THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 51 The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 21, 1970'Earth Day EventsSteve AokiPetition To Close DownCoffeehouses Criticized Discuss PollutionPetitions are being distributed by a groupof about 40 residents and businessmen fromthe 57th St and Harper Ave area, askingthat the Medici coffeehouse and Ahmad’scoffeehouse be closed down. Over 450 per¬sons have responded by signing a petitionin support of the coffeehouses.Signers of the original petition havecalled on the Wilson Realty Company, thelandlords of the buildings involved, to evictits tenants. They hold the management ofthe two coffeehouses responsible for thecongregation of unwanted high-school agepersons along 57th Street. Incidents cited inthe petition include the breaking of shopwindows, fires, break-ins and drug traffic. tioners will not succeed in closing themdown.Hans Morsbach, proprietor of the Mediciagreed, saying “I am sure that I will not beevicted by my landlord because of this peti¬tion. But I fear that some of these residentsand businessmen, who have connectionswith the city, will cause my place of busi¬ness to be continually harassed by in¬spectors of all kinds. This is a tactic whichhas been successful in other similar situ¬ations.” By Allen FriedmanThe Earth Day conference opened yester¬day morning in Quantrell auditorium with apanel discussion on citizen action. The con¬ference, sponsored by the University ad hoccommittee on the environment, was thefirst of four programs scheduled for Mon¬day in Quantrell and Kent 107.Moderator Douglas La Follette, chem¬istry professor at the University of Wiscon¬sin, opened the discussion by quoting froman article in Sunday’s Sun-Times listing theUniversity as the sixth in its “dirty dozenplus one” top polluters in Chicago (Com¬monwealth Edison placed fifth).The conference then decided to move itsmeeting to the Blue Gargoyle at 57 th Streetand University Avenue to protest the deci¬sion of the University’s board of trusteesnot to vote any of its Com Ed shares withthe anti-pollution movement. The Coalitionto Stop Pollution Now (CSPN) had decidedearlier to transfer the afternoon sessions tothe Gargoyle.Other members of the panel were FrankHerbert, a science fiction writer who is tak¬ing part in ecological studies of PugetSound, Francisco Cadilla, professor ofgeology at the university of Puerto Rico,and Sidney Lens, labor organizer and au¬thor of “Radicalism in America”.La Follette emphasized the importance ofbridging the gap of understanding betweenthe polluters and citizens seeking to curbpollution.He associated the war in Vietnam, op¬pression of minority groups and repressionof student voice in the decision making pro¬cess as factors tied in to the generalproblem of pollution:“Our own personal values must change,”he said, in that we ought to realize “theinsanity of how many'color TV sets or elec¬tric tooth brushes do we need?”“Part of the problem,” according to Her-Continued on Page Two By Gordon KatzSpeaking to over 75 people in Kent 107last night, four Chicago attorneys, all in¬volved in anti-pollution activities, outlinedvarious legal strategies aimed at com¬bating pollution.Opening the program was Charles Whe¬lan, a member of the law firm which repre¬sents Commonwealth Edison. Whelan, “notpurporting to speak for or to criticize ComEd,” addressed his speech to the questionof “how citizens can make the most valu¬able contribution against pollution.”Private suits against corporations, hecontended, are a particularly difficultmethod of stopping the pollutor. Among thefactors which he listed as problems con¬fronting the litigant are the difficulty of es¬tablishing a causal relationship betweenpollution and a specific hardship; the factthat judges are not educated to understandthe subtleties of pollution technology; rulesof evidence which might exclude valuable,though legally irrelevant, information; andthe fact that the court is ill-equipped to en¬force its own rulings.“The most effective method of fightingpollution — of putting pressure on pollutors— is through administrative agencies,”Whelan declared. He sighted their ability toset fixed standards, “something which in¬dustry is responsive to,” as the chief ad¬vantage of this legal tactic. Despite the re¬laxed nature of past anti-pollution enforce¬ment, “administrators are not sitting ontheir duff as much as they have been.”“We should not intellectualize an issuesuch as pollution; instead we should consid¬er plans of action,” said Paul Booth, chair¬man of the Campaign Against Pollution(CAP). Booth, a fellow at the Adlai Steven¬son Institute, is a member of the board ofdirectors for the Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Conference.Critical of Com Ed and city politicsContinued on Page TwoBookstore Move To UC Press LikelyThe responding petition, located in theMedici, Ahmad’s and Hutchinson Com¬mons, reads as follows: “That a very smallgroup of residents and businessmen shouldhave the audacity to petition for the closingof the Medici and Ahmad’s is an unbeliev¬able affront to those of us who value andenjoy these places. We, the undersigned,wish to register our support for the proprie¬tors of these establishments.”Richard Wagner, manager of the Medici,was upset at the charges made in the origi¬nal petition. “I can understand why they’rereacting this way,” he said. “But theirevaluation of the situation is very short¬sighted; they’re using the Medici as a sca¬pegoat for the problems of the commu¬nity.”Wagner said that the Medici does notserve those under 18, but that it hasrecently hired doormen in response to thepetitions. “We’re trying to close the Medicito the group they want to eliminate,” hesaid, adding that he hoped businesses onthe block would police their own areas.According to Alderman Leon Despres,“The solution is not to move out these cof¬feehouses. The petition expresses a concernover the congregating of adolescents along57th Street. This is a serious symptom ofthe youth problem in this neighborhood,but the coffeehouses are not the cause.”Despres said there was a need “to finddecent facilities for youths.”Both coffeehouses are heavily frequentedby University students and faculty. Wagnerfeels that because of this support, the peti¬ “I think that it is fairly well decided thatthe bookstore will move into a portion ofthe University of Chicago Press building bynext fall,” Harlan Davidson, manager ofthe bookstore said Monday.Davidson pointed out that the decisionwhere to move must be approved by theBoard of Trustees committee and the busi¬ness advisory committee before any actioncan be taken.Gilbert Lee, vice president for businessand finance, said that the press building is“the preferred site and the one we are se¬riously studying.”Before the move can take place, Leesaid, the University must find a placewhere the portion of the UC Press buildingpeople displaced by the bookstore could go.Before final approval is granted, thebuilding must prove to meet certain spacialand engineering requirements of the plan¬ning committee and the bookstore.Last quarter the committee on Universitypriorities and the committee on the book¬store, approved proposals that would havethe bookstore gradually occupy the Pressbuilding.When asked how much space the book¬store would get if the proposal is adopted,Davidson replied, “Not enough. We’ll getabout 10,000 square feet which is about 1500less than in the present building and lessthan what was in the building that burneddown.” Steve AokiUC PRESS BUILDING: The probable site of the new bookstore, the press buildingis located across from the old bookstore, on the corner of 58th St and Ellis Ave.Lens Cynical of Efforts To Curb PollutionContinued from Page Onebert, “is how we’re aware of that problemand how do we communicate it to others.We don’t have time to look for scapegoats.If a black skin is an accident of nature, sois a red neck.”Herbert described his reason for partici¬pating in the anti-pollution movement as re¬ fusing “to say to my grandchildren, ‘I’msorry there’s no more world to use. Weused it all up.’ ”He warned that “we are devoted to livingin an open-ended growth style in a finitesystem” and that this can have only dis¬astrous consequences. He advised that“what we have to do is ‘don’t buy death.’ ”Cadilla spoke of the struggle of people inPolice Stop, InterrogatetStudents Along StreetBy Paul BernsteinSeveral University students have recentlybeen stopped on campus by city police, andhave been asked a series of questions con¬cerning their personal activities.At least three students have been ques¬tioned by police within the last week, and itis reported that several others have beeninvolved in similar incidents.Dean of students Charles O’Connell saidthat no such occurances had been reportedto him. Steve Cope, student ombudsman,was also unaware of any interrogation ofstudents by police. Cope urged all studentsinvolved to report incidents to his office,and advised students to take down thenames and badge numbers of the officers ifpossible.One student was stopped by a squad carlast Wednesday at the corner of 57th andWoodlawn. He said he was asked by thetwo policemen how long he had been in Chi¬cago, what he had been doing, and whetherhe had ever been arrested. Police also ex¬amined his identification and draft card.When the student answered that he hadbeen downtown, he was asked how he hadreached campus. When told it was by car,police asked who had been in the car withhim. According to the student, a crowd ofabout eight people soon gathered at thescene, and told police they had no right toquestion him. At this point, one of the offi¬cers said he was conducting “field inter¬rogation,” and told the crowd to disperse.Police later asked the student if he wascarrying any drugs, to which he replied“Does anybody ever answer yes to thatquestion?”The student said he was then pushedagainst the squad car and searched. Whenhe attempted to resist, one of the policemenlifted his nightstick and said “Get yourhand off my hand.”The student felt that police were not justlooking for drugs. “It’s not just drugs,” hesaid. “They asked a lot of political ques¬tions.” He noted that someone in the crowdhad taken down the officers’ badge num¬bers, but said he did not plan to take anyaction, explaining that “you can’t prosecutea pig in this city.”Another student was stopped by policewhile walking along 59th Street. After ask¬ing for his identification and writing downthe information on it, police asked him thesame series of questions. A third studentwas stopped .but walked away when policebegan to question him. Puerto Rico against attempts at further in¬dustrialization of the island by companieswho allegedly show little concern about thepollution they produce.Citizen action by Puerto Ricans since1965 has succeeded in setting back the es¬tablishment of a new mining area in thecentral part of the island to exploit the cop¬per deposits. Construction at the site hasstill not begun.Lens was cynical of recent announce¬ments by “the big producers” expressingtheir concern over pollution and telling oftheir efforts to curb the pollution they’reproducing.He compared the issue to the urban re¬newal crisis in Hyde Park. “We haven’tmade any progress in urban renewal,” hesaid. “It was a fradulent program underthe title of urban renewal.”Lens questioned the sincerity of the Uni¬ versity in fighting pollution. “Nixon willspend a few billion dollars and escalate itbut the world will still be polluted,” he fore¬cast.“The question of pollution is no more anaccident or mistake than the war in Viet¬nam,” Lens continued. He cited the powerhold of the major industries over the gov¬ernment as the fundamental reason for pol¬lution continuing unabated. “What givesSun Oil the right to explore off Santa Bar¬bara? Nothing except power.”Lens concluded that “we will never makeany progress against pollution until we putit in a larger scope. Its solution is techni¬cally possible.” But this problem is in¬separable from the others, he said, andthey are caused by a system which allows“capitalists to appropriate what belongs tothe people in common without taking onthe responsibilities.”Speakers Stress TacticsContinued from Page One(“The city has long been in bed with ComEdison”), Booth claimed that on Wednes¬day Chicago’s leading utility plans to send175 staff members to speak in behalf of thefirm at Earth Day conferences in the Chi¬cago area.Dubious of Com Ed’s purpose in their lat¬est purchase of low-sulpher coal, the chair¬man of CAP remarked that “they areagainst pollution •— just like Nixon isagainst pollution — as long as it doesn’tinterfere with the profit motive.” Boothurged members of the audience to attendCom Ed’s upcoming shareholders meeting.The mechanism for effecting change,said Joseph Karaganis, “is to look for alegal focus.” Karaganis, an attorney forBusinessmen for the Public Interest, is arepresentative of the Campaign AgainstEnvironmental Violence. Emphasizing the power which publicopinion can bring to bear on politicians,Karaganis submitted that “if you pose agreater threat than big business, than thepollutor is going to lose.” Otherwise, he ac¬knowledged, “the pollutor is not going tonegotiate with anybody.”“Pollution is not a liberal issue; it has apotential to attract a broad constituency,”Karaganis said. “We have gotta make itrelate to the moderates’ self-interest ...We can’t call a pollutor a corporate fascist;rather, he’s a criminal acting contrary tothe idea of law and order.”Edward Levin, the evening’s final speak¬er and a special assistant to the regionaldirector of the department of Housing andUrban Development (HUD), spoke of thered tape and jealousies of administrativebureaucracies.'Men groan from out of the city, and thesoul of the wounded crieth out...'Those were the words of Job. But they could be the words of a man talking about 20thCentury Chicago, New York, or dozens of other urban centers where agonizing inner cityproblems have led to everything from vague feelings of unrest to riots. Today, scientists likeAmitai Etzioni are coming up with new concepts of how to cut through the despair and findsolutions.A LECTURE BY AMITAI ETZIONIofColumbia UniversityQuantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall, 5811 Ellis Ave.8 p.m., THURSDAY, April 23Admission Free - No Tickets RequiredAnother of the "Scientists Look at Our Cities" lectures sponsored by the Center for PolicyStudy and by the Center for Urban Studies of the University of Chicago.2/The Chicago Maroon/April 21, 1970Ginsberg Recites Poetry at GargoyleH irMiiiniiniiMiMiMiinii iiii “Steve AokiEARTH DAY: Hyde Parkers protest against air pollution as part of national demonstration against environmental abuse.6th Biggest PollutorUniversityThe University is the sixth worst individ¬ual polluter in Chicago, according to fig¬ures released from the city’s Departmentof Environmental Control.The Chicago Daily News Saturday listedthe University as sixth of the 13 “biggestindividual sources of air pollution,” spew¬ing an estimated 2,894 tons of particulatematter into the air annually.Four steel companies and CommonwealthEdison, with a combined estimated outputof 76,683 tons of soot and dust, topped thelist of worst offenders. The figures were turned in to the Illinois Pollution Board aspart of a study of 2,300 industrial plants andinstitutions in the city.All 13 polluters presently have anti-pollu¬tion programs underway.In response to the report, Gilbert Lee,vice-president for business and finance,said, “We haven’t been able to get a defi¬nite statement from the Department of En¬vironmental Control in the collection of th;data. We understand, however, it is baseuon an inventory of emissions conducted bythe city sometime last year.” “Our situation has changed almost 100percent since a year ago,” Lee added. Hepointed out that the University now heatsalmost entirely by gas.“The central steam plant is in the finalstages of conversion from coal burningunits to gas,” he said. “By the beginning ofthe next heating season we will be fullyconverted to gas.” Allen Ginsburg hummed, chanted, andrecited poetry to a packed house of 700Monday night at the Blue Gargoyle. Gins-burg’s visit was a free performance spon¬sored by the Festival of Arts (FOTA) com¬mittee as the beginning of their springprogram.Ginsburg began by singing “The GrayMonk” by William Blake, which he was notallowed io sing at the Conspiracy 7 trial.“Anybody who prevents the name ofKrishna from being spoken aloud will havethat on his karma,” he said, referring toJudge Julius Hoffman.Ginsburg’s poetry recital featured “con¬tinuations of a long poem on, these states,”interspersed with shorter pieces such as“Elegy for Che Guevara.”The poems, as Ginsburg pointed out, cen¬tered on the issues of ecology, the Vietnamwar, and the commercialism of Americansociety. The selections from “these states”ran chronologically from early 1968 to thosewritten just recently.He made his points with phrases such as“my own nation raptured in hypnotic war,”“Romney, the governor of pollution,” “tinyVietnams over TV,” “the family car bumpsover bright asphalt to Texaco,” “give yourorgasms to the clouds,” and “we just in¬vented throw-away planet.”Many of the poems dealt with Chicago,which he described as “the great metro¬polis waiting for a bomb.”Ginsburg led the crowd in a sustainedchant of “Hare Krishna”, and supplied hisown music. Several of the poems empha¬sized his mystic bent: “Christ mergingwith Krishna in car-crash survival,” as onewent.Name2 Graduate DeansReserve Unit Met in FosterBy Sarah GlazerThe mysterious meeting which took placein Foster Hall April 9 was the last meetingof an army reserve unit which had beenmeeting monthly on campus for seven oreight years.According to D. Gale Johnson, Dean ofthe Social Sciences Division, the April 9meeting “was scheduled to be the lastmeeting ... No subsequent meeting hasbeen held nor is any planned.”Johnson explained that the reserve unit1 had been asked a couple of years ago tomake arrangements to move when Univer¬sity participation became too small to jus¬tify the use of its facilities.” The membersof the unit had once been connected withthe University as students, faculty or em¬ployees, but only one member, a graduatestudent, is presently associated officiallywith the University. Johnson said, “TheUniversity doesn’t want its facilities usedby non-University affiliated groups.”Emmet Gonder, business manager forthe Maroon, noticed a military truckparked on 59th St in front of the entry be¬tween Foster and Social Sciences on bothThursday, April 9 and the following Thurs¬day. Johnson denied that this truck wasevidence of a subsequent meeting, and ex¬plained that it must have been parked therein connection with the graduate student.Most administrators connected with Fos¬ter Hall said that before a Maroon articleof April io they were unaware of the meet¬ings. Mrs Wichura, the secretary in SouthAsian Studies said she was “completelydumbfounded” when she read of the meet¬ing. Since then she said she had discoveredthat “we have a whole closetfull of pamph¬lets” belonging to the military unit. Shesaid most of the people in Foster were una¬ware of the meeting because it took placein the evening after most secretaries andfaculty had left The only knowledge shehad of the meeting, Mrs Wichura said, wasthat she sometimes found used ashtrays inroom 102 the next morning.One man who walked into the office whilethis reporter was talking to Mrs Wichura, said that he knew the meeting had beengoing on for years, because he oftenworked late in Foster Hall.When the Maroon spoke to Johnson Fri¬day afternoon he said he assumed it was areserve meeting, knew about it five yearsago, but did not know it was still going on.Questioned whether he or some other Uni¬versity administration did not have to beaware of a reserve meeting on campus,Johnson said “There’s no reason I shouldknow about it.” If one faculty member hasa key to the room, he said administratorscould be ignorant of the meeting.Youth ProgramThe Summer Youth Program, which hasbeen serving Hyde Park-Kenwood since1967, faces an uncertain future this sum¬mer.Dave Hakken of the Blue Gargoyle listedsome of the community program’s prob¬lems as lack of funds, lack of interest and“some heavy racism” from white parentsin the neighborhood.The Youth Program has in past summersbeen coordinated and funded by the HydePark Neighborhood Club, local churchesand the YMCA at 53rd St and Dorchester.Members from each of these organiza¬tions will be present at “Hyde Park Cor¬ner” Thursday at 8 pm at the Blue Gar¬goyle, 5655 University Ave., to discuss theprogram’s future. Young people in the Gar¬goyle’s volunteer youth program will talkabout what kind of program they wouldlike.According to Hakken, the program whichprovided activities and dances severaltimes a week consists predominantly ofblack high school students and has facedopposition from “white middle class par¬ents.”Hakken said that since “the Y is Stones’(Black P Stone Nation) territory” and an¬other building in the program is Disciples’territory, further conflicts were generatedlast summer. The Disciples is a rival SouthSide gang. Two professors have been named deansin the graduate schools of divinity and edu¬cation.Joseph Mitsuo Kitagawa, professor of his¬tory of religions and a scholar in the reli¬gions of the East, has received a five-yearappointment as dean of the divinity school.J Alan Thomas, professor in the depart¬ment of education and director of the Mid¬west Administration Center, has accepted athree-year appointment as dean of thegraduate school of education and chairmanof the department of education.The appointments, effective July 1, wereannounced yesterday by President EdwardH. Levi.Kitagawa, born in Osaka, Japan in 1915,became a United States citizen in 1955. HeIs in TroubleNew University Conference (NUC) hasrecently become involved in the issue ofneighborhood facilities for young people.They have noted that while there are 50 to60 tennis courts in Hyde Park, “a kid has togo to 49th St before he finds a baseball dia¬mond.”“There is no bowling and no pool in HydePark,” Hakken said, “and the Universityshould provide these kinds of things sincethere used to be plenty of bowling alleysand pool halls before the University torethem down.”NUC has suggested that the Universityopen Ida Noyes Hall to the community andhave a full time staff to serve youngpeople.According to Hakken, NUC has attacked‘‘police harassment” of neighborhoodyouth, in particular the police patrol of 57thSt in front of the Medici and Ahmad’s,where groups of high school students con¬gregate.Petitions have been circulating on cam¬pus this week to oppose the closing ofthe Medici and Ahmad’s, a step beingurged by neighborhood residents and mer¬chants who feel the coffee houses attractundesirable elements.The Medici has been closed to personsunder 18 this year. Hakken criticized thecoffeehouse’s prices as a sign that the Med¬ici does not want to serve the community. has Served on the divinity school’s facultysince 1951.Thomas, born in 1915 in Calgary, Canada,has been a faculty member since 1962. Heis also consultant in educational finance tothe US Office of Education.Leslie StraussJOSEPH KITAGAWADivinity school deanBill FitzgeraldALAN THOMASEducation school dean , *,April 21, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3SEXUAL FREEDOMLEAGUE, INCChicago Area ChapterFor SFl QuarterlyMagazine, enclose $1.00For information write to:SFLP.O.Box 9252Chicago, Illinois 60690Or call: 333-5515 fPi»A"iPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsI Compare the Price! II l11460 E. 53rd 643-2800|i WE DELIVER IL....—.....ICornett 3/orist jF1645 E. 55th STREEV *o CHICAGO, ILL 60615^^^Phorte: FA 4-1651In 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.K April 22 7:30 P.M.EVELYN WOODREADING DYNAMICSINSTITUTE180 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 400Chicago 60601 ST 2-9787 READYOUR MAROONMeet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.But the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.jCeUiyJrmporfaync2235 so.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL 326-2550OVERLAND EXPEDITIONTO INDIAleaves London late June.„ *485Details EncounterOverland23 Manor House Drive,London, NW6“a British film producer isin Australia, in search of twohundred aborigines willingto appear in the nude withVanessa Redgrave. An obvi¬ous attempt at mongreliza-tion. Ol the | For ° ,r" c°pr ofNATIONAL RE-aborigines| ^IE,W;™ c 150 E. 35 Street,Y. 10016.TALK FOR MONEYInterviewers wanted. $2.50/hr. onor near campus. Full or part-timeduring May. Limited openings.Call Ext. 2974 now! An EqualOpportunity Employeih gi «i j i i.r) r »»* r1 —^ * The Festival off The Arts1970 still seeksDonations so that it maypresent severalprograms which aretentatively scheduledContributions are taxdeductibleIF MADE PAYABLETOUniversity of Chicago( Festival of the Arts)Please! We need yoursupport.%EOT A '70AftcfSfSi '■ 150 f ,'Civilisation'A University sponsored BBC productionof “Civilisation” began Wednesday, April15 and will be held every Wednesday andFriday until April 27. The production, writ¬ten and narrated by Sir Kenneth Clark, isheld in Social Science 122 at 8 and 9 pm.This Sunday there will be a showing ofthe first in the series, “The Skin of OurTeeth” at 7 pm. The third in the series willbe shown at 8 pm.Maroon AppointmentsCon Hitchcock, ’72, and Paul Bernstein,’72, have been appointed to editorial posi¬tions on next year’s Maroon. Editor-electSteve Cook named Hitchcock managing edi¬tor and Bernstein news editor for the 1970-71 paper.During this year, Hitchcock, a native ofCanaan, Connecticut, has been associatemanaging editor. Bernstein has worked asa staff reporter this year and has also con¬tributed columns to the paper. Bernstein isfrom New York City.Hitchcock graduated from HotchkissSchool in Lakeville, Connecticut, and Bern¬stein from the Lycee Francais de NewYork.Cook also announced the appointment ofDon Ratner, graduate student in business,as business manager for next year’s paper.Ratner is a graduate of the University ofIllinois circle campus and is a certifiedpublic accountant.Sue Loth, presently news editor of the pa¬per, will be executive editor next year. Herappointment was announced after the edito¬rial election last Monday. Miss Loth isan alumna of New Trier West High School. are available in Gates Blake 120.Summer quarter registration will takeplace June 22 and 23. Room reservationforms and information about accom¬modations in the residence halls next yearmay be obtained in the student housing of¬fice, room 201 of the administration build¬ing. Students now living in the halls will bemailed the materials.Spring SwimsThe spring quarter schedule of nudeswims sponsored by the Students for Vio¬lent Non-Action (SVNA) includes swimsMonday, April 20; Tuesday, April 28;Wednesday, May 6; Thursday, May 14;Monday, May 18; and Tuesday, May 26.Swims run from 7:30 to 10 pm in the IdaNoyes swimming pool.Rugby WinsRegistrationRegistration procedures for summer andfall quarters were released this week by Steve AokiSCULPTURE: Frank Dahlkemper workson his art for FOTA. The sculpture ap¬pears between Haskell and BusinessEast.the office of the dean of undergraduate stu¬dents.All resident undergraduates planning toattend next year must register betweenMay 11 and May 29.Next fall advisers will be available forregistration only to new entering studentsand to returning students not in residencespring quarter. Preliminary time schedules The University rugby team extended itsunbeaten spring record to four games lastSaturday by beating the Quad Cities rugbyteam of Davenport-Rock Island 16 to 6.The visiting Maroons scored first and thegame was never in jeopardy.Playing one man short for more than halfthe game (no injury-substitution rule), themen from Chicago displayed spirit worthyof Eton. The “B” side posted a 6-6 tiebringing their record to 1-0-2.The team has not lost a game this schoolyear, and its 14 games without a defeathave earned the team an invitation to TheBorderers’ Invitational Rugby Tournamentin Windsor, Ontario, next Labor Day.The bout will bring together the bestteams in North America as well as someteams from abroad.Writing ContestsEntries for the five prose and poetrywriting contests must be submitted to Mrs Sheila Berg, Wiebolt 205 by Tuesday,May 5.The John Rogers Snowday memorialprize of $100 will be awarded for originalwork in literary criticism.Three prizes of $100, $75 and $50 respec¬tively will be awarded for a critical essayon a subject related to the humanities orsocial sciences for the David Blair 'McLaughlin prose writing prizes.The $100 Academy of American Poetsprize will be awarded for the best under¬graduate poem or group of poems.The John Billings Fiske prizes in poetryare offered annually for an original poemor cycle of poems. The R S Crane award of$50 for distinction in scholarly and criticalwriting will be given for the best essay on aspecific problem in literary theory, prac¬tical criticism, literary history or the his¬tory of ideas.Work submitted must be typed andturned in anonymously with an accom¬panying sealed envelope containing thename and address of the writer. Coursework may be submitted but must be free ofcomments.Rock Fest TripThe Students for Violent Non-Action(SVNA) are organizing an expedition to theMadison rock fest April 24, 25, and 26.Performers will include Country Joe andthe Fish, Ken Kesey and the Merry Prank¬sters, the Grateful Dead and others. Ticketsfor all three concerts are $10.“If people are willing to split the cost, wecan rent a large tent and camp out atcampsites provided by the festival,” oneSVNA spokesman said. “Enough peoplewill drive up that rides should be arrange-able.”For further information call George at324-1266, 493-3410, or ext 8195.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT GOVERNMENTNOMINATION AND CANDIDACYFORMDuring the past year Student Government operating under a budget of $5,304 has sought to place studentobservers on the Council of the University Senate, has lent support to the Vietnam Moratorium and anti-pollutionefforts, raised almost $7,000 for a Woodlawn project involving problems such as hunger, sponsored a speakersprogram on current problems in higher education including a congressman, a student and two university presidents,written an alternative proposal to the Wegener report on discipline, started a large-scale student tenant union project,and has regularly discussed a large variety of student problems (housing, drugs, etc.) with the Administration.Student Government has 50 graduate and 50 undergraduate seats. Meetings are held every 2 or 3 weeks. Officersare elected by and from the members. Representatives are elected from their division, school, dorm, etc.To become a candidate, you must obtain ten signatures from students in your electoral unit (e.g. - Physical SciencesDivision, School of Medicine, Upper Flint, other college (non-dorm, etc.)) and sign the statement below.For more information call the SG office, ext. 3274, between 1 PM and 5 PM.The signatures of persons nominating f°r representivefrom (electoral unit) to Student Government.6.7...8...9...10.I intend to remain in residence as a student for at least 2 of the 3 quarters succeeding the quarter in which the electionis held; I have a grade point average of 2.0 or better, and I intend to attend meetings of SG regularly if elected.SignatureAddress PhoneAny slate or party affiliationElectoral unitPlease return on or before Tues., April 28, 1970 to Student Government, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, Illinois, 60637MOTfc 1ACH CANDIDATE MUSI HAVE IO SIGH* TURKApril 21, 1970/Tho Chicago Maroon/5Don't CloseAhmad's and MediciA group of residents and businessmen in the 57th st area aretrying to evict the Medici and Ahmad’s coffeehouses. The groupis now petitioning thd landlords of the two buildings that house thecoffeehouses.Don’t let them do it.Petitions are circulating in Hyde Park supporting the coffee¬houses. The best way to show that the community as a whole sup¬ports the coffeehouses is to sign up.The people trying to evict the coffeehouses are concernedabout the gathering of high school students outside the coffeehouseson 57th St. They feel that the coffeehouses should be responsiblefor alleged window-breaking, fires, and drug business in the area.The connection between the street people, the crime, and thecoffeehouses is tenuous. It is obvious that closing the Medici andAhmad’s would have an effect on the total number of people onthe street.There are few enough places in this neighborhood to get adecent meal. The closing of the coffeehouses would hurt a lot morepeople than it would help. The closing of O’Neill’s last winter andthe burning of the Hobby House last August have contributed toThe larger questionthat both the petition¬ers against the Mediciand the managementitself should ask is,"Canwe do anything forthese kids besides kickthem out?"the shortage of inexpensive restaurants in Hyde Park. Let’s not losethe Medici while there is something that can be done.Through consistent price raising and requiring proof of beingover 18, the management of the coffeehouses is trying to keep“undesirables” out of the restaurants. This is a form of discrimina¬tion that the owners feel is necessary in the situation.The larger question that both the petitioners against the Mediciand the management itself should ask is, “Can we do anything forthese kids besides kick them out?”Why is there no place for them to go?It is a community problem that is not solved by the short-sightedattempt to close the coffeehouses. Another institution in the neigh¬borhood, the Blue Gargoyle coffeehouse in the Disciples of Christchurch, is a commendable attempt at providing a place for thesehigh-school age “undesirables.”The Gargoyle has had its share of fires and robberies, yetthey’ve stuck with it. The Medici and Ahmad’s are different orga¬nizations; they’re business concerns while the Gargoyle is church-sponsored. Yet the coffeehouses serve a vital role in the communityand their loss would be everyone’s.The management of the two coffeehouses has asked for com¬munity support in their attempt to stay open. By showing the needfor such establishments, perhaps the realtors will ignore the anti¬coffeehouse petitions. It is a way to make your weight felt, so do it.Sign the petition in support of the coffeehouses.t.dt wmmtm >-»6/The Chicago Maroon/April 21, 1970a mm #:t . » v m*>.+. m * •» * *. LETTERS TO THE EDITORSDiana's DefendedI would like to take issue with the letterof Kostas Kazazis in your April 7 issue. Al¬though I don’t know Greek, I do believe Iknow good food, good friends, and good at¬mosphere. God Bless the Diana.Robert RippeyEducation DepartmentCheck the FactsDo you ever investigate the facts beforeyou print your supposed news?Shirley Watson (“About the Midway”April 14) was not fired from Central Ser¬vice as you reported. Rather — she is em¬ployed in Central Service after refusing aCLI laundry position. She was fired fromthe Dietary Department for reasons too nu¬merous to mention.It is nice of SDS to rally (ha!), but whatdo they want for her? She has a nice,“cushiony” job in Central Service. If I lostmy job for the reasons Shirley Watson losthers would they rally for me? I doubt it,because I am white, forty odd years old,and do my job efficiently.I dare you to present another side of yourwarped story.Just sign me (for obvious reasons) —A concerned Billings employee(Concerned for the efficient operationof Billings Hosp.)P.S. I am not employed in Dietary, Cen¬tral Service, or the CLI laundry. I am onlyinterested in the truth.Gay Lib DancesOne begins, these days, with the premisethat University decisions affecting studentlife and activities can have no shock value;we have become immune to shock. Never¬theless, the recent decision to bar Gay Lib¬eration dances from the residence halls hasrevitalized our stunted sense of indignation.We suspect that Mr Turkington’s an¬nouncement is a prelude — a cooling-outstrategy — to discouraging Gay Liberationsocial events in any University facility.Mr Turkington’s reason for the ban wasthat non-University people attended. Pres¬ence of “non-U’s” has become a legitimatereason to suppress social events oncampus. Gay Lib, perceiving the hand¬writing on the ivied wall, has skipped theintermediate step (trying to book Ida Noyesor the gym) and has moved their nextdance off-campus. We wish them well.Notice we said that presence of “aliens”has become a reason for locking out socialevents. Mr Turkington says Chicago hasTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froute (Features).Assistant Business /Manager: Joel PondclikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGood sell, Gordon Katz, Susan Left, GeraldLeval, 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 Roo—s303 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.t.•» e f * i » < c. ».&««t t ft “always” done this; social events have “al¬ways” been restricted but cultural eventshave been public.Some of us have longer memories, MrTurkington.Several years ago there were weeklytwist parties here. Anybody could comeThe community young people came. Even¬tually there were incidents — quarrelsthefts, etc. Then the University crackeddown and banned non-U people.Only after this, Mr Turkington, did theUniversity invidiously divide campus enter¬tainment into social events — restricted at¬tendance — and cultural events — open at¬tendance.There is nothing reasonable, de jure,about this distinction. We must set asidethe rationalization and find the de factoreason.Who are likely to come to “cultural” en¬tertainments (films, lectures, concerts)?Nice middle class staid Hyde Parkers,largely white. They like the University; theUniversity likes them.'Who are likely to come to twist parties(or Gay Lib dances)? Young black peoplecame to the twist parties. People who didnot much like the University, for good rea¬sons. The university recoiled from their“disruptive” deeds, recognized no responsi¬bility to help out with the meagre recrea¬tional facilities in the area, acknowledgedno complicity in exacerbating ghetto livingconditions and consequent “mentality” byits housing land-grabbing expansion inHyde Park and Woodlawn.The University pushed out the black teen¬agers, just as it pushes out the poor and theelderly, black and white both, by its directand indirect urban renewal actions.There are some similarities between thetwist party history and the treatment ofGay Lib. The University’s nervous reactionis directed to “outsiders” in both cases.While homosexuality is tolerated withinan elitist academy so long as the individ¬uals share other dominant bourgeois valueswith the straight members of the club,militantly organized gay people who rejectelitist values and identify with a non aca¬demic community clearly cannot be toler¬ated. Non-U gay people at a campus eventchallenge the system, just as black youthchallenged it.In both cases the University actedagainst class elements and values inimicalto its self-image. And its autonomy.Should non-campus women’s liberationgroups begin to picket and to debate movieaudiences about the chauvinist content offilms, we predict that films will be ruledrestricted events, just like dances, for thesame de facto reasons.The paramount issue is this: the Univer¬sity hates to have its equilibrium chal¬lenged — by any group, acts, or ideas itcannot integrate into its defensively liberalscholasticism. The prospect of “incidents”which would damage this fragile autonomyand might bring civil authorities tocampus, moreover, creates official anx¬ieties. In a perverse extension of “academ¬ic freedom” the University pre-emptivelypolices itself.Better that undesirables should be forcedout by the academy than that civil powersshould come get them. Thus, by its self-pruning the University both defends itselffrom non-elite values and preserves its ab¬solute authority on its own turf.New University ConferenceEarth DayThe University has gotten off to a verybad start as far as the approaching EarthDay Teach-In is concerned. Only this pastSaturday the University had contractedwith the McGinty Tree Service to spray allof the elm trees in the area with a highlytoxic and highly residual substance. As if toadd insult to crime, those of us who wereunfortunate enough to have our cars parkedin the area last Saturday morning (April11) now have this spray on our cars as well.This spray does not come off in a car wash;Continued on Page TenTechnology Won'tSolve Pollution ProblemBy William WimsattI have come to believe that it is a mis¬take to let economists alone discuss eco¬nomic issues. Perhaps, by parity, I shouldadmit that it may be a mistake to let bio¬logists have the only say on biological is¬sues, but this is not the error I wish todiscuss here.At the second sick earth symposium Iheard five panelists and one moderator,academicians all, discuss the economic as¬pects of pollution. The speakers all seemedto agree on one thing: it is a fact of naturethat pollution is a byproduct, indeed a nec¬essary byproduct of our dependence upontechnology. From that point onwards wewere treated, for the most part, to the lastthing I expected, an economic defense ofpollution. Given the assumptions most ofthese speakers were operating with, theirpositions seemed natural, but these as¬sumptions must be examined.Mr Anastaplo appears to regard men’slife in a polluted environment as one morechallenge to a new species, one that he isadapting to without ultimate disadvantage,loss of health, or danger of extinction.His position appears to rest on the as¬sumption that all that happens in the evolu¬tionary process is adaptive, somethingwhich biologists know to be false, andsomething which even social scientists haverejected in criticizing Malinowski’s Pan-glossian “postulate of universal function¬alism.”As a rough estimate, 99.5 per cent of thespecies which have existed on this earthare now extinct, (some at man’s own be¬hest). There is no reason to believe thatman will be an exception. The interestingquestion for all of us is: How long is manlikely to last? and more ... is there any¬thing we can do to prolong our existence?Until recently, this question has been inter¬preted in a positive sense, and technologyhas been seen as the solution. How do we feed our excess population? Hydrophonics!How do we replenish our dwindling naturalresources? Mine raw materials from theocean bed, the moon, the planets! . ..Even: How do we escape the dying sun fiveor ten million years hence? Move to anoth¬er solar system, or even to another galaxy!How? We’re not sure yet, but there is lots oftime, and of course, science and technologywill provide!These then are some crucial assump¬tions:• That we do have lots of time, whichtechnology will make for us• That technology can accomplish al¬most anything, that technology is a goodthing, and that more of a good thing is al¬ways also a good thing• Thus that the mistakes we make in theshort run can always be corrected for us inthe long run by the improved technology ofthose who follow us.Various writers have, within at least the, last 15 years, begun to suggest that thequestion of how man is best to prolong hisexistence has a negative side — that is:What is he now doing which is likely toshorten it substantially, and how, by avoid¬ing these things, can he increase his ex¬pected lifetime as a species? A dramaticdanger arose when technology made nucle¬ar warfare possible. Another threat arosewhen modern medicine cut death rateswithout at the same time providing theideological changes which would lowerbirth rates. Finally, numerous biologistshave pointed to the dangers which the esca¬lating pollution of our burgeoning tech¬nology poses for certain key elements ofthe ecosystem which we depend upon forour continued survival.Not all elements of our ecosystem are es¬sential for our continued survival — thuswe can afford to take some casuaities in GADFLYthe cause of technology and a higher stan¬dard of living. Unfortunately, we still havevery little information about which speciesand species interactions are dispensible.This in itself counsels caution. But further¬more, we are aware of some aspects of theworld’s ecological community that we darenot sacrifice. This includes the oceans’photoplankton which are responsible for theproduction of the greater part of the oxygenwe breathe. Also not to be ignored are thenitrogen-fixing bacteria which are an es¬sential part of the nitrogen cycle. Recentstudies indicate that pollution has an ad¬verse effect on both of these elements ofour ecosystem, and if either of these typesof organism were to go extinct, we wouldnot be long in following them.The gist of this is that we do not haveunlimited time, indeed probably not muchtime at all to attend to these problems andit cannot simply be assumed that tech¬nology (much less more technology) willsolve them. After all, it was technology thatgot us into this mess.The remarks of Coase, Demsetz, andFriedman dealt primarily with the cost ofpollution, but turned the issues upsidedown. Again assuming that the present lev¬el of technology and consumption are agood thing, they concerned themselves pri-marily with the economic cost of reducing pollution and who should pay for it. Nonebut Mr Berry, a chemist, (and Mr Demsetzperipherally) even saw fit to mention thatthe existence of pollution appears to havean economic cost as well. Amidst a call forbalanced rational discussion, this omissionis somewhat surprising.But even Mr Berry usually appeared toaccept the ground rules of the discussion —that the preeminence of technology was notto be questioned, that none other than eco¬nomic considerations were relevant, andmost importantly, that the economic con¬siderations involved were to be limited towoefully short-range perspectives.It is, due largely to the structure of com¬petition in our industrial society, economic¬ally desirable in the short run for com¬panies to process raw material at the high¬est rate possible. This brings higher short-range profits, but brings closer the ultimatestarvation of our technology when thesematerials are exhausted — indeed if thereis anyone who will survive the effects of itsbyproducts to preside at its demise. It isthe ecological damage being done by pollu¬tant byproducts of our technology which(among other things) renders the scope ofthis discussion absurd. In the long run, weare all dead. True. But the longer the shortrun thinking of economic man continues toinfluence nation and international policy,the shorter the long run becomes.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevent to the University com¬munity. The opinions of the guest colum¬nists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit¬ting columns should contact the editor.Ream Team Wins in 5!•' /'•*. I . J- - ♦ - ^ ■■■ -FOIA EventsApril 21-27April 23, Lecture/Demonstration/Reminiscence8:30Ida NoyesTheatre Joseph SLOWIK, Associate Director of Goodman Theatre, on his work with Jerry GROTOWSKI, Directorof the Polish Laboratory Theatre. Mr. Slowik will be accompanied by a group of Goodman TheatreActors.** ****************************** ****************************** ************51April 24, Dance Concert8:00International House presented by UC Modern Dance GroupAssembly Room************* ****************************** ****************************** **New and Experimental Dance Workspresented by *he Synthetic Theatre Experimental Dance Co.***************************************************************************<April 27,8:00Ida NoyesGymAll events free unless otherwise specified.Will the Bells Fall Silent in June?By Wendy GlocknerEvery Saturday, between 11:30 and 1 pmseveral students climb to a little room atthe top of Mitchell Tower to ring the bells.Unlike the electrically controlled bells ofmost modem churches Mitchell Tower bellsare hand controlled by pulling ropes in arhythmic fashion. “We pull on the ropesjust as the monks used to in medievalchurches,” explained one bell-ringer.The little room, besides holding the tenlong ropes which are attached to the bellsat the very top of the tower, is also thehome of the “chimes.” This is a one-manoperation which is played by pulling cords which control hammers within the bell-mouth. Sheet music is available for anyoneinterested in playing the chimes — rangingfrom Beethoven’s Ninth to Aunt Dinah’sQuilting Party — all converted to the keyof C.Why should anyone be interested in thelittle room at the top of Mitchell Toweranyway? Because in June the chief bell¬ringer, Wylie Crawford, is leaving and thebells may fall silent. “We’d really like toteach some interested people how to playthe bells before June,” said Wylie. Anyoneinterested in learning should meet outsideHutch Commons any Saturday at about11:25. “The bells are not only a lot of fun toplay, but will also sound really great if wecould get enough people to play them,” saidone bell-ringer. When a rope attached toone of the bells is pulled, the bell swings uppast the bounding point and slides intoplace (with a “resounding clunk,” saysCrawford); at that point, the mouth of thebell is upright. Then, “if you just give it agentle tug, the bell will fall at full speedand set itself up on its other end.”“Once you get used to the rhythm of thebell, it’s really easy,” said one ringer.When enough people are ringing the bells, acaller calls out which bell should be rung and in what order. The bell-ringers ex¬periment with all different combinations ofthe bells. “The hardest part of bell-ringingis keeping time and knowing when to comein,” explained one ringer. This process iscalled “change-ringing.” The Mitchell Tow¬er bell-ringing system is the only one of itskind in the midwest or west.Anyone who is interested in ringing bellswill also have the opportunity to climb uptwo stories in a vertical direction to see thebells themselves. The lowest bell weighsthirteen hundred pounds. The ten bells arefacing different directions “so MitchellTower wouldn’t topple over if all of themwere played at the same time.”•lCitizens React To Pollution On Earth DaySA VINGSSA VINGSSA VINGSSA VINGS SA VINGSS<John's Mens Wear1459 E. 53rd.thlr- waytowood/todc...the mcM'eEXCLUSIVE SHOWING IN DOWNTOWN CHICAGOStarting Friday, MAY 1 STATE LAKE^ State at Lake Sts. RALLY FOR ROSSTHURSDAYAPRIL 23,1970SSA- LOBBYSHORELAND HOTELSpatial Ratos farStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin & doubles frem $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available torparties, banquets, anddances for 10 • 500. Please call H. FingerhutPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive GCEXPANDYOUR MINDTHROUGHTRAVELCooks Travel Cheques"ar(Tyour passpoiTto Adventure Special"StudentMini-Price, only 50C per S100 issuance charge. With prompt refund if lostor stolen. Go with Cooks.. ."The Action Money.”WE'D LIKE YOU TO JOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITHas an ORDAINED MINISTERWITH A RANK OFDOCTOR OF DIVINITY'And ye shall know the truth and the truth shallmake you free' John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who believe as we do, to joinus in the holy search for Truth. We believe that all men should seekTruth by all 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 fromproperty and other taxes.3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiasticpowers.4. Get sizeable cash grants for doing our missionarywork.5. Seek draft exemption as one of our working mis¬sionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, theaters, etc.,give reduced rates to ministersGET 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 ordainothers. Your ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere in thiscountry. Your money back without question if your package isn'teverything you expect it to be, For an additional $10 we will sendyour Ordination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHBox 1393, Dept. G9, Evanston, III. 60204Name.AddressCity StateZip.$10 end. □ (no frames) $20 end. □ (frames) 'rent beautiuldowntown Verona"...THE MOST BEAUTIFULEXPLOITATION FILMCl^ON/G^£) everI PRODUCED.”Zhe SecretMR MN Set LivesSex duesof Komeo{JulietEASTMANS r-SA' N“,|5& LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337-2113i’VH i .... .April 21, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page Sixours was washed twice but the spray stillremains. Neither the University norMcGinty Bros, had bothered to place signsanywhere to at least warn us. The Univer¬sity Public Relations Dept, “assured” methat McGinty had insurance to “cover” anydamages to the car. McGinty Bros, in¬formed me that an oil solvent would re¬move the spray from the car (and it willwith a great deal of rubbing).Both McGinty and the University missedthe point, however: insurance doesn’t coverthe damage done to our environment bythis spraying! The University has madesteps to get its own house in order by wide¬spread conversion from coal to gas in itsapartments; shouldn’t this concern nowspread to other areas including the use ofbiodegradeable products whenever avail¬able and the halt to all spraying?Dean and Pat MitchellUnion of StudentsOn the union. It is obvious that a lot ofpeople have been looking out for the inter¬ests of students for a long time — so muchso that the interests of students are no long¬er seen as distinct from the interests of theuniversities they attend. We constitute aprivileged class of people — exempt fromthe cares and duties of the population atlarge (safe, while students, from the draft;semi — or completely supported by parentsor scholarship, thus not having to sweat outa living). But at the same time a dependentpopulation, subject to the most arbitraryrestrictions by the University, whose in¬ stitutional status gives us by virtue of asso¬ciation with it, our privileges. And at whata cost! Students do not share the values ofuniversities necessarily, and at any mo¬ment may find themselves opposed to theinstitution’s policies, either internal, suchas course offerings, grading system, stu¬dent wages, or the ability to get a fair air¬ing of grievances; or external, such as theUniversity’s treatment of the surroundingcommunity (urban renewal), or the Univer¬sity’s relationship (or rather marriage) tosome of the most disgusting industrial mag¬nates ever seen in the dismal history ofAmerica’s business society.An individual student who finds himselfin the position where he must protest eitherhis own mistreatment or the mistreatmentof others by the institution which gives himon the one hand, a privileged status, whileon the other hand exacts his tacit supportunder duress of the loss of his privileges,has only one option — to leave.A parallel, though not a strict one, can beseen between the students and the univer¬sity today, and the laborer and his employ¬er before the rise of trade unionism. If theworker didn’t like his wages, or manage¬ment practices, he was free to leave. Thatwages and management practices weresuitable to the laborer nowhere in the coun¬try was such an obvious fact, that laborersjoined together into bargaining units to im¬prove their conditions where they worked.Bluntly put, if you don’t wield any cloutwhere you are, you aren’t going to have abetter deal when you leave.A union of students, properly organized and recognized by regular unions, and inco-operation with them, would supply thenecessary clout to get things changed, toimprove both wages and working conditions(or rather studying and living conditions).Naturally this will redefine the students’position regarding his privileges. Oncebound into a union, the student can no long¬er see himself as a purist individual; uniondecisions must be made on majoritarianprincipals, and the minority must supportthe majority on issues of action (strikes,boycotts, protests, etc.) and this meanssome degree of compromise, which to thehirsute intellectual, means original sin.Since the union must mainly concern itselfwith very crass and materialistic goals,Tuesday, April 21ORGAN: Rockefeller Chapel, 12:30 and 12:50 pm,Edward Mondello, organist.CHEC: Black Arts course, discussion of Tarat cards,west lounge, Burton-Judson, 8 pm.LECTURE: Michael Polanyl, Willett visiting professorfrom Oxford, on Science and Man, Kent 107, 8 pm.GAY LIB: Rap, 5310 Harper, 7 pm.TEA: Career opportunities available to women collegegraduates. Social Sciences Seance, Eleanor Club,3 pm.Wednesday, April 22LECTURE: James C Vaughn, Pollution of Lake Mich¬igan and Surrounding Regions, Cherry Hills countryClub, Flossmoor, Illinois, Phi Delta Kappa. 3:30 —golf, 6 — cocktails and hors d'oeuvres, 6:30 — din-ner, 7:45 — speaker. such as better wages and a good deal ofpower in matters concerning students, suchas discipline, tuition rates, room and boardcosts, and grievance procedures, the tendersentiments of the student who enjoys hisprivileges and his lack of power (havingdecisions made for one is much easier thandeciding for oneself) may be offended.In the long run, this will be the biggestproblem to organizing a union of students— the failure of students to see reality: thatthey are ineffectual children, being rearedand cared for by the University, their re¬ward for obedience being a degree and aticket to material and intellectual wealthDan Gray 71Union of StudentsSEMINAR: Heinz Bechert, visiting professor in South¬east Aslan studies, Buddhist Historiography andNation Building in Ceylon, Foster Lounge, 4:10 pm.FLICK: American Revolution 2, Young Patriots, SSAnoon.CARILLON: 12:30, Robert Lodine. University carillon-neur.Thursday, April 23GAY LIB: dinner at Bandersnatch, 6 pm; volleyballIn INH, 7 pm; lunch at Gargoyle, noon.RALLY: for Charles Ross, candidate for Congress inIndiana, SSA lobby, noon.SEMINAR: Hamid Ahmad Khan, Institute for IslamicCulture, Lahore, The Early Ghalib, Foster lounge,4:10 pm.GO CLUB: INH, 7 pm.TEA: Career opportunities available to women collegegraduates, facts about math and science orientedcareers, 3 pm. Woodward Court.BULLETIN OF EVENTSPLArDCr’i ALL-NIGHT SHCWPftfORMANUS FRIDAT l SATURDAY FOtlOWING LAST filGUlAR FiATURiApril 10 April 11 iWILD IN THE STRUTS MONTEREY POP FESTIVAL IShady Winters & Christopher Jones Jonis Joplin, Ami HendrexApril 17 April 18WILD ANGIES •hr FACESFetor Fonda A Nancy Sinatra John CassavetesV-April 24 _ 1April 25Warren Beatty-Eva Marie Saint *^m ** ROMEO i JULIETAll FALL DOWNMay 1 May 2James Coburn Zero MostelTHE PRESIDENT'S ANALYST THE PRODUCERSAugust 1 August 2THE PRESIDENT'S ANALYST ta*e •hr THE PRODUCERSJames Cohurn Zero Mostel i ' I ' I ' r M I 'M T l"T l | I1 CHARTS/GRAPHSLeroy lettering(Near campus)363-1288 MODERN DANCE CLASSES4i30to6<00Monday - SaturdaySottat, Rock A Jazz taught.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. StateSte tans IwidHigRoom 1902332-9923! TICKETS SI.SO IdeasFOR 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? EL TACOMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANTE. 53rd St.Ralph J Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LoSolie St., Chic. 60602FR 2 2390 — 798-0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by ApptSUN LIFE OF CANADA HUACAMOLETACOSENCHILADASTAMALES ■ TOSTADASCHILIMANY OTHER DISHESCARRY OUT SERVICEOpen 7 days a week11:30 A.M. - 12:30 AM.Continent1Regular cut $3Razor cut & siAppointment Suite 626Hyde Park Bonk■r ‘ mm°KEN ANGER’S CLASSICSCORPIO RISING !IN FLAMING COLOR! !YOJI KURI'S Al!in color -- from Japan!FRITZ LANG'S HUMAN DESIREFILMS at 7:15 and 9:30pm in Cobb Halldoc films Wednesday10/The Chicago Maroon/April 21/1970(Maroon Classified Ads)DONT WASTE TIME, TAKE a SECOND LOOK!SCENESSWEETLIFE is Coming, are you?^TjTon Naturally. TranscendentalMeditation Toes April 27, 8 PM.Ida Noyes.May 1&2, 88.9, 8:30 MANDEL HALL-SWEETLIFE.Marco Polo Travel. 2268S.Drive, Chicago, III. 60616. KingAre you thinking of SWEETLIFE?Classical Guitar Concert by JANARNOLD of Hyde Park Music 8.Records. Studios for Ethical Hu¬manist Society of Chicago FridayApril 24 at 8:00 Rm 801. Fine ArtsBldg. 410 S. Mich. Donation: $1.00for Students.Minnette's Custom Salon 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing; clothes copied 8. designed.Phonographic Literature Free! 11Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8. Tape Decks SaveSSSon Campus Bob Tabor J63-4555.BLACKFRIARS new musical hitSweetlife—May 18.2, 88.9. Ticketsavailable April 26 at Box Office."WOMEN'S LIBERATION: Ameri¬can Hang up or International Move¬ment?" Discussion Friday at Cross¬roads, 5621 Blackstone 8PM.Writers' Workshop (PL 2-8377).Is Lydia Pense really better thanJanis Joplin? Find out at the BeauxArts Ball:May 2. Bartlett Gym. 8:30-1:30Tickets at Mandel—$3.A Natural High is the Best HighTranscendental Meditation. Tues.,April 21, 8:00PM. Ida Noyes.TEAS AT THREE. The One StepBeyond Career Series Features aSocSci Seminar at Breckinridge onTues & a Final Fact Session onScience & Math at Woodward onThurs. Come 8. Bring Friends.First time in Chicago - India'sforemost young sarodist USTADAMJOD ALI KHAN with PANDITSHARDA MAHARAJ, tabla. Satur¬day, April 25, Law School Auditor¬ium, 8:30 P.M. Tickets on sale inFoster Hall 106 and at the door.General admission $3.00, U.C. stu¬dents $2.00.SVNA: Rock FestivalSVNA is organizing an expeditionto the rock festival in Madison thisweekend (Country Joe and the Fish;Ken Kesey and the Merry prank¬sters, the Grateful Dead; RotaryConnection, James Gang; others).WE are renting a large tent toaccomodate us. Total expensesaround $16 (to be split among uswho go). For more, call George324-1266, or stop in Searle 462.Hurry.VISTA LIVES!!! ATREYNOLDS RAP TUE-MONI FOTA 70Lecture/ Demonstration/ Remini¬scence Joseph Slowik Assoc. Dirof Goodman Theater on his workwith Jerzy Grotowskh Accompaniedby Goodman Theater Actors. April23, 8:30, Ida Noyes Theater.Dance ConcertU.C. Modern Dance GroupApril 24 International HouseAssembly Room.Synthetic Theater ExperimentalDance Co. presents new and ex¬perimental dance works April 27,8:00 Ida Noyes Gym.Beaux Arts Ballwith Cold Blood and Corky SiegelHappy Year BandSpectacular Light ShowMay 2. Bartlett Gym 8:30-1:30Tickets in Mandel Hall BoxOffice $3.GO~CLUBTHUR - IDA NOYESPRE-MED CLUB MTGThor, April 23 BillingsM-137 Dr. John J. Fennessy, Assoc.Prof of Radiology Lecture withx-ray pictures.INTERVIEWING / m on e yEarn $2.50/hour interviewing on ornear campus in May. Hours flexi-TMMrru2974 Now! EQUAL oppor¬tunity EMPLOYMENT. GAY LIBERATION1400 at 1st Public Gay Dance. WeOvercame Insurance Companies,Police, Vice Squad & Mafia. NEXT:Discrimination of UC administra¬tion — Oppression is PERVERSION.Sunday: Meeting: 1PM 5310 S. Har¬per. Thurs: Ida Noyes Eat-6PM;Volley Ball 7PM.MUSICIANSGary Hamilton & Co. will play gigsfor $5/nr>an. Call 324-5863 or Hitch¬cock Dorm (Ml 3-0800) room 53.ALL PEPPER TO THE PEOPLE!!THE PEPPERBANDE Will Hold aPress Conference and Party fortheir Ardent Admirers in the LowerFlint Lounge, April 24, 1:45AM, WhenWHPK-88 Premieres PEPPER-BANDE Platter.Did you Like Sha-Na-Na? Did YouSurvive the 50's — Well, Let's Singabout It! Two Student-MusiciansNeed 3-4 Others (Especially RockDrummer & Another Guitarist) ToPlay with. Aiming for ImmediateGig Somewhere. Only Those WhoKnow and Love The True RockN'Roll Should Call David at 929-0633 and Leave Message.HI-FIHigh Quality Stereo System 15 Mo.Old AR Turntable, 2 AR-4x Sks.Shure V15-Type II Cartridge, Lafa¬yette 1500T. Receiver $400.00 Orig.$580. Call 493-5750 Eves.SPACENot a typical Hyde Park rat trap:Roomy, sunny, airy 6-rm. apt. withpiano, near campus, for sublet. Call955-7352.Fern Roommates wntd. Now &/orSummer 8./or 1970-71. 1400 E 57Air Cond, Own Room, 667-5124.2 Working Girls Need Perm Rm-mate May 1 (June O.K.) 5433 Cor¬nell Call 493-2896.Wanted: . . . COACH HOUSE . . .Or Isolated Apt in Park-Like Set¬ting Sought by Trustworthy MarriedMedical Student. Please Call Eve.225-0015.Rmmt wtnd own rm in Lg. SS Hse$50/Mo & Util. 978-0954 Eve.$45 Reward for information leadingresponsible grad stud 8, wife torental or 2 bedroom or large 1bedroom Hyde Pk apt. Elevatorbldng, rent under $165/Mo re¬quired. May or June occ. 955-7517.Rmmts Wanted Sum 8i/or NextYear Air Cond 1400 E 57, 288-4595.Cheerful 5 Rm Furn Apt-AvlbleSummer, Option on Next Yr. CallEves 288-3356. 5342 Greenwood.1Rm in 2 Bdrm Apt Near CampusFlexible Rent. Male, Female OKAvlble June 6-End Sept. 493-9846.6 room apt for summer. 288-4234.APARTMENTS AVAILABLE now—May 1 Studios-1 bedrm-2 bedrm-3bedrm. 53rd 8< Kenwood. Phone Mr.Stoll DO 3-6200 or Steve FA 4-0342.Summer Sublet 3 Bedrm Apt NearCampus Shopping 363-3990.Sublet 3 Bedrooms June-Oct $150/Mo. Sunporch Call 363-3436.2bdrm apt., Ig. kitchen, 55th 8<Hyde Park. Call 288-7372 eves 8iweekends. 3 rm near Coop furn 6/15-9/30.$150/mo nego pf couple 955-6714.3rms, 124. incl. util, married studonly. May 1. 667-8356 aft 6.APARTMENT WANTED:Leaving? Three (or four) peopleneed Hyde Park apt June and for¬ever. 955-6714 or Ml 3-0800, ext 3754Rm 220.Wanted One Bedroom ApartmentTo Sublet for Summer-BeginningJune 1 Please Call 667-7451.Apt V/2 Rm Avail 5/1 - 100.00 Aft 6.324-0626, 51st University.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.Co-op 2Vj Rm Modern Apt for Sale.54th PI. and Dorch; Balcon; LgeYard. Excel, for one or Couple.955-3595 Eves.3 Rms Furn + porch. 57+Dorch.6/24-9/19 $160 mo. 493-4426.For Rent S. S. House 4 Bdrms.Super Delux.Nice House Large Yard. 2 Car Gar.2 Baths. 955-5916. For SALE.Female grad student seeking aptin HP with other females startingSept. Will sign lease now if youcan sublet for summer. Have car.Call 677-7889.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.Room for rent In apt. 54 8< Wood-lawn. $39 month. 684-8412. Judy.Subletters wanted Smr and/or FallAircond Nr Campus 493-8041.FOR SALEStereo 4 Speed Vox Changer $15 oroffer. MU 4-4879.Pontiac '52 good Tires Bat Rad 8<Brakes Straight Eight Eng. $60.324-8000 Ext. 708 Mike Simon.PORSCHE '65 Convert., Brown, LowMileage, Mint Cond. $2800. 536-2182.1964 VESPA, RED, 90CC, 1700 miles.Best reasonable offer. 684-5739 after5:30.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.ETHOL LPD IN STOCK! MODELCAMERA 55th 8, Kenwood 493-6700.Straight Talk:Your diamond is at...UNI flwtllts (Oi 5« TfAtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZAMAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNname, address, phone.CHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^. 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.CAUFORNIASANTA CRUZ - BIG SUR APR 26 -MAY 4 SHARE DRIVINGAL 493-9259PEOPLE WANTEDWant to Spend Aug. On Martha'sVineyard? We Need Someone toLive in and Help with Babysitting.Room, Board, $20/Wk. Call 624-8363Eves.Hustling MBA-type for venture w/UC Grad Student in Photo Scheme.Full-time and very profitable. Maleor Female. Send resume to MaroonBox PH.Interesting Interviewing on Or NearCampus. Call Now. X2974.Woman interested in living in air-conditioned ranch house in ex¬change for looking after house &13yr. old evenings. 9500 S. 779-4818A.M.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! B&V ENTER¬PRISES, Dept. 4-U, PO Box 1056,Yucaipa, Calif. 92399.Nursing Mother Seeks Same ForBabysitting Exchange. 978-0547.PEOPLE FOR SALEThird YearUndergraduate in Political ScienceNeeds Summer Employment. WouldLike to Do Either Research orClerical Work, Full Time. PleaseCall Wendy at 955-0348, Leave Mes¬sage.Need your manuscript typed profes¬sionally? fast? Call E. Lauritis 684-2743 days. PL2-3800 eves. 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.PERSONALSHave a SWEETLIFE.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.Never underestimate the power ofthe people — see SWEETLIFE.Gilbert (Alias Tony) Advertises inthe Maroon. UCSWEETLIFE, A Steel At Any Priced$2.00 & $2.50 seats w/student andgroup discounts.Did you hear the one about thedirector of student activities whois leaving his job to go back tohigh school and get his diploma?SWEETLIFE — Blackfriars.Hey Dougie baby! How come yournose is brown? Maybe you betternot lean over so far to ingratiateyourself with everyone's favoritedirector of SA. It's bad for theblood pressure.Wow, another one: Sweetlife. Hey all you people, groups andothers who are being generallyscrewed out of your room assign¬ments by that great big monsterthat arises in the spring! Theycan't do it to you! If you reserveda room, its yours. So if you'vebeen removed from Ida Noyes li¬brary or the east lounge to letsome cat read his poetry, go toSkip's office and chew his ear off.(An interesting thought: Skip Landta la Van Gough!)HEY! YOU! OUT THERE! HEY!YOU! Now that I've gotten yourattention, I would like to make arap extoiing the virtues of Revital¬ization. Can any one of you outthere think of any group that hasdone as much for you and for therest of this campus as Revitaliza¬tion? Just this year they havebrought us the Byrds, Donovan,Jacques Brel, Sha-na-na, Poco andJohn Sebastian. And maybe moreyet to come. And what do theyget in return besides grief andbankruptcy. Did you know thatthey lost $1200 on Poco and Seba¬stian and because of that theymay not bring anybody here forthe rest of the year. And what doesanyone do to help them out. Canyou believe that they only got $4700from CORSO while SG, whom noone has heard of this year, got$7500. What kind of priorities arethat? So everyone out there whofeels that Revitalization is gettinga raw deal, why not write a little,stinging note to either Skip Landt,director of Student Activities orCharles O'Connell, your friendlydean of students. Let's not let Re¬vitalization break up. We needthem!FUND RAISERFive percent. Complete freedom.Immediate and long-term. Leavemessage for Durphy. 955-0575.COUGH, COUGHYOU'RE DEAD.De Bell The Environmental HandbookEhrlich The Population BombMarx The Frail OceanReinow Moment in the SunFalter mayer Redoing AmericaBorgstrom The Hungry PlanetGraham Since Silent SpringNovick The Careless AtomEdberg On the Shred of a CloudGoldman Controlling PollutionThese and other titles concerning environment areavailable at theUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE1020 E. 57th StreetApril 21, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/ 1JThe Class of 1970 is on the go. You are not goingto sit still or settle back. Too many things to do,challenges to be met—personal as well asprofessional.As a college graduate your future earning power issubstantial. Despite this you may find it extremelydifficult to obtain credit immediately aftergraduation.This is where we come in. If you have accepted ajob offer, have a clear credit background, and areover 21 years of age, you may qualify for an American Express Card—the most useful financialinstrument in the world. So useful that we call itThe New Money.Use it to pay for airlines, restaurants, hotels,motels, rent-a-cars, clothing, luggage, flowers,jewelry and specialty items at shops and stores—and for emergency check cashing—worldwide. It’sthe only card you will need. Get it now, green ascash and a lot more convenient, The New Moneysays go!AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD APPLICATIONP.O.Box4l84 Grand Central StationPlease print or type information New York, New York I00I7 For office use onlyBO NOT INCLOSI $15.00 ANNUALFU. WE WILL BILL YOU LATER.PERSONAL ACCOUNT - .-.MAIL BILL TO OFFICE □PERSONAL ACCOUNT- ,MAIL BILL TO HOME UCOMPANY ACCOUNT -MAIL BILL TO OFFICE UNOTE: If earnings shown are lessthan $7500, indicate source andamount of any other income, e.g.commissions, expense account,dividends, investment income.(Fill in below)’ HAD □ A PER¬SONAL □ OR A COMPANY □ACCOUNT WITH AMERICAN EX¬PRESS?IF YOU KNOW THE ACCOUNTNUMBER WRITE IT HERE PRINT NAME (First) (Middle) (Ust) AGE SPOUSE (First Name)HOME ADDRESS (Street) (City) (State or Country) (Zip Code)TELEPHONE YEARS ATPRESENTAODRESS OWN HOME □ RENTD NUMBER OFDEPENDENTS SOCIAL SECURITY NO.PREVIOUS HOME ADDRESS (Street) (City) (State or Country) HOW LONGFIRM NAME OR EMPLOYER NATURE OF BUSINESSADDRESS (Street) (City) (State or Country) (Zip Code)POSITION | ANNUAL EARNINGS YEARS WITH FIRM TELEPHONEADDRESS (Street & City) IF BILLING IS TO GO TO A BUSINESS AODRESS OTHER THAN MAIN OFFICE ADDRESS PLEASE SPECIFY (State or Country) (Zip Code)PREVIOUS EMPLOYER (If employed by above less than 3 years) OR COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY IF RECENT GRADUATE YEARS WITH FIRMOR YEAR GRAOUATEDADORESS (Street) (City) (State or Country) (Zip Code)BANK (When for Company Account show Company Banks)-ADORESS ACCT. NUMBERTYPE ACCOUNTBANK (When for Company Account show Company Banks)ADDRESS ACCT. NUMBERTYPE ACCOUNTOTHER CHARGE ACCOUNTS (Include other national credit cards)The undersigned agree(s) that if this application is accepted and a Card issued, the individual and the company he represents, if this isa company account, will be bound by the terms and conditions accompanying the Card and any renewal or replacement card, unless hereturns the Card immediately. The individual applicant and the company, if this is a company account, will be liable for all chargesincurred with the Card and all supplementary Cards issued on the account. Each supplementary applicant will be liable for all chargesincurred with the supplementary Card, jointly and severally with the holder of the basic Card.PLEASE SEND ME SUPPLEMENTARY CARDS FOR IMMEDIATE MEMBERS OF MY FAMILY AS FOLLOWS:(First) (Middle) (Last) PRINT NAMES):(First) (Middle) (Lest)(SIGNATURE of supplementary applicant) (RELATIONSHIP) (SIGNATURE of supplementary applicant) (RELATIONSHIP)DO NOT ENCLOSE $10.00 ANNUAL SUPPLEMENTARY CARO FEE. WE WILL BILL YOU LATER.In addition pliase send me epplicatlons tor supplementary cards for other immediate members of my family □ for other members of my firm □NOTE: For Company Ac¬counts, signatures of bothapplicant and authorizingofficer are required X SIGNATURE OF INDIVIDUAL APPLICANT (ink only).X COMPANY ACCOUNT AUTHORIZATION (Ink only)(Must be signed if company account) (Signature of Authorizing Officer) (Title)899 9550 42 9 Teachers andProfessors want toTRAVELOur company needs alocal campus tour or¬ganizer to act as apart time travel agent.Free travel in the sum¬mer and on schoolholidays plus sub¬stantial additional in¬come is available. CallMr. John Hancock at327-5431 Tuesday,April 21 - 11 AM - 8PM. Start your travelcareer now, no ex¬perience necessary.TEACHERSonlyPLEASE!!!(Students may write to In¬tertour, 629 Cornelia Av¬enue, § 1N, Chicago.)TAKCAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out13 18 East[63r^ MU4-MiCLASSICAL GUITARCONCERTwithJAN ARNOLDAAR. DEAN HAY, composer, willdiscuss "LIFE AS A MIXED MEDIAEXPERIENCE"WINE A CHEESESOCIALIZINGEVERYONE IS INVITEDNO ADMISSION CHARGEFRIDAY, APRIL 24-7:30 PMETHICAL HUMANIST SOCIETY410 S. MICHIGAN AVE.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644Yon don't needInsuranceprotectionfor your car(if von 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 vourauto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971sentryJtINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization12/The Chicago Maroon/April 21, 1970