* A .1 A * *'i * i'l'l i 4 *’* **' ill J44».l J» * .< J>i i*.‘ J j.iProfessors Discuss Intellectual RolesMandel hall was the scene Saturday af¬ternoon of a discussion on science and themorality of intellect. Participants wereKenneth Boulding, professor of economicsat the University of Colorado; Murray Gell-Mann, professor of physics at the CaliforniaInstitute of Technology; and Paul Good¬man, writer and sociologist.The program featured formal presenta¬tions from each of the speakers, followedby questions from the audience. Goodmanand Boulding led a further session Saturdayevening in the Reynolds club lounge.Boulding emphasized the historical na¬ture of science as a sub-culture and the“ethic” of the scientific community. Gell-mann stressed the problems of pollutionand the analysis needed for their solutionby scientists. Goodman criticized scientistsfor “coming on like finks” and urged them to take up a new attitude of leaving thingsalone.The following are selections from an in¬terview with the speakers which three Ma¬roon reporters, Bob Blacksberg, Pete Good-sell and Steve Aoki, conducted before theprogram.What do you three have to say about yourpersonal relations with people in or out ofacademe, in detail, regarding what you willtalk about today?BOULDING: Well, the way to get awaywith things is to achieve a certain amountof prestige, and treat it as a liquid asset:spend it. In a way, I suppose, this has beenthe story of my life. I wrote an extremelystuffy textbook in economics at the age of3C and have been living on it ever since. I MURRAY GELL-MANNNobel laureatethink I am regarded as a harmless eccent¬ric by the profession. They don’t take meseriously. GODMAN: I’d bolster that up by saying,that if you find something worthwhile to do,and keep at it, in the course of time youwill accumulate prestige and when you die,even if the activity was blowing up the Stat¬ue of Liberty or something like that, you’llget a splendid obituary in the Times.Do you people think you can do more forscience and morality besides having nicediscussions like this one? In terms of“shaking up your colleagues”?GELL-MANN: This is something which Ihave been interested in all my life. There iscertainly a need to place less emphasis onthe old notion of the mastery of nature forthe benefit of man, and more emphasis onthe protection and restoration of the natu-Continued on Page TwoTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 38 The University of Chicago Tuesday, February 17, 1970Marchers KeepingA Conspiracy VigilSG Examines CORSO Spending night at 7:30 in front of the Federal Build¬ing until a verdict is reached. Last nightthe two attorneys for the defense and MrsHoffman (Abbie Hoffman’s wife) werescheduled to speak. About 75 people werekeeping vigil early Monday night. A staffmember expressed disappointment at thesmall turnout compared to a Los Angelesrally where several thousand people attend¬ed.A spectator left the trial Sunday and in¬formed the crowd of the contempt sen¬tences which Judge Hoffman had just hand¬ed out. A member of the Conspiracy staffsaid Sunday that only 20 spectators hadbeen allowed into the courtroom instead ofthe usual 35 to 40, and that the remainingplaces were filled by Red Squad Police¬men. The staff member added that somerelatives of the defendents and staff hadnot been allowed into the trial.There has been especially tight securityover the weekend. Both Saturday and Sun¬day demonstrators observed that theyseemed to be outnumbered by plainclothes-men (identifiable by a small blue badgeworn on the inside of the coat collar. Sometook pictures of the demonstrators. At thecorner where demonstrators gathered, thecurb was lined with the cars of plainclothespolicemen. Large numbers of uniformedpolicemen also arrived at noon Sunday andtook positions on the ground floor of thefederal building.Youths$ I HAYAKAWAExpresses feelings about protestersMdvyn StarlingCONSPIRACY ATTORNEYS: Leonard Weinglass and William Kunstler discuss thetrial after their sentences for contempt. By Sarah GlazerA vigil supporting the Conspiracy 7 hasbeen held outside the Federal buildingsince the jury began its deliberation on theverdict Friday. The number of people par¬ticipating in the vigil varied from about 30to 300. Demonstrators have been marchingin a circle in front of the Federal building,chanting and carrying signs reading “Im¬peach Hoffman” and-on Valentine’s Day(Saturday) —-“We love you Tom Hayden”.The vigil is operating out of Christ theKing Lutheran Church in the Loop, achurch across the street from the Federalbuilding. Here participants can help them¬selves to warmth, coffee, newspapers andinformation about the trial. The People’sJury and the round the clock entertainmentoriginally planned to take place in theChurch of the Epiphany at 207 S Ashland,has been discontinued. A staff member saidover the phone that the church had “thrownthem out.”A raiiy is scheduled to take place everyMembers of the student government (SG)assembly criticized the committee on rec¬ognized student organizations (CORSO) ata Sunday meeting for giving a largeamount of money to the upcoming WashProm without the approval of the assem¬bly. CORSO alloted the prom committee$1700 one month ago.The committee was also accused of vio¬lating SG ethics by keeping its 1970-71 bud¬get secret. The complaints raised over theamount of money given to the Wash Promcommittee have thrown attention on pos¬sible irregularities in CORSO’s system offund allocation.According to the SG minutes, a motionwas passed ordering CORSO to get back asmuch of the unspent money (about $500) aspossible.The SG constitution says that CORSOmust submit its budget to SG by November1 each year. The constitution, in order toprotect organizations, also says CORSOmay not take back funds once they havel>een allocated.Pete Douglass, a member of CORSO, toldthe assembly that in 1969, the Wash Promhad been given $1206 by CORSO and an ad¬ditional $1500 had to be allocated fromOORSO’s exingency fund. This year, he pointed out, the prom had only been given$1700, a saving of $1000, and the directivethat if the prom lost more than $100 thisyear, it would be given no CORSO funds in1971.In a later interview, Sheldon Sacks, *71chairman of Wash Prom, said the promcommittee had already committed $1000 incontracts for the three bands, and hadspent roughly $250 in advertisements andflowers. Sacks, who feels the logical actionis to let the dance be held, said, “If theprom is cancelled, we lose $1000. If theprom is a success, no one loses money.”In explaining why SG was not notified ofCORSO’s action, Pete Douglas said the or¬ganization had kept quiet the allocation toWash Prom because they did not want tocause trouble for dean of students CharlesO’Connell, from whom CORSO’s fundscome.S G, unsatisfied with CORSO’s ex¬planation, proposed the following con¬stitutional amendment: “CORSO must sub¬mit to the assembly any allocation over($300-$500, the amount is uncertain) madeafter November 1.”The Wash Prom’s tentative budget, cutdrastically after SG motion, included $200for publicity, $30 for tickets, $825 for the three bands, $100 for the queen contest, $400for decorations, $200 for guards and $400 forrefreshments. The planned expenditure to¬tals $2155.Hayakawa Fears“There are a small minority of the youthwho are determined to destroy the sys¬tem,” said SI Hayakawa, noted semantic-ist and president of San Francisco StateCollege, in a press conference preceding hisopening address at the 105th annual Mid¬winter meeting of the Chicago DentalSociety.Hayakawa, noted for his handling of stu¬dent disorders on his campus last fall thatresulted in a large number of arrests,spoke both at the press conference and atthe opening meeting concerning the low¬ering of the voting age to 18.“Some of our college trouble comes fromthe fact that our college youth aren’t com¬mitted,” he said. “I would like to see themhave a greater part in the society.” Headded that if young people were able tovote, more emphasis would be placed uponthe study of social sciences in high school.Hayakawa refused to comment on the re¬sult the lower voting age would have onContinued on Page FourGell-Mann, Goodman TalkContinued from Page Oneral environment. There is the possibility ofactually playing a role in planning, in ac¬tually developing strategies, in analyzingsituations, possibly wholistically, with at¬tention to the many variables, to the manyaspects, including attention to the soft vari¬ables: beauty, diversity, the need to avoidmindless irreversible changes on naturalsurroundings and so forth.GOODMAN: I love to regarded as one ofthe soft variables.BOULDING: Let me tell you an awful se¬cret. The cardinal numbers are a fraud;the only reality is ordinal numbers. Thewhole damn universe is soft. Hardness isan artifact.GELL-MANN: Anyway, for this thing wehave been talking about, it is obviously nec¬essary that scientists not try to do it bythemselves. They must work with socialscientists, with lawyers, with people withmany different background. At the ex¬treme end of the spectrum you have peoplewho are raucous and exaggerate, whomake a big fuss. I deplore excessive parti¬cipation of scientists at that end of thespectrum; it’s not in the spirit of science.GODMAN: Yeah, but can I ask a questionnow about this extreme end of the spec¬trum. When scientists are bribed to en¬gage in an activity that they think isreally disastrous, in Hie war industry,people who are doing military work, whydon’t they strike?GELL-MANN: But in the present world sit¬uation, one can affect the armaments situ¬ation only in one country, and one is also,perhaps, creating an imbalance.We went down to the American PhysicalSociety meeting last week, downtown, andwere all bitching about military funding ofscience research. TTiese guys were comingup to us and saying: Well, we’ve got towork for the military, there’s no moneyaround. There’s a moral problem. What doyou say to people like this?GELL-MANN: I’m not sure that I grant thepremise. The country is in need, relative to other countries, of armaments. A reason¬able program of armaments, we hope, onethat will not be too destabilizing, one thatwill not be misused.GOODMAN: Oh, come on Murray. Every¬body who talks about this would say thatwe are about 400% above what’s sufficient.Everybody knows that.GELL-MANN: I agree that in many re¬spects we have developed things that arenot necessary.BOULDING: The word is “delusions ofgrandeur.”GELL-MANN: However, it may be that asthe situation develops, scientists can helpthe defense establishment to be morestable. I see two sides.GOODMAN: In other words, you are con¬fused.The weapons establishment is the biggestproblem that faces scientists in terms oftheir own profession because of the bigmoney cutback. What can be done to orga¬nize scientists to do something besides de¬fense research?BOULDING: You’re only a scientist byday. Once you take your hat and coat offyou become an American or a Communist.There’s hardly any scientist who is scien¬tific either in relation to his wife or to hiscolleagues.GOODMAN: In the main tradition of sci¬ence, I think it would have been unheard ofto practice secret science, and now they allseem to be willing to do it.GELL-MANN: The funding of military re¬search by military organizations has al¬ways been on a rather small scale, andthey do a very good job of it, actually.But there’s an imbalance which seems toexist.GELL-MANN: It’s quite a remarkable ac¬cident that that happened.BOULDING: The one sin against the holyghost in the scientific community is to fal-IF 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. Hold upyour local gasstation.It you’ve «ot a bit of larceny ihyour heart,you'll love theRenault 10.You see. it >>et> 55 miles to theBallon.And as far as Bas stations areconcerned, that’s hiBhway robbery.So don’t be tix> harsh w hen theboys at your local Bas station acta little Btumpy.In tact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suBBcst they B*-‘t one torthemselves.After all, they miBht have a bitot larceny intheir heartsux>.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-25502/.TH* XWog? .Mijttw/KfbNMry .17,. Jflfp,. sify your results. Success just confirmsyour failures. That’s the crunch, you see.GELL-MANN: I don’t think you understandthe situation. I’m not sure that you haveproved that, on the national level, the ef¬fects of resistance to one’s own governmentwould be good. Let’s take for example thesecond world war. It was considered quitenatural on the part of many scientists, Ithink, to participate in the development ofsecret weapons, when they thought that thesociety was in danger.BOULDING: I didn’t participate in the sec¬ond world war, I was a conscientious objec¬tor.GOODMAN: As a humanist, I didn’t par¬ticipate.GELL-MANN: I was too young to partici¬pate, so the question didn’t arise. But someof the people who partiepated in the initialdevelopment of nuclear weapons, I under¬stand, hoped that the use would be some¬what different: that a demonstration mightbe sufficient to scare the Japanese govern¬ment into surrendering.GOODMAN: Were there scientists who fa¬vored immediate use? Ed Teller, I guess.There’s always Ed Teller.BOULDING: He was an evil man. GELL-MANN: No, the people who sup¬ported it, I don’t think you would call par¬ticularly evil. But if the test had failed, I’msure most of them would have favored go¬ing ahead with the bombing.GOODMAN: Shouldn’t scientists therebylearn that they are fall guys for people withwhom they do not fundamentally agree?There you have a situation which at leastlooked like a terrible emergency. But theother situation has gone on for 25 years.GELL-MANN: To the extent that one actsonly locally, it is not at all obvious to methat it is in fact evil to help one’s own coun¬try to develop strategic armaments in rela¬tion to another.GOODMAN: For 25 years?GELL-MAN: It may help to maintain a bal¬ance. You seem to take for granted that astrike within one country on military workGOODMAN: I didn’t say “within one coun¬try.” It’s supposed to be an internationalcommunity. Why don’t they act like an in¬ternational community?BOULDING: The Seventh Day Adventistsare a much stronger community than scien¬tists. As a community it is terribly weak,although it has an ethic.Contacttenses are madeof modern plas¬tics which have en¬tirely different charac¬teristics than the tissuesand fluids of the eye. Conse¬quently your eye cannot handlethis foreign object without help.So, in order to correct forMother Nature's lack of foresight,you have to use lens solutions tomake your contacts and your eyescompatible.There was a time when youneeded two or more separate solutions toproperly mod¬ify and carefor your con¬tacts, makingthem ready foryour eyes. But nowthere's Lensine fromthe makers ofMurine. Lensine,for contact com¬fort and convenience.Lensine is the one solutionfor complete contact lens care.Just a drop or two of Lensine coatsand lubricates your lens. This al¬lows the lens to float more freelyin the natural fluids of your eye.Why9 Because Lensine is an "iso¬tonic” solution, very much likeyour own tears. Lensine is com¬patible with the eye.Cleaning your contacts withLensine retards the build-up offoreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts inLensine between wearing periodsassures you of proper lens hy¬giene. You get a free soakirig-stor-age case with individual lens com¬partments on the bottom of everybottle of Lensine.It has been demonstrated thatimproper storage between wear-ings permits the growth of bac¬teria on the lenses. This is a surecause of eye irritation and, insome cases, can endanger yourvision. Bacteria cannot grow inLensine because it's sterile, seif-samtizing, and antisepticLet caring for yourcontacts be as conven¬ient as wearing them.Get some Lensine . .Mother's little helper.untilMother Naturenever planned oncontactlenses(Says Drug Law Hurts ResearchDR DANIEL X FREEDMANOpposes no-knock billBy Gerard LevelA concert of Organ and Brass to be heldTuesday evening, February 24, at 8:30 pmin Rockefeller Chapel will climax a studentgovernment (SG) sponsored fund-raisingcampaign to benefit the Woodlawn commu¬nity.The fund-raising effort, which began inDecember, has resulted in over $4,000 incontributions thus far. The present goal isto obtain $10,000.It is anticipated that next Tuesday eve¬ning’s concert will permit the SG group toachieve its objective. Over 7,000 lettershave been sent to members of the Univer¬sity community urging them to attend theconcert and to make donations to the proj¬ects. Richard Vikstrom, music director ofRockefeller Chapel and Edward Mondello,organist, have donated their services forthe concert, ami the Chapel facilities havebeen made available to the SG group.The Rev John Fry, pastor of the FirstPresbyterian Church located in Woodlawnwill briefly address the gathering. Rev Fryand his church have been intimately in¬volved in a large number of the Woodlawnprograms and will assist in the distributionof the contributions.SG initially became involved in the proj¬ect to provide funds for the Woodlawn pro¬grams during the summer months. A groupof SG representatives held a fund-raisingpicnic soliciting contributions in order to* provide breakfasts for school children inWoodlawn. However, as project directorand SG treasurer Rosemarie Gillespiepoints out, “it became clear to us that thehunger problem could not be solved by justsupplying food.”Having decided to undertake a majorproject of assistance for the WoodlawnCommunity, SG decided to collect fundsthat could be placed at the disposal of somecommunity-based group to be distributed.Mrs Gillespie elaborated, “We decided notto impose on the community; there areplenty of people in Woodlawn who are will¬ing to help themselves, but can’t only be¬cause of the great shortage of funds.”Contributions to the SG effort will go to¬wards strengthening existing educationalprograms and for the establishment of anew center to coordinate the various educa¬tional services. These prgorams are allpart of an over-all effort on the part of theFirst Presbyterian Church at 6400 S Kim-bark in Woodlawn.The church, under the leadership of RevFry, has instituted a series of projects in¬tended to fill some of the more pressingneeds of Woodlawn residents and specific¬ally of school-age children. A communityeducation center is presently beingplanned. It would extend the existing com¬munity controlled early child developmentprogram which was begun in 1965. Theexisting program includes both an excludedchild project and a head start component.. Programs affecting adults have also beeninstituted. Maurice Mondell, parent co-ordi-nation for the early child development pro¬gram, explained that a parents’ creditunion has been developed. The goal of thisproject is to permit greater independencein obtaining and dispensing funds for theearly child program.Stressing the overwhelming need for spe¬cial educational projects, Rev Fry stated ofthe city school system, “the public schools, Dr Daniel X Freedman, professor andchairman of the department of psychiatry,is one of a committee of leading expertswho will speak out on “serious and tragicflaws” in drug abuse legislation, known asthe “no-knock” bill, now pending before theCongress.The group is concerned especially with“the adverse impact of the bill on the prac¬tice of medicine and, more particularly, onresearch and education in the area of drugabuse,” said Neil Chayet, a Boston attorneyand lecturer in medicine at Boston andTufts University, spokesman for the group.Specific objections to the bill, passed byhave done, not merely a rotten job, but acynical, rotten job of educating students.”In his recently published book, Fire andBlackstone, Rev Fry specifically describesthe unfortunate educational situation. “Theschools are terrible,” he writes. “They in¬spire no hope, are not credible as educa¬tional facilities. But that is not the point.The point is that the schools have a nega,tive symbolic characteristic. They are seento perform functions.”According to Mrs Gillespie, many schoolchildren in the Woodlawn area are entirelyexcluded from the public schools. Accord¬ing to Mrs Gillespie, the reason for suchexclusion is “alleged mental retardation,emotional maladaptation and social imma¬turity.” However, Mrs Gillespie explainsthat “65 percent of the children so ex¬cluded, given a few months in a suitableschool environment, can and do function ator above grade level.”The special facilities at the First Presby¬terian Church hope to provide such an envi¬ronment. There are many classrooms withthe church buildings which serve a varietyof functions. Several are used on a full-timebasis to provide an all-day education forthose children who have been excludedfrom the Chicago Public Schools. Othersare used for the head start program forpre-schoolers.Rev Fry places much emphasis on theearly phase of the children’s educationalprocesses. “The decisive learning years be¬gin at age one,” he states, “and not in kin¬dergarten.” On the basis of that belief, theprojected community education center willinitiate programs that will involve childrenfrom the moment they are able to walk.This in essence will provide a day-care pro¬gram which, as Rev Fry emphasizes, “willnot be a babysitting service, but rather adeluxe educational model. While pro¬grams at the projected Center and underthe present Early Child Development Pro¬gram are geared toward education, theyalso treat the Woodlawn hunger problem.The center will have facilities for preparingand serving hot meals to those childrenmaking use of the Center. the Senate and now before the House inter¬state and foreign commerce committee,are• the bill places immense burdens on dayto day practice of medicine and attempts toregulate substances properly used by mil¬lions of citizens and their physicians• judgment as whether to restrict a com¬pound lies solely with the attorney general• criteria for placing restrictions and con¬trols on drugs are stated in terms of “med¬ical usefulness” and “potential for abuse”rather than dangerousness of the substanceas far as the individual and society are con¬cernedA recent study by Jeannie Garrison, agraduate student in the school of social ser¬vice administration, written for 5th WardAlderman Leon Despres, analyzes the na¬ture and extent of the hunger problem inWoodlawn.The report acknowledges that there is in¬deed a hunger problem and an even morewidespread nutritional problem. “Manypeople in our own community are sufferingfrom hunger, often ‘hidden hunger’, mani¬fested in poor health and lack of energy or,among children, stunted mental devel¬opment.” The report indicates that most ofthose who can be classified as malnour¬ished are persons on public aid and who,due to the inadequate allotments, areunable to provide nutritious foods.The University’s new office of service op¬portunity (OSO), created last August toprovide interested students with informa¬tion on work in social welfare agenciesthroughout Chicago, is in need of more stu¬dent volunteers, according to ChesterRempson, director of the office.“We can use a great many more studentvolunteers to staff the various projects wehave been asked to aid,” said Rempson.Rempson explained the function of OSOas that of “a clearing house or funnelingagency between interested students and so¬cial service agencies that need student as¬sistance ... We are matching student inter¬ests with community needs.”According to Rempson, the responsefrom the various agencies has been ex¬cellent. “We have working agreements with25 agencies throughout the city.” But“these agencies could use as many as 400students to assist them in various ways.Unfortunately, we’ve been able to fill only54 of these spots with University students.”Rempson felt that this lack of studentparticipation was due to the fact that theoffice was still not very well-known oncampus. “It’s a new office,” he said, “andmany students don’t really know we exist.” • mandatory federal registration of all per¬sons and institutions dispensing drugs,whether for research or treatment is calledfor• it is felt record-keeping and inspectionprovisions will place a large burden on phy¬sicians, researchers and scientists• broad research and education responsi- jbilities are given to the attorney generaland the justice department in areas other |than law enforcement• the bill sets up machinery permitting alaw enforcement officer to enter a home,laboratory or office without warning.Said Freedman, who is chairman of theAmerican psychiatric task force on drugabuse, “It is tragic that this legislation inpoliticizing an area important to our entiresociety. Affected by such legislation wouldbe those seeking sorely needed knowledgeabout drugs and their abuse, and the vic¬tims of illicit drug use. Also affected areperhaps a third of all useful drugs whichpatients require from their physicians.”He added, “The effect will be to create ahuge and cumbersome bureaucracy withinthe justice department with the capacity ofexerting serious and unwarranted controlsover research and legitimate practice ofmedicine. This package has been labeled alaw enforcement and crime bill, but itemerges at the total regulation of a majorsegment of the nation’s health care.”Other members on the committee includeKarl Menninger, MD; Dana Farnsworth,MD, director of Harvard health services; F jC Redlich, dean of Yale medical school;and Nobel laureates Joshua Lederberg andSalvador Luria.Rempson added that he was reluctant toattribute the small number of volunteers tostudent apathy, claiming that “there is stu- Jdent interest on campus in this type of ac- !tivity. We simply have to tap it.”He did admit, however, that similar pro¬grams had been more successful on othercampuses, particularly at public in¬stitutions. He explained that “the make-upof the student body here is different. It con¬sists primarily of graduate students.” Hefelt that as a rule graduate students hadless time to participate in such a programthan undergraduates, and a clearer notionof what they wanted to do. “Students in the \College have a greater tendency to want tofind out what’s what,” he said.A number of University students are ac¬tive in student initiated programs, such asthe Student Tutors Elementary Project(STEP) and the Student Woodlawn AreaProject (SWAP), which do not channelthrough OSO. Rempson said he hoped thisdid not mean that students distrusted aUniversity initiated program. “The office isnot in any way politically oriented,” hesaid, and added that it had been created inresponse to the student demand for a cen¬tralized referral office. “It was a big stepfor the University even to institute such aprogram,” he said.Student volunteers arrange their timeand activity with the agency to which theyare referred. They can work with the agen¬cy anywhere from four to 20 hours a week.Openings range from a project that mighttake a week or two to ongoing jobs that runthe entire academic year. Rempson notedthat the students who spent the most time(Mi a project found it very rewarding.Student volunteers generally choose toserve in agencies within the general Uni¬versity neighborhood, Rempson said, al¬though opportunities are available in manyother areas of the city if they wish.Among the agencies in which student vol¬unteers are now working are the HydePark neighborhood club, the Chicago statehospital, the Illinois state psychiatric in¬stitute, St Thomas the Apostle elementaryschool, the University of Chicago hospitalsand climes, Hyde Park-Kenwood publicschools, and the Hyde Park-Kenwood com¬munity conference.OSO is located in Reynolds Club 200. It isopen daily, Monday through Friday, from 9am to noon and from 1 to 5 pm.ANEVENINGOFORGANANDBRASSRICHARD VIKSTROM ConductorEDWARD MONDELLO OrganistThe Chicago Symphony Brass EnsembleAt 8JO pm on February 24.1970Rockefeller ChapelUniversity of ChicagoA benefit concert sponsored byStudent Government of the University of ChicagoProceeds will go to the community controlledEarly Child Development Programand the Community Education Centerat the First Presbyterian Church.Woodlawn.Tickets may be purchased fromSG Office. Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East S*th StMLMMOO XJ273SKX f7.5ft $630.95. f 3 SO, 92andatThe Book NoA. Coop Shappng Com*The Book Center.Harper Court ,Qaibome s.2JOBEaat 71Mraary 17# lt7B/H» Chief Mn-w/3'Organ and Brass' to Benefit SG GoalOSO Requests Volunteer Help14 iAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAY HillBookstore SitesAlternative sites are currently being in¬vestigated for the permanent location forthe bookstore. president for physical planning has beenworking out plans for these alternativesites.Among the sites mentioned is the Univer¬sity press building at 58 St and Ellis Ave.In early November, the standing com¬mittee on the bookstore recommended thatthe administration building be chosen asthe permanent location of the store, but thecommittee on University priorities andspending chaired by Julian Goldsmith didnot agree with this recommendation andasked that alternative sites be examined.Presently, Naphtali Knox, assistant vice- John Wilson, provost of the Universitysaid, “We are quite a long way from decid¬ing.”Agnew ArrestsTwo University students were among 25arrested in Chicago following a 90 minute demonstration outside the Conrad HiltonHotel where Vice-President Spiro Agnewspoke Thursday night.The arrests came when about 150 youthsleft a group of about 350 at the Hilton tomarch to the Palmer House, where the juryfor the Conspiracy 7 trial is sequestered.Police, who claim they had warned dem¬onstrators to remain on the sidewalks dur¬ing the march, made most arrests in thevicinity of Monroe and Wabash Ave., thenherded the group onto a CTA bus to ride to police headquarters at 11th and State.Jessica Siegel ’70, and Katie Lynch ’7i(charged with refusing to disperse and okstructing traffic, spent most of the night ina cell with seven others until friends couldpost bail at 4 am. Police said most demon¬strators would be charged with mob actionand disorderly conduct and would appear inmass arrest court March 3.According to Miss Siegel, the maximumpenalty for refusal to disperse is a $500 fineand six months in jail.Hayakawa Cites Irrationality of LeftContinued from Page Onepolitics saying “That’s the trouble with mycurrent position; I have to be an expert oneverything.”Commenting on the current state ofcampus unrest, Hayakawa said, “Afterhaving gotten their reforms at San Fran¬cisco State, many who had been radical, atleast in their rhetoric, have been satisfiedand have gone back to their studies.”Hayakawa said that he was not sure whateffect the lower voting age would have oncampus unrest. He did say that at SanFrancisco State, more than half of the dem¬onstrators were of voting age. He also saidthat a large segment of the demonstratorswere not students.Mfk* BrantCONSTRUCTION: A crane is etched inthe sky at dusk. Speaking of the demonstrations at SanFrancisco State, Hayakawa said, “There’sa basic irrationality in the student dis¬orders. They should have hit the most back¬ward, not the most forward thinking in¬stitutions.” Hayakawa cited San FranciscoState, Harvard, Berkeley, Columbia, Ober-3 bands - Food - Drink - Miss U of C - BlackfriarsPEOPLE!!!WASH PROMADVENTUREWhat is their Secret? Why is he looking at her that way? DoYou KNOW? Well tell us - for a free WASH PROM ticket. Allentrees no later than Thurs., Feb. 19. Submit to Ida Noyes desk,leave name & phone. Best 2 answers - a ticket for two toSaturday's WASHINGTON PROMENADE. (If you don't want totake the chance of losing, tickets on sale Tues. thru Fri. and atdoor, for only $4.50 a couple. Cheap at half the price!4/The Chicago Maroon/February 17, 1970•W' * * .>0 rl •jffl lib lin and Grinnell as examples of forward-thinking institutions.“We have beautiful things happening onour campus — concerts, plays and artshows — dammit, why don’t you ask aboutthem?” he asked newsmen who asked himquestions concerning student disorders.One student editor at the press confer¬ence, Bernard Farber of Roosevelt Univer¬sity asked Hayakawa what he thought ofthe “genocide” of the Vietnamese andblacks that is being perpetrated by theAmerican government. Hayakawa respond¬ed by dismissing Farber’s use of the word“genocide” saying, “Linguistic inflation isone of the problems of the new left.”We have among our young people themost irrational leaders I have ever seen,”Hayakawa said in reference to the Con¬ spiracy trial. “I believe that our judicialsystem, imperfect as it is, is better thanany other.”At Columbia and Harvard there are awhole group of people who don’t want tocommunicate. They just want to throwbricks and burn down buildings. This is areversion to barbarism,” Hayakawa said.He added that one of the greatest problemsof the youth of today is that they aren’twilling to argue with anyone; they are sosure that they are right and that others arewrong that communication does not go on,he said. “This is an arrest of intellectualdevelopment,” he said.As Hayakawa left the conference room,one of the newsmen called out to him“You’re still my kind of man, Dr Hay¬akawa.”Stare at your walls.You might learn something for a change.Something about learning and change. Thinking andparticipating. Even about film-making and quantumphysics. It's not done with mirrors but with charts.Three of them.It’s asking a lot of three charts to undo all the harm doneby university education. You have to undo most of it.But the charts can help.The charts, and an accompanying handbook (to ease yourtransition from print) now comprise a BLUEPRINT FORCOUNTER EDUCATION. The liberated chart watcher seesbefore him the crisis of western civilization in a pattern ofnames, concepts and events configured around the mostradical members of today’s intellectual and artisticvanguard—from Marcuse and McLuhan to Eldridge Cleaverand John Lennon. From there on, everything becomesself-evident. Or unintelligible.Maurice Stein and Larry Miller, who created the charts,are two deeply committed radicals now affiliated with theCalifornia Institute of the Arts in Los Angeles. MarshallHenrichs, who designed them, is now making a movie ofhis own screenplay. Where are you?3 wall charts, 371/4" x 45" each, plus 192 page handbook,packed in slipcase.•IDOUBLEDAY m■This year’s Wash Prom will be a “threering circus” according to Sheldon Sacks71, chairman of the Prom committee.Three bands playing simultaneously, anoriginal Blackfriar’s skit, gobs of goodies,the crowning of Miss University of Chicago,a new lower price of $4.50 per couple willbe featured at the Prom Saturday eveningat Ida Noyes Hall, according to Sacks.The price cut was made possible byeliminating the traditional full catered din¬ner. There will still be food, but the Promcommittee felt students would appreciatethe $2 price cut from last year’s $6.50 percouple tickets rather than a full dinnerwhose quality was felt to be deterioratingin the past few years.A ten-piece dance band with “a singerand a really different repertoire” will playin the Cloister Club, while the Stan MossBlues Band performs in the gym, and ajazz band that has appeared each Saturdayat the Bandersnatch Nightclub play in themain lounge.As usual, Walter of Ida Noyes Fame willappear as George Washington in time forthe crowning of Miss University of Chicago.The four finalists for the title are IreneDymkar 73, Pamela Reichl 72, Mary AnneWright, grad student in library science, andDiane Rhodes 71. There are four finaliststhis year instead of the usual six due to thesmall number of candidates, according toIngrid Johnson 71, chairman of the queencommittee. Balloting for Miss University ofChicago will take place this week in Cobband in the dorms. All registered studentsmay vote.As a special evening entertainment bar¬gain, any couple attending UniversityTheatre’s Don Carlos Saturday night mayenter the prom for only $2.50 by presentingtheir stubs at the door. There is no specialadvance sale price and tickets will be avail¬able at the door for $4.50.In past years the Wash Prom was theUniversity’s biggest formal event. Held ev¬ery year since the founding of the Univer¬ sity except for three war years, this yearthere was some controversy between stu¬dent government and the committee on rec¬ognized student organizations CORSO as towhether this year’s $1700 subsidy requestshould be granted, but Sacks announcedMonday afternoon that the dance would goon as scheduled.FATHER OF OUR COUNTRY:Saturday at Wash Prom. $•• himFebruary '17, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/Sorganize. Consequently a motion calling foropposition to the draft as a whole but notendorsing draft resistance was adopted.The women’s liberation proposals re¬ceived little support. Most groups at onetime or another gave verbal support to de¬mands of women’s groups but when actualsubstantive proposals were made to alterthe structure of the SMC there was prac¬tically no support at all. There were somederisive comments made.SMC Sets Spring Antiwar OffensiveBy John GowerThe biggest meeting of American radi¬cals ever held took place this weekend inCleveland. The student mobilization com¬mittee (SMC) reported that over 3,000people registered for the antiwar confer¬ence but estimates of attendance were ashigh as 4000.The major decision of the conference wasto plan a week of mass antiwar action forthis spring to be held April 13 through 18.The focus will be around peaceful massmarches in the streets of all large Ameri¬can cities April 15, tax day.This plan will permit the SMC to coordi¬nate its April 15 action with the new mobili¬zation committee and the Vietnam morato¬rium committee while holding more leftoriented demonstrations on the other daysof that week.While there was discussion of each issuebrought about by the participation of themany political tendencies, the Young So¬cialist Alliance (YSA) position carried ev¬ery vote.It was the feeling of many groups thatdemonstrations nave grown large enough interms of numbers but that they have beenunproductive in bringing about a real un¬derstanding of the nature of the Vietnam¬ese war. These groups tended to minimizethe marches as a tool for bringing pressure on the government. They also feel that ademand to withdraw all troops from Viet¬nam does not build an opposition to futurewars in which the US might get involved.The proposals of the international social¬ists, revolutionary youth movement andworkers league tended to demand that theSMC make a special attempt to show howthe war is specially oppressive to workersand to organize workers groups. They feltthat there should also be a greater attemptto bring blacks into the antiwar coalition.This was all tied to a perspective whichsees the war as the result of a capitalisteconomic system.While the YSA could agree on theanalysis of the war it was reluctant to havethe SMC broaden its demands from the ele¬mental one of “Bring All the GI’s HomeNow.” They felt that it was best to keep thedemands at the lowest common denomina¬tor so that the greatest number of peoplecould be brought out to march.The greatest division of the conferencecame over the issue of draft resistance.Many political independents joined somenon-YSA groups in supporting a move thatcalled on the SMC to help organize a day ofmass draft resistance. However the YSAhas always opposed draft resistance as aprogram because they feel it would alienatetoo many GI’s whom they are also trying to250 Protest GE Madison RecruiterThe General Electric Company was againthe target of student protest as a massdemonstration of 250 students attempted toconfront a GE recruiter on the Universityof Wisconsin at Madison campus Thursday.The demonstration, organized by a widerange of groups including SDS, focusedtheir attack on what they termed GeneralElectric’s role in war production, its ex¬ploitation of workers, and the InternationalUnion of Electrical Workers’ (IUE) role in“selling out” its rank-and-file with respectto the recently settled strike.Following a noon Thursday rally, the stu¬dents marched to the University’s Engi¬neering Building where GE was holding in¬terviews. There the protesters were met by40 Madison and University police whoblocked their progress.At this point, several hundred studentsspread out in all directions and proceededto smash windows of unpopular businessesand campus military establishments, mostnotably the ROTC building. “Assaultingthese targets,” said one spokesman, “logi¬cally flowed from the students’ under¬standing of the military’s role in keepingGE in business around the world.” He lik¬ened the attack on the Madison businesses to an attack on GE’s exploitative policiesinasmuch “as it is the same exploitativepolicies to which students are exposeddaily in Madison.”In all, over $25,000 worth of damage wasdone, eight students were arrested, fivepersons were treated for injuries, a sterncrackdown on “disruptive” students was in¬itiated by University of Wisconsin officials.Meanwhile, the GE recruiter was report¬ed to be unaware of the activities outsidethe building. He remained on campusthrough midday Friday. University of Wis¬consin Chancellor Edwin Young said hebelieved everyone who had sought an inter¬view with the recruiter had been “pro¬cessed.”Last October 28 SDS held a mill-in dem¬onstration here to kick “GE off campus”when that firm’s recruiters were here inter¬viewing prospective employees. After twen¬ty minutes of heated discussion wtth theGE representatives, the SDS-ers convincedthe recruiters that they would prevent in¬terviews for the rest of the day. Cabswere subsequently called, and the re¬cruiters left Campus to the cheers of theprotesters. ' “The council is bankrupt. We will have torun on a very low key for the rest of theyear, hoping the University will provide alittle more money.Turkington explained that only practicedictated the appropriation to the Towercouncil since no charter exists. In contrastto this year’s bankruptcy, previous Towercouncil expenses, including recreationequipment and the Pierce Tower cinema,were small leaving the rest as the onlysource of housing office money for thehouses.The snack bar’s financial failure hasbeen variously attributed to sales, the diffi¬culties of working with residence halls andcommons (RH & C), inflation in costs, andPierce Tower politics.In October, the snack bar lost more than$700 in three weeks of operation. Jerry Tul-lis, snack bar manager, blamed this loss oninflation, including an unannounced pricerise, his inability to determine food prices,and the decrease in sales from $2000 month¬ly a year ago to about $1300. He gave littlecredence to charges that free handouts offood by employees caused the losses thisquarter, while he and others conceded thatsuch handouts were rampant last spring.Tullis also blamed the loss on prices toolow for large servings, sales of a new bankof vending machines, and the smaller popu¬lation of the Tower.November showed a loss of $350 withcosts cut back by not operating the grill onweekdays. Food costs dropped but laborcosts ate up more than half the sales.RH & C, the snack bar’s sole supplier,refused to report the individual cost ofitems. They claimed special contracts for¬bid such disclosure. Tullis stated that thiscreated management difficulties.Wash Prom Gets Three Bands“We are doing everything we can to re¬open the Pierce Tower snack bar on Febru¬ary 23,” says Edward Turkington, directorof student housing. The snack bar closedlast quarter due to financial difficulties.About 12 Thompson House residents havenegotiated with University officials to runthe snack bar on their own financial in¬itiative. The proposal is under consid¬eration by the legal office.A member said that the group planned toextend and increase sales of the snack barby selling a greater variety of non-fooditems, investing their own labor and capi¬tal, and doing their own purchasing.Financial failure last quarter closed thesnack bar and depleted the Pierce Towercouncil budget. The housing office paid forsmall losses by the snack bar in the past,but following an $800 deficit last spring,they said that the Tower council would payfor any further loss. A $130 deficit in Octo¬ber and November wiped out the $1200 al¬lotment the Tower council receives fromthe housing office.Steve Blau, president of the council, said,David TravisPIERCE TOWER: Snack bar hopes to reopen after financial difficulties areresolved. Turkington ForeseesSnack Bar Reopening» ■ ' 1<H' %EDITORIALSThe ConspiracyAnd a Police StateThere are so many flip ways of starting an editorial about theConspiracy, and suddenly none of them is funny any more. Thetrial used to be funny because it was a bizarre aberration in ausually reliable and sober legal system. Now the trial isn’t anaberration any more; it is emerging as the conscious, deliberatepolicy of powerful people. We used to be able to laugh at the pitifulantics of a would-be police state. Now “police state” is no longerextravagant rhetoric, the property of extreme leftists with morepassion than reason; now “police state” is a real fear.It’s a fear that becomes real when you walk down 57 streetand a policeman stops you for “speeding” on a street where youcan’t get away fast if you want to. It becomes real when you’rewaiting for a train and a policeman harasses you and tells youto move because you happen to have long hair. It becomes morereal, and less amusing, as we learn of more and more people inHyde Park being busted for dristan, acne pills, and saccharine,while away in Washington the Congress is voting to make itlegal for policemen to enter your home without knocking.If anyone thinks that all these repressions are unrelated,then he either has recently moved here from some island wilds,or he is hopelessly naive. We’re not going to walk down 57 streetfree of harassment until the conspiracy 7 and their lawyers arefreed. If the rulings of Julius Hoffman are supported by the highercourts, we are all — in the most individual and direct ways —going to feel the consequences.When was the last time a policeman approached you and youdidn’t feel afraid? We know that we have been called paranoid.We have also watched yesterday’s paranoia turn into today’s prud¬ence, and by tomorrow it might be survival tactics.Our sympathy and support goes out to the conspiracy de¬fendants, their lawyers, and all their supporters. We, perhapslike many of them, are still a little stunned. We saw some ominousadvice printed on a sign today, and we’d like to spread it around:protest the conspiracy trial, while it’s still legal.Wash Prom Funds( *The members of student government (SG) are upset at thelarge appropriation ($1700) given to the Wash Prom recently bythe committee on recognized student organizations (CORSO.) Weare a bit more than upset. It is appalling that CORSO, which hadoperated on a theory that they would give the most money togroups which in turn give the most back to the campus, couldgive so much money to an organization that benefits so few. Lastyear, less than 100 people attended the Wash Prom; at that rate,that’s $17 per person. At the same time, CORSO this year gavethe Maroon only $1500 for more than 60 issues, each of whichhas a reading public of over 10,000. Somehow, CORSO’s logicescapes us.CORSO, unfortunately, only gets $35,000 with which to fundall student organizations on campus. Due to this shortage of funds,they have to cut requests and run a very tight ship. They hurt theirown arguments for larger appropriations, which are desperatelyneeded, by being so irresponsible with the little that they have.The Wash Prom has already spent most of the money that hasbeen appropriated to them. However, while there is very littlethat can be done to correct this specific current situation, wewould hope that the members of SG will use this incident as anexample to change the policy so that something like this can neverhappen again. Also, we would hope that when the new SG iselected in the spring, they will remember this incident and electthe new members of CORSO only after a great deal of thought anddeliberation. The Conspiracy Trial:By Con HitchcockWhether the contempt citations were just¬ified or not, Judge Julius J Hoffman hasapplied the coup de grace to the conspiracytrial and the rest is anti-climax, even theverdict. It has been hard to look objectivelyat the whole trial, and the actions of thejudge probably have polarized opinion tosuch a degree that rational examination ofthe whole event is virtually impossible. Thereal, issues of the trial have been sub¬merged, the real charges have been lost,and in their place we are left with a tur¬moil of charges, accusations and emotion¬alism which obfuscate everything theytouch.The charge against the seven (nee eight)is conspiracy to cross state lines with intentto incite a riot. Whether or not this hasbeen committed, no one can tell. No onecan recall what evidence the governmentproduced or how well the defense rebuttedthe accusations. No one can state if in facta consipracy has been proven or refuted.But what do we recall? Mayor Daley, for¬mer attorney general Ramsey Clark, JudyCollins, Julian Bond, Norman Mailer — thewitnesses called by the defense reads like awho’s who of prominent public figures. Yetwho can remember what each of them said,how each contributed to the defense’s case?The antics of Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Ru¬bin will always prove more interesting thantestimony by police officers, and this iswhat stands out as distinctive marks of thetrial.And as the jury remains out and the dem¬onstrations go on, what are we left with?Probably as great a circus as the Ringlingbrothers ever put on. Each action broughtmore and more publicity, each witness ofthe defense added more and more lustre tothe whole affair. But what of the chargesamid this morass?One becomes inebriated with the trial,and the form replaces the substance as theprimary source of interest, and the con¬stitutional issue becomes secondary and istrundled out and blown up only when theentertainment has temporarily ceased.The defendants have based a good deal oftheir extra-legal defense on this publicityand while in the short run it is foolish in asense of jurisprudence (witness the con¬tempt citations), perhaps in the long run,so the argument goes, they will be able, bythe mass of public support and emotion, tohave the decision reversed. But one wouldtend to doubt that.From a legal standpoint Judge Hoffmancan convict the defendants and their attor¬neys for contempt and the charges willstick unless they are overturned on appeal.And in fact Judge Hoffman has precedentsfor most of his actions, including chainingand gagging Bobby Seale. It remains to beseen what will happen in the appeals court.But what must be considered as of pri¬mary importance in the appeals process isthe fact that as one appeals a case higherand higher in the federal courts, procedurebecomes more and more strict. Comparedwith the decorum of a Supreme Court ses¬sion, Judge Hoffman’s courtroom was abrouhaha, and similar behavior in the for¬mer would make Hoffman look like a be¬nevolent country judge.By their theatrics, the defense has madeit hard for themselves to keep the spiritalive should they get to an appeals court.Had they played it straight, had they gonealong with the judge, the trial would havegone along at a lowered-voices tempo, andthe defense would probably have a goodchance of being acquitted, and, most im¬portant, established a precedent, so thatsuch a trial might not happen again. Butthe trial would not have engendered en¬thusiasm or popular support, such as it be.Noticeable by its absence is a reactionfrom the right to the whole affair. One hasyet to see a conservative columnist comeout with a “they all ought to be in jail”statement. Nor has there been any sizeableenthusiasm or antipathy from the silentmajority, if we grant that such a thing ac¬tually exists. And this is understandable. Itis an issue not of great interest to middleAmerica, for it. does not touch themContinued on Page Nine, 'Hitchcock'6/The Chicago Maroon/February 17, 1970 ; fi »n* »f • ■ * r*• ®//tors ExamineWith the coming of evening, more of thevigil-keepers are inside the warm Lutheranchurch.'fences, demonstrations, rallies marked one of the most controversial trials in U S history,y of the important questions surrounding the events beginning September 27 will be de-hy Mike Brant, Melvyn Sterling) The demonstrators are staying throughthe night. They are keeping a vigil for thejury’s verdict. Most believe it will be guil¬ty, and the defendants are in jail anyway.Yet they’re waiting anyway, missing schoolContinued on Page Nine, 'Cook'February 17, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7By Steve CookWhile the jury in the conspiracy trial isout deliberating on a verdict, there hasbeen a constant vigil outside the Federalbuilding. Yesterday the marchers num¬bered between thirty and two hundred atdifferent times; they marched counter¬clockwise around the glass-walled building.Sometimes, when there were enough ofthem, they chanted their support for thejailed defendants but mostly they were si¬lent, still shell-shocked from the flurry ofcontempt charges handed out by JudgeHoffman to the defendants and their law¬yers over the weekend.Across the thin layer of glass that wallsin the building, plainclothes federal mar¬shals and police watched the demonstra¬tors. The glass separated two worlds, withina huge color photo of President Nixon hov¬ered above the information desk. Outsidethe glass, a few people started up “Ho HoHo Chi Minh ...”Across Jackson boulevard, the Con¬spiracy people had set up an office in theChrist the King Lutheran Church. A secre¬tary for the church tried to do business asusual among the conspiracy demonstratorswarming up over coffee.“This is beyond belief,” says a youngshort-haired man. “It isn’t happening with¬in my reality. I used to take a soft line,y’know? But this is all too real.”Sprawled on the carpet floors, the vigil-ers were very quiet; the vigil had been go¬ing on since the jury let out at noon Satur¬day.A conspiracy worker enters the storefrontchurch with a bullhorn.“We’re going to try to get speakers everyday at noon and have rallies as long as thejury is out. The vigil is going on from ten inthe morning until ten at night when thejury is in session in the Federal building.Keep people coming, and don’t let yourmorale drop. It’s gonna be a long time, butwe’re staying here until the jury lets out.Call up ten people you know and tell themto come on down.”Yet as she talks, the line of marchersaround the building thins out more and thechants stop. A Marshall Field truck drivesby the marchers and the driver leans out ofthe window shouting, “Hippies, shoot ’em.”A marcher shouts back “Right on” andraises his fist, laughing.“Let’s march single file, it makes it looklike more people,” suggests a sign-carrier.As the march slows down, a Federal inar-shal gestures from inside the glass wall. Agirl holds her sign up for the marshal tosee. It says “Justice is dead”. Anothermarshal has been counting heads of thedemonstrators. A black-armbanded march¬er is also keeping count. “Fifty-seven”, hereports, “up from thirty-two”.Within the Federal building, the jurorshave been deliberating for twenty-fivehours. The rumor is that the best hope thatthe conspiracy defendants have is a hungjury. Meanwhile, someone telephoned newsof a bomb threat to the Chicago police andthere is a federal marshal stationed aroundthe clock outside Judge Hoffman’s resi¬dence in the Drake hotel.Three girls outside the Federal buildingbegin shouting “Free the Conspiracy, jailHoffman.” As the line of marchers passesthe east side of the building the chant ech¬oes loud between the narrow walls. Othermarchers join in, and keep up the pace ofthe chant past the WMAQ television unit onthe building’s west side.The TV announcer, trying to get somefootage for the six o’clock news, standsacross the street from the marchers; atop asalt box that says “Keep Chicago clean”.“Join us,” shouts a marcher to the TVmen.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 Baba Ram Dass(formerly Dr. Richard Alpert)will talk on"The Transformationof a Man"Saturday,February 21, 8 p.m.Lecture Center A-1,Chicago Circle CampusTickets at $4 (students $3)are available at the dooror from Oasis, 20 EastHarrison, 922-8294.THECOMPLETEBEETHOVENPIANO SONATASA SERIES OF7 RECITALS BYPAULBADURA-SKODAPresented byThe University of Chicago ExtensionMandel HallMarch 3, 10, 17, 31, April 14, 20, 21SINGLE AND SERIES TICKETSAVAILABLE NOVi AT MANDEL HALLBOX OFFICEBOWERS DODGE7300 S. WESTERNPHONE 476-4400THE ALL NEW FOR 1970 CHALLENGERChallenger 2-Door Hardtop1966 Buick Skylark2 Dr.. H.T. V-8, A.T., P.S., R, H,WSW, Turq/Black Int.$1295.00 1965 Olds 442Sports Coup 4-Speed, R, H,WSW, Red/Black Int.$895.001964 Pontiac Tempest4 Dr. Sed. Auto. Trans., P.S.,R, H, WSW, Black w/blue Int.$595.00 1964 Dart2 Dr. H.T. 4-Speed, White$295.00LET US KNOW THAT YOU ARE A STUDENTAND YOU WILL RECEIVE THE BEST DEAL IN TOWNON A NEW DODGE OR USED CAR Photo Bettmann A..h.Hair.It’s not the style that counts,it’s what’s under it.The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States. New York, N Y An Equal Opportunity Employer. M/F THE EQUITABLEFor a free 18" x 24" poster of this advertisement, write: The Equitable, Dept. B, G.P.O. Box 1170, New York, N. Y. 10001LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue Where's the 3 largestwedding ring selection?119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOODEVERGREEN PLAZA EveryoneEATSatGORDON'S1321 E. 57thStudent Government Speakers Series '70PresentsJOHN BRANDEMAS.CongressmanSpeaking on: chairman, House Select Subcommittee on Education''Congress & The Changing University" at Breasted Oriental Institute, Fri., Feb. 20, 3 P.M.8/The Chicago Maroon/February 17, 1970By Connie Maravelland David BensmanOver three months ago student govern¬ment (SG) petitioned the Council of the fac¬ulty Senate for student participating ob¬servers. In January four students appearedbefore the Council to present the r*ase. TheCouncil has not taken any action. The let¬ters which follow were written to NormanNachtrieb, professor of chemistry andspokesman of the Committee of the Coun¬cil, and circulated to the members of theCouncil.I understand that the Council is consid¬ering some sort of regular student partici¬pation in Council meetings, and I would liketo express my own opinion on this matter.I think it would be a terrible mistake tohave students at Council meetings exceptby specific invitation on special (and rare)occasions. It is natural and proper that aprofessor should alter the style of his de¬bate to fit his audience. It is also natural,though perhaps improper and lamentable,that a professor may alter the substance ofhis debate to fit his audience. The impor¬tant thing is not that it is lamentable butthat it is true. And because of this, moreoften than from concern for confidentiality,the nature of the topics debated by theCouncil would change if its audience wereto change.If students were to attend Council meet¬ings the result, whatever the statutes mightsay, would be that sensitive issues would bedecided somewhere else; perhaps in meet¬ings of deans. The power of the Councilwould decline and with it the real influenceof students on University affairs. The abili¬ty of the Council for pronouncements wouldnot diminish but I assert that councillorswould more often visit administrative of¬fices with problems which had become in¬appropriate for Council action.Please understand that all of this is saidwith the greatest respect for the distinctopinions of students and councillors. It isalso said in the conviction that deansshould not, by default, get any more re¬sponsibility than they now have.Roger (Hildebrand)The participating student observers willprovide the Council of the University Sen¬ate with another point of view on how theUniversity should be working and function¬ing. Neither of the faculty letters addressesthis issue. Mac Lane makes an unsubstan¬tiated charge that students will “distortand wreck the atmosphere of the dis¬cussion.” This remains to be proved.Hildebrand says that because the facultywill not be able to talk about the sameproblems if students are present, the powerof the Council will shift to the adminis¬tration. This does not have to happen. If thefaculty are rational, they can decide if it isTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging 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 Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Gordon Katz, SusanLeft, Gerard Leval, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Ellen Sazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, DavidSteele, John Stovcns, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Miko Brant, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, 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 Roomsperioas. unices in isuunis03 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 5»th'*■> Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,=xt. 3263. Distributed on campus and in thetyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub-criptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non-'rofit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscriberso College Press Service. more important to maintain the jurisdictionof the Council than to give in to their irra¬tional reactions to students. Isn’t Mr Hilde¬brand underrating the faculty’s ability tomal.a a logical adaption to a new situation?Having participating observers would be aneasy way for the faculty to overcome thetrauma of student participation becausestudents would become a normal part ofthe decision making process rather thanbeing called on for “Advice and comment”during crisis situations. We feel that thefaculty can change their behavior in a con¬structive manner if they want to.There is an obvious confusion in Mr MacLane’s letter. He is forwarding the conceptof the University as a community, orga¬nized on a hierarchical basis, where allmembers share a common goal. If thiswere true, then the faculty would only betoo happy to show students how they reachdecisions which are in the best interest ofall groups. Why are the faculty against apublic competition of ideas? Are there, infact, two groups with conflicting purposes?The faculty seem to think the best way ofanswering this question is to close off de¬bate in the Council. They say that thereshould be no change. They seem to feel thatbecause they have the authority any stu¬dent dissatisfaction around this issue is ademonstration of student irrationality.If the faculty is sincere in their desire toconserve a unified community, they toomust make adjustments. Students will notdevelop a constructive interest in the Uni¬versity if they enter with the expectationthat their ideas are considered worthlessand this expectation is fulfilled by the fac¬ulty’s behavior. Convening sub-committeeson the spur of the moment does not count¬eract the faculty’s prevailing attitude. Oneway of dispelling this felling is for the fac¬ulty to admit students, on a regular basis,as participating observer in the Council.This would indicate that the faculty doesindeed respect student ideas’ and wouldmean that students would express theirconcern for the University in positive ways.We hope that other members of the Uni¬versity will express their opinions’ on thisquestion.Following are Hildebrand’s and Mac-Lane’s response to SG’s remarks.The most useful contribution I can maketo the debate on student observers is toreinforce my earlier remarks in the contextof the College.Among our important committees are thedean’s student advisory committee, theTuesday, February 17, 1970ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello, University organ¬ist, Rockefeller Chapel, 12:30 pm.COLLOQUIUM: Kwangjai Park, Professor, departmentof physics, University of Oregon. "Two-Photon Absorp¬tion Spectroscopy". Research Institutes 480, 4:15 pm.WRESTLING: Georgia Tech, Bartlett Gym, 4:30 pm.FLICK: "A Man Escaped," Cobb, 8 pm; plus "Nosfe-ratu" for free at 9:39.LECTURE: Albert Weisbord, "A Marxist view of con¬temporary world problems; the inner boundaries ofAsia." Breasted Hall, 8 pm.CRAP: Coalition to Stop Pollution Now meeting, IdaNoyes lounge, 7:30 pm.Wednesday, February 18LECTURE: "Changes in Personality Through the AdultYears," by Bernice Neugarten, professor committee onhuman development, Rosenwald 2, 11:30 am.LECTURE: Emile Snyder, African Studies program atIndiana University, "From Harlem to Senegal: TheIdentity of African Literature," Social Sciences 122, 8LECTURE: Emile Snyder, Professor Dept, of AfricanStudies, Indiana University (lecture in English),"Aime Cesaire: Le Cahier d'un retour au pays natal,Business East 24, 3:30 pm.MEETING: To plan response to Jewel's recruiting visitFebruary 24, Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone, 8:30 pm.RECITAL: Robert Lodine on carillon. Rockefeller Chap¬el, 12:30 am.LECTURE: Richard D. Altick, Ohio State University,"The Nature of the Victorian Reader," SS 122, 4 pm.FUCK: "Born Yesterday", Cobb, 8 pm.DANCING: Country Dancers, Dance Room, Ida NoyesHall, 8 pm.LECTURE: Robert McC. Adams, "Archaelogical Recon¬naissance and Soundings in the Nippur Region,"Breasted Hall, 8:30 pm.Thursday, February 19LECTURE: Dr. Harold Wykoff, Yale University, "ThreeDimensional Structure, Function," Abbott Hall room101,11:30 am. „ , ^MEETING: Division of Humanities, Classics 10, 4:30pm.COLLOQUIUM: Robert G. Sach, "K°-K° System As aProbe of Time Reversal Violation," Eckhart 133, 4:30pm.FLICK: "Far from the Madding Crowd", Cobb, 7 pm.LECTURE: Albert Weisbord, "Soviet Strategy in the GADFLYcommittee of the College council, and theseparate student and faculty curriculumcommittees. These committees work withvarying degrees of informal contact andwith only a modicum of administrativecoordination. They seem to me to be gener¬ating ideas and resolving difficulties withconsiderable success. I cannot imagine thatthey would work any better if they spenttheir time observing each other. On thecontrary I am afraid that if one of themhad official observers from another itsmeetings would too often turn into debateson procedure and jurisdiction — a deadlybore except for those who enjoy debates onprocedure and jurisdiction.I have too much esteem for students andfaculty and know them too well to ask thatthey “change their behavior in a construc¬tive manner.” We should not be alarmed ifour group behavior is that of congenital an¬archists. We should simply adapt to it bymaking our groups as much like individualsas possible. That is how we have trainedourselves to be productive.I do not extend this argument to dis¬ciplinary committees. There proceduresare important, problems are well-defined,and responsibility is hard to duck. I favorstudent participation as proposed by themajority of the Wegener Committee.But as for student government and thefaculty council, I urge them to stick to theirown meetings.Roger HildebrandI understand that the Council of the Uni¬versity Senate is considering a proposalfrom Student Government that student ob¬servers be permitted to attend meetings ofthe council.I trust that the Council will not agree totiie proposal. It seems to me unwise onmany grounds, in particular, because itdoes not serve well either the central pur¬poses of the University or of the CouncU.The main purpose of the University, Ihold, is to discover, organize, and transmitknowledge and understanding. Faculty andstudents are partners in these tasks, but atmarkedly different levels. These tasks arehard; knowledge or discovery usually de¬Arab-Moslem World," Breasted Hall, 8 pm.HYDE PARK CORNER: Draft laws and changes in re¬sistance, Gl organizers, Blue Gargoyle, 8 pm.TALK: Richard Castrodal, Vice-consul, Johannesburg1966-68, "South Africa: Our Foreing Policy," first floorIda Noyes, 8 pm.Friday, February 20LECTURE: Dr. Harold Wykoff, "Genetics of Ribonu-cleases, Abbott Hall, Room 101, 11:30 am.LECTURE:: Gertrude Himmelfarb, Brooklyn College,"The Idea of Poverty and the Poor in Victorian Eng¬land." Quantrell, 4 pm.LECTURE: Jim Douglas, "Numerical Solution of PartialDifferential Equations," Eckhart 133, 4:30 pm.FLICK: "Falstaff", Cobb, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.PLAYS: "Gilbert Without Sullivan; Sullivan without Gil- mands long preparation, plus devotion.For each individual it is many years be¬fore he can really show that he has what ittakes. This is why junior faculty do not atonce have tenure; this is why the energyand ability of the students do not entitlethem to make long range decisions aboutthe University. This is why the fundamen¬tal academic policy of the Universityshould be decided by the faculty in Council— not the trustees, or the students, or thecentral administration, but the faculty.The faculty as a whole would be ahopelessly unwieldy body — so it delegatesto tile Council the power of decision as toacademic policy, recognizing in electedmembers of the Council fellow scholars andscientists who have proved their worth. TheCouncil is there to engage in serious andprobing, effective discussion. Outside “ob¬servers” would simply distort and wreckthe atmosphere of this discussion.1 hope that other means can be developedto get student advice and comment on thoseissues which concern them.Sincerely yours,Saunders Mac LaneMiss Maravell has made some commentson my earlier letter about the proposal timtstudent observers be permitted to attendmeetings of the Council of the UniversitySenate. It is still a mistaken proposal. Toavoid any possible confusion, let me againsay why: The public competition of ideas isfine; this should go on in classes and semi¬nars. The processes of academic decisionare different; they should not be made apublic spectacle nor be cluttered with ob¬servers, for the reasons I stated. There aremany other reasons; in particular, the spe¬cial character of this University with itsstrong emphasis on graduate work and re¬search.Let me again urge that one consider oth¬er means for arranging regularly con¬stituted meetings of representative groupsof students and faculty.Saunders MacLaneProfessor of mathematicsDavid Bensman, ’70, is chairman of SG’scommittee on internal affairs. ConstanceMaravell, graduate student in business, ispresident of SG. ;The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevant to the University com¬munity. The opinions of the guest colum- ,.nists are not necessarily endorsed by the *Maroon. Individuals interested in submit- .ting columns should contact the editor.bert" "Cox and Box", "Rosencrantz and Guilden-stern". International House Auditorium, 8 pm.DON CARLOS: Reynolds Club Theater, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: Congressman John Brademas, "The Chang¬ing University and Congress," Breasted Hall in theOriental Institute, 3 pm.CONSPIRACY: Mickey Leaner, Conspiracy staff mem¬ber and Willard Lassers chairman of legal committeeof Illinois American Civil Liberties Union, "Day ofContempt: Constitutional, legal and moral issue," Gar¬den Room, Unitarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn, tpm.DANCE-PANEL: Discuss and smash tuition rise; Water¬melon Band, NUC, Blue Gargoyle, 8 pm.Saturday, February 21DANCE: Gay Lib sponsors dance at Pierce Tower, 9pm. 'Trial Studied by EditorsHitchcock . . .Continued from Page Sixdirectly, and when the jury returns, the re¬action will probably be one of apatheticapproval, if they are guilty, or restrainedoutrage if they are acquitted.Thus, while the defense has been effec¬tive in gathering vociferous support bytheir actions, their playing on the generalignorance of the public concerning court¬room procedure, which thus casts the de¬fendants at persecuted patriots in the eyesof most of the demonstrators, may in factdo themselves more harm in the end thangood. Should the jury find them guilty andshould massive demonstrations result, theymay find a reaction and “repression” such as has not been seen in recent times. It is apossibility to be considered with great cau¬tion, as the defense may have paintedthemselves into a corner, leaving themwith no alternative but theatrics when legalexpertise and restraint is needed.Con Hitchcock, ’72, is the Maroon’s as¬sociate managing editor.Cook ...Continued from Page Sixand jobs to maintain dissent, to show thatthe trial will not end unpopular dissent aslong as someone is willing to march aroundthe building.Steve Cook, ’71, is the Maroon’s associatenews editor.February 17, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9BULLETIN OF EVENTSVT'dl "9 "9 .i £ *5 % £ Y '< &&%-&£ & & 2- 4. '.!.'%*41 $J1 1 '*• zanim«t«# «jLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONDean Vice RepliesI asked, a week or two ago, that the Ma¬roon make clear that the University doesnot provide bait bond money. In view ofFriday’s letter from Mr Joel and Mr Baron,perhaps a lettsr to the editor is the bestway to spread the word.• The University does not provide bailbond; that is the responsibility of familyand friends.• At the beginning of the year, whenthere are a number of new graduate stu¬dents on the campus who do not live in aUniversity house (with resident head etal.), I have often gone down to the 21stPrecinct to provide $25 bail out of my ownpocket for traffic offenses, on the under¬standing that the person arrested had noone else to call upon. Later in the year,when I receive calls from a student underarrest, I have “telephoned around” to thestudent’s friends to help line up bond mon¬ey.• In matters other than traffic offenses,booking normally takes quite a long time;if the arrest has taken place at night, bondoften is not set until the next morning. Myexperience has been that a University deanhas no more access to the person underarrest in the intervening hours than anyother “man off the street.”• University security squad cars are, un¬fortunately, very much in use in theirprimary function of covering this neighbor¬hood. It is a rare occasion indeed when acar should be pulled off its beat for an houror so to provide taxi service to the policestation. Normally, if the student does nothave another car available to him, I myselfprovide a ride down to the station if there issome reasonable chance of accomplishingsomething thereby.In short, if a student is arrested, heShould first try to get in touch with his ownroommates or friends. (My impression isthat the police seldom limit someone underarrest to “one call.”) If I can be of help inlocating friends, I shall certainly be willingto try, University extension 3510.James W ViceAssistant dean of studentsBeautifulThe February 10 issue of the Maroon con¬tained a letter to the editor written by Ste¬phen May, whose purpose was to clarify adiscussion of homosexual stereotypes thatwas misquoted in a Maroon article on GayLiberation. I feel that this topic deservesfurther consideration and should be dis¬cussed more fully. Both gay and straight people are guilty ofsocially indoctrinated sentiments which areprejudicial towards persons who do not con¬form to traditional standards of masculin¬ity and femininity. The people who aremost subject to such prejudice are thosehomosexuals to whom Stephen May refersto as the “swaggering dyke” and “lispingfag”. Straight people who have no clear ra¬tional argument on which to base theirprejudice towards the homosexual rely on aconvenient, almost universally acceptedmethod of ridicule in order to justify them¬selves. They deride the homosexual on thebhsis of his or her deviation from the re¬vered standards of physical expression ormannerisms appropriate to his or her sex.Some gay people who harbor guilt con¬cerning their homosexuality try to justifythemselves by affirming their adherence totraditional masculinity or femininity.They mitigate their stigma of deviant be¬havior by claiming that at least they do notdeviate in their physical appearance. Theyclaim that they are not nor are most gaypeople, lisping or swaggering. Instead ofaccepting the lisping fag and the swagger¬ing dyke as legitimate and thus admirableforms of human expression, and welcomingthem to gay society as representatives ofone of the many natural ways of being,many gay people allow themselves to beintimidated by the derision of the straightworld and strictly discipline their lisps ortheir manner of walk so as never to revealtheir ugly secret. At the same time theyscorn those people who choose that mode ofphysical expression, which, though equallyvalid, is unfortunately less acceptable.There exists a glaring paradox con¬cerning attitudes towards masculinity andfemininity. Today, when many establishedsocial standards are being challenged,traditional stereotypes are not being over¬looked. Much has been said protesting theimage of the “All-American” male and theshy subordinate female. The scope of con¬temporary movements include those whosevery premise rests on the abolition of ster¬eotypes of sexuality. Yet these people arequick to scorn the “effeminacy” of the ho¬mosexual male and the “masculinity” ofthe homosexual female. It seems obviousthen, that much of the discussion about sex¬ual liberation, occuring both in women’sliberation groups and among sympathizers,is gross hypocrisy, mere lip service to anideal which is acceptable only within theconfines of heterosexuality. For when con¬fronted with the lisping fag and the swag¬gering dyke (whom they find offensive)many of these so-called radicals have nosubstantial rational to resort to and thusUC DRIVERSSentry tries to ease the highcost of auto insurance foryoung drivers with thefollowing reductions:GOOD STUDENTDISCOUNTYOUNG DRIVERDISCOUNTIf you are a good student21-25 with a good drivingattitude, you've got itmade. Even if you don'tthink so, give me a call.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY TTINSURANCE TICKETS SI.SOplayioyTvTTHEATER 1 f„]rLOOKING FOR TYPEST FORCM Al A LETTER AT225-6375 or223-6343 from9 to 6 P.MIV trirh ortdttionol ptipt2600 S. Midtigon RECORDS!Oldies! 20,000 in Stock. Send 35‘for 2,000 listing catalog. MailOrders filled. RECORD CENTER1895 W. 25th - Oeve., OhioRecord Tapes invoke (subtly, so as to make their hypocr-icy) the forbidden stereotypes of masculin¬ity and femininity in order to defend theirprejudices.Thus, though unorthodox mannerismsand attitudes (i.e., sensitive, gentle malesand independent, aggressive females) arepraised and encouraged by “liberal” peoplewho deny the validity of traditional ster¬eotypes, this is within the boundaries ofheterosexual “normalcy”. The gay man orwoman is subject to a double standard anddegraded by both straight and gay peoplewho cannot deal with the problem of ho¬mosexuality due respectively to ignoranceand guilt. Yet the lisping fag and swagger¬ing dyke are not only as valid a form ofhuman expression, but also as beautiful,and, as Steven May has said, I reiterate, toboth straight and gay people, “Swaggeringwomen are beautiful, lisping men are beau¬tiful.”Libby Hamlin 72Weiss AttackedIn his February 13 letter, Roger Weissoffers “convincing proof” of nothing excepthis own baseness.He says not reappointing Marlene Dixonwas wise — because, since being academi¬cally and emotionally eviscerated by theUniversity of Chicago, Mrs Dixon has de¬voted less time to academic pursuits! Inother words, kick her in the guts and then,when she lies on the floor groaning, pointout: “See — she was always a com-plainer.”Then he favorably contrasts Flacks andagain finds the University wise — becausejfii»;« »:♦:« »:<»:«»>:« »;< »:< way»!5N »!5!« »!SN »Si§ MB MS3 “the University gave Richard Flacks ten¬ure.”Not only does he display remarkableblindness, in Mrs Dixon’s case, to the re¬sults of his and the University’s cruelty(and a failure to distinguish cause and ef¬fect which would make us wonder about hiscredentials as a scholar if so many scholarsdid not do the same) but also, in Flack’scase, he fails to tell the truth. For he nevermentions that the “tenure” the Universityoffered Flacks was in the College, not in hisdepartment, and hence was both a slap athis professional reputation and a calculatedacademic dead-end.To those of us who spent several yearshere as radicals at the University, whatmost impressed us about the Universityand its professors was not even their will¬ingness to crush dissent by any meanswhich seemed to work, but their lack of themost elementary honesty. Sadly, they arenot even honorable opponents — they aresimply two-bit hacks.Chris HobsonPolitical Science, expelledInternational Socialists (IS)Dorm MastersThe dorm masters plan is an atrocity.The student village, which will cost 100times more, is 100 times more an atrocity.The Blum Committee to plan studenthousing hasn’t met since student govern¬ment appointed student members to it. Per¬haps it would prick Wally Blum’s pride tosit down at a conference table with studentmembers as equals.John Siefert, 71PlATCCrS ALL-NIGHT SHOWFRIDAY L SATUB0AT FOLLOWING LAST BIGUIAB MAILIGIFeb. 13 Feb. 14Richard BurtonElizabeth TaylorTHE NIGHT OF THE IGUANA PARANOIAFob. 20 Feb. 21Fellini's Sandy Dennis•K THAT COLD DAY IN THE PARKFeb. 27 Feb. 28B » A*• On BwWWOh wMOU Rkfcerd Bertee, Peter O'TeeleHIM) BECKETTMarch 6 March 7RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY FOUR HORSEMEN OFTHE APOCALYPSEMarch 13 March 14THE LIQUIDATOR '***’ THE COMEDIANS !*« »V« >!♦:« »:»:< »:< »;♦:« >;♦;< >:«■«ifi7i >7i >7i >7i >7i HWHAT DOES LEVI DOWITH ALL OUR BREAD?(hear Rev. John Fry, Al Raby, S.G.)Come to panel/discussion/dance to...DISCUSSRESISTCELEBRATESMASHthe tuition rise(who asked us anyhow?)FRIDAY, Feb. 20*8 PM - Blue Gargoyle(dance to the WATERMELON) N.U.C.Exposing themselves at a recent CORSO meet¬ing Gay Liberation leaders punctuated de¬mands for alterations in the traditions of WashProm.■.u’l*.■ - V»»* ?• ■ :r<e g r * * *yyr * *..«- % ? *% g t rr •'* * * ~ v i H ■ i t. ’. i r. 314. -.' li ?i t r, 8 £ & V „ : •- • :l, ’ tt-i (• } *RIGHTEOUS NEWS BELIEVERS.... DRUGS TO KEEP YOU WHITE.poly-demi-semi-pseudo-quasi-neo-200-crypto-proto-sesqui-Pierce Tower. Sat. NiteSCENESPaving more and enjoying it less?Friday at 8-Blue Garg.__,0 hn BRADEMUS, Congressmanand Chairman of House Subcom¬mittee on Education will speak^bout Congress and us, BREASTEDFRI ip ORIENTAL INSTITUTE3PM.»Kina Broadcasting Company inter¬views Feb 18, 1970, for news re¬porters, writers, filmmakers, etc.See our ad on page—.”jewel is coming Feb 24. PlanAhead' 8:30PM Wed, CrossroadsStud Center 5621 Blackstone.Are you tired, lonely, cold, de¬pressed? Come visit us at 5112 SKimbark tomorrow at 7:30. Be in¬spired, meet nice people, learnHebrew. Meet Motke.TTTTTg. representativesCOME and support your SPEAK¬ERS SERIES Hear JOHN BRADE¬MUS ORIENTAL INST. FRI. FEB20, at 3 PM.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-*377)Hyde Park Corner. "New Draft Lawand the Resistance." Blue Gargoyle.Thursday 8 PM.CESAR SI, JEWEL NON! FEB 24.Congressman JOHN BRADEMUSORIENTAL Institute Fri Feb 20-3.Second meeting of Chavurat alliyah(people interested in Israel settle¬ment) tomorrow 8:30 5112 S Kim¬bark Motke will speak on profes¬sional opportunities ConversationalHebrew at 7:30 as usual For ride orinfo call 752-5416 or 752-6120.DDT 8. DOD GRAPES, JEWELFEB 24.Priv Art Show. Corvtemp work; Nav-aho, Hopi, Zuni, Pueblo Pottery.Feb 21-22. 667-0840.Come out of your closets, brothersand sisters. Join us.WASH PROM — Miss U of CWhat does Levi DO with all ourbread? Find out Friday at I.Gay Liberation sponsors a dancefor:homo-hetero-bl-uni-ultra-trans-super-botano-sui-auto-necro-a- -sexualselectro-mu Iti-extra-intra- AACM Concert. Blue Gargoyle Fri¬day.IS WASH PROM A FORMAL? yes.but its informal; in fact you cancome in Genes. Or costume, or noth¬ing.Tenants have rights too. Form atenant union to get better leases,building repairs, fairer rents. Callthe Tenant Union Project, StudentGovernment, MI3-0800, ext.3274 be¬tween 1 and 5PM or 493-4148.WASH PROM — ten piece danceband ,Blue Gargoyle. Folk Nite Wed BringGuitars, Songs, Friends 8:00.GRAND OPENINGThe Craft Coop will open on 3rdfloor of the Gargoyle on MondayFeb 23, featuring rag dolls, Ukra-nian belts, pots, scarfs etc. Work¬shops in the crafts coming soon.INFO ON WASHPROMContrary to popular opinion. WashProm is alive and well, and will beheld next Saturday Feb. 21, at 9:00.Tickets are on sale at the Bookstore,Reynolds Club, and the Student Ac¬tivities office, for a price of $4.50 acouple. And what do you get foryour 4Vi smackers? A blues band(fantastic); A jazz band (great); A10 piece dance band (no comment);Food; drink (of Gods); Blackfriars;Miss U of C; George Washington (Inperson) and a cast of thousands.And lots 'o other stuff we haven'teven thought of yetMARXIST LECTUREAlbert Weisbord will deliver a lec¬ture "The Inner Boundaries ofAsia," the first In a series of "Marx¬ist Views of Contemporary WorldProblems," tonight 8PM at BreastedHall? Sponsored by Hitchcock Hall.SPACE'izznzzzLDOORS'Morrison Hotelonly $3.99Mother’s Burnt Weenie Sandwich$3.29STUDINT CO-OPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT ■\$ 3 rooms and bath in Kenwood homeat camous bus stop. Prefer girl whowill babysit (boys 3 and 5) for rent.924-6098. PERSONALSWash PROM — JAZZUC STAFF cpI would like to rentor sblet 2-3 bdrm turn hse or aptin Hyde Pk or So Shore, June 70to 71. 955-9352 after 5:30.See life at a U of C fraternitywhile rooming with one of the uni¬versity's more conscientious hiredhicks. $55/mo. PL29647.Beautiful spacious 5 • and 6 rmapts at 71st 8, Jeffery for informa¬tion call - Albert H. Johnson RealtyCo., 732 East 75th Street - HU 3-1470.Roommate wanted: Own room $65/Mo. 1400 E 571h St. Call 684-4119.5300 So. Shore Drive. 1 Bdrm. Apt.Avail. March 1, on Lake, near 1C,bus lines, Hyde Pk. Shops. 288-7358 eves. Sorry Kiddies, but I may not beable to halt CORSO's $1700 illegaldole for the UC queer contest 8< highschool promenade (with an orches¬tra to prance to.)Diana BurgBlackstone SG repJOHN BRADEMUSCOME!!! Speaks —In a Hurry for Lunch? Things areSpeeding up at the Gargoyle.Wash Prom riding the piston of lo¬cal bureaucrats suffering from nos¬talgia life $1700 from CORSO andleave the remaining U of C organi¬zations to mend their fences as bestthey can.Rational discourse with Jessica Seig-al means seven policemen.1 bdrm turn Univ apt avail for SprQtr 363-3430.Free Room in Exchange for BabySitting Evenings 684-1369. JOHN BRADEMUS — ORIENTALINST. FRI FEB. 20 at 3PM.COME!!!Dont Do It in The Lake!!!LENT Recalling your nebulous gazetray myself in you. 1 be-LENT HOLY EUCHARIST, Augus-tana Church, 5500 Woodlawn, 7:30PM Thursday, Feb. 19. Preacher:Prof. Axel Kildegaard, LutheranSchool of Theology. DO NOT PUT ANY FOOD BY THECOFFEE MACHINE OR 1 WILLEAT IT...THE SCAVENGER.FOR SALE3bd. Rm Georgian Fin. Basmt LibNew Kitchen, Dishwasher, Nat FirePlace, 2’/j Baths Washer Dryer SideDrive Garage Fully Carpeted SoShore 28500. 768-2472 for Appoint¬ment Pvt.Really Find out how crowded thoseflights ace ... for all StandbyInformation Call American AirlinesCampus Rep Jim Sack 684-6667.Complete Set of Great Books Leath¬erette Binding Excellent ConditionCall 288-1100, xllll.MOVING: Sell Plastic R. PlayerCover, Trunk and Room Div Screen.363-1742.Excursion Rates to New York andWashington.. .Get Details fromAmerican Airlines Campus Rep.Jim Sack 684-6667.'63 Peugeot Wagon, Motor Excellent,Extras, $475, 955-5250.2 '60 VW'S $100, $500 955-7809Buy Wash Prom Tickets anytimefrom today on, at the BookstoreReynolds club, or Student Activitiesoffice. Only $4.50 a couple!!! Cheapat half the price . .. Special FORDON CARLOS BRING IN DONCARLOS TICKET STUB AFTER11:00, GET WASH PROM TICKETFOR $2.50 .per couple)PEOPLE WANTEDMARTHA'S VINEYARD Summer1970 Student EMPLOYMENT OP¬PORTUNITIES. Hundreds of jobs!Detailed descriptions including res¬taurants, hotels, shops. SEND $2.00.APPLIED RESEARCH ASSOCI¬ATES, Dept. 8, PO BOX 3903, NewHaven, Conn. 06525.STUDENTS, STAFF, Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. $1.50 for an hour's work,plus the chance of a bonus. Oncampus. Call x4710 for an appoint¬ment.CO-OP HOUSINGThere will be a meeting for all per¬sons interested In Co-op Housing.Rey. Club. So. Tues, 4:30 PM.EXPEDITIONEverglades Escapades March 21-29Call HICKORY ex. 2381NEED NEW HOMESLOVING CATS FREE TO LONELYPEOPLE. CALL JACKIE 363-9580.Oedipus needs mother — save catfrom Animal Welfare. Call PL2-1981 evenings after 9.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON12 f 2 E. 59«h S«., Chicago, 60637dates TO RUNname, address, phone *CHARGE;HEADING: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fred. BOYCOTTBOYCOTTBOYCOTTBOY-COTTDont rent a tux, leave yourlong dress at home, and keepyour dance pumps on the shelf.Wash Prom shall not stealwith impunity.Unknown agentsrule us each in his cell.When has so much been spent on sofew at U of C? Wash Prom illegallyspirits away the largest chunk of $given any one nite stand to bringballroom dancing back to the mid¬way.Wash Prom — Blackfriars!!!Want to get out of your head andinto the real world where what youthink makes a difference? Join thetenant union staff. Tenant UnionProject, Ml3-0800, ext 3274 between 1and 5PM or 493-4148.To all the people who have been rip¬ping off ashtrays and spoons andsaltshakers and bowls and every¬thing else you can lay your mitts onfrom the Bandersnatch. Your abunch of shitheads and we hope youall die. We are non-profit and stu¬dent-run; you're keeping us fromgiving a pay raise to our starvingworkers, most of whom eat once aweek while working here and haveto spend their pay on rent and pills.We need your business, but pleaseleave the dishes here when you go.Did you hear the one about the tui¬tion rise being a strategy to knockout the college?WATERMELON — NUCDance Garg DanceDear Fan Club (Cindy, Sue, Ann,Wig Sale!BUY DIRECT - ' IMPORTER100% HUMAN HAIR WIGSMachine Made Wigs 44 qaReg Retail $29.50 to 59.50 lCla«JUHand Made Wigs 04 qaReg Retail $85.00 to 200.00 W*Va«HJFashionable Falls oc onReg Retail $49.50 to 79.50 £De3ULovely Wiglets c cnReg Retail $15.00 to 25.00 DaOUBeautiful CascadesReg Retail $20.00 to 35.00 11.60Eyelashes 4 jaReg Retail $2.50 to 5.00 I .*IUStretch WigsReg Retail $24.95 to 29.95Synthetic, Tapered, Straight or Curly14.90Don Kaye ImportsSTEVENS BUILDING17 N. STATE • SUITE 1716Phone- 641-21999:30 to 5:30 MONDAY THRU SAT .ADDITIONAL 10% OFF TOSTUDENTS & FACULTYWITH I.D.Class inFolk Guitarwith TED JOHNSON fromthe Old Town School ofFolk Musicat LEHNH0FF STUDIOS1438 E. 57th St. 288-3500 Mary, Sandy, Pat, Rachel, Brenda,Lola, Ami and Lisa, et al) HowThoughtful of you to Think of Me onValentine's Day.The Playboy Internationale.Gay Liberations sponsors a dance atPierce Tower, 2-21. Come dance andhelp us raise a bail fund.WASH PROM — Stan Moss Blues!!!WASH PROM — Gay people,Freaks, jocks. Grads, undergrads —hell you're all supposed to come!!WASH PROM — COME IN YOUR BLEW GENESJeannie Wickler and Barbara Bern¬stein — your ad makes it soundlike a Gay person comes out of hiscloset when he puts on the clothesthat are conventionally worn bymembers of the opposite sex.Wrong. How about another one?U.C. Gay Liberation.Form a tenant union in your build¬ing. Call the Tenant Union Projectfor advice, organizing skill and legalaid. Student Government MI3-0800ext. 3274 between 1 and 5 PM or 493-4148.Will the friendly lady show the sailorsthe ropes??? Find out on The Don AdamsSpecial: “Hooray for Hollywood”...brought to you by Budweiser®, the Kingof Beers®. Thursday, February 26,CBS-TV, 8 p.m. EST.Anheuser-Busch, Inc. • St. LouisINDONESIAN^ FOOD - DRINKS-v ATHE VOLSTEAD ACT2238 N. LINCOLN348-7228SAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGS SAVINGSS<John's Mens Wear1459 E. 53rd.REDEEM THIS COUPONFOR 10% OFF ON ANYSPORT COAT OR SUIT!expires Feb. 24{SPECIALMODERN DANCE CLASSES4.30 to 6.00latter. Rock 8 Jan taught.Allison Theater Dance CenterRoom 1902332-9923 Cornett Dtorisl1645 E. 55th STREETCHICAGO, ILL 60615Phono: FA 4-1651*9February 17, 1970/The Chicago' Miroon/11SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $13.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call N.T, NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveAnheuser-Busch, Inc. • St. LouisWhy are these men laughing? Find outon The Don Adams Special: “Hoorayfor Hollywood”... brought to you byBudweiser«, the King of Beers*. Thurs¬day, February 26, CBS-TV, 8 p.m. EST. Studentair faresto Europestart at*120Icelandic has the greatesttravel bargain ever for stu¬dents ... our brand new$120* one-way fare toLuxembourg in the heart ofEurope. If you’re travellingto or from your studies at afully accredited college oruniversity, and are 31 yearsold or under, you qualify forthis outstanding rate. It’san individual fare, not acharter or group; you flywhenever you want, andcan stay up to a year. Inter¬ested? Qualified? Also, ifyou are thinking of Europebut not for study, we’ve gotthe lowest air fares. Callyour travel agent or writefor Student Fare Folder CN.Icelandic Airlines, 630 FifthAve. (Rockefeller Center)New York, N.Y. 10020.*Sligtitly higher in peakseason.ICELANDICJuitr*♦ mifimumSTILLLOWESTAIRFARESTO EUROPEof any scheduled airline. The ailing heart of American cities has been thesubject of many books — but none more telling,none more jarring than this gathering of nurseryrhymes, altered from their classic form to drama¬tize the desperation of life in our urban ghettos."Anyone concerned about our "The Inner City Mother Gooseurban poor and our national has arrived just in the nick ofcharacter should read it." time. If ever there was a need—ramsey Clark, Former for that sweet lady s point ofAttorney General of the U S view, it is here and now."—John v. lindsay, MayorTV i WbfeR <#<fcY VK.WSPM.S bUHbWKi ftATgfciftJUST PUBLISHED • $4.95 CLOTH • $1 95 PAPER • SIMON AND SCHUSTER^HISTORY & CULTURE COURSETRAVELING THROUGH EUROPEJULY 2-AUG. 22, 1970CONTACT: Mrs. E. HOROWITZ3211 HUMANITIES, UNIV. of WISCONSINMADISON, WISC. 608-256-3024 i puesa':PLATTER. Pizzo, Fried ChickenI Italian FoodsI Compare the Price! II I11460 E. 53rd 643-2800|I WE DELIVER IKINGINTERVIEWFEB. 18, 1970King Broadcasting Company,a growing, diversifiedcommunications companycentered in the PacificNorthwest, would like to meetwith graduating seniors andgraduate students interested incareers within thecommunications industry.The company owns andoperates TV - AM - FMbroadcast stations in Seattle,Portland and Spokane; amonthly magazine; a film-production division, a com¬munity antenna (CATV) divi¬sion, and a properties and realestate division.Entry-level positions occur inradio, television and film prod¬uction; writing, announcing,news reporting, sales, promo¬tion, merchandising and photo¬graphy.Preference is given thosewith broad liberal-artseducational backgrounds at theundergraduate level.For further information, youmay consult our careerspamphlet and the companypolicy manual at your campusplacement office, where aninterview with ourrepresentative also may bescheduled.King is an equal opportunityemployer.« bHoadcartino company!Kv