THF, MAROONVolume 78, Number 46 The University of Chicago Friday, April 3, 1970For Ombudsman PostNew Procedure SetAbortion Law Tested In CourtDr. Frederick Zuspan, chairman of thedepartment of obstetrics and gynecology atthe University, is one of six plaintiffs whohave filed suit in court seeking to have theIllinois abortion law declared uncon¬stitutional.The suit has been filed with the AmericanCivil Liberties Union (ACLU). Other plian-tiffs include Dr Charles Fields, Dr RalphWinn, and Dr David Danforth, all chairmenof obstetrics and gynecology, at the Chi¬cago Medical School, the University of II-Dixon To TalkAt April RallyMarlene Dixon, former assistant profes¬sor of sociology and human development atthe University and now teaching at McGillUniversity, is scheduled to speak oncampus the evening of April 15.Mrs Dixon was invited by the new univer¬sity conference (NUC), as part of a pro¬gram in Mandel hall which will also featurerepresentatives from the Black Panthers.Organizers of the April 15 Vietnam Mora¬torium are co-sponsors of the event, whichwill be one of several moratorium day ac¬tivities.It is also hoped that Richard Flacks, for¬mer assistant professor of sociology at theuniversity and now at the University of Cal¬ifornia at Santa Barbara, will be able toappear on that day.At a meeting held Thursday night, actioncommittees were formed to work out plansfor a proposed convocation in RockefellerChapel, and to charter buses for a noonrally at the Civic Center Plaza. Plans for.continuous live television coverage of themoratorium on UHF channel 40, which willbegin operation this Sunday, are also underway. linois Medical School, and the North¬western University Medical Schoolrespectively.A federal court of appeals ruling last Mon¬day permitted Dr Fields to terminate thepregnancy of a 16 year-old rape victim, af¬ter the other plaintiffs filed a brief in hisbehalf.The names of the two other plaintiffs ap¬pear as Jane Doe, a pseudonym for a wom¬an who went to England to have an abor¬tion performed, and Mary Roe, apseudonum for a woman who had a baby inIllinois because she could not afford anabortion elsewhere.Zuspan was out of town and could not bereached for comment, but HellmutFritzsche, an attorney acting as staff coun¬sel for the ACLU, in the case, discussed thesuit.Mrs Fritzsche said that an Illinois districtjudge will have to rule on two motions:the first is a motion submitted by the stateattorney general asking that the case beJudy Clark and Howard Machtinger, bothof whom were expelled following last year’ssit-in, are among the twelve members ofthe Weatherman faction of SDS who wereindicted yesterday for conspiring to violatethe Federal Anti-Riot Act.The indictments, announced by UnitedStates District Attorney Thomas A. Foran,grew out of the Weathermen’s demonstra¬tions in Chicago’s Loop and Near Northsidelast October 8-11, and the judge, selected bylottery to hear the case is Julius Hoffman,who recently presided over the much-publi¬cized Chicago Conspiracy trial. dismissed; the second motion, made by theplaintiffs, seeks to have a three-judge paneltaken from the federal court of appeals ruleon the suit, rather than one state judge.Mrs Fritzsche said that if the plaintiffs’motion were denied, an appeal would bepresented before the federal court of ap¬peals, and that the decision would probablybe reversed. She also thought that the tem¬porary restraining order issued in theFields case would help their cause.Mrs Fritzsche mentioned two other rul¬ings which she believed had set a goodprecedent: a Michigan district judgerecently declared unconstitutional thatstate’s abortion law, and a federal districtjudge last week declared unconstitutionalWisconsin’s abortion law. She said that thesecond ruling was particularly helpful, be¬cause the Wisconsin law is similar to Il¬linois’, and because the decision was madeby Judge Otto Kerner, who also issued therestraining order permitting Dr Fields toperform an abortion.The Anti-Riot Act, which makes it a fed¬eral crime to cross state lines to inciteriots, was the same measure under whichfive members of the “Chicago 7” wererecently convicted.Although it is believed that several of thedefendants are out of the country, the FBIhas been authorized to serve arrest war¬rants. Bail has been set at $50,000 to $100,-000, varying with each defendant.Among those listed in the indictments areMark Rudd, Bemadine Dohrn, and CathyBoudin. »Twelve Weathermen Indicted;Hoffman Selected Trial JudgeSTEVE COPEHappy with procedureApplications are now being accepted forthe 1970-71 student ombudsman, who will beselected through a new procedure an¬nounced Thursday by dean of studentsCharles O’Connell.The new procedure calls for a selectioncommittee composed of three faculty, threestudents and O’Connell.Student government, (SG), the presentombudsman and the students of the faculty-student advisory committee on campus stu¬dent life (FSACCSL) will each appoint onestudent to the committee which will send apanel of names from the applicants to Pres¬ident Edward Levi. Levi will make the finalappointment. *Under the new procedure, all applicantswill be interviewed by the committee withthe incumbent ombudsman acting as a con¬sultant and the assistant to the presidentserving as ex officio secretary of the com¬mittee.The three faculty members of the com¬mittee will be appointed by John Wilson,the provost.From the panel of names submitted tohim, Levi will make his appointment. If hehas a specific individual in mind for theposition who is not on the list given him, hewill consult the committee about thd candi¬date.Applications for next year’s ombudsmanwill be accepted through April 17. Appli¬cations should be in the form of a letter toO’Connell indicating the candidate’s aca¬ demic level and area, his number of yearsat the University, any experience thatmight seem relevant, and the applicant’sspecific qualifications for the position. Let¬ters of recommendation from other stu¬dents and from members of the faculty andstaff will be helpful.Applications from individual students willbe accepted as will be recommendationsfrom individual students or student groups.O’Connell has already sent letters to theseveral student councils of the major aca¬demic areas to SG, and to FSACCSL askingthem to submit recommendations for theposition.Steve Cope, the current ombudsman, willhold office until the end of summer quarter,but the new ombudsman, whose appoint¬ment is expected during May, will servewith Cope to get acclimated to the job.“I think the new procedure is an im¬provement over the one we had last year.Hopefully it will both secure a good om¬budsman and secure student trust forhim,” Cope said. “The first complaint I gotwas that I got the job. So the first thing Idid was to try to work out a better selectionprocedure for this year,” he added.The new procedure had been discussedand planned for the last few months. Be¬sides Cope, O’Connell, Levi, Karl Bemes-derfer, assistant to the president and Caro¬line Heck, Maroon editor, had been amongthose working out the new procedure.The concept of a panel of names sub¬mitted to Levi is the same way that dean-ships and other presidential appointmentswithin the University are made, Cope said.In this way, the President gets to see anumber of possible names in the com¬mittee’s order of preference rather thanjust their final recommendation for the job.According to O’Conell’s announcement,“The student ombudsman is a part-time sa¬laried officer of the University. He may beeither a man or a woman, but he should bea currently registered degree candidatewith a superior academic average andshould be willing to take only a partial aca¬demic program during the 1970-71 academ¬ic year in order to have sufficient time toserve as ombudsman. Among under¬graduate candidates, students enteringtheir senior year in 1970-71 will be givenpreference.”“The ombudsman is provided with an of¬fice in the Reynolds Club and with secretar¬ial assistance.”Steve AokiRabbi Ticktin Representative Of Jewish FaithRABBI MAX TICKTIN: TI10 controversial figure in his office. Steve AokiBy Christine FroulaFor six years Rabbi Max D. Ticktin hasbeen director of Hillel foundation, coordi¬nating Hillel activities, teaching seminars,attending to administrative matters, help¬ing people deal with personal problems,and serving as a rabbi and a representativeof the Jewish tradition — all without at¬tracting much newspaper attention until hisrecent arrest in absentia under the Mich¬igan abortion statute. Now, though sudden¬ly famous, the busy, bearded rabbi contin¬ues life as usual, dealing with the problemsof Hillel and its community members while“waiting to see what will happen” with hisown.Rabbi Ticktin regards “enabler” or “fa¬cilitator” as a more apt term for his posi¬tion in Hillel activities than “director.”“The initiative for activities comes fromthe students,” he says, “and I use my tal¬ents or experience to help them effect whatthey would like to do.”A considerable amount of Rabbi Ticktin’stime is spent in counseling people withproblems. Besides giving “friendship sup¬port — “there are a lot of lonely peoplearound here,” — he helps people workthrough problems with parents, friendships,love affairs, intermarriages, religion, thedraft problem, pregnancies, and so forth.“My most important role here,” he ex¬plains, “is to be informed about the issues,and to try to take a non-judgmental stand¬point toward the problem. My responsi¬bility is to help the person see and thinkabout all his alternatives, so that he canchoose the best one for himself.“I have views and do not hide them whenit’s relevant to bring them up, but I striveto keep them separate from counseling andgetting people to formulate where theywant to be concerning a particular issue,”he adds. “The two important things are toaccept the person at the point where he is,and to accept myself for what I am. PROFILEThere’s a ‘thou’ and an ‘I,’ and neither canexist unless l accept both him and myselffor what we are, without jumping at theproblem and pulling a solution out of ahat.”Rabbi Ticktin says that it is “very rare”for a person to decide to do somethingwhich Ticktin himself believes is wrong.“The moral consider?tions are very com¬plicated and ambiguous,” he says. “Takethe war issue — service to one’s country isdefinable in so many ways. My responsi¬bility is to help people recognize their re¬sponsibilities, more than anything else.“A woman with a problem pregnancy hasseveral alternatives: marriage, sometimesless than enthusiastically welcomed, havingthe child — the alternative that is closed bythe law is abortion. I do not advocate abor¬tion, but it sometimes can be a defensiblesolution.”Rabbi Ticktin feels that the University ofChicago, called by at least one publicationthe place where one is most likely to losehis religion, offers strong philosophic andintellectual challenges to an acceptance ofa religious tradition. “I think that’s good,”he says. “My hope is that students whohave a religious commitment will emergewith a post-critical religious commitment— certainly this University makes it diffi¬cult to accept a pre-critical commitment.The crisis usually involves either an in¬tellectual examination of the content of areligion, or a crisis of belonging — the uni¬versalized attitudes which this University,and any good university, encouragesfrequently weaken the connection which thestudent has with his own religious commu¬nity. So, the University poses both philo¬sophical and sociological challenges.” Before coming to Chicago, Rabbi Ticktinwas director at the University of Wisconsinfor 16 years. Comparing the two groups ofstudents, he says, “There are fewer stu¬dents at a state university who are reallystudents. There are more people here whosearch seriously for knowledge and ideas,and academic standards and expectationsare therefore higher. But this atmospheremakes for more lonely, isolated people. Ithink there’s a great need for students tofind small subcommunities.”Educated at the University of Pennsylva¬nia and the Jewish Theological Seminary ofAmerica, Rabbi Ticktin says his decision tobecome a rabbi was influenced by his work¬ing on the New York University campus.His grandfather had been a rabbi in Po¬land, but he ran a store instead of having a congregation because he believed religiousleaders should not be salaried. “At NYU Isaw that to be a rabbi on a campus was away of being free to do what I wanted todo, to have a professional relationship witha congregation without being hired bythem,” he explains. “The most satisfyingaspect of this kind of job is the consistentchallenges which it offers.”Ticktin’s major fields of interest includeJewish literature,which he finds “a fasci¬nating body of knowledge, exciting to learnand teach,” medieval and modern theology,ethics, and mysticism. He is married andhas three daughters.At present, Rabbi Ticktin says he has noplans for litigation, but will continue as amember of the Chicago area Clergy Con¬sultation Service on Problem Pregnancies.WHERE IS GAY LIBERATION AT?Donee Saturday2/Tbe.CMc»Bp M*ro*n7Af»ril 3/ \970 Inner-City Creative Arts andBlues Show Sunday, April 12-Mandel HallArt work by prison inmatesdisplayed for sale2:00 - 9:00 p.m.Blues ShowChicago Blues BandHomesick JamesSunny Lind SlimShaky HortonMat. 5:30 p.m. Eve. 8:30 p.m.Prices $3.50 - $3.00 - $2.50Tickets on sale Mandel HallBox office Mon. - Sun. 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. Presentingthe most irreverent, irrelevantfather and son teamsince the Frankensteins.HYDI PARK THEATRE53rd & LAKE PARKCBL Challenges Law;Police Evict MembersMembers of the Contract Buyers Leagueare once again faced with the threat of for¬cible eviction from their homes. Last Mon¬day and Tuesday 16 families were evictedin co-ordinated early morning strikes bycity and sheriff’s police.Tuesday’s evictions were marked by ageneral melee in which police were peltedwith bricks and bottles by a group of localhigh school students. In the scuffle that en¬sued, police arrested 25 persons. The scenewas one of agony as dislocated residentssaw their furniture and belongings carriedout and dragged through the mud. Policeused tear gas to quell the crowd. YesterdayRep. Robert Mann characterized the moodof the South Side as “extremely volatile”and called for a “moratorium” on furtherevictions.The evictions are a direct result of thepayment withholding action which the CBLinitiated last July. Under this plan, the CBLplaces normal rent payments in escrow inan effort to protest their contracts. CBLclaims that the contracts under which theybought their homes are illegal and dis¬criminatory.The League believes that because of ra¬cial discrimination, its members — most ofthem South and West Side residents — wereunable to obtain mortgage financing. Thisforced its members to buy on contract andat what they contend excessive rates. If abuyer misses even one contract payment,he is liable to lose all his property regard¬less of his prior payments.Evictions were begun last fall. At thattime, however, CBL filed a motion in Fed¬eral District Court asking for a restrainingorder on further evictions. U.S. DistrictCourt Judge Hubert L. Will subsequentlydenied the League’s plea, but in the pastfive months large crowds have preventedeight police attempts to evict CBL mem¬bers.The County Sheriff’s Office estimatedthat it cost the taxpayers over $25,000 forone of the evictions last fall.CBL is presently in Court attempting tohave the State’s eviction law declared un¬constitutional under the 14th Amendment.But until the courts rule, Cook County Sher¬iff Joseph Woods, under threat of suit bythe home sellers, Universal Builders In¬corporated, is obligated to evict those con¬tract buyers negligent in their payments.The Contract Buyers League is centeredin the South and West Side ghettoes. On theSouth Side the League has membership ofslightly over 120 families. There are morethan 500 families listed as members in theCBL on the West Side.According to Chief Deputy Sheriff Rich- Wegener Sees Report ApprovalThe Wegener committee report, whichurged student participation on disciplinecommittees, will probably be adopted bythe end of April, said Charles Wegener,chairman of the committee.The report is currently being studied bythe council of the faculty senate whose rec¬ommendations will be adopted as Univer¬sity policy.Wegener, professor of humanities, saidthat the Council is now taking “sensevotes” on specific points.The Wegener report urged four facultymembers, one law faculty member and twostudents to serve on committees to dealwith disruptive demonstrations. The Wege¬ner committee was appointed last May tore-consider the Kalven report on disciplinewhich did not call for student participation.Council member James Redfield, masterof the new collegiate division, agreed withWegener that “the trend of the sense votes is along the lines of the report.” The twoalso agreed that “a couple more meetingsshould produce the final draft” of the Coun¬cil’s rules on discipline.Despite general concurrence with thesubcommittee’s recommendations, Wege¬ner said that some changes are being con¬sidered “and are probable.” “They’remostly procedural matters,” said Redfieldand Wegener said that one of the changeswould have the recommended disciplinarycommittees appointed in the spring ratherthan in the. fall. “It seems a little silly,”said Wegener, “but I’m not going to throwup a barracade about something like that.”But Wegener said that a more significantchange from his committee’s report willprobably be made.“The main body of our recommendationsdealt with student discipline after dis¬ruptions, but we also included recommen¬dations on other disciplinary actions.There’s some question here of con¬ stitutionality. The Council cannot interferewith the College or the divisions in handlingtheir own disciplinary problems.”Nonetheless, said Redfield, “The trend ofthe debate is that we come back to the re¬port. Other proposals are made, but we endup back with the report.”“There’s a lot of legislative red tape,”said Wegener. After the general decisionsof the Council are reached, he said, “we’llgo to a drafting committee. One moremeeting should give us tentative decisionsand procedures. At our present rate ofprogress, two more meetings should do thejob.”Concluded Wegener, “The House of Com¬mons would have all this done in about sixhours. But these people (the members ofthe council) are not legislators, and I’m notsure that’s such a bad thing.”“This is a very complex legislative pack¬age,” he said, “and this is a very in¬experienced legislative body.”ard Andersen the remaining CBL evictionon the South Side will be “cleaned up in sixor seven days. All members of the Leaguehave been served eviction notices in view oftheir participation in the rent withholdingaction. No evictions were carried out yes¬terday and Wednesday because of thesnow.Since November five homes have eitherbeen damaged or destroyed by fire aftertheir occupants have been evicted. Duringone eviction last fall on the West Side, po¬lice were met by residents brandishingarms.On campus, concerned black students metTuesday and Wednesday to discuss possibleactions that they might take in support ofCBL. One student spokesman said, “Thequestions we want to ask are: (1) Why isthe city and sheriff spending so much mon¬ey to evict these families when they knowthey (the CBL members) have beencheated? and (2) Who besides UniversalBuilders Inc. (the sellers) stands to lose?” Steve AokiPublic Affairs Students Seek a New Chairmanbe chairman of the program. Theymade this recommendation to Arcadius Ka-han, master of the social sciences colle¬giate division, but he turned down the jobin June after the students had left for vaca¬tions.David Greenstone, associate professor ofpolitical science, was persuaded by Whiteto serve as program chairman for oneyear.This year, students have until April 13 tooffer a recommendation for chairman, andsome feel they will end up with the samesituation they were in last year. Said KathyHudson, 71, chairman of a committee seek¬ing candidates for the post, “People werebitter last September when they found achairman selected without them, and wemay have the same thing this year.”Greenstone and students are presentlycanvassing faculty in an attempt to comeup with a recommendation before April13, the date Kahan set for his announce¬ment of a chairman.Greenstone spoke of the difficulties ofgetting professors to work in the programand praised Gilbert White for his ability toget faculty to help students with their indi¬vidual projects, saying “It’s especiallyvaluable to have someone like thataround.”Greenstone considers the chairman as anadministrator as well as a person to initiatenew policies. Among the new programs thisyear are a junior workshop which is takenprior to field research and helps preparethe student, and a six-man student steeringStudents in the College public affairs pro¬gram are disturbed over a possible ex¬clusion of students from the selection pro¬cess for a new program chairman.Last year, when a new chairman wasneeded, students and Gilbert White, formerprogram chairman, now at the Universityof Colorado, agreed to ask one professor toSteve Aoki committee which meets with the chairmanto discuss problems of the program.Because students run- many things forthemselves, some feel there is confusionabout what the chairman should specific¬ally do. Greenstone said, “The name ‘chair¬man’ is as good as any other. I’m not surewhat it really should mean.”There is general agreement among stu¬dents and Greenstone that a major job ofthe chairman is to persuade faculty mem¬bers to become involved in the program,and for doing this Gilbert White waspraised by all.The committee and Greenstone are stillcanvassing for possible chairmen and hopeto come to an agreement by the April 13deadline, as Kahan feels a new chairmanshould be chosen early in the spring quar¬ter.Public affairs is a small, new programwhich allows students to take a quarter offto do field work in an area of public policyin which he is particularly interested andthen write a paper based on this research.Originated four years ago, the programprovides the opportunity for the 30-odd ma¬jors to analyze public policy questions andto have the necessary research componentsto study a particular question in detail.Maroon electionElection of next year’s Marooneditor will be held Monday, April 13at 5 pm in the Maroon office. Allstaff members 3re urged to attend. IApril 3,* 1970/The Chicago Maroon/^If we are to attempt the experimentof student participation, it must succeed!t *So declared Edgar Faure after Charles de Gaulle assignedhim the task of overhauling France's antiquated educationalsystem. But that was two years age. President GeorgesPompidou has replaced Faure with a new minister of edu¬cation. Faure's reform blueprint is gathering dust and vio¬lence is sweeping over campuses like Nanterre. The Frenchhave now elected veteran politician - lawyer Faure to theAssemble Nationale, where he is a rallying point for Gaullistsand critics of Pompidou's conservative policies on education.Hear Faure at the single speaking appearance he will makeat the University of Chicago.A Lecture byEDGAR FAURE* Former Premier of France* Former President of the Council ofMinisters and Minister of Education* Professor of LawSponsored ByThe Center for Policy StudyIn Cooperation WithThe Departments of Political Science,Education, and Romance Languages and LiteraturesTUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1970 • 4:00 p.m.Kent 107 Lecture HallADMISSION FREENo Tickets Necessary4/Thfc Chicago Maroon/April* 3) 1970' V*- - - - ; i m ■i ci; f ¥,#•>> i' * £ ? f i 1^34First Event MondayFor Earth ConferenceSteve Aoki The first in a series of panels and work¬shops on the environmental crisis, entitledthe Sick Earth Conference, will be heldMonday, April 6 at 7:30 p.m. in QuantrelAuditorium.This series is sponsored by the Universityad hoc committee on the environment, andthe panelists are sponsored by the Beard-sley-Ruml foundation, center for policystudies, center for urban studies, studentfaculty committee for physical and biolog¬ical sciences, and Student Government.The Monday discussion concerns the defi¬nition of the elements of pollution. The pan¬el will consist of Gene Marine, a freelancewriter for Ramparts, the New Republic,and author of “America the Raped; GarretHardin, professor of biological sciences,University of California at Santa Barbara,author of “Population, Evolution, and BirthControl and currently a visiting professorat the University, and John Scheaffer, re¬search associate, center for urban studies,executive director of the Lake Michiganand adjacent land study commission.A consideration on the economic depend¬ence upon pollution will be discussed Mon-Lynd Talks to Union OrganizersBy Steve Cook“If you people think that you’re too high-minded or too intellectual to borrow meth¬ods from the trade union movement, youought to think back to how your organizerswere massacred after last year’s sit-in,’’said radical professor Staughton Lynd at ameeting of the student union Thursday af¬ternoon.The sparsley attended meeting high¬lighted a week-long membership drive forthe newly formed student union. Desks atBartlett gym and in Mandel Hall corridorgarnered some one hundred members as ofThursday afternoon.Other speakers at the Thursday meetingin the Ida Noyes Cloister Club includedCarl Schier, a union organizer from theUnited Auto Workers, and labor lawyer Gil¬bert Feldman. Feldman pledged the sup¬port of his law firm for the union.The speakers emphasized the importanceof buildmg a majority support for the unionand working democratically to decide uponpriorities.“Before you can move to strike or sit-in,you have to go through a patient process,” said Lynd. “You’ve got to go dormitory bydormitory, department by department ...One of the things we’ve got to learn fromthe trade union movement is to think inmajoritarian terms.”The purpose of the union is to establish ameans for collective action for the enforce¬ment of student demands. Proposed tacticsfor the union include:• withholding fees from dormitories andtuition• boycotting University-supported profit¬making enterprises• organizing student employees and sup¬porting their actions• filing law suits against the University• forming alliances with Universityworkers and their unions.Representatives of the student unionshave already contacted University unions.“We’ve been talking with some of themore progressive people in labor unions,”said Larry Lambert, a graduate student inphysics and the primary organizer of theunion. “They seemed relatively favorable.But there’s really no alliance with anybody.We are entirely independent.” “The idea of the union has been aroundsince last November,” said Lambert. “Wejust started doing something about it at theend of last quarter.”There are no dues required to join theunion. “We need people more than money”,said Lambert.Student government has funded and offi¬cially endorsed the union, though Lambertemphasized its independence from SG.Photo StaffSunday, April 5 there will be ameeting for the Maroon photographystaff. Current staff members andanyone else interested in taking pho¬tographs for the Maroon should cometo the Maroon office on the thirdfloor of Ida Noyes at 1:30. day April 13 in a workshop called “Pollu¬tion As A Way of Life.”The following Monday, April 20, “Pollu¬ter, Pollutant, Pollutee: A Close Family,” aseries of three panel discussions of citizenaction, intentional destruction of the envi¬ronment, and the legal techniques of com¬batting will coincide with the national envi¬ronmental teach in. Panels will be heldfrom 10:30 am until 9:30 pm with work¬shops between panels. The first panel in themorning will discuss the ways in which citi¬zens have, are, and can act directly to com¬bat pollution; the problems of organizingfor citizen action, public apathy, counter¬action by industrial pollution, and govern¬mental inaction; and why citizen action isan essential component of any effectiveprogram to combat pollution.The second panel will concern intentionaldestruction of the environment. The speak¬ers are E W Pfeiffer, professor of zoology,University of Montana; Terrence Turner,professor of anthropogy, University of Chi¬cago; Richard Levins, professor of math¬ematical biology, University of Chicago;and A A Rayner, alderman of the 6th Ward.The “Legal Strategies to Combat Pollu¬tion” will be the last panel discussion of theday. Speaking will be Joseph Karaganis, at¬torney for Businessmen for the Public In¬terest and attorney for Campaign againstEnvironmental Pollution; Jerome Torshen,attorney handling the alderman’s suitagainst the automobile manufacturers; andPaul Booth, a fellow Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute, and chairman of Campaign AgainstPollution(CAP); and Allan Sugarman, arepresentative for the Environment LawSociety.The final workshop in the sick earth con¬ference, “The End of Political Puberty?”,will be held April 27, as a discussion of thesocial and political implications of environ¬mental control. The panel members will in¬clude Linton K Caldwell and Joseph Sittler.Caldwell, professor of political science,University of Indiana, will discuss the cy-nergistic effects of integrating politics, eco¬nomics, and environmental control. Sittler,professor of theology, University of Chi¬cago, will discuss man’s loss of his sense ofnature and its impact on his social and po¬litical life.MAROONSUBSCRIPTION $4 FORTHE REST OF SCHOOLYEARRosary College Prof ResignsOver Barred Kunstler SpeechGeorge Anastaplo, a lecturer in the liber¬al arts department at the University and afaculty member at Rosary College in RiverForest announced his resignation as chair¬man of the political science department atRosary because of that school’s refusal tolet William Kunstler, defending lawyer ofthe Conspiracy 7, keep a speaking engage¬ment at the school. Anastaplo also an¬nounced he was postponing a series of lec¬tures on the Chicago conspiracy trial untilanother bona fide invitation had been ex¬tended to Kunstler.In a memo to the administration, facultyCorrectionTuesday’s Maroon and most othernews media in Chicago carried astory about Dr Charles Field whowon a federal court ruling Mondayallowing him to terminate the preg¬nancy of a 16-year-old girl, referringto Field as the chairman of the Uni¬versity’s obstetrics and gynecologydepartment. Fields is, as today’s Ma¬roon states, chairman of ChicagoMedical School’s department. and student body of Rosary College, Anas¬taplo said, “the postponement of my lec¬ture series reflects my opinion that it doesnot seem to me fair play that I should ex¬press the serious criticisms I do have of theconspiracy trial defendants and their law¬yers (including their speeches) from thevery platform taken away from Mr Kunst¬ler three weeks ago.”Anastaplo said such an opinion was con¬sistent with a condition he insisted upon inagreeing to an April debate with AssistantUnited States Attorney George Schultz atthe University of Chicago. He said he wouldrefuse to speak on that occasion, “if myopponent (a prosecuting attorney duringthe Trial) should be prevented by a hostileaudience from having his say as well.”He also criticized Rosary College’s de¬mand of a surety bond in the amount of$1,000,000 to cover possible damages result¬ing from the speech, and a bond of the de¬scription of Kunstler’s student and off-campus sponsors.“The folly of our recourse to such delu¬sions as a surety bond is that it concealsfrom us what we are really doing,” Anas¬taplo said...... . m- • » » a. * »• • ••• BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMDIT STOREPL 2-47441150 E. 63rd St.EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 A CONVERSATIONWITH COPLANDAaron Copland and a distinguishedpanel will discuss his work and trendsin contemporary musicApril 7, 1970Mandel Hall8:30 p.m.Sponsored by the Music Departmentand the Alumni AssociationAlumni and Faculty tickets - $1.00Available at Alumni House5733 University AvenueStudent tickets FreeAvailable through FOTAInformation desk, Administration BuildingStudent Activities Office, Ida Noyes HallAprils, •!»?<>/Th. Chic*». M.rppn/5 iEDITORIALSLegalizing AbortionWe’ll take the risk of looking foolish later and announce nowthat the abortion law seems finally to be meeting a swift and longoverdue demise. Recent court declarations in Michigan and Wis¬consin have declared those states’ archaic laws unconstitutional,Hawaii and Maryland have recently passed reasonable abortionlaws, permitting abortions at the discretion of the woman andher physician (though Hawaii, unfortunately, also requires 90 dayresidency, and a recent court decision here allowed a Chicago doc¬tor to terminate the pregnancy of a 16 year old rape victim, con¬trary to the incredibly warped Illinois law, which allows abortiononly to save the mother’s life, and which we hope will soon bedeclared unconstitutional.We hope that it not premature to say that soon all states’abortion laws that infringe on the woman’s right to control herown life will be recognized, either by state courts or by the Su¬preme Court, as cruel, inhuman, and — what’s more importantto them — unconstitutional. The voices of those who oppose abor¬tion as immoral are becoming fainter and more sheepish. Abortionhas become a popular — a liberal — issue that no enlightenedperson really argues about any more."The voices of those who opposeabortion as immoral are becomingfainter and more sheepish"Abortion has not always been such a fashionable cause. Menand women have gone to jail for supporting and aiding womenin their attempt to preserve the dignity of control over their ownbodies. If Rabbi Max Ticktin, for instance, the Hillel house direc¬tor who recently had charges against him of conspiring to commitabortion dropped, had been arrested several years ago, he wouldhave met with much harsher treatment, and those who supportedhim vociferously would have done so at his own risk. We are surethat none of our readers is so stupid as to think that we mean inany way to disparage Rabbi Ticktm’s courage in what he’s done;we wish only to point out that the times have changed, and thatthe case for abolishing abortion laws has suddenly come of age.It’s a strange phenomenon, this changing of public opinion.Surely the laws are no more or less unjust now than they wereten years ago; the misery they imposed on women in the past wasno less heinous than what a woman would go through today, deniedan abortion that is her right.And today we see another strange phenomenon. Crazy, shrillwomen — “nuts” — can be seen and heard doing such ridiculousthings as sitting in at all-male restaurants, or demanding the samepay as men for work we all know women are unable to do. They’reawfully silly, these “nuts.” They must be; every respectable man,from liberal Chicago columnists to enlightened University pro¬fessors, tells us so. After all, ‘these respectable men say,’ let’s bereasonable. Abortion reform is one thing, after all, we’ve endorsedthat issue. But a whole movement of women? Demanding an inde¬pendent place in society? Let’s not be silly, ladies.”The two “strange phenomena” are of course, inseparable.It’s yesterday’s “nuts” who create today’s burning moral issue.Women have known for years that abortion laws were unjust;courageous women have fought for years to get them changed.Now the men who run the country will decide that they are indeedunjust, and repeal them, with eloquent speeches on the humanrights of women.Today the “nuts” — more properly known as radicals —have moved on to other issues. Now they offer such doctrines asthe more humane alternatives to the nuclear family, doctrines thatare jeered at and despised today as women’s suffrage and abor¬tion once were. And they rest secure now, as they did then, in thehope and the conviction that eventually the world will catch upwith them, or they will be able to change the world, and demolishthe corrosive conditions presently clung to out of fear and ignor¬ance.4/Th« Chicago Maroon/April 3, 1970 LETTERS TO THE EDITORSFlacks RepliesJust today I received issues of the Ma¬roon dated February 20 and 27. These con¬tained replies by Chris Hobson and MarleneDixon to an earlier letter by Roger Weiss.Since the issue containing Mr. Weiss’ letterhas not yet reached me, I am not sure whatit says exactly. But if Mr. Weiss attemptedto claim that I had been offered tenure,then Chris is surely correct to point out thatMr. Weiss is well aware of the fact that Ihad not been offered tenure by the Sociolo¬gy department.Further, there is something quite repel- 'lent about still another effort to compareMarlene with me, to her detriment. My owncomparison of the two interviews left memoved by the forthrightness and humanitywhich emanated from hers. The bland fuz¬ziness which mine displayed I found ratherappalling. No wonder Mr Weiss thought Iwas qualified to be a member of his club!I never enjoyed being cast as Chicago’shouse radical, but I found it rather amusingthat Mr Weiss should still want me for therole after I am gone.Given the condition I was in at the time, Iwas in no position to pursue the circum¬stances surrounding the decision about me.But students who believe that I was wel¬come to stay should know that I believe thefollowing (although I may be mis¬informed): First, if the University wantedme to stay, it certainly didn’t signal thatwish in the salary offer it made. That offerwas actually less than what I receive here(to be precise Chicago offered me exactlywhat UCSB guaranteed me, but the latterindicated that all California salaries wouldbe raised by 5% by the time I should ar¬rive.)Second, and of course more importantly,certain members of the Department saidsome quite unfortunate things after the at¬tack on me. One member, on two separateoccasions, declared that “Flacks had itcoming to him” or words to that effect.Others jumped to the conclusion, andspread the rumor, that I had attempted sui¬cide. Such experesions did not make mefeel warm all over; they led me to feel that norms of colleagueship were no longer ap¬plicable in my case.Third, reliable sources report that somemembers of the department were not en¬tirely reticent about stating politicalgrounds for opposing my tenure.Fourth, the department gave as a chiefreason for not offering tenure the fact thatouts'.de evaluations of my work did not fa¬vor tenure. I have been quite disturbedabout that statement, since I know that atleast four sources of such evaluation werequite favorable.The handling of these four sources haspuzzled me ever since. The department toldstudents at the time that one of these out¬side men never responded to departmentrequests for an evaluation. He says, in writ¬ing, that he never received any suchrequests and that, if he had, his evaluationwould have been quite favorable. A secondman was asked to send h;s evaluation tothe department, which he did; studentswere later told, however, that his quite fa¬vorable evaluation was not used by the de¬partment but only by the college groupwhich was also evaluating me.The two other favorable evaluations thatI know of (there may have been others)were also treated strangely as I understandit. Whether these slip-ups were honest er¬rors in a complicated evaluative process orcalculated efforts to prevent a positive ten¬ure decision, I do not know. I do not be¬lieve, however, that the treatment I re¬ceived by the Sociology department offeredreassuring evidence that norms of academ¬ic freedom, professionalism and collegialitywere taken seriously by several gentlemenwho make a big deal in public about thenecessity of preserving them.I should hasten to add that many othermembers of the faculty, including severalin the Sociology department, have alwaysbeen very good and helpful friends. Anumber did much to persuade me to stay.Many were very supportive and kind dur¬ing the time of trouble my family and Iexperienced. The administration did muchto provide protection and outstanding med¬ical care. I will forever be grateful to allContinued on Page NineBULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, April 3CONFERENCE: Graduate program In the departmentof history, annual meeting of the Mid-West Juntoof the History of Science Society. Center for Con¬tinuing Education. 9:30 am.LECTURE: Department of Biochemistry, Maxine Singer,National-Institute of Health. "Recent Studies of theMechanism of Action of Polynucleotide Phosphory-Editor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AekiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff; Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChismon, Allen Friedman, Sarah Otaier, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Gordon Katz, SusanLoft, Gerard Leva I, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Janet Pino, Ellon Sazzman, AudreyShalinsky, David Stooio, Cart Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, Jerry Levy,David Rosenbush, Paul Stutter.Founded in 1(92. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices In Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 40437. Phone Midway 34400,Ext. 3243. Distributed on campus and In theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail S4 per year In the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Prase Service.:. - lase." Abbott Hall, Room 101, 2:30 pm.COLLEGE FORUM: "Meet the Veeps." John T Wilson,Provost; Michael Claffey, Vice-President for De¬velopment; Eddie N Williams, Vice-President forPublic Affairs, Quantrell Auditorium, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Department of Microbiology, "TransloactionReactions In Bacterial Cell Wall Synthesis," Ric¬ketts 1, 4 pm.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS: Recital, ElsaChalston, soprano, and John Cobb, pianist. Scarlatti,Webern, Berg, Babbitt, Ives, and Stauss. MandelHall, 8:30 pm.STUDENT PANEL DISCUSSION: Hillel Foundation,"What Alienation and Exile Mean for Me as aJew." Hillel House, 8:30 pm.DISCUSSION: "Revolution In Latin America: CulturalOpresslon and Liberation of the Mind," by VictorNazario, staff member, Centro Intercultural deDocumentacion, Cuernavaca, Mexico. CrossroadsStudent Center, 5621 S Blackstone., 6 pm.MEETING: Cooperative Living Group, Reynolds ClubS Lounge, 4:40 pm.LECTURE: Prof Milton J Rosenberg, "ABM-MIRV:The Drift Toward Doomsday." Hillel House, 8:30pm.TWO MINUTE HATE: Ad Building, noon.Saturday, April 4CONFERENCE: Graduate program of the Departmentof History, Center for Continuing Education, 9:10 am.FLICK: Stolen Kisses, Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:15 pm.CONCERT: Black Colony, Buddy Guy, Junior Wellsand Koko Taylor. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.MEDIEVAL PLAYS: Allegro consplrito, The Seven LastWords of Christ by Heinrich Schultz, and theMastricht Easter Play. University church of theDisciples of Christ, 5655 University Ave, 8:30 pm.Tickets are $2.50, $1.50, and $1.NIGHT CLUB: Bandersnatch Night club reopens, music,food, etc, 9-2 am.GAY LIB DANCE: Woodward Commons, $1, PonchoPilot Rock Band, 8:30-2 am.Sunday, April 5FLICK: To Die in Madrid, Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes, 8 pm.LECTURE: Mr Howard Pollack, Assoc, of OrthodoxScientists, "Torah and Technology: The WideningGap." Hillel House, 7:30 pm.MEETING: City Wide Gay Lib Meeting, Ida Noyes,3 pm.HORSEBACK RIDING: UC Riding Club rides everySunday, call Laura x 3259 or 447-1842 for info.Monday, April 6CONCERT: WHPK will rebroadcast a concert given bythe University Symphony on March 7 In MandelHall which included Beethoven's 9th, 7:15 pm.MEETING: Archaeology Club, Important business meet¬ing and lecture. Ida Noyes, East Lounge, 8 pm.MEETING: Chicago Liberation Chapter of JapaneseAmerican Citizen League, Christian FellowshipChurch, W Sheridan, Discussions of plans for sum¬mer, National Caucus, peace rally, etc., 7:30 pm.CONFERENCE: Alfred Adler Institute, ext 3185.Exploring the CityFor a while now, I have been doing a lot of thinkingand looking about the city. I have seen that I can no moreeasily see the entire city than I can read all the booksever written. Talking about it with people, I have realizedthat large numbers of students come to Hyde Park andalmost never leave it except to go to the airport. Ironical¬ly, in this they resemble the declining breed of old timeneighborhood Chicagoans (many still exist) whose life isspent primarily within the neighborhood. To the students,however, the neighborhood is not at all home in the sensethat it is to these people.What amazes me is not only that people will hardly everleave their few square blocks, but that even in travelingthrough and around their accustomed area they never no¬tice what’s there in front of them. Sometimes people getinto my cab and I ask them about a favorite bridge ofmine that is plainly visible — outstandingly so, since ithas not been lowered in at least three years and from theloop is seen silhouetted against the sky. Usually they say,“What bridge?” And maybe we can see it from where weare and I point it out to them and, “Funny, you know I goby here every day and I never noticed it before. Yeah, itis sort of an interesting bridge.” Six years in Hyde Parkand hundreds of walks down Kimbark Avenue and I justlast month noticed what is above the entrance to the RaySchool.There are many ways of looking and noticing. You canlook at the buildings and stores just to see what they looklike. Not all the buildings look alike. After starting tonotice ornamentation, I began to check it out more care¬fully and discovered that a good rule of thumb is thatgiven two similar buildings, the more ornamental is theolder one. You can look for the oddities, the buildings thatdon’t fit into any clear style; and the old ones, too, thosethat seem sunk a few feet below street level (I think thatsome time after these houses were built the streets wereraised for drainage purposes, vaguely around the turn ofthe century. But my formal history is weak). The neigh¬borhood centering around 18th and Blue Island is full ofthose old houses. (For other reasons too it’s a great neigh¬borhood: lots of little stores; narrow streets; a fantasticconglomeration of Mexicans, white, blacks, and others;and why tell you about it when you can see for yourself).You can look not just to see, but to find out. A cityblock is like a history book, you just read it differently.Someone who knew nothing of Hyde Park could walkaround and in minutes know about the massive rearrang- ByLeo Schlosbergremember howIII t ho thll^O t\ P ci O OMv hoot's nacf picture:une T re a N ‘i'dm rGuiini:> _ . , :\b *a a 11 ruric lots oi oui icin,;sAic how trtd t was tne c:Ano I rememher how70s te rV.dVlOGf d*ra.ns- p idlitj SL>d I fc* 3carsshipsana io ts ■ o t peop±ethis morningSi 11m>; on the hacn stainswatching, g isunrnoAnc listening; to the citv wake up,Now, hack in tne hou^e., o w , | 0 n t , 1 ^ a ^ p A r u 1 n sa * ' ne same timeBoth-in the same directionAnc now one tne otrier wavI can close my evesAr.h rememberBack, to when , , . , ■«F’or tne first time'I saw. the cityAm; it lookedthird' prace readerlast y tjcir Steve Aokiing job that was done. They couldn’t tell you about theUniversity’s role necessarily, but a quick drive down 55thwould reveal young trees on one side of the street, oldones on the other side, an entire block vacant except forone old apartment building, and further east old apart¬ment buildings next to rows of new townhouses. No cityever just grew up into a pattern like that. Division Street,between California and Ashland blares out: “Social Mobil¬ity!”; “New Immigrants!”; “Changing Neighborhood!!”The sign is still hanging on “Czerniak Pharmacy” and onthe store window next to it is scrawled “DISCOS, ROPAS”and down the street the Division Street Turkish Bathssteam away.And if you look and listen with care, any silent cityblock will let you in on a million secrets of many peopleand lives, past and living. The people, too, will tell you oftheir lives, there’s no need to eavesdrop, just ask them.Sure, some of them will come after you with a baseballbat before you even open your mouth and some will inviteyou into their homes to see their most treasured posses¬sions, and the conversation had barely gotten beyond theweather. How people treat you has as much to do withhow you come on as with how you look.There’s more to the city than people and their houses.This city has fantastic bridges and railroad yards, both ingreat quantity. And warehouses and just plain wierd spotsof land, not to mention factories upon factories upon facto¬ries, some of them bordering on the surreal, though in theend its all the same, and that’s one of the more amazingthings about a city: so much, so diverse, and all of itequally real. As real as the how ever many miles of contin¬uous bicycle path there is along the lake.For those who want to explore the city, there is a pathalready laid out. Zoos and azalea gardens, water towersand robie houses, museums of science and of natural his¬tory (or even of theosophy, of which there is also one),institutes of art and of the orient, lovely places all of themand I highly recommend seeing them. But the titled placesare too official, too neat and clean for me; they tell onlypart of the story, leaving most of it out. Me, I wouldrather hop onto my bicycle and pedal away, running redlights with impunity. That was how I first met the MedillAvenue Incinerator (despite having a title, it seems lessofficial than the Chicago Academy of Sciences), which sitsthere, peacefully coexisting with its next door neighbor,the piano factory.Continued on Page SevenOTfl ,4 «r«c*o»*.VCULTURE VULTUREGoodbye to Flea CircusesWHILE ALL OF YOU were lazing around over springbreak watching boob tube quiz shows for your culture, theinimitable Culture Vulture was traveling the breadth ofthis nation looking for undiscovered cultural talent. Justtwo of the many discoveries he found were in differentlocations. In New York, on that famous strip known as42nd Street I discovered Hubert’s Original Flea Circus —a land mark of its kind right behind the pinball machines.In a small coffeehouse in San Francisco CV found the 23year checkers game which is still going on (though theboard has gotten a little dusty.) Coming back to Chicagoadmittedly is coming back to much more prosaic fare:CAMPUSFilmTonight Doc Films shows its first Friday feature ofFrench Cinema with Bunuel’s Belle de Jour. CatherineDenueve plays a frigid wife who in the daytime becomes awhore at Madame Anais’ brothel. Soon her home life andher business life colide when her husband and her lover do(Pierre Clementi plays the lover with awful wires on histeeth.) 7:15 and 9:30 for $1 in Cobb.CEF presents Stolen Kisses by none other thanFrancois Truffaut tomorrow night. If you thought this wasat your neighborhood theatre just a little while ago, you’reright. It tells of the little boy in 400 Blows grown up. It’sin the Law School Auditorium at 7 and 9:15.Sunday, three films by the famous Chicago under¬ground filmmaker, Tom Palazzolo will be shown at theUnitarian Church 5650 Woodlawn. They include Your As¬tronauts, a cynical look at their visit to this fair city, ThePigeon Lady, a poignant piece about a lady who feedspigeons, and Campaign, the world premiere of Palazzolo’slook at the Convention. Doors open at 7:30 (films begin at8:15.) Donation of $1.25 is requested but you get an unlim¬ited supply of beer, cokes and coffee.Sunday CEF presents To Die in Madrid — a docu¬mentary of the Spanish Civil War. It is an extremely high¬ly acclaimed film by everyone except Franco. In Mandelat 7 and 9:15.Tuesday the good Doctor Films presents Accident,part of its series on Joseph Losey. It tells of sexual frus¬trations and intrigues at an other “great” institution ofhigher learning — Oxford. The screenplay is by HaroldPinter (of wandering conversation fame) and stars DirkBogarde — how can it miss. In Cobb at 7:15 and 9:30 for$1.Wednesday brings the first of Doc Films’ ex-perimentals — Andy Warhol’s Fuck (that seems like asuccinct title). Supposedly is was busted and banned inNew York — which ain’t no hick town. It stars Viva andincludes discussion on air pollution, Mayor Lindsay andthe 30c subway fare. At 7:15 and 9:30 for $1 in Cobb. Black Colony presents a triple feature on Thursdaynight — Black Man, The American Promise and Who DoYou Kill all of which sound extremely intriguing. They’reall in Soc. Sci. 122 at 8.MusicTonight is a Contempoarry Chamber Players concertwith Elsa Charlston, soprano; John Cobb, piano playingScarlatti, Webern, Berg, Babbit, Ives, and Strauss. It’sFREE in MandelTomorrow night, Black Colony presents quite a con¬cert — Buddy Guy, Junior Wells and Koko Taylor — howcan you beat that? I just named three reasons to overlookChicago’s gray, snow and slush. In Mandel at 8.Allegro Conspirito (of Hie Play of Herod fame) arepresenting two new offerings also on Saturday night. Theyare Heinrich Schutz’s The Seven Last Words of Christ andThe Maastricht Easter Play. Schutz’s play was written in1645 and the Easter play is a mediaeval musical drama.Both are well suited for the Easter season. Both will beperformed at the Blue Gargoyle at 8:30. Tickets are $2,• $1.50 and $1.Tuesday night the Music Department presents “A Con¬versation with Aaron Copland” in which the famous mod¬ern composer will be joined by Steven Crockett, a graduatestudent in the History of Culture, and Calvin Sawyier, alawyer and cellist. Easley Blackwood will be the moder¬ator. It’s at 8 in Mandel for $1.MiscellaneousGay Liberation is sponsoring another dance (how canthey possibly be more successful than last time?) Thistime it is at Woodward Court from 8:30-2. The PonchoPilot rock band plays.This Week At the GargoyleThe Crafts Coop is reopening starting on Monday. It’s onthe third floor.MondayNUC meeting at 8.TuesdayCrafts Workshop meets from 3:30-5.WednesdayFolk music for one and all (musicians or listeners) at8 in the east aisle.ThursdayCrafts Workshop again from 3:30-5.The Poetry group meets at 9.Sunday Sew York Ti7 /? // Cl/ -i I j, H:30JM (daily loo)If Cornell ^florist if * BOB'S NEWSSTANDif 1645 E.55th STREET if * 51st and Lake Park* CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 * * Hu*e *tock* °i Currenl MagaPhone: FA 4-1651iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiifirniiiiiimiiiMJOHN B. SEBASTIANANDPOCOIN CONCERT AT MANDEL HALLSUNDAY, APRIL 19, 7:30 PMTICKETS AT MANDEL HALL BOX OF- LISTEN TO JOHN SEBASTIAN'S SOLO ALBUM ONFICE BEGINNING APRIL 14. LISTEN REPRISE (#6379) RECORDS.TO WHPK-FM FOR FURTHER DETAILS HEAR POCO, FEATURING RICHIE FURAY AND JIMAND TICKET PRICES. MESSINA OF THE LATE BUFFALO SPRINGFIELD, ONEPIC RECORDS.ANOTHER SUPER-CONCERT FROM REVITALIZATIONiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiinniiiiiniiiiiiiiIdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CIUOne North laSalie St., Chic. 60602FR 2 2390 — 798-0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE OF CANADA2/Gtey -City Journal/April 3, 1970 EL TACOMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANT1607 E. 53rd St.• HUACAMOLE• TACOS• ENCHILADAS• TAMALES• TOST ADAS• CHILI•MANY OTHER DISHES•CARRY OUT SERVICEOpen 7 days a week11 ;30 A,M.,- 12:30 A.M. NUC presents Malachy McGurran, chairman of theIrish Republican Clubs of Northern Ireland will speak on“IRA’s Role in Last Year’s Riots” at 8.ELSEWHEREFilmThey Shoot Horses Don’t TYiey has been raved aboutin many quarters. It looks at American society throughthe metaphor of a marathon dance in the 30’s. It starsJane Fonda, Michael Sarrazin and Gig Young. At StateLake Theatre.Z is a film of political suspense and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicaland contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, Chicago and Michigan.Putney Swope is a mad attack on Madison Avenue,white liberals and other such imaginary phenomena and issupposed to be pretty hilarious. At the Three Penny, 2424N. Lincoln.M*A*S*H is a bitterly cynical look at war which justtears it to shreads. It stars Elliot Gould and Donald Suth¬erland. At the United Artists, Randolph and Dearborn.The Boys in the Band is the film version of the playwhich seemed to break the ice on the subject of homosex¬uality on Broadway. At the Carnegie at Rush and State.TheatreThe Blacks, Jean Genet’s statement on the racial is¬sue will be playing tonight and tomorrow at Loop CollegeTheatre 64 E. Lake St. It’s at 6:30 tonight and 8:30 tomor¬row.The People Vs Ranchman is the name of Megan Ter¬ry’s new play (she wrote Viet-Rock.) As you can guess it’spolitical and includes a lynching. It’s at the KingstonMines Theatre 2356 N. Lincoln, weekends at 8:30.The Master Thief and Other Stories is another ex¬ample of Paul Sills’ “story theatre” this time taken fromthe Grimm Brothers. The Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln.Tuesday through Thursday at 8:30, Friday and Saturdayat 8:30 and 10:30.Justice Is Done or Oh! Cal Collidge is the newest ofthe famous Second City revues. Second City 1616 N. Wells,Tuesdays through Thursday and Sunday, Friday at 8:30and 11, Saturday at 8:30, 11 and 1.Continued on Page SevenSunday Sew York Timet ^***^ sines, Paperback*, 4 storied +. Pornography. Come & meet ^my dog “Michael. ” ^the fashion revoltcontinuesThe Seventies begin with an easy-going casual look:Crepe body shirt with permanent pleats in the belledsleeves $27.50; new pleated and flared trousers pre¬cuffed to your length $16.00; the belt from ourcollection of very wide and very crude leathersfrom $6.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th L LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evtnings\ A. J .1MilAntonionionAmericaWHEN A FILM IS CONDEMNED because a group ofcritics misinterpret its purposes and fault the work for notbeing what they wanted it to be, it is easy to get angry atthe critics’ stupidity. You write a rebuttal and feel com¬placently superior to all your better heeled colleagues. Butwhat do you do when a director positively invites misun¬derstanding? At best, when a good picture is being widelymisunderstood and having great financial trouble as a re¬sult, you can feel sadly angry at the man for havingloused himself up. This is, I’m afraid, the case with Mich¬elangelo Antonioni’s Zabriskie Point.It was inevitible. They wanted him badly, those menfrom MGM, he had made a fortune for them with Blow-Up. They would let him do anything and have completecontrol as well. And when he wanted to do a picture thatwould have Kathleen Cleaver and two unknown but beau¬tiful looking kids, what on earth could be better? Politicsand youth were box-office; campus rebellion the hottestnew market idea. (Someone should have warned themabout Antonioni’s working pace. By the time he had fin¬ished the picture, campus scuffles had taken back pagesand “bomb factories” the front.)So here was this picture — billboards of Los Angelesfollowing a simulated SF State strike meeting chaired byKathleen. A story, written in part by Ramparts Magazinestaff member Fred Gardner, which takes a semi-politicalkid and a meditational stoned girl as its subject. How doesanyone expect an audience, much less a group of moviecritics, to think that this film is about anything but politicsand America? How do you expect an audience to knowthat Antonioni is a part of a tradition in Italy that hasaristocrats trying very hard to be Marxists while explor¬ing very different questions in their art?Zabriskie Point is no more about America than Blow-Up was about Britain or Eclipse, Antonioni’s best film,was about Italy. The lesson we should have learned fromEclipse, especially after those butchers of the art filmworld, the brothers Hakim, took the ending away fromthat film for several years and in the process made thePOTPOURRI film incomprehensible, is that Antonioni’s films often donot reveal themselves until their final moments. (This isnot always true. At the end of Red Desert, for example,there is an epiphany, but it is a private one on the part ofthe central character. For the rest of us, the picture be¬comes comprehensible in the “red” scene in the shack atthe beach.)When Jonas Mekas, experimental film maker and crit¬ic and strangely enough one of the films few champions,wrote that Zabriskie Point was “about” Daria he wasright to the extent that her epiphany at the end is ours. Afew necessary plot details to explain this: Mark (MarkFrechette), a toned-down Weatherman type, flees after hebelieves he will be accused of shooting a cop. (If timing,geography, and the way a body falls have any meaning,Mark aimed but didn’t do it.) In order to escape he stealsa small plane. In the desert he finds Daria (Daria Hal-prin) and they go to Zabriskie Point (the lowest geogra¬phical point in the continental United States) and makelove. Mark decides to return and is killed by the police.Daria continues on to her boss-lover’s desert house. Shewalks out after a few minutes there. Alone, looking at theCandidly Speahing...“HEY LOOK AT THIS.”My eyes followed the pointing finger to the Help WantedColumn of the Chicago Tribune. The add went somethingto the effect of hip, young editor wanted for radical jour¬nal with a circulation that has tripled in the last twoyears. “Just like writing for college satire magazine,” itcontinued. “No experience necessary, everybody in theoffice under thirty. Do not wear suit to interview.” Mysuspicions were instantly alerted, but also my fantasies.The super cool jargon, the Chicago Tribune and the ridi¬culous ease of it all warned me, yet... School is an awfuldrag lately and maybe this is my chance to enter theworld of literary pretensions and high-level journalism, toreally try my hand at writing.The next day I called, but the secretary said thatsince it was already after three everybody had gonehome, and that the next day being Friday they probablywouldn’t be coming in; but if I called back on Mondayafter ten, I probably could get somebody. When I inquiredas to the name of the magazine the secretary said shecouldn’t really tell me because the company owned manydifferent publications, and she didn’t know which one wasdoing the hiring this time.My fantasies soared. On Monday I called back andgetting the right person on the line, I quickly explainedthat I had a master’s degree and although no real formalexperience, I was an excellent writer knowledgeable onall sorts of international and domestic subjects. My re¬marks were ignored. “What we’re going to do,” she said,“is send you a copy of our magazine and then we wantyou to see if you can write a short article in our style.”“Oh,” I said. “Just what kind of magazine is this any¬how?” She answered that it was a satirical magazine andthat in fact it wasn’t really a magazine but more of atabloid. I gingerly asked what subject matter it was thatthey satirized. “Well, uh, sex,” she answered. Thinkingthat she probably hadn’t really heard me in the beginningand thought I was answering an add for one of the com¬pany’s other publications, I again stated my qualifications(embellishing them greatly), and told her that really Iwas interested in more serious type writing. “That’sokay,” she replied. “We’ll send you a copy of our maga- really your bag, then we can probably use you in someother place.” (I found out later that meant doing featurestories as “Lesbian Bites Blind Girl, Girl’s Sight Miracu¬lously Restored”). As we ended the conversation I remem¬bered that I hadn’t got the name of the paper. “The Can¬did Press”, she said.About two weeks later I finally received my copy ofthe paper together with a short employment record sheetand a letter explaining the “mission” of the paper andwhat they wanted me to do. The letter turned out to bemuch funnier than the actual paper. According to the let¬ter Candid Press has a weekly circulation of 150,000 andreaches everyone from “hip college students to small townfolks to out-and-out perverts”. The describe themselves as“an adult satire weekly” with typical article titles such as“Should You Go All the Way with Your First Pet?”, “Lis¬ten to the Squoosh” (a report on aural-genital sex), and“As the World Churns” (a TV soap opera satire). Thearticle which the prospective employee is supposed towrite is for a new column in the paper entitled “CandidConsumer”, “which is a new and more or less regularfeature dedicated to the proposition that America’s per¬verts and weirdos are entitled to the same product eval¬uation that are given the readers of Consumer Reports.Products which have been in the past include:• A Rickety Ann doll with detachable limbs, braces,etc., for mutilation and amputee freaks;• A fingernail clipping catcher for people who use theclippings for voodoo dolls and to keep floors neat;• An armpit shield harness with removable per¬spiration pad mailers for isolated and infirm odor fetish¬ists;An electric jockstrap for men whose wives won’t takebirth control pills (the heat kills off spermatazoa).”The paper itself varies tremendously in quality. Unlikeother tabloids of this kind Candid Press tries to maintaina psuedo-sophisticated gloss to all its articles. The firstcouple articles are of such poor quality though, that theyprobably would have even been Maroon rejects (stylisti¬cally and content-wise they don’t differ much.) There is avery forced and overly clever article entitled “Force BusDrivers to Work Naked!” There also is an editorial which.Continued, on Jiage. Five. house, she imagines it blowing up again and again. Thislast moment, an action of the mind, is the essentialepiphany. Daria, who had earlier espoused no interest inpolitics or in Mark’s violent reactions, suddenly ex¬periences the same spontaneous reaction that Mark hasacted out. As the house continually explodes we see itcloser up. Objects fly out at us until the real is totallyabandoned. By the end of the sequence we are witnessinga stoned blow-up: hazy colored fragments mixed in withobjects de pop art: cereal boxes, cigarettes, chickens. Ineffect, Mark and Daria’s visions have merged. As in Blow-Up, vision is Antonioni’s chief concern in Zabriskie Point.Antonioni does not, of course, wait until the end togive us hints as to what is going on, but manages to dropwhat are at times obscure hints along the way. Two shotsin particular are indicative of Antonioni’s manner aboutsuch things. One occurs while Mark is driving his room¬mate to a picket-line. The shot begins moving down alonga road and we assume, given context and convention, thatthis is being shot from Mark’s point of view. However, thecamera swings around at the end of the shot to reveal thetruck pulling up to the picket line. What we assumed wasMark’s point of view was actually the director’s. Again,when Mark takes off we see an aerial shot of Daria’s carcrawling along the highway. The camera descends andonce again we believe we are seeing things from Mark’spoint of view. Again, we are wrong — the shot continueswith a lateral movement impossible for an airplane andwhat follows in the next few shots indicates clearly thatMark and Daria are miles apart. In Blow-Up, when Anto¬nioni was dealing with a photographic artist and usedbasically the same technique (having David Hemmingspop out of the frame at the very end) the device had a bitmore clarity, artistic vision and so-forth. What he loses inclarity in Zabriskie Point he gains in subtlety and purelyon the basis of personal bias I find myself opting for thelatter picture.This prevailing concern with ways of seeing tends tomake Zabriskie Point an almost totally objective filmmorally. Mark’s attempted killing of a cop, the dangers ofbuzzing a car with a plane, the hazards of flying a planewithout knowing what other aircraft might be in the area(precisely the actions which have recently precipitatednumerous deadly crashes) all go without comment oneway or another. All this is fine, it is a pleasure to see anobjective film every once in a while, as. it is fine to haveas his two main characters two particularly unintellectualand inarticulate human beings, but U is not fine to main¬tain this stance while making a single negative judgmentagainst cops. Antonioni need not explain why cops act theway they do, nor need he explain why he thinks it is badfor cops to shoot a student emerging from a tear gassedbuilding. But to say the latter and then to make no com¬ment about a kid killing a cop is cheating. In this context“pigs is pigs” is simply not enough. Certainly a case couldbe made for the attitude that one action is justified andthe other is not, but since the thesis that neither action isjustified seems equally strong, argument is needed. Tomake a film about vision, and to make it without anymoral attachments, makes a great deal of sense. To sud¬denly inject a portion of a morality and then to refuse todiscuss this morality is not to play by the rules.If Zabriskie Point has a major failing it is this one.Granted that given a picture as severely maligned as thisone I am more likely to overlook faults than under normalcircumstances, I find that the appearance of the source ofmiscontent is so infrequent that it does not mar the filmfatally. Taken not as it pretends to be, but rather as it is,Zabriskie Point emerges as a film with a definite styleand personal vision. Both qualities are rare enough thesedays to make that recommendation enough.^TC.FoJtApril 3, 1970/Grey City Journal/3RECORDSThe Gentle Folk SoundDeja Vu by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young (Atlantic SD7200):Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young have realized the im¬portance of creating their own sound; too many groupstoday merely copv the successful sounds of others.CSN&Y have, for the most part, concentrated on theirsinging, creating a tight, soaring harmony that makesgreat use of Graham Nash’s high tenor voice. In-strumentally the group was a bit lacking in the past, buton Deja Vu they corrected this flaw by adding imagina¬tive, gentle instrumentation.The most important aspect about CSN&Y is their di¬versity. They each wrote two songs for the album, Stillsand Young co-wrote one song and Joni Mitchell wrote one.In this way, each song can reflect a different spirit andsince the writer sings lead on his song, the group takes ona different sound song after song. However, at all timesthe basic CSN&Y sound underplays the lead singer, mak¬ing the album a unified work.The talents of the individual members of the groupare enormous. Crosby, the most political member, wrote“Almost Cut My Hair” and the title song. He has a strong,emotional voice and his political lyrics are supported byit. “Almost Cut My Hair” starts off rather poorly withinane phrases but it builds well after the slow start andfeatures some outstanding instrumentation. “Deja Vu”features John Sebastian on harmonica and points out howrefreshing CSN&Y are in today’s record market.Stills is the most musical member of the group. Heplays a variety of instruments with equal ability. On “4and 20” he plays a fine accoustic guitar and “Carry On”is a great song for CSN&Y for it makes great use of theirharmony.Graham Nash’s “Our House” is nothing more than aromantic paean to a house “with two cats in the yard,”but it is catchy and lyrical. His “Teach Your Children” isa remarkable song, calling on both parents and children toteach each other what they can. His songs feature hisflexible tenor voice.Neil Young is a new and very welcome addition to thegroup. He writes poetic country music and sings in abroken, nasal voice that is extremely effective. His “Coun¬try Girl” is the most ambitious and successful song on thealbum, ending in a high point of restrained emotion.“Helpless,” his other song on the album, is a fine song,but it doesn’t have the power of “Country Girl.”Deja Vu is, without a doubt, the best album of 1970. Itwill be hard for any group to surpass the CSN&Y harmony4/Grey City Journal/April 3, 1970 / N Joni Mitchell| LADBESQFTH!, L,-L.K canyon*-/and instrumentation this year, or in any year until newheights are reached in the music world.Ladies of the Canyon by Joni Mitchell (Reprise 6376):An album from Joni Mitchell is a bouquet of thoughts,images and rhymes that must be savored and enjoyed.Ladies of the Canyon, the third Joni Mitchell record,places her unqualifiedly at the top of the current femalefolksingers. On her new album, Joni Mitchell proves thatshe is a talented performer and musician as well as atalented writer.Too few performers today realize the importance ofthe piano, especially in folk music. Joni Mitchell, alongwith Laura Nyro and Judy Collins, has helped in a revita¬lization of the piano. On this album, she evenly divides herguitar and piano songs which makes this her most inter-5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRYOPERAHOUSERODMcKUENCZTiCoi\cert FRIDAY,APRIL 24at 8:30 P.M.Tkketi: $6.50, 5.50, 4.50, 3.50BOX Office OfENS TOMORROW APRIL 6MAIL ORDERS TO: 20 N. Wackar Driv* Endos* S*H-Addr«»*d, Stamped Envelop*Mutt B* Postmarked No Lot*r TK*n April 17thJimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHLITZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNHillel StudiesBUBER AND JEWISH ThursdayFAITH COMMITMENTS 4:00 p.m.READING IN THE Time to beBOOK OF JOB arranged.ELEMENTARY HEBREW Tuesday &(continuing) Thursday 5:00 p.m.INTERMEDIATE HEBREW Wednesday(continuing) 7:30 p.m.ELEMENTARY YIDDISH Wednesday(continuing) 1:30 p.m.BEGINNERS YIDDISH Monday(continuing) 4:30 p.m.MODERN ISRAELI POETRY Wednesday(in’Hobrow) 5:00 p.m.JEWISH PHILOSOPHY Monday(Yavnoh class) 8:00 p.m.TALMUD Tuesday(Yavnoh clou) 8:00 p.m.CHUMASH (Bibie- ThursdayYovnoh class) 8:00 p.m.5715 Woodlawn - 752-1127 esting album, instrumental^. The album also uses a clari¬net, flute and a back-up group. At times, the back-upgroup sounds a bit out-of-place (“Circle Game” for ex¬ample) but on “Big Yellow Taxi” they help to make anenchanting be-bop rock‘song. All these elements though,do not overshadow the basic talent of Joni Mitchell.Vocally, Joni Mitchell is a unique performer. She doesnot have the steadiest or strongest soprano voice around,but she has qualities of innocence and purity that can be*found in no other performer today. Her voice is clear yetit conveys emotion better than technical singers such asJoan Baez and Buffy Sainte-Marie. But perhaps the mostimportant aspect of Joni Mitchell’s voice is its intimacy. Alistener actually thinks that he is getting to know JoniMitchell by listening to her sing.Joni Mitchell is a poet. She looks at life and everydayoccurrences through a poet’s eyes. She sees clouds as“rows and flows of angel hair” and for her “the sunpoured in like butterscotch.” On her newest album shereaffirms that she is indeed a poet who writes songs, notmerely a songwriter. However, the most important stepforward taken on this album is Joni Mitchell’s emergenceas a writer of socially significant songs. Previously herwork had been about love and life but seldom was itpolitical. Her new album exhibits an interest in the worldof today in the lyrics which are printed on the jacket.The only objection to Ladies of the Canyon is that JoniMitchell performs “Circle Game” a song that has beendone by many others. She sounds a bit hesitant about herversion and this spoils the entire effect. Except for this,Ladies of the Canyon is a fine album. It proves that JoniMitchell is a truly amazing talent who has much to offerboth musically and poetically. She should be watched, ex¬amined and appreciated.The Great PumpkinSick -fEarth ■ConferenceA series of panels and workshops on the envi¬ronmental crisis sponsored by the University ofChicago Ad Hoc Committee on the Environ¬ment. Panelists will be sponsored by theBeardsley-Ruml Foundation, Center for PolicyStudies, Center for Urban Studies, Student-Faculty Committee for Physical and BiologicalSciences, and the University of Chicago Stu¬dent Government. Panels will be held Mon¬day evenings 7:30 - 9:30 pm, with workshops,in which the principal speakers will partici¬pate, to follow. Quantrell Auditorium, Cobb209, 5811 S. Ellis Avenue.April 6WHAT IS POLLUTION:a discussion of several definitionsPanelGENE MARINE, Freelance writer for Ram¬parts , the New Republic; author of Americathe RapedGARRET HARDIN , Professor of Biological Sci¬ences, University of California at Santa Bar¬bara , author of Population, Evolution , andBirth ControlJOHN R . SHEAFFER , Research Associate ,Center for Urban Studies, Universitycf Chi¬cago, Executive Director of the Lake Mich¬igan and Adjacent Land Study Commission« *• ' * «* • ‘ 'iiMMMi THEATRE ^Theatre on the North SideTHE NORTH SIDE THEATRE SCENE continues to grow.The latest groups to emerge are The Fourth. Force, as4715 N. Broadway, and The Organic Theatre, located in achurch at 925 W. Diversey Pkwy.Both groups stress the actor’s body as the primarymode of theatre definition, rather than the more con¬ventional use of a playwright’s script. Thus the directortends more to choreograph rather than direct and inter¬pret. This method of presentation also calls for an inventivespontaneity and athleticism in the actor to a degree that isunnecessary in conventional acting (this is not at all tosay that Shakespearean or Chekhovian actors need nomuscular discipline and control). Such a conception of thetheatre, of course, has been gaining popularity for a num¬ber of years now, largely through the efforts of JulianBeck and Judith Malina with the Living Theatre, TomO’Horgan and the La Mama group (his production ofRochelle Owens’ Futz being particularly influential), andfhe "poor theatre” of Jerzy Grotowski of Poland. In Eng¬land, Peter Brook’s production of Marat/Sade was alsohighly influential. There are variations, to be sure: fromBrook’s “total theatre” to Grotowski’s “poor theatre” ofthe "holy” actor to the improvisational and abstract thea¬tre that the Fourth Force is trying to work out. But whatthey all have in common is an assertion that the actor isthe medium of the theatre, not the script of the play. Thestage resounds with bodies, not words. For this reason thenew theatre tends to be, if not anti-intellectual, at least anti-academic: it isn’t literature.The new theatre can be criticized, but I am gettingaway from the North Side, and running out of space. Verybriefly, then, in emphasizing the actor, proponents of thenew theatre have adopted the theatrical at the expense ofthe dramatic; they would substitute the Latin histrionicusfor the Greel hypocrites (both words referring to “actor”),the effect being a show of physicality rather than an un¬folding or emergence of the hidden (fate, plot). This criti¬cism is not meant to throw cold water on the new enter¬prise (ever since the cinema became the dominant formof popular art, the theatre has needed such revivification,and the new theatre is exciting): but the O’Horgans et al.should know what they are giving up.The Organic Theatre (tel. 477-1977) is now presentingan original adaptation of George Orwell’s Animal Farm,and their production is excellent. Most of the company isfrom Madison, where they got their start. The Parish ofthe Holy Covenant Church, which has been active in mak¬ing a community out of the North Side, has furnished agoodly space, and the actors devote full time to ex¬ercising, rehearsing, and producing. They live on whatthey make, and charge $2.50 on Fri. and Sat., with Thurs¬day, I believe, as student discount night (8:00). They playhorses, chickens, dogs, and, you’d better believe it, pigsand give full justice to Orwell’s mythopoeic power in hisimaginative statement on the origins of totalitarianism.The company, directed by Stuart and Carolyn Gordon,POTPOURRIHorny9 Corny PornContinued from Page Threeargues in a semi-serious vein that since so many sexualissues are up before the Supreme Court, judges’ views onsex should be taken into consideration in their selection.Another feature is a few made up letters to the editor.Although the particular issue I was sent contained nothingvery interesting, in the past they have had (so say someof my friends who have had a longer acquaintance withthe journal than I) such clever things as a letter from anorphanage asking that their subscription be cancelled be¬cause in the last issue they suggested that as a solution tothe population problem people should begin eating babies.(Apparently all those hip college student readers missedthe similarity between this and the original 17th centuryversion by Swift). Also included is a rather straight re¬view of the play “Oh! Calcutta!”, which, aside from themore detailed description of the actors’ pubic hair thanmost other papers, comes off as a rather dull review.Interspersed between the pages and pages of articleswhich go on in the same vein are black and white news¬paper pictures that go on in the same vein. A typicalexample is one on page 19 labeled “The Nipple As Eye¬ball’, which shows what a pair of tits look like with a fakemustache put under them, a pair of eyebrows painted overthem, and a pair of huge glasses placed over the nipples.There is only one other column which deserves men¬tioning. “Dear Scabby”, (the porn lover’s Ann Landers),in spite of the unoriginality of its theme, merits attentionfor its consistent grossness. Not only does Scabby manageto get in comments that compare her size to that of theGrand Canyon, discuss other people’s pubic hair and penissizes, but she also manages to get in just the right numberof racial slurs. (Scabby by the way is portrayed as awashed up old black lady).One of the nicer things about Candid Press is its open¬ly exploitive nature. Although some of the employees mayhave a hard time reconciling their personal self-imagewith that of their jobs, the management itself makes nopretenses about themselves — they’re out to make moneyin any way they can. Unlike some of the new sex offshootsof the underground papers, Candid Press doesn’t pretendto have any kind of radical ideology about how the politi¬cal revolution will follow the sexual revolution. The com¬pany. which also owns several hard core picturepommagazines, is owned by a nice Jewish family which hasbeen in the business for several generations. The workatmosphere is relaxed and easy going and the pay is rela¬tively good.The most amazing thing about Candid Press is thecirculation figure of 150,000. This is particularly incrediblein lieu of the competition. Candid Press doesn’t take onthe frankly scandalous but relatively mild porn of the oldstand-by in the business — The Inquirer which has articlesbke the Lesbian blind girl one we mentioned earlier; nordoes it follow the hardcore porn model of the new entriesin the field like Screw. Instead Candid Press tries a moreurbane approach, amply sprinkled with all sorts of cultur¬al references, which try to compensate for its basically culchuro nature (a culchuro is someone who reads TrueConfessions in a laundromat with her hair up in rollers).It seems appropriate at this point to explain the sig¬nificance of this phenomenon in relation to the degeneracyof our culture. However I don’t see any witty parallelsthat can be drawn from this with anything else. It doesn’tseem to have any symbolic significance for four thousandyears of Western culture, except to show that it is stillcreative and inventive, although possibly dying from theboredom which occurs from an overdose of cleverness. Afinal note here is that after I finished this article ourapartment was robbed. While the Pigs were sitting aroundwaiting for the fingerprint man to arrive, one of thembecame attracted to the dirty tabloid pictures lying openon my desk. He picked up the paper and began to thumbthrough it. Thirty seconds later he put it down witha yawn. Lee FeigonContributorsKeith Cushman is assistant professor in the departmentof English.Lee Feigon is a graduate student in the departmentof far eastern languages and civilizations.John Holt is a graduate student in the committee onsocial thought. obviously has political concerns; but no less obviously arethey artists.The fourth Force, (tel. ST 2-9319), directed by TomJaremba and Ted Sarantos (who have experience with theGoodman Theatre), perform “Works-in-Progress” on Sat¬urdays (8:30), and experimental improvisations on Mon¬day. They define what they are doing as “abstractions”and “myths” rather than the “stories” and mimes of PaulSills’ Body Politic (2259 N. Lincoln — and don’t miss thisgroup: they’re great). I was only able to see the Tuesdayworkshop, and while I enjoyed what they did, and be¬cause it was the workshop evening, I was still hungrywhen I left. The Saturday performances are supposed tohave more coherence, so if you go, go then. (Both of thesenew theatres are conveniently located near the el.)The Play House Theatre, (tel. 751-9643 or 778-4240), 315W. North (in Old Town), is presently performing SlawomirMrozek’s The Police. This company is devoted to the “le¬gitimate” avant-garde, opening with Beckett’s Endgame,and after Police, continuing with Arrabal’s The Labyrinth.Here the playwright rules, and the attempt is to be faith¬ful to the written script. But a play, no matter how good itis (and totalitarian Poland’s Mrozek has written a fineplay), does need good acting and direction. Unfortunately,the production simply doesn’t measure up to the script.Some of the actors are miscast, one declaims so loudlyand abrasively it’s painful, some don’t even look at thecharacters they are speaking to. It’s not certain whetherthe problem is inadequate direction or an insufficient un¬derstanding of what actors are supposed to do; probablysomething of both. Despite the problems, the play is stillworth seeing if you are curious about what the leadingplaywright in Poland can get away with. The play is aboutan essentially totalitarian state; the twist is that thepeople are, without Brave New World-ish thought controland biological determination, mindlessly, blissfully, devo¬tedly — content. Nobody has anything bad to say abouttheir “infant-king and his uncle, the prince-regent.” In apolice state, this is bad news, for the police, selfless publicservants that they are, have nothing to do! The storyfocuses on the attempts of the police to stir up the peopleto rebellion after “the last political criminal” renounceshis bomb-throwing past, admits that he sincerely loves hisgovernment, and goes off to become the top general’saide-de-camp. The assumption is clear: a state withoutpolice is unthinkable.Finally, the Columbia College production of WilliamRusso’s “rock-cantata” David at the Lincoln Park Presby¬terian Church, 600 W. Fullerton, is now over. If youmissed it, don’t despair. A new work, Joan of Arc, beginsnext Sunday at 7 and 9, and on Mondays, at 8 and 9. It’sfree, but they will gladly accept donations. If Joan isanything like David (and from the scenes they previewedlast Sunday, it is), you nan expect a light show withstrobes, about five projectors, a cast of tens, a rock bandwith violins added, dancers, singers, and, making her wayunder the splendour of Presbyterian Gothic, Joan theglorious virgin. Since this group has really been catchingon, it is suggested that you get there at least a half anhour early. 1 John R. Holt=6RETCITY) OURNiLHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica Siegel_ Jeanne WiklerStaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxC. F. Z. HitchcockFrank MalbrancheThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.April 3, 1970/Grey City Journal/5Tmm='T '. ^i'# , *•£, 1 aWW , Ai w - ’ 0/ «J®> ,,,ELAINE MAV’s Adaptation and Terrence McNally’s Nextare a doiible^bill of one-act plays,. They have been an off-Broadwaj; ’Nevv York City for some time, and nowthey can be seen in Chicago at the Happy Medium|j.|l1;^- -'5-. : . ; ' * - ..Adaptation is* something of a homecoming for ElaineMWLjfeg s|Te^presents life as a ’'hilarious board game.The all-American protagonist, Phil Benson^ proceeds alongthe board from cradle to grave id' search of the squaremarked Security, which of course isn't to be obtained;Along the way we are presented with the crucial.‘wa#lotions ori’ the road to American “'Sjucfcessi” and we are. • ! that this is indeed a "hard game.” ;MulJfbf 'in' humor seems to 1' ne evoked out ol theold \ichols-May skits, and for the most part, tt isbrilliantly and incisively satiric.: Adaptationds -a sgame in-which the mother rattles off the facts of' fife to Her six-year-old i-n the most straightforward medical terminologybut has to resort to mvths atfout birds and bees when shewants to tell him about black people Adaptation" is’ a: , • - 1 ■ ' •' - ■ ■ ■ ■■ "■ u ■ ■ ,with his teen-dge son because they don’t have great argu¬ments about the family car like the ones on "Leave It toBeaver.'’ is a game m which the hero studieshotel management at the -University of Miami and risesthrough (mostly because of his relentlessconfrontation of the problem of missing topsheetsi untilupon retirement he is rewarded with a golden key thatWill fit the utility closet in any Hilton hotel in the world.As \.m i; have mrou-ed. "Adaptation' is a comedythat curdles upon closer inspect am Beneath all the funand't games is a scathingcommentan of the American ratrace and the values it is founded upon. Miss May's eyeand ear are uncanny, and her wit is devastating.In some ways the rhythm of Adaptation is reminiscentof the first section of America Hurrah, though Adaptationgrew out of nightclub skits rather than the stylization ofabsurd 'theatre. Adaptation is a wonderful vehicle for ea-1 semble acting. The protagonist must project Phil Bensonfrom the age of five days until bis last coronary: each ofthe other three players must undertake a wide range ofcharacters of all ages. All four of the principals at theHappy Medium are outstanding. The play depends on paceand timing, and these are just right It is almqst unfair tosingle nut anyone for special praise, particularly whenactors are dpihg such a.good job of working together, but1 found the versatility of Joe Greco and Fawne Harrimanespecially enjoyable'/-: J more like ah extended gag than a play. ASelective Service computer has made one of thbse littlemistakes, arid ;as a^fpsifl, a'forty-two-vear-old New York¬er is called for his physical If this sounds to you like asituation of limited potentiality, you are absolutely cor¬rect Mr Nally does gt5 some good laughs early in the play— the pinta/niu-u says 1 ion 'on! mg al \ou." whdfctlS§'gives the butch ladv sergeant administering the exam hisurine specimen, and When he facetiously gives his profes¬sion as "dan* ct the next bureaucratl/ed question is.“Toe or tap?” — but ultimately the joke runs out ofsteam. To make matters wor-s'e, fhe play closes by lurch¬ing into’l long-, mawkish soliloquy in which the protagon¬ist turns out m be 'in unh ippy. fliftSilent Majority who Is bitter because “nobody gives adamn about me” although the faceless government goesout of its way- to- pay attention to “niggers on relief.”McNally mdke&Jrts overdose of pathos fatal by providinghis hero with a 'mother who died when he was thirteen.Having been told by the sergeant that he is not accept¬able, he wants his blood and urine back, and, as an Amer-CANQE TRIPS-Int’a Quetico-Superior Wilderness.Plan an'exciting canoe trip for the.highpdint of your summer vacation!Rates- -you can affo.rd.. For- . in¬formation write or call BILL ROMt-StOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.218—365-4046. JDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist, Featuring Chicago's Largest Display pi KLtf Music S y s r c-"THE GRADUATEFACULTY OFPOLITICAL ANDSOCIAL SCIENCE,NEW SCHOOL FORSOCIAL RESEARCHANNOUNCESTWO NEW M.A. AND PH.D.PROGRAMS INCULTURALANTHROPOLOGY eye examinations-contact lenses 'in the•fftew Hyde ParkShopping Centerf#10E. 55th St363-7644NOW IN STOCKTHE NEW STEREO TAPE DECK USINGTHE DOLBY NOISE REDUCTION„V V - SYSTEM• Pizza, Fried Chicken .I Italian foods .I Compare the Price! I11460 E 53rd 643-2800|I WE DELIVER I ONE OR THE TWO NEWGREAT? LOUDSPEAKERSF R-0 M r'KjL H-—PRICEDFROM 55.00 TO. 190.00 INBOOK SHE' : JNiTSIT POES FASTERWITHOUT Tl®CARBURETORS.v [CompletesFfyj StereoUh , H E(liikvkCmpuTcrlivturtyfi V v«*nrr« »l It-dhy >1 it fitt hy prirfett f.UA-l.Sfi, torcngi itv al i% jt % %tfq u i rr.ijt.u no* upUrtGg reLis:Gj eiry scope, the program'wi|T;be cpndjuisted within ,an tftstoneal eand ccynpa^SA! ive Framework. $ wvi.ll providestudent's w.ith a thorough backgroundin the philosophy methods, perspectives,problems, and types of data that "constitute cultural anthropology as asystem of inquiry. .PH D students will concentrate on one of,fiye areas—evolution and revolution,nationalities community studies,philosophical, anthropology,or ecological anthropology in redApply now for September 1970 semester.Write for further information and^ application^bTmj^to' 'y/y*' .--i'DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS, jGRADUATE FACULTY, #ON CAMPUS C L BOB TABOR 363-455> ^2035 W. 9.5th StY f/Grey City Journal/April 3, 197(1 f 6120 S. WESTERNSchlosberg on ChicagoContinued from Page OneTo see the city, you certainly don’t need a bicycle. It’sa good way for those who can dig it, but it depends onwhat you want to see. For a quick glimpse, there’s noth¬ing like the good old el. (In an effort to encourage explor¬ation, the CTA gives away free maps of all its bus and elroutes.) (And for those who won’t let their fingers do allthe walking, the Yellow Pages include a complete streetdirectory.) (I would also highly recommend to those whowant their fingers and eyes to do the walking, and toanyone else too, reading some Nelson Algren, maybe on arainy day.) For 40 cents you can get a grand quickie lookof a good part of the city, since you can ride back andforth and transfer from one line to the next for a singlefare. The el is also elevated, and that affords a view ofthings much different from what you get on the ground.The Loop is a good example; many of the buildings aremore interesting above street level, but you never look upexcept at the giant buildings that stand alone. Lots of thesmall buildings are dilapidated up top, some are strange-interesting, some are dull, and a number of the newer,larger buildings have their most interesting features upwhere someone walking along the street would have torisk a sore neck and being trampled if he tried to look atthem. (Carson, Pirie, Scott, if I remember right, is anexample.) If you were to ride only one el, I would stronglysuggest the Ravenswood. It circles the loop, goes throughvaried areas, and at the end of the line it comes down toearth and runs through the middle of an alley for a mileor so.Car, train, bus, feet, bicycle, boat, helicopter, all aregood ways to see the city, although I myself have neverhad access to the last two. The great thing is that you canexplore at any hour of the day or night. Car and bicycle,if you just sort of want to look around, are nice at night,there's no traffic and you can drive your car slowly upand down streets. But the light is different and you miss alot of details an^J dirt. The city is more dangerous atnight, but by 4 a m. evil has moved off the streets, mak¬ing 4:00-7:00 a.m. an ideal time for exploring. If you dothat be prepared, particularly if on bicycle, for the shockof the city waking up and all the hustle and hassle thatgoes with it. You can also eat your way around the city.For a while now I’ve wanted to, and haven’t yet, regu¬ larly eaten in small ethnic restaurants. Every Sunday orpreferably something a bit less regular, go to a restaurantand after dinner walk around, checking out the neighbor¬hood. The monthly guide which WFMT publishes includesa restaurant guide that lists many non-official restaurantsand gives the pertinent information of hours, cost, etc. Allkinds of food stores can also be found while exploring. Forall its bookstores, Hyde Park does not have a single realbakery where baking is done on the premises: man doesnot live by books alone.So many of the great places can be found only byword of mouth, or morelikely, by your stumbling uponcnmi mmiContinued from Page TwoPolice — an interesting title is the Chicago premiereof Slawomire Mrozek’s futuristic drama. At the Play¬house, 315 W. North. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 andSunday at 7:30. Students, $2.Adaptation-Next is two one-act plays, one by old Chi¬cagoan Elaine May and one by Terance McNally. At theHappy Medium, 901 N. Rush St. Tuesday — Thursday at8:30, Friday and Saturday at 8 and 11, Sunday at 7:30.The Lot Assigned and Christmas Eve with Miss Fet-engill are two original one-act plays by Don Abrahamsonand Lucille Bluestein respectively. Hull House PlaywrightsCenter, 222 W. North Friday and Saturday at 8:30.Endgame a play by none other than the Nobel Prizewinner Samuel Becket. It’s in a new theatre with a coffeeshop attached. Chicago repertory Company, 315 W. North,Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at 8:30.Blues and Soul PlacesSOUTH SIDE - Must be 21Burning Spear 55th and StateTurner’s 39th and IndianaPepper’s 43rd and VincennesTheresa’s 48th and Indiana them yourself. There are three all night Mexican restau¬rants in Chicago that I know of: one I noticed while driv¬ing my cab, the other two I saw ads for in a Mexicancommunity newspaper. Local papers which can be foundat local newsstands or drug stores frequently lead to dis¬coveries: even if you don’t understand the language of thepaper you can probably tell from an ad what kind of placeran the ad and where it’s located. But the best way is justto go out exploring.Leo Schlosberg is currently employed as a cab driver whileputting the finishing touches on his B.A. You can call himif you want details, explanations, or just company.I Spy 500 W 63rdClub DeLisa’s 56th and StateBlue Flame Oakwood and Cottage GroveSouth Side Jazz every Wednesday 9-4 am at Jose¬phine’s Pumpkin Room, 2015 E. 71st St. Call 288-9331 formore information.WEST SIDEShantay 4654 W. MadisonEddie Shaw’s Lounge 4423 W. MadisonL and A 1422 S. PalaskiWalton’s Corner S. Roosevelt and Washtenaw1815 Club Annex 1815 W. RooseveltLicking Stick 1700 W. RooseveltSportsman’s Roosevelt and KedzieKey Largo Roosevelt and DamenFlamingo 2500 W. RooseveltArtThe Museum of Contemporary Art presents an exhibi¬tion called “Evidence on the Flight of Six Fugitives”which displays the works of Michael Heizer, Peter Hut¬chinson, Richard Long, Walter de Maria, Dennis Oppen-heim, and Robert Smithson. All react against the idea ofpermanence. The museum is at 237 E. Ontario.From Checker GamesTo More Prosaic FareCONTEMPORARYEUROPEAN FILMSpresent for your enjoymentOur Spring ScheduleWednesday April 1 Morgan 7-9:15*Saturday April 4 Stolen KissesSunday April 5 To Die in MadridSaturday April 18 La Guerre est FinieSaturday April 25 The Fifth Horseman is FearSunday May 3 Pretty PosionSunday May 17 Titticut FolliesSaturday May 23 ShameSaturday June 6 Rosemary's Baby*all showings at 7 & 9:15 unless otherwise announcedConsult future Maroon's for exact locations and film timesTHIS QUARTER SEASON TICKET PRICES SLASHEDALL FILMS FOR ONLY FOUR DOLLARS.‘jVift* VFiVitamw 'SOtSlBtS8KHI?WJBflBVPJB& ViiSffiiWA *V.V. W.V W.V.* f\S/X A* f/t l April 3, 1970/Grey City Journal/7.» O' t • I.-;* * 1 1 /•>*-:The QntDcrsiru of ChicagoTHE 1970 ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA LECTURESBYMORTIMER J. ADLERDirector of the Institute for Philosophical ResearchTHE COMMONSENSE OF POLITICSApril 6 • From Ethics to PoliticsApril 8 • Politics and History: The Three RevolutionsApril 73 * Government, Law, and ViolenceApril 15 • Liberty, Equality, and JusticeApril 20 • The Classless EstablishmentApril 22 • The End of Revolution8:00 P.M.THE LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM111! EAST 60TH STREETADMISSION FREE Survival inthe SeventiesDepends UponYour BeingInformed The Contemporary Chamber Playersof The University of ChicagopresentsBLSA CHARLSTON • sopranoJOHN COBB at the pianoWorks by Scarlatti • Berg • Babbitt •Ives • StraussFRIDAY, APRIL 3* 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission is tree The public is invitedOn April 22nd the first National Environ¬mental Teach-In will be held at colleges anduniversities across the nation. If you'reashing yourself what can I do, THE ENVIRONMENTAL HANDBOOK will serve as asource of ideas and tactics.Other related title*:THE POPULATION BOMBby Or Paul ft Ehrlich (95cTHE FRAIL OCEAN by Wesley Mart (95cMOMENT IN THE SUNby Leona & Robert Rienow (95c)S $ T and Sonic Boom Handbookby William R Shurdiff (95c)PERILS OF THE PEACEFUL ATOMThe Myth of Safe Nuclear Power Plantsby Richard Curtis A Elizabeth Hogan ($1 25)Available whereverQJD BAllANTINE BOOKS are sold DRAGOON’SPUB219 !t .Sorth Av*.1/2 price on cocktail* for college otudenuS-7 p.m. Mon. - Fri.3091 off on weekendentertainment chargeFOLK BILESBed , Fri., Sot., Sun.The computer industrywill pay goodmoney foryour brain.With your brains, and three months of graduate study at theHoneywell Institute of Information Sciences, you could landa management-level job next fall. Honeywell offers the onlycomputer programming course specially designed for collegegraduates. It's the most advanced, professional computereducation you can get.So Honeywell graduates get hired sooner, promoted faster,and paid more.If you'd like to know all about Honeywell's next graduatecourse, put your brain to work filling out the coupon, today.The Other Computer Company:Honeywell THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryT'ull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks & Hardcovers1540E. 55th St.-Ml 3-7511 !What. .id’s so special aboutBeechwood Ageing?You don't needinsuranceprotectionfor your car(if you liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’llwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0977sentryJPFINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization We must be bragging too much aboutBeechwood Ageing.Because we’re starting to get someflak about it. Like, “Beechwood,Beechwood . . . big deal.”- And “ IfBeechwood Ageing is so hot,why don’t you tell every¬body what it is?”So we will.First, it isn't big woodencasks that we age Budweiserin.But it is a layer of thinwood strips from the beechtree (what else?) laid downin a dense lattice on thebottom of our glass-linedand stainless steel lageringtanks. This is where we let Budweiser ferment a second time.(Most brewers quit after one fermen¬tation. We don’t.)These beechwood strips offer extrasurface area for tiny yeast particlesto cling to, helping clarifythe beer. And since thesestrips are also porous, theyhelp absorb beer’s natural“edge,” giving Budweiserits finished taste. Or in otherwords, “a taste, a smooth¬ness and a drinkability youwill find in no other beer atany price.”Ah yes, drinkability. That'swhat’s so special aboutBeechwood Ageing.But you know that.Budweiser, is the King of Beers.(But you know that.)LANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. * ST. LOUIS * NEWARK . LOS ANGELES . TAMPA * HOUSTON . COLUMBUS * JACKSONVILLEv«/«tepjCftp*j0Hntel/Api11 £ 1878*AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYOchs In ConcertFolksinger Phil Ochs, best known for hisanti-war songs, will give a peace concertfor the University Moratorium fund at 8:30pm Friday, April 10 in Rockefeller Chapel.Tickets will be on sale in the Mandel Hallbox office for $2 and $3. No tickets will besold at the door. Proceeds from the concertwill pay the Moratorium committee’s pastdebts and help cover the costs of the April15 Moratorium.NCD MeetingFreshmen interested in entering the newcollegiate division (NCD) are invited to aseries of informal meetings describing theseveral NCD programs. Each meeting willbe conducted by the chairman and studentsin the program and will be devoted to an¬swering questions about the programs andthe divisions. The schedule appears below.• Ideas and Methods, Monday, April 6, 4pm, Cobb 103• Philosophical Psychology, Tuesday,April 7, 4 pm, Cobb 103• History and philosophy of Religion,Wednesday, April 8, 4 pm, Cobb 106• Civilizational Studies, Friday, April 10,4 pm, Cobb 324• Tutorial Studies, Tuesday, April 14, 4pm, Cobb 103• History and Philosophy of Science,Wednesday, April 15,1 pm, Cobb 402.Soc Sci PrizesStudents in the College are invited to be¬gin work on essays to be submitted for $800in prizes awarded through the social scien¬ces collegiate division.Professor Arcadius Kalian, master of thesocial sciences collegiate division, an¬nounced that $600 in prizes was availableunder the auspices of the Harold E Goettlerpolitical institutions contest and $200 was RUBBLE: Tho old bookstore site is now just left-over junk. steve Aokiavailable under the auspices of the MunroBernhard social inventions prizes.Entries must be typed, and submitted intriplicate by April 24 at the latest, in Gates-Blake 405, according to Professor Kahan.Judges for the Goettler prizes will beKenneth Prewitt, associate professor of po¬litical science, Peter Novick, associate pro¬fessor of history, and Susanne Rudolph,associate professor of political science, to¬gether with the following students: RogerWebman, 70, Alice Baslos, 70, RogerSweeny, 71, and alternate Tim Lovain, 70.Judges for the Munro Bernhard prizes willbe Emile Karaffol, assistant professor ofhistory, Richard Taub, assistant professorof sociology, and Ralph Lerner, associateprofessor of social sciences, together withAnthony Grafton, 71, David Nufer, 71, andJoseph Henschel, 70. Book ListsBeginning this quarter, reading lists forundergraduate courses will be available inHarper library.Each quarter the collegiate divisions willprepare booklets listing the course offer¬ings and their readings.The new service, worked out by collegedean Roger Hildebrand at the suggestion ofhis student advisory committee and the om¬budsman’s office, will meet the frequentcomplaint that no accurate course descrip¬tions are available, according to A1 Shpun-toff, advisory committee chairman.“There exist many other uses for thisnew service,” he said. Winter's TaleShakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale will bepresented next month, with auditions to beheld Sunday, April 5 at 7:30 pm in IdaNoyes Theater.Produced by the Undivided Line Play-Producing Company, the play will be di¬rected by James Redfield, master of thenew collegiate division (NCD), designed byVirgil Burnett, associate professor of art,and produced by Janet Kravetz, adminis¬trative assistant in the NCD.Actors will be auditioned with an attemptto cast largely from the NCD, and a lightdesigner, sound designer, business man¬ager, and production assistants are needed.Actors are encouraged to bring a copy ofthe play to the audition.Adler LectoresMortimer J. Adler, director of the In¬stitute for Philosophical Research and asso¬ciate editor of the Great Books of the West¬ern World, will present a series of sixEncyclopaedia Britannica Lectures inApril.The series, entitled “The Common Senseof Politics,” is open to the public withoutcharge. The schedule of lectures is as fol¬lows: “From Ethics to Politics,” April 6;“Politics and History: The Three Revolu¬tions,” April 8; “Government, Law, andViolence,” April 13; “Liberty, Equality,and Justice,” April 15; “The Classless Es¬tablishment,” April 20; and “The End ofRevolution,” April 22. All lectures will be inthe Law School Auditorium at 8 pm.This will be Adler’s fourth series of En¬cyclopaedia Britannica lectures. He haspublished books based on his precedingthree series.Adler is also the author of How To ReadA Book, The Capitalist Manifesto, The Ideaof Freedom, and The Conditions of Philoso¬phy.CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN FILMSPRESENT TWO MASTERPIECESof the Current CinemaON SATURDAY,,V ^PRIL 4A I. ON SUNDAY, APRIL 5STOLEKISSES N TO DIEIN MADRIDdirected byFrancois Truffaut(Jules & Jim, Shoot The Piano Player)HIS NEWEST FILM The Definitive, Award-WinningCinematic Treatmentof the Spanish Civil Warat 7:00 & 9= 15 at 7:00 & 9:15The LAW SCHOOLAUDITORIUM MANDEL HALLApril ), 1070/Thu < Chicago Maroon/7Introductory LectureTUESDAY, APRIL 78:00 P.M.IDA NOYESTRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONAS TAUGHT BYMAHARISHIMAHESHYOGITRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION IS A NATURAL SPONTANEOUSTECHNIOUE WHICH ALLOWS EACH INDIVIDUAL TO EXPANDHIS MIND AND IMPROVE HIS LIFE. Students InternationalMeditation Society f PERENNIAL LIBRARYTHE LOTTERYAND THE DRAFT:WHEREDO I STAND?ONrtO KCNOAU. AMOCONVERSATIONSWITHSAULAUNSKYJust publishedThe Lottery and the Draft:Where Do I Stand?by DAVID KENDALL & LEONARD ROSSA practical and authoritative guide to the entire SelectiveService System, with special emphasis on how the lotteryaffects all classes of registrants. Based on the authors' r*.search at the Yale Law School, the book includes forecastingtables for the reader's use. P/175 950THEBUS. AD. MAJORSAIDSTATISTICALLY: 1MILLERMAKES IT RIGHT!SEND USYOURADVERBIALPUNS ABOUTCOLLEGEMAJORS. IFPUBLISHED,WE LL SENDYOU AREFRESHINGREWARD.COLLEGE BOX 482© MILLER BREW. CO.M1LW., W1S. 63201 CARPET BARNWAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur Coatsinexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Davs Tues.-thru Sat. 9-41228 W. Kinzie 243-2271 LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES The Professional RadicalConversations with Saul A/inskyby MARION K. SANDERSA tough-minded agitator talks candidly about his unorthodoxways of attacking the troubles of Chicago and other Americancommunities. "A fantastically great artist.” — Abbie Hoffman,in Revolution for the Hell of It P/176 950At all bookstores-f- Harper &> Rowih 17 49 E. 33d Street, New York, N.Y. 10016GOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM-2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM -9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.CHUCK'S PRESS LOVES WORKServices ofCOPy CEDTER nowavailable to students, staffand faculty. .They accept cash,102 forms, book-store charge cards. rBand personalchecks (with ID's) JFor Information: /DON’T MISS YOUR FLIGHT TO EUROPE!FLIGHT AIRLINE DATES DESTINATION FARE70A AIR CANADA June 23Sept. 20 Chicago/ParisLondon/Chicago $24070B ELAL June 26Sept. 11 New York/LondonLondon/New York $18970D AIR CANADA Sept. 2Oct. 2 Chicago/AmsterdamLondon/Chicago $21970E TWA Sept. 4Sept. 25 New York/LondonLondon/New York $205* */. o » U. of c. CHARTER FLIGHTSIDA NOYES HALL, #306Ml 3-Q800 - EXT. 3598.3272WJ* / The Chteego Maroon / Afrrlf *‘3; 19&0'3 *letters to the editors of the maroonContinued from Page Sixof these people.Still, I found little in my experience todisconfirm the view I repeatedly expressedduring the conflict over Marlene’s case:The Sociology department in particular,and the University in general is not a freeplace for radical faculty or graduate stu¬dents. Furthermore, fundamental criticismof the University’s purposes is not toleratedby those who count. This is true of mostdepartments and universities everywhere.What makes Chicago so insufferable is theway in which its dominant personagescloak their narrow-mindedness, con¬servatism, elitism and downright in¬humanity with absurdly inflated rhetoric,with self-righteous claims to be the true de¬fenders of Reason, Truth, Excellence andAcademic Freedom.Like Marlene, I am mighty happy to befree of that atmosphere. From this dis¬tance, Chicago looks like a center of reac¬tion — one of the command posts in the waragainst the young. When I try to think of agood way to capsulize my feelings aboutthe place, I keep coming back to this: oneof the things I most hold against the Uni¬versity of Chicago is the way it is system¬atically organized to rob young people oftheir youth. Maybe this is why so many ofits inhabitants grow old before their time,while others, as a last resort, make calcu¬lated use of infantilism.Richard FlacksAssociate ProfessorUniversity of CaliforniaSanta BarbaraISfuc/enf UnionMany students have been asking ques¬tions about the Union of Students. The mostfrequent questions have been: who is or¬ ganizing the Union, what tactics does itplan to use, and what issues are going to beraised.The answer to the first question is thatthe Union was started by a group of indi¬viduals, mainly from Student Government,who feel that the established channels forchange in the University are essentiallyworthless. We welcome any individuals andany group to join us and help organize theUnion. We are not pushing a politicalideology, but we are trying to organizepeople around issues which affect them.The Union is a completely independentand autonomous organization; it has no af¬filiation or obligation to any organizationeither in the University or outside the Uni¬versity. We feel, however, that it is tacti¬cally wise to seek cooperative allianceswith other groups who share our concerns.In this regard we have asked for and re¬ceived endorsement and financial assis¬tance from Student Government with theunderstanding that SG has no authority tomake Union policy. We have also soughtout and talked to some of the more progres¬sive people in the labor union movement.Generally speaking they have responded tous favorably and seem to be willing to co¬operate with us on issues of mutual con¬cern.Concerning the questions on issues andtactics, I want to make it clear that Unionpolicies will be made democratically by themembership. There is no official policy ofthe Union on any of the issues at this time.We feel that concrete decisions should bemade only after a fairly large number ofpeople have had an opportunity to join. Thefirst meeting of the Union will be Wednes¬day, April 8 at 2:30 pm in Mandel hall. Ifyou want to have a voice in what directionthe Union should take you should join onMODERN DANCE CLASSES4,30 to 6.00Monday * SaturdayBallot, ftodi 4 Jazz taught.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. StatsStstani BuddingRoom 1902332 9923Hold upyour local gasstation.It \ou vc yot a hit of larceny invour heart, you’ll love theRenault 10. *Vm see, it yets 35 miles to thegallon.AikI as tar as jtas stations areconcerned, that s highway robbery.Si don’t be too harsh when theb'Vs it your local gas station act•i little grumpy.In tact,you can soften the blow.Ju'( t<'ll them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)hen surest they yet one torthemselves.Alter all, they might have a bitlarceny in |their heartstoo.jCeiluimports,Jrnc.2235 SO.Michigan ave.,CHICAGO, ILL.tel. 326-2550 CIVIC THEATREWACMR DB ot WASHINGTONPHONE 372-4814STARS OF THEDUBLIN THEATREFESTIVALJACKARANSONAND COMPANY INi>yL»nThe Drama of Dylan Thomas,Poet of the Now Generation.By SIDNEY MICHAELS LAST 2 WEEKSCLOSES APR. 18"WITTY. LUST, RABELAISIAN!" - Dublin PranMON. thru SAT. EVES at 8:30 - WED. & SAT. MATS. 2 P M.SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR STUDENTS 8i FACULTYBring this ad to the Box Officeand receive best availableseat at the STUDENT RATE of $3.00THIS OFFER GOOD NOW THRU APR. 17FOR ALL PERFS. EXCEPT SAT. EVESRegular Prices are: 7.00, 6.50, 6.00, 5.50, and 5.00JESSELSON’S752-2870,752-8190,363-9186 • 1340 E. 53rdNEEL VSSTANDARDSERVICETo Our Customers1 have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we cancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and better service.Please join us at our new location.6600 So Stony IslandPhone BU 8-9645Thank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard Service UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARISIproprietor Wednesday or before.In our leaflet we suggested a number ofnew ways of putting pressure on the Uni¬versity, but before we do any of thosethings we need to assess our strength andpossible effectiveness from each type of ac¬tion. Our strength will depend critically onbuilding a broad base of support, and thatin turn will depend on raising issues whichdirectly effect a great many students.No doubt we will have to debate and workout some disagreements among ourselves,but we should be able to put together aprogram which deals with every majorgrievance that students have. These shouldinclude the grievances of student employ¬ees, of women, of people living in Univer¬sity housing, of people exploited by hightuition, and of people in various depart¬ments over departmental issues, in additionto the more obvious issues affecting every¬body.I hope people will start forming caucusesto discuss these various concerns. We mustremember that we are going to have towork out some difficult problems amongourselves, if we don’t, it will be all too easyfor the University to divide us and weakenour movement. Larry LambertDepartment of PhysicsEnglish CurriculumVirginia Wexman’s Gadfly, which ap¬peared in the last regular edition of the Ma¬roon, does not accurately represent whathappened at the under-graduate meeting todiscuss the English department curriculumproposal. First of all, the purpose of themeeting was to present the proposal to stu¬dents for discussion and clarification.Somewhere in the middle of the meeting,which lasted about five hours, Mr Sacksexplained that if students’ initial negativereaction to the proposal persisted, the pro¬posal should be withdrawn, since a curricu¬lum that everyone dislikes cannot be suc¬cessful. But throughout the meeting MrSacks made it clear that he was not presentas the chairman of the committee, but as aguest of the undergraduate members, and was expressing his own opinions and notthe will of the committee. Mrs Wexman iscorrect in saying that some people leftwhile the meeting was going on; it is notcorrect, however, to say that they all leftassuming the proposal would be dropped.Near the close of the meeting, we, as thestudent members of the committee, werenot sure what to do and we asked for sug¬gestions from the floor. At that point, al¬most all of the students still at the meetingwere in favor of the proposal and suggestedthat we present it at the next faculty meet¬ing. Realizing that a majority of Englishmajors had not responded either pro or conto the proposal, we assumed the responsi¬bility for deciding to submit it to the facul¬ty. English Curriculum CommitteeundergraduatesDan ChaffeeBill Hoglellene KantrovCraig McPhersonPhil RussDiana'sHaving just read your description of thedelightfully “ethnic” food at the Diana Res¬taurant (Maroon, March 6), I thought someof your readers might be interested in anexperience that I once had there:I am white (as are most Shapiros) andone evening I happened to go to dinner atthe Diana with a girl who is black. To putthings, simply, we simply were not served.We waited and waited and waited and wewere told that other parties who came inafter us had “reservations” and that thetable over there was for four people nottwo, etc., etc.Now I know that it is probably true thatmany public places in Chicago still have“old-fashioned” policies about “reserva¬tions” and “tables”, and I also know that“integration is dead” and that being able toeat at the Diana is not the “real issue”. Butsince that experience, I have not gone backto the Diana. And I hope that many otherpeople do not either.Barry ShapiroBetter food for less money? Try the Underground. Basementof Pierce Tower. Open nightly from 8:30 to as late as you cankeep them working after 12:30. • *April 3( 1970/Tho Chicago Maroon/9 •'PlArCCVS ALL-NIGHT SUCHptiKWMAHtu (aio&T t u’jaOAf touowiNC taw fttoulM KaryeiThe time has cometo take a realistic lookat yourself...1 Clark: l mrrlrr■ enjoy ourm special studentratemC at ■m times ■■ for college students ■■ presenting i.d. cards ■■ at our box office ■■ • different double feature ■■ daily• open 7 30 a.m.-late■ show midnight ■■ • Sunday film guild Hm • every wed. and fri. is Mladies day-all gals 85‘m little gal lery for galsm only ■m • dark park ing-1 door ■jouth■ 4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• v*.Tite for your free ■monthly programj :Clark & madrson fr 2-2843 □10/The Chicago - Maroon/AprH 3, 1970 BLACK Colony PresentsJUNIOR WELLSANDKoko Taylorin ConcertSaturday, April 4 in Mpndel Hall8:30 p.m. Until...MSTNICTCOU«<»0« 11 '•<»«.<•»O' Adult GufOitn<35- Buddy GuyTickets $2.50 and $3.00(on sale Tuesday, March 31 atMandel Box Office and Student Act. Office)TICKETS ON SALE AT DOORIf you’re about to get your degree, it’s time toask yourself some penetrating questions —thekind of questions many people never reallyface up to.Are you more interested in people, in things orin abstract ideas? Are you willing to make mean¬ingful commitments to other people as well as toyourself?It is worth thinking about. We at InternationalHarvester also continue to critically examine oureconomic and social responsibilities. We are grow¬ing in the United States and in 166 other coun¬tries because IH products are making an impor¬tant contribution to a better life.Trucks —from the scout utility vehicle to giantoff-highway specialized vehicles.Farm & Industrial Equipment —from gardenand farm tractors to loader-backhoes.Construction Equipment —from in-plant load¬ers to powerful earth scrapers.Iron & Steel- from cold-finished bars to specialalloy steels.Gas Turbines —from stationary generators tomobile power units.Aerospace —from specialized space vehicle com¬ponents to complete systems.To help you plan your future, we invite you tostop in at your College Placement Office for a freecopy of our book, "Your World of Opportunity.INTERNATIONAL HARVESTERAn equal opportunity employerMASIITom urn.*, foi presents J.YA im kV 11 An logo Preminger Productions.»nng DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITTCo StarringSAllY KlUfRMAN ROBtRT DUVAlt ■ JO ANN PflUC • RfNt AUBfRJONOIS Produced by INGO PREMINGEROtreclfd by ROBERT At TMAN Screenplay by RING LARDNER, Jr. from a novel by RICHARD HOOAfRMusic by JOHNNY MANDU PANAVISI0N’ COLOR by Del uie “abc GREAT STATES THEATREUNITED ARTISTSRANDOLPH AT DEARBORNApril 3Jont Fondo-Robert Radford April 4BAREFOOT IN THE PARK BATTLE OF BRITAINApril 10NotolieWood-Robort Radford sM April 11■Ob* Mia Farrow-Eliiobeth TaylorTHIS PROPERTY IS CONDEMNED SECRET CEREMONYApril 17Rod Stoigor-Cloire BloomTHREE INTO TWO WON'T GO April 18Richard Burton-Eiizabeth TaylorBOOMApril 24Worren Bootty-Evo Marie Saint April 25All FAU DOWN ROMEO l JULIETMay 1James Coburn wM May 2■e* Zero MostelTHE PRESIDENT'S ANALYST THE PRODUCERSi TICKfTS $1.50MASHgives aDAMN(Maroon Classified Ads)DO WHAT THE SPIRIT SAY DO.Visit Joseph R. Shapiro's privateart collection in his home Wednes¬day evening, April 15th. Bus trans¬portation available from Ida NoyesHall for 50c. Details and sign upsheets in the Student Activities Of¬fice, Room 209, Ida Noyes Hall.A FREE UNIVERSITY CELEBRA¬TION at Graham Taylor Chapelevery Sunday - 5PM.UC Baha'i Fellowship Meets EachMonday, 7:30 PM, Ida Noyes. Ourcommitments are to spiritual -Growth and to Social Change.Some of your best friends will beat the Gay Lib Dance. For Someof the best reasons. Sat, 8:30, Wood¬ward, St, live band.Prof Milton J. Rosenberg will speakon "ABM-MIRV: The Drift towardsDoomsday" at Hillel tonight, 8:30.5715 Woodlawn. Discussion on wom¬ens' ordination in the LutheranChurch. Sunday, Apr. 5, 6:00. Bon-hoeffer House. Supper Following.Make the Scene with Good SoundBe Our Stereo Type and Save$$$On Stereo Components at Musicraft.On Campus Bob Tabor at 363-4555All Brands Low Prices.Two great new dances are aboutto sweep the country. They'll prem¬ier Sat. night at the Gay LibDance. Call them the Swag andthe Mince. Woodward.TORAH AND TECHNOLOGY: THEWIDENING GAP Mr. Howard Pol-’lack, Assoc, of Orthodox Scientists,At Hillel, Sunday, 7:30PM.A Natural High is the Best HighTranscendental Meditation. TuesApril 7, 8:00pm. Ida Noyes.*It looked as if a night of darkintent/ Was coming, and not onlya night, an age/ Someone had bet¬ter be prepared for rage.—Come to the Sick EarthConferenceTHE UNDERGROUNDinvites all students to have a L stysnack or meal at our plush PierceTower home this week. Tenderloinsteak, burgers shakes, fries andall those other goodies. Try ourlow prices now.Hillel classes resume this week.See ad in this issue.Victor Nazario speaks on "REVOL¬UTION IN LATIN AMERICA: CUL¬TURAL OPPRESSION & LIBERA¬TION OF THE MIND" Friday 8^M Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone.Dirty Dykes and Freaking Fags,Inc. invites Tom Foran and Pig-woman to dance to the sound of3oncho Pilot, Woodward Commons,Sat., 8:30!urn on Naturally. TranscendentalMeditation Tuesday April 700PM Ida Noyes Hall.SON OF GAY LIB DANCE. DAU¬BER TOO. 8:30 SAT. $1. WOOD¬WARD.larco Polo Travel. 2268S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.• INTERPERSONALjR.OWTH. Trained Experiencedframers conduct ongoing Group Ex¬perience For info 8, registration,•ail Tom or Norm 288-2917.-UROPE $199 round trip (let),poking fast. Call or write: Itkin,Jnm Vf,s,s,ar Dr" Kalamazoo, Mich.49001 (616) 349-7011 Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)Sunday AM: Garrett Hardin, BobMann, Rabbi Maslin Speak—Over¬population and US Policy. KAMTEMPLE, 930 E. 50th, 10-12, April5.Enjoy! Enjoy! Sunday Suppers withFriends at Brent House Communaldinners 6PM every Sunday - $1.00(home-cooking)Got the Blues? Well, We Do. TheCHICAGO BLUES BAND, HomesickJames, Sunny Lind Slim and ShakyHorton, Mandel Hall, Sunday, April12.i thank You God for most dis-amazing/day: for the leaping green¬ly spirits of trees/ and a blue truedream sky; and for everything/which is natural which is infinitewhich is yes—Come to the Sick EarthConferenceChairman of IRA, Malachy McGur-ran speaks on "The Role of theIRA in Last Year's Riots." BLUEGARGOYLE April 9, 8:00.Gay Lib Dance lasts until 2AMYou can go somewhere else firstand still get in a few hours of . . .what a night!!!!an experiment on good eating.Pierce Tower basement—open night¬ly 8:30-12:30 and 4:30-12:30 on Sun¬days.CEFSaturday See Truffaut's New FilmStolen Kisses at the Law School at7:00 and 9:15.Sunday: To Die in Madrid anti¬fascist Flick at Cobb Hall at 7:00and 9:15.Each Film for $1.00 or Series Tick¬et (nine films) for four dollars.SCHUTZ & MAASTRICHTTHE SEVEN LAST WORDS OFCHRIST by Heinrich Schutz and theMAASTRICHT EASTERN PLAYwill be presented at DisciplesChurch, 5655 University, April 4,8:30.SENSITIVITY TRAININGA Weekend sensitivity training work-ship will be conducted April 10-12by staff of UC. counseling center.If you would like to apply callMl 3-0800 ext 2360 immediately forfurther information.PLAYBOYSHey all you guys with breast fix¬ations! And all you girls with fix¬ations too (never let it be saidthat, we discriminate against gaygirls) don't let a golden opportu¬nity like this one pass you by.Playboy, that breast fixators par¬adise, is offering a special offerfor new subscribers so you won'thave to drool and pant at yourfavorite neighborhood newsstand. Foryou, because your eyes are blue,such a deal! A three-year subscrip¬tion for only the ridiculously lowsum of only $24.00. But if breastsdon't mean that much to you (andif not, why not?) Playboy also of¬fers a two year subscription foronly $18, a one year for $8.50 anda seven month (that's if you arestill experimenting) at $6. But don'tlet these luscious, panting breastsescape you. Order today from theBig Bunny at the Maroon office.PEOPLE FOR SALECRAFTSMAN will build your harp¬sichord - clavichord from Hubbardor Zuckerman kits, to your specifica¬tions. Call 345-4631.Typing. 955-4659 pm & weekends.JOB WANTEDFemale British Student Needs Vac.Job June-October. PL 2-3800 Ext.1403 (after 6PM)LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA¬TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALL236-1423 9-5 WEEKDAYS. PEOPLE WANTEDSociology Graduate foreign StudentFrom Another University NeedsHelp with M.A. Thesis. Data Al¬ready Collected. Eve. 363-6425.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.RIDE WANTEDRide Wanted to NYC area. April4th or after. Will share driving andexpenses. 324-6389 after 6.HEBREW TEACHERSWANTEDGood salary, pension and fringebenefits for full-time qualified per¬sonnel. Part-time positions avail¬able. Openings for one-day-a-weekschools.Placement ServiceBoard of Jewish Education72 E. 11th St.Chicago, III.HA 7-5570.MUSICIANSThe PEPPERBANDE Proudly An¬nounces Production of its First Rec¬ord is Underway. Call 684-6667 toBooks.Opportunity for Rock Band 8./orRock Musicians!!! Tryouts forSweetlife, an original musical TuesApr 7, 10-12PM; Thurs 9, 7-10pm.Ida Noyes. Bring Eqpt Music Read¬ers Preferred for More info callLouis FA 4-3028.Female Vocalist Needs Group. BoxF c/o Maroon.Opportunity for Rock Band!!! Try¬outs for SWEETLIFE. AN OriginalMusical Thur, Fri. Apr. 9, 10. IdaNoyes 7-10PM. Bring Equipment.Music Readers Preferred.FOR SALEIf you wish to buy a copy of thenew 45 Record of Conspiracy 7.Call CA 5-6605 LOWE'S.Portable 23" TV-6xl0 Rug-Bed-Spreads-Drapes and other House¬hold Items. SO 8-0029.French-Made 10 Speed Bike. $55.324-9358.FORD MAVRICK 1970. Only 2700miles. Autom. 120 HP, w/w tires,radio, deluxe eqpm. $2,200. After5:30 and all day weekends. 955-6908.63 RamblerAmer Conv. Good Condi¬tion. $300. 363-0544.For Sale: Master's Cap (7%), Gown(C. E. Ward, medium size), andHood (University of Chicago, Sci¬ence); worn 4 times, perfect condi¬tion, $22.50, postpaid, COD. extra.Inquire Maroon Business Office.1962 Corvair $115, 643-8210.Honda 337 Scramb. $385, 643-8210.Toyota '67 4dr, New Clutch, RunsGreat $895 or Offer. 955-8578.A new shipment of quality, lowpriced guitars, banjos, and mando¬lins expected shortly. TeamsterUnion willing. THE FRET SHOP,Harper Court.HONDA 50cc, 1965. Very good cond.120 mi/gal. $75.00 (firm) 955-5033.Stereo Components at DiscountsSave on Dyna, AR, Scott, ADC,Up to 25%. Sherwood & SANSUIUP to 40% at MUSICRAFT CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 and Save$$ZOOM! Honda 337, $385, 643-8210single bed box spring mattress, $35.752-7516 Bob.SPACERoommate Wanted for Spring Quar¬ter and/or Summer. Own Roomnear Campus. 324-6389 After 6.Nice, clean room near campus.Call Ml 3-9257.Nice House Large Yard. 2 CarGar. 2 Baths. 955-5916.3 Rms Furn Util Incl. $125. 5405S. Woodlawn. Ml 3-2760 or 667-5746.Male Wants Room 8< Roommate(s)Mike 762-9895. Leave Message.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUN .name, address, phone.CHARGE;HEADING: 50c per line, 40c per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75c perline, 60‘ per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andrks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!punctuation marlThere is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^. Big 3-bedroom 6-room apt 57th 8,Kenwood; rent starts June 15 butsign lease now; $250/mo. Call Markor Irl 955-7285.6 rm clean sunny spacious apt w/piano 3 bedrms. Mid-June to mid-Sept. $200/mo (negot.) 955-7352.Sale or Rent Deluxe 4 Rm SSApt. Ideal for Couple. 221-7916 Eves.4 Rm Apartment for Rent ($135/mo)From June First, on 55th 8< HydePark Blvd. Phone 363-6603 Eves.6 Rms. South Shore. 3-4 bedrms.2 baths. Carptd. Close to I.C. orUniv. bus. Fexible lease. Familyor 3 students. Call 721-5302 aft. 5.2 Roommates Wanted 57th & Mary¬land Own Rooms 46. 75/Mo. 288-4303.Attractive rooms in communal houseShore $35-45 kit priv near 1C. 324-3881.Sublet now—apt to renew in Aug.Mod 2’/2 Irg. rms. Married UCStud Only. 54 8< Harper, $116. Park$14/Qtr. 288-6039.Male Grad to Share w/2.6 Rms.2 baths, own rm. $55. 752-6151.LOST AND FOUNDBifocals. Rectangular Silver Frames.Ken Gass x3762.NEED NEW HOMESFREE Kittens: There is one ofevery color imaginable. And onethat is unimaginable. Call 363-5644.Free gerbils. Call 324-6786.GETTING TOGETHERWarm, Friendly, But Shy MaleSeeks Warm, Friendly Female.Please Leave Message, MaroonBox S.VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS!Have you had good experience orbad experiences with local VWdealers? We have had a complaintabout VW service, and we wouldlike a sampling of public opinionbefore we take action. Send repliesto Box VW, Care of Maroon, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. IdaNoyes Hall.PERSONALSUnlike several other food dispen¬saries on campus, our prices haveactually gone DOWN. We now havehave the lowest prices on campus.We are THE UNDERGROUND.If you don't want to dance withsomebody, that's quite all right.Just be flattered and say, "No,thank you." GL.Minnette's Custom Salon 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing; clothes copied & designed.Hear the one about the UC studentwho discovered bisexuality at theGay Lib Dance?Phonographic Literature Free!!!Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8< Tape Decks Save$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.Turn on Naturally. TranscendentalMeditation — Tuesday April 7,8:00PM Ida Noyes Hall.A dog starv'd at his Master's Gate/Predicts the ruin of the State. AHorse misus'd upon the Road/ Callsto Heaven for Human blood./ Eachoutcry of the hunted Hare/ A fiberfrom the Brain does tear.—Come to the Sick EarthConferenceA Natural High is the Best HighTranscendental Meditation TuesApril 7, 8:00PM Ida Noyes.STUDENTS! WRITERS!Literary Consultant Can Help Youwith Your Papers and Manuscripts.Call 624-1914 5-7PM.FACULTY:INCOME TAXPROBLEMS?Unusual problems of fac¬ulty income warrant specialattention.Will complete your formsor advise you how to do it.Call 752-7047for appointment“ALL NATIONAL COMMISSIONSreach the same conclusion. Itwould save a lot of bother to havea rubber stamp prepared to behanded on from one commissionchairman to the next: ‘The Na¬tional Commission on con¬cludes that the problem ofconfronts the nation with a criticalemergency that requires the im¬mediate appropriation of bil¬lion dollars and | For Q fr„ copy 0,the expenditure!hereafter of — Ibillions yearly’.'’ I NATIONAL RE¬VIEW, write: Dept.Z, ISO E. 35 Street,N. Y. 10016. Got the Blues? Well we do. TheChicago Blues Band, HomesickJames, Sunny Lind Slim and ShakyHorton, Mandel Hall, Sunday, April12.Trying to figure out next week'sway to spite your parents? Tellthen you went to the Gay-LibDance. And enjoyed it—Saturdaynite at Woodward. NEWENGINECARS!The Maroon needs cars. We go toHinsdale Monday and Thursdaynights so that you can get yourfavorite rag. However, to get there,we need automotive transportation.Unfortunately, few of us have cars.If you do, and would be willingto rent it to the Maroon for $5(we supply the gas) or if you candrive us out and get the sameamount, call us either Monday orThursday afternoons at the office,ext 3263, 3264, 3265, or 3269. (Ob¬viously, phones we got. Cars wedon't.) FIAT 850RACER903 cc. engine, develops 90+ mphsaves on fuel. Overhead valves onin-line four-cylinders. Twin-barrelcarburetor. 3-bearing crankshaft.Powers the Pace Car for theSeventies!B3X7 $oooo.Confidential to Sherry: See! I toldyou that you'd make the infamousMaroon classified ads.Confidential to CH: Only 16 moreto go. Keep plugging. REGHNConfidential to JW: No matter whatthe outcome of the audition, thecampus thanks you for the show. 6120 S. WESTERNOPEN SUNDAYConfidential to TL: Didn't I tellyou that the album was great. Joniis the best! 471-0900< * "i 7Yu V dSVWANTEDTHE EXACT TIME AND PLACE OF THE MEET¬ING (THIS MONTH) OF THE BOARD OFTRUSTEES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO.IT IS UNIVERSITY POLICY NOT TO REVEALTHIS INFORMATION.THE COALITION TO STOP POLLUTIBELIEVES IN THE NEED FOR A MONSTRATION AT THE TRUSTEES MEDRAMATIZE OUR DEMAND THATVERSITY VOTE ITS OWN STOCK IN SUITHE CITY WIDE FIGHT AGAINSTMONWEALTH EDISON POLLUTION.ANYONE WHO GAINS ACCESS TO THIS IN¬FORMATION IS REQUESTED TO PHONE288-4234 OR CONTACT A MEMBER OF THECOALITION.POWER GOES TO TWO POLES - TO THOSE WHO'VE GOT THE MONEY AND WOSE WHO'VGOT THE—DOLE. AGITATI assIMPERFECT IN ORIGINAL /Tka.CWcafwYou don’t have to beto drink Joe Louis milk,Just “hip”.TAWCAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS' 12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle room* from $10.00 dailyTwin & doubles from $14.00 dailyW eekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call H. FingerhulPI 2-10005454 South Shore Drivei CARPET CITY !,6740 STONY ISLAND I ►324-7998 (>a Has what you need from a $10,Yused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom *▼carpet Specializing in Remnants ^ *Mill returns at a fraction of the #^original cost. ( |^Decoration Colors and Qualities * 1▼Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad{ FREE DELIVERY ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL11 o'clockSunday, April 5, 1970PreacherE. Spencer ParsonsDean of the Chapel"God and the Human Spirit" If you’ve seen HAIR, you won’t want to missTHE NEW TROUPEformerly of the La Mama Repertory Troupedirected by TOM O’HORGAN(who directed HAIR)‘A major vision!” -NEWSWEEK “A feast! Brilliant!” -VILLAGE VOICE“Lusty! A revolution!” —LONDON RECORD “Laurels!” —CUE“Sensational!” -LONDON TELEGRAPHwithTWO PLAYS BY SAM SHEPARD:THE HOLY GHOSTLY & MELODRAMA PLAYFriday at 8:30/Sat. at 7:00 & 10dX)/Sun. at 3:00 & 7:30LATIN SCHOOL’S THE.ATER/Clark Street at North AvenueGURTONS APOCALYPTIC NEEDLEdevised & with music bv TOM O’HORGANcoming to Hyde Park next TuesdayApril 7 thru Sunday April 12HARPER THEATER/5238 S. Harper at 53rdTues-Fri 8:30 pm Sat 7 & 10 pm Sun 3 & 7:30 pmTues/Wcd/Thur:S4.50/S3.50 Fri/Sat/Sun:S5.50/S4.50Student Rate - $1.00off with LD. exceptSaturdays at 7:00 & 10:00tickets at all TICKETRON outlets including Marshall Field & Co.. Montgomery Ward Stores ... phone 641-6338Used Textbooks, New textbooks Greeting Cards Gifts FoodThe U. of C. Bookstorewill be open tomorrow( Saturday, April 4)9:00-3:00Despite the mail strike, truck strike,air-freight slowdown, snow stormsand assorted tragedies, we have re¬ceived hundreds of textbook titleswithin the past few days. Come intomorrow - chances are, with our luck,we won't be overcrowded.The Bookstore1020 E. 57th St.’Sdijddns puo s*f!9 sj0ju/\A0dA| pooj SpjD3 6u|400J012/The Chicago Maroon/April 3, 1970 AllRecommendedBooksandSupplies.PhotographySupplies.