As exclusively related to our reporterby one of the victims.It all started early one cold Decembermorning. It being Wednesday of tenthweek, we ware all home studying or sleep¬ing when we were surprised by a knock onthe door around 1 am. It was not early San¬ta Claus but two smiling Chicago vicesquad plainclothesmen who exhibited asearch warrant for the premises of one ofour housemates.They quickly set about searching hisroom in their professional manner, pryingup floor boards, peering into corners, emp¬tying drawers, and digging around in thenumerous cracks our Hyde Park landlordhad somehow neglected to fill.Knowing the vice men’s occasional over¬zealousness, I tried to watch them search¬ing my friend’s room to see when and ifthey “found” anything, but they politelysuggested I leave — or I might be arrestedfor interfering with police work. So the restof us huddled downstairs whispering andspeculating while the police kept askingthe owner of the room to make it easy onhimself and tell them where the stuff was.After an hour had turned up a new feder¬al disaster area in his room and adjoiningcloset, but no contraband, the diligent duoof V-men decided the bathroom also con¬stituted part of housemate’s residence, andproceeded to look in light fixtures, heatingducts, and toilet bowls there as well' as un¬screwing the drain pipes. They were quitehandy plumbers.Finally, fiendishly concealed amongst Phil LathropNEWEST ADDICTION: "Paste Freak" often snort the slave maker, but more commonly they fill their syringes and "shootit up."other bottles of pills in the darkest reachesof the medicine cabinet, a plastic bottlecontaining five orange and yellow capsuleswith no label was found! Their faces lit upas they turned their find in the light andasked, “Kid, are these your pills?” orsomething to that effect. Housemate deniedownership, but they explained he wouldhave to come down to the station and ex¬plain it to the judge.Seeing this miscarriage of justice, I could not remain silent, so I stepped up and said,“Officer, they are my pills. They are tet¬racycline and I take them for my acne,” orsomething like that. Instead of clearing upthe matter as I had expected, this deepenedthe frown on the officers’ face as he ex¬plained that now we’d both have to comedown and tell it to the judge.They were kind enough to give us a lift.And buy us some coffee on the way down. Ididn’t drink it because I was afraid it might be laced with truth serum.Knowing I was a bright college type, theydidn’t bother informing me of my con¬stitutional rights like in Mod Squad, but Ihad already blurted out the awful truth, soI guess it didn’t matter.At the station house they leafed throughthe state penal code looking for just theright thing to book us on. They mulled over“keeper of a disorderly house,” and “con-Continued on Page SevenThe Great Hyde Park Pot Bust MassacreeTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 31 The University of Chicago Friday, January 23, 1970Coal Use To SlopBy End of 1971i y r'-aw- ' yBruce NortonTWO PROJECT: A unit of the Woodlawn Gardens on Cottage Grove Avenue.TWO Constructs Low-Rent HousingNine acres of modern three-story unitsnow line Cottage Grove Avenue from 60 to63 Street as a result of Hie Woodlawn Orga¬nization’s two first housing constructionprojects in Woodlawn. Woodlawn Gardens,designed in part to provide housing forpeople displaced by the University’s demo¬lition of south campus apartment buildings,will hold 504 families when finished inMarch.James Grammer, president of the boardof directors of the corporation formed tocarry out the project, termed it in an inter¬view “the only thing of its kind anywhere inthe country ... It goes to show what agroup can do for themselves if the oppor¬tunities are given to them.”Twenty percent of the apartments will besubsidized by the Chicago Housing Author¬ity for low-income tenants. Originallyplanned to be totally low-cost, delays inconstruction have forced rents to middle levels, with three-bedroom apartmentsrenting for $150.People who were unable to relocate inWoodlawn after being moved out by theUniversity’s expansion into South Campus,the area between 60 and 61 Streets border¬ing the Midway, are given first preferencefor subsidized and regular housing, pro¬vided they pass a credit check.The University and TWO agreed fiveyears ago that South campus apartmentswould not be destroyed until the projectwas completed and Woodlawn residentscould relocate there. When political prob¬lems such as demands for more parkingfacilities by the City held up construction,the University “went along and starteddemolition before we could relocate anytenants,” according to Grammer.To finance the development, The Wood¬lawn Organization formed a corporationwith a non-profit development firm, Kate By 1971 no University buildings in theHyde Park-Kenwood area will be heated byburning coal.“The University in the long run felt thatpollution would be a big factor and that theUniversity should be ahead in the fight,” adepartment of housing and real estatespokesman said of the change. “Cost wasnot a concern.”Conversion of the steam plant to gas willcost over $2 million and the cost of heatingthe main quadrangles by gas will increaseby about $250,000 over the cost now paid forcoal.The University will appropriate most ofthe funds, as it has throughout the activeMaremont, with TWO in control on theboard of directors. Public meetings wereheld in Woodlawn at which models of archi¬tects’ plans were submitted to public criti¬cism. Grammer stated that “every detailwas gone over before the citizens in openmeetings.”The land was formerly occupied by com¬mercial interests such as car lots, some ofwhich had closed down. It was condemnedby Urban Renewal and sold directly toTWO’s development corporation.The Woodlawn Organization is a feder¬ation of business, church, and neighborhoodgroups formed in 1960 with the help of orga¬nizer Saul Alinsky. One of its main con¬cerns is housing improvement. Several oth¬er construction projects are planned, in¬cluding one to start this spring on sevenacres of land leased from the University at60 St and Stony Island. conversion campaign, the spokesman said.More than 30 months ago the Universitydecided this, he added.Last year and last summer the largestbuildings, worst of the polluters, wereconverted.Of the 236 university-owned buildings inthe Hyde Park-Kenwood area, half areheated by the University steam plant at 61St. and Blackstone. By September 1970 theplant will operate only on gas and oil, notcoal. Tunnels with large pipes take thesteam heat from the high pressure areawhere it is created to the main Universitybuildings. The plant was constructedaround 1930 near the Illinois Central tracksso coal could be easily shipped into thearea.The other University owned buildings arewarmed by separate heating plants. About95 use gas or oil. Only 22 are heated bycoal. These are small buildings includingsome married student housing and housesrented to personnel. The switch to gas andoil heating came during World War II.The 22 buildings and the steam plantthat use coal are well below the min¬imum requirement for pollution safetywhich goes into citywide effect this July.Low sulphur coal use began several yearsago. Illinois coal is high in sulphur con¬tents. The coal must be treated to a moreexpensive washing process in which thecoal splits along the line of the impuritiesand the sulphur is washed away.The switch to gas and oil from coal cutsdown not only sulphur fumes in the air butalso the dirt and carbon dioxide content ofthe smoke, the spokesman said.The University does not cause most airpollution in Hyde Park-Kenwood, the realestate spokesman said. Most pollution prob¬ably drifts in from industries to the southand west, he stated. i<*>% t 4 ii M, *>:*:* -• ■'*'• ’•••*»-••T -1 4 I ’ ‘ 1E ?. I IMFyodor Dostoevskydoes not review booksfrom The University ofChicago Press,Hoffmann's best work, full of maturehumor...strength of realism...andmalice. What types and portraits, and^ with all of these, what thirstfor beauty, whatbright idealism."—Dostoevsky on Hoffmann's Kater Murr\■\T\)e Umverrity of Chicago Vreoo5750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637 OrdinarilySELECTED WRITINGSOF E.T. A. HOFFMANIn Two Volumes, Slipcasedand with an Introductionby Leonard J. Kent and Elizabeth C. KnightForeword by Rene WellekIllustrated in full color by Jacob LandauE. T. A. Hoffmann. Best known as the librettist for Offenbach's Tales of Hoffmann andTschaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite. And one of the first modern writers. His literary worksconsistently break free from debilitating conventions. And brilliantly andoriginaHy depict what Dostoevsk ailed Hoffmann's "secret, enchanted world."Hoffmann. His fascination wi normal psychological states. With dualism.With alienated man. With drea id the subconscious. Even with urban life as asource of strain-all anticipate it. entieth century. Hoffmann. Very much a part ofthe mainstream of literature. An influence on Dostoevsky. Gogol. Balzac. And in this countryon Poe and Hawthorne. Selected Writings of E. T. A. Hoffmann, with Jacob Landau's 20brilliant full color illus. tions, remarkably convey Hoffmann's extraordinary andfantastic vision. Volume I Seven bizarre short stories: "Ritter Gluck.” "The GoldenPot." "The Sandman." "Councillor Krespel." "The Mines of Falun." "Mademoisellede Scuderi." And "The D' hies." Volume II. The novel Kater Murr. His mostand most extensive work. Wonderfully, outrageously funny. Kapellmeister Kreisler and hisbourgeois tomcat Murr (surely the world's greatest "quotation dropper") are Hoffmann'smost unique creations. All these incredibly rich fictional representations reveal Hoffmann'scomplex vision of humanity. Of man—especially the artist-engaged in an archetypal struggleto establish identity in a hostile, absurd, and surprisingly modern world."These imaginative, inventive and ironic tales are some of the most ingenious tocome along for some time, no matter what their complexity may be.Their publication, with a foreword by Rene Wellek and handsome illustrationsin color by Jacob Landau, is bound to cause a flurry amongcritics and scholars. The 20 Landau illustrations arewild, beautiful, entirely appropriate.A Christmas present for the discriminating."—Publishers' WeeklyTwo volumes. 680 pages. 20 color plates. Slipcased.$20.00he Chicago Maroon/January 23, 1970Phil LathropBOOKS FOR CUBA: Len Radinsky sits behind the NUC booth in Mandel corridor. NUC Conducts DriveTo Send Cuba BooksBy Stan Goumas“Because Cuba has shown that socialismis the only way to overcome the majorproblems underdeveloped countries face,US imperialism is trying to destroy the Cu¬ban government,” is how Len Radinsky, as¬sociate professor of anatomy, described thereasons for the “books for Cuba” drive thisquarter.The New University Conference (NUC) isconducting the drive on this campus to getstudents and faculty to donate universitylevel teaching and research books for Cu¬ban students, as part of a campaign onmany campuses across the country. Tableswill be set up at various locations in theUniversity, including Mandel corridor.“One main purpose is to break the USblockade of Cuba,” Radinsky explained. In1960, Congress passed an embargo on tradewith Cuba, and the US government hasbeen exerting considerable diplomatic pres¬sure on other countries not to trade withCuba, he added.Radinsky said the program would alsoserve to educate Americans on the US ef¬forts to dominate Latin America, and wouldserve the practical purpose of getting booksinto the hands of Cuban students who havedifficulty getting books because of the USeconomic blockade. In addition to asking for textbooks, Radin¬sky is also encouraging people with tech¬nical expertise to go to Cuba for researchand teaching for as long as they want.Radinsky is asking for people in all de¬partments to help by making bibliographiesof the most important current books intheir fields, and then asking students andfaculty to donate the books. All interestedpersons should contact Radinsky at x-3907.Radinsky stressed the need for educatingpeople on the situation in Cuba. He gave atalk at the Blue Gargoyle January 14 andwill show a series of movies on Cuba in afew weeks. At the end of the quarter NUCwill sponsor a forum on US imperialism inLatin America.A delegation of NUC, including Radinsky,went to Cuba last summer and decided tostart the nationwide campaign this month.Radinsky, in describing his experience inCuba last August, said most Cubans areconvinced that capitalism could not helpthem and that socialism has been able to.The unemployment rate, he noted, was 25percent under capitalism, and is now zeropercent under Castro.While admitting that there is consid¬erable political repression in Cuba, Radin¬sky said the people are allowed to criticizethe means of operation, so long as they fallwithin the socialist context.Ticktin Remains Silent About ArrestRabbi Max Ticktin, director of Hillelhouse, is presently consulting with lawyersabout the charges he faces in connectionwith an alleged international abortion ring.Ticktin, a member of the Chicago areaclergy consultation service on problempregnancies (CCSP), was arrested inabsentia January 6 when Chicago policeentered his house and confiscated his files.He is charged with conspiring to commitabortion.Ticktin has been meeting with lawyerssince his return from a tour of Israel. Hehas declined to speak to any reporters, but he hopes to release a statement to the Ma¬roon early next week if his lawyers find itadvisable. Thursday afternoon he said “Onadvice of legal counsel, it is too early tomake a statement.”Rabbi Ticktin has not released any state¬ment to the press at all so far. In thepast, Rev E Spenser Parson has spokenout on behalf of both Ticktin and thework being done - by the CCSP to aidwomen seeking abortions.Ticktin’s arrest followed a counselingsession he had with a policewomen mas¬querading as an abortion patient. Ticktin advised the women on the possibilitiesavailable to her and sent her to a doctorin Michigan who would perform the oper¬ation. Both the doctor and Ticktin weresubsequently arrested.The Rev E Spencer Parsons, leader ofCCSP, will speak at a seminar in abortionto be held 7:30 pm Wednesday at the LawSchool in Seminar Room D. The seminar isone of a weekly series on women and thelaw sponsored by the Law School Women’sCaucus of the Law Students Association.The meeting is open to all. Radinsky said most Americans do not un¬derstand what life in Cuba is really like,and view those returning with bright storiesas hypocritical or naive. Cuba is open to allAmerican tourists except right winggroups.Cubans generally think that a small, un¬representative elite is running the US, andthey sympathize with the Vietnamese, saidRadinsky. There is popular hatred againstthe US government, but not against theAmerican people.A ma jor difference between the two coun-tris, Radinsky said, is that althoughblacks constitute a large part in both, thereis no racial antagonism in Cuba, unlike theUS.Hearings Raise Issue: Pill vs AlternativesAN OPENED BOX: The pill sits atop a jewelry box.By Judy Alsofrom and Nancy Chisman“I don’t think chicks should take thePill,” the young man said. “I don’t thinkthey should have artificial hormones mes¬sing around in their bodies.” He paused.“It’s so damned convenient, though.”No one knows how many women at theUniversity of Chicago take the Pill. Thenumber is sufficiently large, however, toinsure that conversations, arguments, andworries over the Senate sub-committeehearings on the effects of birth control pillshave been widespread over campus thispast week.Student health has not experienced a de¬luge of calls from students worried overpossible side effects of the Pill, which sub¬committee hearing witnesses have statedmight range from cancer to sterility. Thesub-committee hearings, initiated by Sena¬tor Gaylord Nelson, are concerned with thepossible carcinogenic effects of the Pill,and whether women are given enough in¬formation of its potential dangers. Wit¬nesses have cited examples of induced can¬cers by the use of synthetic estrogens inlaboratory animals, but no conclusive evi¬dence was presented.Second district Congressman Abner Mik-va, when contacted in Washington, saidthat the hearings have “created a climatefor fear that is not wholly justified.” Mikvasaid that he considered the hearings to beloaded. He added that the witnesses ques¬tioned in the hearings treated them “as ifthe only ingredients involved were pure ab¬solute health facts without regard for al¬ternatives.”On the other hand, Dr. Peter Segal, me¬dical director of the planned parenthood di¬vision of the Cook County public aid depart¬ment, said “these airings of public opinionand political meetings might be beneficial. The pros and cons of the Pill can be hashedout instead of a sensational news piececoming out in the paper or in a ladies’magazine, then a period of quiet, then sen¬sationalism again. These meetings will putthe Pill in the proper perspective.”Dr William Burks, gynecologist for stu¬dent health, said he hoped women wouldnot go off the Pill as a result of the hear¬ings. “Once a woman decides not to be¬come pregnant she should use the most ef¬fective method provided it is safe.” Burkswent on to say that the failure rate of theintrauterine devices (IUD) was two percentwhile the failure rate of the Pill was 20times less.Dr Burks remarked that he was unhappyover the published reactions to the hear¬ings. “People don’t get down to the finerprint, and don’t understand what is beingtalked about. What has been said in thehearings must be carefully read and putinto context.”Students also reacted to the subcom¬mittee hearings. Harold Siewald ’70 criti¬cized the hearings saying, “the idea of theSenate investigating a medical problem isjust another indication of Nixon’s ridiculousapproach to the universe.”A woman interviewed in the gynecologywaiting room at Billings Hospital said, “Iquit using the Pill when I heard reports ofits bad effects. I don’t think it should beextensively used until it is thoroughly re¬searched. “This opinion was the consensusof many women interviewed.•;Jim Hamilton, ’71, said, “I read somestuff in the newspapers about the con¬troversy. If they are going to try and getme scared, they’d better give me some sol¬id statistics.”There has also been widespread dis¬ cussion following the hearings of the Pill’spsychological and social implications, aswell as its physical effects. Heather Booth,a member of the Women’s Liberation Union(WT.U), said, “The whole situation isn’t ex¬plained to women — women are being usedas guinea pigs. It would be different if wehad more understanding.” She would liketo see a free medical center, such as theBlack Panther health centers, set up bywomen where they could talk about theirproblems with one another, obtain liter¬ature and have simple tests performedwhich, she says, are overpriced in hospi-i tals. Mrs Booth said “birth control should; be a right, but any pill that endangers ourhealth is against the constitution.i Another member of the WTJJ expressedanger at the exploitation of women, saying,1 “Women have been experimented upon and: used as guinea pigs. There is not sufficientresearch into their problems. Many prob¬lems of women are considered psy-r chological when they are actually physi¬cal.” She also expressed anger that little orno research was being directed toward the1 development of male contraceptives.Continued on Page NineJanuary 23, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3OTCf yisuntil*mootf-M jgoiiO t>HT'*SDS Offers AppealsI For Deans DecisionDean of students Charles O’Connell hascompleted work in the appeals of the stu¬dents suspended for their participation inSDS’s November Hutch demonstrations. Ofthe five appeals submitted, three were de¬nied; one two-quarter suspension was re¬duced to a one-quarter suspension; and onesuspension was suspended entirely.Although not unconcerned with gettingamnesty for the remaining suspended stu¬dents, SDS has shifted the thrust of its ef¬forts to aiding the workers involved in theGeneral Electric strike. According to onemember, four or five students have beengoing out to the Hotpoint plant in Cicerodaily to demonstrate student solidarity and“find out the latest” with respect to theprogress of the strike.Meanwhile, back on campus, SDS claimsto have collected “close to $200” this weekto be used in behalf of the workers. Theytentatively plan to use the money to buycanned foods which they intend to bring tothe picket lines next Monday.Continuing their origial “free meals forGorilla Warfare Invades AcademiaA pair of black gorillas lumbered intothe social science reading room of Harperlibrary Thursday night.Their appearance at 8:10 pm seemedmore amusing than disturbing to the fiftyoccupants of the room, including abouttwenty members and associates of thestudents’ for violent non-action (SVNA),who wandered in soon before the unex¬pected arrival.All snickered and stared as the apesbegan studying their books, “Hie Pri¬mates” and “The Naked Ape.”Hie male, taller and more belligerantthan his mate, shoved a provoking studentagainst a bookshelf, but made no further assalts. The female, who wore a lightblue ribbon, atop her long black hair,seemed more interested in other males inthe reading room.Both gorillas seemed happy to be photo¬graphed, and offered some onlookers aslightly mauled banana. They could nothelp the students who requested change fora quarter, however.The fun continued for fifteen minutes,until a desk attendent warned, “Okay,fun’s fun, but if you’re not out of here by8:30 I’m going to kick you out.”Minutes later the anthropoid duo walkedout followed by reporters, photographers,and about half the reading room. Caught afterwards a.id asked, “Can weexpect gorilla warefare elsewhere oncampus this quarter?” the female apegesticulated an unmistakable “soytantly,”before heading with her mate for themore hallowed halls of Reynolds Cluband Ida Noyes.Asked, “any comment?” the blond deskattendent shrugged, smiled and said, “Idon’t know what it would be. I guess theyhad their fun.” Hutch and C-Shop workers” demand, SDSplans to publish on a regular basis “TheAlliance”, a magazine consisting of articlesby students and campus workers describing“job conditions on campus.” They said thatthey hoped to distribute their latest issuetoday in the vicinity of the AdministrationBuilding.SDS also plans to change their Mondaynight meetings into “topical discussions”on such subjects as abortion and pollution.Next Thursday night they will sponsor theshowing of the film, “Salt of the Earth”.The film will be shown in Ida Noyes Hall at7:30 p.m.Three NamedTo HospitalThree new members have been elected tothe board of directors of the home for desti¬tute crippled children which operates theSilvain and Arma Wyler children’s hospital.They are• Mrs H Ernest Lafontant, senior partnerin the Chicago law firm of Stradford, La¬fontant, Gibson, Fisher, and Cousins• Leo Segall, a senior partner in the Chi¬cago law firm of Asher, Greenfield, Gub-bins, and Segall• Frank Takahashi, senior partner in theChicago firm of Gale, Takahashi, andChannon, certified public accountants.All three were elected to one-year termson the board of the home for destitutecrippled children, one of Chicago’s oldestcharities. Hie Home has been responsiblefor the operation of the 100-bed Silvain andArma Wyler children’s hospital since itopened in 1966.BOWERS DODGE7300 S. WESTERNPHONE 476-4400THE ALL NEW FOR 1970 CHALLENGERChallenger 2-Door Hardtop1965 Pont. Temp.4 Dr. V-R, A.T., P.S., R, H,W.S.W., Whita/Blk. Int.$895.00 1966 Buick Skylark2 Dr. H.T., V-B, A.T..F.S.,R, H, W.S.W., Turq/BIk.bit.$1295.001963 Dart4Dr.Sad.6Cyl., A.T..R,H, W.S.W. BIk/Rod In*.$495.00 1964 Dodge Cere.4Dr.Sad.6Cyl., A.T., R,H, W.S.W. Turq.w/matching bit.$695.00LET US KNOW THAT YOU ARE A STUDENTAND YOU WILL RECEIVE THE BEST DEAL IN TOWNON A NEW DODGE OR USED CARV 4/Wm Chicago Maroon/January 23, 1970T’jE.xrK? ,0O?T Woman's Caucus Probes TopicOf Advertising and LiberationThe Carpet BarnA drnuoti ot Corttond CatpXWe have on enormowt selectionof new and used waH-to-wollcarpetings, staircase runners,remnants and area rugs (a largeselection of genuine and Amer¬ican orientals). Antique furnituretoo.We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 - 4.1226 W. Kinsie (at Rocme)NU4-1M9 243-2271BUY DIRECT - IMPORTER100% HUMAN HAIR WIGSMachine Made Wigs e a mR*f Retail $29.50 to 59.50 1Hand Made Wigs oj qaRoc Retell $85.00 to 200.00 OfiUUFashionable Falls oc onReg Retail $49.50 to 79.50 CDeDULovely WigletsRo« Retail $15.00 to :Beautiful Cascades 6.60Ref Retell $20.00 to 35.00 11.60Eyelashes < jaRet Retail $2.50 to 5.00 I e*HJStretch Wigs < a qaRoc Retail $24.95 to 29.95 IHoOUSynthetic. Tapered. Straight or CurlyDon Kaye Import*STEVENS BUILDING17 N. STATE • SUITE I71«Phone- 641-21999:30 to 5:30 MONDAY THRU SAT.ADDITIONAL 10% OFF TOSTUDENTS & FACULTYWITH 1.0. “Consumerism and Women’s Liberation”was the topic of the January 20 workshop atthe Blue Gargoyle Tuesday sponsored bythe New University Women’s Caucus.Marge Witte, heading the workshop,opened with the commandments of theAmerican economic system: “Create morethan desired,” therefore “Thou must con¬sume,” using cash or credit. “Our cultureis against self-denial and self-discipline,”says Miss Witte.In advertising, “truth is what sells.” Adsaimed at a woman “exploit her sense offancy.” Miss Witte used the following com¬mercial example: “ ‘We made VirginiaSlims especially for women because womenare dainty and beautiful and sweet.’ So as awoman continues to buy these products shebecomes a victim to this image of the dain¬ty, beautiful, sweet, and wooly-mindedcreature generally different from men.”“The image of woman as cunt,” contin¬ued Miss Witte, “obviously appears in anad such as You’ll be some body in your Rogers Form-Fit Nightgown!’ or in a bath¬ing suit ad with a photo of a swimsuit mod¬el: ‘Some girls have developed a lot morethan just their mind.’ ”Also used to increase the female con¬sumer urge, Miss Witte said, is “theThreat” of loss of beauty. After giving theexample, ‘If your smile goes but the linesstay on, use Dorothy Gray,’ Miss Witte em¬phasized that “advertising makes womenmore narcisistic. Why do only women usecosmetics ”“Chlorox was scientifically tested andfound to be no better than most otherbleaches,” Miss Witte said, “yet womenclaim their sheets are whiter after using it.This is evidence that the innocent femalebuyer’s sense of perception is distorted.”Miss Witte suggested, “These conditionsmight not exist if women began to scruti¬nize advertising and prove they are notwooly-minded but capable of resisting thesefrivolous advances.”Mi a i&h)i < i > »‘i c -v, *T**i'. i *'» i r ’ A Uklvi'i i'lU ♦ I,Tenant Union FormsIn Married Housinging the conference to preside at the techni¬cal sessions, or to give papers, include UgoFano, professor of physics; Stephen Berry,professor of chemistry; Royal Stark andFrank Richards, of the physics department,Isaac Abella, associate professor of phys¬ics; and S Chandrasekhar, professor ofphysics and astronomy. A total of 528 tech¬nical papers have been scheduled for deliv¬ery during the four-day session. Student Housing Tenants Association as thesole collective bargaining agent for tenantsin the system, and would provide a work¬able system for rent negotiations betweenURM and the association.Copeland stressed that “signing an au¬thorization does not commit anyone to anyform of action, such as rent striking—all itdoes is demonstrate support for the associ¬ation gaining rent negotiations with URM.Any questions in regard to tactics to pres¬sure URM into negotiating fairly will bedecided by the membership as a wholewhen the need arises.”Monday’s meeting discussed other tenantmatters such as the return of security de¬posits, decorating, and maintenance insome of the smaller buildings, but rent re¬mained the key issue.“We are attempting to build a strong or¬ganization around the rent question,” saidCopeland, “so that we will have the organi¬zational strength to deal with these otherissues. URM simply has not taken us se¬riously up to now—we need to display thesupport of tenants in order to bring about achange.”Tenant unions have spread this year instudent apartment buildings due to theefforts of the student government tenantunion committee under the leadership ofFrank Day 70. This group has sponsoredtenant unions in a number of buildings inHyde Park and is always seeking newgroups of students interested in formingnew unions. The group has already re¬ceived the support of A1 Raby, delegateto the Illinois Constitutional Convention.Phy Sci Group Faces Political IssuesStudents in the physical sciences at theUniversity have formed a group named Sci¬ence Organizing Committee (SOC) whichwill stress political issues at next week’sannual meeting of the American PhysicalSociety and American Association of Phys¬ics Teachers (January 26-29) at the PalmerHouse in Chicago. Students who plan to at¬tend the conference are urged to come to ame ting of SOC in Ryerson 251 at 3 pmFriuay.SOC intends to work in conjunction withscientists and engineers for social and polit¬ical action (SESPA), from chapters at Ber-kely, Rutgers, MIT and Northwestern, inan attempt to incrfease the social and politi¬cal awareness of scientists attending the'meeting. At the 9:30 am session on Mon¬day, a resolution that would pledge scien¬tists to refuse to work on military weapon¬ry will be proposed by Charles Schwartz,professor of physics at Berkely. SOC plans to propose resolutions callingfor an end to military funding of scientificresearch, immediate withdrawal of soldiersfrom Vietnam, and reevaluation of the roleof women scientists, to the business meet¬ing of the conference at 5 pm Monday.Leaflets on environmental pollution, writ¬ten by SOC members, will be distributedduring the meeting, along with petitions en¬dorsing the resolutions that will be pro¬posed. If facilities at the Palmer House canbe obtained, SOC also plans to hold paneldiscussions and speeches on the issuesmentioned.Julian Levi, professor of urban studies,will speak on “The Urban Condition — Crit¬ical Mass?” in a special session on scienceand society Tuesday at 8:30 pm. Y Nambu,professor of physics, will receive the Heine-man physics prize at a joint banquet of thetwo associations Wednesday evening.Other Chicago faculty who will be attend- SG Votes for the PublicationOf Faculty Senate's MinutesApproximately 40 organizers for the mar¬ried student housing tenants associationmet Monday night to hear Warren Cope¬land, president of the association, outlineplans for a new organizational effort to ef¬fect rent negotiations with University real¬ty management (URM), which managesthe married student housing buildings.Copeland sees a rent hike coming whencurrent married student housing leases ex¬pire. “I would expect URM to propose in¬creases of about ten percent, perhapsmore,” said Copeland. “I think it’s time wefound out whether URM makes a profit ornot.”Copeland called upon the organizers towork within the next two weeks, to see ev¬ery tenant in the married student housingsystem and to obtain as many signed au¬thorizations as possible to proceed withsubmitting a contract proposal to URM.The contract would authorize the MarriedSports :i tinTf^ Mnroon varsity wrestling team con-unuea its winning ways Wednesday, down.~°fldordla College 30-16. The team’srecord is now 2-1.In basketball, the Maroons suffered yet _. ■ „. , . • Monty, -Futchanother defeat, losing to ITT last Tuesday,68-59.: The team will try to improve its 2-6Cedord tonight, when it plays Niles juniorvarsity at 8 p.m. in the Field House.Also, the Maroon track and field teamwill face DePaul and McMaster Collegestonight at 6 p.m. in the Field House. The student government assembly hasvoted to request the Council of the FacultySenate to make public the minutes of itsmeetings.Passed at the Sunday evening meetingheld in Ida Noyes hall, the SG request fol¬lows by less than a week a meeting of theCouncil of the Senate at which four SGmembers requested permission for studentobservers to sit with the council.This request for publication of Councilminutes was initially passed by SG lastspring along with the request for studentobersvers. Steps are presently being takento obtain permission for another delegationof SG members to address the Council re¬garding this latest request.In other business, the assembly estab¬lished a committee to be headed by DavidBensman, chairman of the Internal Affairscommittee, to analyze the Wegener Com¬mittee report on student disciplinary proce¬dures. Bensman’s committee should issue areport within a month, on the basis ofwhich the assembly will determine whetheror not to support the Wegener report.Michael Barnett, former SG president,presented a proposal for “building a newstudent representative structure.” Deplor¬ing the lack of communications betweenvarious student structures and pointing tothe disunity which limits the effectivenessof all student representative groups, Bar¬nett called for uniting, in a manner to bedetermined later, the academic advisorycouncils, the inter-house council (IHC),and a reconstituted SG assembly.SG voted to organize a preliminary meet¬ing of its executive council members andrepresentatives from the academic adviso¬ry council and IHC to discuss the possi¬bilities of a building a new student organi¬zation.SG also decided to allow a delegation ofexecutive council members to meet withPresident Edward Levi. The assemblystipulated, however, that these meetingswere not to be confidential in nature andthat those attending must report back tothe assembly.The final action of Sunday’s meeting was passage of a motion submitted by John Sie-fert, 71. The motion called for the estab¬lishment of a committee “for the purposeof... carrying out a program of participa¬tion in the national teach-ins on the envi¬ronment ... to take place April 22, 1970.”SG’s speakers program begins later thismonth. The speakers, who will all addressthemselves to the problems facing theuniversities of today, were invited to aug¬ment the work of the SG committee on theconstitution of the University. This groupis considering yvays of calling for a con¬stituent assembly composed of all mem¬bers of the University. This assemblywould rewrite the University constitutionto allow students a greater voice in Uni¬versity affairs. The speakers will attemptto supply information to the Universityconstitution committee and to enlightenthe student body.January 23, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5MarijuanaThe next time you buy a bottle of aspirin, look out — BigBrother may be watching. That is the message of a front pageMaroon story today which humorously chronicles the not-so-funnyevents of a true story in which a University student was arrestedfor possession of acne pills. This is the funny side of a situationthat is more often tragic — the misunderstanding that surroundsdrug use in this country, and the destructive and illogical lawsthat prohibit its use. The tragic side was all too clear in anotherrecent story, of a University student who jumped three floorsduring a bad drug experience and was promptly arrested.No one would disagree that today’s drug laws are out ofdate, unfair, and most destructive to the people they purport tohelp. The proscriptions against use of hard drugs — heroin, newhallucinogens — are inequitable and a source of misery for drugaddicts who truly need help in solving a serious physiological andpsychological problem.The laws prohibiting the use of marijuana are a joke to mostpeople who smoke, except when they are unfortunate enough toget caught. They provide a striking example of the corrosive effectsof a bad and unjust law, by breeding contempt for all laws in thosewho feel, as we do, the full ludicrousness of this particular law.A bad law is not limited in its bad effects to the specific area ofactivity it regulates; it poisons one’s regard for all laws, and forthe process whereby laws are made.In the case of laws against the use of marijuana, the unjustlaws of the past contribute to the widening gap of polarities be^tween old defenders of the American faith and new advocates ofthe individual’s rights. We doubt whether most of the people whovigorously condemn the legalization of marijuana have ever usedthe stuff (well, Mr. Nixon?) and doubt also whether they viewthe subject of such laws to be a particular weed, or the repulsivemass of degenerate disrespectful long haired young people whotrouble their lives.Legalization of marijuana is not a step to be taken lightly.We feel that this provides an even stronger justification for thecall to institute, as soon as possible, a thorough and serious investi¬gation of what the possibilities are for legalizing marijuana.The PillAnother drug which has been attracting a lot of attentionlately — though no one’s been arrested for using it, yet — is thePill. Amidst the controversy surrounding Senate sub-committeehearings investigating possibly harmful side-effects of the Pill,many arguments, touching many implications of the Pill, have beenheard.Not the least important of these arguments are ones question¬ing society’s attitudes toward women in its regard of the Pill. It istrue that millions of women are presently involved in a hugehuman experiment with a drug no one really understands. We findthis treatment of women to be distasteful, and sympathize withthose who see in it a degrading attitude toward women.We feel very strongly that in light of doubts about the Pill,a safer but equally effective birth control alternative is extremelydesirable. Both the imminent population deluge and the new con¬sciousness brought by the women’s liberation movement demanda safe, easy, inexpensive way to control birth. Women have theright to control their lives, and they have the right to be securethat such control does not threaten their health.Social and medical needs call for more research aimed atdeveloping better safer birth control devices. We can think of nobetter place for such research than at a great university, and lookforward to hear of progress made here in the future.To v«o ViVco on li>v yvJT h; Poor Suffer in a Sick Society,More Health Centers NeededBy Lynnae KingTo receive reasonable, compassionate,personal medical care in Chicago, you haveto be wealthy enough to pay a private phy¬sician with hospital ties to such prestigiousinstitutions as Michael Reese Hospital, orWesley Memorial, or Passavant, or Weiss,all of which have most of their staff in pri¬vate practice with offices downtown or onNorth Michigan Avenue. Increasingly, phy¬sicians and dentists are fleeing the city’spoor and working class neighborhoods formore wealthy clients in high rises on thelake or in the suburbs. In neighborhoodslike Uptown, Lincoln Park west, the southand the west sides and the near north side,very few competent doctors remain. Officesare deserted on most of the main streets,“welfare doctors,” so called because theysee up to 150 patients on welfare per day,are few, but they are really making themoney, spending less than two minutes perpatient.The Board of Health has inadequate in¬fant welfare stations and a few other cen¬ters scattered around the city for treatmentof specific diseases such as VD. However,these places are poorly utilized, not wellknown in their communities, indifferent,and amazingly bureaucratic structures in¬capable of really serving the people. Forexample, the station in Uptown is now amaternal and child care center run. by aphysician whose specialty is developmentalretardation in children. That sounds verygood. But to register your child for immuni¬zations the staff strongly encourages themother first, before obtaining the medica¬tion, to fill in a lengthy form delving intothe relationship between her and the child.People have told me that this can take wellover an hour to do, especially for thosewithout a high school or college back¬ground. Not only does this approach to caredepreciate the true needs of the people, italso exploits them for research purposes.To document the need for new institutionsfor health care delivery in this city is initself a significant task. But clearly, thepresent structures are by and large racist,exploitive, inadequate, and remarkably un¬willing to meet the needs of poor and work¬ing class people.Three new centersThe above outline of the inadequacy ofthe city’s established health care deliverycenters has been presented in order tobring into focus the remarkable promiseand significance of three new centers beingoperated and developed by the Black Pan¬ther Party of Illinois, The Young PatriotsOrganization, and the Young Lords Organi¬zation.Editor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderMarvagirvg Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve Aoki, Phil LathropFeature 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 Olazer, PeteOoodsell, Stan Goumas, Gordon Katz, SusanLeft, Gerard Leval, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Ellen Sazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, DavidSteele, John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Flitch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, 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, 111. <0837. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 32<3. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mall $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service.6/The Chicago .w-Uj ou Vs-vj $imu>.*il> v*livt.isaLwj s M .xs/o13l*I tusLi\ Aiii nfwWt oa u s vv4? The Black Panther Party has alwaysbeen serving the people with free break¬fasts for children, educational services, andthe work of special committees on housingand employment. As a political party, theyhave wide support in black neighborhoods,especially among the youth.The Young Patriot Organization used tobe a street gang of Appalachian whites inthe far north Uptown area. Recently theyhave had a relationship with the Black Pan¬ther Party and are now in political alliancewith them. They do agree with many of theideological points of the Panthers such asthe existence of class and colonial struc¬tures working to divide and exploit thepeople. The Young Patriots have a break¬fast for children program, plus a freeschool. It helps to support a day care cen¬ter, and offers free clothing and referral tolegal aid.The Young Lords Organization has most¬ly Latin and Puerto Rican youth in itsmembership. They too support the Pan¬thers, have a breakfast program, and run aday center. They are active mostly on theNorth side in the Lincoln Park West areaIt is important to emphasize that thesethree groups are in political alliance toform a so called Rainbow Coalition. Eachhas a significant base of support in its owncommunity and takes seriously the medic¬al, housing and nutritional problems of thepeople. All three organizations have formalprograms identifying the need for free,community controled health care centers.The Black Panther Party nationally hasbeen opening several medical centers. TieBunchy Carter Free Health Center openedDecember 27, 1969, in Los Angeles, there isone in Kansas, and another is opening inone month in Philadelphia. In Chicago theIllinois chapter of the Black Panther Partyopened January 4, 1970, after nine monthsof hard work, the Spurgeon Jake WintersPeoples Medical Care Center at 3850 W 16Street. Under the leadership of the Illinoischapter deputy minister of health Ronald“Doc” Satchel, the center will “demon¬strate the socialistic nature of serving thepeople freely at a time when medical carecosts are rising ... and it will be under theownership and control of the people so itwill act in their interest.”In Chicago the center has been operatingsix evenings per week with the enthusiasticsupport of medical, paramedical, and com¬munity workers. Needless to say, constantsupport from everyone is going to beneeded to continue operations, for certainlythere will be a barrage of efforts to dis¬credit and disrupt the service from the po¬lice as well as other city and federalagencies.In the street?Tie Young Patriot Organization has aneleven point program; point two specific¬ally states “We believe that all people areentitled to adequate food, clothing, shelter,and medical care. We believe that business¬men should not make a profit on the thingswe need to survive.” They also state thatthe purpose of the medical care center is tobring compassionate care to the people,rather than trying to bring people to somedistant facility for care. This implies thatthe center will always be in the middle ofthe Uptown community and that it will op¬erate in the homes of people if no otherplaces will have it. Bobby Joe McGuinnessof the Young Patriots Organization saysthat the center will give care in the streetor in an empty lot if necessary. Recentevents suggest that this may be necessary.Three months ago, the Young PatriotsOrganization began the service at 1140 WSuimyside November 1 in an apartmentused during the week for a day care centerWith enthusiastic support from medicalpeople, nurses, dentists, laboratory person-Continued on Page Nineq;i “iORAJ vn* ™ 1% gt iuLifcVit rwarto i:eRennie Davis on the TrialCHICAGO, HOG BUTCHER OF THE WORLD and con¬vention capital of the nation, has been for the last fivemonths the site of the Conspiracy Trial.. It isthat the Trial will be wound up sometime in the middle ofFebruary. Rennie Davis who is interviewed is NationalCoordinator of the New Mobilization to End the War mVietnam and one of the seven defendants. The other sixare David Dellinger, John Froines, Tom Hayden, AbbieHoffman, Jerry Rubin, and Lee Weiner. Bobby Seale, foranyone who has been in hibernation, the eighth originaldefendant was bound "and gagged in the courtroom andcited for contempt charges and will have a trial by him¬self. The interviewer is Abe Peck who writes for TtieSeed.After 56 witnesses for the prosecution and a curJ^ntotal of eighty for the defense, what do you think has beenaccomplished by the Conspiracy Trial?The Conspiracy Trial is the summation of a decade ofpolitical protest. The prosecution chose to try our cmtare,our identity, and the politics of the last ten years whollyon the basis of thie macle-up testimony of paid informers.Our defense has been an offense designed to project a legal and political strategy by conducting a parade of ourhistory.The Government indicted us on the false assumptionthat it could chill the Movement by picking off eight indi¬viduals. We feel that the government has proved nothingat the price of exposing its own racism and imperialism,the racism and imperialism which have expressed them¬selves from Greensboro through Vietnam to Fred Hamp¬ton’s apartment.We came to Chicago to disrupt the ritual and shamwhich is ordinarily put over as toe democratic process.Now we are disrupting toe ritual and sham which JudgeHoffman calls the judicial process.How would you characterize Judge Hoffman’s role inthe trial?One of the problems associated with toe political partof our trial is that there has been too much focus on toeinsanity of toe judge when in fact Judge Hoffman presidesin every court in the country.All that is unique in our courtroom is its public visibil¬ity. Our trial is a daily occurrence in thousands of courtswhich functioned as assembly points on toe road to prison.There is no doubt that Julius Hoffman is a partisan. He supports every motion and objection by the govern¬ment. The courtroom functions under two sets of rules.Every day we undergo minor harassments — last weekwe were not allowed to use toe bathroom outside thecourt, this week toe judge announced a seven day week,today he cut our lunch time, which we use to preparewitnesses. Our witnesses and lawyers are maligned andintimidated from the bench in toe presence of toe jury,and young people are tossed out on a daily basis afterbeing subjected to a degrading search before entering theroom.This year Julius Hoffman is playing toe role MayorDaley played last year. Last year Daley accused us ofcreating a security crisis, wildly charging that we weregoing to assassinate all toe candidates. This year toejudge assigned phalanxes of marshals at all the entrancesto the Federal Building and outside toe courtroom, andjustifies placing the jury in an armed camp on toegrounds that our memoranda-carrying legal staff createsa security risk during its walk between toe ConspiracyOffice and the courtroom, a distance of a block-and-one-half.Last year Daley said that he had no control over the* 4 *******music W' —*«■**«a*4 r* rwff Jr***?* si*sjt'*'fx**yf<* i tr«»*'*"4-4 * y y fJ« «,The Case for Gustav MahlerTHIS PART OF MY ARTICLE concerns those who did notget into Chicago to hear the Mahler Fifth Symphony twoweeks ago. You don’t have to be a music major, or even awould-be afficionado to be able to get your kicks fromlive, orchestral concerts. You just have to have ears thatfunction reasonably well and an ability to react emotional¬ly when your emotions are aroused. It’s as simple as that!We all have a Dionysiac component to our psyche as wellas the Apollonian; we cater to the one in amplified stereosand frenetic dancing as we do the other in faithfully at¬tending classes and copiously printing sheets of immacu¬late notes. If you think that seminal minds like Beethoven,or even Schoenberg, wrote music merely designed toplease a certain type of audience confined to their respec¬tive milieu, you’re dead wrong!Music has no limits in terms of context, form, orstyle! It is to be experienced in all its incarnations — fromHaydn quartet, to Wagnerian gesamtkunstwerk, to Toad!It is yours to experience, to revel in its joys, weep in itsprofound sadness, glary in its exaltations, and pulsate inits Dianysiac frenzy.Now, you wonder, what has this mini-tirade to do withreviewing the Mahler Fifth Symphony of 3 January? Sim¬ply this. Of all the great composers of that which is la¬belled “classical music,” Gustav Mahler was one who isable to speak most directly and sincerely to the listener;that is, you do not need to have a mastery of counterpoint,composition or music history to get his message. This, ofcourse, does not make him a simpleton — not by anymeans. But, Mahler was a master of expressing his widerange of intense feelings in such a way as to communicateeffectively these feelings to any type of audience, regard¬less of their musicianship.Mahler was a man of highly contradictory moods andfeelings. Bumptious Bohemian, naive German romantic,cynical Viennese Jew, Catholic mystic — to name a few —these were equally valid aspects of his psyche, comingforth at various moments in his music. A master of or¬chestration, Mahler pioneered in bringing the coloristic pos¬sibilities of the classical-romantic orchestra to some of itsContrary to popular opinion, there are no regular colum¬nists for the Grey City Journal. The prevalence of particu¬lar reviewers or contributors in the magazine does notindicate any sort of monopoly on cultural areas; often,rather, our lack of a variety of contributors can beblamed for what may appear to be a clique-ish publica¬tion. WRITERS ARE NEEDED! If you would like to sub¬mit reviews of plays, films, concerts, records, exhibits, orother events; if you have short pieces of fiction or poetry,commentary (political or otherwise), or photographs,please contact the editors at least a week before intendedpublications.TAl-SAM-YWNRESTAURANTSERVES GOOD CHINESE POODDAILY 11 A.M.-9P.M.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS OPEN 12 NOON - 9 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY288-91001318 EAST 63RD STREET 684-1062 furthest limits, in addition to giving the symphony a newmeaning and dimension. What all this signifies, is that themusic of Gustav Mahler is some of the most exciting anddelightful stuff to be encountered in the classical corpus.Any listening is bound to unleash a set of powerful impres¬sions in the listener, which will not part with him forseveral hours after his exposure, and can only be magni¬fied in repeated hearings. Mahler’s work is a cardinaltestimony to the continued vitality of Western classicalmusic, and, for this reason, alone, those of you who stillremain unimpressed about the possilibities of classicalmusic, go hear some MahlerThe Fifth Synphony, composed between 1901-3, waswritten at one of the happiest periods in Mahler’s general¬ly unhappy life, comprising his marriage to Alma in 1902,and the birth of a daughter, all while Mahler ran theImperial Court Opera in Vienna, the most prestigious posi¬tion in European music circles. The Fifth Symphony, likethe Fourth, is a very optimistic work, as befitting thisphase in Mahler’s life. It begins on a note of mock solem¬nity, with a Trauermarsch, and ends in a frenzy of joy andrevelry in a fif' i movement, considered by some devoteesa Mahlerian cop-out. This is, indeed, a far cry from theMahler of the Sixth, the manic-depressive, Faustian ob¬sessed with death. However, these two symphonies areone and the same Mahler, which adds even more fascina¬ tion to any listening of his complete works.The Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Georg Soltitruly excelled in its performance of the Fifth. So many ofthe splendid, little nuances of coloring, counter-ideaswhich are often ignored in the effort to bring out the mainforces, were given ample and lucid expression by Solti,who managed a very controlled, yet ebullient, reading ofthe work. Despite its precision, the vitality was there, thehorns and trumpets finally overcame the acoustical ob¬stacle of Orchestra Hall to envelop all in a blaze of sound;the violins and celli were sehr ausdrucksvoll, particularlyduring the Fourth movement, which is, in itself, a gem.However, perhaps the best demonstration of the quality ofthis performance, was to be heard in the Second andThird Movements. These two movements require a rapid,kaleidoscopic presentation; moods colors, tones change al¬most instantaneously, and the mind reels and thrills at theexcitement and stimulation this generates. They can eas¬ily lead to musical shipwreck if either orchestra or con¬ductor is a bit too careless. Yet, the C.S.O. put forth anautical tour-de-force under Solti’s steady hand.For many years, people have been going around say¬ing that the C.S.O. is one of the five best in the world.This performance of the Mahler Fifth, a joyful experience,indeed, is witness to the fact.Peter . RatnerTHEATRETheatre TidbitsIf the casting tidbits mentioned in last week’s Grey CityJournal weren’t the cups of tea for all you budding,blooming, or withering actors out there, here are somemore (until the GCJ comes out with its supplement ofShowbiz magazine, you’ll have to be content with thisrather informal style):The Festival Truck:This short one-act play, written by Alan Minskoff(UC’s only graduate student in drama), will be directedby Chris Lyon and performed as part of the UniversityTheatre Experimental Weekend, February 14, 15, and 16in the Reynolds Club Theatre.Tryouts for the play will be held today between 4 and5:30 and tomorrow (Saturday the 24th), in the ReynoldsClub South Lounge. The play, a ritualistic comedy, will bedone to the accompaniment of original music preparted bySteve Menscher. The rehearsal schedule will be very shortand it is hoped that many students who would not normal¬ly have time to act in a major production will try out.The Good Ole Days of VAUDEVILLE!!!You may find this hard to believe, but Vaudeville is actually coming back to the University of Chicago! Yes,ladies and gents, a genuine, authentic old time vaudevilleshow will be presented on the Reynolds Club stage (once aclose rival of the Palace) at the end of February. BarbaraBernstein and Jeanne Wikler (famous for the until-now-defunct Wikler-Bemstein circuit), who are even studyingVaudeville in an independent research course, are direct¬ing this once-in-a-lifetime spectacular.However, they need talent — bad! The type of talentthey need are the following: those who can juggle, doacrobatics, contortions, animal acts, song-and-dance rou¬tines, female impersonations, quick-change numbers, mag¬ic tricks, and ventriloquism. If you are adept to sawingwomen in half, you may also apply. Two prerequisites:you gotta be good, and the material has to be authentic.(The directors will be happy to supply carefully-research¬ed material if you supply the talent).Those interested should contact Miss Bernstein at 667-6977 or the Doc Films Office, or Miss Wikler at 643-6803 orthe Maroon Office or University Theatre.GRAND OPENING MONDAY, JAN. IMiFREE GIFT WITH EVERY PURCHASE.BOOKSFORBUCK STUDIESSOCIAL STUDIES BIOGRAPHIESHISTORY (AMERICAN) HISTORY (AFRICAN)ESSAYS ARTSNOVELS POSTERSBLACK GREETING CARDSBESIBLACK EDUCATIONAL SERVICES INC.1900 E. 71 st ST. 667-5200 YAVNEHLECTURE SERIES ONJEWISH ATTITUDES TOCONTEMPORARY PROBLEMSpresentsRABBI YOSEF BLAULecturer • Hebrew Theological College - Skokie"MORAL RESPONSIBILITIES OFJEWS IN CIVIL RIGHTS"SUNDAY, JAN. 25,1970 AT HILLEL, 8:00 P.M.5715 S. WOOOLAWNTonight...Stories Gtaptfin’sM0ESIEUR ¥ER00UMDOC FILMS FRIDAY JANUARY 23 7:15 & 9:30 COBB HALL $1.002/Grey City Journal/January 23, 1970iSET * ' •- VfVictoriana at the BergmanWho Are Ma and Pa Vulture?THROUGH THE AGES man has been concerned withmaking pictures of himself and his world, but it was notuntil the invention of photography in the nineteenth centu¬ry that this ambition became a practical hope. The Gem-shim Collection of' Victorian photographs, facsimile printsof which are now on display in the Bergman Gallery,allow a unique opportunity to study the past. If one canadmit that the photograph enables the scholar to beginfrom a point immeasurably closer to the origin of his in¬quiry and that the photograph possesses a unique abilityto present evidence of the past as raw material for theintellectual process, then the Gemshim Collection is avaluable addition to the campus and one which should notbe missed.The Collection is a set of graphic clues to the under¬standing of the Victorian era with its ethos focused aroundReligion, Family and the Queen, and to the antiquarianand buff provides invaluable material on the developmentof the photographic art. Mrs. Cameron’s “Idylls of theKing,” Rejlander’s “Street Urchins,” Robinsons “Whenthe Day’s Work is Done,” Talbot’s “Stableyard in Tal-botype” and Annan’s “Slums of Glasgow” are the creativeproducts of each artist’s unique perception of the worldabout him, and it is through the cameras of these photo¬graphers that we see the Victorians, both as they wereand as they wanted to see themselves. The topical spect¬rum of the Gernsheim ranges from Hill and Adamson’scalotype portraits of “Dr. Thomas Keith,” Cameron’s“Tennyson” and “Herschel,” unsurpassed by any of thenineteenth century photographers, to the war real studiesof R. Thiele: “British War Casualties” and “Fort Taku,China,” from the stayed serenity of Barraud’s “John Hen¬ry Cardinal Newman” and Mayall’s “Queen Victoria andtne Prince Consort” to the earthy realism of Martin’s“Tramp” and “Porter at Billingsgate.”One of the special features of this great Berg showingis a well-done catalogue edited by the collection’s curator,Warren Roberts. The catalogue contains various insightfuland interesting essays on the value and appeal of the col-CULTURE VULTUREWELL FOLKS, LAST WEEK I told you what I reallydid for a living (wrote counter-revolutionary graffiti) nowI’m sure you’d like to know a little about my background.I’ll have to give you an abbreviated version since I’mselling my story (as told to Ann Landers) to the Tribune.In any case I come from a long line of cultured vultures(of the type vultures artie). My father, Wolf J. Flywheelhas had a long association with this great University hav¬ing been employed to play a gargoyle on Harper Libraryfor 45 years until his retirement (and you thought theywere real!) My mother, the former Beatrice Scavenger,spent the first 18 years of her life (before she met myfather) in the Clark, living on popcorn and unfinished can-dybars and seeing every classic of the film which playedthere. Thus you can see, if I do say so myself, I comefrom a pretty fine line.CAMPUSFilmTonight Doc Films presents Monsieur Verdoux writ¬ten, directed and starring Charles Chaplin. Chaplin is nolonger the sweet Little Tramp but a wife murderer in¬stead. But don’t judge a book by its cover (as HUACwould say) because this film is a strongly political onepointing out that Chaplin says “A few deaths is murder;millions, politics. It is numbers which sanctify.” At Cobbfor $1. At 7:15 and 9:30.Saturday, International Socialists presents HowardHawks’ The Big Sleep with both Bogart and Bacall. Thescreenplay is by William Falkner from a novel by Ray¬mond Chandler (this whole thing looks like a stackeddeck.) It’s a detective story with guess who as the detec¬tive. There are seven murders (Hawkes, Falkner andChandler don’t mess around.) In Cobb for 75 cents. At 7:15and 9:30.Sunday CEF presents America, America, written anddirected by Elia Kazan, semi-autobiographical, it tells ofa Greek imigrant’s journey to the promised land (other¬wise known in those days as the United States.) The prom¬ised land, not surprisingly enough turns out to not be all itpromised. At Cobb for $1 at 7 and 9.Tuesday is Max Ophul’s The Exile. There’s somethingabout this director; some critics say at least one of hisfilms is the best ever made and others think he’s Ophul1 * m sorry I couldn’t restrain myself.) This one deals withLharles II in Holland just before his return to England. In( °bb for 75 cents at 8.Wednesday brings Buster Keaton in The General. Thisls a 1925 silent in which Keaton tries to get into the army• which seems like quite a switch.) Any chase scene you’veever seen was stolen from this picture. At Cobb for 75cents. 7:15 and 9:30.Thursday means another film for the Victorian quar-er and this week it is Alice and Wonderland with a cast to end all casts: W. C. Fields as the Mad Hatter, GaryCooper, Edward Everett Horton, Jack Oakie, and MaeMarshe. With a cast like that you don’t need an Alice. AtCobb at 7 and it’s free.Tonight and tomorrow Renaissance Players presentThe Play of Robin and Marion by Robin de la Halle.It is a 13th century musical comedy (yes, theyexisted long before Variety) not about the merry men ofSherwood Forest after all. It’s more pastoral and lustythan stuffy old Robin Hood. The music will be performedby none other than the Collegium Musicum. It stars Kath¬erine Nelson, Don Swanton, Barbara Bernstein, Bob Hein-rikson and is directed by Annette Fern. It’s at CloisterClub in Ida Noyes at 8:30 Tickets are $1.50 and $1 forstudents.Tuesday, in honor of those two great Victorian gentle¬men, W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan there will be aconcert performance of Trial by Jury as well as selectionsfrom their other works. These will be performed by theHyde Park Gilbert and Sullivan Company. There also willbe some commentary by Jane Stedman, author of GilbertBefore Sullivan. At 8 in Cloister Club.MusicTonight is a concert of the Contemporary ChamberPlayers directed by Ralph Shapey. They will be playingSextet by Willard Elliot, 7 Set-Pieces by Francis Thorne,Octet by Henri Lazarof, and Chamber Symphony Opus 9by Arnold Shoenberg. A number of the composers will bethere though Shoenberg couldn’t make it. At Mandel at8:30, FREE.Tomorrow night the Musical Society presents a con¬cert of Baroque music. Featured will be works by Tele¬man, Rameau, Bach’s Cantata Number 78, 2 Germanarias by Handel, Haydn’s Sonata Number 37, Bach’sFrench Suite Number Six and Vivaldi’s Cello Sonata Num¬ber in. It’s at 8:30 in Mandel and its FREE.Tuesday is an organ recital (another example of Vic¬toriana) performed by Thomas Wikman, organist andchoirmaster, Church of St. Paul and the Redeemer. It’s at12:30 in Rockefeller.Poetry ReadingThursday, David Ray and Bill Hunt, formerly part ofthe masses here and also former editors of the ChicagoReview who have joined the real world will read theirpoetry. It will be in the Berman Gallery at 8.ELSEWHEREFilmNorthwestern, our friend to the north is presentinga French Film Festival of first showings of new Frenchfilms. Monday is Le Mur (The Wall) by Serge Roullet, aformer assistant to Robert Flaherty and Robert Bresson;it is an adaptation of Sartre’s short story. Tuesday is LeContinued on Page Four F. Hollyer: “Aubrey Beardsley’ContributorsCharles Flynn is a third year student in the College, chair¬man of Doc Films, and editor of FOCUS! magazine.Warren Moon is a doctoral candidate in Archeology.BRETCITYjo UIllflLHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the projit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaff• Culture VultureT. C. FoxChristopher LyonFrank MalbrancheMyron 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 Hall.G. W. Wilson: “A Woman of Substance”lection to the students of Victorian history, literature andarchitecture. Before G. M. Young, England looked on theVictorians virtues of duty and prohibity with hypocrisy,while material such as the Gemshim shows quite clearlythat there was one Victorian mind, one Victorian temper,one Victorian world exposed through the photographic pro¬cess.Warren Moon National Building Record: “Slum Dwellings Built Withinthe Gate of Holy Trinity Priory, York”f 0 t t ** .* J J l «! J * * * i it* i ,0-»-* 0 0 0 0 0 0 January 23, 1970/Grey City Journal/3Jp Jf P * 9 -4 Jt JP J i J | I f 4’ A *i * ** *».<Y 1 mstMJAij.-u??. x,!.') ""t.K.CULTURE mint uThe Vulture Sits Atop the Family TreeContinued from Page ThreeGrand Amour starring and directed by Pierre Etaix.Wednesday is Pierre et Paul by Rene Allio, director ofThe Shameless Old Lady. Thursday is La Belle Vie byRobert Enrice who directed Incident at Owl Creek Bridge.Friday is Une Femme Douce directed by Robert Bressonwho also did Diary of a Country Priest, Pickpocket andothers. This film, based on Dostoyevski, is his first one incolor. Next Saturday is Je t’aime, je t’aime directed byAlain Resnais, director of Hiroshima, Mon Amour, LastYear at Marienbad and La Guerre est Fini.The Battle of Algiers gives an overwhelmingly vividaccount of Algeria’s struggle for independence. It is di¬rected by Gillo Pontecorvo but resembles a documentary.At the Festival 3912 N. Sheridan.Andy Warhol’s Lonesome Cowboys started last weekhere in Chicago. Its publicity describes it as a Zane Grayidea, written by Aristophanes, and performed by DeSade’sstock company from Charenton. It’s at the Aardvark, 1608N. Wells, in Piper’s Allery.Z is a film of political suspense and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicaland contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, diicago and Michigan.Topaz is a movie for people who like Hitchcock butalso like taking showers. John Forsythe hasn’t been sogood since his Bachelor Father days. At the ChicagoTheatre, Randolph near State.Easy Rider is still playing in Chicago for all of youwho missed Peter Fonda playing Marlon Brando completewith mumbles and meaningful silences. Dennis Hopperplays a character who is exactly like your next doorneighbor. At the Esquire, 50 E. Oak Street.TheatreEndgame a play by none other than the Nobel Prizewinner Samual Beckett. It’s in a new theatre with a coffeeshop attached. Chicago Reperatory Company, 315 W.North, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at 8:30.The Assault on Charles Sumner by Robert Hivnor hasits premiere engagement here. It’s a Civil War comedy(judge by the title). Kingston Mines Theatre, 2356 Lincoln.Friday and Saturday at 8:30, Sunday at 7:30.The Master Thief and Other Stories is another ex¬ample of Paul Sills’ “story theatre” this time taken fromthe Grimm Brothers. The Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln.Tuesday through Thursday at 8:30, Friday and Saturdayat 8:30 and 10:30.ZODIA-DATEFind your compatablemate through the Zodiac$4.00 for three datesFor info and applicationwrite to: ZODIA-DATEP.O. Box 1952Chicago, III. 60690752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186- 1340 E. 53rdStraight Talk:Your diamond is at...Shdkm^bMN« »Ot 59 YfAtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZAAttention - Men Under 25Save $$ On Auto Insurance.$25,0001.1. and P.D. $1,000 Medical Payand UrJmuiad Motorists Protectionu.l.aVEURRe.Age 21-25-Ma mad MaleAge 21-25 *278&v p»rY*ar‘153 Per YearWITH GOOD STUDENT &YOUNG DRIVER DISCOUNT Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY. IT INSURANCE The Next Generation is the newest of the famous Sec¬ond City revues. Second City 1616 N. Wells. Tuesdaysthrough Thursday and Sunday, Friday at 8:30 and 11, Sat¬urday at 8:30,11 and 1.Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris isthe long-running revue based on the songs of the Frenchsinger-composer. Tuesdays through Thursdays at 9, Fri¬day and Saturday at 8 and 11, Sunday at 6 and 9.Libertation is William Russo’s rock cantata. FreeTheatre of the Columbia College Center for New Music,Lincoln Park Presbyterian Church, 600 W. Fullerton. It’sFREE. MiscellanyTonight there will be a benefit part for the Chicagocontingent of the Venceramos Brigade, the group who willbe going to Cuba to help with the sugar cane harvest.There will be movies of Cuba, entertainment, talks bypeople who have been there, and a play by some childrenfrom the Co-op School. The party, called a Sugar CaneFestival is at 4810 Ellis at 8.Monday night, the Chicago Peace Council is sponsor¬ing a Peace Party at Second City, 1616 N. Wells. It willfeature a performance of Megan Terry’s Viet Rock, thetopical political rock musical. It will be performed by agroup called the Live Minority. It will be at 7:30.romrnt'A Campus Nightclub4Natch - The4SnatchIF YOU ABANDONED the Bandersnatch long ago be¬cause of a disconcerting resemblance to your high schoolhangout, you are not alone. In fact, so responsive is themanagement to the diminished lines at dinner time (that’sright! You do not have to endure those endless announce¬ments of two digit numbers while ravenously awaitinggreasy hamburger and french fries number 173) that theyare attempting to attract a wider spectrum of studentsthrough innovations in a variety of areas.The most ambitious project is the nightclub, whichopened two Saturdays ago to an overwhelming response of200 people, according to manager Tim Cliffe. If you dropin, you can hear a jazz trio and such famous guest artistsas Speedy, of Buildings and Grounds. You have nothing tolose; there is no cover and only a 15 cents minimum, eventhough this establishment boasts waitresses (!) servingthat familiar Bandersnatch menu (now with exotic items like egg rolls and vermicelli). The nightclub, located inthe Cloister Club of Ida Noyes Hall, is open every Satur¬day night from 8 to 1 A.M. All you local talents who wantto use this as your showcase, call Michael Buckner at 493-0061.The Bandersnatch continues under its old guise, offeringfood, music and occasional movies, nightly from 5:30 to12:45. Should you care to venture beyond the limits ofMandel Hall during the noon hour, know that the Band¬ersnatch is open for lunch for the first time in its threeyear history. (12 to 2 Monday through Saturday). They arealso considering expanding the Snatch into Cloister Clubfor those who are less anamored of the jukebox.As a final note, for all those interested in underminingthe profit system, remember that the Snatch is a non¬profit student operated organization, where any profit goesto increasing the worker’s wage.\ ' Save 40 Minutes OnC Your Next FlightYOUR TYPEOF LUGGAGEThe best piece ofluggage you haveever toted anywhere... at home in theworld’s finest hotels.Careful attention to finedetail and hand craftsman¬ship. Quality zippers, locks,balanced handles. ■> A\' TUCKSEASILYUNDERYOURSEAT■ This is the CARRY-ON Execu-Flight Bag by ALEXANDERSALES that saves time for the jet flying executive. It's alwayswith you . . . compact, efficient design makes it easy to handle,yet it carries an enormous quantity of clothing and other neces¬sities. 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You will not believe howmuch you can stuff into these pockets. Extra convenience forsorting out your soiled clothes on the return trip.WHO SAYS YOU CANT TAKE IT WITH YOU?You can carry it on . .. never have to check it through . . . knowthat it's always at your side. Especially handy on a trip where youmust transfer planes. The Execu-Fli,tht Bag changes with you.Yes . . . you can take it with you . . . everywhere. HOLDS EVERYTHINGYOU NEEDSAVES CHECK IN AND CHECK OUT TIME!AN AMAZING VALUEThis Execu-Flight Bag looks like $40.00 or more . . and wellit should be. However, we bought the manufacturer s entire pro¬duction and offer it direct to you at a special low mail order price.It is a real money-saving buy.$1995*283 Saddle Brown pies $1 ei. pp. a hdlf.- I«7I Satin BlackALSO AVAILABLE NEW DELUXE MODELFor the man who wants the finest. Made of an exclusive WaterBuffalo-grain miracle vinyl material with a rich Impressive lookyou will find in no other luggage Special "stay firm" construc¬tion means your luggage will keep its shape whether empty orfull . . . now or years from now. Deluxe zippers, trim, etc Inblack only.SSSSS DELt'XE EXECU-FLIGHT BAG SI4.SS plu. St »». A hdl*./\/om The Execu-Flight Bagis America’s Best-Selling,Best-Known Carry-OnFlight BagCOMPARE IT WITH THESE OTHERS #This type: Smaller—has about half thecapacity of the Execu-Flight Bag. Noframed suit unit to carry your extrasuit, wrinkle-free. Small outside pockets—about large enough for one electricrazor. This unit costs $64.00.Same size as Execu-Flight Bag, made ofsimilar material. Butis priced more than300% higher!— 4/Grey City JeernaL/January 23, 1970 ;:.7i L_ os MAIL HANDY COUPON TOOAY ■ ■■■■■ - — ■ -| MS 869ALEXANDER SALES CORPORATIONP.O. Box 4t«3 Clinton. Iowa 52732Please send me the following Execu-Flight Bags. I understand thatif I am not completely satisfied, I may return tor a full refund.£283 Execu-Flight Bag. saddle brown 4r $19 95 4 $1 pp. & hdlg£1071 Execu-Flight Bag, satin black 'u $19.95 * $1 pp. 4 hdlg.£5359 Deluxe Execu-Flight Bag fu $24.95 f $1 pp. & hdlg.I enclose payment of $Charge to my□ BankAmericard □ American Express□ Master Charge □ Diners ClubACCT. £ EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372CARPET CITY▼ 6740 STONY ISLAND▼ 324-7998^Has what you need from a S10 ^▼used 9 x 12 Rug, to o custom^▼carpet. Specializing in RemnantsMill returns at a fraction of the 1^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities▼Additional 10% Discount with this$Ad.! FREE DELIVERY>»»♦»»»♦♦♦♦StreetCity State Zip(California Residents, please add appropriate tax )1—075—12 BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMMT STOREPI 2-47441150 E. 63rd St..1.1,1. , IV v. Vv,.'v v■m•«»•»*- i .M>iwAii'--,.T|^ ^ AAi'/ ****!****t««M'! fciMNw,.. ^n*rt*****j** ■ 30ks*: 4NWUH*iaMit«: MdlhM'Fade Out on the Trial ...Continued from Page OneChicago police. This year Hoffman says that he has nocontrol over the marshals. Both men possess enormouspersonal power, but both men are also role-players in ascenario larger than their own area of control.What do you see as the central issues in the trial?The two central issues are:• The total fraudulency of the court system that is usedto put the face of legality on political repression and• the total racism in which this court system functions.Hoffman intends to put us in jail for many years whateverthe jury decides, but whatever he does to us, he will nevermatch the “special treatment” that he reserved for BobbySeale. Bobby was chained and gagged and sentenced tofour years for trying to exercise rights “protected” by theConstitution. And Bobby Seale’s “special treatment” onlyreflected the “special treatment” which black people getin the courts of this country every day of the year.What would yea like to see happen at the end of thetrial?A week of concentrated energy and attack on Amer¬ica’s legal system from February 14th, which is National Huey Newton Day, to February 21st. We envision that thejury will be out during this week deliberating on a verdict.It is a week in which we ask this generation of youngpeople to constitute itself as a jury to judge the govern¬ment. It is a week that this generation might confront thelaw students of our age to demand that they not put theirservices towards a legal system which rounds up BlackPanthers and anti-war demonstrators instead of instruct¬ing Federal Marshals to arrest Richard Nixon for gen¬ocide. We are calling on students to go into every lawschool in this country during that week to suspend classes,stop abstract discussions of torts and property rights andbegin talking about the real wrongs perpetuated by the le¬gal and court systems which permit genocide in Asia andin the black colony of America.The people of the Movement should appoint them¬selves professors of law and go to law schools and teach— teach about courts, jails, lawyers, judges, undercoveragents, and the law as it applies to different classes andminorities.We are calling on community groups to bring theirgrievances to the campuses, and especially to the lawschools. We hope that these groups will do their utmost toconvince all students that their true calling is to serve thepeople.POTPOURRITHIS WEEK AT THE GARGWHAT DO YOU DO on a cold, boring studying night? Whygo over to the warm and friendly Blue Gargoyle. To addto their list of entertainments, they have a large supply ofboard games — what better for the bored students? Whenwas the last time you played Clue? It can even be goodtherapy to get rid of some of your capitalistic tendanciesby playing Monopoly. Otherwise, this is what is happeningthere this week:MondayThe Gay Liberation has informal discussions at noon.There is an Eucmenical Christian Council meetingat 4.At 5 there is a Chicago Women’s Liberation TrainingWorkshop to train women for speaking engagements onwomen’s liberation topics.The regular NUC meeting is at 8.PUrBCri ALL-NIGHT SHOWPflfOMUNGH (MOAT t KXiOWING LAST ,1001*1 H*UJ«I TuesdayThe Martin Alexander Group of the Association for theAdvancement of Contemporary Music has a concert at 8.WednesdayAt 7:30 there will be a folksong fest with a number offolksingers. All types of musicians should bring theirvoices and their instruments.ThursdayGay Liberation has informal discussion at lunchtime.The poetry group which reads and discusses their ownpoetry meets at 8.Jan 23Paul NewmanTORN CURTAINJan 30Gregory PockTO KIU AMOCKINGRIRD Jan 24Burt LancasterTHE SWIMMERJan 31IFFeb 6Clint EastwoodFISTFUL Of DOUARS Feb 7John CassavottosFACESFeb. 13Richard BurtonBizaboth TaylorTHE NIGHT Of TNE IGUANA Feb. 14PARANOIAFeb. 21Sandy DennisTHAT COLD DAY IN THE PARK ROCKEFELLERMEMORIALCHAPELECUMENICAL SERVICEON THE OCCASIONOFTHE WEEK OF PRAYERFOR CHRISTIAN UNITYSunday, January 25, 1970,11:00 a.m.Participants in the service will be mem¬bers of the Ecumenical Christian Councilat The University of Chicago. Followingthe service a brief Roman Catholic Masswill be celebrated in the Chancel of theChapel.THE DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC presentsTHE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSOF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORalph Shapey • Music DirectorWorks by Elliot Thorne • Lazarof • SchoenbergFRIDAY, JANUARY 23MANDEL HALL-8:30 P.M.The public is invited « Admission is without ticket and without charge. We are calling for demonstrations at courts and pris¬ons.We are calling on students to confront the professorswho have helped to produce the Mitchells, theKleindiensts, the Wilsons, the Leonards, and the other re¬actionary officials who have taken over the Department ofJustice and other enforcement agencies in the UnitedStates.The Conspiracy office can assist groups by furnishingtapes of witnesses, defendants, and other principals to thetrial. Anybody wanting these tapes or transcripts of testi¬mony should contact Mike Gold, Rm 407, Conspiracy/28East Jackson, Chicago 60604, 427-7773.To cap this week of protest, we are calling for largeindoor rallies across the country on the 21st. These rallieswill be organized by various groups, including the Yippiesand the New Mobilization, and will feature rock bands,speakers, guerilla theatre troupes, and, most importantly,the peoples’ juries which will convene to sentence the gov¬ernment and launch the 1970s.THE RENAISSANCE PLAYERSPRESENTche play opROBIN zfMARIONby Adam de la Halle-W a concert of music fy Adam and his contentpouries* FRIDAYS SATURDAYJANUARY 23 24, M CM lXXEijhtr-thirty PM Cloister Club, IdaNoyes-'Hall - i2t2 £. 59th Street EEEnEEEEHDGeneral admission-#1.50 Student- Xi.coTickets on sale at the Reynolds Clut DesloJanuary 23, 1970/Grty City Journal/5He wassoon tosecondmostpowerful $114.9}rag prlctCOMPUTE HOME SYSTEMin NaziGermany:SELECT ANY 6 TOSTART MEMBERSHIPOnly Stereo Tape Club gives youfull selection: all labels, allfull selection; all labcartists, all new releasesYOURS AS A GIFT JUSTFOR JOINING NOWStereo Tapfe Cl ub of Americon* yoor membership and minimum top* purchato,and on* a month for o yoor; tpookort oatra.PICK ONE FREENEWEST FINEST SOLID STATE AUTOMATIC 8 TRACK STEREO TAPE CARTRIDGE PLAYERSWith built-in amplifier and 2deluxe stereo speaker unitsm handsome walnut cabinets.THE PLAYER IS FREE We willbill you only special mem¬ber's price Of $24.95 forspeakers. 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IElm Presley (RCA) ( 9R C1969, Stereo Tape Club of America LSound Track (Warner I(310 -HAIR. OriginalBroadway Cast (RCA>(312 ROMEO A JULIETTE.Sound Track (Capitol)(313- MIDNIGHT COWBOY OneSound Track (United Art.stsi I 9B7301 -MY FAVORITE CHOPIN.Van Cliburn (RCA) IM7303- GERSHWIN RMAPSOOY INBLUE. Lon frst Orch (Lor ) ( 9B7304 TCHAIKOVSKY SWAN LAKEf icdler A Boston Pops (RCA; I 9B7311-SWITCHED ON RACN.(Columbia) 7 9S7313- 2001 A SPACE OOYSSIYOng Sound Track (MGM) (917]14 BERNSTEIN’S GREATESTHITS Oernstem N T Ph.l (Col ) 7 91 Heme. _ gg( _AddressCity _ . -Stitt lip.Auto mail i yearPhone -Spouse Nametank— IraackCredit Ref LeeCredit Ref LeeCharge albums above to my credit card.O BankAmencard Q Master Charge Q InterbankAcct. # Q Diners ClubMY MAIN MUSICAL INHRLST IS (check one)□ Popular □ Rock A folk Q Show * ClassicalIn addition to tho 6 cartridges I am buying now tostart my membership, I agree to purchase e cartridgea month during the coming year. (Albums you ’ll wantto buy anyway; thousands to choose from )1-232-12-!lj«|i|i It IMODERN DANCE CLASSES4:30 to 6t00Monday - SaturdayBallot, Rock & Jazz taught.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. StateStovwns BuildingRoom 1902332-9923 * Cornett Dforii! ** 16451.55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *2 Phone: FA 4-1651 ?'★★★★. Don’t miss it. I repeat, don’t miss it."New York Daily NewsCinema Theatre EveryoneEATSatGORDON’S1321 E. 57thj PIZZA j(PLATTERjPizza, Fried Chicken |Italian Foods ^Compare the Price! II1460 E. 53rd 643-2800|WE DELIVER IL- A STATION JBD HAS MOVEDFROM 1435 E. HYDE PARKTO THE FLAMINGO HOTEL'nmncuuj..THE BESTFOOD AND DRINKSIN TOWN5500 So. Shore DriveOur telephone remains thesame: BU 8-9241 or PL 2-3800INDONESIANFOOD-DRINKSTHE VOLSTEAD ACT2238 N. LINCOLN348-7228 Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHLITZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNEAST@2© 247 E. ONTARIO ST.EAST OF MICHIGANmmmAlMUFRIENDSRECORDING ARTISTVTel: 337-5864SHOWTIMES--SUN thru THURS. 8 30-11FRI and SAT 8 30-10 30-12 30OPEN FOR LUNCH 1130AM COCKTAIL HOUR 5to8PM GOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM -2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM -9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)6/Grey City Journal/January 23, 1970Salesmen — Down Home AmericaALBERT AND DAVID MAYSLES’ Salesman (currentlyplaying at the Three-Penny Cinema, 2424 North Lincoln) isan impressive film by any standards, but most of thepraise it has been receiving is rather misdirected. Sales¬man is a critique of the American bourgeoise only in theloosest sense. The four salesmen the film follows fromBoston to Chicago to Florida, and their prospective cus¬tomers cling to the very lowest reaches of the middleclass. The elaborately illustrated $50 bibles the salesmenpeddle are vulgar in a direct, unabashed, and rather ap¬pealing way. By purchasing these Bibles, the people hopeto fulfill some rather vaguely middle-class social and reli¬gious obligations. The true middle class prefers the moregenteel vulgarity of films like The Lion in Winter andbooks by people like Leon Uris and James Michener. Theconfrontations between the salesmen and their clients arereduced to one-to-one personal encounters, rather than ab¬stracted into conflicts between capitalist manipulation andpopular common sense. The Maysles’ choice of what toemphasize here is a further clue to their lack of interest inovert social criticism. Salesman functions best as a studyof the barriers people erect, as if by instinct, betweeneach other. As one might expect, the salesmen make con¬tact with their customers only on a battlefield of hostility(salesman wants to sell; customer does not want to buy).The results are both extraordinarily unpleasant and richlycomic. However, the lack of communication does not stophere. One of the salesmen calls his wife. The conversationis brief, disconnected, monosylabic. Well, yes, that is theway it often happens in real life. * By placing it on thescreen, Salesman removes the conversation one step fromreality; it tries both for a shock (that the two people haveso little to say to each other) and a shock of recognition(of how often our own conversations are like the one inthe film).As Don Pennebaker’s Monterey Pop (shown here lastweek) amply demonstrates, photographing people sayingand doing silly things is no great artistic achievement.Organizing the photographs into a consistent vision is.Salesman succeeds because it shows why the salesmen ofthe title do not succeed. Around the middle of the film, webegin to see that the focus is on one of the men, PaulBrennan, who has lost confidence in his ability to sell. TheMaysles concentrate on Brennan’s failure by the stan-dards he has set up, without attempting to question theThe University of ChicagoThe Department of SlavicLanguages and LituratureProfessor Vitaly KostomarovDirector of the RussianMethodology Center of theUniversity of MoscowSecretary-General of theInternational Association of theTeachers of RussianIN A LECTURE INTHE RUSSIAN LANGUAGE"CHANGES IN THECONTEMPORARY RUSSIANLANGUAGE'Monday, January 26 1770ifM C1ASS)CS2|THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback LinesIO^i Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks & Hardcovers1540E. 55thSt.-Ml 3-7511 • different double featuredaily• open 7:30a.m. — lateshow midnight• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 75‘little gal-lery for galsonly• Clark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly programIdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun Lifey ^ f Policy will guarantee the^W needed money for your child’sz ec^uca^on' not ca^ meRalph J. Wood, Jr., CLU Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondoys,One North laSalie St., Chic. 60602 Others by Appt.FR 2-2390 — 798 0470SUN LIFE OF CANADA standards per se. Brennan has staked all his hopes on hisability to sell himself — his collapse is not unlike that ofLoman in Death of a Salesman without the cheap senti¬mentality and maudlin melodrama of Miller’s play.Scenes of rich humor (such as Brennan asking forstreet directions and receiving a hilariously contradictoryTHE1TBBEuripides andA NEW ADAPTATION of Euripides’ Hippolytus has beenconceived and directed by T. C. (Terry Curtis) Fox, notedU.C. film critic and director, and will be presented in theReynolds Club Theatre on Thursday through Sunday eve¬nings, January 29, 30, 31, and February 1. Music for theproduction, which has incorporated a Chicago blues stylewith modern dress and sets, was composed by ClydeStats, and will be performed by Snakeskin and the PitVipers.In using the modern blues accompaniment to the clas¬sical play, Fox does not intend to modernize or “hip up”the text. “This is straight ahead Euripides,” he asserts. “Ihaven’t changed the text at all, except to simplify some ofthe language in order to make it amenable to the modernAmerican stage.”Why the Chicago blues? “The play is being performedhere and now,” explains Fox. “The music and modemdress are intended to help a modern audience relate to theclassical text. I don’t think Euripides needs reinterpreta¬tion; rather, a modern audience needs an immediate iden¬tification (the music) with the play in order to adjust tothe language and circumstances. Also, music is fun. So’sthe play.”Euripides’ well-known characters are being played byalmost equally well-known campus figures. ChristopherLyon, a University Theatre veteran after less than twoyears here, has been cast as Hippolytus, the reluctantvirgin. His mother, Phaedre (a role made famous by noneother than Melina Mercouri), will be played by Lynn Son-berg, and Aphrodite will be brought to us by Laura Selig-man. Janet Kravetz has been cast as the Nurse, AlanMinskoff as Theseus, and Leiza Zadel as Artemis. Themessenger, with his famous four-page speech, will beplayed by Jim Callahan. Gregory Ferguson has designedSHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rata* forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bod rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin roams from $14.00 dailyLake ViewRooms available for ^ ease call N.T. Norbertparties,banquets,and PL 2-1000dances for 10 - 500. 5454 South Shore OriveMonday Jan. 26thPhi Delta Theta5625 UniversityPhi Kappa Psi5555 WoodlawnTuesday Jan. 27thDelta Upsilon5714 WoodlawnPhi Gamma Delta5615 UniversityThursday Jan. 29thPsi Upsilon5639 UniversityPhi Sigma Delta5625 Woodlawn response) alternate with scenes of telling viciousness(mostly involving Raymond Martos, the most aggressiveof the salesmen). What is truly good about Salesman is itsown avoidance of any viciousness and facile social com¬ment, in opting for a true emotional experience.Charles FlynnChicago Blues“Hippolytus” rehearses in Reynolds chub theatrethe sets.Tickets for Hippolytus can be purchased at the Rey¬nolds Club Desk for $1.50. Curtain time for each perform-ance is 8:30 pm.MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.5 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 & LAUNDRYHAVE YOUDISCOVEREDTHE BOOKCENTER INHARPERCOURTIt's worth the extra effort.January 23, 1970/Grey City Journal/7PLEASE CUT OUT AND ENCLOSE WITH CONTRIBUTIONFestival of the Arts Committee1212 East 59th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637NAMEADDRESSCONTRIBUTIONJWffatWjMOiuVfe, ifN "/‘jh’JFOTA '70 is a month long festival from April 22 to May 19 devoted to the presentation anddevelopment of all aspects of the Arts. The program is administered by a combined stu¬dent-faculty-community organization based at the University of Chicago. Our goals are toimporve arts education, to bring the arts to a larger community audience, and to support andencourage the development of both present and new forms and methods of artistic endeavor.Edward Albee * The La Mama Troup • The Fine Arts Quartet • Allen Ginsburg • SunRa Jimmy Breslin • a ten day film festival • outdoor luncheon concerts • AaronCopeland reception * Putney Swope and Robert Downey • mixed media happening• art-photography workshop * Easley Blackwood * professional ballet group • CainCompany production • Leonard Cohen • Shirley Clark • chalk in • cricket match •Gala Performance • Beaux Arts Ball * plus many other events.In order to involve as many people as possible, FOTA presents all of its events but one free ofcharge. Consequently, we ask you to give us your much needed support as we set about planningFOTA '70. To date we have raised $26,500 of our projected $50,000 budget. Your financialsupport will make this the significant event of the year.ALL CONTRIBUTIONS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE AS PROVIDED BY LAW IF MADE PAYABLE TO:THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO (FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS COMMITTEE).The campaign ends on February 15Free brochures available upon request.'1•' VII BewaretheViceMenWhoComewithNightContinued from Page OneHOOKED: Head gets his kicks by smoking a "toother" and by cooking his fix of Crest. Phil Lathroptributing to the delinquency of a minor,”which didn’t quite fit, so they hit us bothwhh “possession of dangerous drugs” (111-8(]2c for our professional readers). Thenthev typed up our arrest forms which tookabout half an hour since they weren’t asgood typists as plumbers.Meantime our housemates had calledUniversity security as we were beinghauled away, and a University policemanshowed up at the station to get the storyand assure we would be bailed out if wedidn’t have the money.Booking done, we were escorted to thefingerprint room where our fingerprintswere taken four times each hand all fingersseparately and at once by a police special¬ist. On the wall above the fingerprint printcounter my constitutional rights were post¬ed in case I should get bored during the tenminute process. I could also overhear thestation officers relating the latest excitingmuggings and shootings in the big city andspeculating on what they would have doneto the mothers if they had been there.Our fingerprints done, they put us in anewly painted air-conditioned grey cell allby ourselves while they rushed our arrestrecord over to the special 24 hour bail set¬ting judge. There were some other criminaltypes down the row from us, but we weretoo busy appreciating the sink, flushtoilet,tin cup, and sheet metal shelves to sleepon, to talk to them. We meditated on theerrors of our ways for about two hours untila clanging door latch announced the returnof our jailer.Our band was set at $1000 each, the usualfor the crime, which meant we had to have$100 ourselves, the State of Illinois kindlyguaranteeing the rest for a modest fee.Good scouts both, we had prepared beforeleaving home, and had the dough, exceptmine was in National City Bank Traveller’schecks. After several minutes folding,crinkling, snapping, tasting, turning, smell¬ing, and otherwise testing the notes, thedesk sergeant called his superior and final¬ly decided to accept them since I lookedlike a good kid. Just to be sure, they tookmy picture — front and side views, glassesoff please, with a little sign giving myname and number.A quick call to University security (ourdime) and we got a lift home in time forbreakfast with nothing lost but a little sleep,and a valuable experience behind us. Lastweek our “case” came before the narcoticscourt and since the police lab report cor¬rectly showed there were no noxious agentsin my acne pills (more specialists), we gotForums DiscussPollution IssuesTwo forums on air and water pollutionwiil take place today, one in Quantrell at3:30 pm, as part of the College Forum, andthe other at Northwestern tonight at 7 pm.Speakers at the College Forum will beAbner Mikva, Congressman from this dis¬trict; Joseph Karaganis, chairman of theCampaign against Environmental Vio¬lence; and Dr. Bertram Camow, medicaldirector of the tuberculosis institute of CookCounty.Speakers at Northwestern will includeWilliam Scott, state attorney general whohas filed suits against large corporationsallegedly responsible for pollution; AdlaiStevenson III, Democratic Senatorial candi¬date; and Paul Simon, lieutenant governor.Following the teach ;out, there will be asing-out led by Tom Paxton, which willcontinue until dawn.At the College Forum, each participantwill speak for 15 minutes, after which therewill be questions from the floor. It is spon-sored by the student-faculty committees ofthe divisions of the physical and biologicalsciences in cooperation with the Collegehorum series.The Northwestern teach-out will takeplace at the Northwestern Tech auditorium,ocated on Sheridan Road at Noyes invanston. It is sponsored by Northwesterntudents for a Better Environment. off with $90 of our bail money refunded.(The remaining $10 is the State’s standardtithe.)I only regret not being offered one of theChicago police department’s famous balo¬ney sandwiches. However, the Legal Aidlawyer who kindly undertook to defend usassures us we’ll have another chance. Oncethe Chicago police are on to a house of illNo DrinkingA sight equal to the ashtrays in Cobb Hallclassrooms under “No Smoking” signs isthe austere reminder above the water foun¬tain in the Social Sciences building thatwarns “No Eating or Drinking in the Lob¬by.”CCP ConcertThe Contemporary Chamber Players(CCP) of the University will present theirfirst concert of the season at 8:30 pmtonight in Mandel Hall.The CCP, under the direction of RalphShapley, professor of music, will performSextet by Willard Elliot; seven set piecesfor 13 players by Francis Thorne; octet forwind instruments by Henri Lazarof, andchamber symphony by Arnold Schoenberg.Admission is open to the public and willbe without ticket and without charge.Coffee HouseA new coffee house, complete with awide-range menu and grass roots entertain¬ment, has opened this week at InternationalHouse, 1414 E 59 St. The “I” House base¬ment shop will offer unusual soups, amplesandwiches, and music ranging from Dylanto Gregorian chant nightly between 9 andmidnight.UWA MeetingMembers of the University Womens Asso¬ciation (UWA) will meet in Ida Noyes li¬brary at 1 p.m. Friday to prepare the UWA“manifesto.”UWA is an organization of women stu¬dents who are deeply concerned with theposition of women on this campus and isopen to both graduate and undergraduatewomen.Panther BreakfastsContributions of non-perishable food andmoney for the Black Panther party break¬fast program can be left at the First Uni-versalist Church, 910 E 83rd street between9 am and 1 pm. Checks should be madepayable to “Free Services, Incorporated,”which is the name of the non-profit corpo¬ration for the program. Checks can bemailed to the church. Contributions are tax-deductible. repute, they don’t lie down on the job. All ittakes to get a search warrant is a report bya “reliable police informant” of drug traf¬fic. Police surveillance showing severalpeople entering or leaving the house in anyfew hours (over half a dozen people live inour house) is further indication of illicitdrug traffic.Moral of the story is don’t keep yourSugar FestivalThe Venceramos Brigade, “headed forCuba with a mind to build a friendship theUS government has destroyed,” accordingto one of its members, will hold a sugarcane festival at 8 pm tonight at 4810 SouthEllis Ave.The purpose of the festival is to raisefunds for students going to Cuba to helpworkers pick sugar cane and “educatethem about the Cuban revolution.” Handi¬crafts and artwork will be on sale.Leonard Radinsky, assistant professor ofanatomy, will speak and answer questionsabout his experiences in Cuba. Two sets ofmovie slides filmed in Cuba and Hanoi willbe shown. stash in unlabeled bottles, or if you do, useAmerican Express checks. Otherwise theever-vigilant Chicago vice force may putyou on their Christmas visit list, andthere’s not a thing you can do about it. Infact you may already be on the list, sincemy housemate discovered his address bookwas missing as he was cleaning up afterthe search.In MemoriamA memorial service for Dr. Hilger PerryJenkins, professor emeritus of surgery inthe Pritzker school of medicine was heldWednesday, January 21, in Bond Chapel.Dr Jenkins, a pioneer in surgical and me¬dical cinematography, died suddenly Satur¬day night.He made more than 20 motion picturesfor teaching various phases of medicineand surgery. ''Dr Jenkins, a native of Chicago, receiveda BS degree in 1923 from the Universityand an M.D. in 1927 from Rush MedicalCollege which was then affiliated with theUniversity.He was past chairman of the committeeon medical motion pictures of the Ameri¬can College of Surgeons and had received anumber of awards for films he had made.JanuaryABOUT THE MIDWAYt 4> * .(W§Student Power: A Political StruggleBy Mitch BobkinA letter in last Friday’s Maroon fromConnie Maravell, president of student gov¬ernment in response to an editorial on theWegener committee report said “The Ma¬roon implores students to prove that theyare trustworthy. Why should students haveto prove this? Why are students beingjudged guilty by their fellow students. Apriori, there is no reason why the sameburden of proof be put on the faculty.” MissMaravell then said that students should tryto amend the report to make it more sat¬isfactory to students. Miss Maravell’s argu¬ment is indeed morally exemplary. Stu¬dents do indeed deserve more power in thisUniversity. There are too many decisionsthat are still made behind closed doors, orin committees that only have faculty mem¬bers. The trend is towards more studentinvolvement, but the change is occurringvery slowly, so slowly in fact that somestudents are becoming impatient. Yet thisimpatience has led many students, in¬cluding Miss Maravell, to take politicallynaive stands on the student power question.It is true that students should not have toprove that they are trustworthy to the fac¬ulty. This is indeed a compromising posi¬tion to put students in. But to expect thefaculty to relinquish their power to studentactivists merely because students “de¬serve” it is expecting the impossible. Bothhistory and human nature prove wrongsuch a belief.The student power movement has muchto learn from the history of many otherstruggles by minority groups to gain power.A perfect case in point is the blacks,struggle for the equality and freedom thatthey deserve in our society. While few havebeen willing to argue in recent years thatblacks do not deserve equal rights, there has still been a slow movement towardsthese goals. The cause of this tardiness ismost important. Too many segments of thesociety had too-much to lose from blackliberation for the change to happen quickly.Rather, blacks had to argue and debate theissues with those in power before mean¬ingful change was made. Some may arguethat black militancy in the form of the Pan¬thers was the real force behind govern¬mental reform; this too is a naive position.Few groups possessing the power of theUnited States government are going to al¬low themselves to be coerced into anything.Rather, to make them change their ways,they must be convinced that the changewill be profitable and necessary, with theprofitability underlined. This is where hu¬man nature comes into the picture. Humanbeings are not apt to relinquish the rightsand privileges that they hold unless theythink there may be something to gain fromit. While there may be a few philanthropicsouls who would give up their privileges onmoral grounds, most people will fight forwhat they have.The faculty of this University arepresently such a ruling group. They havemost of the decision-making power in thisUniversity and they will not be coerced bystudent militants into giving it up. Neitherwill they give up their privileges to stu¬dents who question the morality of the fac¬ulty position. Rather, they will or may giveup their rights to students who convincethem that it will be the right thing to do,both for the faculty and the students, or inother words, for the sake of the entire Uni¬versity. There are some students who havebeen doing this for a number of years, buttheir advancements are destroyed by state¬ments from other students demandingchange now, and not just some change, buta complete overhaul of the system. ChangeI Wanna Go HomeYour father is probably worrying whatyou're up to. Send him a subscription to theMaroon.iI NAMEI| ADDRESS ZIP| □ Rest of the school year subscription $6.00 I‘3/The Chicago Maroon/January 23, 1970 ANALYSISis a strange thing. A set system can onlytake a little of it‘ at a time, or the systemitself will collapse. Many faculty seem torealize this. Unfortunately, few studentsseem to.Students must also realize that the Uni¬versity is composed of many people in¬cluding the student body, faculty and ad¬ministration. These groups hold very differ¬ent political beliefs on many issues. Theeditorial that Miss Maravell referred tomade an important point. For many facul¬ty, the Wegener committee report is a radi¬cal step forward. While many studentsmight scoff at this, they must realize that itis so. It is conceivable that if the faculty ispushed too far on the Wegener report issue,they may not accept the report at all. This is not to say that the issue should not beexamined at great length. Rather, studentsmust realize that the specifics of the Wege¬ner report may be all the faculty willrelinquish at this time. If that is the casestudents must then try to advance one stepfurther in the futyre. This may seem like anever-ending cat and mouse game with thefaculty offering a little bit at a time andstudents lapping up the “token gestures” asthey have been called by some. But if thisis the way the faculty wants to give up itspower, it is quite ridiculous not to take it.After all, can students afford to look a gifthorse in the mouth?Hopefully maqy students understand thepolitical implications involved in the stu¬dent power movement. Morals are a nicething, but no struggle has ever been won onmoral grounds. Politics may be dirty andcompromising, but politics is the battlefieldthat the student power movement will bewon on and until students realize that, theyare engaged in a hopeless situation.Mitch Bobkin, ’72, is the Maroon’s man¬aging editor.Hold upyour local gasstation.It you’ve got n hit of larceny ihyour heart,you’ll love theRenault 10.You see, it yets JS miles to thegallon.And as far as yas stations areconcerned, that’s hiyhway robbery.So don’t be text harsh when thehoys at your local yas station acta little yrumpy.In fact.you can soften the blowJust tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suyyest they yet one lorthemselves.Alter all, they might have a bitot larceny in|their heartstix>.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 RUSTIC CONTINENTALSTUDIOPRESENTSDESIGN MOIA BOUTIQUEiimiiinfill or>oD aV.-r noiliFeaturing Exclusive ImportsDirect From IndiaCARVEDWOOD,POUSHEDBRASS,SILKSunusual items, many one of akind1375- 75 Vi E. 53rd St.288-7080 NEEL VSSTANDARDSERVICETo Our CustomersI have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we rancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and better service.Please join us at our new location.0600 So Stonv IslandPhone Bl 8-964.r)Thank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard ServiceSON OF UGLY BOXThe MusicalSocietypresentsAn Evening of Baroque MusicSaturday, Jan 24, at 8:30 PMMandel Hal Free AdmissionEurope-*178 R.T.U.C. Charter Flights3598,3272TLlhamwFashions to wake vonf eel as beautif ul as van 'lllook Finely tailoredoriginals of domestnand imported fabricsMod. Fd wardian.conventional andcasual styles pinsdressv things fromSI2.W to SI00.00 inmost sizes. Stop inand hro wse a while ) onare welcome1HoursMon.-Wed10.00 to 7:30Thurs.-Sat.10:00 to 9 3014F..3 Fast Hyde Park,City Harrasses Rainbow Coalition ProgramsContinued from Page Sixnel, and from the Young Patriots Organiza¬tion itself, thirty patients were seen andgiven prompt, courteous care. Completephysical examinations, complete bloodcounts and urine tests, immunizations,comprehensive records, and dental scree,n-ing were done. For those people whoseneeds required a specialist, Weiss Me¬morial Hospital gave the care using theYoung Patriot Organization records and notcharging the patients. Medications werefree also. Since November over 200 patientshave been served; in addition to the once aweek Saturday service, home visits for fol¬low up are done by the Young Patriots Or¬ganization so that the people have advo¬cates specifically assigned to help them re¬solve their medical need. However, cur¬rently the medical service is in great dan¬ger of being disrupted by the police depart¬ment. To clarify this charge, the followingevents taken from a Young Patriots Orga¬nization press release of December 31 arerecounted: »November 17. An article favorable to thenew service was printed by a local news¬paper. Dr Bruce Douglas, then dental coor¬dinator for the service was pictured andidentified. The next Monday Dr Douglaswas visited at his University of Illinois of¬fices by plainclothes policemen possiblyfrom either the Gang Intelligence Unit orthe so called Red Squad. They advised himto stop working with the Patriots, tellinghim that it would not be wise for him to continue the work or to associate with theYoung Patriots. Dr Douglas has since leftthe center.November 22: An elderly man receivedcare at the center for a seriously infectedknife wound said to have been inflicted bythe police. After being seen, he was ar¬rested, as he was leaving, thrown in jail,and denied his right to his medication andclean bandages. The gentleman wishes toremain anonymous, but the next week hecame to the center with two friends also inneed of care.November 25: While leafleting the com¬munity two Patriots were told by the policeto stop or face arrest.December 4: This was the evening follow¬ing the assassination of Chairman FredHampton of the Black Panther Party. As„an orderly private medical meeting wasbeing held in a private apartment, six po¬licemen, only two of whom were in uniformor had any visible identifying information,came to the front door. They first de¬manded that one Patriot leave the room,then, <ienied entrance, they stated thatthere had been a complaint from anotherresident in the building reporting a dis¬orderly affair going on. The lawyer presentassured them that no problem of that na¬ture existed and asked for their searchwarrant. The policemen stated that nonewas needed, that there was a suspiciousodor in the hallway, that the lawyer was apseudo-intellectual, that they would breakthe door down if necessary to gain admis-Effects of Pills Create Fears,Research Looks for AnswersContinued from Page ThreeDavid Linban, 70, saw the current con¬troversy of the Pill’s physical effects asmasking deeper social problem. “Ithink,” he SMfl, “fhat the fSoputation prob¬lem is much more pressing than the con¬troversy over the Pill. The controversy isan unconscious, if not conscious, anti-sexmovement of the government. It’s inter¬esting that these reports have been arounda couple of years and that they are justcoming out now. The consequences of tak¬ing the Pill off the market are this ex¬tremely horrible population problem aswell as public mores. Too little thought isexpended on these problems.”Others expressed a similar concern, cor¬relating the Pill and population control.Congressman Mikva said if the Pill werebanned, “we would have to start thinking oflegalized abortion and social and welfareprograms.” Another woman interviewed inthe gynecology waiting room expressed thebelief that “the Pill is the only way of regu¬lating population. We have to limit thenumber of people or else we can’t survive.”Dr Burks said it was important to studythe effects of the Pill, but that the “risks ofthe Pill were less than the risks of preg¬nancy.” Dr Segal had voiced a similaropinion. “The benefits of the Pill far out¬weigh the risks. Society would be at a losswithout a good contraceptive like the Pill.”For many people, however, the most im¬ mediate concern over the Pill was the pos¬sibility that their health might be endan¬gered. People do seem visibly worriedabout the hormone level of the Pill, anddoctors themsfelves do not know what thesafe level is.“I think that it is going to be figured outsoon — from the hormone point of view,”said a student optimistically. “I’m worriednow about the effects of the hormones be¬cause I don’t know the effects.”A young mother said, “I took the Pill fora while, and now I’m off — I know in somewomen, and in myself, that the Pill causedpsychological as well as physical problems.Prescribing the Pill is something a doctormust feel strongly about. There should beregulation on the amount taken, too. If theycut down on the level of hormones in thePill, it would probably be all right.”Another woman who had just had herthird child said, “I don’t intend to haveanymore children, but I’m off the Pill now.I used it for five years and can’t see usingit for the rest of my life.”Will more women turn to alternativemeasures because of the Pill’s reported ef¬fects, or will it continue to be a primarymethod of birth control?A University student seemed to providethe answer, “The controversy seems to bea repeat of some experiments done acouple of years ago. It doesn’t effect me.I’ll continue taking the Pill.”THE PIU: On* * day k**ps th* doctor away.avM a \\ViV*v sion. Granted admission, they then saw 15medical people, many still in their whiteuniforms. The officers left rather bewil¬dered, shouting “All power to the Pigs.”December 20: An unmarked squad carparked in front of the medical service formost of the day, taking pictures of some ofthe people. That same Saturday they spoketo the 80 year old woman who manages thebuilding at 1140 Sunnyside, asking her whorented the apartment and who was the own¬er.December 22: These same plainclothes-men, identified as part of the Gang In¬telligence Unit, spoke with the owner of thebuilding, Alfonse Spanitz. Following thatvisit Spanitz promptly demanded that themedical service be removed immediatelyfrom his property.December 28: While the Patriots weremoving the equipment from the apartment,an unmarked car circled them, taking pic¬tures. Upon questioning, the officers re¬fused to identify themselves or their de¬partment.January 10: The service was beinghoused in the Young Patriots Organizationoffice until a permanent setting could befound. Without announcement six police¬men in uniform came as an escort for in¬spectors from the building department andthe Board of Health. These people camewithout giving prior notice.Clearly the Young Patriots Organizationis serious about continuing the medical ser¬vice and making it the kind of communityservice that will be under the control of thepeople. However, the center may well col¬lapse unless more people support them im¬mediately. Current problems include diffi¬culty in finding a suitable office since realestate managers are unwilling to rent, theongoing need for equipment needed forpatient care, and the obvious presence ofpolice department harassment.The Young Lords Organization also hasgiven priority to meeting the health careneeds of the people in their community. InNew York their chapter has a ten point pro¬gram on relevant health issues; it calls fortotal self determination and control of allhealth services operating in the Puerto Ri¬can area of that city, for increased in¬volvement of community people as employ¬ees and administrators in those facilities,leading to community control, and for a de¬centralization of health care in their neigh¬borhoods with block health officers anddoor to door preventive services, empha¬sizing environment, sanitation, a.nd nutri¬tion. Senabla espanol?In Chicago, the Young Lords Organiza¬tion is actively involved with the creation ofa health center specifically to handle ma¬ternal-child health problems. They have al¬ready obtained free dental care, opthamolo-gy consultations for children with visionproblems, and are negotiating with sur¬rounding hospitals for referral privilegesfor their patients. Some gang membersfrom groups friendly with the Young Lordsare now stationed at local emergencyrooms to help Spanish speaking people ob¬tain care when presented with a problem.The emergency rooms were selected be¬cause of their reputation for having the re¬ceptionists turn away people who could nottell their problem in English.Chicago Young Lords Organization healthcenter plans to open next month in an areachurch. One of the first things planned willbe to create a way to handle nutritional andparasitic problems inflicting the peoplewhich no public health facility in this citycan properly diagnose and treat. In thisway the Young Lords Organization hopesreally to meet the special health needs ofthe people in a way no other agency orgroup has been sensitive enough orequipped to do.In summary, it is apparent that all threeorganizations are trying to give care topeople who have never before received any¬thing approaching competent medical man¬agement. None of these efforts is going tosurvive without continued and emphaticsupport from both their own and outsidecommunities. Most every kind of help isnecessary: medications, equipment, officesupplies, linen, cabinets, furniture, labora¬tory equipment, and personnel. A truestruggle is going to have to be sustained inorder to overcome the proven efforts of thepolice and other city agencies to thwartthese centers.Contributions for the three health pro¬grams may be sent to the Student HealthOrganization of Chicago, Faculty ExchangeBox 77, 970 E 58 St, Chicago 60637.Lynnae King is a registered nurse anda member of the Student Health Organiza-of Chicago.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevent to the University com¬munity. The opinions of the guest colum¬nists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit¬ting columns should contact the editor.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, January 23LECTURE: Department of Microbiology, Soostang Kang,Research Associate, Dept, of Microbiology. "Tempera¬ture Sensative Ribosomal Mutants of E. coli K 12;Isolation and Protein Synthesis." Ricketts North,Room 1, 4 pm.TRACK: DePaul and McMaster, Fieldhouse, 8 pm.FLICK: Monsieur Verdoux, Charles Cheplin, Cobb Hall,7:15 and 9:30 pm.DANCE: Watermelon Band, Eleanor Club, 1442 E 59thSt., 9-1, 50 c.BASKETBALL: Frosh-Soph vs. Niles, Field House, 8pm.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS OF THE UNI¬VERSITY OF CHICAGO: Ralph Shapey, Musical Di¬rector, Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.RENAISSANCE PLAYERS: Robin and Marlon, AnnetteFern, Director, Ida Noyes, Cloister Club, 8:30 pmFLICK: The Shop on Main Street, Judd 126, 3:30, 6:30pm. Admission free.DISCUSSION: "The Chinese Cultural Revolution: AnEyewitness Report." Resource: Mr and Mrs NealeHunter, from Australia, teachers In the Foreign Lan¬guage Institute in Shanghai during the cultural revolu¬tion (1965-67), and authors of China Observed andShanghai Journal, Crossroads Student Center, 5621Blackstone, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: Advanced, Ida Noyes, 25 cents, 8 pm.Saturday, January 24BASKETBALL: Frosh-Soph vs. Amundsen, Field House,1:30 pm.GYMNASTICS: Wisconsin StateOshkosh, Bartlett Gym,2 pm.TRACK: Sixteenth Annual Chicagoland Open, FieldHouse, 6 Dm.RENAISSANCE PLAYERS: Robin and Marion, IdaNoyes, Cloister Club, 8:30 pm.MUSICAL SOCIETY CONCERT: Music by Bach, Haydn,Handel, Teleman, Rameau, and Vivaldi, Mandel Hallfree, 8:30 pm.FLICK: The Big Sleep, Bogatt, Bacall, Cobb Halt 75cents, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.Sunday, January 25RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Special Ecumenical Service,The Reverend E. Spencer Parsons, Dean of the Chapel,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 am.SEMINAR: Students for Israel, "Israel and You." HlllelHouse, 2 pm.FLICK: America, America, Cobb Hall. 7:00 and 9 pm. INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hall, 8pm.FLICK: A New Wind, produced and directed by GeorgeC Stoney, a 30rminute cx>lor documentary about theBaha'i world community. Talk and discussion by ProfDaniel Jordan, Director or Research of the FederalEducational Program, University of Massachusetts atAmherst, Sponsored by Baha'i Fellowship, Kent 107, 3pm.Monday, January 26BOARD MEETING: Division of Social Sciences, SocialScience 122, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Department of Sociology, Rita James Sim¬on. "Assassinations as a Political Process." Social Sci¬ences 305, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Department of Chemistry, S. H. Bauer, De¬partment of Chemistry, Cornell University. TentativeTitle; "Electron Diffraction," Kent 103, 4 pm.LECTURE: Divinity School, Martin Marty, Professor ofChurch History, "An Age of Visible Transition," SocialSciences 122, 4 pm.FIRESIDE: Questions, answers, informal discussionsabout spiritual and social revolution founded byBaha'u'llah: Baha'i Fellowship, Ida Noues, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: The Department of Slavic Languages andLiterature p.esents Professor Vitaly Kosomaeov, Dire¬ctor of the Russian Methodology Center of the Univer¬sity of Moscow in a lecture in the Russian Language,"Changes in The Contemporary Russian Language,"Classics 21, 4 pm.COFFEE HOUR: Students for Capitalism and Freedom,Soc. Scl. Lounge, 4:30 pm.CONFERENCE: American Newspaper Publishers Asso¬ciation, In service education conference for newspaperpublishers. Sponsored by the American NewspaperPublishers Association and the University of ChicagoIndustrial Relations Center. Open to publishers only.Ext. 3189.SQUARE DANCING: Ida Noyes, 25 cents, 8 pm.Tuesday, January 27CONCERT: "An Evening of Gilbert and Sullivan" (Vic¬torian Festival), a A concert performance of "Trial byJury" and selected pieces from later operas. The Gil¬bert and Sullivan Opera Company (directed by RolandBailey) and Jane Stedman, author. Cloisters Club, IdaNo^es, 8 pm.LECTURE: De.. rtment of Education, John F C Har¬rison, Departmc.it of History, University of Wise on son,"Early Victorian Socialism: or, the Owen It as' Questfor a new Moral World." Illustrated lecture, Judd 126,FLICK*: The Exile. Max Ophuls, Cobb Hell, • pm., J*ou*ry J23, J97J)/Jh*. Ghfct99.MPFP9f*i?,,.CKO*.' jX vVSurwi'iMcMsiCV xvthW!;'■| i 1 in rr* :"r ■ ' ; f u * * ’ ■ ~ vvt -r. -> ivri-rrn-r trrr 'rmitrin - ; v i i 11 i i i 11 r r « i i i i tLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONj "Serious Thing"I hope Mr O’Connell didn’t overlook thefact that 42 people were expelled from theUniversity last year, not to mention thisyear’s eleven suspensions; these were quiteserious too, perhaps even more so, than oneperson’s bad trip.Cassie Schwartz, ’70■ To Abort or NotIf we believe in God, we believe that wehave a divine character — our daily actionsand secular lives are meaningful only tothe extent that they are directed towardcarrying out the will of God and thus com¬ing closer to Him. And if we believe in God,we must accept “divine Providence” — ac¬cept that God alters the course of our lives,totally beyond our control. Then if Godgives some of us very heavy burdens —such as pregnancy arising from rape — Hedoes not give us exception from his lawagainst murder, but He expects us to usethis burden to bring ourselves closer toHim by obeying his laws even when doing so brings severe pain. We know from manycitations of the Bible that God well re¬wards, even during their lifetimes, peoplewho faithfully carry out His will; the livesof those who are temporarily severely bur¬dened will not be unbearable.Some claim that the freshly fertilizedovum is not a human being. We all knowthat this egg begins to take on visible hu¬man characteristi-s only gradually. We areno more accurate in pinning down the mo¬ment in which God puts a soul into thisindividual than at determining when theembryo or fetus begins to look human. Wecannot destroy this fetus on an assumptionthat it does not have a soul.And what of the women with unwantedpregnancies? Yes, they very definitely needhelp. But they do not need to be accom¬plices in murder to add to their alreadyheavy burdens. When a woman wants anabortion “to save her marriage,” take note— that women never had a “marriage,”and killing a child isn’t going to save any¬thing; this woman — and her husband —need really deep, sincere, and prolongedcounseling to change their attitudes toward the meaning of life. We must not be shallowand avoid all the time and effort of deepcounseling by simply arranging this wom¬an’s abortion and sending her on her way,leaving all her real problems to continueeating her away.Daniel E B FaryPharmacologyCO UW LetterIn reference to my letter to the editorwhich appeared In the January 9 issue ofThe Maroon, I wish to make clear that thestudent subcommittee of the committee onUniversity Women (COUW) did not partici¬pate in or know about COUW’s consid¬erations and decisions regarding the JudyLong Laws case as reported in that letter(i.e., that COUW found that the normalprocedures regarding reappointments hadbeen followed by the Business School inMrs Law’s case; and that because COUWis not itself a hearing committee, it hasnot investigated further into the case.)Bernice Neugarten, ChairmanCommittee on University Women GE and StudentsMany students at the University of Chi¬cago support the General Electric (GE)workers in their strike against GE. Un¬fortunately, some don’t understand that theunions must be strong and unified in astrike; any breach of unity can be exploitedby the monster corporation to break thestrike, and break the union.Consequently, the youth committee tosupport the GE workers is working with thestrikers in their unions. The money it raisesgoes to the unions’ strike fund. Any “com¬mittee for solidarity with GE workers”which bypasses the unions, even denouncesthe union leadership, while giving food tostrikers, only serves to divide the workers,and weaken the strike.Those who feel the union leadership iscorrupt only handicap the workers by at¬tacking the union leadership during thestrike. After the strike is over, workers canreplace their leadership, if they think it in¬adequate. The workers don’t need studentsto tell them what to do.David Bensman 70Young People's Socialist LeagueWARNINGBEFORE BUYING A GUITAR ORAMPLIFIER, COME TO THE WORLD’SLARGEST GUITAR STORE.SPANISH IMPORTSCHICAGO GUITAR GALLERY216 SO. WABASH AVE. (DOWNTOWN)WE BUY, REPAIR, TRADE, & SELLHA 7-8434 HA 7-0423UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARISIproprietor DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644WALLER GALLERYis Alive and WellTo Come:Posters GaloreIF 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.10/The CJycMil^fyon/Janujry 23,Vijr * * »i»' TheOctoputerRCAs many-tentacled computer does time sharing plus regular computing.It’s a generation ahead of its major competitor.Once there were only monstercomputers that did big batchjobs like payrolls.Then came the whirlingdervishes of time sharing thatlet a lot of people work at once.Now there’s a new kind ofcreature that does time sharingand batch work together. Solots of people can use it —efficiently.It’s the Spectra 70/46.TheOctoputer.There’s nothingelse quite like it on earthor under the sea.The Octoputer’s arms are longand strong. It sits in themiddle of your company andreaches helping hands out inall directions. Suddenly, yourcompany works harder. Moreof your people use the com¬puter-solving more problems,finding more facts, writingmore programs.And it does your big batchjobs in its spare time.The Octoputer does a realarmload of work for a hand¬ful of change. Check thebills from your time¬sharing services. See if it’s not more efficient todo the same work on your ownOctoputer. And get batchprocessing, too. Onemore thing.The Octo¬puter concentrateson remote computingbecause that’s whatyou’re going to need—that’s where theindustry is going.We got there first because communications is whatRCA is famous for. It’ll keep usahead of our competition.It can keep you aheadof yours. Step up to theOctoputer and shakehands hands handshands hands hands...For career information visit your College Placement Office.i m , ,,,,»■ 4 /• 41 a f s i * fj......,Avii.....,,,,,.(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)hard hats is requiredSCENESTDIMITE- Environmental Teachoot-NORTHWESTERN-2145 Stendan Rd.,i-ALL NITE. Hear P. Ehrlich.WATERMELON BAND tonight 9-1Eleanor Club 1442 E 59th StreetID's/50cGRAD STUDENTS INT|^^ISTE^,N WORK IN ISRAEL! meet IsraeliL American grad students who■ have done grad work in Israel atI '-Israel & You"-representativeS fromSoc Sci hum medicine etc Sun Jan25.Friedrich Schiller and the FoliesBergere? Anything can happen inDON CARLOS.GO FOLK YOURSELF Jan 30 31Feb 1 Luther Allison Bill MonroeBukka White Cajuns and more—very satisfyingAMERICA, AMERICA—Elia Kazan'sautobiographical ego trip is thisSunday night in Cobb Hall, 7 and9 pm. Contemporary EuropeanFilms.Dr Chappel from Drug Rehabilita¬tion Center and an expatient discussdrug addiction Th 1/29 7:30 BillingsMl37 PREMED Club.Rollin' . WATERMELONI Enjoy the last decadent days ofold Europe, before the Revolution.Ext 3598, 3272.Come to Undergrad Pol Sci AssocMeeting 26 Jan 4 PM in Cobb 119Discuss Vital Issues.BIG SLEEP with Bogart, Bacall.Sat 7:15, 9:15 Cobb 75c.Is the wind chill factor in yourapartment -20 degrees F. Organ¬ize a tenant union.The Most exciting Production ofGreek Tragedy you have SeenHIPPOLYTUS, Jan 29 to Feb 1.Martin Marty on the Victorian Age,Mon, Jan 26, Soc Sci 122, 4:00.Special student discount on 7 re¬cital Beethoven series. 10 dollars—FI 6-8300.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)About 10 o'clock when your roomstarts really getting to you, come tothe BanderSnatch.ISRAEL & YOU SEMINAR:Information about undergrad & gradstudies, summer & fall yr pro¬grams, job opportunities, & per¬manent settlement SUN, JAN 25,205PM at Hillel House 5715 S Wood-lawn.Enjoy the Blue Gargoyle This Week¬end. FoodMusicPeople.Blue Gargoyle 12-12 Food MusicPeople Hurrah!THE MUSICAL SOCIETY PRE¬SENTS A CONCERT OF BAROQUEMUSIC, SAT JAN 24, 8:30 PM,Mandel Hall Admission FREE.ISRAELISREAL: discoverthe new reality it can offer you.Israel & You Seminar Jan25.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 SchoolISRAEL & YOU SEMINAR:information about undergrad & gradstudies, summer & fall yr pro-9rams, job opportunities, & per-manent settlement SUN, JAN 25,J05PM at Hillel House 5715 S. Wood-lawn.COME TO THE BLUE GARGOYLE.WHATEVER YOUR CAUSE,* A Lost Cause Without Popula¬tion Control.I hrl0^ K[l0ck ~ Wh0's there — awh?? Study abroad; learnIsraoi ,und«r®rad 4 9rad studiesIsrael 8, y00 Seminar, Jan 25. A ACM Tuesday Gargoyle MartinAlexander GroupBaha'u'llah Wrote that Baha'i's''need no weapons of Destruction,inasmuch as they have girdedthemselves to reconstruct theworld." UC Baha'i Fellowshipmeets Monday eves., 7:30 in IdaNoyes library. Join us. ,"China: Eyewitness Report of Cul¬tural Revolution" Tonite 8 PMCrossroads, 5621 Blackstone.Soc Sci Lounge 430 Monday SCAFCoffee Hour. Come on & Meet us.Hung up in the closet? Fed upwith fronting? Do something aboutit! GAY LIBERATION Now! Lunchat Blue Gargoyle Mon 8, Thurs;Meetings Sun 11 am. Males & fe¬males. Call 955-7433 for details.Does the snow drift across yourdesk? Organize a tenant union andget that hole In the wall fixed.BLUE GRASSArt Crowder and the TennesseeRailsplitters In Concert Sun. Jan25th 8:00PM Mandel Hall.FOR SALEPermanent Plastic Laminating Pro¬cess. Preserves, Beautifies, mostvaluable possessions. Diplomas, Cer¬tificates, Photos, etc. Write freecatalog. Stewarts 6520 N. Hoyne,Chicago, III. 60645.The Perfect Summer. Yourself andtwo UC Charter Flight Tickets toEurope. Ext 3598 or 3272.For SaleRambler Amer 640 1964 ConvertibleOver Drive AM/FM WW 43000 mi8395 E Kyriakopoulos Ml 3-0800,x8648 or FA 4-6200.Beethoven recital series StudentDiscount. 7 recitals: $10 FI 6-8300.1962 Mercedes'Benz, runs well andeconomically. Excellent heater, sup¬er-good am-fm radio $650 call weeknights 955-5064.Port Magnavox Cassette Recorder,AC adapter 12 tapes $55 288-9659.BASS AMP—cheap $200-EXC condtwo 15" speakers—Dave Bu8-9870.Old Table, Six Newly Uphol HighBack Chairs $175 — Will Discuss324-3205 After 6, x3251 Days .'59 VW Sedan, high mileage butrecent engine overhaul, new brakesand drums, and new clutch andclutch assembly, clean interior,runs perfect, radio, no-rot, body ingood shape, everything works, per¬fect student transportation . . .promises many years of life . . .made when Volkswagens were stillas Hitler designed them. $425. Joelat ext. 3263 or 944-4798 between 6 &9 P.M.Due to fantastic response we areagain ofering to U. of C. studentsthe chance to sign-up for Bullwinkteand/or Dudley Dooright watches.When inflation strikes it's a wiseman who keeps his money in com¬modities. 17 jewel, resistant to mosteverything, fully illustrated . . .$25. Apply at Maroon BusinessOffice.64 VW Sunroof, R.H., 2 New tires& old engine. $600. 9557430.MOVING SALEHIFI's, TV's, Components, PricesSubject to Negotiation:AR Turntables $45.00Scott Turntables $35.00Craig Recorders $30.00Sony Recorders $40.00$150,000,000 inventory Slashed ToMove. SCHWARTZ BROS. HI-FI.8533 S. Cottage Grove. TR4-4131.FREEI Small multi-colored fernCAT! beautiful call 4934)143.Fur Coats-1 Muskrat, 1 Seal Type.Good Cond. Warm. Bargains. 721-3283.SPACEcl055 _ and PhantasmagoricI Ught Show Coming to BLUE GAR¬GOYLE next Friday.Brei is Alive and Well andFi* 2 ."L Paris ~ Mandel, MonEeb 2 8:00 l.so with ID.I union T lhe heat with a tenantLack of heat, poo,, buildingconditions, high rents and bad leas-uni2>U8ht wi,h a tenantrTUPi SS,1, Tenant Union ProjectPC Student Govern-aJtf <; da* 3^®°°' *m* between 1j2atin TUP can provide organ-nai skill, legal aid and advice. Is it rural New Hampshire? Orwoodsy Wisconsin? Where else canyou find trees outside your win¬dow. HYDE PARK at 54th andWoodlawn. Besides that it has 4'hrooms. All for $l50/mo. Its availableFeb. 1. To quote Jean-Jacques Rous¬seau, Henry Thoreau, and DanielBoone: "Just give me some trees."Call 955-2998 or 427-7773 or 363-1352and leave message for Penny.Beautiful spacious 5 and 6 rmapts at 71st & Jeffery for informa¬tion call - Albert H. Johnson RealtyCo., 732 East 75th Street - HU 3-1470. Want to rent House for Next YearCall P. Kranz NO 7-4700, X8165.4 rm apt to sublet 57th & Cottage$130 643-9834 after 6.Room in private home $40 weekMU4-1092 after 5 pm 53+Dorch.Fern roomate large apt in easthyde park. Own room 4- bath. 955-0459 or 955-2270.Roommate wtd pref fern own roomcheap-close-friendly 288-3356.ROOMMATE: avail. Immed. $55/moown rm. New Kitch. Dshwshr AirCond. Call Eves 955-6031.Fern roomate wtd Own Room $65w/util. 1400 E 57 324-6786.Rolleicord Camera w/accessories,cheap excellent shape. Call 324-3005.Three persons want fourth to sharespacious HOUSE. Own room. $40 permonth. 5422 Dorchester, 288-4192.4 rm apt 120/mo. Call 955-4845 at 5.Student to Live in Spacious RoomWith Own Bath in Lovely KenwoodHome in Exchange For 15 Hours/Wk Babysitting with 3Vz Year old.Call 624-8363.Mature, Responsible male to sharefine E H. Pk. apt. 875/mo incl util.288-1297 after 5 PM.Gay Student wanted to share 5 rmApt (53rd & Harper) with M & f.Own rm. Immediate occupancy.$52 and utils. 955-7433.DRUNKEN DEBAUCHERYRush Party Alpha Delta Phi Featur¬ing the United Nations 9 Piece Rock-Blues Band Sat Jan 24 9:00-1:00.5747 S. Univ. Ave.WANTEDNEEDED: 16mm PORNOGRAPHICFilms for forthcomig Libertime ArtsConference If you own, have accessto, or know where available pleasecontact Vance Archer BU 8-9019.Wanted: table chairs 955-8775.Heated Garage Wanted for a FewHours Work Call Walter 684-1802.PHENOMENAEs ist ein Vogel ein Flugzeug-nein! Es ist Ubermensch!!! DONCARLOS.PEOPLE FOR SALECello Lessons, Former Eastman Stu¬dent — Ron Wilson 536-3521."May we do your typing? . .363-1104.The typist at 363-1104 may wellgive you three errors per page,each error with a box around it.Let the buyer beware!Bass and accoustic guitarist search¬ing for group. Has own equipment.Union. Call Bill, Ml 34)641.Will do typing — CO 4-1813.Seminary Wife will BABYSIT Week¬days in her S. Woodlawn home.363-6384.Typing, Dissertations, Term Papers,etc. Ml 3-0800, X4771 or 4772 orafter 6, 873-4111.Fast, Accurate ad Complete Re¬searching. 525-2848.PEOPLE WANTEDWanted mature student to takeyoung boy to and from Loop doc¬tors appt. late afternoons 4 timesa week. Good salary. HY 3-9656WANTED: Paid medical examinersfor insurance exams. Resident typedoctors preferred. Full professionalfees paid by nationally known in¬surance firm. Ralph J. Wood. FR 2-2390.Reps needs for nat. student maga¬zine. Write Student West 2561 N.Clark, Chicago 60614.Subject wanted, to be interviewedin connection with a graduate class'attempt to understand personality.Anonymity insured. Information ob¬tained can be made available tosubject, if desired. Male or female,student or nonstudent. About 10-20hours of work at very generous pay($5-$10/hr). Call Paul Costa, x4711or 285-2689.WOODY ALLENTAKE THE MONEY AND RUNRICHARD BURTON 4STAIRCASE REX HARRISONHyde Park Theater53rd & LAKE PARK Young mothers with 6-18/monthold babies. Earn $5 for your opin¬ions in connection with a consumerresearch project on baby food. Notaste testing necessary. Call 329-0500, between 9 and 5:30 PM tosee If you qualify.Diplomacy players sought, refer¬ences desirable — 493-2299.DRIVER-part time evenings. Inde¬pendent contractor has immediateopening for part time driver 3 or4 nights a week from 9 PM-1 AMin university area. Will drive stationwagon delivering passengers. Start¬ing rate $2.75 per hour. Must bereliable. Call Mr. Marfas at 487-5600days or 264-8005 eves.Weekend Daytime Babysitter helpneeded. Rates Negotiable. CallMarvin Zonis ext 4548.Blue Gargoyle desperately needspeople to work lunch. Apply inperson.Experienced in or Willing to LearnArt of Indian Cooking For Restau¬rant in HP Call 978-1793 or 642-1199.Volunteer needed—Prefer womanstudent of like minded person,needed to help organize an urbanaction library in Lawndale area.Leo King 826-8180. Lawndale Peoples'Planning & Action Conference.Audio Asst, for campus tapingsevengs 10-20 hrs/wk, $2.50/hr Hi-fior home tape exp. needed. Officeof Radio & TV, X4371.A Faculty Family Needs a girlto live in and help care for twodaughters. Hours and rates flexible.Call Marvin Zonis, Ext. 4548.Do You Want to Earn $15. HelpMe Move Sat Jan 31. 3-4 HoursSat Afternoon. Nothing Really Heavyto Lift. Call 684-6361.SUPPORT A LEGALINJUNCTION TO STOPALL INDUCTIONSPresentation of proof in FederalCourt that the draft lottery wasbiased and held under false pre¬tenses has been accepted and fullhearings scheduled. All inductionswould be stopped until the hearingswere complete and either a newlottery held or new laws passed.Info on representatives for Chicagoarea and contributions for courtcost and witness expenses can beobtained c/o Jim Rissman 432-8696after 10:00 PM. Representatives forU. of C. will be in Mandel HallLobby starting Friday afternoon.LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA¬TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALLMOTHER RUSH PARTYAlpha Delta Phi Sat Jan 24 9:00-1:00 FEATURING THE UNITEDNATIONS 9 PIECE BLUES BAND5747 S UNIV AVE.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: Man's Ring Gold With SquareOnyx Setting Reward BU 8-5118.Found Small Brown Fern Dog. CallMU 4-2130.RIDESLeaving for Tallahassee Fla. endof Jan. riders wanted. Contact PeterKranz NO 7-4700, x8165.THIS SUMMERStudy and Travel in ISRAEL.ILLINOIS STATE UNIVERSITYSUMMER INSTITUTE IN ISRAEL.Study at the Hebrew University ofJerusalem and the University Col¬lege of Haifa.Seminar on "The Modern MiddleEast" carries six semester hoursof graduate or undergraduate credit.Tours to all major geographicalareas and points of interest.Total cost of $960.00 includingtransportation, lodging, meals, tours,special lectures and tuition.For information and applicationswrite:Kenneth C. Kennard, Chairman De¬partment of Philosophy Director,Summer Institute in IsraelIllinois State UniversityNormal, Illinois 61761THE POPULATION BOMBIS EVERYONE'S BABYLONELY PEOPLEThis Univ. is Great For Life of theMind But Not for Social Life. IfYou Are Lonely Like Me, PleaseWrite to Maroon and Suggest HowOpportunities For Meeting PeopleOn This Campus Can Be Improved.PERSONALS Dont miss it! Jacques Brel leavesChicago Feb 9. See it on campusFeb 2.You wont snooze at the BIG SLEEP.Bogart, Bacall Sat 7:15, 9:15 Cobb75c.STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS: COP¬IES of Proposed Amendment toStudent Code are Available in theStudent Activities Office.Hog scalding on appointment only.Want to make your roommatesSiberian husky uncomfortable? Getthe heat turned on with a tenantunion.Again Mama! I got dem ol' whoop-ee-shit'n blues . . .All right all you U of C boys andgirls that have been bitching aboutthe lack of anything to do allyear — there are five (count 'em)five parties with everything youcould possible want this Fridayand Saturday. All you have to be togo to them is a U of C Student.So get out and go already! Andwhile you're at it there is anotherfantastic CEF movie Sun. nite"America, America."Good eatin'WATERMELON — Just back fromNashville.Wouldn't it be great if B.B. Kinggave a concert in Mandel.Where is Sean Regan? Who is Gen¬eral Sternvood? Who's shooting atBogey in the BIG SLEEP? WithBacall. 7:15, 9:15 Cobb Sat. 75c.Trying to raise bread to transferto the U of Miami? Organize atenant union and stay warm atthe intellectual center of the world.Hippolytus he Dared to be Holy.Confidential to Don Carlos:Your mother and I have been veryconcerned about you. Come homefrom Flanders immediately. Dad.Jacques Brel is alive and weil andcoming to UC on Feb 2.The COLLEGE FORUM meetsagainst pollution and for sherry. Fri¬day, Jan 23. Quantre4l Auditorium,3:30.Special student offer-7 Beethovenrecitals $10. Act fast — buy now:FI 6-8300.Hear Bak play Bach; Jan 24, THEMUSICAL SOCIETY FREE CON¬CERT 8:30 PM MANDEL HALL.Alpha Delta Phi Rush Smoker ForFreshmen and Interested Upper¬classmen. Tues Jan 20th 7:30-11:00.5747 S. Univ Ave.Peek-a-boo! Out of the closet!THE GREAT SKI DOWN at Jack-son, Wyo. Mar 20-29. $146. 684-5388.SKI CLUB MEETING Wed., Jan 28Ida Noyes 7:30 PM. Spr & daytrip plans, movies. All welcome.Gay Liberation rap Sessions overLunch, Mons. & Thurs, Blue Gar¬goyle. Males & Females Welcome.WHAT YOU CAN DO TO AID THEAMERICAN INDIAN: Send lettersof support to the American IndianCenter, 3189 16th Street, San Fran¬cisco. Send checks or money or¬ders to the American Indian CenterBldg Fund or Alcatraz Relief Fund.Bank address for funds is Bank ofCalifornia, Mission Branch, 306016th street, San Francisco.POLLUTION IS KILLING YOU.ACT NOW.For Complaints on pollution call793-2562. And help WMAQ-TV amassletters and petitions about pollutionto send the attorney general bywriting WMAQ-TV, MerchandiseMart, Chicago.Fight the Viet Nam Tax Levied onYour Phone Bill. Support the grow¬ing campaign to bring pressure onthe phone company to stop comply¬ing with Nixon's War Plans. With¬hold the tax this month, withholdthe IBM card, use your imagina¬tion, send in a check a few penniesoff the billed rate.Eleanormelon.DYLAN was at the first UC FolkFestival and you never can tellour tenth is next weekend — y'allcome.Mikva on politics and pollution, Jan23, Quantrell Auditorium, 3:30.Confidential to Don Carlos:With friends like you, who needsenemies?The Marquis de Posa. A Natural High is the Best High.Transcendental Meditation TuesdayJan 20 8:00PM Kent 107.KNOW AND PROTECTYOUR RIGHTSH.P.—ACLU Local Elections!Jan 29, 8 pm.Lutheran School of Theology1100 E. 55th St — Come vote!Open to all H.P. A.C.L.U. ers.Don't miss Mike Krauss' MandelHall debut at the free musicalsociety concert, Jan 24, 8:30.H.G. Please mail back-door keynew. Ted needs it more than youdo. C.C.JAPAN: Stay 3 full mos. Fare:$520. Call 363-4881 this week.Enjoy the Blue Gargoyle This Week¬end. FoodMusicPeople.Blue Gargoyle 12-12 Food MusicPeople Hurrah!America a down? Find out aboutnew life styles in Israel — Israel8, You Seminar at Hillel 2-5PMSun Jan 25.Revitalization is alive 8< well andbringing Jacques Brel to UC.Must give away small cat. 5 mo/housebroken. 288-2384.the high lonesome sound comes toMandel Hall Jan 30 31 Feb 1 threedays of peace and love in a HydePark winter.Tired of re-enacting Dr. Zhivago?Organize a tenant union.Say it loud! I'm gay and I'm proud!I think the Maroon is for shit. Nowonder life at the University ofChicago seems! GREY. That is:lookit. Things happen here, oncampus, that never even make theobituary column in the Maroon.You dont even have to waste wordsdescribing, but at least a picture —lots of pictures — of what goesdown and what goes on rather thanarty shots of gargoyles, gurgleois,garbage goils, bikes in the snow,tenured faculty, Levi in his birth¬day bow tie, GARGoyles. I wantpictures of Alexander Boggs doinit on the organ, pictures of thisand that band doin it to it tothemselves and the people; picturesof people talking and stuff. Dontgimme no more taxidermy taxono¬my, county coroner landscape shotsand articleson issues that were beatto shit before I was born. Take itfrom your Uncle, please dont shootup no more junkie.—Uncle Bunky4th year (drop out)20% STUDENT DISCOUNTLAST THREE WEEKS!Get out of your closet! There'll bemore room for your clothes!If you want to do something aboutall the shit floating around Inthe air contact Citizens RevoltAgainst Pollution (CRAP) at anew number 463-0306.Eat lunch at the BanderSnatch,dammit. 12-2, Mon-Sat.Beat the Narcs. Turn on Naturallywith Transcendental Meditation TuesJan 20 8PM Kent 107.*************^ Sunday New York Timet a6:30 AM (daily too) >.♦ BOB’S NEWSSTAND♦ 51st and Lake Park *K Huge ttocks oj Current Mag a- -K^ tines, Paperbacks, Assorted +. Pornography. Come & meet ^my dog “Michael.” a************* May I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.E2fhndiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkUof C Tuesday Night Special20% reduction. The Efendiinvites students, facuKy andstaff for memorable entrees($3.50-5.75) This ad entitlesbearer to 20% reduction ofdinner cost, includingcocktails and wines.January 23, 1970/Th* Chicago Maroon/11dur,opi27*C ■ \ * rrnmagp «I N?2T. I! NJ28. | !J Enroll,op. 90J j A dur,op.10l. 1 jMate^»Sfe5Sfi»cSonata ( ><*k'PaulBadura-Skoda7 BccltalsMandel Hall 8:30 p.m.March 3,10,17, 31, April 14, 20, 21For reserved ticket informationtelephone FI 6-8300write University of Chicago65 East South Water St.6060112/The Chicago Maroon/January 23, 1970 /v k ,i0*‘.lA)xnW4.*kin,