iSROW’SRRc *4 IMPORTED!S ROASTED FRESH DAILY» ABOUND THE WORLD CHECKSCRSHEOExclusive Interview: Senator GoodellSenator Charles E Goodell, 44, first gained nationalattention last September when he introduced a bill in theSenate that would provide for withdrawal of all Americantroops from Vietnam by December 1 by forbidding anymore money to be spent on the war after that date.The New York Republican, appointed in 1968 to fill theseat left vacant by the death of Robert Kennedy, spentnine years in the House of Representatives and will cam¬paign this fall to hold his seat for a full six year term.Following his speech in Mandel hall Wednesday, Good¬ell left for a press conference, a rally at the civic center,and another address at Northwestern. As his car rolleddown Lake Shore Drive he was interviewed by Con Hitch¬cock, the Maroon’s associate managing editor.Senator Goodell, what do you think will be the impor¬tant issues in your campaign for re-election this fall?Well, I intend to talk about the war in Vietnam, Iintend to talk about our priorities, the diversion of ourresources, the immorality of the war, the many problemsof housing and hunger, education and environment thatare being neglected because of the war and because of theother wasteful expenditures of the federal government.The major issue in my campaign will doubtless be myrecord because I am an incumbent.In your speech you spoke of repression, some of itarising from anti-war protest. What is your opinion of thetactics of the defendants in the Conspiracy and the Pan¬ bfcNATOK CHARLES E GOODELLWednesday Moratorium Speakerther 13 trials and the handling of them by Judges Hoffmanand Murtagh?I think the whole trial was a travesty on both sides. Idon’t believe you can have a judicial system that operates if the defendants are going to attempt to destroy it openly.On the other hand somebody like Judge Hoffman provokesthe kind of reaction that occurred in that courtroom. Theynever should have been tried at all.What do you think is the future of anti-war protest? Doyou feel occasional moratoria will continue or that differ¬ent tactics will be adopted, such as working for peacecandidates for Congress?I think the anti-war movement is going to go in sev¬eral directions. I think it will involve itself in the cam¬paigns and elections this year. I think also there will becontinued demonstrations, whether on the 15th of themonth or any other day of the month. There will be addi¬tional rallies. A great deal depends on the course of thewar in Vietnam. In my opinion, we are still going to be inthere in a major way for a long time under present pol¬icies, and therefore continued protest will be necessary.Do you think it will be effective in changing the warpolicy, or will President Nixon’s appeal to the silent ma¬jority be successful in aligning public opinion behind him?I think the American people overwhelmingly wantpeace. If it becomes evident that President Nixon is notgoing to get us peace by his policy, people are going toreject those policies.Several of your critics have charged that you are anContinued on Page NineTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 50 The University of Chicago Friday, April 17, 1970Moratorium Rallies Protest War PolicyMORATORIUM: 10,000 demonstrators rallied in the Loop Wednesday to protest the war in Vietnam and war taxesWomen Protest At Hefner s BenefitBy Carl SunshineHugh Hefner’s Playboy mansion was theobject of protests by women Wednesdaynight during the Vietnam moratorium ben¬efit being held there.The University moratorium committeewas given four complimentary tickets tothe $100 a couple benefit-reception andcommittee members John Siefert 71, Mi¬chael Fowler 71, Tom Biersteker 72, andJim Thompson, sociology, were to repre¬sent the chapter at the benefit.The Chicago Women’s Liberation Union(CWLU) demonstrated outside against Hef¬ner and his Playboy magazine’s allegedly degrading attitude toward women. SueClaster 72, a member of the UniversityCWLU chapter, attended the benefit itselfwith Biersteker, hoping to deliver a shortspeech supporting the moratorium, but ob¬jecting to holding the benefit at Hefner’sPlayboy mansion national headquarters.Senator Charles Goodell (R-NY), moviestars Candice Bergen and Dennis Hopper,and local US Rep Abner Mikva, HydePark’s congressman, were among the no¬tables present.After a short speech by Goodell, SueClaster asked for and was given the micro¬phone by Jerry Hyman, anthropology, for¬mer student government president, and master of ceremonies. Affirming CWLU’ssupport of the moratorium, she said, “weare outside tonight in protest of the locationof the function. (Boos and hisses from theguests) Mr Hefner ...” At this point allpower was shut off except for a few lights.Biersteker began chanting “let herspeak, let her speak!” and about 200 peoplein the crowd of 500 took up the plea. Sena¬tor Goodell returned to the platform andtold the speaker that he was sorry aboutwhat was happening because it wentagainst all his principles of free speech.George Wiley, head of the National WelfareRights Organization also approached herContinued on Page Five By Gordon KatzSpeeches by national and local leaders in¬cluding Charles Goodell, Abner Mikva andMarlene Dixon on campus and downtown atthe Civic Center and the Federal Buildinghighlighted daytime activities of the Aprilmoratorium Wednesday.Senator Charles Goodell of New York andGeorge McCoy, a founder of the AmericanFriends’ Service Committee, denounced theNixon war policy at the April moratoriumconvocation Wednesday in Mandel Hall.Speaking before a crowd of over 500 per¬sons, Goodell intended to rekindle the spiritof the peace movement which he concededhad been “defused” by the President’sspeech of November 3. Sponsor of the Viet¬nam Disengagement Act, the junior Sena¬tor from New York warned that “as long aswe remain in Southeast Asia, we run thegrave danger that the war will re-esca-late.”“We never should have gotten involved inthe first place,” the Senator declared.“Now, 47,000 American lives and $120 bil¬lion later, we should not have to debateVietnam being a mistake.”Goodell, keeping with the April 15 themeof taxation and the war, pointed out thatalmost one-half of the federal income tax isused to support the war, and even more isused when one includes defense departmentprograms. “At the cost of one-third that ofthe war, we could raise the proposed $1600minimum income to $3800,” he said.On the possibility of a “bloodbath” ofVietnamese coinciding with immediateAmerican withdrawal, Goodell remarkedthat “the blood is on our hands ... what inthe world has been going on in the past sixyears?”“The first thing wrong with this countryis the war,” he maintained. It has givenrise to a wave of repression in the guise oflaw and order, the Senator observed. Whileadmitting that critics of the war would besubject to slander, Goodell insisted “thatthere is no greater form of patriotism thanto point out the nation’s mistakes and beimpatient that this country return to itscourse of service to mankind.”Responding to questions from the au¬dience, the Senator conceded that the Dis¬engagement Act would probably not get outContinued on Page ThroeEarth Day apri 20POLLUTOR, POLLUTANT, POLLUTEE: A CLOSE FAMILY - discussions of citizen action, intentional destruction of the environ¬ment, ancKthe legal techniques of combatting pollution.Sponsored by the University of Chicago Ad Hoc Committee on the Environment. Panelists will be sponsored by the University ofChicago Student Government, The Center for Urban Studies, and the Student-Faculty Committee for Physical and BiologicalSciences.10:30 CITIZEN ACTION COBB HALL 209 5811 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUEPanelists will discuss the ways in which citizens have, are, and can act directly to combat pollution; the problems oforganizing for citizen action, public apathy, counter-action by industrial pollutors, and governmental inaction; whycitizen action is an essential component of any effective program to combat pollution.FRANCISCO CADI LLA-Professor of Geology, University of Puerto Rico. Prof. Cadilla is a spokesman for the PuertoRican Independence Movement and is currently involved in the Movement's opposition to industrial strip-mining.SIDNEY LENS-Political and labor organizer, author of Radicalism in America. FRANK HERBERT -science fiction writer,author of Dune. Mr. Herbert is currently involved in estuary studies of Puget Sound. DOUGLAS LA FOLLETTE, moder¬ator. Mr. La Follette is a Professor of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin, Parkside, candidate for Congress on theecology issue. Workshops to be announced.INTENTIONAL DESTRUCTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT COBB HALL 209 5811 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUEE. W. PFEIFFER-Professor of Zoology, University of Montana. Prof. Pfeiffer will discuss, and show a filmed report on,the destruction of the environment in Southeast Asia and its ecological effects. TERRENCE TURNER-Professor of Anthro¬pology, University of Chicago. Prof. Turner will discuss the intentional destruction of the jungles of Brazil by the Bra¬zilian Government and its impact upon the native Indians. RICHARD LEVI NS-Professor of Mathematical Biology, Uni¬versity of Chicago. Prof. Levins will discuss the unequal effects of pollution on the poor and the wealthy. Workshopsto be announced.7:30 LEGAL STRATEGIES TO COMBAT POLLUTION KENT 107 1020-24 EAST 58th STREETJOSEPH KARAGANIS-Attorney for Businessmen for the Public Interest and attorney for Campaign Against EnvironmentalPollut ion. JEROME TORSHEN-Attorney handling the city of Chicago aldermen's suit against the automobile manufac¬turers. PAUL BOOTH-Fellow, Adlai Stevenson Institute, member of the board of directors for the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference, Chairman of the Campaign Against Pollution (CAP). ALAN SUGARMAN-moderator. Mr. Sugar-man is a representative of the University of Chicago Environmental Law Society. Workshops to be announced.9:30 DIRTY PICTURES KENT 107 1020-24 EAST 58th STREETBRAZIL: THE GATHERING MILLIONS-60 minutes, black and white. The film opens with a general statement on theimplications of population growth, especially for underdeveloped countries. The lives of several Brazilians are then re¬counted. The film points up that half of the population of Brazil is under 15 and that Brazil has one of the highest ab¬ortion rates in the world. "The film makes a number of unforgettable comments," according to a reviewer in Intercom,July-Aug., 1968. SUCCESSION FROM SAND DUNE TO FOREST-16 minutes, black and white. A study of the plantecology of the southern end of Lake Michigan. THE HEART OF THE CITY-30 minutes, black and white. One of aseries of Lewis Mumford films on the problems of the city and the inadequacy of city planning (or lack of it).a/Th^Chicapp, M*oqn/Apr»J 17, 197A Design/FrankDahlkemper5%%*i**i^ir*i’i* *■ *.*.4 >1Protesters March From Civic CenterContinued from Page Oneof the Senate’s Foreign Relations Com¬mittee, in which case, he said, he wouldintroduce it on the floor of the Senate. Re¬garding the draft, Goodell voiced supportfor an all-volunteer army and selective con¬scientious objection. He praised the Mas¬sachusetts “undeclared war” statute, buthe expressed reservations as to its con¬stitutionality.Not a “neo-isolationist,” Goodell feelsthat “we can substantially cut down thesize of the army — but we have to have anarmy.” “I don t want our only alternativeto be nuclear arms,” he stated. On foreignaid and imperialism Goodell said he fa¬vored “community action projects that helpthe people.”Before leaving Mandel for the Civic Cen¬ter, the Senator answered a query aboutthe possible impeachment proceedingsagainst Associate Supreme Court JusticeWilliam 0. Douglas. “The whole thing isridiculous,” he said.George McCoy, who is a leading memberof Businessmen for Peace, began hisspeech with fond recollections of his yearsas a student at the University. He recalledhow the late Robert Redfield in the ’40’shad labeled Congress “a great body of igno¬rant men.” “Little has been done to dispelthat image,” McCoy said.“Our job is to be spending some time tofind out what we can do,” he declared.“There is a rule politicians respect: they donot want to deprive their constituency oftheir leadership ... What works,” McCoyclaimed, “is getting behind some Congress¬man or Senator and going to the people andringing some bells.”A frequent visitor to Washington, McCoycomplained that “when you come awayfrom the capitol you realize that these areirrelevant people talking about irrelevantand bankrupt ideas.” he cited an instancewhere a high ranking State department of¬ficial admitted the error of engagement inVietnam and then proceeded to “justify andextoll the present policies.”MARCH: After hearing speakers at theCivic Center, demonstrators marcheddown State Street to the Federal build*•ng for another rally. 110 PEACEIWITHOUT^(the princeOF PEACEmv. t-mi M3HELPRE5;5IRALLY: Thousands turned out for a rally at the Civic Center at noon to hear Senator Goodell, George Wiley, Abner Mikva,and Rennie Davis.Quoting Carl Schurz, McCoy declared“my country right or wrong; when right tobe defended — when wrong to be set right.”At noon in the Civic Center, a morato¬rium day demonstration of approximately12,000 persons listened to Goodell, Con¬gressman Abner Mikva, George Wiley ofthe National Welfare Rights Association,comedian Allen Sherman, and other speak¬ers. Sidney Lens, co-chairman of the NewMobilization to End the War, presided overthe event which brought together virtuallyevery anti-war and radical organization inthe city.The demonstrators, many of them highschool students, flew American flag kites,blew soap bubbles, heard the REOSpeedwagon play “Sympathy for the De¬vil,” and pushed leaflets and newspapersfor a multiplicity of radical causes. Therewere banners declaring that “The NY Pan¬thers Must Be Set Free,” others like thoseproclaiming that “Homosexuality is Natu¬ral Birth Control,” as well as placardsreading “No Taxation for Vietnamization.”Mikva, whose Congressional district in¬cludes Hyde Park, asserted that “the wayto get out of Vietnam is to get out by land,sea, and air. Instead of Vietnamizing thewar, why not Vietnamize Vietnam?” Heurged demonstrators to remain vocal andto work for Congressional candidates whooppose the war.“We have in America a sick society,”said George Wily. Surrounded by signs of“$5500 or Fight,” the director of the na¬tion’s largest organization of poor peoplelamented the fact that the country’s con¬cern can be mobilized for three astronautsbut cannot be focused on “the thousands ofpeople killed in Vietnam and the millionshungry in America.” He described the Nix¬on welfare proposal as “totally inadequate”and called for the $5500 figure as a minimalincome.Goodell, who faces re-election this year,asked “where is the money to deliver themail? It’s being spent to deliver bombs toLaos and Vietnam ... It’s time we toldSouth Vietnam,” he said, “either shape upor we’re shipping out.”Perhaps the most entertaining, if not themost moving, speech of the day was thatdelivered by Allen Sherman. “The war inVietnam,” he told listeners, “was broughtto you by the people who brought you theBay of Pigs, the CIA laugh-in, frozen TVdinners, the fabulous, long-running ParisPeace Talks, and the latest delight of cross¬word puzzle writers — Spiro T. Agnew.”Sherman admitted that he was a commu¬nist sympathizer; for if a communist had atoothache, he said, he would sympathizewith him. The comedian likened the Com¬munist Party to the military “where people are thought of as units.”“How long would the war last if WalterCrnokite interrupted programming, like isdone with the astronauts, and announcedthe death of each soldier, familiarizing theTV audience with him and his family?”Sherman implored.Also on hand was Rep. Robert Mann whosolicited support for his “undeclared war”resolution which he introduced in the Il¬linois General Assembly Tuesday.With an American flag draped upsidedown over an edge of the Civic Center Pi¬casso, the demonstrators danced to rockmusic as the rally paused before marchingto the Federal Building. Lee Koutrom, aGreek-American missionary with a whitebeard, circulated throughout the throngbearing a sign promising that “Jesus isComing Back to Earth Soon.”At 3 pm, seven to ten thousand war pro¬testers began to march east on WashingtonStreet, then south on State, and then weston Jackson to the Federal Building. Theparade was well disciplined and drewmixed reactions from those lining the side¬walks.By Wendy Glockner“Well, the Moratorium for this month isover. We all went to the rally today to pro¬test the war. Now we can go home andstudy and go to the theater and to concertsand forget about the war for anothermonth.”Judging from the reaction of Chicago stu¬dents to Wednesday’s moratorium, the sar¬castic comment reported above appears torepresent the attitude which many students,at least, subconsciously take about the war.“The war has become diffused as a sub¬ject” commented one fourth-year pre-medstudent who attended the rally at the civiccenter Wednesday and said he was verydisappointed by it.“The explanation is in the moratoriumposters themselves: ‘Do You RememberThat A War is Going On’ ” said a thirdyear student in political science. “Peopleforget. The war fades farther and fartherfrom our minds.”Many students feel that the Vietnam warissue is being replaced by pollution andconspiracy trial issues. However, manystill stress the importance of the morato¬rium as a form of protest. “I think it’s badthat no other groups support the morato¬rium” said one student. Another studentcommented “it will have more negative ef¬fect than positive if the turn-out is poor.”Several students said they turned out for As the crowd edged toward the FederalBuilding, people began chanting “We wantHoffman,” referring to the controversialjudge of the Conspiracy Trial. Numerousspeakers addressed the crowd from theback of a rented pick-up truck as the dem¬onstrators peacefully sat in the street onDearborn between Jackson and Adams.“We are here to say that the most sub¬versive force in the United States is theWhite House and the Pentagon,” said Sid¬ney Lens.After listening to folksinger Bob Gibson,the demonstrators listened to Marlene Dix¬on, the former assistant professor of sociol¬ogy, who also spoke on campus Wednesdayevening. The radical feminist explainedthat “women are no longer in the peacemovement — they are in a revolutionarymovement.”Midway through Marlene Dixon’s speech,a conservative spectator interrupted therally by yelling, “You guys are a bunch ofcommie bastards.” This was the day’s onlyincident aside from the demonstration’sfour arrests, one a member of Vets forPeace who was arrested for selling whistleswithout a license.moratorium activities “just to be counted. Ireally didn’t listen to the speeches. I’veheard so many of them I know what they’llsay.” Several students are “getting tired oflistening to speeches.” “I guess if youhaven’t made up your mind about the warnow you never will,” commented one stu¬dent.The general feeling which pervaded themoratorium perhaps can be summarizedby one purple-shirted protester at the civiccenter: “I’m glad they got a band; theyfinally learned how to run politics.” Severalthought that one positive factor of the mor¬atorium was the slow-up in protest duringthe winter months. “It is impossible to keepup momentum” commented one protesterat the civic center.Many students didn’t participate in themoratorium activities at all. “I’ve givenup” said one graduate student. “Therehave been moratoriums and moratoriums.Why don’t they end? It’s time to go on tosomething new.”“I think its a real drag and it doesn’t doanything but we still have to go,” summa¬rized one student. And another: “I guessit’s about time we all joined the morato¬rium committee and came up with some¬thing new!” One student suggested masscivil disobedience as a newer form of pro¬test.ApVn' 1/;r lWl/tfii 'Chii.;# M.foon/3:Students Apathetic about WarWHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM SWEDEN?A lot of fresh approaches to city planning, ecology,mass media, welfare, literature & the arts. DALAROSUMMER INSTITUTE, JULY 16 - AUGUST 14, a col¬lege-credit program at a seaside resort near Stock¬holm, provides a unique overview through courses,study circles, films, concerts, numerous study trips, ect.Open to Americans & Swedes - students, teachers &professionals. Instruction in English; Swedish classesavailable. $495 (group meets in Copenhagen).Write ISI, 958 Cragmont, Berkeley, Calif. 94708,before May 1.In the space of an hour you can learnmore about reading than you thoughtpossible. Attend a FREE Mini Lesson onthe Evelyn Wood Course, where you willlearn how to read 3-4-5 times fasterwith comprehension.MINI-LESSON SCHEDULE FORNEW 6 WEEK COURSE!ONCE A WEEK FOR THREE HOURS PER WEEKFirst Unitarian Church of Chicago,5638 Woodlawn, Chicago, Illinois 60637April 17 4:00 P.M. April 21' 3:30 P.M.April 22 7:30 P.M.EVELYN WOODREADING DYNAMICSINSTITUTE180 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 400Chicago 60601 ST 2-9787C <r(co>AM ouohO -*d7\tV\4l s j inqA|A/The Chicago Maroon/April 17, 1970 CHECKERTAXIHASTHE IDEAL JOBFOR THECOLLEGE STUDENT• WE CAN ARRANGE AWORK SCHEDULE TO FITANY C LASSROOMSCHEDULE• WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS 1 TO 6 PER WK.• WORK CLOSE TO HOMEOR SCHOOL AT ONE OF 9GARAGES• WORK DURING SUMMERVACATION, SEMESTERBREAKS AND HOLIDAYS• EARN AS MUCH AS FULLTIME WORKERSMALE OR FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY845 WASHINGTON8:00 to 4:30 DAILY8:00 to 11:00 SAT.CALL 421-1314 Yours for the asking...72 pages of color . . with a "wholenew world" for pipe and cigarsmokers. We'll include a "trialrun" of our famous 3 Stai Tobacco,too!For your free catalog and sample,write Dept C,17 SOUTH WABASH AVECHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60603Where's the 3 largestwedding ring selection?119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOODEVERGREEN PLAZA"Nf TWCUiS ‘OR 59 vf ARS t — N&>GoodHumorsRESERVE A PROFITABLE HIGH PAYINGJOB FOR THIS SUMMER WITHGOOD HUMOR CORP.IN 1969 OUR COLLEGE STUDENTEMPLOYEES AVERAGED OVER $150 00PER WEEK*.HOW DO YOU QUALIFY?• WORK TWO >PART TIMEDAYS PER WEEK(3-8 P.M. OR 4-9 P.M.)• WORK SAT. & SUN.UNTIL SCHOOL IS OVER(8 HRS. EACH DAY)WHAT WILL YOU EARNON A PART TIME BASIS?• OUR RECORDS INDICATE EARNINGS OF$50.00 to $100.00 PER WK. PART TIME.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 & LAUNDRY1 mFACULTY:INCOME TAXPROBLEMS? DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristUnusual problems of fac¬ulty income warrant specialattention.Will complete your formsor advise you how to do it. eye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center IF YOU FULFIL THE ABOVE WE GUARANTEE AFULL TIME SUMMER POSITION WHEN YOU AREAVAILABLE.INTERVIEWS EVERYDAY (7 DAYS) 9 A.M.-5 P.M.4825 W. ARTHINGTON ST.TWO BLKS. SO. OF CONGRESS XWAYAT CICERO AVE.GoodHimarCall 752-7047for appointment 1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 •BASED ON 10 WEEKS EMPLOYMENT ON ACOMMISSION BASIS OF 20-22%.MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.SH0RELAND HOTELSpecial Rate* forStudonts and RelativesSingle room* from $10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyW eekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available 'orparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call H. FingerhutPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive CHUCK'S PRESS LOVES WORKServices of iCOPy CEI1TER nowavailable to students, staffand faculty. 4They accept cash,102 forms, book¬store charge cards,and personalchecks (with ID's) - i >.iFor Information: /Dial 4222* Cornett Dtorisl ** 1645 E. 55th STREEV ** CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *J Phone: FA 4-1651 2pTHEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback LinesI0'i Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks & Hardcovers1540E. 55th St.-Ml 3-7511 You don’t have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip"1By Nancy ChismanAbout 35 SDS members and Billings Hos¬pital employees assembled outside the 59 Stentrance of Billings Tuesday, at 3:30 pm toshow support for 18 year old Shirley Watsonwho was allegedly fired unjustly February23.According to an SDS leaflet, Miss Wat¬son. an asthmatic, was employed in thedietary department until February whenthe supervisor saw fit to yell at her. MissWatson suffered an attack of asthma andwent home for the rest of the day. Whenshe returned to work the next morning, shewas told she was fired.Two weeks ago, after friends criticizedthe firing and began to organize a rally tosupport Miss Watson, the hospital told hershe would be employed in Central Service.The job, however, was in the laundry room,a position Miss Watson could not hold be¬cause of her asthma.Another rally was scheduled and MissWatson was given another job, part time, inCentral Service. The rally was still held.SDS called the rally to protest the “racistfiring” of Miss Watson. One member said,however, that in order for anything to beaccomplished on campus, “an alliance withthe workers is necessary.”Though she said the leaflets about MissWatson had received “tremendous re¬sponse” from the hospital workers, the ral¬ly was predominantly made up of students,some of whom however, work at Billingspart time.Many employees, finished with theirshift, walked past the gathering. Othersstood curiously at its fringe. None ques¬tioned knew Miss Watson personally al¬ though several had read the SDS leafletabout her.When asked what she thought of the rallyand its purpose, one, middle-aged womansaid, ‘.‘It’s something to be discussed, some¬thing to be thought about.”Another woman replied, “It’s beautiful.”The speeches, delivered through a bullhorn by Sam Watson, Miss Watson’s broth¬er, and two SDS members, seemed to at¬tract little attention except for severalpeople looking out of windows on the fourthand fifth floors of Billings. At one time,Sam Watson’s speech was drowned out by awoman calling to a friend across the street.One woman worker, standing in back ofthe gathering said more workers wouldhave come if the rally had been held at adifferent time. “Around noon would be agood time. Lots of people come outsidethen. Now they all have to go home. Lots ofthem have kids to take care of.”Miss Watson herself was not present atthe rally.Playboy Party Described As BoringContinued from Page Oneapologetically, but the power was not re¬stored.Finally a microphone from the nearbyband was passed over, and Miss Clasterfinished her talk: “Mr Hefner has repeated¬ly exploited the women of America as com¬mercial products. Recently he published adegrading article concerning women’s lib¬eration and subsequently fired two secre¬taries who refused to type this article andparticipate in their own degradation.”4 Academy Awards!PAUL NEWMAN ISBUTCH CASSIDY ANDTHE SUNDANCE KIDIS ROBERT REDFORD.KATHARINE ROSS Coming April 25 INDIA'S foremostyoung sarodist, USTAD AMJADAll KHAN - in concert withSharda Maharaj, tabla. LawSchool Auditorium, 8:30 PM. Tick¬ets in Foster 106. $3.00, generaladmission,- $2.00, student ID.ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St.288-2900 Miss Claster then asked all those whosympathized to leave the dinner with her.While she and Biersteker were still on thespeaker’s platform, one of the Playboy bun¬nies approached Biersteker and asked,“Why are you doing this? Don’t you likeyour sperm?”She tried to edge Biersteker away fromthe microphone and when he resisted, shesaid “Don’t touch me!” to which he re¬plied, “I don’t want to touch you — I thinkyou’re disgusting.”On her way out, a man approached MissClaster and said, “I really believe in whatyou’re doing. May I help you on with yourcoat?”Outside, CWLU demonstrators notedabout 50 people leaving at this time, ac¬cording to a South Side office spokesman.Many other guests including local state RepBob Mann and Fowler had stopped at thepicket lines to talk and had not entered thedinner at all. Siefert was ill and did notattend.Three demonstrators were arrested fordisorderly conduct in the course of the eve¬ning. One was trying to talk to local US Rep Abner Mikva as he “sneaked” throughthe picket line according to a CWLUspokesman. The demonstrator was original¬ly threatened with an aggravated assaultcharge which was later dropped. All threeare out on bail, partly with money collectedins:de the dinner at Miss Claster’s request.Some guests apparently left the dinnerout of sheer boredom according to MissClaster. The dinner was full of “pretentiousplastic people, and everywhere you wentthere were nude women hanging from thewalls — statues, paintings, photographs.The guy (Hefner) obviously has a breastfetish.”There were bars in nearly every room.One bar two floors down had framed indi¬vidually lit center folds of Hefner’s monthlyplaymates on the walls, and an underwaterwindow to look in on swimmers in the nextdoor pool.According to Miss Claster, the Playboymansion’s comforts include a super stereothat played nothing but mood music, a payphone, and a cigarette machine. She an¬nounced that her drink was “the worst rumand coke I’ve ever had.”ANOTHER accent CONTRIBUTION TO COMFORT...ONLY IN THE MAROONNAME.ADDRESS.□ Rest of the school year subscription $4.00Not that It matters, but most of it is true.HYDE PARK THEATRE53rd & LAKE PARKApril 17, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5...THE GOTHIC CHAIR... BLACKWROUGHT-IRON FRAME WITH PLASTIC GLID¬ES. BLACK WASHABLE CANVAS SLING. REGU¬LAR 24.95 ... APRIL INTRODUCTORY OFFER19.95 ‘ACCENT SHOP INC.Ml 3-7400.OPEN: WEEK DAYS 10:00 AM to 6 PMSATURDAY 9:00 AM to 6 PM1437 E. 53rd ST.53rd & BLACKSTONE accentcoaccent coSDS Pickets Billings;35 Challenge FiringVice-President AgnewAnd the UniversitiesIt was inevitable that Spiro Agnew, in his carefully engineeredattacks on the country’s liberal institutions, should get around tothe universities. His recent criticism of programs for disadvantagedstudents as depriving the “natural aristocracy” of bright studentsof a quality education was delivered at a time when the country isripe for such racist backlash.Part of Agnew’s attraction for a segment of the populationresults from the capital he makes from unreasonable fears. Univ¬ersities, which have recently been torn apart by student protestingand by financial crises, are not as healthy as they have been — MrAgnew and friends have, of course, had a hand in this — and Agnewcapitalizes on their troubled state to make racist hay.In his speech he does not distinguish between recruiting ofstudents who would not ordinarily go to college, and a policy of“open admissions.” He then is able to point to a university, suchas the University of Rome, which does have an open admissionspolicy, and equates a program to give poor people and black peoplespecial opportunities with the cheapening of a diploma.The issue, of (jpurse, is not education. If Mr Agnew, and MrNixon, who presumably pulls the vice-president’s strings, reallycared about education, they would exhibit it in less oblique waysthan cutting the country’s education budget while pouring billionsinto defense. The issue is racism and pure hatred. Agnew hasbecome a master at expressing in socially acceptable forms theracism many people harbor, and people love him for it, and forlegitimating their racist feelings.Agnew, of course, did not speak of black students in his Mon¬day speech. Unmistakably, however, he was referring to the belatedefforts of major universities to achieve a more realistic racial bal¬ance and help fight against racial oppression through special re¬cruitment policies. Equally undoubtedly, his real concern was notfor, as he called them “the great universities of this country,”which we feel he privately thinks aren’t so great. Agnew’s appealto racism in America’s citizens gets stronger and stronger, andis one of the most unconscionable policies of the Nixon adminis¬tration.Hugh Hefner's PartyAnd the MoratoriumThe Vietnam moratorium committee displayed gross insensi¬tivity when it decided to hold a large benefit reception at the Play¬boy mansion. The bad feeling between women demonstrating out¬side the mansion and the guests at the party was the only reallydiscordant note at Wednesday’s Chicago anti-war activities.The demonstrating women have our full sympathy. That themoratorium should hold an official gathering at the Playboy man¬sion is a callous and obtuse move. We can think of few womenliberal enough to condemn the war in Vietnam who do not alsofeel angered at the gross exploitation and degradation of their sexthat Hugh Hefner has made into an industry.Not only the behavior of the moratorium in scheduling suchan event but also the behavior of the guests disturbed us. No selfrespecting liberal would ever dream of laughing at a demonstrationof black people protesting racism, but for some reason, many peoplewho proclaim to be humanitarian and open-minded find the ideaof women protesting for their rights ineffably amusing. The guestsat Wednesday’s party laughed, interrupted a feminist speaker bykilling the power in the lights and mikes, and listened for a while,but soon got bored. “After all,” they said, “this is a party.”Some party. ABOUT THE MIDWAYWhat Money?Sad news for grad students hoping forNational Defense Education Act fellow¬ships: the University received only $338,350for Title VI fellowships, rather than $388,-850 as reported in Friday’s Maroon.The funds for 1970-71 fellowships, avail¬able for graduate fellowships for the studyof foreign language and related subjects,are part of approximately $5.75 million infederal funds for the program now in its11th year.According to government fellowships offi¬cer Sara Heslep, the sum will support nomore than 57 students, rather than the 78earlier reported.In a letter to the Maroon Miss Heslepsaid, “The Maroon’s story was based on apress release from the University whichwas based on an erroneous release from ananonymous Department of Health, Educa¬tion, and Welfare source.“Some foolish optimist in HEW sent outhis story before the appropriations were cutback,’’ she said.Fellowship awards cover tuition and re¬lated fees, and each fellow receives ap¬proximately $2,250 for the academic yearand $500 for each dependent.Softball StartsWith the coming of spring, a young man’sfancy turns to . .. would you believe soft-ball? Each year, the warm weather bringsout the birds, the smog and the ball freaks.From the Midway to North Field, the soundof jammed thumbs and fly balls echo overthe base paths.Monday, the intramural softball seasongets under way. Throwing in the first pitchwill be Mitch Kahn, noted Maroon sportseditor.We spoke to Bert Rice, “We are going allthe way. What a fine bunch of ball freaks.”Wierdo Wilson, an ex-ball freak himself,also of Tufts spoke of the old days, “Demwas da days. We had da mole in left, StarHansen in center, and da Bear (now part ofthe Golden Bears at Berkeley) was decoach, played short center, what a ballteam.”ConcertThe Marlboro Trio will perform Friday at8:30 pm in Mandel Hall.They will play Mozart’s Trio in B-flat (K.502); Trio (opus 22) by professor of musicEasley Blackwood, and Trio in D Minor(opus 49) by Felix Mendelssohn.THECHICAGO MAROON Members of the Marlboro Trio are Mit-chell Andrews, piano; Gerald Tarack vio¬lin, and Charles McCracken, cello.Tickets, $4 for general admission and $2for university students, will be sold at thedoor.TryoutsTrvouts will be held for University The¬ater’s production of Edward Albee’s “TheSandbox” and Ray Bradbury's “Death andthe Maiden” on Saturday, April 25. Theywill be held from 3:30 to 5 pm in the Rey.nolds Club Theater on the third floor ofReynolds Club at 57th and University Ave¬nue.“The Sandbox” is a sweet-sour piece withfive characters. Grandma, a “tiny wizenedwoman with bright eyes” ; Mommy, herimposing daughter; Daddy, her son-in-law;the Musician; and the Young Man, “goodlooking and well-built.” The playlet’s briefplot involves Mommy and Daddy, whobring Grandma to the beach and dump herin a sandbox to die. They later find thatGrandma isn’t quite ready to go.“Death and the Maiden” is taken fromthe short by Ray Bradbury and has two' main characters: Old Main, the maiden;and the Young Man.Both plays are quite short (fifteen min¬utes each) and are especially suitable forthose who do not have time for longer pro¬ductions, besides anyone who is interested.Rehearsals will be short and suited to theactors.The playlets are directed by Robert Hop¬kins and will be performed May 28 thruMay 30. Anyone who cannot make thetryout time is asked to call University The¬ater (x3581) and leave his name and phonenumber.Lake vs Land TalkStanley Berge, noted transportation au¬thority and chairman of Northwestern Uni¬versity’s department of transportation, willlecture on “Land or Lake Port” Friday at11:30 am, in Orchestra Hall, 216 SouthMichigan Avenue.Berge’s lecture is the fourth of five in“The Bright-New City” series sponsored bythe University and the Graham Foundationfor Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts.“The Bright New City” forum, now in itsfourth season, brings to Chicago some ofthe nation’s outstanding authorities on envi¬ronmental design.Tickets may be purchased at the door for$2.50.BULLETINEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor; Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Gordon Katz, Susan Leff, GeraldLeva!, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, JanetPine, Audrey Shalinsky, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Monty Futch,Jesse Krakauer, Bruce Rabe, David Rosen-bush, Leslie Strauss.Founded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. Friday, April 17FLICK: "The Bride Wore Blacx," Doc. Cobb, 7:15 and9:30, $1.MARBORO TRIO: Mandel Hall, 8:30, *2 for students,$4 for everybody else. „DISCUSSION: "Modernization in Thailand" led by MrLoson Srisang, Crossroads Student Center, 5621Blackstone, 8 pm.DISCUSSION: David Cleverdon, ex-assistant for AbnerMikva will discuss politics—Chicago style. 5iwKimbark, 9 pm. Call 493-4867 for information.Saturday, April 18NIGHTCLUB: Food and drink, entertainment, Ida NoyesCloister Club, 9 pm to 2 am. . _STOP BOMBING ON CULEBRA: Meeting, 7:30 pm.7th floor lounge, Pierce Tower, 5514 S. UniversityCONCERT: Musical Society. Vocal quartets by Mozart,Hayden, Brahms, Schubert, Schumann, Faure.pm, Mandel Hall, free. ,CEF: La Guerre Est Finie, Cobb 7 and 9:15 for Si-Sunday, April 19HORSEBACK RIDING: UC riding club, for info callLaura x3259 or 667-1862.FLICK: Black Colony presents "Far from Vietnam.Cobb, 7:30 and 9 for $1. „rortREVITALIATION: Poco and John B. Sebastian concenin Mandel. 7:30. Tickets for $5, $4.25, and »5U-UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Rockefeller wemorial Chapel, 11 am. Preacher: Rev. E. SpenParsons, "War and Peace: The Continuing Crisis.Monday, April 20ALLEN GINSBERG: FOTA. Blue Gargoyle at 8pm-VISTA INTERVIEWS: Career Counseling Office, Keynolds Club. 9 am to 5 pm. ,NUDE SWIM: SVNA does it again. Ida Noyesming Pool. 7:30 to 10 pm. , ,FLICK: "The Great Dictator," International SocialiseCobb, 7:15 and 9:30 for $1.6/The Chicago Maroon/April 17, 1970Up Against HighBy Bill RossBill Ross writes for The Seed. Reading his continuing col¬umn is like reading a running description of what is hap¬pening in Chicago high schools.Perhaps two incidents relating to him can best repre¬sent the type of situation found daily in high schools. Heand another Seed writer went to a high school on Tuesdayafter accepting an invitation to talk to the students. Whenone student was seen leaving the meeting by the principalcarrying a copy of The Seed, the issue was confiscated.The principal stated, “We can’t have such obscene mate¬rial in here.”Secondly, when one of the editors went to pick up themanuscript of the following article, she passed by a highschool on West Armitage. Coming from the basement, youcould hear the sounds “Hup, two, hup, two”. Peering inshe discovered what seemed to be a high school ROTCclass in full uniform practicing.That’s high school today.AH, THOSE WONDERFUL high school days! Visions ofthrilling football games, old friends, all the wacky adoles¬cent things you did. Flags with the school colors stream¬ing in the wind as the school band plays the school song, atear comes to the eye, and you tend to forget things likethe stark fear before a report card or a test, the embar-assment of not knowing the answer when the teachercalled on you, or detentions for not going to a class (whenthey caught the fake pass.) Or what about things likegetting told what a child you’re acting like, wonderingwhy the teachers got to cut in line at lunch, detentions forwalking in a forbidden area, being ordered to cut yourhair or lengthen your skirt, detentions for talking “out ofturn”. And things like putting off your homework as long as you could, then wading miserably through the questionsat the end of the chapter you couldn’t concentrate on,being deathly afraid when you were called to the princi¬pal’s office, doing a little cheating here and there (ormaybe constantly) because you had to get a B or youwouldn’t have above a C for the quarter. Stuff like that.And you probably remember that in response to all thoseoutrages, student council sent an American flag kit to anunderdeveloped country, opened a snack bar, and held abeautiful prom, and you heard that there was an under¬ground paper, but the guy who did it was expelled.It’s horribly hackneyed but what can you say? Thingsare changing. Prompted by war protests and good old“campus unrest,” high school people are just not listeningto their elders like they used to. Lectures on how the billof rights makes America great by standing for the individ¬ual’s freedom are interrupted by students walking out toprotest the dress codes (Can you imagine that? They tellpeople what clothes to wear!) Kids who once would havescribbled vulgar put-downs on their teachers in their note¬books are now putting out underground papers. Lots whowould have spent all their time studying and worryingnow pass out leaflets (secretly; that’s illegal too) andorganize actions. Girls wearing pants to defy the dresscode; sit-ins to protest unfair suspensions; walk-outs de¬manding an end to grades and compulsory attendance;strikes over the tracking system.Schools serve as programming centers, where GoodCitizens make their young in their own image. Good stu¬dents stand straight in line. Good students always puttheir name, then the date, then their'homeroom number inthe upper right hand corner of the paper. Good studentsdo not enjoy sex until they’re married. Good students arealways well-behaved. Good students get A’s. Good stu¬dents must be or act white. Good students wear their hairso that it does not reach past their collar in the back, theearlobes on the sides, or the eyebrows. Good studentsaren’t uppity.Enough of that kind of good student. What thesestruggles are about are people taking control of theirlives, determining their own values, asking for educationalinstitutions that are free and open and democratic so thatthey will want to learn. But because of the decent, law-abiding citizens who rule, administrate and “teach” at ourschools, the kind of schools we want won’t come out of theproper channels and “meaningful dialogue.” They’ll comefrom actions of a movement of people who refuse to lettheir lives be run by ideas whose time has passed. SchoolWanna help? Find the activist at whatever high schoolyou’re near. Help them find good literature, places toprint their own, money, find/give them transportation,support, suggestions; figure out how you can use yourskills to help the liP tykes out. Help them out-maneuvertheir parents.* * *Things to read on the subject: The Student As Nigger,a new book (including the famous essay) by Jerry Far-ber; Summerhill by A.S. Neill; How Old Will You Be in1984? edited by Diane Divoky — collection from highschool underground papers; the Chicago Seed, 35c on anystreetcomer.iKtM ,\t !nc;A\.TOo»o*rMhs?|W5»l*-,FrQ8A-4«music —A Very Spirited ConspiritoTHE PEOPLE OF ALLEGRO CONSPIRITO enjoy singing.Their program notes say so, and their performance April4th confirmed it beyond doubt. They began with an ex-hilirating reading of Heinrich Schuetz’ The Seven LastWords of Christ and then performed the medieval Maas-trich Easter Play with even more fire than intended.If the baroque music of Schuetz is not so well known asthe later productions of Telemann, the blame can only beassigned to the rococo taste of record company executives.Schuetz’ perpetual rediscovery of the beauty of a monodicline is a joy unending. And the performance of his cantatawas well paced, beginning unostentatiously with an in¬strumental prelude and chorus, gaining momentumthrough the solo singing of the evangelists, and culminat¬ing, tutti, in a glorious disarming simplicity and charm, asthough the words and music were being thought for thefirst time and there had been no time to practice embel¬lishments. The robust fullness of the climactic chorusshowed, however, that the earlier simplicity had been bydesign, and that the chorus could modulate to differentstyles for different effects. The singing style of the soloists,too, was at first unexpected. The floridity appropriate toWagner or Verdi, I thought, was out of place in a sev¬enteenth-century cantata; but the singers’ vigorous con¬sistency, the hobgoblin only of purists, soon swept me up.Barbara Pearson and Robert Heinrikson were especiallypowerful. Robert Swan’s voice, while pleasing, was not soHTHIEEI strong as the evangelist’s, and his characterization ofChrist suffered somewhat thereby. The closing chorus,however, redeemed all.The Easter play as performed at Maastrict, Holland, wasmuch more austere than the Schuetz. True, there was moremovement about the stage, and more characters appeared,but the production was dramatically lifeless. Imaginativeblocking might have solved this problem, for the actorssparkled when given a chance, as when the buffoon of aspice merchant met the three Marys. The plain chant mu¬sic is certainly beautiful, but fluid action is needed to com¬plement its austerely small range, musically and emotion¬ally. A little less solemnity, particularly after the resur¬rection, would have been in order, too, as though dealingwith a moving drama rather than an ancient artifact, somedirectorial allegro con spirito, not grave con corpo. Thefinal procession, for example, was an unnecessarily ex¬tended anticlimax. The singing was more than competentthroughout, and Mimi Kuester and David Nelson displayedespecially delicate vocalization.The multitudinous candles used as footlights were lessthan successful. It took approximately twelve eons to lightthem all, and they were lighted twice. If the purpose was toprovide the audience time for meditation, I can only reportthat this reviewer did not achieve a transcendental state.And finally boredom was succeeded by fiasco. Near theend of the Easter play, the cloth around one of the candleWhere the Grass is GreenerEARTH PEOPLES PARK (no apostrophe before “s” be*cause no possession or possesaiveness)A Rigidity Defying Framework:What would happen if everyone who believed in, say,the Declaration of Inter-dependence were to put a bit ofspare change into a pile, and the resulting, incrediblylarge clump were used to purchase land all over theUnited States? And these tracts of land were free foreverfor those who would want to settle and care for earth andeach other? It would space for all possibilities of commu¬nal living.The idea is so powerful because everyone has had essen¬tially the same notion before. So with the swiftness ofwhat we think of as revolution, people started to make ithappen. First, a central office was formed in San Fran¬cisco. A short while later, two more offices were set up inNew York and Santa Fe. In March, a newspaper-informa¬tion clearing house began in New Mexico; and the HogFarm light-show folks toured the East Coast, where theygot together rock concerts generating interest and dona¬tions, in addition to catalyzing the formation of EarthPeoples Park offices in New Haven and Boston.Originally, the San Francisco office was the recipientof donations that were coming in from all over, throughappeals made in the underground media. As more officesopened up, however, so did the flow of decentralization. Atan earlier evolutionary stage, EPP organizers figured onusing a central fund to acquire 100,000 acres in northernNew Mexico. But then people realized that good things aremore likely to happen in tribes than in urbs. Parallelingthis change in aims to small Parks throughout the countryis the shift on the part of the offices to a loose con¬federacy.Each office is now organizationally separate in hus¬tling donations and selecting land, but each contributes to acentral kitty earmarked for the payment of property taxeson land purchased under the name of Earth Peoples Park.Lord knows people living on their respective pieces of landwill have a hard enough time without the additionaltrouble of paying property tax each year. So the system ofa central agency to pay out tax money in perpetuity hasbeen set up by Yale law students.On the Transforming Side:The difficulties are there for those who choose one ofthe Parks as home. This is no escapist rural retreat. Rur¬al, yes; near to wilderness, yes if it can be. Escapist, notin the most important sense. Living with people in a com¬munal way means an increased responsiveness for eachother, an increased openness to one’s own feelings and tothose of others. And the opening process is scary: aware¬ness is not escaping. Whether the people on a certain ParkJ immy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHUTZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWN?. IXtTLKL tjc ..t are involved in organic farming or laser research or crafttechnology, to make it means a willingness to share their(feeling) selves.There is nothing simple and alone and unramifying.Earth Peoples Park is the exploration of one of the manyways. Often, such authentic explorations have unsuspectedpotency to influence the whole. Gary Snyder: “It seemsevident that there are throughout the world certain socialand religious forces which have worked through historytoward an ecologically and culturally enlightened state ofaffairs. Let these be encouraged: Gnostics, hip Marxists,Teilhard de Chardin Catholics, Druids, Taoists, Biologists,Witches, Yogins, Bhikkus, Quakers, Sufis, Tibetans, Zens,Shamans, Bushmen, American Indians, Polynesians, An¬archists, Alchemists ... the list is long. All primitive cul¬tures, all communal and ashram movements. Since itdoesn’t seem practical or even desirable to think thatbloody force will achieve much, it would be best to consid¬er this a continuing ‘revolution of consciousness’ whichwill be won not by guns but by seizing the key images,myths, archetypes, eschatologies, and ecstasies so that lifewon’t seem worth living unless one’s on the transformingenergy’s side.”This article is the beginning of a movement towardopening an Earth Peoples Park office in Chicago. An actof faith but lots of fine space in Wisconsin, Michigan, etc.Four hundred acres have already been purchased in Ore¬gon and three hundred in the South somewhere. The SanFrancisco and Santa Fe offices will soon be acquiringmore tracts of land in California and the Southwest. NewYork and Boston offices are looking in their section of thecountry; and there’s a lot of energy here in the Mid-westthat dissipates in the cities but could get together in acountry way. If you are interested in more informationand in doing something to further Earth Peoples Park,you might contact me through The Grey City Journal orby calling 281-4297. There will also be workshop sessionsas part of the Earth Day program on Monday at whichthere will be discussion of Earth Peoples Park.Howard SteinerEL TACPMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANTE. 53rd St.• HUACAMOLE• TACOS • TOSTADAS• CHIUTAMALES • CARRY OUT SIRVOpen 7 days a week11:30 A.M.- 12:30 A.M. boxes burst into flame. Henry Beale, on stage as Christstamped out the fire and saved the day, appropriatelyenough. A shadowy bearded figure then emerged from theentryway and shot off his fire extinguisher over the ashesChrist mysteriously disappeared in a cloud of vapors, butno one missed a note. It is only unfortunate that the scenewas on the road to Emmaus rather than the ascension. Thedeeper significance of the incorporeal Christ was lost.Quibbles aside, Allegro Conspirito puts on a good showThey have joy, they have spirit. And even their faults arelike errors by the home team, easily blamed on the sun ora bump or the umpires.Bob SilveyrrrnoTiFrom Fox& Flynn(The following, printed unedited and in its entirety, isa public statement by GCJ film critics Terry (T.C.) Foxand Charles Flynn. The opinions expressed in this letterare not necessarily those of the editors.)To the readers of the Gray (sic) City Journal:At the request of the editor’s (sic) of this magazine we ofFocus! magazine provided a selected transcript of an in¬tensive interview we had with Joseph Losey. We did thisin the belief that the campus at large would be interested ,in the kind of question and answer session unobtainable inthe kind of large public speaking situation Mr. Losey at¬tended at our invitation. Our arrangement with the Jour¬nal was that if, for reasons of space, any section of theinterview would have to be deleted that section would betaken out whole and only with our consent. The editors ofthe Journal have broken faith with us. Not only is theinterview as it appeared in last Friday’s issue edited insuch a manner as to misrepresent some of Mr. Losey’scomments, but Miss Wilder reworded certain of Mr Lo¬sey’s remarks as well. Both of us have suffered with theinsensitive and condescending editing that Journal review¬ers regularly receive. But when this kind of editing isapplied to some of the most prestigious men of the ci¬nema, who have submitted themselves to the intensiveand exhausting process of a detailed interview at our invitation, we must draw the line. Henceforce (sic), inter- ,views for Focus! magazine will appear exclusively in thatjournal. We regret that potentionally (sic) informativeand interesting material will necessarily be withheldfrom the general campus for the amount of time it takesfor an issue of the magazine to be published.Terry Curtis FoxCharles FlynnWho areTODAY’SPROPHETS?What isChristian Science?Come find out ata lecture anddiscussion byJoseph G. HeardWednesday, April 224 p.m.Ida Noyes The University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street A Woodlawn AvenueSun., April 26, 3:30 P.M.IsraelInEgypt(The Exodus Story)byGeorge Frederick HandelRICHARD VIKSTR0M,Director ef Chapel MusicROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 24 members atTHE CHICAGOSYMPHONY ORCHESTRARosemary Book, sopranoPhyllis Unosawe, contraltoDonald Doig, tenorEdward Mondclle, organistTICKETS:, 4*4.50 Reserved; *3.50 Generel Ad".*2.50 lor Students of ell college*end universitiesAVAILABLE:TICKETRON outlets et Marine City,end ell Montgomery Werd end Mar¬shall Field stores. Cooley's Corner.5211 S. Harper Ave.. Woodworth*lookstore, 1311 E. 57th St.Moil Orders to:Ckopel Music.Rockefeller Chapel59th Street end Woodlewn AvenueChlcego *0437Please enclose self - addressed,stomped envelope and make cneespayable to The Univarslty •< Chieogo-euiTist mmiAs Groucho Marx Would Say ...I WONDER if anyone realizes what an effort it is to pro¬duce this masterpiece every week. Vultures by nature arerather erratic and it is quite a strain to come up with myhigh-flung prose every week. Discipline is all it takesfriends, discipline. Just think of all those great creativeartists who harnessed their great creative power and pro¬duced works prolifically — Earle Stanley Gardner, HaroldRobbins. I have to tell you something, they even offeredme a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award (younotice how well they kept it under wraps after my refusal.What a scandal, to have me turn it down!). In any case inmy rejection speech, I quoted Groucho Marx (who hap¬pens to be a 4th cousin — you noticed the resemblance?)who said, “Any organization which would accept me as amember I wouldn’t want to be associated with.”CAMPUSFilmTonight Doc Films presents Truffaut’s The Bride WoreBlack. Spring is the season for brides though only some¬one like Alfred Hitchcock would imagine a bride like this.Well, Truffaut is an admirer of Hitchcock so it’s not sur¬prising that the bride’s path is strewn with bodies insteadof rose petals. In Cobb at 7:15 and 9:30 for $1.Tomorrow night CEF presents Alain Renais’ LaGuerre Est Finie. Starring Yves Montand, it tells of aformer Spanish Civil War Loyalist who runs terrorist mis¬sions into Spain where things, not surprisingly enough,haven’t changed. Just the other day France said givingSpain, anything other than a Facist dictatorship was likeoffering liquor to a former alcoholic. Who needs insidiousfictional villains? In Cobb at 7 and 9:15 for $1.Sunday, Black Colony presents Far from Vietnaniwhich includes a number of directors’ works on the subjectof Vietnam. Each tries a different approach (Godard evenfilms himself making a film on Viet Nam). In Cobb atURTPhotographiesatMidway“PHOTOGRAPHS INVOLVING PEOPLE,” a display byChris Honeyman, 71, now at Midway Studios until Satur¬day, is an interesting collection of mainly Universityfaces. Most of the pictures are of students, at instantscaught in Cobb Coffee Shop, blues concerts, and SVNArallies. Many successfully convey a mood — of troubled,thoughtful people feeling sometimes a passing pleasure —which is what we look like around here.The few pictures of professors are less successful inexpression of a coherent mood. Those of New York andLondon are interesting in themselves. The main valuethough lies in the pictures of students, which are worth atrip across the Midway, especially as they may help one’scontinuing definition of what is happening to people here.Bruce Norton 7:30 and 9 for $1.Monday, International Socialists present Charlie Chap¬lin’s The Great Dictator. If satire could kill, Adolf Hitlerand Naziism would have been dead as soon as this filmcame out. If you’re a little tired of little tramps and wantto see a more political Chaplin, see this (there’s also alittle tramp-like character.) In Cobb at 7:15 and 9:30for $1.Tuesday, Doc Films presents Joseph Losey’s TheCriminal (or The Concrete Jungle). It traces the rise andfall of a British underworld figure (yes there’s a Mafiathere too — not only in New Jersey.) In Cobb at 8 for 75cents.Wednesday Doc Films is showing a Triple Feature!First is Yoji Kuri’s Ai! (that’s pretty short and sweet). It’sabout the battle of the sexes and Doc Films calls it“gross” so you can imagine what it’s like. The secondfeature is Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising, a classic of theunderground which portrays motorcycles and motorcyclemen. The film is a conglomeration of old photos, comicstrips, Superman, Hitler, Jesus etc. and with music byRay Charles and Elvis Presley. The third is Fritz Lang’sHuman Desire with Glenn Ford, Gloria Grahame and Brod¬erick Crawford as characters entangled in fate and des¬tiny. All in Cobb at 7:15 and 9:30 for 75 cents.MUSICTonight The Marboro Trio present a concert of Mo¬zart, Trio in B-Flat major, K. 502; Blackwood, Trio op 22(1968); and Mendelssohn, Trio in D minor, op. 49. Thatprogram covers quite a few centuries, you sure get yourmoney’s worth. It’s in Mandel at 8:30, Students are $2.Sunday Revitalization presents John B. Sebastian andPoco. Sebastian, for those who are not in the know, wasthe leader of the Lovin’ Spoonful and Poco includes for¬mer members of Buffalo Springfield. But why live in thePortrait of Philip Dawson past, hear what they sound like new. Tickets are $5, 4.25,and 3.50 in Mandel at 7:30.With all the interest in India and the East, there hasbeen much exposure to Indian culture, specifically danceamong other things. What is usually performed is southernIndia classical dance. Wendy Patrik, who has studied fora while in India, will be performing north India dances,called Katak, tomorrow night. It will be at 7:30 in IdaNoyes Theatre and it’s FREE.MiscellaneousThe Chicago Yippies are presenting what they call a“cosmic exploration” otherwise known as the “TribalStomp Acid Test”. Wilderness Road and Stonehenge willplay, the Blessed Realm will mastermind the visuals, theMagic Circus will be acting very strangely, and Gandalfwill preside as Chief Wizard. It will be tomorrow night atthe Wobblies (IWW), 2440 N. Lincoln, Admission is $2.50except for people who come naked who will be admittedfree.Integral, a group part of the AACM presents Centering— a mixed media production. They will be performing itfor the first time live in Chicago. It’ll be on Wednesday atthe First Unitarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn at 8. Do¬nation of $2.This Week At the GargoyleCADRE is beginning its Sunday Suppers again. Bringyour own food — there’ll be free coffee and milk. It’s at 6.MondayGay Liberation rap session at noon.FOTA begins!!! with none other than Allen Ginsberg.He’ll be reading his poetry beginning at 8.NUC meeting at 8.TuesdayCrafts Workshop 3:30-5:30U High Student Coalition welcomes all who are inter¬ested in the problems of education at 8.ThursdayGay Liberation at 12.Hyde Park Comer talks about “Youth Programs.”Don’t ignore the problems you see around you and comeand see what people are doing. Represented will be theNeighborhood Club, the Y, the Gargoyle, and the HydePark Kenwood Community Conference.ElsewhereFilmThey Shoot Horses Don’t They 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 shreds. It stars Elliot Gould and Donald Suther¬land. At the United Artists, Randolph and Dearborn.The Boys in the Band is the film version of the playContinued on Page Six"slREYCIT TjopewalHere 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 SiegelJeanne 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. Ail interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices In Ida Noyes Hall.April i7, 1970/Grey City Journal/3POETRYFrom a Young HungarianBy Janos BaranyTranslated, by Andrei LaszloIllustrated by Michael DePorteThere is a politically-motivated intellectual snobbery in the west which automaticallyexcludes all types of writing and art from countries of Eastern Europe. Yes, Hungaryhas produced some literature since Count Dracula. This is an example.JANOS BARANY is a young man in his twenties Though his father is a gov¬ernment official, the younger Barany supports himself by his poetry. His friendslaughingly call him a “hippie.” Since there isn't much contact between our twocountries, he is very interested in seeing examples of what is (he newest Americanpoetry.WITH FLARING MANE AND BEARD“thus I’ll be I knowso anything new I cannot show”stone-axed stone man precious stone made monster i’ve becomeall and all was stone; i collected stone flowersstone words roll out, rock was my spitstone walls as if taut wire my shoulders bentstone was the heart, stone was the mindstone was the rock mold flowering on my spiriti bow over the paperso as from my stone tipped pen ore-tippedcan into the sky fly smoke-like desireswhich hand in my horn-bone cranium’sfire polished shadesnever heard visions grammple mestone-mill murmur dopes meto thank the earththat eternally conceiving motherin bronze covered thoughts i smeltedonly a small glass shatter size longing bothers meopenwinged glass vulture waS^Iwith bone heart soft as butterbut rivers of fire smoothes my veins my paper veinsas electromagnets on scrap ironpulsing neck vein is still wildly throbingvulture hand’s beaten foul muddled veinmy feet walked into a polip-growing grout growing Meccacindery burnt skeletons crawled on the scorching skyspastic tongue’s wolf howling sounds fly into the feverish nightas encircled photons swim into handmy flame red hair, over stake-burned clay brainwith Aetna is pairing the sleepy old Milky Waysmy branch arm falls my perturbed eye shutsin its grave overturned overpowered guts cut wild-lightstone axed stone man precious stone made monster i’ve becomeall and all was stone; i collected stone flowersstone words roll out rock was my spitstone walls as if taut wire my rock shoulders bendstone was the heart, stone was the mindstone was the rock mold flowering on my spiritdon’t think i pick plastic flowersdon’t believe my brain’s being attacked by spitting fliestiny bits of sense still remain, onlybut even traces of hate can demolish worldsprometean fire corals will painta screaming blue weary grey sheet above youfeel a lead bubble can’t you hear the noise yettractor voiced but gurgling behind youflower shirts throb guitar heads throbmud-mobs pulsate genius ideas throbIIidiot siblings whimper whim-perbeastly white sneaks up on the lawnsthe earth stops the clock moves backwardnevada’s scorched desert throbs wildlyatom smoke wanders into the womb of conceiving motherspain-struggles dirt-dizzing interwoven noiseshard heads crumble as the world’s buzzing rageswild horses graze the fresh pastures of broadwayblood flows in the civilized english water-closetinto the bitter sky fly the turkish shaded extremitiesthe face of man has become clung water dirtythe blowing swish of aluminum cigars singsfrom beneath the sea uranium ships emergereddish-purple blood rattles on push of a buttonwhy why why don’t think i’m just talking to youif you’d let them they’d shit in your facetell them tell them lets make better and more beautifuland the printed circuited mosquitoes suck out your bloodfor my green flowered shirt is scary stillmy beard saddled faceturns turns from fire red to blacki bracket myself and this diesel-axled worldi long for flowers and electric guitarsi show you hexagonal-nut shaped heads proudlyhow the flowers already engulf meand they will overwhelm the whole world4/Grey City Journal/April 17, 1970MUMMIES AND STRIPLINGSmy life as a horrible phantom reflects my selfalong other’s lanterns i can only in a dark corner remainwhere the light does not reachi am one who in serious arguments argues with clichesmy faith is pagan;money’s my god; with her i live for todayin my mind ramble thoughtsthe foolsdo not await ‘till the god’s sparks burst outbut what is the worth of the kettle which only buzzes simmersthat cannot build nor is strong enough to destroydamns today and praises tomorrowbursts out and kills all thoughtswith the good-for nothings staying onsuch is man: he denies his existencebut reality is unsurmountabledegenerated generations are unlike their forefathersdogmas emplant thousands of habits in usbut the obsessed monomaniacal old worldwill not become form and old man a young striplingit can only understand todayi dread the fact that nevermy feverishly pulsating brain’s thoughts will notbe other than a pile of junk that is thrown togetherand as time-unresistant shit thrown into fireits easy to findfor whom the bad is lined upit’s easy to find the goodbut anyway who are we rummaging through darknessuntil our heavy sighs release thundering cursesfrom the world of the graveswe destroy and build anew from our ruinsand well know that tomorrow the world will give birth tonew bastardswe don’t understand how clocks run in circles since that starts a new dayso thusi’ve become the fools’ bardmy throat giving birth to deformed songsmy reward is cursed scorn and disdain my words flatten casting a sidewise glanceis mild breeze only to deaf earsspinning centuries are my protecting watchtowersi can prove all this to my hard headmy atrophied brain’s thoughts are imprisoned in my craniumnow they are preparing to break out in vainmy life’s clock has not been clicking long my hand alreadyis shaking my concerned mind’s fruit is poisoned sweatsaywho is he who knows how to believe and have hope to attain many nice tomorrowsand even if struggling will find a father for his bent sonsaywho is he who will look into the eyes of the past lives in the now sees intothe futureand hears the song of wild drums in his ear ringingand will understand its wordsnow the dawn’s eyes are seedy still, the future hesitantly glimmersbut tomorrow will come once eventually and the new hands will be thescared handsand so will write about us junky letters mistaken confused hard craniayou all see these are not mummies, they are even today stripplings. TECHNICAL PAUSEhe poured;from a frosty glass i gulped firey sipsi shall not ever attain the distinctionwith my rock-branched hands i hugged to methe hay-flame colored blood-soft biersulfur tanned and chapped lipped mouthangrily the taste of fear tastedmy chaotic brains’s sparrow hawk clawed notionsinto ice veined earth blood flieswhere have lost breathing sounds glidedtormentor-breasted broken-thoughted friends?what did embezzled macro-romantics with prudery struggle forthe infantry charges of my dreams?to what shedded the stake-gods hammered into the groundwine colored jello-like flowersto what pressed my hatchet edged wheel crackingrock-hard death destined murmuringmy cement shaken faith?primeval worlds are shatteringthe bee-humm crawls into my ludwig-quality eardrumlawn-delicate the sickness with its glittering eyesin my back vein-swimmingas a makeshift raftits death spotted groaningsmy atom’s veil-like glimmerthe crucified budding of my junk leavesthe strick unison of dirty pricecosmically overwhelming machine-struggle of the platonic worldspring-like fresh floating of stormy armed air’slovethirsty fadingrust beaten cold lump of after year earthand again he poured, and again he poured,totem-pole making gyroscope headed horror bubblingtabu-theorizing log spinning slowly smoking fading awayfading awa. . . aw . ..laughing first-lass ruinheaped globesteam whistling ocean diver sinking atom-death ship’snightmare rattling of television eyed mothershurricane screaming of the dog-kissed peacewilling fathers’mud-burried self consciousness throbbing silver voicemelon faced amoeba mobs are beating their wild rhythmsunder achilles’ heel the earth is bentvinegar blood from my stem hanging eyes bubble forthderanged crania roll on our civilized pathsgod kennedy lincoln are transistor crucifiedspotted legs trample into myrazorsharp-whip-cracking brainmarching is the stale-blooded robot like ant, man ...from a frosty glass i sipped fiery drinksfrom a frosty glass i sipped fiery drinksIIone spot one prisma screaming blondness drops wild belly dancesits geyzer-vapor drowning shoots arsenic into the nighton veiled prisoner’s hearts mold-surprises are peeringthe wind thrown puffing of my truckload-like hair’selectric spark into my eyeball cracksits blinding glare point-like into my kidney snapsmy camel-sole lean face is resting in brick-red shadowsmy muscle knot heart is breaking like an oaktreeblistering frothing overhanged iron solesmumbling sheeps’ bleet sweeps upon the snowscollege graduated knife sharp wing fans my ribonucleic acidveil-walls are battered by my million watt throat’s thunderingI screwed myself into the earthi fell in love with the greeninto chilly-aired crypts my obscene ethics dustscalp seeking root fingers lean on charring headsivory handled knives cut into the trembling veinsaged noises waddle into the reflection embedded nightredish youngster beards fanfareblindlyinto the worldin vainApril 17, lS7t/Grey City Joornal/5tumi tnmiAs / Was Saying, "Well Folks..."Club DeLisa’s 56th and StateContinued from Page Threewhich seemed to break the ice on the subject of homosex¬uality on Broadway. At the Carnegie at Rush and State.I Am Curious (Yellow) has caused a lot of furor be¬cause of what the people are doing but the picture isreally about what the people are thinking. At the Playboy,1204 N. Dearborn.Eisentein’s Ten Days that Shook the World has beenrestored and has new music by Shostakovich. It is anEisenstein which isn’t shown as much as the others but ishis epic documentation of the Russian Revolution. Alsoplaying with it is a partially restored copy of one of hismissing films, Bezhin Meadow. At the Festival, 3912 N.Sheridan.Fantasia — Disney’s classic featuring Night on BaldMountain — great for heads. At the Esquire, 50 E. Oak St.TheatreThe 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.Justice Is Done or Oh! Cal Coolidge is the newest ofthe famous Second City revues. Second City, 1616 N.Wells, Tuesdays through Thursday and Sunday, Friday at8:30 and 11, Saturday at 8:30 ,11 and 1.Police — 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 Parson in the Cupboard is the newest of PaulSills’ story theatre. Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln Tuesdaythrough Thursday at 8:30, A Friday and Saturday at 8:30and 10:30 and Sunday at 7:30. Theatre games Sunday at 3.An Evening with Bill Lederer includes 3 one-actors bythis Chicago playwright. At the Hull House PlaywrightsCenter, 222 W. North. Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Lady of Larkspur Loffon and The Happy Journeyfrom Trenton to Camden are two plays by Tennessee Wil¬liams and Thorton Wilder respectively. Cafe TOPA, 904 W.Belmont. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at 7:30.Theatre in Media is multi-media works in television,film and radio. The Theatre of Phynance, 2261 N. Lincoln. Mondays at 8 and 10.The Fourth Force improvisational farces and work-in¬progress. 4715 Broadway, Monday and Saturday at 8:30.Osei: Prince of Ghana A black African version ofHamlet. Spartan Players, Mill Run Playhouse, Golf-Millonly at 8.The Epiphany Theatre Company presents three one-act plays with the intriguing titles of Sand, Antigone andSomeone. They’re at the Jane Adams Center of HullHouse, 3212 N. Broadway on Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Organic Theatre’s adaptation of Animal Farm isbeing shown Thursdays and Fridays at 8 pm and Satur¬days at 8 and 10:30. The theatre is located at 925 W.Diversey, 477-1977, and tickets are $2.50 except on Thurs¬days when students can get in for a buck.Blues and Soul PlacesSOUTH SIDE - Must be 21Burning Spear 55th and StateTurner’s 39th and IndianaPepper’s 43rd and VincennesTheresa’s 48th and IndianaI Spy 500 W. 63rdLAST QUARTER, EVERYONE SEEMED to be hung upon Queen Victoria. This quarter, what with the vicissi¬tudes of the U.C. mind, the watchword is none other thanthat old Commie, Bertolt Brecht. And in its usual style,University Theatre is launching the trend. Last quarter aproduction of Angel Street entrenched us all firmly inVictoriana. Fall Quarter, We Bombed in New Haven start¬ed the whole Moratorium thing, if you recall. And thisquarter, who won’t go crusading for Marxism after UT’sproduction of The Threepenny Opera?Yes, folks, that old favorite, that bastion of alienation(Verfremdung, in the original), that catalyst of the Bent-ley-Blitztein controversy, that launching pad of Lotte Len-ya, The Threepenny Opera, is finally making its way ontothe Reynolds Club Stage. For anyone who might not haveheard, this is UT Director James O’Reilly’s last produc¬tion at this University, his dying swan, as it were, andO’Reilly is working to make this the best show he hasever directed here. Blue Flame Oakwood and Cottage GroveSouth Side Jazz every Wednesday 9-4 am at Josephine’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 Carner 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 dispalys 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.If the cast is any indication, O’Reilly’s hopes mightwell be realized. In the role of Macheath (Mackie theKnife) is Bob Keefe, of Court Theatre Fame. Pat Prinz isplaying Polly Peachum (how’s that for alliteration!), andDon Swanton and Edrene Ferman Heiss are playing herrespective parents. Pauline Brailsford pays Jenny, withher collection of whores a la Toulouse Lautrec, and Bar¬bara Bernstein and Bill Lycan are Lucy and Tiger Brown.The Streetsinger is none other than that golden tenor,Patrick Billingsley.The set design for Threepenny has been taken over bythe Theatre Design (Art 111) course, under the directionof Virgil Burnett. New and exciting things will be done to 'that jewel box, the Reynolds Club Theatre. Joel Cope isdirecting the music, with a full orchestra.The show opens Thursday, April 23, and runs throughSunday, April 26. Curtain time each night is 8:30 and 1tickets, at $2.00 apiece, will be available at the ReynoldsClub Desk or the Reynolds Club Box Office.TBE1TKE ==^========="Threepenny" Graces RCTk MUSICRAFT FOR SOUND ADVICESAVE $170ON H. H. SCOTT'S TOP RECEIVERSCOTT 388B160 WATT AM-FM RECEIVERSOLID STATE2 YEAR WARRANTYREG. NOW$45 O00 $27995FREE DELIVERY FOR U of CSTUDENTS OR FACULTY» Wu&iCiaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500-—-FEEDBACKAdvice from a Draft CounsellorI AM WRITING in response to your article “You’re in theArmy Now,” by Lawrence W. Sherman, which appearedin your edition of February 27,1970.I realize the article was intended to convey not infor¬mation but rather a mood. I believe that Sherman cap¬tures quite well the dehumanized and dehumanizing at¬mosphere of an AFEES. But as a draft counselor I cannotallow to pass several inaccurate comments in that article.• Checking the box labeled “homosexual tendencies”does not guarantee rejection. I have known a number ofhomosexuals who were found to be fully acceptable; in some cases the examining physicians simply ignored let¬ters from a mental health professional attesting to theman’s sexual preferences.• It takes more than refusal to sign the securityquestionnaire and spouting Marxist diatribes to be re¬jected for security reasons. In the case of a man whorefuses to sign the security questionnaire processing is inrelatively few cases even slightly delayed.• Selective Service Regulation 1606.32 provides forthe confidentiality of Selective Service files, but these pro¬visions are often disregarded by Selective Service. I knowFEEDBACKA Candid Retort from PutzDEAR MR. LEE FEIGON: (If that’s your real name —)Reading your “piece” on the Hot Pink One, CandidPress, nearly made me throw up. Not because you “ex¬posed” us, but rather because your article was founded onso much half-truth, hearsay, and plain fabrication. If Iwere writing a “Speaking Out” column for CP, I wouldsuggest that your naked body be exposed to a flood ofmolasses and eaten alive by ants! But I am not one ofthose; I am not a falsifier like you, who followed the oldpulp dictum, “If you don’t have the facts, wing it!”CP never claimed to be a radical journal; it isn’tMUSICIntegral is CenteringWHAT IS CENTERING? Perhaps one should ask first,what is Integral. Integral is one of the many groups whoare part of the Association for the Advancement of Con¬temporary Music (AACM) which has as its intent topresent black contemporary creative music.Integral calls itself “a group of performers that em¬ploy musical instruments, electronics, and the audio-vis¬uals of life in creating an environment of total ex¬pression.” Though they are Chicago-based, they have justcompleted a tour of the East Coast. They feel that theirintent is “to put expression in its rightful place — to freeit completely.” They think that art and expression areusually created by one of the two forces — commercialdemand or academic power. “We find it sad that we haveto go through these two powers to get to the people.”Centering which they will perform on Wednesday nightat 8 at the First Unitarian Church at 57th and Woodlawnexamines the idea of centering drawn from an ancientIndian Book. It is a forerunner of many of the contempo¬rary ideas about Eastern religion and thought. Centering,according to Integral, “offers people experiences to createthemselves. Offers avenues of expression by everyone.”This will be the first live performance of Centering andIntegral’s first in Hyde Park.Integral will be on WHPK on Tuesday night from 9to 10.Their next performances will be at the Southeast Col¬lege on May 5 at 2:30. The performance will be of Act Iand II of Clausbrams Kinectome’s Psychogram which willbe it’s first live performance in Chicago.Integral will be performed again at the Museum ofContemporary Art on June 18.auiarehouseMafeFINAL SALE 30%-50% OFFOUTERWEAR. SPORT-JACKETS, MAXI-COATS.SHIRTS. BELL BOTTOMSHOURS: Monday thru Friday - 12 to 10Saturday — 11 to 9Sunday - 12 to 62837 N. BROADWAY CHICAGO, 60657 owned by nice old Jewish people, and they don’t have any“hard-core picturepom” magazines (alas!): office hoursare 8:45 to 5 and each staff member must adhere strictlyto this schedule; CP never suggested eating babies as asolution to overpopulation, as you claim, though one of our“Speaking Out” contributors (a new maniac each week)did propose renting orphans to child molesters; Scabby isnot a washed-up old black lady, but the hottest youngblack lady this side of the earth’s core; finally, we don’twrite for the cops who hang around your apartment; whynot share your copy of National Rifleman with them?It is unclear whether you were refused hire here, orwhether you decided not to pursue the possibility. (One ofour editors says, “He shoulda hung in there: mighta got ajob if he can write that shit. But if he wants to fix up 4,000years of culture by taking a job, I hope he gets on atBritannica.”)Apparently you got your greasy hands on one issueand were disappointed that it contained no jack-off mate¬rial. Or maybe someone told you about CP, and in defe¬rence to the modern credo of journalism, you decided tospin a bullshit story out of your own head.CP has consistently panned and parodied as manytypes of “popular lit” as we’ve run across — confessionmags, movie mags, Raver’s Digest, Want-ads, True Defec¬tive magazine, book supplements, etc. We only hope thatyou as an aspiring writer realize before it’s too late thatnearly every publication in the United States is put out tomake money only — you have to get the truth in side¬ways, and Candid Press prints only the truth. Sincerely,Moishe-PutzAssociate EditorEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEAR SEXUAL FREEDOMCONTACT LENSES LEAGUE, INCChicago Area ChapterFor SFL QuarterlyDR. KURT ROSENBAUM Magazine, enclose $1.00For information write to:Optometrist SFLP.0. Box 925253 Kimbark Plaza Chicago, Illinois 606901200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Or call: 333-5515On April 22, over 1,200 colleges are going to observeNational Earth Day with teach-ins on ecotactics.This is the book you’ll want to consult-not onlythen, but for as long as the fight goes on!How to stop them frompolluting your world!Here's the first book that tells youhow to make war on the polluters.It's ECOTACTICS: The Sierra ClubHandbook for Environment Activistswith an introduction by Ralph Nader.It's a blueprint for direct action. Forexample:• Who's who in the college conser¬vation movement-how to apply theirtechniques.• How to organize non-violent, directactions against factories, supermar¬kets, department stores, the univer¬sity, anti-conservation congressmenand others.• Mistakes made and lessonslearned in anti-pollution actions inSanta Cruz..Stanford...Washington,D.C.• How to bring the war against pol¬lution home to the “silent majority"in local communities.• How to play the media game tohelp your ecology group get maxi¬mum coverage in campus publica¬tions and commercial media.POCKET-BOOKS 950Get ECOTACTICS todsy-at your bookstore. of at least one case in which a man lost a job becauseSelective Service notified his employer (the Chicago Tran¬sit Authority) that the man had claimed to have homosex¬ual tendancies.• Loss of a toe or toes is disqualifying only if “func¬tion of the foot is poor or running or jumping is pre¬cluded.” Obviously the examining physician would havegreat discretionary authority on such a matter.• Obscene tattoos are disqualifying only if “in theopinion of the examining physician” they are “consideredunsightly.” I know of nobody who has successfully usedthis ploy.Furthermore, if a man became a homosexual, becamea radical, lost a toe or toes, or had an obscene tattoo withthe intent to evade service under the Selective ServiceAct, he would be liable for prosecution.I feel you do your readers a disservice in printingsuch an article without warning them of the consequences.One may object very strongly to, for example, the stigmaattached to homosexuality; but while objecting one maywish to bear in mind the possible material disadvantages.A person in doubt about his draft status should seekcompetent advice from a draft counselor or attorney. Ex¬cellent draft counseling is available at Quaker House, 5615S. Woodlawn Avenue (363-1248) or at the AmericanFriends Service Committee.In Peace and FreedomEd PhillipsContributorsMichael De Porte is an assistant professor in the Eng¬lish department who does artwork on the side.Andrei Laszlo is a fourth year student in the newcollegiate division. A philosopher-chemist, he knows sixlanguages.Bruce Norton is a third year student in the Collegemajoring in history.Robert Silvey is a graduate student in the departmentof English.Howard Steiner, a former resident of Hyde Park whomoved to New Mexico and is back to get other peopleinterested in Earth Peoples Parks.C.Jthe fashion revoltcontinuesOne of our dozens of new ways to look goodwhile not wearing a suit: New leather-lookjacket casually combined here with boldlystriped flared trousers. Jacket in brown orblack by Peters, $30; trousers in variousstripes $15.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsApf»17rA9QR6ftB#rtCitgr ioamaW*. ♦*GOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM -2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM - 9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)You don't needInsuranceprotectionfor your car(If vou 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 CRANE238-0971sentryjTINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization TAWCArW-YWCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outjflEasnS3r£^UM^£FAR EAST KITCHENCHINESE & AMERICANFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen daily 10-10Fri.&Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd955-2229ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSunday, April 19-11 a.m.SermonWAR and PEACE:The Continuing CrisisE. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the ChapelTHE RENAISSANCE SOCIETYat The University of ChicagopresentsPAUL SPRAGUEArchitectual Historian & Prof, at U. of C."Classicism and Romanticism inA Tale of Two Cities"8 P.M. Monday, April 20thOriental Institute, 1155 E. 58th St.$4 members, $5 non-members, $2 students (UC ID) PlArtiOrJ ALL-NIGHT SHOWPltlOtnUMUl 1 1.11*00 I0II0WINC lilt SIUIIU ILIUGIApril 10WILD IN TNE STRUTSShelly Winters 1 Christopher Jones April 11MONTEREY POP FESTIVALAmi* Ami HeadrexApril 17WILD ANGUSPeter Fende A Nancy Sinetre April 18FACESJehn CessevetesApril 24Warren Beatty-Eva Marie SaintALL FALL DOWN April 25* ROMEO 4 JULIETMay 1 May 2James Coburn *M*1 Zara MastelTHE PRESIDENT S ANALYST THE PRODUCERSAugust 1 August 2THE PRESIDENT S ANALYST hr THE PRODUCERSJames Ceham Zara MastelTICKETS SI.S0'Best picture of the year.”—Roger Ebert. Sun-Timesi: pizza |■ PLATTER!m I Pizza, Fried Chicken .II Italian Foods ^I Compare the Price! II. IlJ 11460 E. 53rd 643-2800jI WE DELIVER I752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 - 1340 E. 53rdJ Clark tJ Lenjoy ourspecial studentrate£ atjp timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officedifferent double featuredailyopen 7 30 a.m.-lateshow midnight• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day -all gals 85little gal lery for galsonly• dark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m• v.rite for your freemonthly programClark & madison fr 2-2843z TM1 UMIVSRSITV OF CHICAOOUNIVERSITY EXTENSIONANNOUNCESPAUL BADURA-SKODAPIANISTWILL BE REHEARSING IN LEXINGTON HALL STUDIO5831 UNIVERSITY AVENUEON TUESDAY, APRIL 21 FROM 10 TO 11=30 A.M.;AND WILL BE HAPPY TO TALK INFORMALLY WITH STUDENTS'Theatre First, Inc.presents"ONDINE"By Jean GiraudouxDirected by Nancy KoleDramatic Fantasy - A Classic Beauty!Friday-Saturday-Sunday PerformancesApril 10 Through April 26(Curtain 8:30 p.m., Sun., 7:30)STUDENT DISCOUNT WITH ID - $1.25(Regular Admission, $2.00)AT THE ATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport - 463-30998/Grey City Journal/April IT,- W70 -- -ououi<D fl»IT\QTVI ,\l JiscjA Chicago Avenue at Michigan Cinema TheatreMatinees Daily - tor student group rites call: WH 4-5SS7THIS SUNDAYRevitalization PresentsJOHN B. SEBASTION&POCOTogether in one super-concertat Mandel HallSunday, April 19, 7:30 PM/Tickets available at Mandel HallTicket office today until 4 P.M.,Sat. 10 to 2 P.M.& Sun. 2 until Showtime$5.00, 4.25, 3.50 - $1 discount with UC I.D.u - - -mrrrrTrt *&#'■*■**->}**' ' "Dixon Says We Cannot Avoid Violencef/quiDEMONSTRATION: Led by Sidney Lens, marchers proceed south to the FederalBuilding, protesting high taxes to support the war. By Sue LothMarlene Dixon, radical feminist whosparked last year’s sit-in, and Illinois BlackPanther Joan Gray spoke of revolution to acrowd of 200 Wednesday night at the Dis¬ciples of Christ Church.The Jalk, jointly sponsored by the Mora¬torium committee and the New UniversityConference (NUC), concluded campus ac¬tivities for the April moratorium.Marlene Dixon who earlier Wednesdayspoke to a rally at the Federal Building andattended demonstrations outside Playboypublisher Hugh Hefner’s mansion, drew ap¬plause when she said of the Second City:“It’s always very strange to return toChicago because Chicago is pig city and theUniversity of Chicago is pig university.”The former assistant professor of sociolo¬gy addressed her first remarks to people atthe University, noting “presumably ifyou’re still at the University of Chicagoyou’re not revolutionary.”Mrs Dixon considered violent revolutionthe only answer to already violent repres¬sion. “We cannot avoid violence,” she said.“The gun stands everywhere. Power growsAgnew Criticizes Admission By QuotaVice President Spiro Agnew lashed out atthe nation’s colleges and universities at aRepublican fund gathering dinner in DesMoines Monday night for using what hecalled an open admission or quota systemfor admitting “unqualified” students.The Vice President claimed that everyunprepared student admitted into an in¬stitution of higher learning on a programfor disadvantaged students cheated “somebetter prepared student” of entrance.Agnew called such policies part of a“wave of the new socialism,” and said hedid not believe that “every American boyand girl should go to a four-year college”because such thinking allowed “concentra¬tions of disoriented students” with an “im¬mense potential for disorder” to grow oncampuses.The Vice President singled out presidentof University of Michigan, Robbin W. Flem¬ ing by name in criticizing that universityfor “surrendering” to militant black stu¬dents in their demand for a ten per centblack enrollment by 1973.He said that when the achievement of acollege education became a right ratherthan a privilege, the education was lessvalued.Agnew said, that he felt “as much asanyone that there should be expanded edu¬cation opportunities for deprived, but ableyoung people in our society.” Agnew calledhis solution better preparation “with addi¬tional government assistance — in someform of prep school.”He .clearly stated, “Preparatory andcompensatory education do not belong inthe university. Students needing specialeducational services should not be encour¬aged to apply in the first instance to suchinstitutions.” However, a study of collegiate com¬pensatory programs for disadvantaged stu¬dents conducted at the teacher’s college ofColumbia University indicated that most ofthe nation’s colleges and universities arenot currently engaged in programs de¬signed to assist disadvantaged students.Seventy-two per cent of a studied 4119 col¬leges and universities throughout the nationreported they had no programs for dis¬advantaged students in existence. out of the barrel of the gun.“The answer (to revolution) has alwaysbeen the escalation of oppression,” shesaid. “We sit in the twilight and watch thecoming darkness (of repression). To fightor to collaborate. Not to fight is to collabo¬rate.”For those sympathicizers who chose notto become full-time revolutionaries, Mrs.Dixon suggested working to get people outof high schools, colleges, universities, andthe army; marching in the streets “mindfulof the windows of banks and businesses”;struggling against racism and male chau¬vinism; buying rifles, taking karate les¬sons, and “teach(ing) the peace movementto say ‘revolution’ ”.In the second half of her speech, ad¬dressed to the women in the audience, Mrs.Dixon criticized male chauvinism in thepeace movement.The blonde professor, now teaching atMcGill University in Montreal, cited theMoratorium benefit dinner held at the Play¬boy mansion, and attempts to place wom¬en’s lib speakers last on program agendasas evidence of discrimination and in¬sensitivity.However, the liberated woman will refuseto be denigrated and kept happy, Mrs. Dix¬on added. “Don’t talk to us of (differencesin) physical strength,” she concluded. “Itonly takes an index finger to pull a trig¬ger.”In the opening speech, Black PantherJoan Gray also emphasized that “In orderto get rid of the gun, you have to pick upthe gun.”Miss Gray pointed out Panther dis¬agreement with the peace movement aboutforce, Vietnam, and black struggles in theUnited States.Gay Lib Charges PredjudiceCSP Refused Com-Ed ProxiesIn response to the trustees’ refusal to as¬sign the University’s shares of stock inCommonwealth Edison (Com Ed) to theCoalition to Stop Pollution (CSP), the coali¬tion is planning to hold a picket line outsidethe site of the pollution teach-in on Monday.In a statement issued Thursday, FairfaxCone, chairman of the board of trustees,said that the voting of stock in individualcompanies is “rarely, if ever, an effectiveor appropriate method of discharging theUniversity’s institutional obligations to im¬prove the cultural or social values or per¬formance of our society.”Bob Creamer, a CSP spokesman, saidthat the University is “hypocritical” in al¬lowing a teach-in to occur on its campus while refusing to vote its stock towardsanti-pollution methods.Creamer, noting that the Lutheran Theo¬logical Seminary (LTS) has assigned itsproxy to the coalition, said that the picketlines will go up unless the teach-in is movedto the LTS.He added that several speakers sched¬uled to participate in the teach-in have saidthat they will not break a picket line.Among the speakers who, according toCreamer, have indicated they will notbreak the picket line are Paul Booth of theCampaign against Pollution, Richard Lev¬ins, associate professor of biology, andSammy Rayner, alderman from the sixthdistrict. Gay Liberation will not be allowed to usecampus facilities for their events unlessthey pledge in writing to keep non-Univer-sity people away, said director of studentactivities Skip Landt Thursday afternoon.“We object to this policy that we have tomake arrangements to keep out off-campuspeople when other organizations do not,”said Susan Tosswill, a group spokesman.Landt is enforcing a policy that he feelshas been consistent.“I would be concerned if a very substan¬tial minority of the audience in any on-campus event were non-students,” he said.Landt said that the policy is based on twoconsiderations:• The lack of facilities on campus forlarge crowds requires restricting events tothose which would draw an audience pri¬marily from the University community.• There are tax problems involved thatnecessitate the use of University facilitiesonly by members of the University. Be¬cause it is an educational institution, theUniversity receives a tax discount on theirbuildings.A teach-out planned by Gay Liberation for this weekend has been called off as aresult of the University’s policy.“We decided to drop it because we can’tdeal with another hassle right now,” saidMiss Tosswill. Gay Liberation is also plan¬ning to stage a dance at the Coliseum Sat¬urday night.In order to permit future Gay Liberationevents on campus, Landt will require apledge in writing from the leaders of theorganization. They must promise not to ad¬vertise off-campus and devise a program toinsure that non-University people do not at¬tend.“I would prefer that they come up withsome arrangement of their own (to keepout off-campus people) rather than the stu¬dent activities office having to deal withit,” said Landt.“I am willing to have them try it oncemore here in Ida Noyes if they come upwith a written guarantee that it will be forthe University only.”Wednesday Landt informed members ofGay Lib of the restrictions when they weremaking arrangements for the weekendteach-out.I'LL BE DAMNED IF I'MGONNA 6ET UP AND PUTTHAT BOTTLE IN THETRASH CAN./f2s(2SX2y H□m i mirhorOFTEN WE GET DAMNEDBY PEOPLE WHO DON’TGIVE A DAMN... .. .WE'RE W0RKIN6 DAMNED HARDTO CLEAN UPTHE AIR AND WATER WEUSE. WE SURE HAVEN’T LICKED ALLTHE PROBLEMS-AND WESOMETIAAES HAVE ACCIDENTALSPILLS- BUT WE'RE AAAKIN6 PR06RES&WE CHALLENGE YOU TO LET USTELL IT LIKE IT IS AT AMERICANOIL. DROP A CARD TO:CLEAN AIR AND WATERAMERICAN OIL COMPANYPO BOX GIIO-A 'CHICAGO, ILLINOISApril 17, 1970/Tha Chicago Maraon/7What’s in yearBoxformev stkwj A Chicago PortfolioFifty finely printed photographs byDavid Travis, Steve Aoki, Chris Honey-man, Marc PoKempner, and others, ga¬thered into a beautiful portfolio. Thecity, the campus, and the people.The University of Chicago GameDon Palumbo has created a fascinatinggame based on the real one—the objectof which is to get out of Hyde Park. De¬pression and Euphoria cards included.Hours of fun for all ages.Is There Life on Hyde Park?A full-color guide to Hyde Park. Tellswhere to find food for your head, yourbody, and your stomach. The facts aboutstores and theaters and restaurants thatyou can’t get anywhere else.S.V.N.A. RevealedA hilarious history of the growth ofStudents for Violent Non-Action, per¬haps the most active growth on campus.By Steve Landsman, one of the thousandor so aliases of Frank Malbranche.The Hyde Park Cook BookA collection of delightful recipes tomake delicious food that doesn't cost anarm and a leg. Such as Zebra Pudding,Chef Lumpjaw's Potato Soup, and Sky¬line Country Pie.A Stroll Through Memory LaneTen alumni, some of them famous,some of them just interesting people,recall incidents from their time at theUniversity. Their choices are revealing,significant, and properly absurd.Planning The Grey CityA critical survey of design and plan¬ing at the University, by Paul Sprague,art professor, and one of the leaders ofthe effort to save some of Chicago's fineold buildings. Drawings and photographs. Mack the KnifePaul Asbell (who plays guitar with JeffCarp) is putting together two sides of a45. One side is a very funky version of‘‘Mack the Knife." The other side is, wellwait and listen to it.1970: The YearImpressions of what it was like to liveat the University of Chicago in 1970.The one section in yearBox that thewhole staff will work on. (Definitely notthe usual yearbook junk.)And MoreA sculpture that you can put togetherin different ways. Posters. A debatablebust of Edward Levi. A provacative essayon the University. Senior class stamps.Altogether a media experience.I wantone. Here is my $5.Name.Address.J City, State| [YearBox will come out around May 15. \I If you live in Hyde Park, watch for posters |I then to see where to pick up your yearBox. 1j If you live outside of Hyde Park, the Box I■ will be sent to you.] IWe can guarantee you a yearBox if we Iget your order by May 1. After that, it’s 1I first come, first served! Ii jyearBox 1212 E. 59th, Chicago, Illinois 60637r.cf :f,i:::rjri‘r-y:xrr rrrrvfcaeirfjri'r.m wrra ,v t.V”; .. ....„ ...1 * “riYitufri^jr r' ******v fit* r'WI*. ■ •nwiiWi ***> ■»** gw gp **** **« #8?•• \ f < . * ‘1<-. /MfGoodell Discusses Bombings and RepressionContinued from Page One“instant liberal,” that is, you had a conservative votingrecord in the House and a liberal one in the Senate. Howdo you respond to this charge?Well, they haven’t looked very closely at my record inthe House. I led two revolts in the House of Representa¬tives against the leadership because I felt is was too nega¬tive, too conservative, if you will. I proposed a greatmany things on a bi-partisan basis, on hunger and housingand poverty. I strongly urged that we not get involved in aground war in Vietnam. But I have changed over the lastten years. I’m very quick to acknowledge that, and I’mproud of it. With all the things that have been going on,the tumult, convulsion in this country, anyone who hasn’tchanged hasn’t been living.In light of the recent bombings in New York City, itwas reported in Sunday’s New York Times that PresidentNixon intends to increase surveillance of potentially dan¬gerous radicals to prevent further such acts. What do youthink of the President’s handling of this problem?The bombings are a symptom of something wrong inthis society that is very deep. The only way you’re goingto eliminate this kind of violence ultimately is to turn ourwhole country around and begin to make progress, mo¬mentum in these pressing, desperate domestic needs, hu¬man needs in our own country.How can the country be turned around? your opinion of President Nixon’s letter to Senator WilliamSaxbe, which charged that the Senate was encroaching onthe right of the President to nominate Justices?Well, that’s a very difficult thing; you don’t turn acountry around easily. It has to be turned around throughleadership, it has to be turned around through public opin¬ion. it has to be turned around through an enlightenedunderstanding of the mistakes of the past, and a firm andsometimes painful action to eliminate those mistakes andreverse them. The first thing I think should be done is torecognize the mistake of Vietnam and say we’re gettingout completely, all our men, by a specific date. This wouldfree a great many of our resources, and it would certainlyturn our people on again in terms of solving our ownproblems.You voted against the confirmation of both JudgesHaynsworth and Carswell to the Supreme Court. What is I think it was an insult to the Senate of the UnitedStates. The Senate did not reject Carswell because he wasfrom the South. It rejected Carswell because he was in¬sensitive to civil liberties issues while he was sitting onthe bench right up to the time of his appointment andbecause he had an undistinguished career on the federalbench. Those were the two major reasons. It has nothingto do with his coming from the South as such.The attack against pollution is very scattered. In whatdirection do you feel anti-pollutions groups should move —for example, are demonstrations against Com Edison atpublic hearings effective, or could this type of activitybackfire in that Com Ed cuts back on pollution, but raisesits rates? What should be our long-run policies?Well, I think there are many instances where demon¬strations are very helpful. They point up the guilty party,and they can arouse public opinion. But in the long runwe’re going to solve the problems of pollution only by awillingness to commit our resources to do so. It’s going totake billions of dollars. Industry can pay for part of it,consumers are going to have to pay for part of it withincreased costs of products, the taxpayers are going tohave to pay for part of it.In a recent statement the President urged more mon¬ey put into ghetto schools and the elimination of de juresegregation. Do you feel this is an adequate response tothe problem of school desegregation?I’m certainly in favor of more money going into ghettoschools, and of course it makes a great difference how youspend it, if you do it effectively and really reach thepeople we’re trying to reach. I’m not in favor of all thatthe President urged, particularly I don’t think he’s talkingnear enough money to do the job, and I am opposed to dejure segregation, I’m opposed to de facto segregation.They’re quite different, and the federal government has tobe involved in a major way to eliminate both these formsof segregation.In what way should the federal government move toContinued on Page TenELECTIONSPursuant to the decisions of the E + R Committee, reached in plenary meeting on April 14th, 1970, the followingnotices:The Regular Student Government Elections of 1969-70 will be conducted on May 7th and 8th. Approximately 50graduate and 50 undergraduate seats in the Assembly are to be filled by this election.Nomination Petitions must be in the hands of the E + R Chairman, Cheak Yee, by April 24th. Petitions may be leftat the SG Office, 2nd Floor of Ida Noyes, up to 5:30 PM on that date, or at 5625 S. University up to 12 midnight onthat date. PETITIONS ARE AVAILABLE AT THE SG Office along with other forms.THERE ARE THREE TYPES OF NOMINATION PETITIONS: FILE THE APPROPRIATE ONE. An IndependentCandidate Nomination Petition requires 10 signatures of students in the candidate's constituency. The SingleConstituency Party Nomination Petition requires 10 signatures of students in the specific constituency in which a partyor slate is running: The Multi-Constituency Party Nomination Petitions requires the signatures of any 40 students; thisPetition permits any broadly-based group to field candidates in many constituencies.Each Candidate shall be a voter in the Constituency where he seeks an Assembly Seat; however, any student inthe College shall be permitted to run in the College-at-Large Constituency.EACH AND EVERY CANDIDATE SHALL file a Candidacy Intention and Qualifications Form, the contents of whichare outlined in the qualifications of Assembly members section of the SG Constitution, which are available in theStudent Activities Office, 2nd Floor Ida Noyes.EACH AND EVERY PARTY SHALL file a Party Roster, which shall include the names and other pertinentinformation about all of the candidates it is fielding and about all officers or spokesmen. Be absolutely certain toinclude extra candidates and written instructions as to the order in which these extra candidates shall appear on theballot should the E+R Committee remove any of the regularly slated candidates on grounds of disqualification.The Counting of the Ballots shall be open only to Members, Deputies and Guests of the E + R Committee and tothe Candidates. The Counting she!! commence at 11 PM on May 8th and shall be concluded in a single session. Theresults shall be announced in the SG Office by Noon of May 9th and published in the May 12th issue of the Maroon.NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICEThe E+R Committee is hiring Deputies to man the Ballot Boxes. Shifts are 2 hours each and no person may workmore than a total of three shifts. Pay is $1.75 an hour. If you are interested in obtaining spending money, contactCheak Yee at 684-5361 (between 8 PM and 2 AM) from April 22nd to 30th or at 955-0780 (between 12 Midnight and5 AM) from April 17th to 21 st.April 17, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9Continued from Page Nineeliminate de facto segregation? Do you think busing ofschool children is an effective answer?In some instances it is a very effective answer. Itdepends on the situation, and the criterion should bewhether it improves education for the children. And Idon’t think that we who have white skins should be soarrogant as to say that no black child can get a goodeducation unless he sits beside a white child. That is ar¬rant nonsense. The whole key to this, however, is to see toit that we don’t have dual school systems, that we don’thave an inferior school system in the ghetto area wherethere happen to be predominantly black or Puerto Ricanor Mexican Americans.New York state recently passed a law which makes itpossible for a woman to have an abortion legally. Do yousupport this law?I do support it, I think it’s a long overdue reform. Ithink a woman should have the right to make this decisionherself on a voluntary basis. What action do you intend to take if your bill to with¬draw all US troops from Vietnam by December 1 fails?I will continue to work for my bill, I will support anyother approaches that might push us towards removal ofall American troops from Southeast Asia. I expect it’sgoing to be a continuing and sometimes frustrating fight,but I intend to keep right on working for it.What do you feel about the recent developments inCambodia. Should we support the new government, and ifso, to what degree?Cambodia is a vt y perilous situation. I do not thinkwe should send American troops there. I do not think weshould send in any military supplies at this point. I haveindicated very strongly on the floor of the Senate the ap¬proach I have urged for Vietnam should be applied toCambodia, namely that no American military personnelshould be there.In your speech you spoke of the desirability of an all¬volunteer army. One task force has recommended a volun¬teer army be set up when the present law expires on July30, 1971. When should such an army be established?I think we could do it by the date set by the taskforce, and I would hope the Congress would pass a lawalong that line. A great deal does depend on whetherwe’re still involved in the Vietnam war in a major way. Ifwe are, it might preclude the application of a volunteerarmy immediately, but I would hope that by July 30, 1971,the war would be over. House minority leader Gerald Ford is now attemptingto begin impeachment proceedings against Justice WilliamDouglas. In his recent book Douglas compared the “Es¬tablishment” of today to George III of 1776, saying thatperhaps violence is needed to overthrow it. What do youthink of this statement?I think that Justice Douglas has every right to makesuch a statement. And I would remind those people whoare scandalized by that statement that some of the mostviolent acts in American history are now portrayed asmoments of heroism and courage. The Revolutionary Waris one example. Also the Civil War, the Boston Tea Party,the atrocities committed against the Indians, World War I,World War II —the list goes on indefinitely.Charlie Chaplin asTHE GREAT DICTATORCobb Hall, Monday, April 20 - 7:15 and 9:30 si -is MODERN DANCE CLASSES4.30*0 600• Sotvrdoy•alM. Dock t Jan taughtAllison Theater Dance Center17 N StateSteten. tuiidingRoam 1902332 9923 (jljt M«>/>#**¥¥****¥¥■¥•*j, Sunday l\eu) York Timet m3:30 AM (daily too) ** BOB’S NEWSSTANDW 51s! and Lake Park *•R Huge ttockt of Current Maga- *.ft zines. Paperbacks, Assorted^^ Pornography. Come & meet ^my dog “Michael.”^ ♦ » ********.*Hold upyour local gasstation.It you vc not a bit ot larceny ihyour heart,you’ll love theRenault 10.Viu see, it yets 55 miles to thegallon.AnJ as tar as ”as stations areconcerned, that’s highway robbery.So don’t be too harsh when theboys at your local yas station acta little grumpy.In tact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then surest they «et one torthemselves.After all, they mieht have a bitof larceny intheir heartstix>.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 PANASONIC sdlleiidaltMODEL RQ-209SPortable Cassette Tape Recorder$39.95AC/BATTERY OPERATIONOperates on batteries or AC house current. Travels with you, orcan be used at home, in the office or in the classroom.UNIQUE AUTOMATIC RECORDING LEVEL CON¬TROL CIRCUITRYEngineered with special built-in recording level circuitry thatautomatically adjusts for uniformity in sound level and assuresyou true recorded tones, automatic trouble-free operation.ACCESSORIES:1 • Remote dynamic microphone with stand1 - Pre-recorded cassette tape1 - Earphone4 - "C" size PANASONIC Hi-Top batteriescarrying case optionalTHIRTY YEARS OFMAKING PEOPLE HAPPYHAPPYANNIVERSARYJIMMYJIMMY'S FOR BACH,BEER, & FELLOWSHIPThe Maroon10/3W Chtago Mtftoar/AprU J17#-197Q a MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th SI., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* per line, 40‘ per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75c perline, 60c per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^.;W..V.V m «»«*(Maroon Classified Ads)ministers to an idiot kingSCENES\*/hnpver heard of a Concert OnSunday Niqhf? Whoever heard ofJohn Sebastian and Poco tn Con-Revitalization' Did. Super-Concert.Interested in Sailing and Learningsail? Call Paul 324-1683.A Natural High is the Best HighTranscendental Meditation. Tues.,April 21, 8:00PM. Ida Noyes.More Spanish Civil War yet evenalready.la GUERRE EST FIN IE (CEF)7 & 9:15 in COBB HALL—Saturday.Writers' Workshop (PL 2-8377).Don't miss JOHN SEBASTIAN andPOCO in concert this Sunday, 7:30PM at Mandel Hall.7urn on Naturally. TranscendentalMed iation Tues April 27, 8 PM.Ida Noyes.First the CREAM, then JON IMITCHELL, and now JOHN SEBAS¬TIAN — Revitalization has broughtthem all to UC just before they be¬came superstars.Marco Polo Travel. 2268S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616..... , beration Dance, Sat, April18 9 00PM. Will be held at theColiseum, 1513 S. Wabash. Admis¬sion $1.00, Live Music, Everyoneinvited For more information call:338-9241, 262-0083 , 955-7433.ALLEN GINSBURG recites hispoetry, Mon. April 20 at 8:00. Dis¬ciples of Christ Church. 5655 Uni¬versity Ave.Can FOTA screw other student or¬ganizations out of reserved hallswith impunity?Will S.L. try to iustify FOTA's ac¬tions and stand behind another"tradition" like Wash Prom?Tune in tomorrow for the nextinstallment of "Push it Through theHoop"Minnette's Custom Salon 493-971VAlterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing; clothes copied & designed.Phonographic Literature Free!!!Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8. Tape Decks Save$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.FOTA 70 opens with GINSBERGMon April 20 at 8:00Disciples of Christ Church5655 University AveGRAVE STONE ROBBING ANEARLY AMERICAN FOLK ARTNO "GRAVE STONE RUBBING". . . a lecture and presentation byDr. Glen Davidson. 6pm. SundayApril 19 Bonhoeffer House. DINNERFOLLOWING.Fed up with having your lungsslowly destroyed by Com Ed andUS Steel? You can help stop thesepollutors. Learn how. hear PaulBooth and Joseph Karaganis (CA-EV) on Earth Day, Monday April20th, Ccbb 209, 2:00 PM.NOW OPEN - CRAFT CO-OP 3r0fir Blue Gargoyle Mon-Fri, 1-5,To R.L.: Ich mochte mit dir mostanything ... Hi Elaine and Rich¬ard. J.A."MODERNIZATION IN THAILAND"by Kosan Srisang, tonight Cross¬roads, 5621 Blackstone, 8PM.Jerome Torshen thinks automobilesare a health hazard. He's suingDetroit. Hear him with Paul Booth(CAP) and Joseph Karaganis(CAEV) on Earth Day. April 20th.Kent 107. 7:30 pm."At a hearing this morning beforethe Senate Commerce Sub-commit¬tee on Energy, Natural Resourcesand the Environment, a Food andDrug Administration scientist, DrJaqueline Verrett, said the dioxincontaminants found in 2, 4, 5-T andother herbicides such as 2, 4-D,were more potent than thalidomydein their ability to cause birth defects." N.Y. Times, April 16, 1970.The defoliants that the UnitedMates uses in Vietnam kills nolonly trees, but people - born andunborn. Prof. E. W. Pfeiffer, backfrom Southeast Asia, will discussthe use of 2, 4, 5-T and other herbi¬cides and defoliants in Vietnam,Laos and Cambodia. Earth DayApril 20th 2:00 pm. Cobb 209.Peasants vs. Industrial GiantsPfot Francisco Cadilla of theuer.o Rican Independence Move¬ment organizes peasants to opposeland-destructive strip mining. He,,1|1 ^e talking with Sidney LensI Radicalism in America") andFrank Herbert ("Dune") on EarthDay, April 20, 10:30 am. Cobb 209A SUPER-CONCERTTOGFTU«'ian 3nd P0C0' B<m a Super-Concert /ft N7 SUNDAY, APR9, 7.„opm. Tickets on Sale NOVSENIOR NUDEtTrhe VearBo* invites people to p,'icipate in the first senior NuRnnw9raph' See ,he Tuesday MROON personals.LAW SC HOCLAW SCHOOL SUCKSCAMP IN SOVIET UNS135°. 10 Weeks. Call 667-2063. BEEF WELLINGTONNever say die! SVNA held a con¬vention last week at the Mark TwinHotel. For their room they got theRoyal Suite, and for the elevator,they got the Royal Shaft! (ps. thetypist of this drivel takes no res¬ponsibility for its content) . . . Forall you West Coast fans, did youknow that Orange Julius was stab¬bed to death by Orange Brutus?. . Who is this group, the IRONBIBLE, that's playing at FiveStages this weekend? . . . JIMMYHOUSTON is so skinny that whenhe sits down, his knees make a fist!. . . Yowzah, Yowzah, folks! Cometo the quads next Wednesday andsee ANDY GURIAN freak out ona bad fig newton! . . . Looks likethe ODD SQUAD switched suitcaseswith Barbarella . . LESTERGOODIN had his pants stolen Mon¬day . . . Have you heard thatCYNTHIA NYBORG is on BettyCrocker's Ten-Most-Wanted-List? . . .It was so cold today, we saw arobin trying to fix a hot breakfast— he was warming a worm overa steam vent! . . . KEN GINS-BURG's house is the only one inHyde Park to be fired on by theWelcome Wagon! ... A quote fromthe back of Rockefeller Chapel:"HIC LACENT PRAESIDUM SUO-RUM-QUE CINERES" ... JOELPONDELIK told us the other daythat his lawyers operate out of theback of a '53 Studebaker! . . .MUSICIANSThe PEPPERBANDE Platter: "TheBrothers Pepper: Dr. 8> Sgt" Prem¬iers on WHPK, 88.3 MHZ, April 24,1:45am. Coming Soon. The PEP¬PERBANDE May Day Celebration.Applications For Maypole Accepted.Sertts Need Not Reply. Pepper tothe People.Call Mike at 684-2410 or Blind Alat 929-0133 if you're interested ingetting free rock concerts going inthe parks around here this summer.SECRET SQUID RECIPERemove the bones and eyes. Seasonlightly with salt and allow to standfor 30 minutes so the salt pene¬trates. Place enough olive oil ina frying pan to half cover thesquid. Dust the squid in flour andpan fry. Serve with a complimentof boiled dandelion greens.FOR SALETICKETS FOR THE SUPER-CON¬CERT Are 55.00, 4.25, 3.50. But HasRevitalization Ever Let You Down?Discount SI Off with ID.Double Bed w/Box Spg. BoughtNew in Sept, $50; Metal 4 DrawerFiling Cab $25; 2 Piece Couch $10;Chair $6. 955-3906.For Sale: Double bed and springsand dining room table — CHEAP.After 5. 667-0988.A Mustang 1966, 6 cyl Vinyl Top.Very Good Condition, Air-Condition,Power Steering and Brakes. ForSale in June $880. Call: 288-0790 orMl 3-0800 Ext 4364.ZOOM-Nikkor Auto Lens 43-86mmf3.5 to Fit Nikon F or Nikomat.$120. Will haggle. Ed Stern X-6357.Wedding Dress. Spring, SummerSize 8, Short, Thai Silk From De¬sign Thai. Call 752-4098.Honda305 Scrmb67 $400. 643-4050.Townhouse S Shore Area Mdrn 2Bdrm V/2 Baths S Shore Chamberof Commerce N07-2002. Stereo Components at DiscountsSave on Dyna, AR, Scott, ADC,Up to 25%. Sherwood 8. SANSUIUP to 40% at MUSICRAFT CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 and Save$$ZOOM! Honda 337, $385, 643-8210.WANTEDSoc sci grad student wants job aslibrary, field, or data researchasst. 5/1-9-1. Call Paul 752-1456.Wanted: A used authoharp, prefer¬ably the old-fashioned kind. Call643-6803.Wanted: Used Full-sized Class. Gui¬tar in Gd Cond. Ph. Jim: 667-7180.EARTH DAY MONDAY APRIL 20thPEOPLE WANTEDResearch Subjects Wanted. Femaleswith Color-Blind Fathers Wtd forColor Vision Testing (We Will AlsoNeed to Test the Father for onehour) $1.75 per hour with minimumof 12 hrs work. Call x6039.Can you Sing, Dance or Speak?Sweetlife wants you for the Black-friars Chorus. Sunday 3PM. IdaNoyes.Hustling MBA-type for venture 2/UCGrad Student in photo scheme. Full¬time and very profitable. Male orFemale. Send resume to MaroonBox PH.SOCIAL-ECONOMIC DEVELOP¬MENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTU¬NITIES. Nationwide directories ofpositions. All relevant fields. Ac¬curate. Current. Inexpensive. In¬formation write: Sociocom, Box 317,Harvard Square P.O., Cambridge,Mass. 02138.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.OPPORTUNITY, sparetime, address¬ing envelopes and circulars! Make$27,000 per thousand. Handwrittenor typed, in your home. Send just$2. for INSTRUCTIONS Plus LISTOF FIRMS using addressers. Satis¬faction Guaranteed! B8,V ENTER¬PRISES, Dept. 4-U, PO Box 1056,Yucaipa, Calif. 92399.Nursing Mother Seeks Same ForBabysitting Exchange. 978-0547.PEOPLE FOR SALEIBM Selectric Thesis Typist. 2Blocks from Ad Bldg. 955-1795.TYPING-STENO-THESES-PL 2-4280.Student's Wife Will Babysit Children2 Years old up in her home. Black-stone 8. 51st. 955-7480,CRAFTSMAN will build your harp¬sichord - clavichord from Hubbardor Zuckerman kits, to your specifica¬tions. Call 345-4631.Need your manuscript typed profes¬sionally? fast? Call E. Lauritis 684-2743 days. PL2-3800 eves.SPACERoom for rent in apt. 54 8i Wood-lawn. $39 month. 684-8412. Judy.Subletters wanted Smr and/or FallAircond Nr Campus 493-8041.2-3 Fern Students summer, optionpossible next year aircond 1400 e57 St 324-2864.Rent Studio Apt $70/Mo. May 154th 8, Blkstn. 493-4680. Kp. Trying. Summer Rent Own Pvt Large RoomFurnished Apt $55/Mo. 955-8755.Summer Sublet: Spacious, cleanfurnished four room apartment.Various goodies (e.g. air condi¬tioner, television . . .). Near shop¬ping, campus. Call 493-5858.Rmmt wntd own rm in Lg SS Hse$44/Mo 8, Util. 978-0954 Eve.Wanted: 3 or 4 Rm Apt in HydePark Starting in June. Call ArtRoberts, 549-0983, Eves.For Sublet in the Summer Beauti¬ful Furnished One Bedroom AptOverlooking Lake Doorman Air-Condition. Swimming Pool. $175 Mo.Call 288-0790 or Ml 3-0800—4364.Male graduate std. needs roommateto share 4'/2rooms, 2 bdrms begin-ing mid June with option in fall.$100/mo. Male or female. 288-3182.Get it while its hot. Apt to sharewith grad stud. 54th & Kenwood.Call 363-1822 evngs.Co-op 2Vi Rm Modern Apt for Sale.54th PI. and Dorch; Balcon; LgeYard. Excel, for one or Couple.955-3595 Eves.4 rm. apt., 52nd & Kenwood, forMay 1. Call Frank Chvatal atMl 3-4335 before 5:00.APARTMENTS AVAILABLE now-May 1 Studios-1 bedrm-2 bedrm-3bedrm. 35rd 8. Kenwood. Phone Mr.Stoll DO 3-6200 or Steve FA 4-0342.3 Rms Furn + porch. 57+Dorch.6/24 - 9/19 $160 mo. 493-4426.Super 2 Rm Apt in S Shore Julyand Forever. Rm for Darkrm $97.Call 374-9383 or X2968.Fantastic 8 Room Apt to Sharewith 2 other male grad studntsspace for 2 or 3. Own Bedroom,Furnished. $57 per Mo. for Sum.and/or Next year. 10 min. fromcampus. Call 221-3411. Garrage.Quiet Clean Furn l'/j Rm apt NrHarper Cf. Sublet Now to Sep-OptNext Yr. 104/mo. 363-1872 Eves.4'/2 Rm Furn Apt 54-Cornell Sublet20 June - 10 Sept for $240. PL 2-7999.For Rent S. S. House 4 Bdrms.Super Delux.Nice House Large Yard. 2 Car Gar.2 Baths. 955-5916. For SALE.4 rms furn. Facing Jackson Pk.$153 util incl. Security guard nights.DO 3-4300 ext. 506.Room/address for rent. Quiet pleas¬ant apt. 54th & Dor. Fern. Pref$50/Mo. BU 8-2007 eve. or 663-6646.Rmmts Wntd Sum 4/or Nxt YrOwn Rm Air Cond 1400 E 57. 667-3531.Female grad student seeking aptin HP with other females startingSept. Will sign lease now if youcan sublet for summer. Have car.Call 677-7889.4th Fern wanted for Huge Apt. 528, Kenwood. Own Room & FullBath. $65. 643-8148.Live in Friederika's Famous Build¬ing. Nearby unfurn 2, 3 rm apts.$85 up. Free utils. Stm. Ht. Quiet.Light. Pvt Ba. 4-6PM. 6043 Wood-lawn.Summer Sublet. Ideal location; 57St. nextdoor to playground/park,stores, coffeeshop. Walk to 1C,beach. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. Living-room. Diningroom. Kitchen. Tree-top Study. Sunny balcony. Fireplace.Washer. Dryer. Mid-June, late Sept.$210 month. 288-4004. Wanted One Bedroom ApartmentTo sublet for Summer-BeginningJune 1 Please Call 667-7451.Apt 3Vi Rm Avail 5/1 - 100.00 Aft 6.324-0626, 51st University.TUMBLEWEED: 1 LOVE YOU.JEW.CHECWhat's an Abortion—Find Out Howit's Done, What the Laws Are,What it Feels Like and Why. Wed¬nesday Nights at 7:30. 1442 E. 59St. Every Week.Wanted: Copy writers, Layout De¬signers, Typists, Cours Recruitersand Sponsors, General Administra¬tors for Experimental College. Call955-0575 or ext. 3754 Rm219; LeaveMessage.FUND RAISERFive percent. Complete freedom.Immediate and long-term. Leavemessage for Durphy. 955-0575.TYPIST WANTEDNovel Manuscript. 955-9505.NEED NEW HOMESSave A Black And White Cat FromPound Immediately Call BU 8-6610Rm 1423.LOST & FOUNDOriginal Doll Girl Sought After byTenacious Good Guy.EARTH DAY MONDAY APrTl 20thCRANK LETTEROF THE WEEKDear Present Maroon Staff,It has come to my attention thatthe Maroon staff will meet to electa new editor-in-chief next week. Ihave not had the opportunity toonce again offer my services toyour publication this year; conse¬quently, I will have no actual voicein the decision. However, I do wishto voice my opinion publicly, if un¬officially.I unequivocally endorse the candi¬dacy of Steve Cook for editor-in-chief. Steve did not in any waysolicit this endorsement; I offer itfreely and in the interest of theMaroon. In working with Steve onthe Maroon and on WHPK overthe last few years, he has con¬vinced me of his superior ability,superior imagination, and superiordedication to news gathering andreporting. Steve's affability andcandor will greatly enhance theMaroon with administration dudesas well as with fellow students andco-workers, and his well developedsense of responsibility and desirefor excellence will lift the Maroonto new planes of existence, to whatI believe will be as yet unexploredareas of achievement in news re¬porting.Read his stories, talk with him,think about what he has to say.You'll be forced to agree that Steveis a person of distinguished charac¬ter, a first-rate reporter, and apowerful intellect.Consider well then. Do you wantan editor—or do you want anEDITOR? Choose Steve Cook.Dig It, John RechtManaging Editor 1968 DOLL-GIRLDoll-Girl-Please-TonyCO4-0309 or FA4-3400, xl07.PERSONALSDid you ever have to Make UpYour Mind? John Sebastian-Poco.Do You Believe in Magic? BothJohn Sebastian 8. Poco Together.This is Truly a Super-Concert.Sweetlife is Coming for Everyonein May.Gilbert (Alias Tony) Advertises inthe Maroon. UCOn a Clear Day You Can SeeForever, When It Happens We WillLet You Take A Peek.See the new superstars — POCOand JOHN SEBASTIAN in concertApril 19 at Mandel Hall. Tickets atMandel Box Office today and Sun¬day beginning at noon.Che Rubin is not a Kosher FrenchRestaurant. See Sweetlife in May.C stands for ContraceptiveH for her Hymens RAREI stands for I'm a Virgin(Sure)C for her College cry—MAMAA for her Anal pervertsG for her GonorheaO stands for Orgasm, aren't weglad we all has 'em.God what a school I'm in.(OK so it loses something withoutthe tune).Tickets for SEBASTIAN and POCOconcert this Sunday only 4.00, 3.25,and 2.50 with UC ID card.Final Solution Brazilian style? Prof.Terrence Turner will discuss theintentional destruction of the junglesof Brazil and its inhabitants. EarthDay, April 20th. 2:00 p.m. Cobb209.FRENCH 103 FREAKS!!Forget about those stupid tapeswith lady going 00-00-00 and themonologues about DeGaulle—cometo a Real Genuine FRENCH movieinstead. LA GUERRE EST FINIE(Rough trans: The War Is Over—Smoother Reworking: The War isOver) in COBB HALL (Definitely)7 & 9:15 Saturday.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.What is defeat? The bravest, thestrongest and the most honorablehave all lost something they wantedsooner or later. | feel honored tobe in their company.EARTH DAY MONDAY APRIL 20thGuess what dirt the Maroon's goingto print of the trustees.Don't walk down any dark alleys,Gordon.ASS REAMKathy Greenberg is now in Berkeley,for all those who haven't seen herrecently.Beppo LivesPedanticus Maximums Ombudsman-iensis.Confidential to JM: Thanks forservices and help rendered.To RH: I can't promise that wewon't talk about baseball. GK.To RH and SM: Watch out forthose kinking tracks.Is it true that Professor Rico GFupini is a visiting professor oflaw from the University of Gianni.Raleigh bicyclesdon't cause cancer.Roll one todayCheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh, Robin Hood, Falcon,Peugeot, Citane, Merrier,Coppi and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. I sedbicycles spasmodically.Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8Suhe a Raleigh bicycle today■NOW HOW WOULD YOU LIKE YOUR DONATION SPENT, SIR? TO SPONSOR A VIETNAMNBOMBING RAID? BUY A NEW HELICOPTER ROTOR? A FEW HUNDRED ROUNDS OFAMMUNITION? SOME GRENADES. PERHAPS..?*Dear Staff: "NEVER INTERFERE WITH THE ENEMY WHENHE IS IN THE PROCESS OF PESTROVIH6 HIMSELF. Napoleon, a loserAptfL' 11970/The, CMftga >M**ow/Tr>THEMAROONIdeasFOR 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., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by ApptSI IN LIFE OF CANADAMALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. We Want You To Join Our ChurchAs AnOrdained MinisterAnd Have The Rank OfDoctor of DivinityWe are a non-structured faith* undenominational,with no traditional doctrine or dogma Our fastgrowing church is actively seeking new ministerswho believe what we believe, AH men are entitledto their own convictions. To seek truth their ownway, whatever it may be, no questions asked Asaminister of the church, you may1 Start your own church and apply for exemption from property and other taxes2. Perform marriages, baptism, funerals andall other ministerial functions3. Enjoy reduced rates from some modes oftransportation, some theaters, stores, hotels,etc.4 Seek draft exemption as one of our workmg missionaries \A/e will tell you howEnclose a free will donation for the Minister'scredentials and license. We also issue Doctor ofDivinity Degrees. We are State Chartered and yourordination is recognized in all 50 states and mostforeign countries FREE LIFE CHURCH -BOX 4039, HOLLYWOOD. FLORIDA 33023BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMENT STOREPL 2-47441150 E. 63rd St.4 CARPET CITY4 6740 STONY ISLAND4 324-7998^Has what you need from a $10Yused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants' 1Mill returns at a fraction of the 4^original cost. ( ,^Decoration Colors and Qualities. 1▼Additional 10% Discount with this ijAd I! FREE DELIVERY SEE THE NEW HONDA 350 AT AIRPORT HONDAPhone:767- 2070 Phone767 - 2070AIRPORT CYCLE SALES4520 W. 63rd ST.CHICAGOPrices from $ 169.00 Open Daily to 9 P M Sat to 4 P.M.WE'D LIKE YOU TOJOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTER °WITH A RANK OF- doctor of1- prviKirrV0We want men and women of all ages, who believe as we do, to join us inthe holy search for Truth. We believe that all men should seek Truth byall just means. As one of our ministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for exemption from propertyand other taxes.3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiastic powers.4. Get sizeable cash grants for doing our missionary work.5. Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries. We cantell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotel s, theaters, etc., give reducedrates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinity and I.D. card,we'll send you 12 blank forms to use when you wish to ordain others.Your ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere in this country.Your money back without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send your Ordination andD.D. Certificates beautifully framed and glassed.SEND TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHBox 1393, Dept. G8, Evanston, III. 60204NameAddress.City State- Zip- $10ind. □(no frames)$20 end. □(deluxe frames) CARPET BARNWAREHOUSENew and Ised CarpelsRemnants and Rail EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Ru£ & Fur (oatsInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Days Tues.-thru Sat. 9-41228 H. kinzie 243-2271/The Chicago Maroon/April 17, 1970 If you're sok)on a Volvo,well sell you one.6120 S. WESTERN