THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 21 The University of Chicago Friday, November 14, 1969Discipline Will Follow Militant PicketBUSING: These went leafletting; later buses took students to the Washington march.Washington March Draws 500The November anti-war moratorium con¬vocation drew a crowd of under 1800 toRockefeller chapel Thursday morning, no¬ticeably less than the attendance for lastmonth’s moratorium convocation.Announced speakers Cesar Chevez andJimmy Breslin did not attend the con¬vocation because of health reasons. Staugh-ton Lynd, Roosevelt University professor,former Senator Ernest Gruening (D-Alas-ka) and Rev C T Vivian, whose demandsfor more training and jobs for black con¬struction workers have been tentativelyagreed on by the unions, delivered anti¬war addresses to the assembly.Lynd, known in the Chicago area for hisradical scholarship, said after November15, the peace movement has to turn its ef¬forts to the American corporations, espe¬cially the academic corporations. Lyndstated that the cause of the war is not thepresident, but the expansion of overseaseconomic activity after World War II, thedesire of defense contract corporations tocontinue profit making, and the recognitionof corporations not in the military-industri¬al contract that government spending onmilitary hardware might prevent depres¬sion. “For many corporations, the wareconomy means business as usual,” hesaid, “many corporations would be panicstricken if general peace were to breakout.”Lynd stated that members of the peacemovement must stand up to American cor¬porations, “must deal with the full oper¬ation of the academic institutions in whichthey are involved.”Lynd criticized the University of Chicagofor being “deeply imbedded in what mustbe called an academic-military complex,”and for holding stock in fifty of the coun¬try’s largest defense contraqfcis.said it was unfair to “singlesity of Chicago alone when a*«najversifies in the city are invicity’s major corporations.” He outlined his plan for an end to the warby proposing that the peace movementdemonstrate at the stockholders’ meetingsof defense contract corporations nextspring. “We need to find ways to laysiege to corporations — an anti-corpora¬tion activity involving masses of people.”Lynd declared the message between thelines of the peace movement must be, “Lis¬ten United States, listen corporations ofAmerica, including those corporationswhich sell education, we’ve had enough of asociety dedicated to buying and selling ...of carefully constructed public images; we’ve had enough of unarmed Vietnamese,condemned without trial and shot throughthe head; of a cigarette industry that man¬ufactures cancer, and industries which pol¬lute God’s earth and air. We want a newAmerica. We want you to get on to buildingit. If you can’t get on, get out of the way.”Rev C T Vivian, a coordinator in the Coa¬lition for United Community Action, remi¬nisced about one of Rev Martin LutherKing’s first anti-war messages, delivered inRockefeller chapel. Vivian said King’s crit-Continued on Page Five Disciplinary action will be taken againststudents who formed a militant picket linein front of the entrances to the C-Shop andHutchinson Commons in the Reynolds ClubWednesday to demonstrate support for thedemand that the University grant a freemeal to every shift of cafeteria workers.The students, about 20 members of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society, held a non¬militant boycott there Thursday, and areto picket again today. Although no employ¬ees were in the picket line Wednesday, atleast three said they supported the picket-ers but had received an indication that theymight be dismissed for participating.In a meeting held Wednesday at 5 pm,the Committee of the Council of the facultySenate appointed a disciplinary committee.According to dean of students CharlesO’Connell, letters are being sent out to stu¬dents who were identified as having partici¬pated in the boycott, asking them to appearbefore that committee.During Thursday’s non-militant boycott,Hutch was filled with customers at lunch-hour, few of whom appeared to be under¬graduate students. The C-Shop at that timehad no customers; workers there were seentalking to a union representative, and re¬fused to comment on the content of thatdiscussion. When a student walked in, theworkers did not serve him until the man¬ager appeared, and then reluctantly agreedto do so. According to director of personnelFred Bjorling, C-Shop employees wereallowed time off to hold the meeting, andwere not on strike.A group of C-Shop workers told a Maroonreporter Wednesday “We’re not againstthese people. We’d like to be out there withthem.” Asked if they had some indicationthere would be a bad reaction — perhapsfiring — if they joined the pickets, they an¬swered affirmatively. The worker added,“Of course we’re not against them. Howcould we be against them? They’re fightingfor us.”According to Bjorling, such a threatmight have been made, because “it’s ille¬gal to boycott under the union agreement,and the employee is subject to possible dis¬charge.” He added, however, that he hadnot made any threat.Continued on Page TwoCope To Assume Ombudsman PositionSteven Cope, 70, has been appointed stu¬dent ombudsman for the 1969-70 academicyear.Edward Levi, president of the University,appointed Cope, a sociology major from Sil¬ver Springs, Maryland, this week to the po¬sition for term of office beginning Novem¬ber 1 and ending at the end of summerquarter, 1970.Of the seven candidates who applied forthe position, only two were interviewed bythe faculty screening committee set up byPresident Levi to make a recommendationfor the post. Faculty on the committeewere Peter Meyer, professor of physics,Peter Dembowski, professor of Romancelanguages and Charles O’Connell, dean ofstudents. Each candidate submitted a let¬ter of application, some submitted letters ofrecommendation and the academic tran¬script of each applicant was also reviewed.The committee decided that two of the can-be®m&hrtewed and lettersthe other five telling them thator a' variety of reasons, including freetime, quality of academic work and ex¬perience, they were not selected. The two candidates who were inter¬viewed, Cope and Timothy Lovain, 70,were considered to be equally good candi¬dates, but Cope was selected because Lo¬vain is a member of the Wegener Com¬mittee on discipline and said that he wouldnot become ombudsman, if chosen, until af¬ter the Wegener Committee’s report wascompleted and acted upon. Cope was alsochosen over Lovain because he has a light¬er work load for this year academicallyand can still graduate on time.The committee’s recommendation wassent on to President Levi who acceptedtheir advice and notified Cope of the deci¬sion. The committee also recommendedthat Cope ask Lovain to serve as his assis¬tant.Other criteria which were used to makethe decision were recommendations fromfaculty members and a rating of the candi¬dates done by student government thissummer.Cope was also selected, according to KarlBemesderfer, assistant to the president, be-Continued on Page Three STEVE COPENewly appointed ombudsmanSDS and Opponents Squirmish at CafeteriasContinued from Page OneAccording to James Brimberry, managerof personnel at Hutchinson Commons andthe C-Shop, no employees were ever threat¬ened with the loss of their jobs for partici¬pating in the action. He added that all ofthe staff had come to work. When askedwhat the staff’s reaction to the boycott was,he said “I don’t know. No employees havecommented to me about it. But I think theywould have been out there if they were un¬happy with the contract.”A statement issued by O’Connell to stu¬dents and faculty of the University Thurs¬day reads, “On the morning of Wednesday,November 12, a number of persons physi¬cally blocked the entrances to the C-Shopand Hutchinson Commons in the ReynoldsClub and forcibly prevented students, facul¬ty, and staff from entering either diningroom.” The statement adds “On numerousoccasions between 10:30 am and 2 pm,physical force was used by the group barri¬cading entrances to the dining roomsagainst members of the University commu¬nity. Specific complaints from faculty, stu¬dents, and staff have been received. It isreported that one University employee wasknocked to the ground and another kickedin the stomach.”O’Connell quotes the “relevant Universitypolicy,” as re-stated by the Council of theUniversity Senate February 23, 1969. Itreads “Dissent and protest cannot bedeemed to include harassment or coercionof individual members of the Universitycommunity or other activities which inter¬fere with the normal operations of the Uni¬versity. Such tactics are especially repug¬nant in an academic community and areprohibited in this University, whether theytake the form of invasions of the freedom,security, or the privacy of members of theUniversity community or their guests, or ofnoise, tumult and other activities that canreasonably be expected to interfere withthe operations of the University. Partici¬pants in conduct violating this frequentlyannounced policy will subject themselves todisciplinary measures.”Members of the disciplinary committee are Jo Desha Lucas, professor of law, whowill serve as chairman; Herbert Anderson,professor of physics; and Bernard Wein¬berg, professor of romance languages andliterature. Student Government (SG) willbe asked to appoint a student observer tothe committee.SG president Mike Barnett said “the SGassembly has already said that it rejectsthe current disciplinary procedures, and Ithink it will seriously question whether ornot to appoint student observers, whichmight indicate tacit approval of thoseprocedures.” He added “the assembly canappoint observers if it wants to. I will notbe part of that travesty.”Assistant dean of students James W. Viceinformed the demonstrators Wednesdaythat they were participating in a disruptiveaction and were subject to disciplinarymeasures. Vice told onlookers that “anyonehere may submit names of people he recog¬nizes to the dean of students.”He was accompanied by five Universityplainclothesmen, and a University photo¬grapher took several pictures of the picketline. Later an administrator, commentingon the fact that students had submitted thenames of some demonstrators, remarked,“I think it’s good that students don’t thinkit’s a stigma to fink on other students.”The reaction of many observers indicatedlittle awareness of the issue behind the pro¬test. An elderly woman exclaimed “whatdoes this mean? Can I eat lunch here?Who’s doing this?” A student said “Do Isupport this? I don’t know. I haven’t readany literature.”Most of the students in the picket linewere involved in individual arguments withstudents who wanted to get in. When a stu¬dent asserted that he had the right to eatwhere he wanted to, a protester replied“the right to free meals is more importantthan the right to eat in Hutch,” and anothersaid, “the University forces its workers tolive on $2.07 an hour, so we are forcing youto eat elsewhere.”One spectator said, pointing to someoneon the picket line, “He’s the first one; I’m5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRYStudy Abroad...in Scenic Monterey, California130 Miles South of Sen FranciscoMonterey Institute of Foreign StudiesSmall Classes— Individual AttentionIntensive Tutorial-Type InstructionUpper Division Graduate StudyEnrollment open to limited number ot qualified sophomores.Languages and Area Studies—Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese,Portuguese, Russian, Spanish—History, International Economics, Political Science—Department of Educaticn, Department ot Translation & Interpretation.SPRING SEMESTERFebruary 9, 1970May 30, 1970For Information Write toDEAN OF ADMISSIONSP.O. BOX 1978MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA%A private liberal arts college Accreditedby the Western Association of Schoolsand Colleges. V.A. Approved. ClarkD'PdtfPenjoy our .special studentrate85 at alltimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officem • different double featuredaily• open 7 30 a.m - late■ show midnight Ol■ • Sunday film guild ■m a every wed. and fri. is ■ladies day-all gals 75*m little gal lery for galsm only Olm • dark park ing-1 door ■southM 4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m. ■m • write for your free ■monthly programClark & madison fr 2-28431Revitalization Presents:Howlin' WolfDance in Bartlett GymSaturday, Nov. 15, at 9:00 PMTickets: $1.50 at the door2/The Chicago Maroon/November 14, 1969 YOUR FRIENDLY ADMINISTRATORS: Skip Landt and James Vice at Hutch.going to kick your face in.” Other oppo¬nents of the boycott shouted “the workersdon’t need you; they can work through theunion,” and “where are all the blacks whosupport you?”Many in the picket line said that employ¬ees were not participating because theyhad been threatened with loss of their jobs.Several mentioned that in spite of suchthreats during a fight between demonstra¬tors and students attempting to get in, agroup of C-Shop workers standing near thedoor had shouted “We support them, don’teat in here.”Most of the workers in Hutch who wereasked for their reaction to the boycott re¬fused to comment. “When I understandwhat’s going on I’ll give you my opinion,”said one employee. Another said “I have nocomment,” and added “you know how it is;we work here.”Some employees commented on the de¬mand for free meals. One said “of coursewe’d all like free meals,” while anothersaid “I wouldn’t refuse it, but I don’t thinkit’s that important.” One employee came tothe service entrance to tell a picketer “I think you’re doing a fine thing,” but addedthat free meals were not her main concern“The washroom facilities here are ter¬rible!” she exclaimed.By about 2 pm most of the crowd hadleft. Some of the picketers felt that the ac¬tion had been a success. “Most of the stu¬dents trying to get in were from SCAF”(Students for Capitalism and Freedom),said one. “I think we won over a lot of thepeople we talked to.” Another student dis¬agreed, saying “ this would be a success ifwe kept it up until this place went bank¬rupt.”Many admitted that it would have been“nice to see more students in the picketline.” As one put it “they’ve signed a peti¬tion, and they think they’ve done their bitfor justice.”Some students said that discipline hadnot been an important consideration in theirdecision to participate in the action, whileothers refused to answer the question. Onestudent said “what it basically came downto is this: is it a good action? Discipline isnot an important consideration in our poli¬tics.”MUSICRAFT SPECIALGARRARD AUTOMATIC TURNTABLESAVE *35 onGARRARD 60 MKIIwith powermatic basedustcoverpicketing V-15 cartridgeWITH POWERMATIC BASEDUSTCOVERPICKERING V-15 CARTRIDGEONLY $5995REG. $94 951o ip 0 fA Thi> totally reliable mochine hateomed Mi merit rating ovor theyoon through tha enthueoim oftotitfied owner* and the ex¬perienced judgement of in-many now refinement*. M prom-itet to remain a maimtay of An*feature! required for qualityrecord reproduction uong themod advanced pickupi. It it ajophidicotad mochine with alow-mem tubular aluminumto permit vary light tracking andON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR - 363-455541 E. Oik St.-DE 7-4150 ,/VtttA MM ft ftT¥ 20J5 *. tsm St.-774-6540MubiOuiftThe University bookstore, burned out bya fire last month, will be moved for the restof the school year to the Stagg field labs on57 St, Robert Heidrich, director of purchas¬ing and auxiliary services, announced Mon¬day.The move will be temporary until thebookstore can find permanent accom¬modations large enough to fill its needs. Ithas been persistently rumored that it willeventually move to the first two floors andbasement of the administration building,but that report was not confirmed by Heid¬rich.It is hoped that the bookstore will beready for operation within a month, Heid¬rich said, and it will be definitely open forthe winter quarter.The bookstore must vacate Ellis hall soonto make way for hospital expansion there,and reports of moves have been circulating Cope To Resign From ActivitiesThe move to Stagg labs will result in adecrease in the size of present space avail¬able. Ellis hall has 11,500 square feet offloor space, and the labs have 9,000 squarefeet. Only the bare essentials of service willbe provided.cent to pay the $200,000 estimated for dam¬age, as the store must be torn down soon.Harlan Davidson, manager of the book¬store, said Monday afternoon that “there ismuch that could be done to the bookstorewith $200,000.”The move to Stagg labs had been re¬cently endorsed by student government,the student life committee and the Gold¬smith committee on funding. STAGG LABS: Site of the new temporary bookstore.Bookstore Will MoveTo Stagg Field Labsfor over a year.Students wishing to buy books are able tofind limited supplies at Belfield Hall onKimbark Ave. Several services normallyprovided by the bookstore may be obtainedthere.According to one University official, theUniversity has had difficulty getting insur¬ance to cover costs for the damaged book¬store. Insurance companies have been reti-By Carl SunshineIn a Maroon survey connected with theappointment of the new ombudsman, facul¬ty and students expressed varying ideas ofhis role ranging from “ad symp” to fixer.But on a campus where consensus is anaughty word, there at least appears to beno violent objection to the ombudsman’soffice.The basic task of the ombudsman as seenby William Meyer, professor of mathemat¬ics, is to “facilitate the ongoing operationsof the University with particular attentionto the needs of students.” Jerry Webman,71, agreed that “sometimes you get intosituations where you just can’t cut throughthe red tape” where an ombudsman wouldbe useful. Continued from Page Onecause of his “ability to stay cool” and “hisknowledgeability about the University.”Bemesderfer added that “we wanted some¬one who simply would be able to be aneffective assist to students.”The ombudsman, according to the releasesent out by the University, “receives griev¬ances and, at his discretion, brings them toappropriate people or institutes in¬vestigations into those cases where a re-their preconceptions that he’s just an adsymp.”Some of the faculty’s deepest thinkers en¬sconced within the Fermi Institute ex¬pressed complete ignorance of the office. Ahigh official of student government de¬clared “I am not interested in it,” and onerelaxed student lounging in Ida Noyes lam¬ented “I have a feeling he’s never going todo anything for me.”Most eloquent supporter of the office wasan NCD undergraduate found skippingthrough the third sub-basement of Harperstacks: “I think students need a friendamong the mighty, someone to put in agood word and sWeep all the petty diffi¬culties of life under the rug.” view by his office seems warranted. Sincethe work of this office is intended to resultin improvement in the regular remedialprocesses, the student ombudsman, as anindependent officer, calls attention to ab¬uses of discretion wherever he finds themand suggests changes in rules, procedures,or policies wherever he sees fit. The stu¬dent ombudsman also issues quarterly pub¬lic reports describing in general what hisactivities have been.”Cope said Thursday “I think John (JohnMoscow, last year’s ombudsman) put theemphasis in the wrong places, in terms ofutilitarian principles if for no other rea¬sons. He alienated too many people whocould have found use in this office. My onlyobligation to the administration is to dowhat President Levi hired me to do — to bean impartial investigator and to come tomy own independent judgements on is¬sues.”Cope is presently setting up his second-floor Reynolds Club office. He hopes toopen Monday with or without a secretary.He plans to spend as much time in the of¬fice as possible and will, this year, open theoffice from 7 pm to 10 pm on Monday andWednesday nights.“The administration has not hired me todefend them; it has hired me to investigatethem,” Cope said. He is going to resignfrom all committees he is presently servingon, including the dean of the College’s advi¬sory committee, the undergraduate sociolo¬gy curriculum committee, the Blum com¬ mittee on student housing and the nationalstudent association delegation.Cope is giving up these positions to havemore free time to devote to his new job, tobe able to make impartial, independent de¬cisions and to allow other people to fillthese posts.“The difference between John and I willprobably not be what we treat but how wetreat it,” Cope said. He hopes to continuepushing some of the issues that Moscowstarted last year. Among these are theplacement of all courses’ reading lists inthe Harper Library reserve room and theinstallation of campus phones on the firstfloor of all campus buildings.“For this institution to be a viable oneafter I leave, it needs student interest, but Iwill not pander to student interest groups. Iwill try to be impartial,” Cope added.The ombudsman receives a salary fromthe University and is supplied with an of¬fice in Reynolds Club and a secretary. Mos¬cow was the first ombudsman on any majorcollege or university campus in the coun¬try.One important thing that Cope hopes todo this year is to investigate the infiltra¬tion of police agencies into the Universitycommunity. Cope said that this will notbe easy to do but he hopes to devote muchof his time to this problem.In addition to this he will investigate allmatters brought to his attention by mem¬bers of the community. Cope asks all stu¬dents to take advantage of the serviceshe can offer to them.Survey Shows Varied OpinionsToward Ombudsman PositionCandidates for Con-Con Speak at Law SchoolMany students expressed concern overhow the ombudsman should be chosen, at¬tacking last year’s administration appoint¬ment as unrepresentative of students. “Ifthe ombudsman is going to help students,he must have their trust, or at least re¬spect,” said Karen Wishner ’72. While somechanges were made in this year’s proce¬dure, many students felt that a joint stu¬dent-faculty committee should have chosenthe ombudsman.Feeling the quality of the choice is moreimportant than the means of choosing,Mark Ashin, associate chairman of theEnglish department, sees the ombudsmanas more a convenience than a necessity:“There is always someone to whom the stu¬dent could have gone if he knew where togo.” The ombudsman’s job is just to steerpeople in the right direction. “I don’t seehim as a pressuring lever, but as a guy whoknows the ropes.”Others hope the ombudsman will do morethan lubricate the gears of the system. Ifmany problems of a particular type cometo his attention, he should make recommen¬dations on how to eliminate the underlyingdifficulties, dean of the College Roger Hil¬debrand said. But A1 Shpuntoff 71, Piercesnack bar mascot, cautioned the ombuds¬man against “becoming too political or tak¬ing a stand when he doesn’t know what heis doing.” Another student thinks the om¬budsman will be effective “if people^(prge£ Three of the local Illinois ConstitutionalConvention candidates agreed that womenneed more rights and clashed briefly overmachine politics during a panel discussionMonday afternoon at the law school.The fourth area candidate, A1 Raby, out¬lined his views on the constitution later inthe week.Elections of two delegates will take placeTuesday.Attye Belle McGee, wife of Universitytrustee Frank McGee, said at the Mondaymeeting that she favors expanding thepresent constitution’s bill of rights in threebasic areas: equal job opportunities for all,freedom of housing and women’s rights.Mrs McGee, a democratic-endorsed candi¬date, finished fourth in the September 23primary.All three candidates favored repeal of the“so-called protective laws” which limitwomen’s employment, and endorsed moreliberal abortion and divorce laws.Shakman, an independent candidate whoplaced third in the primary, said that be¬cause the three candidates agreed on theissue of women’s rights, they should dis¬cuss their areas of major disagreementsuch as court reform and machine politics.Shakman said that he has used women tohelp run his campaign “not because theyare women but- because they are good people.” Before the primary, he said, allhis ward chairmen were women, thoughsome had to quit to take on other jobs.Odas Nicholson said she was glad Shak-men feels women are “good people” be¬cause “that is what I have been trying totell the voters.” She was endorsed by theDemocratic party and placed first in theprimary, narrowly edging out independentA1 Raby. She based her views of women’srights on the report of the president’s com¬mission on the status of women which cameout in 1964. In the report, she said, she was“surprised to see that black people are notthe most discriminated against people, butthat the most discriminated against peopleare women — white and black.”Shakman said the patronage system isone reason that “in this city 40 out of 50aldermen are invulnerable to the will of thepeople.” He said he strongly opposes andhas tried to gain a temporary court in¬junction against the practice of governmentemployees giving two percent of their sala¬ry to the Democratic party to maintaintheir jobs.Miss Nicholson and Mrs McGee both saidthat they “don’t know about the requireddonation that Shakman is talking about.”Speaking to about 40 people Tuesday,Raby said he favors full equality in job op¬portunities. He is for legalizing abortion, saying that “women have the right overtheir own bodies.”Raby cited the question of legislative con¬trol on determining tax laws as being cru¬cial. As an example of its ramifications, hementioned that the Illinois chamber of com¬merce has recommended a five percentceiling on all income taxes, corporate aswell as private. He wants to “eliminatesales tax on necessities” and to correct thesituation where renters pay property taxes,in that increases are passed on from lea¬sers through increased rates.In the field of education, Raby believesthe state should take on full responsibilityfor paying for public education.He said the intent of the state attorneygeneral to eliminate trial by jury and bail-bond and to legalize preventive detention isindicative of an attempt to deprive peopleof their civil liberties. “We need a bill ofhuman rights,” he declared.Finally he enumerated three favorableoutcomes of the black power movement: itraises and partly answers the question ofwhat it means to be a black individual, anda Wack community within a white society,and it demonstrates the intensity of in¬stitutional racism. According to Raby,black power is redefining the relationshipbetween blacks and whites, not calling forits elimination.**■•.*.*»^* * «i * #*•**- November-14, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3By Rob Skeist“On November 14, 1968, we publicly andcheerfully declare our refusal to cooperatewith the draft. We resist the draft, and thewar in Vietnam, in attempting to buildlives based on the vision and the practiceof brotherhood.’’It was a year ago today that four Uni¬versity of Chicago students signed thispledge. None of them are at the universitynow. John Welch (former Maroon manag¬ing editor who was expelled after lastyear’s sit-in) goes to court today in SanFrancisco.Chris Hannafan, a freshman last year, isworking in a GI coffee house in SouthCarolina. The government has not movedin on him yet.Mike Presser left the University lgstyear and is now on his own, somewhere. Idon’t know where.I am the fourth. Last month I was calledfor a pre-induction physical, and was toldthat I would be classified I-Y, deferred be¬cause of a curved spine. I’m still in theresistance. Does that make sense to you?It does.The legal ordeal around John Welch’scase has been dragging on for a long time— it was 17 months ago that he refusedinduction — and it has been an emotionalstrain at times. Not that he’s anxious to goto jail — he has no more respect for thecourts and prisons than he has for thearmy — but the limbo of waiting for a trialmakes a serious long-term involvement inanother activity hard to undertake.At this point, John has doubts that ~efus-ing induction was worth all the hassle.When he speaks positively of the resis¬tance, it’s “with the resistance I wasspurred (or spurred myself) to act in poli¬tics.” In a recent letter to me, he summedup his pre-Resistance life as a time when“I hemmed and hawed, tried to avoid it,became a journalist, aesthetics student,hippie, traveler, but I always knew that I’dend up doing politics.” And the commu- nity-in-struggle we had is something hewants to keep creating.Welch now has a job at a mental healthproject in a Puerto Rican ghetto in NewYork. He and other people at hospitals inthe area are putting a lot of energy now to“getting together some ideas for a cohe¬rent radical medical program,” responsiveto the needs of the community and theworkers, not to top-down administrationsand the patients with the most money.Chris Hannafan really likes the work atthe GI coffee house.“Resistance has always been primarily amoral act on my part,” he wrote in thelast letter I got from him, “and I have nointention of registering. My politicalawareness has come a long way from whatit was the night of October 30 when I sat inyour kitchen with you and John and triedto remember the pamphlets I had readwhen I was asked why I wanted to resist.Then I really wasn’t sure of the reasons,but I knew it was something I had to do.... I’m glad I took that first step, for ithas given me the awareness I need to lookat things the way they are, and the in¬itiative to do something about them.”Chris originally went to the GI coffeehouse in South Carolina for a summer, butis still there eight months later, since hefound it more meaningful and satisfyingthan anything he did in Chicago. The deci¬sion to stay down there has probably beenas much of a breaking-through and self¬defining process as his decision about thedraft a year ago.As for me, the resistance has been animportant part of my life for the past year— political, spiritual, social. Without get¬ting too carried away with the messianicrhetoric the Resistance has gained somereputation for, the experience really hasmeant for me breaking into a serious polit¬ical involvement with a non-ideological andhuman attitude. And it has meant breakingthrough a self-image that was overly de¬pendent on the prospect of a career as aprofessional (lawyer, professor, etc.), andWhy is this man desirable?Because he has mere of what matters toadvertisers. More education. More money tospend. More interests. More needs.And there are more of him. Over 16 million.Where do you find him? Reading THE MA¬ROON. One out of every four men in the U.S.Jves you i _ _ f...- olds. More college • educated. More men withannual household incomes over $10,000. Morehome owners. More car owners. More men in households with 3 or more children.In short, more men who buy more. Or to sayit another way, more desirable men than anyother newspaper.Which is why so many advertisers start theiradvertising schedule with the MAROON. It'sbask. Shouldn't you start with the MAROON?After all, there's a lot to be said for sayingwhat you have to say to the most desirablemen in the world.The MAROONThe newspaper for desirable men. JOHN WELCH: The draft resister on campus last year.breaking through a certain amount of fear.But by the time it came around to anorder for a physical, which I knew I mightflunk, I found that refusng to let thosedoctors look at my back wasn’t somethingI felt morally or politically compelled todo; it didn’t seem the same as turning in a card, quitting school in spite of losing a II-S, deciding not to appeal for a CO.The decision about the physical hadsomething to do with what I’m doing now.I’m living in Maywood and working in Ber¬wyn, both lower-middle income suburbsContinued on Page NineKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856iRECOMMENDED BYLEADING SPE¬CIALISTSto satisfy the soul.Shirt in white withblack stripes, gold,green, royal purple,brown or black withA white stripes.% PLUS1 FASHIONSFor Men and Women5225 S. Harper324-68004/The Chicago Maroon/November 14, 1969 NEELY’SSTANDARDSERVICETo Our CustomersI have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we cancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and better service.Please join us at our new location.6600 So Stony IslandPhone Bl 8-9645Thank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard Service I \^Qlubg22pi TOTAL FASHIONIMPRESSIONSFOR MEN WITHYOUNG IDEASTHE NORFOLK LOOK. Traditional in style, anthenlic in detail. Very "non ” in soft, supple leatherAcrylic pile lining 90THE SPORTS LOOK. Racy nylon oxford jacket',lough to beat for skiing or skating. Detaeliable hoodAcrylic pile lined 35THE BUSH COAT LOOK. We're winterized thepopular jungle jacket. Of u-arm melton (reprocessedwool and other hardy fibers) with full acrylic pilelining. 4 pockets 35.‘CHARGE IT'' AT WARDSState & AdamsEvergreen ParkOld Orchard,Randhurst,Lombard,Munster,Waukegan./VAC )f\JTC »( )/V\f- KFour Former Students Now Draft Resistersrt ERNEST GRUENING: Former senator and moratorium speaker Moratorium Speakers\Outline Peace PlansContinued from Page Oneics had objected to his “meddling” in af¬fairs abroad, saying he was a civil rightsleader and what happened in Vietnamdidn’t concern him. “Whatever happens inVietnam affects black men here, and what¬ever happens to black men here can hap¬pen to any man anywhere in the world,”said Vivian.He.appealed to the members of the peacemovement, saying they faced a commonenemy with the members of the freedommovement. “If we are not able to win ourposition on Vietnam as people who are con¬cerned with America’s future, America hasno future at all.”Senator Gruening, who was introduced bystudent government (SG) president Mike Barnett as “our senator,” received a stand¬ing tribute from the gathering of morato¬rium observers before he began his speech.The 84 year old former senator was one oftwo senators to vote against the 1964 Tonkinresolution, described by Gruening as Presi¬dent Johnson’s “blank check,” and cameout against the administration as the causeof the Vietnamese War.“The war will not be ended by Nixon. Itcan only be ended by an uprising of theAmerican people observing moratoriums aslong as necessary to put an end to the ob¬scene slaughter in Asia.”Gruening said that the Vietnamese hadnever asked for military aid from theUnited States. “We invaded Vietnam uni¬laterally in violation of treaties.”Produces Empty ClassesMoratoriumThe University moratorium committee’scall for syspensioji of classes Thursday ap¬peared to be well over 50 per cent effective.The moratorium did not call for contin¬uing the boycott today.A check on Cobb Hall at 3 pm Thursdayshowed three classes in session at half ca¬pacity. According to the registrar’s office,twelve classes are scheduled to meet be¬tween 2:30 and 4 in Cobb, the major meet¬ing place for undergraduate classes. Be-Nearly 170 people heard David Dellinger,Conspiracy defendant, speak at the BlueGargoyle Tuesday night.Dellinger, chairman of the national mobi¬lization to end the war in Vietnam, on trialfor conspiring to cross state lines with theintent to incite riots during the 1968 . Demo¬cratic convention in Chicago, discussed thetrial before the sympathetic audience. Helikened the trial to “a very beautiful classi¬cal minuet, where everybody moves justlike he’s supposed to and nobody is out ofplace, and at a certain point you go over acliff.”He said that the trial “is unbelievable,”and suggested that only by watching it inperson rather than reading accounts of itcan its ambience be known. “I used tothink that televising trials would be bad,”he said, “because of the way it could hurt adefendant. But I’ve decided that only byhaving TV and by capturing the judge’sbias ... would it be possible to convey thenature of what is going on there.” Dellingeradded, “Things like bias are elementaryfacts” one cannot “glean from reading thenewspaper.”Declaring that ‘the prosecution and thejudge act in collusion to prevent cross ex¬amination when you’re getting anywhere,”Dellinger said, “the prosecution and thejudge are a team — they work together,”and that the courts “are goddamned unjustand away from people.”“This case represented,” Dellinger said,“part of a two part offensive by the Nixonadministration. The Nixon administrationin its nervousness ... set up a two partprogram: the token troop withdrawals andall the little bait thrown out about peace• • . and to take a cross-section of the(peace) movement and to put them in thepublic dock.”“Why,” asked Dellinger, “should the onlyrecourse be through the courts? Or throughthe appeals courts? Maybe one should dis¬rupt,” he said. He claimed that an accuratedescription of what occurs in the courtroomis not made available to the public. “Thebourgeois press bears responsibility,” hesaid.“The witnesses,” he said, “haven’t toldthe truth. Frappolo (a government witness) tween 10 and 11:30 that morning, attend¬ance appeared to have dropped off by abouttwo third’s.There were about fifteen students at Rey¬nolds Club early in the afternoon. Abouthalf the students there said they had at¬tended classes without having any dis¬cussion about the moratorium. Those whodid not go indicated that classes had beencalled off due to a consensus of the stu¬dents.“The whole system is unjust,” he said,“There are times when we are sure thathe’s (Hoffman) just gotten a phone callfrom Washington.“What a facade it is. It’s so far removedfrom the people.”Dellinger noted that “non-violent tacticscan be the most fruitful, particularly in theU.S. But I have always supported the NLFand the Panthers ... While I believe innon-violence, liberation must be first. Iwon’t take the sterile tactic of condemningviolent revolutionaries.A grant of $9,000 has been given to theCommittee on Recognized Student Organi¬zations (CORSO) to supplement its $35,000budget. Tiese new funds were made avail¬able to CORSO by Charles O’Connell, Deanof Students.Connie Maravell, chairman of CORSO in¬dicated that the $9,000 appropriation wouldbe distributed primarily to Festival of theArts (FOTA) radio station WHPK and toCORSO’s own contingency fund which ispresently very small. She also expressed a“sense of relief,” pointing out that becauseof additional appropriation “this year therewill be a little less pressure on groups tocut down on activities.”CORSO, which provides funds for all non¬political student organizations on campus,had very limited resources left after fund¬ing student organizations for emergenciesor for providing assistance to any newgroups that might organize during the year.Miss Maravell expressed “appreciation toMr. O’Cormell” for having obtained the sup¬plementary funds for CORSO.She emphasized that despite the addition¬al $9,000 it will only be possible to keepstudent activities at about the same levelas last year, when CORSO’s budget was$32,000. The rising costs of many of these One member of a US economic historyclass commented, “Attendance was dis¬cussed; the conservatives wanted to dotheir own thing, the liberals wanted to vote,but the professor felt that even if 99 percent of the students wanted to go to class, itwas a question of right and wrong.” Therewas no class.Bio 111 was held with about 70 per cent at¬tendance, another student said. The teacherand two assistants, however, are going toWashington today, and are holding a make¬up for those who did not go to class /ester-day.Charles Chase ’71, a 24 year old Vietnamveteran, had asked the University to refundhis tuition for classes cancelled on the daysof the moratorium, and has been refused.Dean of students Charles O’Connell saidthat the University would not refund themoney to Chase, as “the decision to holdclasses is made by the individual professorand the University has not cancelledclasses officially. Also, students are not re¬quired to attend classes.”Argued Chase, a Chinese major whoworked in Army intelligence in Vietnam fora year, “I have enough trouble with Chineseoutside of classes, and I don’t think theyshould be cancelled without some com¬pensation.”Chase, a frequent letter writer to the Ma¬roon, has attacked the moratorium andSDS’s forcing of GE recruiters off campus.activities would have forced the curtail¬ment of some of them had the supplementa¬ry funds not been made available.Approximately one-third of the $9,000 willprobably go to FOTA. According to Direc¬tor of Student Activities Skip Landt, “bothMr. O’Connell and CORSO felt that it wouldbe wise to give FOTA and other groupsmaking special contributions to campus lifea financial shot-in-the-arm.”In past years CORSO has kept about $8,-000 in its contingency fund in order to copewith any emergencies, including over¬drawing, that might occur during the year.This year however, there remained, follow¬ing distribution of the original CORSO ap¬propriations, only $4,000 in the fund. Thus alarge part of the new appropriation will notbe distributed, but rather will be kept toreturn the contingency fund to its previouslevel.CORSO will meet early next week to con¬sider the specific details of the distributionof the new funds. Following that meetingthe CORSO members will issue a statementoutlining the manner in which they plan touse the additional grant. All budgetingmust be presented to Student Governmentfor approval. Senator Gruening maintained that Presi¬dent Johnson and his advisors did not tellthe American people the facts about theUSS Mannix affair which sparked the Ton¬kin resolution.The retired senator criticized Nixon’s No¬vember 3 speech saying Nixon’s peace planhad been nullified by escape clauses.Gruening said that Nixon’s note of cautionstating he would have to adjust the timetable if enemy attacks occur doesn’t looklike withdrawal, that “Nixon can do what¬ever he wants,” and that the motion to freeSouth Vietnam was a “grotesque mock¬ery.”Gruening said moves are now on in theHouse and Senate to endorse Nixon’s peaceplan. He urged the assembly to make itclear that “Everyone who votes (to endorsethe plan) will have the blood of every boywho dies henceforth.“The way to back our boys is to bringthem back.”Following the two hour convocation, pro¬testers boarded five of seven buses outsidethe chapel to leaflet in Chicago shoppingcenters, in the black neighborhood for Con-Con candidate A1 Raby, or to picket KrogerFood Stores for selling California grapes.Although student government originallychartered 15 buses for post-convocation ac¬tivity, SG Pre? dent Mike Barnett saidThursday, leaders anticipated the smallerturnout because of bad weather, press play,and the great interest in the Washington,D.C. march, and cancelled eight of thebuses.This afternoon at 4 pm, seven buses forthe Washington moratorium march leavefrom the Ida Noyes parking lot. Barnett es¬timated that 500 people from the Universitycommunity are journeying to Washingtonfor the November 15 anti-war protest. Thenumber includes 200 on the moratoriumbuses, a known 200 going by car, and 100SDS supporters leaving on three buseschartered by the Chicago SDS chapter.Barnett said at the convocation that allcharter buses within a hundred miles ra¬dius of Chicago have been employed bythe city’s peace groups to go to Wash¬ington.Cries of “peace now” echoed off TribuneTower and Big John as 800 people marcheddown Michigan Ave. Thursday evening at7:30, braving icy winds that kept snuffingout their candles and the icier stares of Chi¬cago policemen and passersby.Marchers filled the northbound lane ofMichigan at Monroe and continued north tothe water tower, where Protestant andJewish clergy, including Reverend Troutand Rabbi Martin Silverman of the RogersPark Mizpah Temple urged the crowd to be“aggresively non-violent.”The demonstration ended quietly at 8:30.Friday moratorium observances includea Latin American defense organization ral¬ly at Wicker Park, the New Mobilizationrally in Grant Park from 1 to 5 pm, and acandlelight march against death sponsoredby the Hyde Park Peace Council starting atRockefeller Chapel at 7:30 pm.Dellinger Describes TrialNixonPJote biggest liar I’ve ever Seen.”As Repressiveis IDean O'Connell Gets $9,000To Supplement CORSO FundsNovember 14, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5T*nNo DisciplineThe University has chosen to respond to the militant boycottof some SDS members in front of Hutchinson Commons and theC-Shop with the appointment of a disciplinary committee, and inso doing is taking the first steps in the tragic and dishonorableprocess we were saddened to witness last spring. The bitter divi¬siveness and paralyzing distrust excited last year by both sidesin an ugly battle may well have been rekindled by an excessivereaction to an admittedly unpleasant situation.SDS is making it extremely difficult for us to support them.Their cause — workers, mostly black, caught in society’s trap oflow-paying, dead end jobs — is a plight we should all regardsympathetically. Tactics of alienation and polarization deter usfrom wholeheartedly supporting SDS, however, and we cannotcondone Wednesday’s picket line that prevented those who wishedto enter Hutch and C-Shop from doing so.The University’s move to enact disciplinary proceedings isbased on the objection that the militant boycott attempted to“harass or coerce” individual University members, in violation ofUniversity regulations as set forth in the student handbook. Harass¬ment and coercion, clearly, are matters of degree, and subject todefinition that varies with the individual’s partiality. The degreeof coercion lies in the judgment of the persons coercing and beingcoerced. There is no doubt that several persons felt coerced andharassed by the fact that they could not eat their lunch in Hutchin¬son Commons or the C-Shop Wednesday. Some were annoyed atthe inconvenience, others were outraged by the principle of amilitant picket line.It is undisputed that it was disruption of normal activities,but was it enough to warrant disciplinary action? Are activitiesvital to the University disrupted by having two cafeterias closed?Last year, the controversy over whether the University wasjustified in disciplining students who participated in thewinter’s sit-in was a deep and furious one. The policy of Uni¬versity disciplinary practices which exclude student participationcame under particular fire, and are currently being examined bythe Wegener committee, which is supposed to print its report beforethe end of this quarter. How can the University now beginproceedings so dubiously regarded by a substantial portion of itscommunity for a case so obviously less vital to the welfare of theUniversity?We fully understand that the University has reacted to as¬pects of the protest other than the closing of the cafeterias, pri¬marily alleged violence in front of Hutch Wednesday. If fightsbreak out, it is the job of University police — in unforms, notplainclothesmen — to be present and to break up fights. If theUniversity feels it must discipline students for fighting, then itshould in all fairness discipline all students who fought — includ¬ing those who opposed SDS.The University is in a difficult position. It has been injuredin some degree: some of its members couldn’t eat lunch wherethey wanted to. Students often injure the University, and arequietly disregarded, because discipline would be more disruptivethan the injury. We believe this is such a case. The University willbe setting a deplorable and dangerous precedent if they disciplinestudents now. One year ago, precisely the same situation occurred:SDS sponsored a militant boycott of Hutch and C-Shop to supporta non-union worker demand. No one dreamed of using the fear¬some weapon of discipline then, but evidently last spring’s actionshave opened the door to a more casual use of discipline that wor¬ries us extremely. Last year students were disciplined for sittingin, Wednesday for picketing. What will it be tomorrow?Discipline can be a treacherous weapon. It can turn againstthose who wield it. When you discipline someone, you judge him,you usurp some of his power over himself. You make it less likelythat he will judge himself dispassionately. You force him to weighhis actions, not out of reason, but out of fear.Last year, students were disciplined for disruption. This year,the University must ask itself, who is breaking the peace now?j» i f *-.• ^EDITORIAL 'UC's Racism' Becomes IssueBy Paul Barn stainLast month, Students for a DemocraticSociety (SDS) began circulating a petitioncalling for the University to grant a freemeal for every shift of cafeteria workers.At that time, the issue seemed to makesome sense, or at least to merit some fur¬ther discussion. If other cafeteria workersget free meals, then why shouldn’t Univer¬sity workers get them also?Now, three weeks later, the demand forfree meals has turned into a campaignagainst University racism. The fight forfree meals has become “the first concretestep in fighting U.C.’s racism,” a fight thatbegan with Wednesday’s boycott of theC-Shop. Many observers of that action hadmoral objections to its coercive character.But apart from that problem, there re¬mains the question of just how racism be¬came an issue here.Ironically enough, the charge of racismwas brought up after a leaflet circulated byFred Bjorling, director of personnel,' point¬ed out a few facts which SDS had neglectedto mention. The statement said that thecontracts of University employees are su¬perior to those of hotel and restaurantworkers in the following areas: minimumwage, vacations, holidays, sick leave, in¬surance plan, and retirement plan. Theminimum wage for cafeteria workers hereis $2.07 In restaurants and hotels it can beas much as 81£ lower. This means thateven without free meals, University em¬ployees are assured of earning more.Now SDS claims that while all this istrue, the University is racist because it be¬lieves in paying its black workers wages onwhich they cannot live adequately. “Eventhe government says a family of four needs$10,000 a year to live in Chicago adequate¬ly,” reads one of their statements.It remains unknown as to just how SDSreached the conclusion that every cafeteriaworker must support alone a family of four(many are under 21). But there is some¬thing much more fundamentally wronghere: the statement suggests that an em¬ployer should pay its workers on the basisof size of family and of the standard ofliving in their area of residence, withoutregard to existing wage standards or to thenature of the work involved. From this kindof logic, it follows that any supporter of afamily of ten might earn approximately$20,000 a year if he or she lived in Chicago,and more than that in San Francisco. Thepoint is that no employer can, should, orever has paid its workers according to thisstandard.Is the University racist because it claimsTHE CHICAGO M AROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: David TravisFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Susan Left, GerardLeval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, EllenSazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, David Steele,John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Steve Aoki, Mike Brant,Steve Current, Richard Davis, Monty Futch,Ben Gilbert, Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer,Phil Lathrop, Jerry Levy, David Rosenbush,Paul Stelter.Founded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60437. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. that the $2.07 minimum wage is goodenough for black workers? The director ofpersonnel claims that it is good when com¬pared to that of other cafeteria workers. Itis certainly no accident that most cafeteriaworkers are black; this is the result of so¬cial inequalities in educational and job¬training opportunities, inequalities whichmay indeed be unjust. But to label one par¬ticular social institution “racist” simply be¬cause it displays the inevitable effects ofthese inequualities is to take a ridiculouslynarrow and unfair view of the situation.The University does not train whites forhigher paying jobs, nor does it control wagestandards. Consequently, it cannot be said !to engage in racism.At the same time there is a basic, per¬haps intentional misunderstanding on thepart of SDS about the meaning of the word“racism.” The syllogism they use is the fol¬lowing: the University exploits cafeteriaworkers, most cafeteria workers are black,and therefore the University is racist. Butthe University, even if it did abuse its Iworkers, would still not be racist unless it jtreated white workers better than biackworkers. This would mean paying whiteworkers more for the same kind of work,an accusation that SDS has often made, but Ithat has not been substantiated by any Ifacts.Because SDS has taken this view, stu¬dents who do not fight for the demand are 'being labelled racists. Racism is a seriousand ugly charge, not a catch-word to bethrown in whenever convenient. The issueseems to be so deeply and thoroughly em- 'bedded in SDS’s philosophy, however, that ;it cannot put forth any demand withoutsomehow bringing it in.SDS states in a flyer “when racism is notfought it flourishes.” It would appear in- ;stead that racism “flourishes” wheneverSDS feels like fighting it. When SDS bringsto light unnoticed issues and opens up dis¬cussion, it can be a useful and importantorganisation. (The.demand for free mealsin itself is not unreasonable.) But when it jmakes irresponsible charges and unfounded ,conclusions an integral part of its argu¬ment, it is a group with little moral integri¬ty, and ultimately with little effectiveness.It is interesting to note that SDS has al¬ready seen how ineffective its dogmatic jcondemnation of the Vietnam moratoriumas a “smokescreen for imperialism” was,and it has decided that it had better join inthis time. If by the same reasoning it would )stop calling this demand “the fight againstracism,” SDS might become more appeal-int to other students, and what is more im- jportant, it would be getting the factsstraight.Paul Bernstein is a staff writer for theMaroon.BULLETINFriday, November 14CHESS MATCH: UC vs. Loop College, 3rd floor Ida jNoyes, 1 pm. Guests welcome.COLLOQUIUM: A. R. Mackintosh, laboratory for elec- |trophysics, the technical University, Lyngby, Den- ,mark. "Neutron Scattering in rare earth metals id a !magnetic field," Research Institutes 480, 1:30 pm. JDEMONSTRATION: Against Pahlavi Institute, 58th and 1Wocdlawn, 2 pm.WORKSHOP IN ECONOMIC HISTORY (DEPARTMENT 1OF ECONOMICS): Gavin Wright, Yale University,"An Econometric Model of the Cotton Market Betor jthe Civil War," Social Science 106, 3:30 pm. «DOC FILMS: Tabu, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.DISCUSSION: Professor John Holsgood will speak °n 1"The Kickapoo Indians of Northern Mexico," 8 pm- -Crossroads Student Center, 5621 Blackstone. All stu¬dents welcome.UNIVERSITY THEATER: We Bombed In New Haven, fflJames O'Reilly, director, Reynolds Club Theater, b.j spm. — |Saturday, November 15CONTEMPORARY FILMS: The 400 Blows, Cobb Hall, ^and 9:30 pm.OPEN SESSION: (in co-operation with CADRE), ™eReverend Williams Sloarte Coffin, Jr, Blue Gargoy <57th and University Ave, 8 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATER: We Bombed In New Haven.Reynolds Club Theater, 8:30 pm.Continued on Page TenIn SDS Free Meal Campaign6/The Chicago Maroon/November 14, 1969t a t arm fix'BRETGITTji DRUM,Number 8, Friday, November 14. 1969and the Uptown CommunityThe Patriots’ Breakfast for Children Program at WorkThe PatriotsBy Jessica SiegelTHE YOUNG PATRIOTS ORGANIZATION is a radicalgroup of predominantly white southerners. from Appa¬lachia which incongrously or not so incongrously uses asits symbol the Confederate flag. It may seen incongrous toyou if you look at racism as a regional disease represent¬ed by the Confederate flag. It appears not so incongrous toyou if look at racism in a Marxian sense as the Patriotsdo in their 11 point program which says “Racism is a toolof capitalism to make people fight among themselves, in¬stead of fighting together for their freedom. Divisions ofrace and sex serve the interests of the rich, ruling classand not of the people.” What the Confederate flag repre¬sents to them is that “We are all slaves in the eyes of theMan.”The Patriots work uptown in an area approximatelybounded by Irving Park on the south (4000 North), BrynMawr on the north (5600 North), the lake front on the eastand Clark. Street on the west (1500 West). In that area livePuerto Ricans, Cubans, American Indians (in fact thelargest Indian community in the nation), southern whitesanc blacks. Many of these people arrive in the area with¬out food, money or a job and in some cases without know¬ing the language. In this same area lives one of the high¬est concentrations of old people in Chicago and a largenumber of discharged mental patients, drug addicts andalcoholics.For these people who can’t work or have difficulty infinding a job it is often a case of day to day subsistencesince welfare checks are often too inadequate for propereating (alloting about 26c a person per meal) or oftenarrive late (sometimes weeks overdue). Furthermore foodprograms in the neighborhood have failed. Public aidgives a mother, in an emergency situation a dispursalorder good for 3 days which is then deducted from hermonthly welfare check. The pantry in the Urban ProgressCenter has the applicant fill out numerous forms and thensubmit to a check of their refrigerator. In response to thissituation, the Patriots have established two programsdirectly aimed at alleviating some of the hunger in thearea.The first is the Breakfast for Children Program whichwas started about a month ago. They have been feedingabout 75 children a day about 45 school children and 30 ata day care center at two breakfast sights. For many ofthe children this is the wily hot meal they have all day.The second program is the Community Pantry whichtries to do on a larger scale what the Breakfast for Chil¬dren does for one meal a day for children. Through thisactivity 200-250 families a week are given food. Both pro¬grams, obviously, depend to a large extent on contribu¬tions of food and or money.The inadequacy or lack of medical care for poorpeople is another emergency which the Patriots are con-White Radicals m Uptown fronting. It is widely known that hospitals which servepoor people are probably the worst in the city, under¬staffed and overcrowded. As a person close to the Patriotssaid, “If uptown was an independent nation it would comeunder the jurisdiction of the World Health Organizationbut since it isn’t the people suffer.” Because of this greatmedical problem, two weeks ago, the Patriots started freemedical service for the community in a building in themiddle of uptown at 1140 Sunnyside. Staffed by volunteerdoctors and medical students it gives free whoopingcough, polio and tetanus shots; skin tests, pregnancy tests,tests for syphillis, lead poisoning and anemia. Preventivemedicine, a word most peoor people never hear, is whatthey are trying to initiate. The complaint for which thepatient comes in of course is examined first. After that acase history is drawn up (for the first time c the cases ofbabies ami many children) and any other medical needsare met. For things that can’t be treated at the center, thepatients are referred to doctors who treat free or at avery low price.The Patriots organization was begun almost a yearago. They are members of the Rainbow Coalition alongwith the Black Panthers and the Young Lords. The threegroups share a common Marxist-Leninist ideology andhave initiated similar community programs in their areas.They agree that separate allied movements must beformed in order to include all members of oppressedgroups.The Patriots’ major concerns are to establish concreteprograms to fill the needs of the community. Unlike thePanthers, who have attained .national recognition (thoughin part because of national repression), the Patriots areattempting to first build a strong local base in the commu¬nity and then later to consider going into other regions.So far, repression against the Patriots has been indi¬vidualized rather than collective; they have not sufferedraids on their office like a number of other left groups. Afew people have been harrassed by police approached byasking, “Didn’t I see you in American Revolution 2?” Thisfilm deals with both the Patriots and the Panthers beforeand after the time of the Democratic Convention. It takesa look at the radicalization process which both groupsunderwent and how they got together for form the coali¬tion with the Young Lords. The Patriots and the NewUniversity Conference will present this film next Wednes¬day night, November 19, in Judd 126. There will be twoshows — one at 7 and the other at 9:30 at which a mem¬ber of the Patriots will speak.Admission to the film will be free but contributionswill be requested which will be divided between the Patri¬ots and the Leland-Kenmore Family Center, a day carecenter in uptown. Monday night a Patriot will speak at a teach-in on “White Radicalism” sponsored by the NewImproved Left.Find out what a white radical answer to communityneeds is.The following are the 11 points of the Young Patriot’sprograms which form the basis of their ideology:CIms — We see that the key to truly understanding and improving oursituation is to truly understand the nature of class society. We see thatin America and that in the world that those who have money controlthose who do not. WEALTH-POWER! We feel that the wealth of theworld should be shared equally among all people. The workers who arethe masses of people produce the wealth and they should control it.We see that our allies are those who have nothing and our enemies arethose who have too much.Welfare of the People — We believe that all people are entitled to adequatefood, clothing, shelter and medical care. We believe that businessmenshould not make a profit on the things that we need to survive. Wedemand decent and adequate housing at a low cost for poor people. Wedemand safe, clean day care centers for mothers who work. We demandthat mothers who want to raise their children in their own home be paidfor this vital work.Pig and Pig Power Structure — We demand the end to pigs murderingand brutalizing our people. The pigs are in our community to protech theproperty of the robber-baron landlords and avaricious businessmen andnot the fives or the interests of the people who live In the community.We call the police pigs because they oppress the people. The worldbelongs to the people not the pigs. Oppressed people in all communitiesmust have absolute and final control of the police. All police must comefrom the community in which they serve.Schools-Education — We understand that the main purpose of the educa¬tional system as it now stands is to make people fit smoothly Into thecapiltalistic class society. We understand that the children of poor peopleare trained to be poor people — the children of factory workers aretrained to work in factories — the children of rich people are trainedto take their parents' places. The schools are run like prisons becausetheir society is a prison. We demand that all people know their truehistory. We demand that all people have the opportunity to develop theirabilities.Draft — We oppose the draft because it means poor and working classmen fight rich mens' wars. We oppose imperialistic wars of aggressionsuch as the war in Vietnam. We believe that all patriotic men and womenshould serve only in the army of liberation. Rich people can buy theirway out of the draft, but poor and working class people have no choice.We demand that the old rich men who create the wars should fightthem and that the young men should stay home and construct a newsociety.Unions — The idea of unions was a good thing, but we still know thatthe majority of Americans work long hours under bad conditions forpoor wages and never have anything to show for It. We demand an endto discrimination on the job and in the union. Men and women of allraces should get equal wages and better working conditions. Unionsclaim to represent their members, but actually they represent the unionofficials and sell their members down the river. Sell-out unions must bedestroyed. Therefore we support the right of workers to organize outsidethe union. We realize that the real change in this country will not happenuntil the people control their factories. When the workers control theirfactories they have no need for union representatives to bargain withthe company.Exploitation of the Community — We understand that the businessmen inthe community make their living off of us. We understand that we makethe products that they sell back to us. We demand that if businessmenintend to stay in the community, those profits be invested in the com¬munity in the form of goods and services.Racism — Racism is a tool of capitalism to make people fight amongthemselves, instead of fighting together for their freedom. Divisions ofrace and sex serve the interests of the rich, ruling class and not ofthe people.Release Ail Political Prisoners — We demand the release of all politicalprisoners. We understand that the majority of so-called "criminals" inour concentration-camp prisons are victims of our class society. Justiceis a luxury that only rich men can afford. These people should be re¬leased to building a new society rather than hidden away for society'smistakes.Cultural Nationalism — We believe that to fight only for the interests ofyour close cultural brothers and sisters is not in the interest of all thepeople, and in fact perpetuates racism. We understand that our struggleis a class struggle. All power to the poor and working people! Culturalnationalism does not solve the political problems of the oppressed peoples,but only perpetuates exploitation. Capitalism makes millions on love-beads, afro-shirts and cowboy hats. Cultural nationalism is a tool ofcapitalist exploitation.Revolutionary Solidarity — Revolutionary solidarity with all oppressedpeoples of this and alt other countries and races defeats the divisionscreated by the narrow interests of cultural nationalism. We support allwars of national liberation and demand an end to the war in Vietnam.Monopoly capitalism and corrupt Russian socialism are enemies of theinterests of the oppressed peoples throughout the world.MUSIC’mo me: ■* *-»LAST MONTH, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra of Lon¬don under the direction of Rudolf Kempe, performed amemorable concert which, although it is long past, cannotgo unmentioned. The highlight of the evening, Mahler’sFirst Symphony, was accompanied by Richard Strauss’Don Juan and the Schumann A Minor Piano Concerto,with 25 year old soloist Nelson Freire. Hie orchestra alsoperformed one encore in response to its warm receptionand this was the Kolo (a Yugoslav dance) by Jakob Goto-vac.I last heard the Royal Philharmonic two years ago;last month’s concert revealed a very different orchestra interms of its composition, but manifested very much thesame excellent musicianship. It was a joy to experience.Strauss’ splendid tone poem, which was written in1888, was performed admirably, despite some faculty in¬tonation by the horns at the beginning of the work. Thecoloristic qualities of this music, its mercurial changes ofmood, character and timbre, were artfully brought out byKempe and his ensemble. This was perhaps the mostbrisk performance of Don Juan I have ever heard, yet thefine musicians working under a sensitive conductor, main¬tained the vibrancy and the kaleidoscopic character of thework without excessive rubato.The Schumann was a delight. Freire demonstrated anassurance that comes from total mastery of technique —something which I have seen evident only in the bestpianists. Granted, the A-Minor Concerto offers very littleBring All the Gl's Home NowMarch on Washington November 15Put/* IfVooCant GoDon't MissmwysmimismirFRIDAYSSAT.-SUN • ^ $1.50 StudentsNovember 14 15-16November 21 22-23 performancesat 8:30University TheatreTickets avaiable at Reynolds Club Desk2/Grey City Journal/November 14, 1969 in bravura and demonic technique. However, there aresome splendid runs in the first movement and the utterease with which Freire handled them — at an unusuallyrapid tempo — attested to his mastery of the instrument.His tone was firm and powerful. His treatment of thesecond movement was smooth and fluid, with a keen senseof balance and phrasing. He imparted to the allegro agrand and sweeping yet totally controlled manner. Hiscrescendi were stunning; his pianissimi were delicate andclear; and his manner was totally relaxed, even at mo¬ments in which his hands seemed to fly across the keys,only to land inevitably in the right places. None of thiswas lost on the audience, which subsequently gave Freirea hearty show of appreciation. I would conjecture thatFreire has an excellent future ahead of him. Readersshould be on the lookout for his next appearance in Chi¬cago. associated with only the most veteran of orchestral en.sembles.This concert marked the opening of the 1969-70 seasonof the Allied Arts Corporation Subscription Series, whichincludes among its coming attractions such luminaires asElisabeth Schwarzkopf, Sviatoslav Richter, LeontynePrice, and David Oistrakh, to name just a few. For morelinformation about this, the reader should address his in-iquiries to: Allied Arts Corporation, 20 North WackerDrive, Chicago, Illinois 60606.Peter L. Ratner \ContributorsSarah Glazer is a second year student in the College, anda member of the Maroon news staff.Gustav Mahler’s First Symphony, written in the sameyear as Strauss’ Don Juan, is a youthful, ebullient andoptimistic work. There is strong evidence in this sym¬phony of Wagner’s influence, which was most keenly feltby Mahler in his early years.Elements of Mahler’s manic and contrdictory person¬ality are very much present in th eFirst Symphony, dualelements which remain coexistent in most of Mahler’sworks. There are the broad, lofty and heroic tones sugges¬tive of Beethoven, Wagner and von Weber; then, there isthe satirical Mahler, as manifested in the Jagers Lie-chenbegangnis parody of the Third Movement. There isthe blissful and pseudo-courtly Landler — a feature thatstays with Mahler through the Ninth Symphony. Finally,there are gypsy-like flashes reminiscent of wind-bandsthat were quite popular in Central Europe during the com¬poser’s childhood. Frank Malbrancbe is currently out on bail from CaliforniaState Prison. Having dipped his drivers license in a mix-5ture of LSD and DMSO (which upon skin contact affects 1the subject exactly as if he had taken LSD internally),Malbranche was caught for speeding on a California freeway. When the police officer took Malbranche’s driver’s:license, he “feaked out.” Freaking out a police officer is acapital offense.Warren Moon is a doctoral candidate in Classical Arch,eology.The Royal Philharmonic succeeded admirably inbringing out all these facets of Gustav Mahler’s complexcharacter in their performance. The violins were strongand crisp, the horns full and opulent, and the winds, mostnotably the oboe, smooth and mellifluous. There was pre¬cision, yet not without rubato and portamenti in the appro¬priate places. The sound of the orchestra was crystalclear and brilliant. Its dynamics were controlled and well-modulated. Crescendi were electric; diminuendi, imme¬diate when necessary. From the steady and piercing har¬monics of the violins commencing the first movement, tothe exalted conclusion of the final movement, all was per¬formed with mastery and sensitivity befitting the dis¬tinguished ensemble.Yet the most striking thing about this orchestra wasthe youthfulness of the musicians. Their average age wasabout forty-one or forty-two. Yet they performed with asensitivity to the music and with a poise that is often BRETCITY] OUBHILHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.IU the wind, ill the time, uncertain the projit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late » the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey.v.'- '-T '"V.!- '-W, . T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica Siegel mJeanne WiklerStaff ExtraordinairePeter RabinowitzT. C. FoxTo a Gypsy Moth... jumping isn’t only away to live...but a helluva way to die, too!m1 v.1Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presentsThe John Frankenheimer-Edward Lewis Production starringBurt LancasterDeborah KerrThe Gypsy Moths” Eco - stMTwg Gene Hackman • Scott Wilson • William WindomScreenplay By William Hanley Based on a Story By James DroughtExecutive Producer Edward Lewis Produced By Hal Landers andBobby Roberts Directed by John Frankenheimer • Metrocolor momSEE IT SOON AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! StaffGregory FergusonChristopher LyonMyron MeiselThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices In Ida Noyes Ha".CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998a Has what you need from a $10.Tused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants *Mill returns at a fraction of the 1^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with this$Ad.t FREE DELIVERY>♦♦♦» THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks & Hardcovers1540 E. 55th St. -Ml 3-751120% Discount for Universityaffiliates, Tuesday nightMay I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?1525 E. 53rd St.Why not? Yourhost, MuratSomay, withsucculent foodsand memorablewines. DiscoverEfendi. Tonight. Afoo th#Hyde PaABonk Bldg.BfendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE955-5151For ReservationspoTPomi * JIT?'-T**' !f **■*•’'**- »-n»r j*»t . .***■»' ’>*■'* a w % ■ «j»i» .iwmAbbie HoffmanI HADN’T SEEN Abbie Hoffman for years. Not since bar-mitzvah classes way back when. We did a few wild thingsback then. You know how it is when you’re a kid. Stockmarket crashes, blizzards, one or two perfect crimes Iwon’t go into to maintain their perfection. That sort ofstuff. But we were both pretty solid, caught up in theAmerican Dream, with our sights set on the normal Amer¬ican goals. I wanted to be either a C.P.A. or a wall streettycoon, and Abbie wanted to be either a Rabbi or themayor of a great city. After we were bar-mitzvahed (hehad Ezekial, if I remember correctly, and I had Isiah) welost touch. I would hear about him occasionally, like whenour soccer team played his school, but I never saw himagain. Which bothered me some, because we had agreedthat he would have me do his books or be his broker, andI would get married in his temple or city.As we went through our respective, and now separate,lives, America went through subtle, almost imperceptiblechanges, and slowly I began to realize that my Americangoals weren’t all that great, and that to stay in themainstream of American thought ,1 would have to alterthem somewhat. Shortly thereafter, I broke with my for¬mer goals completely, deciding that I didn’t want to be inthe mainstream of American thought at all. I decided thenand there (in the late fifties, or early sixties) that I want¬ed to be either a throw rug, an activist, or a naitonal hero.Possibly all three.Abbie it seems, came to similar conclusions. Only hedidn’t change that much from his early goals. He modifiedthem, and seemed to merge them into what became bothour later goals. His church became the streets, his parish¬ioners, the young. And the city he chose to become mayorof was Chicago.This was all fine, except the man currently holding thepost sensed something dangerous to his career in theperson of Abbie. So when Abbie came to Chicago to claimwhat was obviously rightly his, he met with some opposi¬tion. The permutations of events which then transpiredwere somewhat confusign, but ended with Abbie in courtat the beckon of his rival.In my attempts to fulfill my own dreams, I happenedto wander into Chicago, and erading of Abbie’s being inthe city, I decided to visit him. Having just crossed astate line, however, I decided to delay my visit to himuntil all thoughts I had while out of Illinois were gone, and»TA NEW ART SHOW opened November 7 which is definite¬ly one of the best The Berg has ever had. The show is intwo parts; lithographs by Jacob Landau, and a selectionof lithographs by various artists from the Gallerie MichelCasse, Paris.Jacob Landau, a versatile artist whose talents arerecognized internationally, and a Professor of Art at thePratt Institute in New York City, has recently illustrated,for the University of Chicago Press, the Selected Writingsof E. T. A. Hoffmann (translated and introduced by E. C.Knight and L. J. Kent). The Bergman show features Land¬au’s colored proofs of the gothic novelist’s works. In hiswritings, E. T. A. Hoffmann (1776-1822) examined the jux¬taposition and contradiction of horror and fantasy, ofknowledge and mystery, and greatly influenced Poe, Dos¬toevsky, Kafka and Dinesen — but in particular the art ofJacob Landau. Landau’s homage takes form in a remark¬able suite of color lithographs completed in Paris with thehelp of a Guggenheim fellowship.Jacob Landau, a humanist-artist, finds in Hoff¬mann’s anticipations of modern life reflections of his ownobsessions, and artistically brings to life Hoffman’s goth¬ic characters; Antonia, a lovely girl gifted with an ex¬ceptional voice which is accompanied by an illness thatwill kill her if she sings; Archivarios Lindhorst, a sala¬mander forced to live among mortals; Ritter Gluck, aghost of a great composer who tells of his visit to the' kingdom of dreams” in a glimpse of the magical realmbeyond ordinary existence where he sought and found in¬spiration; Coppelius, the sinister creation of automatons,that seduces and drives men mad; Natalie, the beautywho is torn by her love for each of two individuals, the“doubles,” and therefore remains inaccessible to both;Habeland and Schwendy, the “doubles” bom of differentwomen but as alike as twins, the one a true artist, theother a true prince.Landau makes these and other grotesques writhe andreact in a neo-surrealistic style using a vivid comic strip,hyper French cartoon design technique. In artsy parlance,ms figures hatfe clear^ integral silhouettes which explode Abbie Hoffmanall that remained were safe Chicago thoughts. Aftermonths of hibernation, now sure I was safe even fromlaws I was unaware of, I decided to renew our acquaint¬ance. Courtrooms, however, make me uncomfortable, andthinking it wise not to visit Abbie in private, as he hadrecently spoken to an attorney of his who had been out ofthe state for a while, I decided to visit him at a Yippieparty being given put a Second City on Monday.I was really somewhat excited about seeing himagain. Talk about when we were kids, have you seen soand 90, how’s mom and dad, what do you think about thethe war, is dope really good for increasing creativity, etc.,etc. I was also curious to see how coming so close toachieving his goals had affected him. And did he havefuture plans. I knew, in any event, that*I was in for anenjoyable evening. Abbie had always been warm andfriendly, and we used to have great raps when we werekids ,and it had been some time since I had seen him ,sothere was a lot to talk about.So I started out for Second City, and not being totallyfamiliar with Chicago (and who, in fact, can say he is) gotlost somewhere north of the loop. Spotting a beacon, whichI took for a sign of welcome and friendliness, I headed forit to find out where Second City was. The people in theinternally with both plain and variegated areas of flatcolor. The figures on colored or white background arehalved and quartered, contorted, compressed and self jux¬taposed to artistically interpret their literary lives. Land¬au mimics modern blow ups of comic strips and cartoons,but then reduces the grand effect to a miniature manu¬script size. The chromatic impression is somewhat similarto" the Beatles’ movie, Yellow Submarine, to the albumcover of Big Brother and the Holding Company’s CheapThrills, to the works of The Berg’s previous feature artist,Lindner, and in inspiration to some of the works of Profes¬sor Virgil Burnett. Great! (For information on Landau,consult Current Biography 1965 and various statements byMorris Philipson.) Don’t miss this exhibition!In the other half of the Bergman Gallery, and mostdeservedly to the rear, is a selection of lithographs byvarious contemporary artists from Michel Casse, Lith-ographe Editeur Livres Estampes, Paris. Many of theworks are untitled and it is not surprising: they are gener¬ally trite cliches of the modern art scene, monotonous andunoriginal. There are two oeuvres by apata, one a sceneof copulation on a kitchen table, the other a side-saddleversion on a living room chair. Both lithos in executionseem like censored segments of a Blondie and Dagwoodcomic strip and in terms of originality of theme, UC fresh¬men are more imaginative -(if not, the inspiration is yoursfor 30 dollars). There are six pieces entitled “Lith¬ographies pour les etudiants” perhaps arranged by Cassehimself, which are black and white hodge-podge remem¬brances of the recent Paris student revolts. Their mostinteresting fe< artistic) is the “cherished” official estampeof the “Union Nationale des Etudiants de France.” Twoadditional pieces deserve special notice: the first is aLindner-like, untitled litho by Segui of a suit of clothes ina well arranged, blown up comic strip style; the second isan untitled litho by Viefauvre which, though it comes onlike bathroom wallpaper, is an ingenious analysis of con¬temporary cubical society with a spaceman Big Brotherdirecting the mess. All the Casse are for sale (30-40 dol¬lars).Warren Moon Playboy Building, however, turned out to be not my kindof people, and they decided that they couldn’t tell mewhere Second City was, because I didn’t have on a jacket.Undaunted I went outside and asked a friendly policeofficer if he knew where Second City was, because therewas a Yippie party there, and I wanted to visit my oldfriend Abbie Hoffman. He didn’t tell me where SecondCity was either. After stopping two or three warm friendlymidwesterners to find what I sought, and receiving verylittle in the way of helpful advice, I finally sought out afriendly telephone booth and looked up the address. Bynow I really wanted to see Abbie badly, so that I could seesomeone that I could identify with.So I drove up to Old Town, which is of course a veryreal and vital area, filled with the leaders of tomorrow.There only seemed to be a few drunks and little kids onthe streets, but that was natural, because the leaders oftormorrow were probably all at Second City.Finally, after a twenty minute search for a parkingspace, I was there. There on the door, scribbled on com¬puter readout paper, was a sign that said “Yippie Night”.And I was happy, because soon I would be talking withgood old Abbie.I walked in and joined the line at the steps, whichmoved slowly upwards. At the head of the stairs was alittle kid sittjng at a desk asking for a two dollar donation.This was fair enough. Court fights take money. So I paid,and walked into a sort of night club looking affair, and satdown, waiting until Abbie wasn’t busy so I could talk withhim.On the stage was some guy in. a jump suit, wearing acloth helmet with a peak on it, playing with a DonaldDuck laugh track, and fondling a four foot inflated ba¬nana. He talked continuously without saying anything,aided by a clean cut looking individual and several teeny-boppers trying desperately to look and act freaky. Theentire scene, in fact, seemed to be a desperate attempt tobe disorganized and freaky. They succeeded in being dis¬organized.Anyway, after half an hour of watching people throw¬ing things and ego-tripping, while a horde of suited peopleleft, the people in the direction of up front announced thefirst act. Very clever Abbie, I thought. Make the first halfhour unbearable so that only the true, the faithful, will bethere when you come out.So a group called the All Freak Marching band cameout and did some bad skits (one totally ridiculous oneabout a kazoo band playing at a homecoming game goingthrough non-formations), and sang some bad songs. And Icould hardly conceal my admiration for Abbie, becausenow only the really, really dedicated would be there to seehim.Finally assured of a good audience, the Yippie powersstarted with the powerful stuff, and Sam lay and CorkySiegal came out and played, and the crowd was reallywith it. You could even take the teenyboppers. And I knewthat we would defeat the forces of evil, having a geniouslike Abbie Hoffman leading us. I was set to give him astanding ovation when he came out.But he wasn’t ready yet, and so they showed a fewYippie films, and tlie guy with the banana said nothingoften and loudly and the teenyboppers began runningthrough the crowds not doing anything. You misjudged ita little Abbie, I thought, but that’s excusable. When youcome out now, people will really be glad to see you.Then the guy with the banana came up, fondling it,and announced that there were going tobe two plays, andhanded out the parts to the crowd. Come on now, Abbie, Ithought, let us not stretch things.But the plays went on, with everyone wanting to bethe king, and nobody wanting to be the peasants. Whatsort of crowd is this, I began to wonder. Empathizing withthe administration, and not the worker? But I found solacein the fact that though they did not seem to be all I hadhoped, at least they were anarchistic. And Abbie would beout soon.Then the guy with the banana came out again, andsaid we were all going to fly, and did the thing wherepeople jump off the stage into other peoples arms, likethey do in Living Theatre and things like that. And Ibegan to sense something. It was after midnight, and theclimax had already been reached, and there was no Ab¬bie. Then the guy with the banana started humping it andpeople were throwing computer readout paper around, andI suddenly remembered that I had forgotten to take thegarbage out, and that I had best get back so that Iwouldn’t be too tired to do it and be stuck with garbage inthe apartment the next day. So I left, knowing I had givento the cause and that >t was unfair of me to think thatAbbie had the time to come to something so frivolous andentertaining while he had such important things on hismind. And I knew that I would see him at some Yippieparty right after the trial was over and he has less on hismind, and we would talk about old times. And as I left thebuilding, I cohld not restrain myself from lifting my lefthand with a clenched fist, and smiling, flushed with victo¬ry. For how could we lose, when our leader was a gener¬ous and warm and friendly person, like good old Abbie.Frank MalbrancbeLithographic ExhibitionAt the Bergman GalleryNovember 14, 1969/Grey City JonrnaI/3m—m1Our thing is your ring —» Nf fAfiet^ »Q» »fA#$119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZATAl-SAM-YSNRESTAURANTSERVES GOOD CHINESE FOODDAILY 11 A.M.-9 P.M.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS OPEN1 2 NOON - 9 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY1318 EAST 63RD STREET 288-9100684-1062^l\S0N/ERjYou deserveBRAND NEW 19(9'*AND DEMOST-Birds, LTD's. Galaxies, Torinos,Mustang Mach I. Falcons*1600SAVE upto OFF LIST'57 THUNDERBIROBeautifully conditioned originalT-lirdr Collector's Item wilh V-C,Automatic, Power APSteering, Convert-66 CONTINENTALAmerica'* fine** prartig* car. Ml Con¬tinental Power. Ak Con- (1 Jl AC(Monad, AM-PM rode. A eVV'69 CHEVY NOVA4-spd., 396 with positrdction. AOX!’"" ">w *2195\mmmr —lL Get it NOW! 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Marshall Field and Montgomery wardstores D»al TICKETS for mformaSUN AT 7 30S3 25 $2 SO tionFor spenal attention to groupsand schools, call Lillian Carlin at 377-1643170 N.DEARBORN ST. PHONE641 5860ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS11620 E. 53rd Sl. BL-8-2900Hold upyour local gasstation.If you’ve got a bit of larceny inyour heart, you’ll love theRenault 10.You see, it gets 35 miles to thegallon.And as far as gas stations areconcerned, that’s highway robbery.So don’t be too harsh when theboys at your local gas station acta little grumpy.In fact, you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suggest they get one torthemselves.After all, they might have a bit2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 UC DRIVERSSentry tries to ease the highcost of auto insurance foryoung drivers with thefollowing reductions:GOOD STUDENTDISCOUNTYOUNG DRIVERDISCOUNTIf you are a good student21-25 with a good drivingattitude, you've got itmade. 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GEORGE ANASTAPLOSPEAKSSpecialist in CIVIL LIBERTIES AND LAWLecturer at The University of Chicago1 C ] 1 [—|JCONSPIRACYTRAIL:SOME LEGALPOLITICAL QUESTIONSSUNDAYSPONSORS:The UniversityReligious Councelors HILLEL FOUNDATION5715 WOODLAWNJimmy's and theUniversity RoomFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNSEND A SUB mmuStateText ofby the UniversityPresident LeviFollowing is the State of the University address tothe University Senate delivered by Edward H. Levi, Presi¬dent of The Universit yof Chicago, on Tuesday, November4, 1969, on campus.The Statutes of the University provide for the Senateto meet not less than once a year to hear a report fromthe President and to discuss matters of Universityinterest.Changes in the last 10 years give some perspectiveon the nature of our University and its problems.During the period, faculty size increased by 45 percent; students by 40 per cent. Increases were general,though uneven, throughout most of the University.Within the Divisions, the largest increase in both facultyand student numbers was in the Humanities. The smallestincrease in student numbers was in the College and in ThePritzker School of Medicine. The smallest increase in fac¬ulty numbers was in the Divinity School and in the Physi¬cal Sciences.Eighteen major buildings were completed. Amongthem are the Wyler Children’s Hospital, Searle Chemistry,the Laird Bell Law Quadrangle, the Center for ContinuingEducation, Woodward Court, the A. J. Carlson AnimalResearch Facility, the new High School Building, PierceTower, the completely rtdone Cobb Hall, Goldblatt Pavi¬lion. the Astrophysics and Space Research Building, SocialService Administration, the Mott Building, the High Ener¬gy Physics Building, and the just dedicated Hinds Re¬search Laboratory. During the 10 years, the Universityspent more than $70 million in building construction.Four new buildings are now going up: the RegensteinLibrary, the Social Services Center, the Pick InternationalStudies Center, the Ben May Cancer Research Laboratory.For student housing, in buildings constructed and ac¬quired, the University spent more than $23 million.At the beginning of the 10 year period, it was reportedthat endowment income exceeded the salary commitmentsfor the tenured faculty. In.1959 total faculty compensa¬tion for professors and asso¬ciate professors was $6,761,-000. Endowment income was$6,939,000. This comfortingproportion, if that is what itwas, no longer exists. Totalfaculty compensation for pro¬fessors and associate profes¬sors today is $18,377,000, andendowment income is $11,-632,000. Total faculty com¬pensation for all ranks at theLevi University is now $25,661,000.In 1959 it was $9,353,000. During a period when endow¬ment income increased 68 per cent, the total budgetswent up 148 per cent; student fee income went up189 per cent and student aid 394 per cent. Total facultycompensation rose 174 per cent, average facultycompensation 91 per cent, with the greatest percentageincrease at the instructorship level. I am sure it will sur¬prise many of our faculty to know, either because theyregard the figure as too high or too low, or just plainmythical, that the average faculty compensation withfringe benefit is now $22,072. In 1959 it was $li,560. We,apparently, stand third among the universities of ourcountry in faculty salary level, and perhaps somewhathigher if the comparisons are made more precise. A fewyears ago we stood second.We, apparently, stand third among the universities of ourcountry in faculty salary level, and perhaps somewhathigher if the comparisons are made more precise.”As is well known, the period was a time of substantialincrease in government contracts and grants for research.Over the 10 years, the regular budget of the University,from its unrestricted funds, rose 149 per cent. Restrictedfunds increased 97 per cent, while government grants andcontracts went up 247 per cent. Of the three divisionswhere government contracts and grants are largest, thegreatest increase — 582 per cent — was to the BiologicalSciences; then a 500 per cent increase to the Social Scien¬ces, and a 269 per cent increase to the Physical Sciences.The hanking is somewhat different for increased ex¬penditures from the University’s own funds, including re¬stricted funds, where among the Divisions and the College,the greatest percentage increase went to the College, thennext to the Humanities, then to the Physical Sciences, theBiological Sciences and the Social Sciences.In 1959, 21.55 per cent of the total adopted budget wasfor expenditures to be made possible through governmentgrants and contracts; an additional 5.11 per cent camefrom overhead allowances, largely governmental. The “Emergency capital expenditures which must be made —and there always seem to be some —unless otherwiseraised are a call upon those same unrestricted giftsneeded to maintain existing budgets.”It is no pleasure for me in a general talk on the stateof the University to give so much weight to these figures.I do so only because of their overwhelming importance.The reality which we must face is shown by the following:In 1959 we counted on a total of $7,186,000 in gifts tosupport the budget. Of this amount $1,752,000 was proj¬ected as unrestricted for the purposes of the regular budg¬et. We ended that year with a surplus of $325,000. Thisyear, in order to balance the budget, we must project$19,328,000 in gifts, of which $9,328,000 would be for unrest¬ricted purposes. If $9,328,000 is required, in order to arriveat that figure, it appears likely we may have to use $5,-690,COO from the $25 million challenge grant which wasgiven to us by the Ford Foundation. Indeed, in order toget $6,751,000 in unrestricted gifts last year, we had to use$4,269,000 from the Ford challenge grant. If we have touse $5,690,000 from the Ford challenge grant this year,and let us hope this proves to be unnecessary, that willalmost use up what remains of the entire $25 million fromFord. A hole of $5,690,000 in our budget in future years,even at current levels, is the equivalent of 20 per cent of Cobb Hall, which recently was renovated, is theUniversity's oldest building and is the center ofthe College.A view of the University's main quadrangle as seen from above.comparable figures for the adopted budget this year are28.41 per cent and 5.04 per cent. An overview of thesources of income which make possible the University’stotal budget is as follows: government and overhead, 33.45per cent; tuition, 18.70 per cent; patient fees, 18.66 percent; gifts 16.43 per cent; endowment and sundry, mainlyendow*nent-like, income, 12.76 per cent. In 1959, that ei>dowment and sundry, mainly endowment-like, incomeamounted to 18.82 per cent.The figures on the sources of income for the totalbudget serve to emphasize, of course, the importance offederal support for individual faculty research and whichfrequently provides student support. But they also indicatethe great dependence upon private funds, where gifts andendowment and sundry, mainly endowment-like, incomeamount to almost 30 per cent of the total budget. Thispoint is made sharper if attention is focused on thesources of income which make possible the University’sregular and restricted budgets.If we leave out self-balancing funds and expendituresfor the hospitals and clinics and the Industrial RelationsCenter, and only include federal funds for faculty salariesand overhead, the picture is as follows: tuition 32.67 percent; gifts 27.51 per cent; endowment and sundry income24.31 per cent; overhead, largely governmental, and gov¬ernment support to faculty salaries, 15.51 per cent. Thusgifts, endowment and sundry income amount to almost 52per cent of these budgets. the regular budget of the College, the Divisions, theSchools and the Library.Another point must be stressed. The budgets of whichI have been speaking do not include capital expenditures.They never have. These funds must be raised on their ownoutside the budget. Emergency capital expenditures whichmust be made — and there always seem to be some &inless otherwise raised are a call upon those same unrest¬ricted gifts needed to maintain existing budgets. Desper¬ate pleas for the University to complete the amount re¬quired to put up a building, which has been only partiallyfinanced, are also a call upon these same funds unlessother gifts are raised or restricted funds can be tapped forthis purpose. A good example of the problem of gettingfinancing for new buildings is the Basic Biology Building,much needed, much planned. This is now estimated tocost $13 million, of which $5,480,000 has been raised. I donot wish to make us more miserable by pointing out inpassing that most new buildings, when completed, do notcarry with them, nor do they engender, funds for theirwVisitors gaze at samples from the moon that were on exhibit recentlybeing investigated by six scientists at het Universiy.This may well be the financial situation of the privateuniversity of quality in the United States in the year 1969.This is, in any event, our present outlook. It is a difficultpicture to present. The figures are, of course, com¬plicated, subject to interpretation. They inadequately re¬flect complexities and nuances. There is a widespread be¬lief that because the society is affluent, private univer¬sities cannot really find themselves in this kind of bind.There is a natural hesitancy, although I find myself notsharing it, to give news which might be regarded as dis¬couraging either within the institution or to potential do¬nors. Donors, it is said, do not rise to the opportunity ofgiving money for deficits. It has sometimes been sug¬gested that if private universities were brighter in the waythey invest their funds, capital gains would have donemuch to close the gap.“I do not wish to make us more miserable by pointing outin passing that most new buildings, when completed, donot carry with them, nor do they engender, funds for theirmaintenance.”Our university has, indeed, divided its funds to permitmore adventuresome investments with possible payoutsabove a lower annual income when this is not prohibitedby the terms of the gift. But this kind of enterprise willnot greatly diminsh the necessity for added gifts and addi¬tional income. There is also a widespread belief, some¬times shared by faculty, that because of the rise of federalsupport, private institutions do not have a special financialproblem. But we do have. Compare the extraordinary ef¬fort to build 18 new buildings on this campus for $70 mil¬lion over a 10 year period with the almost instant campus¬es which have been able to arise within some state sys¬tems. The partnership which state and private institutionshave, and should have in our system of higher educationought not obscure the fact that between them, sources offunds are somewhat different; problems and strengths arenot always the same.The general burden which is upon the University isthat its productivity increases more slowly than does pro¬ductivity in the economy as a whole. William G. Bowen,Provost and Professor of Economics and Public Affairs atPrinceton University, studied combined data furnished byChicago, Princeton, and Vanderbilt, and information sup¬plied him by the Office of Education for private univer¬sities in general. He found that the cost per student overthe 10 year period from 1955 to 1965 in the three univer¬sities combined showed an average annual rate of in¬crease of 7.3 per cent, and that the data for all privateuniversities indicated an average annual rate of increasein cost per student of 8.3 per cent.“There is a widespread belief that because the society isaffluent, private universities cannot really find themselvesin this kind of bind.”“At the root of the cost pressure besetting all educa¬tional institutions,” Professor Bowen writes in a studypublished by the Carnegie Commission on Higher Educa¬tion, “is the nature of their technology. Over the long rsn,even if the universities were to have the most progressiveleadership and were to shed many of their conservativebiases, the odds seem slim indeed that they can hope to2/Public Information Supplement/November 14, 1969 in the Oriental Institute and that arematch the remarkable record of productivity growthachieved by the economy as a whole ... And it is theability of the universities to keep pace, year after year,with economy-wide productivity gains which is crucial fortheir cost position.”He concludes: “the economic implications of the tech¬nology of education would lead us to expect costs per stu-“There is also a widespread belief, sometimes shared byfaculty, that because of the rise of federal support, privateinstitutions do not have a special financial problem. Butwe do have.”dent to rise inexorably, even if universities avoided alltemptations to embrace .new fields and new techniques, toaccept broader responsibility in the world at large, toeducate more graduate students relative to under¬graduates, and to do more research.”And this cost problem falls most heavily upon themajor private universities. “The conscientious supervisionof a student’s independent work is the essence of high-level graduate education, and it is an important elementin the undergraduate preparation of highly qualified stu¬dents ... it is hard to see how any significant savings infaculty time are to be achieved here. In short, the verynature of the educational mission of the major private“The general burden which is upon the University is thatits productivity increases more slowly than does produc¬tivity in the economy as a whole.”universities makes it unlikely they will benefit to anygreat extent from whatever technological innovations tooccur. The same comments can, of course, be applied toother institutions which emphasize graduate education orthe small group mode of undergraduate instruction char¬acteristic of many liberal arts colleges.”Our present state, or quality, our financial situation —the fact we are here —are the results of decisions madeto attempt to reinvigorate the University as the institutionit had always been, after the forced budget cuts of theearly ’50s, the flight of the faculty, the struggle to exist inthe community. The question was whether the Universitycould continue to attract faculty, begin to rebuild facilitiesand add new ones, do the things it ought to do within thecommunity, and maintain that excellence in teaching andresearch without which there would be small reason tohave a University of Chicago. Departments of undoubtedeminence required reassurance; new areas of inquiry con-“In short, the very nature of the educational mission ofthe major private universities makes it unlikely they willbenefit to any great extent from whatever technologicalinnovations do occur.”sistent with the basic interdisciplinary unity of the Univer¬sity had to be developed. Weak departments needed to beconvinced the fault lay within, .not without.These efforts gained considerable momentum and suc¬cess by 1959. With the leadership of President Beadle, theywere strenuously renewed. To these efforts, essentially ef¬forts of the faculty, we owe the University’s present un¬doubted ability in most of the traditional disciplines, andits equal primacy in some areas further developed during... _ t % TM * t < I * ♦ facilities for Chemistry and Geophysics, along with the.new Astrophysics and Space Research and High EnergyPhysics buildings. Looking at Psychology and divisive¬ness which seemed to overtake it as soon as it moved intothe first adequate quarters it ever had, one is churlishlyreminded that new buildings need not a department make.But I am sure these new facilities have already helpedgreatly — even with Psychology. I am told that Far East¬ern Languages is positively enjoying its tenancy in one ofthe buildings vacated by Geophysics.This has been a year when we have been unusuallyhurt through faculty losses due to death, retirement orresignation. This has been the case, for example, in Politi¬cal Science, Economics, Middle Eastern Studies, History,the Divinity School, Physics, the Biological Sciences, in¬cluding among other areas, Surgery, Physiology, Biophy¬sics, and Medicine. But remarkable new appointmentshave been made last year and this, and that, after all, isthe ultimate test. Moreover, there is the happy indication,as in History, Economics, Political Science, Law, Educa¬tion, the Divinity School, Business, Mathematics, Physics,and Astronomy and Astrophysics, of increasing success infinding young scholars of unusual accomplishment. Thislast list is not intended to be exhaustive. It spells goodfortune for the University if there are major or, for thatmatter, any omissions.The strength of the University is in the individualscholar, the individual student, the tradition of scholar-“During the last year we have continued to build upon thestrength which prior successes have made possible.”the period, such as non western studies. Of course, wehave many inadequacies of varying degrees of serious¬ness, including sometimes ourselves. It is perhaps smallcomfort to realize a satisfied university is not a good one.The opportunity for much that has been achievedcame because of the success of the $160 million campaignfor funds made possible by the Ford Foundation’s $25 mil¬lion challenge grant and the efforts of members of theBoard of Trustees and friends of the University. Ofcourse, it was realized the end of this money-raising effortwould find the University with important unmet academicneeds and continuing financial pressures. It was, perhaps,good it was not fully realized how acute these might be inpart, because of the special vicissitudes of this period. Butthe $160 million drive was projected as only the first leg ofan effort to raise $360 million. We have $200 million to go,and this, whether we can obtain it or pot, may be toolittle. I should remind you that with or without a drive,our present level of operations requires us to raise $20million a year to keep going, and without the Ford chal¬lenge grant, we are not now achieving this.During the last year we have continued to build uponthe strength which prior successes have made possible.The Physical Science Division now has the excellent new“Of course, we have many inadequacies of varying de¬grees of seriousness, including sometimes ourselves. It isperhaps small comfort to realize a satisfied university isnot a good one.”ship, the precious and mysterious collaboration whichsometimes occurs among scholars and cannot be measuredin time spent or under the banality of communication. ItVisitors view the ceramic mural by Ruth Duck¬worth in the reception room of the new HenryHinds Laboratory for the Geophysical Sciences.Students lounge on the grass of the main quadrangle on a sunny day.U.C. Cannot Be Something for All, Levi Sayshas been the good fortune of the University to have hadmany great scholars throughout the years. We have themnow. As colleagues, we value them — young or old —sometimes for their wisdom, always for their insight;when they have it. Fortunately we do not always knowwho the great scholars are — in addition to a Chan¬drasekhar, a Zachariasen, a Huggins, a Mulliken, aBeadle. I would name others — they come readily to mind— but the longer the list the greater the trouble I will bein if there are obvious omissions. We surely do not knowall those who will become great scholars. This helps us toapproach each other with civility, tolerance and skeptic¬ism.In any event, I believe it is correct to state that thisinstitution knows a university begins with the individual.But even though a university should not have all the facil¬ities it craves, physical arrangements, access to materialsand special equipment can shape or can be indispensable“The strength of the University is in the individual schol¬ar, the individual student, the tradition of scholarship, theprecious and mysterious collaboration which sometimesoccurs among scholars and cannot be measured in timespent or under the banality of communication.”to the work of the scholar and the education of the stu¬dent. In our expectation, the Regenstein Library alreadycasts a glow. Graduate students may once more becomeaccustomed to that kind of individual inquiry and studywhich proper library arrangements encourage, and whichwe have not had in many years. Even when we complain,which we frequently do, we are fortunate in the avail¬ability of many facilities within and without our in¬stitution, such as the still functioning Fermi Institute cy¬clotron, extending its borrowed time, Argonne’s ZGS, the12-foot bubble chamber which began operating at Argonnelast month, the coming National Accelerator Laboratoryat Batavia. These are only a few examples. The hospitalsand clinics are another. To one who works in a fieldwhere, despite the commotion about the behavioral scien¬ces, a library is the main requisite, there is sometimes aparticular awe in knowing such things as the unique devel-“We surely do not know all those who will become greatscholars. This helps us to approach each other with civ¬ility, tolerance and skepticism. In any event, I believe it iscorrect to state that this institution knows a universitybegins with the individual.”opment and use of electron miscroscopy how taking place,to be aware of the seven instruments relaying informationon particles in space, to see the lunar samples, realizinghow they were obtained and brought back for analysis.One might feel book-bound, even miniaturized.I suppose I mention these quite random examples ofspecial facilities, as a preface to making the point thateven this university, or perhaps particularly this univer¬sity, cannot have all the facilities it wants or could welluse. It cannot have all the faculty it would like <9 have. Itis quite proper that a flow of memoranda, pointing out ourpresent limitation, should come from faculty and depart¬ ment chairman and from students. Distinguished depart¬ments frequently point out they have achieved great dis¬tinction with a faculty too small in numbers, if com¬parisons are made to departments elsewhere. The com¬plaint is made so often one wonders whether it does notdescribe a cause for excellence. We are reminded contin¬ually that our computing capacity falls far short of that“Even when we complain, which we frequently do, we arefortunate in the availability of many facilities within andwithout our institution...”available at many smaller institutions. We are continuallybeing told that if the University wishes to maintain astrong position in a particular area, we must be willing totake on major capital costs.This university, whatever its future need not cry outfor sympathy. There is virtue in some of our limitations.We have been and are a small university; the expansionof the last ten years preserves this quality. We are themost unified, the least aggregated, of the major privateuniversities. We are a combination of college, graduatedivisions and professional schools, which unlike a frequentmodel, does not rest upon a mass of undergraduates topay the bill. We entered graduate work from the verybeginning, and not in response to government contracts,because we thought there was a special place for a unifiedinstitution which would seek to increase and transmit“It is quite proper that a flow of memoranda, pointing outour present limitation, should come from faculty and de¬partment chairmen and from students.”knowledge. There is a price for this attempted unity. Itimposes a limitation on size. It forces a persistent ques¬tioning as to the relationship of old and new activities tothe University as a whole. We learned long ago that wecould not do everything, and we discovered that becauseof this limitation we could do a good deal. This does notmean that at times we have not departed from this kind ofideal conception. Moreover, many of our unmet needs anddeficiencies are not only serious, they are notorious. Therecord of the last 10 years carries a triple and probablyperennial message: an extraordinary amount can be ac¬complished; everything takes so long; an enormousamount remains to be done.This year, upon the recommendation of the Dean ofthe College and of the College Council, the size of theCollege’s entering class was reduced from 730 to 500. Theaction was primarily taken because of shortages in space“We are most unified, the least aggregated, of the majorprivate universities.”in the University residence halls, the desire to undouble133 rooms to single occupancy, the felt necessity to createbetter quarters for head residents in six of the under¬graduate residential houses as part of a long-term pro¬gram to induce faculty to take part in the cultural life ofthese houses. The shortage and inadequacies of our resi¬dential facilities have been known for a long time. Ten years ago about half of our student body commuted to thtUniversity from the homes of their parents. I remember adetailed explanation from one of the University’s leadingsocial scientists why this would always have to be thecase. But today this is true for only about 3 percent of ourstudent population. More than 40 per cent of our studentslive in University residence halls or University apart¬ments, and an equal number find housing for themselvesin the immediate neighborhood of the University.There have been changes also in what is regarded asattractive or suitable housing. The University began plan¬ning for more adequate residential units at least 7 years“We learned long ago that we could not do everything,and we discovered that because of this limitation we coulddo a good deal.”Water splatters lily pads on Botany Pond duringa shower.November 14, 1969/Public Information Supplement/3Much Work Must Be Done: Leviago. Innumerable faculty and student committees havepassed upon a variety of plans. The projected studentvillage, which has been frequently approved, would give aconsiderable segment of the student body the kind of hous¬ing they seem to favor. We need some donors. I do notknow whether to be depressed or encouraged by the factthat it took about 26 years from the time of initial plan¬ning to the beginnin gof the construction of the RegensteinLibaray.The reduction in the size of the College gives to thefaculty of the University an unusual opportunity to workwith undergraduates in small groups. This should be oneof the characteristics of undergraduate training at Chi¬cago, as indeed it should be, and frequently is, at thegraduate level. I am not sure I know what a small groupis, and I am not specifying a particular method of instruc¬“The record of the last 10 years carries a triple and prob¬ably perennial message: an extraordinary amount can beaccomplished; everything takes so long; an enormousamount remains to be done.”tion. What is important is the ability to reach and workwith the individual student, and this can be done in anumber of ways. A growing number of undergraduatesare taking part in research activities with senior facultywith what are descrived as surprisingly excellent results.There should be more such possibilities.In the autumn of last year, the Committee of theCouncil began discussions looking toward the broadeningof the University Senate which then consisted of profes¬sors, associate professors, and those assistant professorwho had completed thret year’ full-time service on aca¬demic appointments. The faculty Council voted to recom¬mend the inclusion of assistant professors who had com¬pleted one year’s full-time service on academic appoint¬“The shortage and inadequacies of our residential facil¬ities have been known for a long time.”ments at any rank. The change was approved by theBoark of Trustees prior to the election of the presentCouncil. The Council, created in 1944 and consisting of 51elected members, has been a unique institution in the gov¬ernance of a university. It was an attempt, and I believe asuccessful one, by the Board of Trustees, after con¬sultation with the President and a faculty committee, tobuild what the Trustees describtd as “a coherent schemeof administration.”The Statues describe the Council as “the supreme aca¬demic body of the Univeesity, having all legislative pow¬ers except those matters reserved to the Board ofTrustees, the Office of the President, or the other RulingBodies.” It has “jurisdiction over (1) matters affectingmore than one Ruling Body, and (2) any action of anyRuling Body which substantially affects the general inter¬est of the University.” In setting up the Council, theTrustees also provided for an elected Executive Com¬mittee, 7 members of the Council chosen annually by the“The projected student village, which has been frequentlyapproved, would give a considerable segment of the stu¬dent body the kind of housing they seem to favor.”Council, with an elected spokesman who serves as thechannel of communication between the Committee and theCouncil. This Committee meets every two weeks duringthe autumn, winter and spring quarters, frequently moreoften, and again according to the original plan, the Presi¬dent is required to keep “the Committee informed as faras practicable on all matters of general University inter¬est.” For some reason, other instructions are now showingintense interest in how the Committee and the Councilfunction. They have functioned well.Two years ago I urged the Deans to encourage thecreation of effective student-faculty committees or coun¬cils in all of the academic areas of the University. TheCouncil has strongly and repeatedly endorsed this propos-1. Mare than 60 of these committees are now in oper¬ation. Their importance depends, of course, on how theyare used and the amount of faculty and student in-“The reduction in the size of the College gives to thefaculty of the University an unusual opportunity to workwith undergraduates in small groups.”volvement in their work. It goes without saying that theexchange of views and the process of deliberation amongfaculty and students will not work if the faculty does notplay a full role. The committees represent a necessaryopportunity for mutual enlightenment, and they can con¬tribute greatly to the programs and operations of the Uni¬versity.This has been an interesting year. Some overall im¬pressions remain. They are not startling. I trust they gobeyond particular issues. The coherance and direction ofthis University depend upon its faculty. The institutionalarrangements which have been peritrted make this clear.It could hardly be otherwise in view of the kind of univer¬sity this is. The institutional arrangements go beyond theCouncil to the other Ruling Bodies, the, Schools, the Divi¬sions, the College, and to the Departments and CollegiateDivisions. The exercice of responsibility by the facultydepends upon these bodies having regular meetings, and4/Public Information Supplement/November 14, 1969 It is perhaps natural that some of the most thoughtfulinquiries into our present forms of education and directionfor research have begun in some of the professionalschools. These is a sense in which these schools haveassinged tasks. They are aware of problems to be solved“The coherence and direction of this University dependupon its faculty. The institutional arrangements whichhave been perfected make this clear.”— problems which affect the well-being of society, man¬kind, of individuals. They are maintained continually ofthe inadequacies of our knowledge. They cannot be satis¬fied with a training of students which merely duplicates * •their predecessors. The pressures they feel must be uponall of us. The University as a whole and each of its areasin some ways must share these concerns We must giveconstant thought to the kind of contribution — which can*!be made from here. Because we cannot do everything, we“There is much work to be done. No one can look athigher education today without wondering about the cor¬rectness of much of the structure which has beencreated.”The Wieboldt Arch links the Midway Plaisancewith the main quadrangle.not just in time of stress. The greatest number of Collegefaculty now have joint appointments in some other aca¬demic unit. Partly as a consequence of this, some depart-“It goes without saying that the exchange of views andthe process of deliberation among faculty and studentswill not work if the faculty does not play a full role.”ments are now much larger than they were. These depart¬ments must find new wys of achieving understanding andinterchnage among their members.There is much work to be done. No one can look athigher education today without wondering about the cor¬rectness of much of the structure which has been created. must select those things we can do and which make adifference. This means we musk know ourselves and thekind of institution which this can become. It means we*must overcome a defeating self-pride.I would not be true to myself or to you if I did notstate my admiration for this faculty, collectively and indi¬vidually, for the members of the Council and the Deans.11Masters, and Chairmen who have carried a greater ad¬ministrative burden than anyone would have known. Threegreat Deans have won the right to shed this burden. Twoof them, Wayne Booth and Alton Linford, have returned toscholarly pursuits. The third, George Schultz, perhapsfinds his arduous duties as Secretary of Labor as evensomething of a vacation.Universities must respond and change,. Their great-,ness, if they have it in any measure, is not to be found intheir ability to express a popular will. They are very“We must give constant thought to the kind of contribution— the kind of advancement of knowledge and under- ‘standing — which can be made from here.”much of the society, but they are also separate from itThey are in themselves places of criticism, discovery, anddissent. They must often go it alone, just as the individual ^scholar must find his own wpy. They may not be the mostimportant instututions in the world. If they 10a£ their char¬acter, they have no importance at all.I have taken pains to describe to you some of theprctical difficulties which this University must face. Weshould not be fearful for this University’s future. Weshould, rather, hope that in our hands it will continue tobe worthy.This supplement has been prepared and paid for by theUniversity’s office of Public Information.Consolidated Budget: Revenues and Expenditures, 1969-70Revenues (Estimated)General Funds (Unrestricted)Student fees $ 20,291,000Endowment income 8,859,000Sundry income 5,753,361Indirect cost allowance 6,200,000Gifts applied 9,327,618Total :.. $ 50,430,979RestrictedEndowment income $ 2,757,000Government contracts and grants 34,940,000Other 10,088,000Total $ 47,785,000Academic Auxiliary EnterprisesStudent fees: percollegiate $ 2,709,000Endowment income: precollegiate 16,000Income from patients:Hospitals and Clinics 20,953,053Gifts and fees:Industrial Relations Center 1,100,000Total $ 24,778,053Auxiliary EnterprisesHousing and food services 3,840,000International House 742,000Center for Continuing Education .. 977,000University Press 7,404,500Miscellaneous activities 3,542,500Total $ 16,506,000Consolidated Revenues(Total of A, B,C,D) $139,500,032'Reprinted from THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO RECORD, Expenditures (AppropriatedjA. General Funds (Unrestricted)Instruction and research i. $ 26,973,211Library 3,300,000Student services 2,179,790Physical properties operation — 6,676,100General administration 862,350Development expense 1,900,000Business operations 3,158,900Student aid 5,875,000Staff benefits 108,000Estimated year-old savings) (1,050,000)Total $ 49,983,351B. RestrictedInstruction and research $ 42,191,000Library 485,000Student services 54,000Physical properties operation — 15.000General administration 140,000Student aid 4,900,000Total $ 47,785,000C. Academic Auxiliary EnterprisesPrecollegiate $ 2,814.928Hospitals and Clinics 20,953,053Industrial Relations Center 1,100,000Total $ 24,867,981D. Auxiliary EnterprisesHousing and food services 4,373,700International House 742,000Center for Continuing Education .. 977,000University Press 7,214,500Miscellaneous activities 1,437,500Total * $ 16.863,700E. Consolidate# Expenditures(Total of A, B,C,D) $139,500,032Volume III, Number 10, available after December l, 1W*.CULTURE VPLTPRE"JVctc/ Improved! Expanded!HERE IT IS GANG, the new, improved, comprehensive,exclusive, expanded, CULTURE VULTURE! No morewondering what the art institute is exhibiting or if there isa John Wayne in town. Here is the info!CampusFILMTonight, Friday Doc Films presents Tabu, directed byF. W. Murnau and Robert Flaherty. A 1931 film set in theSouth Seas about a woman, prevented by the gods to love.At Cobb Hall for 75 cents. At 7:15 and 9:30.Saturday CE Fpresents Francois Truffaut’s classicfilm The 400 Blows. It is one of the first of what has cometo be called, New Wave films and deals autobiographicallywith a young boy’s childhood. Cobb Hall for $1.00 At 7 and9:30.Sunday night CEF returns with Mark Rydell’s TheFox. Taken from the D. H. Lawrence novella, it centerson a lesbian relationship of two women, played by AnnHeywood and Sandy Dennis which is upset by the entranceof a man, played by Kier Dullea. Cobb for $1.00 7 and9:30.Tuesday is a Doc Films night and this week they arepresenting Vincent Minnelli’s Some Came Running. Set ina small town in Indiana, it documents a young man’sdisillusionment with it when he returns. Cobb Hall for 75cents. One show at 8:00.Wednesday night is Doc Films’ Nicholas Ray nightand this week there is a double feature. At 7 is FlyingLeathernecks with John Wayne as a pilot involved in riv¬alries and conflicts during World War II. The second fea¬ture, shown at 9 is Bigger Than Life. Some think this isRay’s best film and it stars James Mason as a schooltea¬cher who little by little goes mad. Both films are 75 cents.Wednesday night brings a very special film tocampus. The Young Patriots and The New University-Con¬ference present American Revolution 2. Filmed in Chi¬cago, the film documents what it hopes will be the secondRevolution. It deals with the Black Panthers and theYoung Patriots, how they formed separately and how theyjoined together with other groups to form the RainbowCoalition. There is also footage on the Convention and theeffect it had an the City. The film will be shown in Judd126 at 7 and 9:30. Admission is free but it is hoped theaudience will contribute something at the showings to thePatriots. A member of the Patriots will speak at eachperformance.THEATREThis week-end being Moratorium week-end, Universitypresent Joseph Heller’s We Bombed in New Haven. Theanti-war play can be best described as a black comedy.Another noticabl'e feature is that the actors are constantlystepping out of character to talk about their personallives. Directed by James O’ Reilly the cast includes PatBillingsly and Jeanne Wikler. It will be performed thisFriday, Saturday and Sunday and next week at 8:30 inReynolds Club Theatre.The Harper Theatre, Hyde Park’s wily legitimateRB CORDS"1 theatre is finally reopening again and has imported theoriginal cast of Leroi Jones’ Dutchman to play here for amere week-end. The play, starring Cherolyn Wright andMaunwell Turner, is a racial allegory which takes placeon a subway and deals with a confrontation between awhite Woman and a black man. The choreography is bythe Darlene Blockburn Dancers and the Joseph HolmesDancers. It will be playing this Thursday and Friday at 8.Also in the area is Ler.ner and Loewe’s My Fair Lady,performed by the Masque Players, a local Hyde Parkgroup. The musical comedy classic stars Jerry Loeb andHelen Bailey. It will be preserited at the St. ThomasApostle Auditorium, 55th and Woodlawn, tonight at 8, Sat¬urday at 2 and 8 and Sunday at 3. Students $1.MUSICThat valuable institution, Revitalization, is bringingHowling Wolf to campus tomorrow at 9 in Bartlett Gymn.Chicago Blues — unbeatable anywhere. Don’t miss it.Sunday, the Lutheran School of Theology, 1100 East55th Street will be the setting for a concert of the music ofBack, Purcell and Handel. The soloists ae Adolph HersethTrumpet, and Elsa Charlston, soprano.ElsewhereFILMSAlice’s Restaurant stars none other than Arlo Guthrie -and documents on film his various adventures in Stock-bridge, Mass, as told in his epic so.ng.It’s at the Woods.Easy Rider, Dennis Hopper’s and Peter Fonda’smuch-applauded violent journey through this country hasbeen considered by some to be one of the most contempo¬rary statements on American life to be released by a bigmovie company. At the Esquire.I am Curious (Yellow)had a controversial history be¬fore it even opened with all the court suits over whether itwas obscene or not. There is a great deal more to it thanmerely its nude scenes — it deals with politics, com-mitmen tand modern Sweden. At the Playboy.Last but certainly not least is the Chicago Film Festi¬val. Continuing tonight through next Thursday, it is anunmissable chance to see small non-commercial picturesfrom new directors. There are films from Sweden, Yugos¬lavia, Hundary, England, Czechoslovakia the US andoth-ers. Itis at the Village Theatre, 1548North Clark. Don’tmiss it. ‘Soldiers is the first production of the professional com¬pany of the Goodman Theatre. Written by Rolf Hochcuth(the author of The Deputy) this play is a sharp con¬demnation of Winston Churchill and his tactics duringWorld War II. Tuesday through Thursday and Sunday at7:30, Friday and Saturday at 8:30, Thursday at 2.The Great White Hope is Howard Sackler’s slight fic-tionalization of the story of the black boxer Jack Johnson.It stars Brock Peters in the powerful title role. Mondaythrough Saturday at 8:30, Wednesday and Saturday at 2.At the McVickers Theatre.Down From the Hill is an original drama by Chica¬ 1s this the Culture Vulture?goan Zan Skolnick. Friday and Saturday at 8:30. At theHull House Playwrights Center, 222 W. North.Ovid’s Metamorphasis is the first example of “Storytheatre” a new invention of that theatre magician, PaulSills. The play combines music and song. Tuesday throughThursday at 8:30 Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and 10:30 atthe Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln.The Madness of Lady Bright and Chicago is two one-act plays by Lanford Wilson and Sam Shepard (respec¬tively. Friday and Sunday at 8:30 and Saturday at 8:30and 11. At the Los Angeles Coliseum, 1653 N. Wells.We Close in 16 Minutes, Crawling Arnold and theUnexpurgated Memoirs of Bernard Mergendieler consistsof a new drama by Marshall Sands and two older comedi¬es by Jules Feiffer. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 (to No¬vember 15). Cafe TOPA, 904W. Belmont.The Monster and No Use Cryin’ are new works byblack playwrights Ronald Milner and Bill Harris. Friday,Saturday and Sunday at 8:30. Louis Theatre 35th Streetand Michigan.The Serpent is the Chicago premiere of not only a newplay by Jean-Claude van Itallie but also a new theatrecompany. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at 9. KingstonMines Theatre Company 2356 N. Lincoln.The Seven Deadly Sins and The Exception and theRule both plays by Bertolt Brecht (the former not veryoften performed and with music by Kurt Weill.) SaturdayWednesday and Thursday at 8 at the Chicago Circle Play¬ers, Eleventh Street Theatre, 72 W. 11th Street.ARTThe Art Institute has a large show of Rembrandt andhis Contemporaries in commemoration of the 300 anni¬versary of Rembrandt’s death.Mediocrity En Masse, Etc.THERE IS NOTHING WORSE than mediocre records. If arecord is bad, you can set it aside and forget about it. If arecord is good you know exactly what to expect each timeyou put it on. But if an album is only mediocre, you areforever listening to it trying to decide if there is some¬thing worthwhile somewhere on the whole record or not.Here are some releases, that, unfortunately, seem to revelin mediocrity.Hot Rats by Frank Zappa (Bizarre Reprise RS6356):Well Mothers fans, it seems that Frank Zappa has leftthe Mothers of Invention. Supposedly the other Mothershave scattered with the high winds after Zappa split to doother things. It would have been better for Frank to stickwith the other Mothers instead of going out on his own, forhis first solo attempt, Hot Rats, isn’t too hot.It’s amazing how different this record is from all ofthe Mothers’ releases. Missing from Hot Rats is the satirethat Zappa infused into the Mothers of Invention makingthem a truly unique group. Hot Rats is mainly an in¬strumental album and how can an instrumental numberbe satirical? It would be okay if these instrumentals weremoving or creative, but they aren’t for the most part.Every now and then a number seems to come alive aftergoing through five minutes of dull, ordinary music. Onlyone song has words in it, “Willie the Pimp”, which is theonly number reminiscent of the Mothers of Invention. It isthe best number on the album, being satiric and catchy atthe same time. The only other satire on the album is inthe s°ng titles. What distinguishes an instrumental such asThe Gumbo Variations” from one with such a differenttitle as “Son of Mr. Green Genes?” It is too bad thatZappa didn’t instill more life into the rest of the album. Itdesperately needs it.Song for a Tailor by Jack Bruce (Atco SD 33-306): This record is much better than Hot Rats, but it isstill missing that one special, unidentifiable quality thatmakes a record really good. Jack Bruce, like Zappa, isanother great talent who has split from a group. Bruce’svoice immediately pinpoints him as the lead singer for thenow-defunct Cream. Cream was built around the threetalents in the band (Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker beingthe other two) but Bruce’s talent was the most obviousbecause of his singing and writing. The first and bestCream album, Fresh Cream, seems to be a total JackBruce effort. But on his own, Bruce has lost that magicalquality that made the Cream one of the finest groups ofthe last two years.Songs for a Tailor is a one man creation that soundslike an entire band. Bruce has triple and quadrupletracked so many of the songs that the credits are unbelie¬vable. For example, on “Tickets to Water Falls” Bruce isresponsible for the vocals, piano, organ and bass! Yet it isthis exact thing that is the downfall of Songs for a Tailor.The album is over-orchestrated and has been worked onso hard that it lacks any real feeling. This is unfortunatefor Jack Bruce, as evidenced on the Cream albums, is aman with feelings. On Songs for a Tailor, he has, unfortu¬nately, just hidden his feelings too well. However, Bruce’stalent cannot be denied. Besides performing he also wroteall the songs. For the future, though, Jack Bruce shouldnot be so concerned with perfecting his albums but shouldbe concerned with producing a moving, rather than anadmired product.Then Play On by Fleetwood Mac (Reprise 6368):Fleetwood Mac plays blues, British blues that is.There seems to be a difference between British and Amer¬ican blues with thp British version always being moretoned down and closer to rock.) Fleetwood Mac however, is not one of the better British blues groups, and theiralbum proves why. They do not have the creative, movingguitar work that distinguishes John Mayall, Eric Claptonor Led Zeppelin. They do not have great voices like StevieWinwood from Traffic and now of Blind Faith or evenJack Bruce when he is doing what he does best. In fact,Fleetwood Mac is so mediocre that they seem to fade intothe woodwork.Fleetwood Mac is very popular in England, so I amtold. For the life of me, I can’t see why. This fact is evenmore amazing when you realize that groups that areareally good like Cream and Led Zeppelin have never re¬ceived universal acceptance in England but have had tocome here to make it big. I guess though that we shouldbe glad that Fleetwood Mac has made it in England.Maybe now they won’t come here.Sweet Thursday by Sweet Thursday (TetragrammatonT-112):This is the best record of all four. It is good, notmediocre at all, an exception to the other records re¬viewed. Sweet Thursday is Nicky Hopkins’ group. Hopkinsis a session man who was in Jeff Beck Group for a while.He has performed on the new Jefferson Airplane album,on some Rolling Stones albums and even on a Beatlesalbum or two. He is a fine piano and organ player as theconfidence of these great groups testifies to. His grouphowever, is not centered around a piano or organ as onewould expect. Rather, Hopkins appears to be as much aproducer for Sweet Thursday as he is a performer. Thepiano and organ blend instead of stand out, making themusic a unified wsole instead of a fragmented piece. Thevocals are especially good. My favorite song is “Laughedat Him” but a number of others are just as good.The Great PumpkinV . . *November 14, 1969/Grey City Journal/5• ik* * *<* - n f t r * : jj?■-., !•» .->-w»*■' *«. „.* *£<'•* X '£ K i -.Special Import SaleLondon Argo, Odeon, Pathe',Loiseau - Lyre, Qualiton, TelefunkenMono & Stereo$3.59 per recordHyde Park Shopping Plaza1558 E. 55th wei RECORDS 684-1505THE FILMMARRIEO PEOPLESHOULD SEE,AND SINGLE PEOPLEMUST SEE!• AMPLE PARKING• AMPLE rAKKINL*le image750 N. Clark-337-2113^auiarehouseBELL BOTTOM SLACKS FROM $6.0010% DISCOUNT WITH STUDENT I.D.HOURS:Monday thru Friday * 12 to 10Saturday • 11 to 9Sunday - 12 to 52837 N. BROADWAY CHICAGO, 60657 BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMBIT STOREPI 2-47441150 {.63rd St.\\ \ NT I. IIREPRESENTATIVE'S4 GIRLS NEEDE U$4 25 7 SO per hourBecome .i doniousliutor olpe r son a I and home careproducts. Everyone needs them,so win not sell them ’Hexible hours to lit aroundvour class schedule Work inyour own aiea All traininglurmshed.HASTINGS ASSOC IATES. 17 N SI ATI SIt Ill( \(,(). It ITNOISl or interview, call 236 0324f Cornet(Diarist *# 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, IU. 60615^ Phone: fA 4-1651 For a free reprint of this ad (suitable for framing)without advertisingwrite: Bud® Man Label, 721 Pestalozzi Street, St. Louis, Mo. 63118M 6/Grey City Journal/November 14, 19691/HUTUThe Fantasticks: For a Family Audiencenorrrvc! i l:. . . J . ..THE FANTASTICKS, the longest running musical in his¬tory (it is still playing off-Broadway after about 11 yearsof performances) was presented by Blackfriars to a fullhouse Saturday night. Ttiis simple tale about love betweena girl and the boy next door alternates between sentimen¬tality and spoof, on the standard Romeo and Juliet theme.The fathers of the boy and girl build a wall between theirhouses and create the pretence of a family feud in orderto make their romantically inclined children fall in lovewith one another.The first act of the play has a fairy tale happy ending,but Act II opens with the line, “What at night may be soscenic, may be cynic by the light” and goes on to showthe tensions that develop between lovers in everyday life.The boy leaves home to see th world and returns dis¬illusioned by the “despair” he discovers instead of thefatasy world he expected. Both boy and girl concludethat they were foolish in their immaturity, but now realizethat the ideals they were searching for were really athome all the time. The play’s stated moral is a good old-fashioned one: people must suffer to become wise. But inspoofing the romantic adventurousness of youth and de¬picting — briefly — the horror that fantasy often dis¬guises, the writer implies another down-to-earth piece ofadvice that is reminiscent of the endings to family come¬dies on television: live “realistically” and appreciate theworth of the unromantic and familiar, for the larger, out¬side world offers not new wonders, but only dis¬appointments.The play continually falls into simpy sentimentality,although the playwright attempts, at times, to counteractthis effect with a bit of weak irony. TTie narrator, playedby Jeremy Troyer, was powerful as the all-knowing, ironiccommentator until the end, when the play calls for him tosolemnly pronounce the moral. The comic actors were themost successful: John Brown created a wonderfully funnycharacter as the girl’s father; John Dabrowski was enter¬taining as the Old Actor who quotes Shakespeare con¬stantly; and his partner, an Indian with a Cockney accent,carried out a death scene which sent the audience intohysterics.The Girl, Laura Seligman, and the Boy, Dennis Hult,probably played their parts accurately according to thescript, which does not give much leeway beyond card¬board characterization. The whole work is on such a su¬perficial level that it is hard to remember even the goodlines, but the cast and director deserve praise for main¬taining^ a lievely, spjLrit throughout. The music is suf¬PLATIiCy’SPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & ALL-NIGHT SUCKSATURDAY fOUOWING IASI REGULAR FEATURENov. 14 Nav. ISDavid laaa's vMv FaNiai'tOLIVER TWI$T LASTRADANav.21 Nav. n•at DylanDON'T LOOK BACK L'EClIfSE*Nav. 2STRUFFAUT'SSTOIIN KISSES Nav.»FEUinrsSPIRITS OF THE NADD*t. SIN THE HEATOF THE NIGHT Dac*THE GOOD, THEBAD l THE UGLYDec 12Clint EastwoodHANG'EM HIGH Dec 13Peter SellersI LOVE YOUALICE B.TOKIASTICKETS $1.50PLAYBOY| TM E ATE R I1/04 N DiAMBOftN • PMQ*l 944 J4J4... when you become a Sun Lifepolicyholder, you are joining hundredsof thousands of farsighted men andwomen who are protecting their futureand the future of their families throughlife insurance.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CUJOne North LaSalle St., Chgo. 60602FR 2-2390-79D-0470Office Moure 9 to 5 Monday*,Other* by Appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA ficiently pleasant and was well played by a trio of piano,harp and drums. Both the boy and the girl were some¬what strained in their singing, the Narrator had a bigvoice and sang with greater ease.Tlie composition and reaction of the audience heremay explain the immense popularity it has received inNew York and elsewhere. Most of the audience Saturdaynight were not University students, but middle-aged orTHB1TEB young adults. Some brought their children. The audienceloved The Fantasticks. There was much laughter at thehumor, enthusiastic clapping after every song, and theelderly ladies sitting near me seemed genuinely moved bythe lover’s reuniting. Hues the ageless Romeo and Julietstory, Shakespeare’s most popular play in his own time,continues in countless variations to hold its wide appeal tocountless audiences.Sarah GlazerUniversity Theatre’s Guest DirectorTHE NEW EUROPEAN THEATRE will come to the Uni¬versity of Chicago next quarter in the form of a guestdirector for University Theatre. Werner Krieglstein, whois currently a doctoral candidate in German literaturehere and a teacher of German and philosophy at St. Jo¬seph’s College in East Chicago, will direct his own adapt¬ation of Schiller’s Don Carlos, to 'be performed during theninth and tenth weeks of winter quarter.Krieglstein, born in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia, and edu¬cated in Frankfort and Berlin, served for three years asdirector of the Frankfort Student Theatre and assistantdirector of the City Theatre of Frankfurt. While in Frank¬furt he mounted his own play, Origin of 0400, and com¬pleted his adaption of Don Carlos in German. With agroup fnom Frankfurt, the Neoebuhne, Krieglstein stagedthe play, and then brought it to Berlin, Paris, and Rome,where it met with great and sometimes surprising en¬thusiasm (in Rome, there was a near-riot when the Ital¬ians decided to surge onstage to share the wine which theactors had brought on in a big barrel). In Chicago,Krieglstein has re-adapted the play in English and madeplans for its American debut.The 28 year old actor-director has taken Don Carlos,an old favorite of the German theatre, and given it revolu¬tionary significance. In a rather Brechtian style, he haseliminated the individual, personal intrigues ( such as thelove affairs) and transformed the characters into socialtypes, giving the play a strictly political framework.Theonly character who remains individual is Don Carlos him¬self. Historically, and in Schiller’s version, Don Carloswas the son of Charles V of Spain, against whom he led arevolt in Flanders during the time of the Spanish In¬quisition, Holland at that time wished to give its peopleTHE: RENAISSANCE SOCIETYat the University of ChicagoPresents“The Myth of the Artist”HAROLD ROSENBERGProf., University of Chicago andArt Critic, New Yorker MagazineMonday, November 17th at 8 PMFirst of a seriesMen and Ideas in ModernArt 1969-70Student Rate: $2.00 individual lecture and $8 series of 5knotted Halt of Orwntal InstituteFor information on locturo termscoll Ml 3-«BOO Ext 2886The only book of its kind!to Study Abroadby JOHN A. GARRATY, WALTER ADAMSand CYRIL J. H. TAYLORComplete, practical, up-to-date. Covers 500 study pro¬grams (summer and full-year) open to U.S. studentsand teachers in Europe, Latin America, the Near andFar East. Authoritative information on expenses, lan¬guage requirements, academic credits, draft exemp¬tions, housing, etc.“Excellent investment... Coversan enormous number of pointsworth considering.”—Saturday Review432 pages, ONLY $3.95At your college store-f- Harper e*) Row1817 New York, N.Y. 10016 independence, and Don Carlos fought against his father inthe name of freedom of thought, which Charles’ aristocrat¬ic, Catholic court bitterly opposed. Krieglstein has extend¬ed Schiller’s story by adding a revolutionary element. Heshows, in his adaptation, that freedom of thought does notlie in one’s own hands. He points out throughout the playthat “compromise” does not work.Krieglstein’s adaptation is a vivid example of the NewTheatre. Language, acting style, interpretations are allexperimented with onstage during the production. Theshow is “spontaneous,” changing from night to night ac¬cording to the audience reaction and interaction of thepeople on the stage. A chorus, representing the anarchisticelement in society, interrupts the play whenever it wishes.In accordance with this style of theatre, Krieglstein plansto “train” his actors by using acting exercises and theatregames. In order to create an ensemble feeling among thecompany, he will cast the play this quarter (details below)and have a few warm-up rehearsals before winter break.Approximately seven major characters find six toeight chorus members are needed (although by the timeNeuebuhne got to Paris, there were about 25 people in thechorus). Krieglstein is anxious for inexperienced actors toaudition as well as experienced ones. “I think everyone isa potential actor,” he states. “In the chorus especially itis important to start from the beginning.”Tryouts for Don Carlos will be held on Wednesday,November 19, and Friday, November 21 from 4-6 p.m. inthe Reynolds Club Theatre, on the third floor of ReynoldsClub. Casting is completely open. Interested actors whoare unable to attend the tryouts may contact Krieglsteinat 624-3679 or at the University Theatre.“Liza Minnelli has given a performance whichis so funny, so moving, so perfectly crafted andrealized that it should win her an AcademyAward but probably won’t, because Oscar isarchaic and Liza is contemporary!”• —Thomas Thompson. LIFE MAGAZINEPoromounr Picture*. Pre*>ents An Alan jFbkda Production^* _ —r ytenleCuckooMinneli • V\fendel Burton •TmMdntieStarringjzabased upon the novel executive producer vrpenployby produced ond directed muSK scored bydv John Nichols DovicfLonge Alvin Sargent by.Alon J Pakula Fred Karlinsong *Come Soturdoy Morning* performed by The SorxJp.perslA&M Records Recording Artists) J .fouteiN »o. mium Mtxcnhm-vh* +%<'**+»momi Technt(ok> • A Poromomf Picture •pr/^5^.*Starts Friday Exclusive First Run Showing atBEVERLYwill at AlhlindEDENS 2Northbrook HILLSIDEHillsideNovember 14, 1969/Grey City Jooraal/7THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORESt5 802 ELLIS AVENUE • CHICAGO • ILLINOIS 606 3 7TEXTBOOKS • GENERAL BOOKS • SCHOOL SUPPLIES • STATIONERY • "TYPEWRITERS•TAPE RECORDERS • ‘PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES • ‘GIFTS • *At mam store only.MEMORANDUM TO: DEPARTMENT HEADS.PROFESSORS, DEPARTMENTAL SECRETARIES.The University of Chicago Bookstores personnel are makingevery effort to obtain a sufficient number of copies of allrequired and recommended texts for every course offeredduring the winter quarter, despite current difficulties.Information forms (Forms #57) requesting information forwinter quarter textbooks were delivered to all departmentson October 3 along with a memorandum requesting that thecompleted forms be returned by October 17. To date, theBookstore has received the necessary textbook informationfor less than 50% of the courses which will be offered duringthe winter quarter.No textbook department records were lost in the fire,and all books listed on the forms received are in stock, orhave been ordered. As in the past, the date we received theinformation, and the date the books were ordered, will belisted on the shelf card for each title.The later we receive the required and recommended in¬formation, and therefore the later we place our orders, thegreater the chance that we will not be able to supply the textsto students on the day classes begin. In fact, it is doubtful thatbooks ordered today will arrive before January 5.This is an appeal to all those deciding on titles to be used,andthose in positions to forward that information to the book¬store to do so just as soon as possible.Thank you.Harlan DavidsonGeneral Manager8/Grey City Journal/November 14, 1969nm* >*! <" r * f- v i * ■; • 3 s :• < .5. rJ|Ii Donate LibraryThe Halstead Memorial Library Collec¬tion, more than 600 bound volumes ii psy¬chology and 3,700 reprints, has beenpresented to the department of psychologyof the University by Mrs. Elizabeth LeeHalstead, widow of the late Ward C. Hal¬stead.Halstead, professor of psychology in thedepartment and the College and professorof medical psychology in the department ofmedicine, died March 25, 1969, leaving in¬structions that his library be given to thedepartment of psychology. Memorial con¬tributions were used to add to this collec¬tion, now housed with the department’s li¬brary in Room 194 of Green Hall, 5848South University Ave.Halstead became affiliated with the Uni¬versity in 1935 as a national research coun¬cil fellow. A year later, he became an in¬structor in experimental psychology at theUniversity. He was appointed assistant pro¬fessor i.n the departments of psychologyand medicine in 1939, associate professor in1943. and professor in 1946.Halstead wrote many books, includingBrain and Intelligence (1947) and Brain andBehavior (1950).FOTA SunshineThe Festival of the Arts (FOTA) com¬mittee unveiled the symbol for the 1970 fes¬tival yesterday.It is a red-orange ball, “the color of thesun when it has just come over the hori¬zon,” above the words, “FOTA ’70.”The new symbol was designed by RogerBlack, 7?, who now becomes art director ofFOTA 70.A circular theme will be used throughoutthe festival, Black said. All the majorevents, such as the theater series, the filmfestival, the gala performance, and con¬certs on the lawn, will have related circular %symbols of their own, he' said. ; - •’ ‘Black said he thought a sun was a prettygood symbol for a festival of the arts at theUniversity of Chicago. EFFETEstreets. SNOB: Thousands of cleverly disguised pseudo intellectuals flood theCAFE ENRICO1411 E. 53rd.493-5300 Art for the MassesHarold Rosenberg, art critic for the NewYorker magazine, will speak on “The Mythof the Artist” at 8 pm November 17 in theOriental Institute.' ; - - 1 r ■ ' •The talk is the first in a series of fivelectures on “Men and Ideas in Modern Art1969-70” sponsored by the RenaissanceSociety.Rosenberg is professor of art and social#**********.**4 Sunday Hew York Time*’ «8:30AM (daily loo) w* BOB’S NEWSSTAND* 51st and Lake Park* Huge $tock* of Current Maga- +zine», Paperbacks, A»»ortedPornography. Come & meet ^my dog “Michael. ” ^ENRICO'S COCKTAILHOUR4:00-7:00COMPLIMENTARYHORS D'OEVURETERRY CALUERFOLK AND BLUES.CALI PAUL FOR RESERVATIONS j PIZZAjPLATTERj Pizza, Fried Chickenj Italian FoodsI Compare the Price!11460 E. 53rd 643-2800l WE DELIVER^ thought and has written and lectured exten¬sively on comtemporary art. His new bookis Artworks and Packages.The series sponsors talks by renownedauthors, critics, and curators on current artand architecture. Other speakers in theseries are:• Jan van der Marck, director, Museumof Contemporary Art, “Laszlo Moholy-Nagy: Art Beyond Theory,” January 19• John Rewald, professor of art, “Visitswith European Artists, 1969-70,” February16• Paul Sprague, assistant professor ofart, “Classicism and Romanticism in Con¬temporary Architecture,” April 20.The price for the series is $15 for mem¬bers of the Renaissance Society, $20 fornonmembers. Tickets for individual lec¬tures are $4 for members and $5 for rton-members. Interested individuals may regi¬ster by calling extension 2886. NASA GuestsAllan Chow, 73, is the guest of the Na¬tional Aeronautics and Space Adminis¬tration (NASA) for three days this week atthe Cape Kennedy launching of the Apollo12 mission to the moon.Chow, born in Hong Kong and still a Brit¬ish subject, attended a NASA student con¬ference in March at Lewis Research Centerin Cleveland. There he diSbussed a re¬search paper he had written dealing withmediated biolectric potentials in the roottips of certain plants.Twenty students took part in that pro¬gram, funded by the National ScienceTeachers’ Association (NSTA). NASA andNSTA have again combined to bring thetwenty young scientists to Cape Kennedy.At the Cape, Chow and his colleagues willbe briefed on NASA operations, shown thebase facilities, introduced to space officials,and given VIP seats for the Apollo liftoff.Tune InCfiarles V. Chase 71, a Vietnam war vet¬eran, and George McCoy, a member ofBusinessmen Against the War will debatethe issues of the war on NBC’s televisionshoir “City Desk” Saturday at 12:30 pm.Cfiase, who supports the war, and McCoywill be interviewed by Charles McKuen ofNBC News and Mike Roycofe well-knowncoll] mnist in Chicago’s Daily News.Thieves Nabbed“Discipline is an obvious possibility” fortwo students picked up last week on suspi¬cion of attempted robbery, James Vice, as¬sistant dean of students said Thursday.Saturday night during the intermission of“The Fantasticks,” one of the actors passedthe second floor east lounge of Ida NoyesHall and allegedly saw someone rolling upa rug to throw outside to a partner.Ida Noyes guards gave chase and alertedUniversity security men, who found the stu¬dents hiding in some bushes at 57th andUniversity.Earlier this year, a $4000 oriental rug, a$150 lamp, and a $300 chair disappearedfrom Ida Noyes.Investigations involving one or two otherstudents are also under way.ADVERTISERSDO IT NOWThe holiday season's approaching... Starting with Thanksgiving TheMaroon will publish on Nov. 18,21 & 25 with the usual deadlines.On December 5 our specialend-of-quarter issue must dead¬line by Dec. 1 at 5 PM.We won't publish again until Jan.6.SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailylake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive The Carpet BarnA dtvitoo* ol Contend CorpotWe have an enormous selectionof new and used wall-to-wallcarpetings, staircase runners,remnants and area rugs (a largeselection of genuine and Amer¬ican orientals). Antique furnituretoo.We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail soles on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 - 4.122* W. Kiniie(atNW4-IMD )MS-2271 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Richard Lewontin: Biologist with OpinionsBy Chris FroulaIt might be rare for a native New Yorkerto find happiness in Chicago, but for biolo¬gy professor Richard Lewontin it seems tohave happened. “I’m happy here because Ithink Chicago’s where the action is,” hesays. “Chicago epitomizes America, andAmerica’s problems and battles will befought out here.”Lewontin, who has been teaching at theUniversity since 1964, is chairman of thecommittee on evolutionary biology and amember of the University committee onmathematical biology. He is president-electof the international, 1200 member societyfor the study of evolution.Lewontin, whose major fields of interestare population genetics, evolution, andecology says his interest in biology as acareer originated in high school years,when he worked in a lab. “When I got tocollege I wasn’t yet sure which branch ofbiology I was most interested in,” he says,“but after taking a genetics course andserving as assistant to a genetics teacher,through whom I met several of the bestLevi Hits Aid PlanJi lian Levi, professor of Urban Studies,and executive director of the South EastChk ago Commission, testified November 3for the American Council on Education at aheai ing by the House special subcommitteeon 'iducation on bills which would amendthe higher education facilities act to pro¬vide for relocation payments to personsfore !d to move by federally aided construc¬tion projects. While supporting the generalpurpose of the bills, Levi said that theywere “too limited in scope” since theywould not cover campus construction proj¬ects receiving funds from other federalagen ties.“It would seem to us unwise to identifyeducational institutions as presenting aunique problem in this area,” he said, “Itis a national problem and should be treatedas such.” He noted that, under the 1949housing act, responsibility for relocationpayments is exclusively that of the; Federalgovernment, not that of a political subdivi¬sion; he urged that the same principle ap¬ply t'» colleges and universities.He stated that a government-wide mea¬sure, like that in a bill passed by the SenateOctober 27, is desirable. This bill, S 1, pro¬vides for equitable treatment of personsdisplaced from their homes, farms andbusinesses by federal or federally-financedprojects. However, Levi said, the billseemed to apply only to public higher edu¬cation institutions whereas public and pri¬vate colleges should be treated alike inthis area. men in the field, I concluded that geneticswas the most interesting and challengingfield I could choose. Its formal structureappealed to my mathematical pre¬dilection ”Following his graduation from Harvardand his graduate work at Columbia, Lewon¬tin was an assistant professor at NorthCarolina State College and at the Univer¬sity of Rochester. He was named associatedean of the biology division of the Collegein 1966.“My current research in population gen¬etics,” he explains, “consists in ex¬periments designed to determine theamount of genetical variation in a particu¬lar species of a population, and in puremathematical theory, by which we try topredict how genetical variation changeswith time so as to learn to predict the evo¬lution of species. I’m doing biochemicalstudies of the proteins of drosophila, in or¬der to determine differences in genes, whilethe theoretical research is concerned withfrequency and rate of change.”Lewontin is one of the approximately fif¬ty faculty members on the council of thesenate, the governing board of the Univer¬sity. He considers this University unique inallowing the faculty to govern the in¬stitution, and adds that “there’s little likeli¬hood of their giving up any power to theadministration or to students.” As one ofthe younger, less conservative members ofthe council, Lewontin deplores the fact thatthe older, more established members of thefaculty tend to be the ones entrusted withthe greatest power in running it. “My ideaof the way to run this institution is to allowa faculty member who has attained a highposition with a high salary no more voice inits government. That way they couldn’tdrag the University along with them in aconservative way.”But this doesn’t mean that Lewontinthinks students should be given any say inthe government of the University. “I wouldlike to see more younger faculty memberson the Council,” he says. “There is no rulethat says they cannot be elected to theCouncil, and in fact the average age ofCouncil members is lower than ever before,but tradition is against them. It’s like theproblem of the craft guilds — the oldermembers run the guild and resist in¬novation.“But I think that the general response tothis conservatism is the wrong one: theonly way to break it down is to give theAFTER 3 WARSIS THERE A REALISTIC AND ACCEPTABLE SOLUTIONTO THE ARAB - ISRALI CONFRONTATION?SABI H. SHABTAIDept, of Political ScienceCOME AND HEAR WHAT PROMISES TO BE THE MOSTPROVOCATIVE TACK OF THE YEAR.Political Science AssociationMidde Eastern Studies AssociationYouth Comm. For PEACE & DEMOCRACYm the MIDDLE EAST TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18SOC.SCI.ILL.7:00 P.M.ATHENA CENTER FOR CREATIVELIVINGApril, 1970, San Miguel De Allende, Mexico. Study¬ing concepts of self and community to facilitate ourconstant struggle to be human in this repressive,sick society. Write: 2308 Smith Avenue, Aliquippa,Pennsylvania, 15001. CompleteStudent StationerySuppliesThe Card Nook9:30-6 P.M. 1456 E. 53rdMon.-Sat.955-2510 RICHARD LEWONTIN: Biologist who supports gentics and students.students power. I am not in favor of studentpower and I see no future for it — althoughI must admit that the longer I listen to thediscussions of the faculty members in vari¬ous groups, the more I’m shaken in thisbelief.”Lewont:n adds, “I don’t think the prob¬lems that institutions have because of os¬sification and older people who have notconsidered the problems, that would besolved by giving power to students. Powerand responsibility go together, but becausestudents are neither self-supporting mem- cerning academic questions as the facultymembAs, they are suspended in society inkind of prolonged childhood. Students getspecial protections and must also give upsome prerogatives of a self-supporting citi¬zen of the society.“Sure, I believe in student power, but notpower given to those who are in artificially-created protection of the University.”Lewontin believes that the attitudes ofstudents have changed drastically in thelast few years, and that he himself gets“progressively more radical as I get old¬er.”EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSES » '•! $'" " op •• r J. • ':5 'T'v^nol •>DR. KURT ROSENBAUMOpIOfTAlmt53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 ROCKFELLER MEMORIALCHAPEL UNIVERSITYRELIGIOUS SERVICELIBRARYHELP WANTED Sunday, November 16,1969, 11 a.m.Stacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545. PreacherWILLIAM SLOANE COFFIN, JR.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenueorthe first snow was yesterdayIs your car ready?Time for a Winter Tun-upHave your car's cooling system reverse-flushedand refilled with new Atlas Perma-Guard an¬tifreeze.Is it time for a grease job and oil change, too?We carry Atlas tires, batteries, and accessories.Replace your old battery now - avoid problemslater. How about snow tires for the next Chi¬cago blizzard?Winter is coming; prepare now at:Lake Park Standard 52nd and Lake Park2*8-96448/The Chicago Maroon/November 14, 1969SVNA AT FOOTBALL GAME: Walter and a curious on-looker at leftTenants Win DecisionOn Rent And EvictionA Hyde Park tenant association has wonan important court skirmish over a rentincrease and a series of attempted evic¬tions.Chicago Circuit Court Judge John J. Lupeordered the landlord, William T. Bradley,to accept rents at the previous rate and tocease eviction efforts until the court hastime to give the tenants’ suit the ‘thought¬ful analysis” it deserves.Judge Lupe, in his November 5 ruling,said that this was a precedent setting case,the first suit filed under Senate Bill 671.which permits tenants to sue landlordsdirectly about illegal conditions. He or¬dered tenants to pay their previous rentsand Bradley to accept these rents andcease eviction proceedings.The suit was filed against Bradley andFrancis T. Muller (owner of the building)on July 29, 1969, by the members of theBeechwood Tenants Association of 1221-23E 57 St. The president of the Association isP. Donald Herring, assistant professor ofEnglish. The Beechwood tenants refused tosign their new leases which, according tothe Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Con¬ference (HPKCC), contain 13 percent to 20percent rent increases.In October after six of the previous sevenleases expired, tenants sent in rent checksat the previous level which were returnedby Bradley as being incorrect amounts.Saturday, November 1, three eviction no¬tices were delivered. Consequently GilbertA. Cornfield, veteran civil rights lawyerrepresenting the Beechwood Association,presented a motion November 5 to preventevictions of his clients in Judge Lupe’scourtroom.Allan Sherman, attorney for Messrs.Bradley and Muller, said that because thetenants had not returned the new leasesthey were no longer tenants and so could beevicted. Cornfield argued that the tenantshad not signed the new leases because theycontested their legal enforcibility.A1 Raby, chairman of the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference Com¬mittee on Tenant Unions, and Illinois con¬stitutional convention candidate said thedecision was a “significant victory forthese tenants. They’ve worked hard formany months, organized effectively, andwith the legal and organization support ofthe Conference, they’ve prevented an ex¬orbitant increase in their rents. HopefullyBradley will soon see equitable negotia¬tions as his best course of action.”The Beechwood group has also pushed itscase for improved maintenance within thecompliance procedure of the city’s BuildingDepartment. The tenants returned to courtaccompanied by Alderman Leon M. Des-pres November 6 to hear the city’s caseagainst Bradley and Muller for code viola¬tions in the Beechwood building. Judge Ar-Council DebatesObserver IssueThe main item of discussion at last Tues¬day’s meeting of the council of the Univer¬sity Senate was a proposal, submitted byStudent Government Assembly that threestudent observers be elected to attend coun¬cil meetings.The request was not discussed with rep¬resentatives of SG. It was submitted to“long and detailed” discussion by the Coun¬cil, according to Knox Hill, secretary to thefaculty and professor of philosophy. Nor¬man Nachtrieb, professor of chemistry andspokesman for the Committee of the Coun¬cil, was appointed to write up the formalreply to the SG request and the decisionshould reach Barnett by Monday.The fact that the request was not dis¬cussed with SG representatives is, accord¬ing to Barnett, “a perfect example of whywe need student observers on the Council• • • it is time to end decision-making in se¬cret, closed meetings.” thur Zelezinski said the court intended tohave all violations that threaten life orlimb, such as falling plaster, peeling paintand defective porches, corrected imme¬diately. He gave the defendants two weeksto show definite progress.After the hearing, Alderman Despres toldthe tenants, “The judge definitely respond¬ed to your presence and your complaintstoday. Bradley knows he’s in trouble now.I’m sure ne ii do something by the nexthearing.”However, Mrs. Joanna Herring, wife ofpresident of the Association, commented:“The cdurt is still unaware that Mr. Brad¬ley has hired only two part-time handymento remedy the violations so that at a con¬servative estimate, the work will take threeto six months.” A TYPICAL APARTMENT: A pert co-ed gets snapped.SVNA Head Calls Politics 'Irrelevant'By Steve CookThe Students for Violent Non-Action(SVNA) has made headlines recently forputting on the kazoo marching band half¬time entertainment at Maroon footballgames this season and for sponsoring the“Pike for Peace” on Halloween night whichfeatured the spiking of pumpkins on top ofthe Hull Court gate.For an in-depth analysis of SVNA and itsplans for the future, the Maroon corneredSVNA president Frank MaJbranche for thefollowing exclusive interview. Frank, whois now out on bond for dipping his driver’slicense in DMSO and purposely speeding sothat a policeman would have to handle it,announced the “Free Frank” movement, tobegin anytime now.Follwing is the transcript of the interview:Frank, just what is SVNA?It’s an organization set up to attempt toget the young back into the mainstream ofAmerican life. We realize that the youngtoday are somewhat alienated from thegovernment today. We like to think of our¬selves as the vocal chords for the silentmajority.Can anyone join SVNA?Our organization is open to anyone whohas a sincere interest in America. We wantto combat evil wherever it may be, andthere’s a lot of that around. The best way topreserve America is to preserve in toto allits ideals. That’s the reason we had thePike for Peace and the Flush for Freedom (a demonstration held last winter duringthe presidential inauguration) — to sliowNixon that we were listening.Well, how would you describe SVNA’s po¬litical stance?Politics are irrelevant, so we try to keepout of such trivial things. We’re for goodand against evil. We’re for motherhood, atthe right time.Frank, why did SVNA sponsor the kazooband?We felt that football is an age old tradi¬tion. It was played by our forefathers be¬fore the Revolution. We wanted to get ev¬eryone involved in this great game to keepthem out of trouble. So we formed thekazoo band.Why did you smash the TV during thehalftime last Friday?Well, we were quite pissed off at themedia. We saw how they handled the con¬vention, and we don’t want them to villifythe good things in American life.Now that the football season is over,Frank, what is SVNA planning for the fu¬ture?Well, students are often accused of beinganti-intellectual. We want to show that weare not. So we are holding the Twenty-fifthAnnual Libertine Arts Conference in Febru¬ary. We hope to get people like Ann Land¬ers, Bruno Bettelheim, Paul Krassner, andHugh Hefner to speak. The idea is sort of togain a greater understanding of each other— a brotherhood idea.We are also sponsoring a “Mr UC Pag-show enthusiasm. eant” to be held next quarter. Any UCmales who are interested can send a dos¬sier of photos and their measurements toSVNA via faculty exchange.What has SVNA done in the past?Well, the Flush for Freedom and Pike forPeace, of course. And we were responsiblefor the blizzard of ’67, the McCormick placefire and the homecoming bookstore bonfireof ’69.Frank how would you describe the type ofperson who belongs to SVNA?They’re concerned, they’re people whoreally care. A bunch of good eggs, I’d say,not like the troublemakers you usually hearabout.Finally, Frank, what is the significanceof the black buttons with the white dot thatSVNA members are wearing now?We don’t deal in significance, we deal inactuality.Well, what are they actually?Actually, they’re black buttons with awhite dot.Frank said that SVNA is now an inter¬national movement, with branches in To¬ronto, Montreal, and Da Nang.He also pointed out that he doesn’t at alllook like Steve Landsman, one of theprominent SVNA members, though hethinks Landsman is a good egg.Movement NeedsCommunity PlansContinued from Page Fourwith many non-college-educated workingpeople. In Hyde Park there’s some mystic¬ism about this area to the west of Chicago,especially Berwyn and Cicero. There is anorganized right-wing movement, and in¬tegration can be a dangerous thing to talkabout, but it’s not like you have to fear foryour life walking down a street. There areyour life walking down a street. There area few teachers and high school studentswho are conscious radicals, and a widerange of people open to talking about newideas, like the movement against the warand the draft.Working at the post office in Berwyn,I’ve been around the community and metsome people in a mostly apolitical way.Taking a course at the community juniorcollege I’ve made some new friends andhelped start the Triton Peace Union, theschool’s first anti-war group, which in¬cludes several Vietnam veterans and sofar has a good cooperative, human spirit.All over the country there must be schoolsand communities where radicals could helpbring new people into motion. This isn’t toput down more dramatic actions like refus¬ing to cooperate with a physical or morethe tangibly-effectual action of buring draftfiles; it is to say that I’ll try the slowercommunity approach for a while.November 14, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/9LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONMaroon Bias?'In the November 7 issue of the Maroonthere appeared an article entitled, “Work¬ers React to Petition for Free Meals.” Thispiece is a good example of the deterioratingquality of the Maroon’s journalism. Oneneed read no further than the accom¬panying picture caption, “CAFETERIAWORKER: SDS is attempting to help him,”to see the blatant bias of this article.Despite its title, the article appears to bebased primarily on SDS sources and tellslittle about the reaction of the workers. Itdoes not attempt to probe such questionsas: the attitude of the workers to SDS’ at¬tempt to create an “alliance” with them, orthe grievances which the workers mighthave against the University, the students,or their labor uniun. True, the article doestell us that many of the cafeteria workershave signed the petitions, but then, whowouldn’t sign a petition for a free meal forluiusea? Fne article does not, however, tellus whether the workers themselves are cir¬culating these petitions, or even whetherSDS has attempted to get the workers tocirculate them. Answers to these two ques¬tions would be especially significant, forthey would give the reader some clue as tothe degree to which the workers are reallyinterested in the issue of free meals, or inworking with SDS.The article tells us that last year therewas a wildcat strike and a student boycott,and that the union negotiated a pay in¬crease but not free meals for the workers.Then SDS is quoted as saying that the unionleaders had “sold out” and did not repre¬sent the workers. Ordinary, journalisticfairness would seem to require that theopinion of the workers as to whether therehad been a sellout be presented. But thenSDS would be a better judge of whether theworkers had been betrayed than the work¬ers themselves. Or would they? Before concluding, I might note that I toofavor free meals for cafeteria workers ifthat is what they want, and if that is whatthey ask for.Bill CohenCenter for Urban StudiesData HearingsYour article of November 11, reportingour announcement of hearings on Novem-ber 15 and 20 in Ida Noyes Library, to someextent misconvcycd their purpose Havingspent some months gathering specific data,we are not now primarily interested inproblem cases. We are mainly interested inproposals, suggestions and reconimenda-tions to supplement those we liavc alreadyconsidered.Committee on University WomenStudent Committee onUniversity WomenOpen the DoorsI am disturbed that the University did notact to prevent the use of force againstmany of its members during the boycott ofHutchinson Commons Wednesday. By fail¬ing to keep the doors open and clear, theUniversity may have minimized the overalluse of force in the short term, but a policywhich, if followed consistently, would leadto victory for whichever side in any disputefirst used force could hardly be of advan¬tage in the long nm. There is also, ofcourse, the question of the morality ofstanding by and watching force used whenyou could prevent it. (I am using the com¬mon physical force meaning of “force”here, as distinct from the SDS meaning,which, like their meaning of “racism,” cov¬ers practically everything.)Bill Mixon Food for the People?First of all, I’d like to thank the Maroonfor its super-abundance of articles con¬cerning that wonderful organization of lo¬quacious, long-suffering laborers, the SDS.However, being a simple-minded freshmanunaccustomed to the university brand oflife of the mind, I have a question for yot*.In your article concerning the upcomingboycott of the C-Shop, you state the purposeas being, among other things, to “supportthe demand for free meals for cafeteriaworkers ...” Then you quote one WillHartley (whom I’ve seen pushing SDSpamphlets, so I’ll assume he’s a member ofthe club), who labels the notorious MrsPhyllis O'Connor, food supervisor ai BJ, asbeing the proud possessoi of “racist atti¬tudes” because “she treats people like chil¬dren; she’s very condescending to the blackworkers and tries to buy them off.”And how does she try to “buy them off?”She actually went so far as to try to “winthem over” by offering them food! Heiniouswoman! However, if the C-Shop accedes toSDS demands, won’t they be guilty of thesame crime? (Perhaps there’s a differencebetween free meals and offered food.) Ihope you can answer this disturbing ques¬tion for me and reaffirm my faith in SDS. Ibreathlessly await your next installment.Jay Hughes, 73Spiro's StyleThis is in response to the innumerableabusive and unthinking comments directedat the several recent speeches of Vice-Pres¬ident Agnew.Let me say that I am much impressed bythe extent of outrage; but even more so bythe fact that it has been aimed solely at MrAgnew’s admittedly very candid study ofrhetoric, in particular, at his use of thephrase “effete corps of impudent snobs.” It appears that the anti-war elements areso accustomed to being delicately handledby this nation’s leaders that when onecomes along who is a bit rougher andtougher than most they know not how torespond intelligibly or meaningfully; andthis, from those who once called LyndonJohnson a murderer. One should weep.Paris Le Jeune, 73BULLETINContinued from Page SixSunday, November 16UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: The ReverendWilliam Sloar.e Coffin. Ir . University Chanlain, YaleUniveikify, Rockefeller Memorial Chapei, u <>•...HORSEBACK RIDING: U u( C Riding Club leaves from59th St. side of Ida Noyes, 12:30 pm. Cal! f *nra x3240 or 667-1862 for information.REHEARSAL: Mandel Hall, 1-3 pm.CONTEMPORARY FILMS: The Fox, Co. Hail, 7 and9:30 pm.INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCERS: Ida Noyes Hall,Cloister Club, 7:30 pm.SEMINAR: Dr. George Anastapoio, specialist in CivilLiberties, speaks on "The Conspiracy Trial: Some Le¬gal and Political Questions," Hillel Foundation, 5715Wcodlawn. Sponsored by the University of Chicago Re¬ligious Counselors, 7:30 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATER: We Bombed in New Haven,Reynolds Club Theater, 8:30 pm.Monday, November 17CHESS TOURNAMENT: Round 2 at 7:10 pm in IdaNoyes third floor. Sponsored by Uc Chess Club.SQUARE DANCING: Ida Noyes Theater. 8 pm.MADRIGAL SINGING: sponsored by allegro conspi'ito.Come and participate, 5540 Wood lawn, 8 pm.WHAT WHITE RADICALS ARE DOING IN CHICAGOSponsored by the new and improved left. Mary EllenKenniston, Young Patriots, Robbie Skerst, U of C ex¬pellee, Coffee Humberdt, draft counseling, Liz Butters,Women's Liberation. Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pm.NEW UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE: library. Blue Gar¬goyle, 8 pm.CHICAGO ARTS THEATRE: Open rehearsal, 2nd floor,Blue Gargoyle, 8 pm.RUTH'S GROUP: An Art Co-op now forming-organiza¬tional meeting-Youth Lounge, Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: Men and Ideas in Modern Art 1969-70,Breasted Hall, 8 pm. Sponsored by the Members ofthe Board of The Renaissance Society.SECOND ANNUAL MIDDLE EASTERN BANQUETSponsored by the Middle East Center Student Association, meal at S5.50 per person, entertainment. 7 pm.CONFERENCE: Reappraising Educational Technology(100) urban research corporation, A review of the, .progress agd problems in the development of effectiveteaching machines. Ext. 3186.T.W.O.Annual AwardsBANQUETGUEST SPEAKERREV. JESSE JACKSONMT. CARMEL STUDENT CENTER 6400 S. DanteTickets may be purchased atHyde Park Federal Savings 1508 E. 55th St.and T.W.O. Office 1135 E. 63rdSAT., NOVEMBER 22ND - 7 P.M.■Chicago Maroon/November 14, 1969#>j.l '■ %, i' .!‘ ' v ; • i. ■} t ,t1L» f W *1 , '•**' » . » * » * 8* ** * * A • « • » S.-V *«.* * — •»<* V I* » 4 fffO'VatU' *rO u %, -m %> *•** H A. % S..+ af •-f-T'*FEED AND WATER YOUR FLAG 9LOST & FOUNDost Black Wall«t With Newfork & Conn. Licenses 684-1802.=OUND Guild Steel Str. Guitar, Pert. Cond.Incl. Case 8. Acc. List $230 — $100752-1555.irav female, six month old friend-y cat. call 955-4706.;KI VAIL AT XMASKI CLUB WINTER TRIP —ONEVPFK VAIL- COLORADO BY AIR.eave Dec. 13 — Return Dtc 20.'Reasonable cost! — Marty 324-8930BOOKSTOREurOers call uc picked upind placed at the fcducanon brancniookstore, Belfield Hall, 5835 S.Cimbark. Xerox Copies 9c,7c,5c&7c,5c,3c $10runs, 10% Discount on 9c7c5c rate.MODERN IMPRESSIONS1031 West Polk at UICCPhone: 829-0248.STEREO COMPONENTS AT LOW¬EST PRICES AR, KLH, DUAL,GARRARD, DYNA. ALL AT MUSI-CRAFT. CAMPUS REP BOB TA¬BOR 363-4555.Sel of Great Books Exc. Cond. MustSee to Appreciate $275. 955-6389. Full Broadcasting of all Mobiliza¬tion Speeches From Washington.Coveraqe Starts Ten Saturday Morn¬ing. WHPK-FM 88.3 Hz.•Free—BobbyWolf. Seaie Si.50—Howlin' Some Sound Advice! MUSICRAFTCares Enough to Have a CampusRep, Lowest Prices 8, Free Deliv.on All Stereo Components. Call BobTabor 363-4555 For Price Quotes.I LOVE YOU JUJURICK IN GERMANYCafe Mapitom returns Sun Nov 23.Dont Miss It!Battle of Bottlenecks Sot Nov 22 atIda Noyes.HYDE PARK ToWNHOUSE DE-I UXC a BDRjV, 2vs BATH LargeRms Yard Many Extras HighWj. 403 «W7Ford Fairlane '62 32,000 Mi. GdCond, Power Steering, Radio, 6Cyl, $395, Phone DO 3-8724.IE A NADER'S RAIDER RIDESH I S SUMMER. INVESTIGATEED, STATE OR CITY AGENCIES.LL DISCIPLINES, PREF GRADS.PPLICATIONS IN RCYNOl PS ™IUST BE COMPLETED BY DEC:OR SALE 2 Girls need Ride to FLA Xmas.Share expenses. 852-2454, 752-5582.PERSONALSSAF ARCTIC PARKA mint cond.,ew $54, asking $40. Light, hand-)me, wolf-trimmed hood. CHRIS,8760.or Sale used War Contact R. Nix-n White House (Rear Entry)Tobacco RoadThurs. Nov. 20Cobb Hall at 8I’ll be washing THE VIETNAM MORATORIUMSUCKS . . .AND SO DOES ANYONE WHOSUPPORTS ITYou Don't need a Weatherman toTell you that Howlin' Wolf Playsthe Best Mucking Blues Around.SOCK IT TO YOURSELF! SummerFlights to Europe. From $189. U.C.Charter Flights. Ext. 3598, 11 mo. f. gry cat needs fmly—Used to kids & being alone. *4733.ANNOUNCEMENT: The 1969 Chut¬zpah Cup goes to . . . Ted Soren¬sen! (1) For writing himself in¬to the Kennedy legend on behalfof his N.Y. Senate campaign. (2)Fur ynosnng, men criticizing EMK'CChappaquiddick speech. David Hal-berstam elucidates at presentationceremonies ... in this month'sHARPER'S MAGAZINE, America'sFirst Monthly. On sale now.A**— 3 w»-s Tues. Nov. 18 7PMSoc Sci 122 Sabi Shabtai.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist•ye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644RUN AMERICA FROM THE MAROON BUSINESSOFFICE!$1.00A 15-word telegram sent to your governor, statelegislator, senator or congressman. Even thePresident is within your reach. These men getthousands of telegrams and every one is read.Use your opinions to make theirs - simple de¬mocracy. The $1.00 charge lets you save $1.25from regular rates. Western Union forms and alist of all governors and U.S. senators andrepresentatives are available in the MaroonBusiness Office, Ida Noyes Hall, Room 304. Fill itout, we deliver it. WRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL2-8377)Them Moratorium Commies areEven under My Bed.DANCE—NOV 15 at 9:00 PM inBartlett Gym to the music ofHowlin' Wolf.War Criminals: Unite Against theMoratorium.Anyone with information regardinglost COUVAH tail please contactBU 8-6610 ext 3423.Who the hell wants to go to Wash¬ington when Howlin' Wolf is playingright here on campus, tomorrownlte for only $1.50 (sure beats $25).Bring manuscripts—fiction, poetry,reviews—for the Chicago LiteraryReview to the Maroon BusinessOffice Now! 1212 E 59th Street—Ida Noyes Hall.After 3 Wars ... IS there a realisticand acceptable solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict? Come hear SabiShabtai of the Poll. Sci. Dept, givewhat promises to be the most pro¬vocative talk of the year. Nov 187PM.Mapitom Mapitom Mapitom Mapi¬tom Mapitom. Mapitom?We Bombed in New Haven Won'tbomb in Hyde Park.UC Folklore Soc. Meeting for new,old, maybe members Mon 7:30 IdaNoyes. Hear folk tapes. All wel¬comed, bring ideas.FOR SALE: SALT, $30 a cup.Where? Biafra. Novelist HerbertGold records his impressions of apeople half-mad from starvationand bombings. In this month's HAR¬PER'S MAGAZINE, America's FirstMonthly. On sale now.HOWLIN' WOLF SUPPORTS CAFE¬TERIA WORKERS.Hate War? Experience a catharticmoment during UT's We Bombed inNew Haven.FRANK MALBRANCHE will playthe Kazoo and Sing the Blues atthe Dance Tomorrow Nite in Bart¬lett Gym, 9:00 PM, $1.50 Ticketsat the Door.It's felafel time again—come to cafe Homesick James & Houndog Tay-Will Ladies that Bit Employee atDining Hall Check in for RabiesQuarantine.Bring the War Home to BartlettGym, Saturday Nite, for only $1.50(BREAH?)JOB OPPORTUNITY: Mayor. Ov«va dozen vacancies created this yearby voluntary drop outs. Qualifica¬tions: thick skin, endless patience,Degree in Confrontation. Minor inlow and order also helpful. In¬terested? Meet four retiring mayorswho aren't, in this month's HAR¬PER'S MAGAZINE, America's FirstMonthly. On Sale Now.Another great show (despite itsprevious publicity) T«E FOX thisSunday 7 & 9:30-CEF.Hear What White Radicals are Do¬ing in Chicago: Young Patriots,Neiyiiborhood and Gl organizersplus STAUGHTON LYNO MON Nov17 7:30 BLUE GARGOYLE.See Jeanne WHder, actress extra¬ordinaire as Ruth in We Bombed inNew Haven.ALL OF YOU CREEPSwho aren't going to Washingtoncan come and hear Howlin' Wolftomorrow nite in Bartlett.Finals are closer than you think!DOC Films provides your lastchance for laughs before finals—BEDAZZLED! Coming Sunday No¬vember 23.SCENESDine, Dance, Be Merry!International Potluck;folk and square-dancing.Harper Theater Baroque Players.Sat. Nov 15, 6:30. 5480 Kenvrood.Call Lin 324-0020.PRE MED CLUB MEETING7 PM, Thurs, Nov 20, Bllgs M137Prof. C. F. Kittle, M.D., Thoracic& Cardiovascular Surgery. On Ar¬tificial Heart.UC Go Club is alive. First meet¬ing; Ida Noyes Thur Nov 20 at7:30 PM."The Kickapoo Indians" Slide-TalkTonight at Crossroads, 8:00 5621Blackstone. All Welcome!THE FOX, whitfi you probablymissed in the theaters is on cam¬pus this SUNDAY, 7 & 9:30 PMCobb Hali—CEFOr. George Anastapolo speaks onTHE CONSPIRACY TRIAL SUN¬DAY at H ILL EL 5715 WOODLAWN7:30 pm.Free University Celebration GrahamTaylor Chapel 5 pm Sunday 58th& University.Tomorrow Nite—See and HearHOWLIN' WOLF in Bartlett Gym.Completely Improvised Shows, Gui¬tarists, Folksingers — Harper The¬ater Coffee House. Fri and Sat. 9and 11. $1.00 Improv Workshops,Sat., 2:00.DeliCious food. Beautiful atmos¬phere. Plus minus 20%. On Tuesdaynights Effendi nine five five five onefive one.HOWLIN' WOLF is playing theBlues in Bartlett Gym, Sat. Nov 15at 9:00 PMDANCE DANCE DANCE DANCEF. W. MURNAN andROBERT FLAHERTY'SmasterpieceTABUCOBB TONIGHT! 7:15 & 9:30 - 75* DOC FILMS SUNDAYS. Margaret's Church — The Episco¬pal Church of South Shore — 2555E. 73rd St. (corner Coles)7 30 am Holy Communion9:00 am Family Eucharist &Church School11:00 am Choral EucharistIs the end of the quarter getting toyou early? Hold or» until CEF'sFREE DOUBLE FEATURE "TheMagnificent Ambeisuns" arid "Miss>"!:c, on Nov (Yes, gang CEFIS doing something free!)Artist to Do Series of Portraits for$. Inquire at Maroor. Office.WANTED: Paid medical examinersfor insurance exams. Resident typedoctors preferred. Full professionalfees paid by nationally known in¬surance firm. Ralph J. Wood. FRPEOPLE FOR SALE"May We Do Your Typing?" 363-1104.Expert typing. 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm s & weekends.LOVE AND ORDERRenault Robinson 8i Warden Hay¬ward Speak at Nov 20 ACLU Meet¬ing 8 PM Lutheran School of The¬ology 1100 E 55 th.FOR RENTAPT. Avail Dec. 6 Rm So Shorewell kept $160. 734-3995 After 5.Closeby unfurn, 2 rm. apt. pvt.bth. stm. ht. Quiet. Free utils. $80.955-9209.Sublet m Rm Turn Apt Full Kit54th and Hyde Park. OverlooksQuaint Alley. $100. 955-9176.Wanted: to rent or sublet furnished(or partially turn.) 1 Vi-2 room aptin Hyde Park or South Shore—upto $100. 375-4786. PEOPLE WANTEDWar Criminals: Unite Against theMoratorium.Wanted: Theater Manager for HydePark Theater. Experience not ne¬cessary. Call 726-9293.Earn Extra Money for Christmasor School Expenses. Contact MichaelLiton 769-1717.Babysitter for one Child 2 or 3morns, or one mom, one aft a“Y. Nr. Campus Mrs Cutter: 955-*966.Ukrainians: Interested in a Ukr.Club? Social cultural, etc. Open to<).i Thur Nov. 2v, /.Ju,5747 S. Univ Av Or call B. Oleksluk:PL 2-9718.WANTED: Tutor tor bright, 12 yrvia. math and science. Call after6pm BU8-5631.WANTED: Pcrswi Now in Hous¬ing System For Single Room at Bou¬cher. Kent Free Until Dec. 5. Call752-3216.ROOMMATES WANifcDOkler Grad or Younger Facultyto share 6-Room Hyde Park Apt;Private Bedroom 363-7387.Fern grad to share apt with same5446 Cornell own rm. $49. Call Mon¬ica at 363-6446.LOVELY 5 rm.' apt w fm. grad.Good HP loc. $66-mo. Avail. D-Jan.684-5388.Own Room in Furn. Apt. 2 Blks.From Campus. 33-mo. 643-8210.WHPKHear Complete Live Coverage ofthe Washington Mobilization MarchSaturday Starting at Ten AM. Ex¬tended News Summaries Friday andSaturday at Seven. 88.3 FM.How do youSeel about thoseflags on cars?If it angers you to see the super-patriots andlove-it-or-leave-it guys taking over the Ameri¬can Flag—STRIKE BACK!Display these “peace” and “equality” colordecals on car and apartment windows .... onDumpers, doors, book jackets.EQUALITY DECAL ozyj o<u.aV, 3oU1><PEACE DECALAFfftOX W ACTUAL SIZCTHE PEACE RAG DECAL CO.ROOM 24,3 E. ONTARIO, CHICAGO, III.Please tend mePeace Decale: window style bumper styleEquality Dcsals: window stylelrii■iiiiI Total amt. enclosedII name (please print) bumper style75* for one decal 50* each additional decal.Add 25* per order for postage and handling.Add sales tax where applicableCash, check, or money order,no stamps| address ■^clty state zip II. IIIIIII1II■■I/1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637dates to run.name, address, phone.CHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75c perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free. SUBSCRIBETHE CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyes Hall,Chicago, Illinois 60637Maroon issues for the remaining academic year (69-70) can be sent anywhere inthe country for $8.00. For an additional $1.00 we throw in the June 6 YearbookIssue from last year.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, impress yourfriends.NAME.ADDRESS ZIP□ 1 year subscription $8.00□ Yearbook Issue $1.00November 14, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11THEMAROONJESSELSON’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 - 1340 E. 53rdALTERNATIVES-IN JANUARY 19TOEDUCATION APRIL 25CIOOC INVITES YOU TO CUERNAVACA for sixteenseminars aimed at finding ways to free educationfrom schooling. Seminar leaders will include:JEROME BRUNER JOHN HOLTPAULO FREIRE IVAN ILLICHPAUL GOODMAN JONATHAN KOZOLTate the entire program or enroll in individual seminars. Tate advan¬tage of conference and courses on Latin America and of INTENSIVEINSTRUCTION IN SPOKEN SPANISH.For detailed information write: CIDOC—SPRING 1970APDO 479, CUERNAVACA, MEXICOIF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. You don't have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip”. UWIWIIM BLOW YOUR BLMINDTHE GOOD BROTHI* * PRESENT - *LUTHERALLISONAND HIS BLUES BANCSUNDAY- NOV. 3C— 1969 —STARTING 8:00 P.M.NORTH PARK HOT1936 NORTH CLARJ ADVANCE TICKETS $2.00 - AT DOO*ADVANCE TICKETS ATINSANITY SOUTH, 31ST AND HA*S»TJO».I5.8:30PJ*.‘“HBrothersTickets: $6.00, 5.00, 4.00, 3.00Tickets NOW at Box Office, or at all Ticketron oetlets, MarinaCity, and all Montgomery Ward, Marshall Field and Crawfordstores. By Mall send check or money order with selt-addressedenvelope to Auditorium Tkeatru, 50 E. Congress, Chicago, III. M. BERG CLEANERSFree Pickup & DeliveryCovered by InsuranceUnclaimed used furs, $25 to $100. Settle 1charges, values up te $1000. Also fabulous micoats and stolas. Tremendous values. We aclean suede coat* and knitted goods.| 1(19 East 55th Street 493-941LAST THREE NIGHTSIncredible Country Guitar PickorDOC WATSONAnd Country-Wostom SingerJOHNNY KAYEShowtime*: 9 pm, 11 pm& 12:30 a.m.AU AGES WBCOMENEW LOCATIONQUIET KNIGHTWS Wert Belmont Avt. (Coraw SMffMd) '* 'i *•) •' - ?• .. cmL£££ wjngJ&nwpsMeijedTWfflsftegqseaufSiJH oi£unea a 3A Non-Profit Org.U.S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931