent. Everyone said the Moratorium would continue to grow in strength but the Dec. 14 newspaper headlines were busy with more elaborate issues. As one student leaving Washington said, ' Nixon will have to hear us, an- other commented, I don ' t think this does any good any more. We ' ve been doing it for ten years. « 1 - ;v J %m -s l -in c J.ii cv IB j Centennial Hall is silent except for a typewriter here and there, except for blackboards that tell empty rooms; Get out of Vietnam— Get out of class Vietnam — Class A53 — sec. 21 — no meeting today. Go to Cahn (or Deering) and listen to Straughton Lynd. No one responds to the ringing bells. Professors not interested in the war or even a holiday draw only crowds of empty seats. Harris and University stand still. Their windowed eyes stare straight ahead. Over the unnatural silence and the traffic of Sheridan Road slip the words of an orator on Deering Meadow. A thousand have convened there to hear about the war and the system that perpetuates war. Those thousand too are silent. Some cry out with ribbons of black and banners and buttons but it is not a day for loud or violent protest. It is a day for silence and respect — or disdain — or apathy. For those who daily trace their sched- ules building to building, class to class, pens primed over notebooks there is no time for the silence. Tech is crowded. Industrious young men who might yet destroy the world or save it in their applied, aloof, prag- matic manner can ' t afford to miss a com- puter lab no matter how much they may really care. My friend with long hair and a droop- ing moustache stands, transitor radio to his ear. What ' s the news, I ask him. World Series — they ' re in extra inn- ings. The Grill is emptier than usual. Booths are empty, seats are plentiful. The Grill Rats have crawled to Deering Meadow to join the mass standing against the war. Arpeggios fall as ever from the School of Music. Trumpets, pianos, sopranos in the name of art, create beauty that cannot today touch the ugliness of our war torn souls. But ail of these are at most a couple of thousand. Eight thousand students crowd the Evanston campus of North- western University. Where are they? Some are in Chicago. But the rest — where are they? -.. , ' ■' - ' l. lg. t y ' fUO ' ' Youth in Reaction The Northwestern student is a 19th century liberal. He agrees with the conservative position without being conser- vative. That ' s how one member of Northwestern ' s Young Ameri- cans for Freedom described the student body that elected Richard M. Nixon President in a mock election. John Jensen is president of Y.A.F. here. He maintains, as do all members, that his organization represents the true student interests. Late last school year, Jensen got tired of many things that are being done with my money, forcible cancellation of classes, the Daily Northwestern, and the whole posture of this campus. He acted. He recruited six members and put down his own $6 for a national charter. If you don ' t agree with the stand of national Y.A.F., you shouldn ' t be a member, one Y.A.F. said. So members of Y.A.F. adhere closely to national policy, defined in a paper called the Sharon Statement. The Sharon Statement was drafted by William F. Buckley, Jr., in 1960, the same year that the S.D.S. Port Huron Statement was written. Y.A.F. ' s are pro volunteer army and really big for laissez faire. They are against the minimum wage, compulsory So- cial Security, and East-West trade. A member will also have definite thoughts about the U.S. role against Communist domination in Asia and the union ' s exploitation of workers in the California grape strike, a complex issue, according to Jensen. Y.A.F. gives strong political support to men like Buckley, Ronald Reagan and Strom Thurmond. They in turn serve on the national advisory board. Y.A.F. ' s role on the Northwestern campus was to take a stance the majority of students would buy, Jensen recalls. 1 was paying into activities funds and got nothing out of it. I can ' t join F.M.O. and I ' m not interested in the Sailing Club. If an organization needs money it should raise it itself. I ' m against giving student government any money it doesn ' t raise itself. Jensen complained his money is being spent on organiza- tions and publications like the Daily Northwestern which don ' t express real campus sentiment. (Syllabus profits and Daily advertising support the Daily. — Ed.) He said student government doles out the funds and is full of liberal to left types with only a few conservative moderates. He and Y.A.F. here opposed cancellation of classes for the October K ..r r torium and proposed that students should request nds from the university. Jenseii , .,, J ihis cancellation of classes to no classes when students take over a building. A clear infringement of my rights. Y.A.F. ' s were thinking out loud about taking the universisy v.; coijrt for breach of contract. This brought hasty sympathy from Provost Payson S. Wild. Jensen, from Pdiatine, is a junior in history. He worked as a bank teller this summer and claims an equal interest in economics. As a Fiji, he wrestles, plays IM football and rode as a Fiji chieftain aiof; a sedan chair in the homecoming parade. His thinking, he believes, reflects the thinking of the American majority. LT ' ! It ' s a different America out there, he said. You hean about different feelings on American life when you talk to)| those in the manual trades, in trade and industrial schools ' and to those in junior colleges. . . . My parents are conservative — there you go saying ' oh,, that explains it! ' — they were really very open minded. I of-ji ten talked with them about it and reasoned it out with j them. I ' ve always been conservative. Jensen said when he entered high school, he discovered ■liberal teachers who would present their own views as the consensus. He says you have to question your teachers to register that you think they are wrong and rise above their outlook. A good teacher to me was Mr. McGregor who taught Money and Banking fall quarter. I can ' t tell which side he ' s on. The types of things that should be taught are ideals, the democratic type, with learning for organic growth, learning F ■' ,. ' -. IJR-J the values we have, Jensen said. If people become more aware they become critical. You should listen to everyone at the right time. I listen to S.D.S. at the right time, he said referring to a fall quarter invasion of a Y.A.F. meeting, but not in the middle of my meeting. S.D.S. is running out of gas here. The left-wing crazies were booed down when they disrupted Barry Farrell ' s class fall quarter. There ' s no question in my mind that they are obnoxious, a blight on campus. They should be exposed for the frauds and fascists that they are, Jensen said. I ' ve been called a fascist myself many times. Are these people who call names educated people? Jensen said although he ' s the Y.A.F. president here, It wouldn ' t go if it just depended on me. Rob Ritholz brought up the letter to Dr. Miller support- ing R.O.T.C. on campus. But I thought it too libertarian so i voted against it. Jensen explained the letter emphasized that the reason for R.O.T.C. ' s presence on campus was be- cause students wanted to take it. ! don ' t think that a course should be given just because students want to take it. The administration can take our advice but we can ' t tell them what to do. Another Y.A.F. activity was a petition which netted pretty well in excess of 500 signatures reflecting anti-North Viet- nam sentiment. Jensen believes the way to make changes is through the government. He admits he isn ' t happy with everything in the United States. But he says, the way to make changes is through government. We worked for Crane and helped get him elected. That ' s the kind of youth in action you never hear about! — Mark Winiarski The Scare We are looking for educated young people who possess such traits as aggressiveness to support America ' s goals, vigor to execute a given task, resourcefulness to conceive a new idea, reliability to execute that idea, curiosity to discover a better way, and boldness to present a new method. Furthermore, we are looking for people with integrity and purpose; people who can adapt to new situ- ations and grow with the changing times. —Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs To some, it was a joke. But many others were genuinely upset, it was more than just having narcs on cam- pus, although that really would be quite eno ugh. It was the distrust gen- erated by the mere hint of their ex- istence. It was the unpleasant but omnipresent necessity to glance over your shoulder, to speak in guarded tones and to consider the possibility of incriminating a friend with the careless answer to an innocent ques- tion. It was the invasion and degrada- tion of academic freedom. And, after a while, it became a game. Narc, narc. Who ' s there? and the merry hunt was on. An ASC commit- tee sought information and the regis- tration office searched its files. It was funny to kid around, claiming to be a narc, until people began to believe it and you got threatening phone calls. There was the atmosphere of an impending witchhunt, of tar and feathers and execution without trial. The most apathetic of Northwestern students was roused to violent decla- mations of the Narcotics Bureau. Then came the second thoughts. How could anybody afford to place sixty (the reported number of narcs on campuses in Illinois) agents any- where for anything over a prolonged period of time? Although one or a few narcs might exist in truth, the main intention of the Illinois Narcotic? Bureau was psychological in nature. Narcs were a rumor spread to inhibit the use of drugs by college students. If narcs were not such a serioui ' issue to so many people, the whole thing could be viewed as a bad joke: Nonetheless, the threat of under ' cover narcotics agents still exists. Tb paranoia they produce is still with u; and cannot be treated lightly. Craig Aronof U.S. DEPARTMENT O SPECIAL AGENT BUREAU OF NARCOTICS AND DANGEROUS DRUGS vv Since I have to go, I might as well go as an officer m m ' ml y : .;f H BP ' . c wfl| HP 1 ROTO o Cte - ' HShk Lee vVeiiier is sitting in jail today, paying our dues. He and the other Conspiracy defen- dants and lawyers represent virtually every force for human change in American society, and their official treatment ( Sentence first, verdict afterward, as in Wonderland) repre- sents the refusal of the proprietors of that socie- ty to let it be saved. Lee Weiner is one of the men of the university, and his fate is also the judgment of our keepers on what we are up to. Lee is taking the exam for us, and they are giving him an F. It is a signal honor for Northwestern that its man should be selected for the symbolic punish- ment of an entire generation of academic people. It is also significant that the instrument of the punishment should be the symbol of the Northwestern of the past, Julius Hoffman. Now that Lee is physically behind bars, with his fellows, it is time for Northwestern to consider its role and to tell the nation that it believes in Lee ' s work and intends to continue that work at an even greater level. Lee was a student, a teacher, a collogue, and a friend to many on our campus, and he has provided a model of how learning and study in the University can be relevant to the new society. Throughout his humiliation by trial in Federal Court, Lee has been working steadily on his dissertation. This work is not an alienated project born of submis- sion to academic tyranny, but a meaningful con- tribution of social science to the problems of social transformation. Lee is not a revolutionary who happens to be a graduate student, he is the student as a revolutionary. Let us seriously discuss the relation of the Conspiracy and its fate to our campus, which was one of its sources. On Wednesday, Feb- ruary 18, let us devote our activities to study of this, our most urgent and proper busi- ness. Bernard Beck Assistant Professor From The Daily Northwestern A DRAMATIZATION OF THE TRIAL BY FRANZ KAFTA AS PERFORMED BY THE CONSPIRACY 7 AND JUDGE JULIUS J. HOFFMAN TOGETHER ■••vMmMwaMI Drinking, drugs, music — it ' s all an escape and done with other people, it ' s the best escape of all. There is a bombard- ment of frustration — from society, from studies, from seeking a goal, from not seeking a goal. The frustration is there whether you think society is right and you try to live in it, or you think it ' s wrong and you try to fight against it. Either way, you fight. The frustration is there whether you study or not because on one side you have to face the work and on the other side you have to face the consequences of not working. There is a need for escape. Escape is an island of recluse. It is the senses ab- sorbed in the media of sights and sounds. It is the senses set free from the boundaries of routine. It is awakening of emo- tions that must be suppressed. Escape is a legitimate attempt to live in a world of myth rather than logic. It is the deadening of the steady pulse of purpose. It is words and touches and mo- tions and quiet. It is a gyration of moments tumbling over each other without context. Sorting them out comes later, comes back with the world of structure and equivalences and frustra- tions. STRIKE lay 1970: Northwestern Free State A FRIEND S - 1- -7 v f! w  t, ., ' it - i ' Ml vW ' V ' V- -sr -«« iliMH Northwestern fraternity men often entertain pinmates with a date of quiet conversation and fun ' ' SYLLABUS 1963 My head is swimming My head is splitting into a thousand kaleidoscopic frag- ments My head is a bubble stretching across one infinity absorbed from another. I have turned my head inside out so the universe coated the inner walls of my mind And I stared in awe at the galaxies of thoughts at the outer touch of my eyes. Only punctured bubbles can make the reverse And the two infinities Are seeping together. :: ' Perhaps it ' s only- my ears don ' t hear w my back strains an What 1 mean is, t typically basketball b detract from the atm of a concert. Still, ii situations, this is i problem, easily toleri Hey! B I don ' t caref abobt ffl i Vi li- and the audience. It was ,.;r!Bally nice to hear BS T do- |g SPINNING WHEEL and I HEN I DIE. It might be the teve of people ' s future. leither sax nor trumpet - ' lands alone with success. Sure, they were fine as a full compliment to a singer, but this was BS T, master musi- , ' ians, complete with a num- -i wr one rating in Playboy ' s jazz and Pop Poll. BS T strove for freedom, but un- fortunately their noble effort musically was only the rat- tling of chains. rm glad I followed the advice of Mary Garden Marvelous Mary G irilcn v riits: Mv teachers. Tmhelto gnil Richaul Harutemcy, all -9- _5 I . THE LOU FRONT ' ' , HIGH BACK cENSORED Arro Collar I know darn well I can do without Broadway, but can Broadway do without me? 1 certainly agree with Nazimova ' Sn.Vi CorKucIo Flnutreon I 1.. .r.. i ,ciTiicilR.HKln.iJJi™cl Naiimova, brilli;int actn- V!u- Ri,5si,iii I.Kl, ..h ' l.. , -he ■' ■■lii;l.l Florenz Zic ' :j;fcld F. nious Thf.Uric.il I ' l. lu. n Scvanil yean ai;i , iiluii I hm - - 1 GILBERTAN SULLIVAN ,;• - lM i . ■0 ik ' DOLPHIN SHOW A i?.w It begins slowly at Swift, Annie May Swift Hall, the Speech Building. In the entrance hall are bulletin boards. These sound the call for actors and actresses, those who presume. University Theatre, the Gilbert and Sullivan Guild, Studio Theatre and the Dolphin Show use the bulletins to announce tryouts. As it happened, early this year many produc- tions auditioned simultaneously. Large groups of potential players were expected so frosh and sophs tried out the first night, the rest the second night, and callbacks filled the third evening. The night of tryouts, the actor or actress (aspiring young) at the door filled out a card with name, address, voice range, physical stature (physical stature?) and previous expe- rience. Then, again passing the bulletins, the aspirants en- tered the theatre and read before the directors. Although lead parts usually go to upperclassmen, casts are sometimes large and there may be spots for talented novices. You wait and watch marvelous performances preceding yours and you sweat and fight the urge to leave. Your turn comes. Judgment begins as you stand up— the director ' s opinion can rest on the way you say your name. In two minutes it ' s over. At callbacks the field is still crowded. Some of the finest talents from the theater department are there and the read- ings become a show in themselves. Those called back for more than one production scurry from room to room. You read well and feel good, tired, op- timistic, happy. You read poorly and feel lousy, tired, pessi- mistic, down. And early next morning, the casts are posted on those bulletin boards. It ' s a time of congratulations and condolences. You look for new postings of more tryouts, or get your rehearsal schedule. e lk Aii ? sJ pJwS fig Rehearsals start slowly. The old-timer veterans of many productions understand the procedures. The novice finds it new and confusing. The first rehearsal is a simple reading of the entire play. The major players have already been rehears- ing and have an edge even here. You get your lines down. You work on expression, projection, dialogue. You memorize the part, dispose of the script, and begin to act. Over and over, each time a finer po- lish. At the same time, in the bowels of Annie May Swift, in underground workshops dozens of people design and make costumes, plan make-up and construct the set. These talented artists work in cloth, leather, wood and paint. Make-up is an example. Your picture is taken so your face can be molded into the character you are to become. How are you playing him? What does he look like? , they ask. The experienced actor answers in terms of the characteristics he wishes to portray. Make-up often leads to other problems. Your side-burns must come off! Elizabethan gentlemen don ' t wear them. Although reaction may be violent, comprise is usually in favor of the make-up artist. And in the costume shop: I can ' t wear tights, the baritone says. But he does because they are the period costume. As performance draws near, rehearsals grow more intense. Dress rehearsals. Make-up girl, costume as- sistants, the light crew, the prop people, all face a common challenge. Suddenly there is no more time. It isn ' t just another dress rehearsal. The stage manager counts time: 45 minutes . . . 45 minutes, drawing little reaction. But 15 minutes to curtain is cue for a rush of activity. At 10 minu- tes it ' s places everyone. With pats on the back and break a leg you take your place. The chatter of the audience grows to a roar and then quiets as the house lights dim. Silence backstage, silence in the audience, and the play begins. — Craig Aronoff A.f . fr sxsy The Grill by Richard Markow , S ' c r v ef. -rm IS « ?p x 2J ?. ■■-? ■w --: ' Vmr ' i r rr  ! ' lUtL— ., r k •X = 9. E Lesson on Marcuse Epistomology say on Liberation cultural subversion the mind sub version underground version underground verse stifling abundance productive exploitation obscene pastie festooned military man evocatively moralize REFUSE sexuality liberalization sex liberal grrrrrrr aggression put down repression CuO OC-C -C the body thou shalt not kil hypocrisy instinct political violence revolt rebellion union opposed (no longer) my body my own your own body your body our nature our natures free with struggle our minds our bodies our natures j; c 5 5 g -a -a o o o o E E OB C Ic C ol s fO E c Q. o QJ yi t ) 01 ' oc c 0) c — In E i= £ o ■O = nj ro u it o o Absolutely not! Build it, mack. 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' .z; ' ■OJ „- _ OJ ra c ■- ' -r — : _c ra OJ 12 00 0) OJ ' o - - o . c OJ gj OC aJ tz o -r ra i o c ' z: g ■- , ra _c .t: OJ 0) I i i eat jori def g 01 -n ra E 6 c o „ 2 D 0) ■-Co E Q- OJ jz g 00 ; IT ' c g OJ C LJJ ■5 ' l X t - ra t; ™ tz-D Q. ■q.-c g§ s o o; C OJ o ra O c OJ c OJ 01 OJ _c -QU i_ 00 o o -z E j -c OJ op-- S , 00 g OJ — D. ra OJ ■- OD-O — - 0 z: 3 c OJ 01 f5 3 o S ra ra c c !C ;2 ■- 15 ra ' OJ ra i i - t b =Q .- 0) OJ 0) 01 c -n -C JZ JZ JZ Z! DC C O ° ™ E o - c o u 2 ■t£ OJ ra c Q. OJ o ,-o 0) zj b ra O) ■- c 01 cl 5 9 J t- m l ' - '  m. So maybe you don ' t want to grow up and marry Bobby — maybe you want to grow up and live with him. The suffragettes of the 60 ' s used to wear a mini-skirt and a diaphragm but now the diaphragm is gone and it ' s all power to the pill. While not many advocates of Women ' s Liberation would describe marriage as an ancient male conspi- racy that put women in line, many think it is a social ritual too long unquestioned. Women ' s Liberation rejects the myth that behind every hardened career girl there is a vision of a castle and Prince Charming. They fee! the career girl is hardened only by the dumps she has to live in because of salary levels which discriminate against women. On the sexual liberation front Women ' s Liberation advocates legal- ized abortion, paid maternity leaves and income tax deductions for child care expenses. It wants women io be feminine without being clinging vines; to be sexually free without being sexual commodities. The Playboy empire should of course be the first victim of a women ' s coup d ' etat. WITCH, Women ' s International Conspiracy from Hell, follows a more radical approach to the elimination of masculine priority. Using guerilla theater tactics, the witches cast hex- es on institutions symbolic of male dominance. Some women, who feel there is no need for liberation, have cast suspi- cious eyes at scientific attempts to rear embryos chemically and foresee the outcome of women ' s liberation in the test tube-based society of Brave New World. They see breakdown of the family as the initiation of com- pletely socialized child care centers. And the male reaction? Well, Stokely Carmichael once said it and said it all when he commented, the only position for a woman in this organization is prone. mmHm WOMAN POWER NOT ME Daily Northwestern iim WZT IdRiOPBmADNimtJMOiJNTIhtS fXGCONA-RM PANHELLENIC COUNCIL SEN. ABRAHAM RIBICOFF D-CONN. You never get something for noth- ing .. . there may be nothing we can do but protest but we can keep an agenda before the country ... If there is not enough employment, we have got an obligation to have the federal government become the em- ployer. Most of us in positions of authority are too old . . . We ' ve done a hell of a job of screwing things up when there is no more to chose from than Spiro Agnew and the Weathermen. ARTHUR M. SCHLESINGER PULITZER PRIZE WINNING HISTORIAN No one can believe that we are nego- tiating seriously and in good faith about Vietnam because Nixon is rid- ing two horses. The negotiation horse is one and incompatible with the Vietnamization horse. The crises today are triggered by small state aggression but they be- come crises less from the initial act of aggression than from the will- ingness of great powers to become involved. The founders of the United States wanted the country to lead by our capacity to inspire, not by our capac- ity to destroy. BARRY GOLDWATER The main point of your new left is that it is not a radical left but thai you want to be left alone ... I believe in that ... I want to ' do my thing ' only I don ' t want in the doing of it to deny you the right to do yours . . . Dissent is a wonderful thing as long as it ' s decent. There ' s nothing more fun than disagreement-as long as it ' s agreeable. REV. RALPH D. ABERNATHY PRESIDENT OF THE SOUTHERN CHRISTIAN LEADERSHIP COUNCIL America ' s greatest asset is our physical resources in the American people. Men have progressed to a previously unknow n potential but now they must learn to be civil to each other. Men with their great capacity for creation have their ter- rible capacity for destruction ... A global humanity . . . must be strength- ened if mankind itself is to survive . . . We are not availing ourselves of the promise of our own technology . . . We cannot summon the will to elimi- nate slums. ,v W W olitical Forum Organizations have a way of splitlin j into committees which split up into sul:)committees and subcommittees with interrelated titles of different organizations have a way of gravitating toward one another to eliminate wasted effort. B ' the lime an issue is funneled through the hierarchy of the organization into other organizations the issue involves, going through the same process and coming back to the original subcommittee with revisions, it is undergoing motion ver ' similar to nuclear fission. While the issue is bouncing back and forth, no one really has to make a decision about it and there is always the chance it will dis- integrate. When everyone was paraudid about narcs early last f dl, an Associated Student Government (ASG| representati ' e proposed that the uni ' ersit ' provide legal aid for students arrested for drug abuse. The legal aid proposal was passed and ASG president Mike Place dutifully sent a letter off to the administration stating the ASG position and dutifully re- ceived a letter in answer that such aid was against universit - policy. The letter stated that only the Board of Trustees could change such policv. Place submitted the- answer to the ASG Community Relations Committee of ASG to decide what action they wanted him to take. Making some sort of ar- rangement with Northwestern graduate law students, bringing the proposal before North- western Community Council ( NCG|, or going before the Board of Trus tees to ask them to change polic - were among the possibil- ities. mM rAjo« : But the narc paranoia had cooled by that time and the lej al aid issue passed into a peaceful oblivion. Besides, the NROTC issue was looming larger and larger and ASG decided it was about time to take a position on that. Other groups on campus such as the General Faculty Committee and NCC were also trying to determine some sort of legitimate stand to take on NROTC. But SDS had its stand already clearh ' defined. Acting accord- ing to uni ' ersity polic ' as stated in the student handbook. Dean of Students Roland [. Hinz sus- pended four members of SDS for actixity in an anti-NROTC demonsfratinn in which several windows were broken. f efore it was decided whether the Uni ersity Hearing and Ap- peals Board (UHAB| or the Stu- dent Hearing and Appeals Board (SHABI vvoukl hear the case, before the judicial system ' s con- ciliation board had e en dis- cussed the case, the sentence was already passed. Two of the suspended students had pre iously faced charges in a case which SHAB dismissed because the defendants had not had equal access to evidence. The administration was appeal- ing the dismissal to UHAB which had originally received the case and passed it on to SHAB. The lioards are under the superx ' ision of NICG. NCC rep- resents students, faculty, and administrators and can work in conjunction with such bodies as , ' SG and GFC. NCC can draft policN. But the policy must have the ajjproval of [. Roscoe Miller who hiis (!to power also. There is no way for NCC to override his ' eto, unless, oi course;, tlu- ' re were a change in uni (M ' sitx polic ' . ' nr CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST We believe that poverty, racism and social injustice are symptoms ot man s basic problems: ego-centeredness, against the infinite, personal God. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION The atmosphere of genuine love runs through the organization and is marvelously attested to by the radiant sociability of its members and guests. HILLEL SHEIL What the Church was once considered to be is no longer. It is more! concernetl with the needs of mankind, more open, both challenging and being challenged, more responsible to society as a whole. Nu Garde The best things about this campus are the following: 1) the Student Union 2) the Lakefill Sculpture 3) the everpresent President 4) the interested student complete with lack of apathy 5) the First Plan of the Seventies 6) and most of all, the respect shown by the administration toward the students. — Student Freshman Carnival Wildcat Council From way up there in the fifth dissertation, the world lookd awfully small and full of objectfi bombarding each other in com- 1 pletely random motion. Who is upsetting the ivory tower? A professor tries to teach social inequality, that a minority group gets nowhere because it doesn ' t have power. And right away students declare them- selves a minority group and boy- cott an exam (and get nowhere because they don ' t have power.) The fear of a world that makes too many demands for an ideal- ist to be happy in it subsides in the steady flip of printed pages. Who ' s upsetting the ivory tower? Now research comes from the streets instead of bounded periodicals. The aca- demic status of pollution chokes in the putrid odor off Lake Michigan and someone writes a petition instead of a paper. I am waiting for a moment of fiones inspiration, Of barely colored art over clearly cubii artifact — I am sliding down tfie slope of a ques tion I cannot see, Cusfiioned on facts and coiled in syllo gisms. For if for every if there is a tfien, thet tliere is an answer And I am safe (in one blue book or les! and (in one blue book or less) I am honest within the postulates of m own reality. - .U;- - . - - ■' 1 V. u .7 A. ' - V --y y. Social Inequality; There is a fundamental error in our thought that just because a situa- tion is unjust it will correct itself, Prof. Raymond Mack lectured at his Social Inequality class in Spring 1969. When junior sociolog ' major Tom Chauncey and 15 others tried to apply the teachings of the course attempting to effect a social change in NU ' s class structure, to drag the cocktail-party liberals onto the street, they were appropriately strangled by The Sys- tem. Because they boycotted an exam which the class had voted against hav- ing, they received incompletes and ultimate F ' s since Mack never allowed them to make up the exam. Mack told his class that rote mem- orization of dates and definitions is neither required nor encouraged for this course. He told students thev would be graded primarily on the basis of several papers and participa- tion in the quiz sections. Papers are better than midterm exams because they give you a better picture of what people are able to do, Mack said. A good liberal, Mack democratically delegated some of his power as pro- fessor to the class at midterm time. He enfranchised them and allowed them to vote on whether or not to have a midterm exam. They voted no; there was no exam. Mack soon provided an example of ruling class philosophy that We ' ll have an election when we know we can win, Chauncey said. Several weeks before the final exam, Chauncey approached Mack with a suggestion that the class vote on hav- ing an optional final. Mack agreed: there were no dissenting votes in the class. Then Mack said he had to discusj eliminating the exam with the section instructors, and we all meet to- gether, plan the course together, de- cide what we ' re going to do and hov we ' re going to evaluate and so on — it ' s like group process for everybody in- volved in teaching it. The section instructors finally met and agreed that they were not op- posed to an optional final. At the next class Mack, who is the chairman of a faculty committee on grade re- form, read what Chauncey called a position paper interpreting the quiz instructors ' statement as, They did not vote for an optional final. And he concluded, Those who do not take the final will run the risk of getting F ' s. His logic, Chauncey wrote in his, mimeographed, position paper, is directly analagous to a person saying, as long as there is prejudice and dis- crimination being practiced by others I will be prejudiced and discrimi- nate. He distributed a petition get- ting 93 signatures calling for a boycott of Mack ' s final, to exert the pressure needed to effect a social change. We are being discriminated against as a category, we must respond as a group together . . . we must free our- selves from the chains of finals . . . anything less and we are acting like slaves hoping for a benevolent own- er, Chauncey wrote in a letter dis- tributed to the class. On June 6, at the time of the final exam, 15 of the 93 signers met at an anti-final held in protest in front of Fisk Hall, where professors Howard Becker and Bernard Beck spoke to the group. They were enjoying them- selves, Chauncey said, and insisted the reform movement shouldn ' t be allowed to end with that quarter. (Ithasn ' t.l Mack was also invited to speak but they only saw him leave the test early, driving his Mercedes-Benz and look- ing straight ahead. Fve heard that when he walked into the final there was a lot of booing and hissing, Chauncey said. Mack said everyone was smiling at him. (Have you ever heard of anybody smiling at a final?) But those inside took the exam. They learned a lot about rote mem- orization that Mack said wasn ' t even required for the course, Chaun- cey said. Those who boycotted (le exam learned a lot more about 3cial interaction than the kids sitting iside writing down their multiple uesses, and they showed it. ' Probably you have learned more ' bout sociology of ' minorities ' and the l cial problems relating to minorities ly doing this self-motivated study, luiz instructor Samuel Wong wrote. I But Mack ' s grading system favored iiose who took the exam. The boy- btters were given X ' s, meaning they ladn ' t taken the final exam and if iiey didn ' t take it within one quarter ley would flunk the course. On returning to school in the fall, )iey learned they would have to peak with Dean Richard Doney, who las the dirty job of determining who nould be allowed to make up a final Ixam. Doney, in turn, said Mack had le final say. Mack again denied this lut said he would do whatever he buld to help them appeal, Chauncey aid. He even helped Joe Valadez, , ' ho took over leadership of the group, Ian strategy against Doney. ■But then the bomb: a letter dated ' Jovember 20, 1969, finally informed he boycotters that they had been ' elpless all along: If a professor i ants not to give a final examination 1 a course, he must secure his depart- lent ' s permission ... I did not ask [Uch permission . . . under these lircumstances I see no reason why lermission for you to take a make-up xamination would be authorized, lack wrote. I ' ll bet he was smiling vhen he wrote that, Chauncey said. But they all learned about race, lass and power: This taught me the real distrust minorities have for hose in power, Chauncey said. My lass project in Mack ' s course with he resulting Mackiavellian machina- ions (sic) has taught me more about jower interaction, minority frustra- ion and the futility of the liberal hetoric than any book, lecture, or nultiple guess examination course !ver could. The university is saying one thing a pseudo-liberal line on how to effect ;hange) and, from Mack on up, doing mother. Chauncey said. Tom Chauncey, senior sociology najor, has been learning about social nequality (race, class and power) or a year now. It ' s one of those :ourses that you just never forget, hat continues teaching you for the est of your life (especially when your ather fines you $1000 for flunking.) Race, Class, and Power Dear Dean Doney: Tom Chauncey lias just come to see me about the course Race, Class, and Power of which I was his section instructor, Spring Quarter, 1968-69. I understand a group of students in that course was involved in an experiment in social change which resulted in their non- participation in the final exam. Tom discussed with me, during the early phase of the course, about the possibility of doing a research project relating to the power differ- ential in tne university setting. Feeling that his actual engagement in power interaction would be a valuable experience which would better help him understand an important aspect of the course, I agreed that he should proceed with the project. That was one way of getting an education and the logical (though unfortunate] consequence of the experiment was his involv- ing other students in the non-participation in the final exam! 1 ,irn aware of the dilemma in the situation in Ihal a person tr ing lo effect social change has to accept its consequences, favorable or un- favorable. But, in the light of the learning situation. I feel the students involved have a better grasp of the meaning of class and power and they should be given the option of com- pleting their work in a manner acceptable to Dr. Raymond Mack and to themselves. 1 shall be happy, should Dr, Mack so desire, to assist in the wrapping up of this case of social experiment. Samuel Wong. Dear Mr. Chauncey: I have spoken to Dean Doney about your re- quest to make some arrangement for receiving credit for Sociology BOl from last spring quarter. I do not believe that there is any pos- sibility of your doing so. If a professor wants not to give a final examina- tion in a course, he must .secure his depart- ment ' s permission. 1 did not ask such permis- sion. Without such permission, a professor is required to give a final examination at the time and place announced in the Time Sched- ule. I did. Under these circumstances I see no reason why permission for you to take a make-up examina- tion would be authorized. Sincerely, Raymond W. Mack Professor of Sociology It comes to this, from being alone too long, it comes, either the kind of declaration that smashes and bends in pain first those things that seem to be together in acknowledgment of mutual existence, , -rj v. j. then finally, i self. I caa die. what our society outmeal -mouths as chronic-prolonged-frustration. - on ' J seTf self-suffiency, a necessary compulsion to live wit iin ■K,, - r, = H-1 , which the man calls madness. ?f ooLL? °f Slacks and moving shadfes of gray., when the sea swirls and ? f Jv colorsd coldness, there is a line of turquoise ort the verge, and the sky over that infinity is tan and pink. On that da r, people. he is that line of blue Copy J Hunter Jackson Photography  Robert Use Northwestern Engineer ACAPPELLA CHOIR Julia Acton Sheldon Atovsky Paul Ballard Geraldine Beigel Joann Boehm Tom Bonner Michael Boruch Jeannette Bowen Truby Clayton Steph en Colson Phil Creech James Dixon Susan Filler Melanie Goldstein Tom Grabowski Pamela Grant Tom Groceman Kathy Hawkins Constance Healy Charles Hewitt Jill Hoffman Marilou Isaacson Sue Jarvis Carl Johnson Isola Jones Larry Kanter Arvid Knutsen Phil Kraus David Lowe Michael Mark Peter McAlear Jennifer McKenzie William Messner Roger Nelson Harold Potter Susan Pristach Tom Rehfield Paul Ridgeway Lynn Roseberry Virginia Rubino William Sayre Denise Schafer Elizabeth Schlecht Barbara Schramm David Spence Les Stahl Melanie Tomaskiewicz Sandra Unrue John Wakefield Patti Weitekamp Mark Zalkin il j Women ' s Glee Club No Pig This Time The blueprints for the new $12 mil- lion Northwestern University Library were people. At least that ' s the way Library Plan- ning Committee Chairman Clarence Ver Steeg describes the four-building complex. Though construction began in 1966, the real foundations were laid by the committee Prof. Ver Steeg formed in 1961. Committee members began plan- ning in Deering Library where they asked students what improvements a new library should include. Students said they wanted small rooms where they could study with friends, and typing rooms. Seminar rooms accordingly were built in the new library. The whole idea was to think first of people and the way they use ma- terial and not just of a place to house books, Ver Steeg says. The committee interviewed profes- sors and asked each academic depart- ment to make recommendations concerning the library. They found faculty members felt undergraduates, graduate students and faculty should work together in the library. An alternating pattern of faculty and graduate study rooms and under- graduate study booths in the top three floors, or Research Towers, of the five-story towers accommoda- tes this request and inspired the cir- cular design there. This means that incoming fresh- men will be treated as scholars from the day they enter, Ver Steeg recalls that one professor said, Wouldn ' t it be nice if all the best books in a field were in one place? And that gave birth to the Core Library, the non-circulating collection of 50,000 volumes which Ver Steeg calls, a distillation of the best in human knowledge. Academic departments have spent four years compiling lists of Core books. Ver Steeg says that not only does the complex fulfill the architectural dream of form following function, but that the form itself makes the li- brary an aesthetic landmark. The new complex can accommo- date 3,000 students, 200 faculty and 2 million books at once. Though Deer- ing remains part of the new complex, it has retired into the university ar- chives. It was 10 years ago now that Prof. Ver Steeg told the university its aca- demic programs would be stran- gled without a new library. Ver Steeg came to Northwestern from Columbia University in 1951. At that time, Deering was already over- crowded and noisy. The long rows of monastic study tables in the reserve room and the poor lighting through the building created a gloomy study atmosphere. Because Deering could only hold a million books, 250,000 additional vol- umes were stored in an underground annex. The university agreed with Ver Steeg ' s objections and asked him to head a planning committee for the new library. Ver Steeg accepted un- der the condition that he could choose the committee members him- self. He asked three faculty, two librar- ians and a member of the university managerial staff to join the commit- tee. He says the committee never con- sulted with leading library advisors across the country. Our whole concept was against normal librarianism, he explains. He adds that the radial arrange- ment of shelves following the circular design of the Research Towers is probably one of the most radical departures from traditional librari- anism and caused a great deal of debate in the committee. Some members of the committee thought people would get lost, Ver Steeg said. Ver Steeg set up models of the system before it was built. But in the real thing some of the shelves were indented to leave additional space for study booths. Ver Steeg likes to call such spaces micro-libraries, or li- braries within libraries. The Research Towers themselves — one for history, one for social scien- ces and one for humanities — are li- braries within libraries. There is a decentralization of in- terests, Ver Steeg said. We want everyone to feel he has his own spe- cial place to go keyed to his indi- vidual interests. The library establishes graduating levels of use. Ver Steeg says that from the first floor with its general refer- ence materials, a student moves to the second level with a more advanced concentration such as the Core Library. The concentration is once more intensified in the Research Towers with the vast collections of circulating books in all fields. Even the windows are smaller in the Research Towers to emphasize the greater intellectual concentra- tion, Ver Steeg points out. it :,;. i r Ml fJ - ' ; ' PUBLISH OR PERISH TO BE OR NOT TO BE WRITE OR WRONG SCHOLARLINESS IS NEXT TO GODLINESS DO OR DIE I think nothing has improved the quality of under- graduate higher education in the United States than the publish or perish doctrine, Dean Robert H. Strotz of the College of Arts and Sciences says. Strotz is NU ' s unofficial spokesman for the doctrine, but he holds the hiring-firing power and his unofficial statements are worth listening to. Strotz emphasized that the university is a center for learning, for the advancement of human knowledge, and, as such, has a strong commitment to graduate education and research. This, he feels, is a more important service than teaching undergraduates, although he tries to hire teachers who can combine professional excellence, as exemplified by the quality and quantity of their work published for other profes- sionals, with teaching ability. The pressure to prove yourself in print extends back into student years, where one often has to at least see his dissertation published in order to get a teaching job upon leaving college. There are thousands of recent PhDs applying to a dozen or so of the most prestigious universities for a few available jobs, and they have a much better chance of getting hired if they have an article or ten to their credit. Some say this is just another manifestation of a pro- duction-oriented society. Publication becomes an important factor in a profes- sor ' s career at three points; when he is hired; five years later when he is considered for tenure; and periodically when he is up for promotion from as- sociate professor to full professor, and for salary in- crease. How good a teacher is now is irrelevant, Strotz said. The consideration made when an associate or assistant professor is given tenure is how good a teacher he will be in ten years and until he retires at 68. Strotz con- tends that the best professors are the best profes- sionals. A professor who does not publish, while the majority of his colleagues are getting national and professional recognition as scholars, does not com- mand respect. He becomes sour, bitter, critical of his own field, and his bitterness is reflected in his teach- ing, Strotz said. Those who publish are those who get tenure. They are the ones whose eyes will continue to sparkle. They remain better teachers because they are alive professionally, and communicate a deep interest in their field to their students. Much irrelevant matter is ground out of academia, a multiplication of trivia, one professor said. If, in your research, you find one fact and can write it up m ' standard form, ' you have a publishable article, he said. However, Strotz said, the ad hoc committees estab- lished to recommend salary increases and promotions note the quality, as well as the quantity of published work, and also take account of the opinions of out- side experts in a professor ' s field. If a man is a satisfactory (not unsatisfactory) teacher, and has published a considerable amount, he should be promoted to full professor, Strotz said. If he is much liked as a teacher but his publication is scanty, we will generally not promote him. We might promote a notoriously superb teacher whose publications were not zero and we might hire someone we don ' t think is an excellent teacher but who has done excellent research. When they stop writing they often stop reading and when they stop reading they stop teaching well, he said. The Living Tiieatre LISTENS You Can ' t As the world begins to die, people should become anxious. A group at Northwestern grew anxious with the spectre of a world soon unfit for living — overpopulated with insufficient food, unbreathable air and unusuable water. Yet few shared their anxiety and those who cause the world ' s grief, they learned, remained oblivious to the condition of the environment. Thus under the alchemist ' s sign of Earth was born Project Survival, a prophet of warning. Although few of the more than 10,000 who packed Tech Institute survived the night-long teachout, January 23, all who attended and digested the message of the night realized desperation in the words of men who knew. The evening was sponsored by the Northwestern Community for a Better Environment, College of Arts and Sciences, Tech Institute, and arious community anti-[iollution groups who gathered authorities on en ' iron- mental problems from across America to present the situation. Ecologists Dr. Lamont Cole and Dr. Lawrence Slobodkin joined biologists Dr. Paul Ehrlich and Dr. Barry Commoner and geologist Dr. Peter Flawn to warn of an environment where everything is connected to everything else and where technology disturbs just about everything. Illinois Attorney General William J. Scott, state treasurer and senatorial candidate Adlai Stevenson III, and Lieutenant Governor Paul Simon ex- pressed their reprehension and offered their political prowess and ded- ication in the search for solutions. But to many the most practical and down-to-earth statement came from Victor J. Yannocone, co-founder of the Environmental Defense Fund and attorney for the Environmental Defenders Inc. He detailed his long fights to preserve natural resources and said simply Stop bitching and do some- thing . . . sue the bastards . . . vote the (Com Ed) stock for the people. Dr. Slobodkin was interrupted by an Indian group who marched into Tech auditorium demanding we Stop pollution of Indian lands, religion and minds. They demanded job opportunities for native-born Americans and opportunities to live free from our foreign influence. After an hour of folk music with Tom Paxton, one a.m. began a long, moderately disorganized series of discussion periods. Escape It The idea and organization of Project Survival grew in Northwestern Students for a Better Environment, which is only as radical as its goals. When the idea of the teach-out began to germinate, NSBE had about 150 student members, and 10 faculty with other faculty and friends helping. This grew from a groundswell of a dozen students, most of them grad- uates. The group quickly decided to get involved in specific issues and schedule what is clearly attainable. The foundation of the group was based on this premise-. There exists a considerable communications gap between the university and the scien- tific community on one hand, and legislators, conservation groups and con- cerned citizens on the other. Erronious positions have often been taken and poor legislation frequently has been passed due to false or incomplete in- formation. The group decided to replace agitation with well thought-out documented opinions and programs. Goals include a student-operated environmental problems information center with a library and reading room; a lecture ser- vice to groups in the area: a newsletter to government organizations and conservation groups and other schools, and a press for strong effective environmental quality legislation. A Northwestern University Center for Environmental Problems was set as a major goal, and by January 1970 it was being considered for final approval. The world won ' t end not with a band nor a whimper but a cough as Adlai Stevenson III said. Not if groups like NSBE continue their crusade with the commiunity Nor will students ' efforts remain ineffective once we convince those wrapped in concrete that it is better to invest in alleviating problems than in those corporations which cause them. Why aren ' t you radicals? one speaker asked. Perhaps the measure of Project Survival ' s success could be measured in the number of people who left convinced that radical action was necessary to save the world. PePULKTiON W EVERYONE ' S Ml Population rok iVERYOME ' S BRB 32Xi ' ' Population iov Paul Yannocone - :V; :- rV PROJECTIONS Last year, in the wake of Rubin, Gregory, Hayden, |ames. Brown, Harrington and Goodwin, the outcry against Sym- posium was all talk, no action, big names, big rhetoric and not much substance. Symposium leaders took this to heart and under the impetus of several noted campus radicals de- cided to change where change is the most readily apparent — right at home. Symposium was democratized. In practical terms this meant no positions were designated and implementing what used to be a $15,0(10 operation was thrown open to the stu- dent body at large. After several large, open meetings, the faithful few dwindled to a working group of about ten, a group which, contrary to expectation, proved to be quite capable of organizing Symposium and did it without the past tension of hierarchy and ego. The group is still here — just barely — after what has been a very active if not entirely successful year. What is here is a week which drew, on its peak days, crowds of 500. That is a far cry from the days of packing McGaw with 2,000, turning dozens away from Cahn which has a seating capacity of 1200. Now everyone is asking: What happened? Is Symposium dead? These questions are interesting, but they fail to deal with the fundamental problem on this campus— a problem Symposium is not really part of, but merely reflects. Consider what is happening. Every major organization is going under. Homecoming is several thousand dollars in debt. Orgy of the arts, one of the best new groups to appear in mv four years on campus, has been running into debt since its inception. The word is out that if ASG does not make money on the Blood, Sweat and Tears concert, it will be the last concert on this campus. Political Forum, the offspring of a dead tradition of Mock this and that, is doing a great job. But they too are barely holding their own. For those of you who have not been here as long as I have, try to picture a campus with no Orgy, no concerts, no free flicks, no Political Forum, no contemporary theater and no S mposium. It sounds pretty bleak. The frightening thing is that we may have reached a peak last year. It was only through concerted pressure on the university that $30,000 was made available to keep these things going. Maybe that sounds like a lot, but believe me, it ' s not when we even have to pay for the rooms on campus we use for our events. But it ' s all right to raise tuition $600 in four years. It is possible to raise a million dollars for a library, close to that for a new biological center. It is all right to subsidize the Daily and athletic events. I think I have an equal right to social and intellectual outlets available as the people who appreciate these other (subsidized) activities. What the university does by dragging its feet in setting priorities which place students last, is to divide and con- quer . It is an old technique and it works very well. For in- stance, the university is not willing to raise the quality of life for blacks on campus, so the Activity Fund tried to fill in with a substantial allocation to F.M.O. What is student reaction? Resentment of F.M.O. If student government doesn ' t wake up and stop humbly thanking the university for the mere pittance of financial and other support given to students, the rest of us should. Are university officials so naive as to think that it is their new librarv or biologv building which has increased applicants to NU? Certainly, once students are here, they appreciate g ' facilities, but NU ' s greatness, if it is to have any, depe largely on its students and the kind of environment ' create on campus. We are not fighting even to go forward. We are fighting to stay where we are. And that is a sad commentary on this university. Pat Brandin Symposium ■f ' M WIN YOUR MAN IN A WASHINGTON LOTTERY Sept. 14 April 24 Dec. 30 Feb. 14 Oct. 18 Sept. 6 Oct. 26 Sept. 7 Nov. 22 Dec. 6 Aug. 31 Dec. 7 July 8 April 11 July 12 Dec. 29 Jan. 15 Sept. 26 Nov. 1 June 4 Aug. 10 June 26 July 24 Oct. 5 Feb. 19 Dec. 14 July 21 June 5 March 31 May 24 April 1 March 2 March 31 May 24 April 1 March 17 Nov. 2 May 7 Aug. 24 May 11 Oct. 30 Dec. 11 May 3 Dec. 10 July 13 Dec. 9 Aug. 16 Aug. 2 Nov. 11 Nov. 27 Aug. 8 Sept. 3 July 7 Nov. 7 Jan. 25 Dec. 22 Aug. 5 May 16 Dec. 5 Feb. 23 Jan. 19 Jan. 24 June 21 Aug. 29 Apr. 21 Sept. 20 June 27 May 10 Nov. 12 July 25 Feb. 12 June 13 Dec. 21 Sept. 10 Oct. 12 June 17 Apr. 27 May 19 Nov. 6 Jan. 28 Dec. 27 Oct. 31 Nov. 9 Apr. 4 Sept. 5 Apr. 3 Dec. 25 June 7 Feb. 1 Oct. 6 July 28 Feb. 15 Apr. 18 Feb. 7 Jan. 26 July 1 Oct. 28 Dec. 24 Dec. 16 Nov. 8 July 17 Nov. 29 Dec. 31 Jan. 5 Aug. 15 May 30 June 19 Dec. 8 Aug. 9 Nov. 16 March 1 June 23 June 6 Aug. 1 May 17 Sept. 15 Aug. 6 July 3 Aug. 23 Oct. 22 Jan. 23 Sept. 23 July 16 Jan. 16 Mar. 7 Dec. 28 Apr. 13 Oct. 2 Nov. 13 Nov. 14 Dec. 18 Dec. 1 May 15 Nov. 15 Nov. 25 May 12 June 11 Dec. 20 Mar. 11 June 25 Oct. 13 Mar. 6 Jan. 18 Aug. 18 Aug. 12 Nov. 17 Feb. 2 Aug. 4 Nov. 18 Apr. 7 Apr. 16 Sept. 25 Feb. 11 Sept. 29 Feb. 13 July 22 Aug. 17 May 6 Nov. 21 Dec. 19 Dec. 19 Dec. 19 Dec. 19 Dec. 19 Feb. 30 Feb. 31 Feb. 31 Dec. 2 Sept. 11 Jan. 2 Sept. 22 Sept. 2 etc. numbers numbers what in- sanity all these dots i couldn ' t take Dec. 23 Dec. 13 Jan. 30 Dec. 4 Mar. 16 Aug. 7 Aug. 7 august 7 AUGUST 7 7 august the 7th day of august in the year of our lord aug. 7 aug. 7 aug. 7 Aug. 28 Aug. 7 Mar. 15 Mar. 26 Oct. 15 July 23 Dec. 26 the day after Dec. 25th and April 16 Dec. 3 Sept. 11 Jan. 2 Sept. 22 Sept. 2 May 8 July 15 March 10 Aug. 11 Jan. 11 Aug. 11 May 22 July 6 keep looking you ' re at the toptoptoptoptoptoptop April 26 June 18 Oct. 9 Mar. keep looking 21 Aug. 30 April 20 April 12 Feb. 6 Northv estern w here were you? Jan. 29 Mar. 14 Jan. 27 April 30 Aprir 5 Jan. 27 June 14 May 26 June 24 October 17 June 20 May 25 Mr. Foster went to Gloucester . . . Mar. 29 Feb21May5Feb26June8 In deference I will quit. I found you in a moment of eclipse When the sun had not yet dried upon the beach and our shadows were still only smudges of grey. We don ' t know where our faces end in darkness And I see you as far as my fin- gers can reach. But don ' t worry — I can still find you in the thickening light — We emerge into bodies to- gether And pretend we are breathless Running down the endless pat- terns That emerged with us. Orchesis -v ■' ? 2? ' %- ' Have you ever picked pink daisies And strung them in your hair? You cannot know what pretty fun Pink daisies are to wear. I woke up Sunday morning And I didn ' t have a care, So I went to pick pink daisies And string them in my hair. And soon a gallant hoy came by, Hey, what you doing there? I ' m picking these pink daisies To string them in my hair. We picked together till two Pretty lovers stopped to stare. We said, Come pick pink daisies And string them in your hair. And all the pretty people Who passed by us stayed to share. The golden-eyed pink daisies And pick them for their hair. Oh, it was quite a party Strewn with daisies everywhere. We danced and laughed but mostly picked Pink daisies for our hair. And then the chill of grayest dusk Fell from a villain ' s glare; The fingers of his laughter Choked the daisies in our hair. The ghost of withered daisies Dropped in petals from our hair. We cried and cried and pastel tears Fell to the garden bare. And all the pretty people Sadly left us pair by pair. They disappeared down dusty paths With nothing in their hair. He took my hand and off we skipped. We laughed without a care. And then we fell in love and picked Pink daisies from the air. — Abbi Foerstner ' H, ' o m Before George arrived many examinations ago, the Campus Inhabitants lived in uncertainty and walked in cold rain. George liked to sit under laughter and sunshine. Since there was none of either in this place called Campus, he planted them both in Deering Meadow. He walked through Deering Meadow night after night, laughing and smiling and watching them grow. He hoped they would take root in the Campus Inhabitants as they ran from the rain through Deering Meadow. Then they could sit under laughter and sunshine and discover each other. No one will say if George is here or gone or even if he ever lived. But occasionally you may see stu- dents laughing in the sunlight. You may see one reach out and another warmly respond. You may hear music. And they call it George. ■4 j  -V i ' - 4« ■- ■• IT- i jf r l St ' i K? 4 :: R_. BBIKL BMk HI I .rfJ ' ♦ The Greek System? There isn ' t a whole lot of difference between a Greek and a freak - a couple of letters, maybe a slim gold bar - but we ' ll all reach the Big Heavy, the ulti- mate why? one way or another. When you ' re a member of some- thing, you don ' t feel like a typ- ical member. It ' s only someone outside who can make that kind of generalization concerning any group — a fraternity, a na- tionality, a race. The Greek system has been for me a most enriching personal experience — friendship, as trite as it may sound, is the key word. Friends 1 would have made anyway — but the frienr ships I ' ve made as a Greek cou never be matched. ji ' The competition for being the big man in the house or the big man on campus is almost over. There ' s still a minority who go around trying to impress people. People just respect you for what you are and not for the way you dress, or the money or the big car. Sororities are living together with your friends, sharing cigarettes or joints, swapping mates, having all-night raps — just like a hippie commune. The people I know best are in this house. That ' s why my best friends are in this house and my worst enemies are in this house. There ' s not a heck of a lot else to do around here — even with it, there ' s not much. The worst experience of being a Greek is coming to phone duty as a freshman when you answer a bunch of calls that are never for you. m •«.4- . 33J3 r ' ■131 1 iVl 1 ttf.aa 11 ■|3 1 ■HB ■1 All this talk about autonomy — 1 think the Greeks have as nnuch right to autonomy as anyone else. I spend so much time arguing It worthless things that it takes luch longer to get anything yon ' s been talking too much ■jt Greeks lately. I think there ' s a lot of real good advantages to being a Greek and I ' ve had a lot of en- joyment from it. It ' s a learning process. It ' s not just meeting people — you do a lot of stuff and learn to be a leader. A lot of people see it as a nice place to live — nice surroundings and nice people. The only good part about living in the house is you have a maid. A Greek system that ' s been reformed into some sort of living unit arrangement isn ' t a Greek system anymore. I ' m not saying that ' s bad, but it ' s bad if people don ' t want to admit they ' re talking about eliminating the system. Whether everyone knows it or not, we ' re really trying to get rid of some of the superficial things, some of the old gripes left over from 1945. I I I If it wasn ' t for the house, I couldn ' t have found a group of friends this quickly on a cold campus. (Transfer Student) •t— i«l u iHi vivao deplore the fact that fraternities are moving away from the traditional practices of pledgeship and initiation which (used to) include various physical and mental practices that built solidarity and spirit within individual houses. i ' rf AND THEN ALONG CAME. 1 .- : --■' - 4.: ' It .r i 3 -h( When you find your friends hap- hazardly, you tend to gravitate toward people with the same in- terests. I ' d never met as many dif- ferent kinds of people as in the house because they ' re not chosen for their interests, they ' re chosen for their warmth. We ' re having a far out formal informal semi-formal casual grubby all school all freak housemother ' s Paddy Murphy Purple Passion Fiji Island Arabian Nights Viking quiet cozy all day weekend mattress marijuana party exchange picnic happening gig space out Schlitz and Bud Ripple wine Seven ' n Sevens Rum ' n Cokes Screwdrivers grain alcohol punch grass and hash AXO MDA ATO a barn in Northfield the frat house Talbott ' s the North Park the Teutonia Club the Sheraton Blackstone the Skokie Lagoons Peterson ' s Day tamp Patton Pool my room for whatever it ' s worth to my ego. to my HTH. to our relationship. to your status. to the Revolution. X y K: ' i ffi ' ' 4 ' iH!6f Mfiv  ,:fe i. ' - ' ■' ■■,1 ?si -.tK - ' J, n,„1 ' g, ' s. « ' m-- «i | i iH) - -V SSBS I i yMgi: ni ' -A f ' Jv 1. uptight 2. not getting any 3. scarcer 4. jammed 5. bust out 6. split Linguistic Analysis of Newly Gener- ated Thoughts: I think I ' ll take up ((try)] (take up) composing After: when I get my hearing up (ears working) so that they listen (hear) ((hear)) in beauti- ful patterns. Sound Symbol Associative Reten- tion Unit: the way the needle hits the record Mama ' s and the Papa ' s (great waste of talent in college) people are bored. It all starts with the head and works outward from the top and details to the bot- tom until it hits the ground. ' OA ) Strife L i A o %■love .. ' .AND ■PROCEED Q -r . • Ifeeous JUSTK J Hlllit BUtUS. % ?s; - i;- A liJjMi , i m 1 Mb i r - r; 1 1 tM. ? „ I-Consdon R Coller R Crawford R Dennifi R DorlinB D Doufilass 1 Ecke 4 4f)ii GTarkas B. Firslenbereer D.Frisch | Gannon D Gardner D Gjeseker A Grego i £ H £ £ £ £ £ ' £ i £ i iS Alpha Clii Omega S Akin-, I A111..UI N Ariz I Bdker C Beck C Beniiei B B,Hit, B. Burn B. Bos H,B V%en Biillerfield E Cohen | Coshunis M, Djie K Dolkin L Diamond Pl fi A Downins C Doyen |. KUzwillum L. Frankenhoff V Garbe B Gillel |, Click B. Harms |Hdri f% t. fl .Heady M. Heim S Hendricks K Hennins D, Henshel C. Hodfies M. HolmRren S, Hvdrick S,|er.nings P.Johnson M. Kopir ei ' |1 © A Kozak S. Lamos A Leighlman S Lewis L MtCall |McCee CMe Murovic M Xighlingale C Oleck I ' l ' ,.a,i f ' f) « a - C. Peters A Plait p Press S. Rimmel S Rogers S. Sans W Saunders C Schmidi M. Scirati ■fv f r e 6 f- ft Ci ' ■verscn M Sinler C Sharp KSkonI RSIewarl CSIowell M Suski N. Szokan P.Taylor feOf ,M M Thelander P Vanikiolis M Wa«enberg | Wanderman [1 We M While 1 ' Wise hllTv 11 j 5S 5 5S i5 53?v j3 55 5 5 5 JS j5 5 5 5S 5SN ?S aH j j3 5 « Alpha Delta Phi ( ' . H.ikcT s DpII I Rentier R Cihn I) ll.illin«, r l- |.iskun..s | l„hnsnn U lull D.McUiin r.McM.ihon | X.il.in A Om.in II W. Skmvninski C. Sm.lh |. Sruijur U. Slewarl K Sljllcr R. Szafranski ' Jlfk 1 R Wiujiers a ; olni.;r jk =™™««-— Alpha Delta Vi: W w a k e ::ir i . m? II it ii 11 it it It it it it It it it it it it it It It It Alpha Epsilon Phi ' WW H.Beck S Bernheim M Bernstein B, Brandolph Brown D Chval S, Circle R Clark M David E Dembsky |Deulelbaum S Eps N Fielder B Fine Fisher A Genser S, Cinsherfi R Glasner C Golden N Gyldfluss T Goltz M Goodti W E Gordon P Gn M Kahn | Keller [) Kriuer L Kriger M I,( MMHM L Lolslein [, n M.onwol.l K M,dn I M, M Mmkler A Mv R Pollock S Pollock F Ra Mil -Sonis S Steiger R. Slern C.TafI MTolmach U. Udin RVValdfofiel LWei! P.Weiss I.Werner S. Zeeman S Ziven 7 ' Alplia Gamma Delta 1 S, Andrews K Beiler BBlaszczvk C. Brolhen L, Brown C, Craig L, Dally L, Dick % f ' 4 .«r 9 . Dunlop M Evans L, Fink | Ga V Gelb IGirves M. Goldbera M i S -9 M Goldberg D. Golt MGrogan L. Guiducci MGustafson L Hersev C. Heuboski I Holm D Jenkins L Kaufman C Keene D Korshak C Long N McClur f 4 4 :2r r i S MeinhardI |. Melzer C. Naumowicz P.Novak S, Ola C. Peska S Rimku « f ' ' € P Ruria M Sahlin ISanlarn N Spinka Tregilga ® $ t ' 3 B. Typlin R, Vileisis M. Wada S. Wassmann 5 ja 5 S 53 53 53 5a j3S 55 3S5 5 5S 5S S 3S 5S 5 5 53HS «: H £ Si i4 S £ £ i £ SHS£ £ £ i .....wilplia Omicron Pi . ... i £4 £ Si4 i i £ S£ i ' Vi 9w ' $.i r rm ' . Ah B. Abhs l Allis.in K And. ' AihIitw 1 . PliiPl P ■!• HirkiMlluMi-r k HI. ink II llnl.is I ' , Hnuin.ni I. IIti Cise V Ch.niilii-ilin W,9 i i fS 5N ? 5f ? 5J S S S 5S - Alplia Plii I I It I mm W M P.Turk L.Uoud C i arii !,. Udrii AV.iliid L iU ' liUiliy!liL!iiiU¥;jJlMaL!Sy!!}Ui5 ' ]Mi Alpha TauL Omega i!.ai! .t! ! 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Feldman M.Ferdinand G.Finkel S.Gann L.Gessou L.Gibson L. Goldbers S Goldherj! B Goldman L Goldman D Granal M Halperin M. Hammel S Isaacson H. jachel R Jacobson B lacoby Meskin D.Kanloff . Kanlon X.KIaslorin S. Krause |.Lappin S. Lasky T. Leventhal K.Levy R.Marsule E. Mellzer M.Miller T Ovitskv S. Pecken S. Policha H Price C RTVchun G Robins. S. Rulenherp A. Sacks 1. Salilsky R. Schoenberg P. Seller A Selvern L.Shapiro R. Sokoloff aSsMS Sigma Nm ! gi iJi a}t.m tK KJJ!i! ' :feJaLaiL 7 R Bruhl D CnUins SDielerich MEhri D FkndSdn F Held I Knehel M Kushne -n--? iiiiiMlWi iM R Neuhaus R Ne« A Oleck E Pell • • ft- r ' ' ' T ' iii D Rausch T, Rv I, Schniellzer 1. Schmell; r Shcn.k I Siekn p nxmmMJm iM immii ' MM ' MM:MMMMmM sTaiuL D I.Adler LAkman G, ers R.Brown l.Caplan . t % gP | Tlieta Clii I. Barker M, Barlhob |. Bitting W. Blacic S. 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V t V : X f Z ' ■fcrt-V ■-i ' EUROPEAN ( BiS AHsa- FucmaRW, TRAWTION: EGO-mcHINE ftSStRTION ftGAINST NHTURE AHJ) REST OF Ml ELECTPONIC CHILDREN HE VEI?riCAL-HOR- I20NTALAX1SUNES REPRESENT 7WE ADAPTIVE TIME-SMCE WIEBSEC7I0N BE- TWEENlOR6AN SMVENVJfiONM£i TtC PSKTMN or MHWUS IM SefCNKaNnfiUMT DONSKiu5iwrr6oNc nroinNOiU EitsoiMuni CBWcuBscaww wrtwuouTcrTMgPEmawe :GENERfinON GAP te PROeUM s iym« VERDCML LESS OFSIZE POSITION ORf T}C Aa-ENCDMWaNG RESOWJON ,EWW£UN(IYOFQJNSQO(IS- S.TiME-SPflCE,GOa GRflWS, ° ys | iwwnvE-NV5Tic M E - ' rENDOCMC ME UMWftattOQ HMWIS SK WEAPON •ssga aKvcfMnvc TwatnofOAurr E (r-wmt) hwT M lEIERHINED Will ' .HUSTOMH nwEvmr 1HC M SKM. CUTURALI VWUKS _ SCWrZOPHRENIA 969 6AmR PT?ESS y EUDO SCIENCE f nt MiLHONS --. flu mtfrsKsmtT f BB© WON THREE LOST SEVEN - - ' TtiffitmlWrfi ifi Hope doesn ' t die in defeat at Dyche Stadium. Rather, every season it surges again in previously trampled hearts. Sophomores bring fresh bodies and new hopes. Witness George Keporos, sophomore, defensive tackle, football player number 58, six feet one inch tall, 230 pounds heavy. He ' s played the game since high school and he plays now to be on the team to earn the Rose Bowl in 72. The football classic is the goal at the end of a gridiron only as long as the team he lives for makes it. He knows his goal. He knows the formula. He ' s feeling it You go through some torture and a lot of work, he says. There ' s a lot of pressure. You reach the Rose Bowl by working as part of the team. You have to do your job plus, give 100% plus. When the man opposing you is three times bigger, you have to try that much harder. You know they ' re a good team, but you can ' t let that stop you from playing your very best, he says. This year he ' s made the effort to play the very best for the team. He echoes the football player ' s dream of the big upset: it ' s degrading when you ' re preparing for a game and everyone is saying your opponent is the toughest there is. It depends on the situation and time. You get really mad. You know deep inside you can beat them. He ' s had the importance of good mental attitude pounded in. Thinking yourself at a disadvantage is the first bad mistake. The team made its advantages this year and won. It didn ' t and it lost. But when it lost George felt the headlines didn ' t show anything of the efforts the team put out. The story screaming Rout! neglects the pains. Pains are part of your job, he says. ' You don ' t think about getting hurt. If you think about it you ' ll hold back . . . You have to be dedicated to play football. Although never injured himself, George recalls the efforts of a teammate, Bill Dowd, all-state lineman in high school who injured his shoulder. It healed and was reinjured. Then after sitting out his freshman year, he threw his first block on the blocking sled this year. Reinjury, uddenly Bill Dowd ' s playing career was permanently over. He ' s remaining with the team as a manager. Enthusiasm. Dedication. George Keporos doesn ' t monopolize those here. He typifies the brave and reckless fools and heroes. He shares the pains and joys of everyman. And when it comes to asking whether George is inside a football player or whether a foot- ball player is inside George, he replies: That ' s a hard one to answer. — Mark Winiarski V. % f . l THE SQUAD SUPERJOCK Ever wonder what happens to football ' s benchwarmers who sit out every game, in the rain and the snow and th heat of day? Senior defensive back {at least in practice) Frank Murphy won a place on the 1969 Big Ten All-Academic Football third team and a certificate in commemoration of his athletic feats — without his name on it. Murphy sat, sweated and practiced for four years on an athletic scholarship. He was required to stay in school, to practice with the team and to attend every game without fail. But Murphy never played varsity football. When the team was losing a game the coach could have put him and four other seniors who never played, into the game, sometime, someplace, he said. We lost so bad so often it couldn ' t have hurt us. If ! had gone to a different school, I probably would ' ve played, said the former high school hero. Northwestern didn ' t give me a hard push. I came here for the education. Murphy received scholarship offers from almost twenty big football schools. At Northwestern he got a four-year education, and he did well. Fiowever, by his senior year, he said, he didn ' t give a damn about football. FHe had become so discouraged he stopped trying. It was my fault that I didn ' t play, he admit- ted. But it wasn ' t my fault that I got no encouragement. The staff would praise those with obvious talent but put down those with yet unrealized potential, he said. They treated some of the players as if they could never make it. Murphy said the 1969 team had great potential — this could have been a tremendous football year. But it remained only potential at the end of the season. .N4hA ' y; mhM. ■ N rO, COMING HOME «•( • «« L Marie Arana, Homecoming Queen .■: ' ' 3 Pi Cross Country mmJht€ m ■Bjg S H ' H I iB H alC H IHH WON NINE LOST FIFTEEN Here we have soft-talking, hard-whumping (-thumping, - twisting) Big Bill Caller, second- place heaveweight wrestler in the Big Ten. A heavy man, this Caller. He won 18 out of 23 matches this year while attend- ing NU on a football scholarship —and he also played a decent game of football. Sadly, his fairly good grades have slipped a little since he started working out like mad in order to take the weekly com- petition he ' s handled since Sep- tember. They work us over and out and in, he says, not really complaining. He likes the glory and competitiveness of team sports and only regrets that, ex- cept for the tight wrestling team, there is very little esprit de crops among NU athletes. Northwestern is a real good school, he says, but ath- letically it doesn ' t have the cli- mate or finances to build cham- pionship teams. It also lacks a good athletic atmosphere — Fraternities effect it: they divide kids up and give them other identities. So now Caller is moving on ( There ' s a place in the sun . . . ) to teach, travel and study other cultures. Between now and then, however, the tall friendly curly-haired blond plans to spend the summer in a logging camp in Oregon making a couple of thousand dollars. (And playing Kesey?). AND IN WINTER S r- - ' .-i . - , ' mimssm . w w - vt m I ! ifi I rsSIIti r L-a •l ff ri i r -tj .. i, 3r v r; ' ' i: ' ' r.: .- m m ' i z ' S J J • ' t ' i.L ' ' ' - ' .?: , . •«---! : S Tvr FkT - jtfi? ' Unofficial Star The Chicago Bears, that Unfortunate (to say the least) team could yet brag of Gayle Sayers. NU ' s 1969 track team, another unfortunate, can still boast of Ralph Schultz who last year tied the world record for the 1000 yard run. The relatively uncelebrated NU team captain, an Ail-American for two years was credited with an unofficial world record (because the track was not the standard length) but he officially broke the Big Ten record he had set the year before in 2:06. Ralph is now at the University of Illinois Law School and he ' s still run- ning. He ' s been training one and a half hours a day for five days a week to run with the University of Chicago track club at mainly east coast meets. I ' m going to keep running one season at a time until I get tired of it, Schultz said, another two or three years while I ' m still young and in shape. I have to keep running, he said. There ' s something pure about track because even if vou lose it doesn ' t hurt anyone. Competition ' s a challenge, but you ' re running for yourself. ' Running is very expressive and very personal, said Schultz, who has been running for nine years. He attended NU for four years on a full athletic scholarship. I ' m really glad I went to NU out of all the schools I could have gone to. It ' s an unusual place, Schultz said. Looking ahead to the end of his Law School career, Schultz admitted, I can ' t avoid the army, and expects to serve with a reserve unit or in an ad- vance ROTC unit. In either case, he ' ll try to get on the army track team — which can mean all kinds of prerogatives. Until then there ' s law which is to be his entry into the government work. At that point he expects to retire from track. I guess it ' s psychologically rough to drop out of competition if you ' ve been in the limelight for a while. You need something to substitute for it, Schultz concluded. ' ft H ti ' ' -- jr I. AND IN THE SPRING U4«tJfcr;_-- -. ' - i5 .- • •-T? - - -4 .iaa -: ., i I T - M It t km ♦ «i|-i ' irf - . . -. HERE ' S TO THE MEMORIES...  .•::: ' i 3 - • ' W ' Vbk. Proper Channels Rocky and His Friends MEVKIDSJ MAkG VouPw 0 r I I I  COM-ED, ' JAMMIES Welcome to FOR THE nACE CROWN OOC L - - AA. V. J J - ' And yi;5T OOK err THOSE Take Of i fvf Si OUTFIT 4k TO HEuP HIM MAKt UTTLe AA ' $fc . MATIONAU BAWKy OFriCIAi-TWA JUMP SOlT ASG THE LOWER ECHELON IRHA ' «•, «v — % V ASBURY 1 1 1 r H f M ' B li El ' Bobb Hall Elder Chapin r ' Foster Hinman Latham ■■•% L-- f -ti ..t% ' Hobart Lindgren North Shore Hotel McCulloch Hall Lyvians Northwestern Apartments ' z{ t ' Z A Rogers House Willard Hall Shepard Hall 1900 Orrington 1902 Sheridan - J ' LJkAJtJ«J XXJU Jt.ajU AAJUg. -y Marvin Gardens 1937 Sheridan ' ' -t Alpha Lambda Delta Ilene Aleshire Diane C. Arthur Bonnie Barber Sue Berman Ann Beasley Mary A. Bowers Elaine Burns Callista Card Marilyn Camino Susan Circle Mary Davidson Rebecca Del Rosso Bonnie Diedrich Judith Dogin Patricia Doran Elizabeth Duff Kathe Eberhardt Elaine Eisen Debbie Ellis Jeanne Flemming Ellen R. Fried Sarah Gammon Beth Gilron Rochelle Gold Karen Goldstein Susan Goldstein Gerrilyn Gross Marcia Halperin Sue Halladay Barbara Heady Cindy Helffrich Susan Hinchcliff Sandy Ingebrand Charlene Johnson Abbie Jones Marjorie Jones Michele Kahn Nancy Kantor Lynn Kaplan Cynthia Kelly Katherine Kenna Kathy Klein Mary Konovsky Judith Konowitz Francine Krasno Judy Laws Roann K. Levinsohn Roberta Levy Lillian Li Elizabeth McGann Karen Malitz Linda Mozin Susan Mysko Laryssa Nahiniak Joann Neu Bonnie Sue Ochstein Kathleen O ' Donnell Ruth Olsen Susan O ' Leary Marlene Papp Linda Pierce Nora Post Gilla Prizant Jane Rudolph Dorothea Samios Babette Sands Gory Sapin Janice Schaffer Maureen Schrader Anne V. Schwartz Rheta Schwartz Nadine Sebastian Ann Shaffer Judy Shepard Joan Slater P. Gayle Snider Ellen Soeteber Marianne Streff Karen Swieszek Polly Tate Maryellen Toman Margaret Turk Brenda VanKanegan Katherine Voegtle Carol Weideman Barbara Weaver Michele Zurick Beta Alpha Psi Edgar Bachrach Timothy Willie Arthur Warady Miriam Goldberg Keith Nakamoto Bob Burgess Linda Meentz Beta Beta Beta Barb.ira Bishop Joseph Chessare Michael Ehrie Jr. Robert Friedman Mrs. Andrea Covins (;ary l.issner Michael Magur Daniel McLnchlan Jr. George Mellendick John Miller Adrian Oleck Oscar Pakier Andrew Roth Gerald Shatz Bonnie Typlin Richard Yarger MORTAR BOARD Marian Adams Patricia Allison Edith Anderson Kathrxn Barrath Patricia Brandin lanice Buren Constance Duncan Linda Garcia Margaret Gardner Margaret Grant Elizabeth Hirsh Patricia Huebsch leannette junk ludith Kulstad Carol Morton [ackalyn Noller loan Pa lo Carole Rothman Phyllis Thorpe Larry A. Akman Peter S. Baldwin Charles R. Berry Clark Boren Richard Boudreaux Gerald |. Buchwald Gary V. Doern Milton Gardner Victor M. Goode Larry K. Mills Frank C. Morris [r. Steven Nisenbaum Robert D. Owen Michael |. Place Louis C. Schueddig Raymond N. VVareham DERU SHI-Al NORLECAMMA Sofia Adoniadis Sherry Akins Barbara Bengel Carolynn Cruse ' Estelle Danish Leslie Dolgenow Elayne Garber Betty Gilfoil Diana Hall Ina Rae Hark Eve Harris Linda Herman Beth Jacoby Eva Jefferson Gayla Kraetsch Carole Kuk Katie Leesley Caren Levy Pat Loui Sandra Robison Sara Siegfriedt Gail Seeskin Tina Stonehouse Jane Tufts I eter Amster Elliot Brown Robert Gasper Robert Dana Charles Roger Copeland Richard Gochnauer Gregory Harbage Steven Hulce Clyde Jeffers David Kalin William Lipsman Michael Meagher Robert Nissen Glen Ross Parker Gary Paterson James Stanford Carl Schierhorn James Stephens William Striff Christopher Vail John Vollmer William Wick h. ' . wr. tJUt 1906 Sherman 1900 Sherman Phi Mu Alpha Eric Allison Paul Ballard Bruce Beyer Robert Birkhead Robert Black Bernard Blayer Gary Brown Randall Brown Lawrence Brunelle Michael Buckley Truby Clayton Thomas Deffley John Dewitt Robert Diehl Barry Donner David Frank Michael Gibson Joseph Giunta Michael Green Alan Gregory James Gustafson Michael Henoch Patrick Holland Carl Johnson Jay Kennedy William Klingelhoffer Jr. Edward Kocher Jr. Richard Lane Thomas Lovejoy Thomas Mintner Matthew Naughtin Craig Nordstrom Richard Norment III Keith Piontek Harold Potter Jeffrey Prauer Randall Rich William Rorick John Sampen David Sanders Richard Scheffel Timothy Schoolmaster Glenn Sogge Gary Shulze Donald Shupe Timothy Stewart David futtle Roland Urbanik John Wakefield Sextant Peter Banta John Bender Thomas Butcher Jeffrey Chandler Robert Dorting Robert Downing Mark Feichtinger Ronald Fish Ray Forbes Dennis Frisch David Haas Frank Haas James Hayes John Heckmueller W. Edward Heitz William Holland Paul lams Walter Jacobsen Joel Metier Joseph Miller Tom Mitchell John Radd Evans Schoeman Charles Sharrocks Robert Shaw- Frank Titus Raymond Wareham John Weigand Steven Weisbrod • ;s Sigma Delta Chi WalK Bi)ll)iic:h Rich.iril UiMiilriiiuix Elliott Brown Tom Davies Jim Dexter Sue (JreenhePK Bob flultz Larry Kaayan Andy Lippman Dave Louie Joann Lublin Bob Jackson VVally ludd Donna Marx |oe Miller Mark Neubauer Barry Petersen Kalhy Polhemus Mike Pollock Baran Rosen Mike Sailer Leon Share Steve Singer Steve Sink Bill Smith Fred VVief;old MarkVVolin Tau Beta Pi Peter Baldwin Michael Bedford Steven Bradle Stephen Brennon Patrick Briley Richard Di Pietro Douglas Chapman Dennis Draper Robert Ellwein Suellen Fausel Raymond Finucane Ronald Fish Daniel Fling Craig Gaw Harry Ginsberg Keith Gorlen James Heller James Ho Arthur Huckelbridge Bruce Jacobsen Arthur Jago Charles Kappauf John Matz Lawrence Meyers )an NIakashige Robert NIauss Daniel Price Donald Rauh Richard Reinhart Sally Rimkus Ronald Saidikowski Richard Sanderson Melvin Schechtman Gilbert Schumacher Rex Schumacher Charles Shork James Stephens William Straff Allen Taflove Roger V ' inila John V ' ornbrock Edward Wagner Sidney Wagner Paula Wiegand Neil Zinnerman IOTA SIGMA EPSILON EDUCATION STUDENT Kathleen Anderson Anne Barry June Cannon Brown Leslie Barth Mary Byrne Janet Calkins Glad ' S Cook Grace Griggs Cottrell Fras Fewer Marie Agnes Foley Jacqueline Gaxlord Jean Gilligan Mildred Gore Angela Gram Rokama Green Fay Harper Xatalie Huber Mildred Klinger Molly Koche Ruth Krautsch Agnes Lewandoski Laura Light Bexerly Lindsay Hilda Loesch Judith Longmeyer Pat Mielecki Carol Niemira Alice Joe Norman Patricia Olson Marion Price Josephine Richardson Beverly Roth Adele Sandberg Ruth Schaefer Mimi Shapiro Margaret Shunneson Betty Smith Anne Silverman Marjorie Seifried Golden SyKester Rose Marie Tomkins Mary Torode Anne ' alentine Rhett Weber PHI ETA SIGMA Christian Campbell Harry Parvey Peter Holm Michael Brown Geoffre ' Rush Priest Louis Erteschek Thomas James Hunter Ralph Zarefsk - Douglas Brown John Slater Brian Krasner William Dunn Robert Weiss John Gench Robert Alpern Alan Lerner Thomas Beres Alan Buchwald David Reiss Earl Maltz William Lo Burke Brush Stephen Weissman Allen White Robert LImland Scott Hoyne Gregory Weir Jeffrey Cooper Roger Kamm Robert Dennig Frank Titus James Giarfrancisco Philip Kraus William Benton Richard Thorward William Epstein ADVISORY BOARD Ellen Meltzer Peggy Grossman Leslie Diamond Bonnie Willig L ' nn Carpenter Diane Brown Janet Price Cindy Kelly Becky Winner Beth Feinberg Gigi Keracik Judy Konowitz Tina Politis Susan Xetznik Linda Rauch Carol Rubenstein Mary Jo Scirati Linnea Danchi Jill Deutlebaum Mary Churchill Danny Miller Dave Conant Ron Rodgers Leslie Gallagher SIGMA ALPHA ETA Phyllis Albrecht Sherry Akins Barbara Allen Helen Beck Gay Bender Carol Biays Katherine Breen Josephine Bronaugh Sherry Brookner Gail Brusberg Janet Buchwald Ellen Busman Marylou Garillo Sharon Conger Joan Cook Margaret Cox Sandra Deutch Cindy Doyen Deborah Dubin Susan Eckhardt Mary Edwards Lynn Freeman Barbara Floyd Stephanie Fuchs Joyce Gasperow Laura Gessow Judith Glandon Terri Glotz Lauren Grossman Susan Hagstrum Mary Hammel Juaquita Harris Deborah Hayes Sara Lamos Donna Machcinski Kathleen Maier Catherine McGinty Susan Mintzes Carol Murphy Jo Ann Neu Kay Ober Diane Petersen Patricia Seifer Shirley Schmidt Donna vSchnitz Jill Shaffer Jill Shapiro Daneen Simms Ellen Singer Hildegarde Slotteland Susan Sleig Joan Taylor Mary Thelander Jane Tufts Gail Turney Assistant Dean H. A. Shanafield. Dean Daniel R. Lang, and ladies. EVENING DIVISION Lydians Theodore F. Kruse is North- western ' s champion commuter. Twice a week he drives 130 miles to attend evening division classes on the Chicago campus and 130 miles back to his home in Sterling. 111. Kruse will be graduating this year with a major in finance. He ' s taken night school courses since 1956, and if it ' s taken him a little longer than the normal four years to complete a college education, his larger than normal load of extra-curricular activities might be offered as an explanation. Kruse is the administrator of the Community Hospital in Sterling as well as being a hus- band and father. In his spare time, he devised an accounting system for municipal assess- ments which the state adopted. Kruse went to work after high school to make money to con- tinue his education. But promo- tions came a lot faster than a degree. ' T couldn ' t afford to quit working, he said. My job was way ahead of my academic standing. By 1959 Kruse was Director of finance in Oaklawn — and at- tending junior college. But Kruse isn ' t pushing the myth of the self-made man. It ' s possible to reach this level but ver - improbable, he said. I had to compensate for my lack of formal learning by doing a lot of reading. Kruse was assistant adminis- trator at MacNeal Hospital in Berwyn when he started North- western ' s night classes in 1966. He moved to Sterling for his present position the following year but he decided to stay at Northwestern. I don ' t think I could get a better education anywhere else in the country, he said. Kruse feels majoring in fin- ance in night school has given him the advantage of using it while I ' m learning it. He feels this has also enabled him to establish a better rapport with this instructors. Kruse has no time for a social life. He spends entire weekends studying. He spent Christmas vacation writing three 20-page papers. Your family has to cooper- ate, Kruse said, since his studying often means no visit- ing and no guests. Kruse said he has received, nothing but encouragement from my wife. Kruse has to admit, I ' m glad I ' m graduating. ' ■s ttf If it P P r r F F £t££ E F FEC£ E rrrirc M. Blanc A. Dema D. Amfahr D.Anderson A. Antunes P.Arendt -f i |r o. f .f?5 p W Hliini R.Brattleaf R. Hnnvpr V. Bri us R. Brolim ' Ji ' iM t A. Brusukas H. Carlsen E. Carr |. Chambliss VV. Cisovvski R Clark R. Clarks L.Connelly R. Dandurand W, Da ie R. Debarger V. Deen D. DelehantN R, Dielhert G. Eierdam U. Erickson J. Erion J. Ernst R. E rich K. Feurer E. Filar L. Batt ). Bazzoni K. Berg |. lirouch R. Bullinski V, Bunch W. Clifton B. Coleman C. Coleman A Donaldson i Duhnick R. Duffer Wrf f h f?5 C. Fisher |. Fogarty R. I ' ricdm.uin I p O f) f P R. Froehlich D. Gallo h. Gazdziak X. Genel K, Gitzendanne C, Herris R Hiesinson T Hill W Holmeide R H df T, Krusp A k ih. ' iski G Kufner M. Kurlvka P Lange I = •  ) f ' I I I Lennon G. Lindgren D Losik B. Lutke R. Maltase E. Goldsby D. Gross E. Hadassy F, Harris M. Hart C. lacksnii R, Hlllcnhrand M. Hillman C. lackson D. |ac(jbsun (p « C.1 n n W. Koski D. Kraft L. Krangle D. Krocko S. Krupp O f D 1 A.Manfred A. Manz |. Marknwicz N. Mattsoii |. Matykiewicz O Q O C) M. McCirllu I ' li:|- ' ,iiliicii K. ' (!wl)urK(M ' K. :Miclsen R. Noi-wikmI ( ; , ( jrdisln . Ii.nrk Q ri n o r i; I ' chilli M I ' llniT K.l ' cill.s V I ' ick.ii.M I Kcdci m - I ' .i IhIi W 4-  K Sluol),! I M ReiiiKM- S. Ri|ikc P, Rijss W, Riirnslh Kiilh R, SiilicriM- Sp.irlh A Svv,nili( ' i ! I r,isli|i,in R llimn.is | Iniiii Ak ' Pi Q p p c f C I. Velter K. Urshek ]. Webber |. VVij;sinl(in K. VVilbams S. VVollriuiii F. Ziitorski M. Moegle E. Mullineaux [. McDonald pop E. O ' N ' eil G Ofesen I.Papadakis N. Provan ). Prusinski j. Ratuszny - ( w |. Sr.hlar.ks D. Schutj S- Sharman U.Trapp J. Trolta L. VanciermarK I v. Oi RULES OF THE GAME do not pass up freshman year do not pass up sophomo year do not pass up junior year do not pass up senior year GO TO GRADUATION do NOT skip quarters do NOT flunk do NOT by-PASS finals do NOT PASS-by GRADUATION Scott Anderson Norvel I achanco j Anne lailky Cheryl laho Filiiar lakey David Lamontacn %- ' ! V Silvan Inr ' .on t5? Roxanne Lei;ler Philip Lchn navi.l loibowit  Linila Leonard ) The most difficult decision 1 had to make at Northwes- tern was whether or not to go to grad school. This was difficult because of the war in Vietnam and getting accepted in grad school. My grades are not very good and 1 might get drafted out of grad school even if 1 do get accepted. But lately 1 realized that 1 didn ' t learn anything here and 1 should before 1 try to make some money and try to raise a family. A BA doesn ' t mean much any- more. So, 1 guess I ' ll go to grad school. B 1 Moilon Leonard YOU ARE SO : iiiiintiiiiiK Bl ICE CREAM . . .THE FAVORITE DESSERT ON CAMPUS! Beatrice foods Co. 537 CrSTKR PT. EVANSTON, ILL. UN 4-0987 With local and chartered service, the EVANSTON BUS COMPANY serves Northwestern students and Evanstonians. The 12,000,000 passengers riding their buses every year know they can depend on their experienced, friendly drivers to get them anywhere they are going on time. .xtl DINNERS CHICKEN BURGERS 4 v, 0 V ' ' H, CONGRATULATIONS GRADS 491-9200 AIR CONDITIONED 7 CHAIR SHOP HAIRSTYLING HAIR STRAIGHTENING MANICURES BY DOLORES FRI. SAT. TOUPEES WIGS FOUNTAIN SQUARE Barber Shop TIME VALUABLE? ... CALL FOR APPOINTMENT UNiversity 4-3660 CLOSED MONDAYS. OPEN WEDNESDAYS JOSEPH J. FERA Prop. 1617 Sherman Avenue Evanston, Illinois (Ewaimsuo: (EwainnsitcDm CHAMBER of COIVIIVIERCE ■Jell ii ji g A MANAGEMENT DECISION BEING MADE AT SEARS BY PEOPLE IN THEIR FIRST SUPERVISORY ASSIGNMENTS Bringing Sears to its present state of deveiop- ment iias called for great numbers of talented people over the years— young men and women willing to invest tlieir potential in the growth of a remarlcable enterprise. Very rapid growth continues to character- ize our company: more people, more stores, more sales, more jobs. And at the same time a mounting quantity of information to digest and alternatives to weigh. Naturally, bigger problems to solve. Sears is committed to growth and expan- sion. Whatever your major field of study — whether you have a bachelors or masters de- gree—you probably have the qualifications needed for advancement to important man- agement assignments: curiosity, flexibility, a determination to succeed in new ventures. Our many new programs for college grad- uates are designed to utilize initiative. They lead to executive careers In store administra- tion, accounting, advertising, credit, product management, data processing, many more. IMake it your business to find out In detail what Sears means by CAREER. We ' ll make it our business to provide you with the answers. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. DEPARTMENT 707 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60607 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER s ' fi ' 2-DAY Kodacolor Processing 1-DAY Kodachrome Processing Brs Homes of the famous Hackneyburger Hackney ' s on Harms Harms Road (south ol Lake Avenue) Glenview. Illinois Hackney ' s on Lake Lake Avenue (east of Waukegan Road). Glenview, Illinois Hackney ' s Wheeling Milwaukee Avenue (south of Dundee Road). Wheeling, lllit Hackney ' s Zurich Route 12, lake Zurich, Illinois 724-5577 724-7171 537-2100 438-2103 GROUP Assoc, Inc. 53 W. Jackson, Chicago 312-922-3030 TRAVEL STUDENT SPECIALISTS ' ■■' ■Espana Special ' ■' Acapiilco Special ' ■■' ■Summer in Europe Special ' ■' ■' ■Ski-the-AIps Special FOLLOW THO CROWD TO Arby ' s CONSTANTLY GROWING COAST TO COAST Get the town ' s Deliciously Different Roast Beef Sandwich ! Buy an Arby ' s today! The proof is in the eating! OPEN II A.M. TO 12 P.M. DAILY 121 ASBURY AVE.. EVANSTON (Vl Block North of Howard-Western Shopping Center) 9434 SKOKIE HWY.. SKOKIE (1 Block South of Old Orchard Shopping Center) 1065 OAKTON, DESPLAINES 91 SKOKIE VALLEY ROAD, HIGHLAND PK, lEdens Expressway at Lake Cook Road: (Crossroads Shopping Center) = 1967, Arby ' s, Inc. Creators of Afby ' S Roast Beef Sandwich NORTHWESTERN CLASS RING Custom Made For You — • Your Degree • Your Year of Graduation • Choice of Four Weights Our Northwestern Ring, in 10K gold shows the Northwestern seal, University Hall, your year of graduation and degree. The excellence of this ring benefits the pride of every Northwestern student — truly a Ring Around Your Future. $46.00-$62.00 (Women ' s $31.00) • Choice of 18 Stones • While Cold J5.00 Additit • Encrusting on Stone NORTHWESTERN STUDENT 1726 ORRINGTON Evanston, Illinois 60201 H H M H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H : _- mitkcraf tecl ( oi er  («• SJIte . . S miln L ompanu 2857 N, WESTERh J AVENUE, CHICAGO 16, ILLINOIS 2 Student Body election posters, 2 P.R. pamphlets, notices, letter 2 heads for campus organizations . . . if it ' s printing you need 3 see: itVl I FOX PRINTING COMPANY | t 1014 Central Street, Evanston, Illinois I UN 4-0733 I 1 Only 5 doors east of the Central St. § 2 L station - EVANSTOiN B G Snack Shops Northwestern Students are always welcome at our 3 Evanston locations. . umber 2 ' 40 Sherman Ave. DA 8-6763 i umber 3 1522 Sherman Ave. GR 5-5-179 . umber 4 505 Main Sirec UN 9-4447 s A V I L L E Flowers Inc. 712 SHERMAN UN 4-0632 Floivers telegraphed anijwhere Well you NU seniors finally have it made ycxj ' ll have the world You ' re graduating soon and - e ' at your fe«t. Some of you girls have found a beau ♦ ond others have landed a husband f but before any of you fellas start bragging about how yoci ' ve escaped matrimony you ' re not ' k ' being followed All f MM • U A Q i , WMTK All of you NU seniors h:ve received ! sraPS; ° ' J .oLw. so we at Trie SPOT want to odd ow congj-a ulations toe. BUT we can ' t let you forget wfiot got you where you ' re today — our pizza ! Remember those cold .vinter nights when you sat in your room, forr. ' shed but too clutched over an exam to go out Old eot ' r ' Then you no doubt remember how the SPOTMOBILE quickly delfvered on oven-hot pizza. That ' s just one example of how THE SPOT helped you graduate — in case you were wondering. So before you leave this campus forever, please make sure to come on over and soy good-bye 5 ® ' ° °y5 hove a warm spot in our hearts ■J for you. P. S. All you youngsters who don ' t graduate this June still have a chance to let THE SPOT find a way tc help you. UN 9-2SI)0 Every young woman (and man) deserves a Fine Portrait You ' ll like the way we make your portrait, and so will everyone who sees it. Our photographers know how to combine just the right lighting and just the pose to picture you at your natural oest. The Studio That Made School Photography An Art SINCE 1889 photographers K ' WEST SHERIDAN ROAD (al De on) g CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60626 ELEPHONE 761-5500 Your Official Syllabus Photographer illCKELSIIIICKl ' riY DIMES ! riJIIIE SLOT W :j ?9tuse t NT coins iii T HESc MACHINES -V. iWSfiAPtM MAOimi r OF QRDgR PliAAT CA ' t M. -4-1626 RADIO-TV APPLIANCES 1 SCHNEL!_ ' S 1 SALES as:: SERVICE -4 R Vision cor PANY CA S-6SOO AL 1-6CSO 1016-13 CHURCH STREET EVANSTON. ILL. S0201 ONE OCTAVE HIGHER POP, JAZZ, CLASSICAL, UNDERGROUND DA -6600 ' 0-6-18 CHLRCH STREET i . :- :;: i Assros, ill. 602C1 Jjn H COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED LIQUORS WINES i! NEIGHBOR LIQUORS Just wanted to say hi everybody. Hojje college didn ' t interfere with yovir ed- ucation too much. Love, J. Terr Hey, IJaskin (uiv, WOW! The Wieiioll ' s Gai Rumor — A Bear lives part-litne on Washington St. Ric:ky Nelson and the [3ear forever. ). T. loves t3oh. B. S. loves Jan. Think ai)oul il. The Zoo salutes Maj gie and Bahs. neighbor RO 1-5339 FREE Parking 2009 W. HOWARD ST. CHICAGO, ILL. 60645 Ws:tm . Immnt ' fi purUiuirar in 9 g ' ljprman • iuanatoii • UN 4-0430 1 677 WEST HOWARD STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS At Howard L ' Bus Plaza 764-2423 4 ' A Aotm.aA (LlW0 fi OJS (AOU iJl iVYidy ii: out 1 (iaiiv bdVs U9 VoAfuSimit ■lObQJhuMikSimt: GIANT HAMBURGERS Casual Cozy Two Roaring Fireplaces Barbecue Ribs Bratvvurst S other great Charcoal Broiled Items PITCHERS OF BEER COMPLIMENTARY PEANUTS Modest Prices Fireside Lounge COCKTAILS HOT DRINKS Open from lunc:h till 2 A.M. 2741 W. Howard Street 973-0990 Alued Radio Stores, Inc. A quality company ot LTV L ing Altec Inc. For the Newest and Best of Everything in Home Electronics and Entertainment Equip- ment see Allied ' s Wide-Range Selection, Famous-Name Brands, Money-Saving Val- ues in • Stereo Hi-Fi Components • Tape Recorders • Amateur CB Equipment • Radios, Phonos TV ' s • Records Tapes ELECTRONICS DEPARTMENT STORES 9450 SKOKIE BOULEVARD and 1 1 other Chicagoland Stores PIUS 26 MORE STORES IN THE FOLLOWING CITIES Indianapolis, Indiana Minneapolis, Minnesota Columbus, Ohio Detroit, Michigan St. Louis, Missouri Dallas, Fort Worth, Texas Grand Rapids, Michigan Cleveland, Ohio Milwaukee, Wisconsin -A ) w - rifeik i and have a HUGE selection of BOOKS new, used, text, general INTEREST, over 15,000 all sorts of study aids and Paperbacks supplies. why not come in and have a look around? QxajuDiBrs, Inc.; T 630 DAVIS STREET, EVANSTON, ILLINOIS 60204 | 1 i Bh j rvi ■v A T . A w •«- -M Creative Yearbooks . . . riOO T E D A V I £l S l « professional POST OFFICE BOX 1000 — DORAviLLE, GEORGIA 30040 service, personal attention, superior productiori flexibility. D IVISION OF McCALL CORPORATION and quality printing IREDALE Storage Moving Co. A Local and Long Distance Moving Five Convenient Warehouses All Offices: 869-7200 Since 1871 ALLIED VAN LINES WORLD ' S NO. 1 MOVER YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOME AT The Hotel of Distinction Where Graciousness Is a Tradition The ORRINGTON Airport Limousine Service Banquet Service for 8—1000 1710 Orrington Avenue Evanston UN 4-8700 Edward Vantine Studios Hamilton, New York Composite Photographers Bob Hinshaw loves Pepsi girls CHICAGO ' S north shore area exceptional hotel- urban convenience suburban serenity . . . AIR-CONDITIONED ROOMS • • AMPLE PARKING TELEVISION • ONLY 18 MINUTES TO DOWNTOWN CHICAGO ... A FEW STEPS FROM NORTHWESTERN UNI- VERSITY ... IN THE HEART OF FASHIONABLE SHOPPING AREA , . FINE FOOD COFFEE SHOP AND RED KNIGHT INN . . SMALL PETS AL- LOWED , . . APARTMENTS AVAIUBLE SWIMMING POOL AND POOISIDE CAFE ' ' Telephone (312) 864-6400 Chicago Ave. at Davis SI. EVANSTON ILLINOIS 60201 BRONSON COLES STUDIOS SPECIALISTS IN PORTRAITS AND COLOR WEDDING CANDIDS 1884 Sheridan Road, Highland Park Phone ID2-3050 SYLLABU SNINETEE NSEVENTY NORTHWE STERNUM IVERSITY BIWER 1 foerstI 1 s E P.r 1 ' i yi B] 1! 1 I H Pv ' pB g B n r PARLO ji M ladfi CAROL LEVIN iif.il MARSHA REINES LARRY BAUM- GARDT UcJ.J
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