MAROONVolume 78, Number 59 The University of Chicago Friday, May 15, 1970Council Acts On Disciplinary ReportFLASHBACK I: The Wegener committee was set up, in part, to deal with the problems encountered during the Shiremancommittee hearings last year. Here, present spokesman of the committee of the council, Norman Nachtrieb, talks with stu¬dents outside the Stagg Field Labs where the Shireman committee met./Report OnWomen Made PublicBy Judy AlsofromThe long-awaited Neugarten Committeereport on the role of women in the Univer¬sity community, released on campus to¬day, says “it seems likely that traditional,more than innovative, views concerningwomen’s roles are still coloring dis¬cretionary judgments” within the Univer¬sity.The 130-page report investigates andgives recommendations on the status andopportunities open to academic women onthis campus, “giving special attention tothe question of equity regarding salaries,promotions, and tenure for women facul¬ty.”The committee appointed a sub-com¬mittee of three faculty and six students whowere concerned with the problems of wom¬en students, specifically.The report says that though there is634 ExpectedIn Class of 74By Nancy ChismanNext year’s freshman class is presentlyover-subscribed, said director of admis¬sions Anthony Pallett in an interviewWednesday. Fqr the first time in the memo¬ries of admissions officers, more studentshave accepted the University’s offer of ad¬mission than expected.Pallett pointed out that in order to get afreshman class of about 570, 1102 applyingfreshmen were accepted. Sixty places wereallowed for transfer students, making theproposed number of entering students 630.By Wednesday, 634 prospective freshmenhad accepted.As a consequence, the admissions officewill not put unaccepted applicants on awaiting list. The list is a usual procedure tofill spaces left by withdrawals during thesummer.Pallett hopes that withdrawals willdwindle the incoming class sufficiently. Hewill meet with the Council of the facultySenate to further discuss the issue.Among the class of ’74 are 79 black stu¬dents, a 57 percent return on acceptances.Pallett wasn’t sure if the higher returnContinued on Pago Four “little concrete evidence of the differentialtreatment of men and women,” women stilldo not receive their full share of rewardsand encouragement on this campus. Also,“the fact of feminity often enters into dis¬cretionary judgments concerning studentswho are women and faculty who are wom¬en.”The committee’s major recommendationis that a committee on women’s affairs beestablished to perform such functions asproviding more opportunities for informa¬tion and contact between student womenand faculty women; stimulating both facul¬ty and students to carry out research onwomen; establishing a visiting lectureseries that will bring notable women tocampus; suggesting innovative programsthat will tap presently underused sources oftalent, “such as highly educated women,some of them faculty wives, whose familyresponsibilities preclude a regular workschedule but who would welcome a re¬search or other scholarly involvement.”This committee is recommended to in¬clude both men and women faculty andmen and women students. Five members ofthe Neugarten committee recommendedthat the new committee be equipped withstaff, “notably with an influential, seniorand imaginative executive.” The com¬mittee would report to the University at theend of two years on the status of women.The committee also recommended thatdepartment chairmen and deans utilizetheir flexibility “to keep the women ...they want to keep” and that they see that“no irrelevant obstacles that might contrib¬ute to attrition such as aid differentials arebeing put in the path of women.” The re¬port also asks departments to try to “placewomen graduates as advantageously asmen.”One of the findings in the report concernsthe fact that as of spring quarter 1969 wom¬en constitute 7.3 percent of the regularteaching faculty of the University which isconsiderably below the average for all uni¬versities, but compares favorably with“other universities, like the University ofChicago, (who) view themselves as‘elites’.”However, it was also found that becauseof the absence of such traditionally “wom¬en’s fields as home economics or nursingeducation,” and the autonomy which existsin individual departments, divisions andi a 1 . i > * • ' ' schools, this percentage takes on less sig-nifcance.The committee notes the “absence of fac¬ulty women in certain areas of the Univer¬sity where the potential pools contain sub¬stantial proportions of women.” They sug¬gest that departments and schools reviewtheir recruitment procedures to determine“whether, in fact, they are exploring thetotal pool of excellence, especially with re¬gard to women.”“The data do not indicate ... that overallthe salaries received by faculty women dif¬fer substantially from those received bymen who are considered to be their equal interms of amount and kind of talent and de¬dication of their talent to University em¬ployment” the report states. “For the mostpart, faculty women reported satisfaction,Continued on Page Seven By Mitch BobkinThe Council of the faculty Senate passedfour resolutions at its bi-weekly closedmeeting Tuesday including enactment onthe report of the subcommittee on dis¬ciplinary procedures (the Wegener com¬mittee). The Council also recommendedthat the academic calendar be rearrangedfor Autumn quarter to recess for ten day’sprior to the November elections.Other recommendations are that the re¬port of the subcommittee on Universitywomen be made available to the Universitycommunity, and that faculties devise meth¬ods to allow students to work on politicalactivity for the rest of the quarter withoutimpeding their academic schedules.In approving large segments of the Wege¬ner committee report, the Council alsomade a few changes in the committee’srecommendations that at least one memberof the committee called “disappointing.”Tim Lovain, ’70, expressed displeasure atambiguity in the Council’s decisions. Hesaid that the Council had “butchered thereport” by giving the faculty chairman avote in committee decisions, by cutting outthe necessity for having a lawyer on everycommittee, by not stating what constitutesa quorum and by eliminating provisions forthose who change their minds aboutserving on committees.Some of these differences were not writ¬ten changes but omissions from the reportbeing circulated by the council.Norman Nachtrieb, spokesman for theCouncil, said “Everything added and ev¬erything eliminated was consciously doneto make it a better document.”Charles Wegener, chairman of the sub¬committee and a member of the Councilwho attended every Council deliberationconcerning his committee report, said,though, that the changes might be “inad¬vertent omissions.” Wegener disagreedwith Lovain and said that “in some ways,the Council report is an improvement overthe original.”By a vote of 28 to 8, the council voted toask President Levi to reconstruct the au¬tumn quarter schedule so that class would_ begin on September 28 and a ten day recesswould be taken from October 24 to Novem-Continued on Page NineFLASHBACK II: The Neugarten committee was set up, in part, because of the agita¬tion of WRAP members during last year's sit-in Here, Judy Clark, speaks aboutwomen during a pre-sit-in rally.M * f »i ; I I, f * * a Vi lie V n i:. * <»' • *).(111 . 4 4 t r, r iAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYaProfs LobbyingA national lobby of professors for theMcGovern amendment cutting off funds tosupport American troops in Cambodia afterJuly 1 is now being organized.Under the direction of the academic andProfessional Committee for a ResponsibleCongress, the group will go to Washingtonfor discussions about the bills with mem¬bers of Congress. The committee has itsheadquarters at Columbia University inNew York and is setting up appointments inconjunction with Senator George McGovern(D-SD), sponsor of the amendment.A spokesman for the group urged facultyvolunteers to volunteer to go to Washingtonearly next week, as debate on the bills willbe taking place within die next few weeks.People interested should contact HermanSinaiko, ext 3850 or Soc Sci 508, or JanetKravetz at ext 4121 or Cobb 324.New ConvocationA group of graduating seniors metWednesday in Reynolds Club to discussreplacing the standard commencement ex¬ercise with one that will be “meaningful”to participants and spectators. John Ryan,70, presided.Proposals for the ceremony included hav¬ing the class choose students or outside fig¬ures to speak on current political issues.It was also suggested that the seniorbreakfast be cancelled and funds donatedto such organization as the Movement for a New Congress or the Black Panthers’Breakfast for Children Program. It wasalso suggested that money usually spent onrental of caps and gowns be used for thesame purpose.The group appointed a committee todraw up a final program. Tuesday at 1 pmin Reynolds Club all June graduates areinvited to vote on the committee report.Upon approval, the report will be presentedto Robert Ashenhurst, University marshalin charge of the exercise. At a later datethe entire class will meet with Ashenhurst."We Want It Back!"After the immense success of their firstGive-Us-Back-Our-Night campaign yearsago, students for violent non-action (SVNA)are ready to again move on the night.“The night belongs to the people. It hasbeen corrupted and despoiled by the samenefarious villains who have corrupted anddespoiled our society, paranoia and ava¬rice. It is time that the people rise up toclaim what is theirs,” cried Frank Mal-branche in his annual Mother’s Day ad¬dress.The night, according to Malbranche, hasbeen lost to muggers and fear. The right tonight is unalienable; a proper subset of thepursuit of happiness.SVNA proposes to re-claim the night bycongregating large groups of people insome of the paranoically labeled dangerousareas in Hyde Park, the security and warmth of the group protecting and com¬forting the fearful.Spring GradesStudents who have questions and prob¬lems relating to the special grading proce¬dures for the spring quarter, are urged tocontact the following members of the socialsciences collegiate division student council:Lewis Margolis, 324-1077; Allan Sharlin,493-4350; and Mrs Carasso, M13-0800 x2727.Mikva on CampusAbner Mikva, Democratic congressmanfrom the 24th district, and his assistant,Leon Davis, will meet with law and otherinterested students Saturday from 1 to 2:30pm at the law school.The two will discuss the current politicalsituation and actions, such as voter regis¬tration and community organizing, that stu¬dents can undertake working through Mik-va’s and others’ offices.Smith & PercyA strike committee, made up of membersof the Hyde Park community have been at¬tempting to arrange an open meeting todiscuss the war and the strike with IllinoisSenators Ralph Smith and Charles Percy.Members of the committee met with rep¬resentatives of Smith and Percy at the Fed¬eral Building Wednesday.The strike committee urges concernedHyde Park citizens to meet at Smith’s cam¬ paign headquarters, 333 N. Michigan, at loam today to ask him to come.Percy will be contacted again by tele¬phone.If arranged, the meeting, open to the pub¬lic, will probably be held in St. ThomasApostle Church, 5274 S. Kimbark.Baumy's?The Stineway Rexall Drug building, onthe corner of 57 St and Kenwood Avenuehas been leased for 15 years to “Barn-aby’s,” a new restaurant chain.”The chain will convert the drug store intoa restaurant featuring booths and countersaround an open kitchen. Baumy’s, thename of the restaurant will be open sevendays a week for breakfast, lunch, dinnerand late snacks, and is scheduled to openby Sept. 1.Armed FarcesBuses will leave Ida Noyes tomorrow,Armed Forces Day, at 10 am for the GreatLakes naval training base where anti-warprotest is being massed. Buses from down¬town and Northwestern are also being sent.Demonstrators will attend a noon rallyand hand out leaflets to sailors on the base.Action is also planned for during the base’sparade. The protest is being organized bysailors at the base.Strike Central is sponsoring the busesfrom the University. Cost is $1 and a $1deposit.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.)The New Bookby Paul R. Ehrlichand Anne H. EhrlichPopulationResourcesEnvironment The author(s) of the bestsellingpaperback The Population Bombpresent the first comprehensive,detailed analysis of the worldwidepopulation-ecology crisis. Anindispensable sourcebook for allconcerned citizens; a timely andrelevant textbook for courses inenvironmental science."I have found this authoritativeand well-documented discussionof today's great problems not onlyvaluable but also very interesting."-Linus Pauling"A superb book.” -Preston CloudCloth, illustrated, $8.95POPULATION, EVOLUTION, AND BIRTH CONTROLA Collage of Controversial Ideas. Assembled by Garrett Hardin"The only book ... that gives all sides of the controversy their 'day incourt,' in their own words... a mine of information." —Defenders ofWildlife News. Cloth $6.00, paper $2.95RESOURCES AND MAN A Study and RecommendationsNational Academy of Sciences-National Research CouncilBy Preston Cloud et al. "The reading and study of this document is anabsolute necessity for every intelligent person in this country and else¬where." —James H. Zumberge. Cloth $5.95, paper $2.95From your bookstore,or from W. H. FREEMAN AND COMPANY660 Market Street, San Francisco, Ca. 94104 Businessmen! Readers!There aren't many chances left to reach 10,000University of Chicago students.REMAINING DATES:May 19, May 22May 26, May 28We will NOT publish June 2; however, we willpublish our usual 10th week special issue, deal¬ing in depth with some major theme, on June 5.June 5 will be your LAST CHANCE.DON'TBEBUGGEDby CAR REPAIRS!Switch to...BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO REPAIRS, INC.4401 S. 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Help us buildthe park.niiimmiimiiiiiiiiiiflTHEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines/09< Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks & Hardcovers1S40E. 55th St.-Ml 3-7511’Alt*A. BILLION DOLLAR ROBBERYCASH Alt U S SAVINGS BONDS AND TFU YOURPARENTS TO $44 BHl ION WORTH HftP FTNANCF WAR ACTION GROUP FORMING NOWPHONF 95$ 95052/The Chicago Maroon/May 15, 1970CAP Sections MeetTo Discuss ActionsA NEW LOOK: General Logan with banners during Saturday's march. Despite the termination of the studentstrike of classes in all but one of the profes¬sional schools, several of the schools arecontinuing political activity protestingAmerican involvement in Southeast Asia.In a release issued earlier this week, stu¬dents in the school of Social Service Admin¬istration (SSA) stated that they will contin¬ue their strike of “regularly scheduledclasses for the remainder of this quarterwith classes available for those studentswishing to continue them.” Although “onstrike from business as usual,” students in¬sist that “the school will stay open as aninstitution of learning and will not submitto pressures to close.” tStudents in SSA have opened the socialwork school as an action-coordination cen¬ter with students, faculty, and staff in¬volved in organized action and discussionaround issues “such as racism, repression,and war.” In addition, people “are engagedon a continuing basis in activities such aslobbying for specific peace legislation, or¬ganizing community action projects, andinvolving local labor unions in relative ac¬tion.”Although students in the law school votedto d scontinue their strike of classes lastMonday, canvassing of neighborhoods hasbeen carried on throughout the week. Ac¬Poor Attendance Hinders VotingA mass meeting Tuesday night to decideon ways to implement the strike decidednot to vote on any proposals because of re¬duced attendance. Approximately 250 at¬tended, about one-fifth of previous meet¬ings’ attendance. The body, feeling itselfunable to make decisions for the strikingcommunity, limited the meeting to dis¬cussion of proposals submitted.Speakers included some who wish tofocus actions on the University and somemore interested in electoral politics or thecoming demonstrations Saturday and Me¬morial Day.Many of the speakers who sought actionagainst the University viewed racism asthe target, in connection with the secondnational demand to end political repressionand as closely connected with the war.Kathy Lindsley of SDS and PL argued foractions in support of a child care centerand wage raises for University workers. Aproposal submitted by International Social¬ists (IS) called for open admissions to allChicago universities and free child andhealth care at the University.Speaking in support of the IS proposalexpelled student Chris Hobson denouncedelectoral politics because “the liberal politi¬cians can’t afford to attack the corpo¬rations.” He called for leafletting and sup¬port of workers, who have the power to stopthe war. A student from Kenwood High called forsupport of high school students’ “liber¬ation” of Ida Noyes Hall, an attempt toopen its facilities to the community by di¬rect action.Other speakers supported the campaignto collect petition signatures for theMcGovern amendment to end the warpending in the Senate.Many speakers called for a demonstra¬ tion at the University of sorrow or angerabout the six people killed in Augusta.Georgia earlier this week.A representative of Gay Liberation drewsupport for plans to open Ida Noyes Satur¬day night to non-University people for aGay Lib sponsored dance.The next mass meeting will be held overthe weekend at a time to be set by thestrike steering committee.Discretion Gives ConcernOver P Grading SystemConfusion still surrounds the new pass-nocredit grading system which was imple¬mented for this quarter in response to lastweek’s strike.In many cases, arrangements have notyet been made between the individual pro¬fessor and student. By late Thursday how¬ever, many students seemed concernedover possible drawbacks of the system.One major problem which may arise isthat the meaning of “satisfactory work” isleft to the discretion of the instructor. Someprofessors are granting “P’s” for workStudent Canvassers WorkingTo Develop Support Of PeaceDuring the last week, some 300 studentshere have been canvassing 16 Chicagoneighborhoods and suburbs to build supportfor peace legislation.Organized overnight in the early days ofthe strike, the canvassers have collectedover 20,000 signatures on petitions callingfor legislators to vote against arms appro¬priations for the war.The canvassers, called the “Peace Legis¬lation and Peace Candidates 70,” have tak¬en over the SG offices in Ida Noyes forheadquarters. Groups of up to five studentsdrive to their assigned area every day fromcampus, and return with signed petitions.The most fruitful areas for signatureswere Hyde Park and South Shore.“The canvassing was good almost every¬where except a few of the suburbs. A lot ofthe response from blue collar workers wasbetter than you would have thought,” said Bob Blacksberg, an organizer.Sunday, the canvassing will center onparks and churches.“We’re going to try to leaflet in front ofmuseums and churches,” said Blacksberg.“The only thing we have to be careful of isthe no littering ordinance.”Blacksberg expressed the opinion thatsince the strike has lost steam this week,the canvassing has depended on a few dedi¬cated people.“We’re hoping for a renaissance thisweekend,” said Blacksberg.Last night the petitions were presented toSenator Charles Percy (R-Ill.) at the Chi¬cago Club downtown. Several representa¬tives of Peace 70 met Percy at the clubwhere he had a speaking engagement.Copies will be sent to Senator Ralph Smith(R-Ill) laifci. which has been completed to this point,while other professors are requiring stu¬dents to complete all work through the endof the quarter before they can receive a4<p HArnold Ravin, master of the biology colle¬giate division foresees a possible problemarising from this lack of homogeneityamong individual professors and the hardfeelings of students which may stem fromit. “Students might get annoyed becauseother students may get different options.That is unavoidable however, in a crazysituation like this.”Apparently, problems may arise in thephysical science collegiate division wherechemistry majors have been told they peeda better grade in order to receive a B Sdegree. (Students who wish to receive a“pass” will be eligible for a B A degree.)Deans who were contacted by the Maroonhold ambivalent opinions toward the effectof the grad’ng system on students admis¬sion to graduate school. Concerning medschool applicants, Ravin believes that “P”grades issued in the spring of 1970 will notaffect a med school applicant’s acceptance.Studart Tave, master of the humanities col¬legiate division, however, anticipates thatthe system may create a problem for gradschool applicants, since the University ofMichigan and possibly other schools limit“P” grades to a ten percent quota.Most graduate divisions and professionalschools have not yet stated whether or nottheir individual professors will take advan¬tage of the new system. In the law school,the faculty has recommended that studentstake incompletes until next fall; many lawstudents, however, prefer a P-N gradingsystem for this quarter. cording to Dan Casper, an organizer of theaction, the canvassing has centered in districts of “hawkish Congressional representatives” in the Chicago area.The law school’s canvassing effort, whichhas been co-ordinated with that of studengovernment (SG) and other Chicago areaschools, has reportedly met with “surprising success.” Last week 6000 signature*were gathered on a petition in support othe McGovem-Hatfield Amendment to limiiexpenditures on the Vietnam War.In Washington late last week four members of the law school met with variou:Senators and Congressmen including Abra¬ham Ribicoff (Conn.), Charles Percy, ancAbner Mikva.Responding to the business school’s deci¬sion to observe a “Solemn moratorium’of classes last Friday and that school’*formal resolution apposing the invasion O;Cambodia, however, several business students delivered a petition signed by ffiof their number vigorously protestingthese actions to Dean Sidney Davidson. David Sheldon, an organizer of th<petition drive, characterized it as “essentially a protest against using the Universityfor political purposes and agamst violatingthe rights of individual conscience in matters which are not a proper subject for collective decision making in a student body.”In the College, the Public Affairs Department has decided to cancel all classes forthe remainder of the quarter to “free mem¬bers of the University community for theconcentrated effort needed to correct thedestructive elements of American society.”The decision was made at a meeting of fac¬ulty, students, and staff at a Wednesdayafternoon meeting in Cobb Hall.The Continuing Action Project (CAP) i*sponsoring nine workshops connected withpolitical action against the war domesticrepression.An incomplete listing of workshops for to¬day follows. Call Kathy Wildman or WayneHoffman at extension 2995 for further infor¬mation.• 10 am: The Hyde Park strike committeewill talk to Senator Ralph Smith (R-Ill) a333N Michigan.• 1 pm: Meeting of those interested inworking for the Movement for a New Congress with representatives from other Il¬linois campuses. Ida Noyes west lounge.• 2pm: Briefing of interviewers for faculty questionnaires on war research. Kelly413.• 2:30 - 7:30 pm. Training materials available for the draft resistance workshop.Quaker House.• 3:30 pm: Meeting to prepare for the Sat¬urday 4 pm meeting with members of LaLocal 65 of the steelworkers union. RobieHouse.• 6 pm: Draft counseling workshop. Quaker House.A group of students will leave Saturdajfor Washington to lobby for anti-war legis¬lation now being considered in Congress.ACTION PROJECT: Richard Levins leadsdiscussion.May 15, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3* ■ t'i ft i • t • « i t i mY» : ; « 11«i»« 11 i * - * - * -Faculty Members Work On Pollution Boardly Gordie KatzFour University faculty members wereippointed late last month to positions on awelve-man environmental advisory com-nittee set up by Commonwealth Edison totelp that company with its pollution prob-jms.President emeritus George Beadle; Lewifacobson, dean of the division of biologicaliciences and the Pritzker school of medi¬cine; professor of physics Albert Crewe,ind professor of chemistry Warren Johnsonvere among those named to the council by J Harris Ward, ComEd Chairman.At the time of announcement, Ward didnot say what the specific tasks of the coun¬cil would be other than to “study and eval¬uate company operations associated withthe use of land, air and water and to rec¬ommend measures to minimize environ¬mental effects.”The council will be independent ofComEd and members will serve withoutpay.Beadle, William E. Wrather Professor ofBiology, feels that “the committee is goingRegistrants Endure Long LinesAnd Fill-1 n-The-Blanks Formsly Carl SunshineStudents yet to register will find a newilack-in-the-numbers form awaiting them,’he forms can be fed straight into a com-mter, making faster and more accuratelandling possible, according to Albert Mlayes, registrar.The traditional long wait to register inhe first place still prevails, however. Ad-riser’s appointments started Monday, butjecause the University was closed by presi-lent Levi Friday, section cards were notivailable Monday as planned. Registration>egan Wednesday instead when hundreds>f students had already seen their advisers.Some arrived as early as 4:30 am to getn line for sections they wanted. By 9 am100 were in a line that twisted around thed building lobby. After an hour of snail’s>ace progress, someone appeared to hand)ut numbers to those in line, telling them to:ome back in a few hours. Upon reaching the registrar’s table, stu¬dents receive section cards and a form sim¬ilar to those used in tests where studentsmust pencil in boxes corresponding to thenumbers of their courses for all three quar¬ters. This takes about five minutes.These forms are read into a special ma¬chine just as they are. Previously registra¬tion information had to be punched oncards from the forms students filled out,introducing extra delays. The new formsare an experiment according to Hayes, andtheir permanent use will be considered af¬ter this year’s experience.One hundred eighty-four students wereregistered Wednesday. Hayes expects thatafter the first few days when the overflowof students who had already seen their ad¬visers is processed, long waits will end andstudents may go straight from their ad¬visers to the registrar.SEE THE NEW HONDA 350 AT AIRPORT HONDAPhone:| -767- 2070 Phone:767-2070AIRPORT CYCLE SALES4520 W. 63rd ST.CHICAGOPrices from $ 169.00 - Open Daily to 9 P.M. Sat to 4 P.M. CARPET CITY !.6740 STONY ISLAND o324-7998 < ►I Has what you need from a $10Yused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom *▼corpet. Specializing in Remnants * *Mill returns at a fraction of the 4^original cost. (JDecoration Colors and Qualities. (▼ Additional 10% Discount with this *t*d ,t FREE DELIVERYYearBox is coming!YearBox arrives two weeks from today-May 26. The strike h^s distracted usa little, but now everything is in production. We are making 2000 yearBoxes,but at the rate we are going now, they will all be sold by May 26. Reserve yourBox today, so you don’t miss: the fantastic University of Chicago game, the32-page Hyde Park Cook Book, the 16-page section about the year and thestrike, The Red Herring Statement (the authorized manifesto of S.V.N.A., ^the beautiful photography portfolio, Little Lester’s funky version of MackThe Knifer the senior stamps, the bust of Mr. Levi, and all the rest. Send $5to yearBox, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Tell your frinds!Name.Address .City, State, Zip.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE:HEADING: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75c perline, 60‘ per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^.I [ TTT !4-4 4"■■+4444—h-+44J L 4- -H-44-j—b+4 4 14J 1 L((the Chicago.Msroop/fyUy l5, 1970 to be pretty objective about everything,”As a geneticist, he foresees his expertisewill be in dealing with problems of low-level radiation.“I don’t think it’s a committee that’s go¬ing to be pushed around by anybody,” hesaid. “After all, it’s to their advantage totake the benefit of independent advice. Ithink that is what the company had inmind.”Crewe, a member of the Enrico FermiInstitute for Nuclear Studies, described thecouncil’s task as “to find something they(ComEd) should be doing that they’re not.”Regarding the committee, he added, “Allare independent operators who owe no alle¬giance to Commonwealth Edison.”Jacobson, an expert on medical radi¬ation, is given credit for saving the lives ofseveral Yugoslavian researchists who wereexposed to excessive amounts of radiation.Johnson, vice-president emeritus of theuniversity, is a former member of a scien¬tific advisory committee to the AtomicEnergy Commission. Among the other twelve members of thecouncil are Dr. Eric Oldberg, head of thedepartment of neurology and neurologicalsurgery at the University of Illinois; WalterOwen, dean of the technological institute atNorthwestern University; and Percy Ju¬lian, director of the Julian Research In¬stitute and president of Julian Associates.The company will not be bound to followsuggestions by the council, but, accordingto Ward, “We will welcome the council’srecommendations and do our very best tocarry them out.”Com Ed appointed the committee amidgrowing pressure from citizens all overChicago to stop polluting the air. ManyUniversity ecology and environment groupshave made Com Ed the target of their pro-tests.Some of these groups demonstrated atCom EM’s annual stockholders meeting lastmonth. Soon after this demonstration, thenew committee was announced.Financial Aid Awards IncreaseIn Next Year's Freshman ClassContinued from Page Onecould be attributed to the orientation week¬end sponsored by black University studentsearlier this year since a majority of thosewho attended the orientation did not accept.He added this could be due to the factthat students with early credentials tend tobe better students and the most sought af¬ter. Questionnaires are being sent to ac¬cepting black students who did attend theorientation to determine its influence.Ten foreign students, more than lastyear, and 49 small school talent search ap¬ plicants will also be in the class. A geogra¬phical breakdown was not yet available forany incoming students. Entering men againoutnumber women, 377 to 257.The average financial award for in¬coming freshmen will be up from last yeardue to the number of entering studentsfrom low income families and the budgetincrease from tuition raises, Pallett said.Financial aid meetings to determine aidto returning students are still in progress.The first batch of letters and certificatesshould be sent out by the end of next week.IIIIIII Studentair faresto Europestart at$120startingnowIcelandic has the greatesttravel bargain ever for stu¬dents ... our brand new$120* one-way fare toLuxembourg in the heart ofEurope. If you're travellingto or from your studies at afully accredited college oruniversity, and are 31 yearsold or under, you qualify forthis outstanding rate. It'san individual fare, not acharter or group; you flywhenever you want, andcan stay up to a year. Inter¬ested? Qualified? Call yourtravel agent or write forStudent Fare Folder CN.Icelandic Airlines, 630 FifthAve. (Rockefeller Center)New York, N.Y. 10020.•Slightly higher In peakseason.WHAHBWah^T-9 ms siswinSTILLLOWEST Cohn A Stwm(Hoiun Sc CampusShopTO EUROPEof any scheduled airline. BOOT BEATBoots are booming! Here’s a bold and brash designby Dexter. Comes on strong anyway you wear it.Available in burnished brown at $23IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday •veningsLiberals and Radicals Debate at ASIBy Paul BernsteinThe controversy surrounding the re¬search of the Adlai Stevenson Institute con¬tinues, more than a week after the firstsmashing of windows and doors at RobieHouse.Radical groups on campus maintain thatthe Institute should be thrown out of RobieHouse, because its research helps fur¬ther American imperialism abroad andrepression at home. The fellows of the In¬stitute insist that it is one of the freest re¬search institutes in the country, and that itis thoroughly committed to change.In an effort to clear up the controversy,the Institute has released the names of itscurrent resident fellows and descriptions oftheir research projects.Speaking of an SDS position paper en¬titled “Pahlavi — Friend or Foe?” whichattacked the Institute, the release statesthat ‘‘much of the information in it waspatently false. Some was untrue in thesense of having been pulled out of contextand much that was known to the authors ofthe document was omitted.”SDS paper — mirror or distortion?Several fellows in the institute discussedsome of the distortions in the SDS paper.According to Joel Henning, a resident fel¬low, the paper misrepresented the tone ofsome of the conferences sponsored by ASI.SDS referred to one such conference asseeking “to understand political violenceand the means of putting it down.” As proofof this, SDS quoted a working paper byHenry Bienan which expressed an interestin theories permitting governmental elitesto stay in power.Henning pointed out that the Bienan pa¬per was only one of many to have come outof the conference, and that another was abook by Richard Rubenstein, now an assis¬tant director at the Institute, entitled “Re¬bels in Eden — Mass Political Violence inthe United States.” Henning said the bookconcluded that the inability of the presentruling coalition to deal with change wouldbecome more apparent, and that the pro¬cesses of its disintegration would acceler¬ate and Richard Pfeffer. Rubenstein agreed,describing the conference as a “con¬frontation between New Frontier liberalsand members of the New Left. They justmention the liberals.” He added that “anyfairminded person reading the book wouldhave to conclude that the liberals’ view ofwhy we’re in Vietnam is demolished.”The Peru ProjectAnother Institute program that has beencriticized is the Peru Project, which ac¬cording to SDS “attempts to deal with acrisis that stems from Peru’s efforts to riditself of US corporate interests.” They citea paper that discusses a fishing dispute be¬tween the Peruvian government and theUnited States, and that suggests the possi¬bility of recognizing a 200-mile fishing limitaround the Peruvian coast but continuing tofish within it. Also, the Peru Project hasissued a paper which was taken from theInstitute’s files during last week’s raid. It isentitled “Diplomatic Protection of UnitedStates Businesses in Peru,” and describesmodels of diplomacy which can help Ameri¬can business interests there.According to Daniel Sharp, head of thePeru Project, the SDS paper misunder¬stands its purpose. He explained that theproject did not seek to recommend a specif¬ic line of policy, but was instead trying “tobring to bear the interests not normallyconsulted by the makers of foreign policy.”He added that these interests were quitebroad, and that participants in the confer¬ence included not only United States gov¬ernment officials and businessmen, butmembers of the academic community, ofthe Peruvian government, and of its NewLeft as well.Sharp claims that by studying the inter¬action among these diverse interests, theproject will attempt to demonstrate “thefeasibility of creating a broad constituencyfor a given issue of foreign policy.” Headded that because all the papers are de¬signed to present many possible policies forAmerican-Peruvian relations, “if you thinkwe’re trying to recommend only one line ofpolicy, you can find any views in the proj¬ect you want, including those that are radi¬cal and those that are not.”SDS claimed that one result of the confer¬ence had been a project on student unrestrun by William Kornhauser, professor atthe University of California at Berkeley,“who has figured out ways by which a clev¬er administration can co-opt studentstruggles.” According to Rubenstein, Kom-hauser has yet to submit a draft of hispaper, the contents of which is unknown.He described Kornhauser as “one of thebiggest radicals on the faculty at Berkeley,who has been denounced as a fellow-trav¬eler with the student movement.”The SDS paper also mentions an In¬stitute-sponsored conference on the Viet¬nam war and a book resulting from it en¬titled No More Vietnams? The War and theFuture of American Foreign Policy. Itclaims that participants in the conferencesuggest “that the US use less flagrantmeans to achieve its ends in internationalaffairs,” and do not discuss American cor¬porate profits in Vietnam.Henning said that SDS had ignored thecontributions of several radicals who at¬tended the conference, such as Eqbal Ah¬mad, John McDermott, Francis Fitzgerald Sharp went on to say that the contents ofthe “fishing” paper had been distorted by*SDS, and that “the foreign minister of Perutold me that it’s the best paper written inEnglish that he’s seen on the subject.” Healso said that the Peruvian governmentwas sending its own delegation to the finalconference; “They wouldn’t do that if theyfelt we were supporting policies againsttheir government,” he said.Despite the alleged misrepresentationscontained in the SDS paper, many mem¬bers of the SDS Pahlavi committee still feelthat the Institute takes a “liberal” ap¬proach in its research which hurts radicalmovements.Mike Dunlap, who has written a gadflyattacking the Institute for today’s Maroon,and member of the SDS committee, agreedthat the Peru Project and other Instituteprograms might seek a large body of opin¬ion, but claimed that “in the end, the onlystuff that can be implemented is what’s go¬ing to be used by the government; itdoesn’t suggest anything for the move¬ment.” Dunlap added that Rubenstein hadtold him privately that he disapproved ofDEMONSTRATION: Students gather outside ASI the day before the strike. ROBIE HOUSE: Adlai Stevenson Institute is situated in Frank Lloyd Wright'smasterpiece.the Peru Project for the reason. Ruben¬stein would not comment on the project tothis reporter, explaining that he did notknow enough about it.Charge of political firingDunlap also charged that a research as¬sistant was recently fired from the Institutefor leaking information to SDS. DirectorWilliam Polk denied this, and said that theassistant had been told last December thatshe would not be employed for a long peri¬od of time.Although the Institute includes among itsfellows Paul Booth, once a founder and na¬tional secretary of SDS, and Eqbal Ahmad,an expert on revolutionary movements,SDS believes that such radicals play a rolein the repression of the movement, whetherthey mean to or not. As one member put it,“their research is providing the policy¬makers in this country with valuable infor¬mation and perspectives on the move¬ment.” He added that these radicals shouldbe organizing instead of attending confer¬ences with government officials: “you don’ttry to speak for the people in the house oftheir oppressor.”Rubenstein, who considers himself a partof the radical movement, was upset atthese charges. “I entirely agree that thereare circumstances under which radicalsmight unwillingly give aid and comfort tothe enemy. But SDS has yet to show thatthat’s the case at the Stevenson Institute.”He also defended the conferences he hadattended: “it’s necessary that we be able totalk to all sorts of people. A pre-censorshipof who should be at our conferences wouldbe terrible.” He added that “we’re not justbeing pumped, we’re also pumping. Theradicals who went found it enormously use¬ful to them.”Rubenstein said some of the conferencesresembled “a shouting-match.” “From thepoint of view of a radical, what we havegiven them amounts to one thing: that theircause is doomed; that repressive actionand co-option won’t work.”Other fellows in the Institute emphasizedits commitment to change. Speaking of theattacks made by SDS, one fellow remarked“frankly I’m sort of amazed. We’re allcommitted to pro jets that monkey with thesystem; if there’s anything on the Univer¬sity campus these kids ought to feel goodabout, it’s us.”Some fellows attempted to explain whythe Institute had become a target. Accord¬ing to one, “the Institute is at fault for notmaking itself more well known on campus.Our programs take us to places likeBrandeis and Colorado, where they know uswell. But we don’t appear publicly here,and that’s been a mistake.”Why students are suspiciousSharp said he could understand why stu¬dents were suspicious of the Institute’s ac¬tivities. “They have the feeling that we getmoney from the outside, so it must bedirty,” he said. “And I can understand whythey would think that; they’ve been de¬ceived before.”Henning was more upset at the SDScharges: “I sat at a table with Dave Del¬linger and Bill Kunstler, and I saw them put away by the same kinds of evidence,the same lifting out of context and dis¬respect for any kind of balance. This is thesame bullshit that Hoffman and Foranpulled.”Henning described as the “ultimate iro¬ny” the analogy made by SDS between itseviction of furniture from the Institute, andthe eviction of the Contract Buyers’ League(CBL), because one of the fellows isThomas Boodell, lawyer for the CBL.Several SDS members said, however,that they did not consider such work to beconstructive. “The CBL leadership is work¬ing through the courts; they’re not advocat¬ing any sort of militant action,” said one.Other positions taken by SDS reflect thisbasic disagreement over what constitutesuseful work. Many fellows were upset, forinstance, that SDS cited members of theChicago Police department as attending aconference on violence held at Hanover,NH, without mentioning that they weremembers of the Afro-American Patrol¬men’s League. But one SDS member didnot feel this was significant: “a pig is a pigno matter what the color of his skin is, andhe’s a part of the system.”Several SDS members emphasized thatthey did not believe most of these workingat the Institute to be evil men, and thatthere were probably few instances of com¬plicity between fellows and the govern¬ment. But, as one explained, “we’re nottrying to find monsters with long fangs.We’re just saying that these people areheavily tied to an existing social, economicand power structure, and that any workthey do within that system means co-optingthe people’s struggle.”SDS also pointed out that most of theradical research done by the Institute “ex¬plains revolution, tells how to react to it.They never advocate it, and discuss waysof organizing people so that they can havepower.”“Beyond the cliches of the New Left”“We need research on revolution and re¬pression which goes beyond the cliches ofthe New Left. The question raised here isthe whole role of the intellectual in themovement. If they’re suggesting that weshould stop writing and thinking and go outon the picket line, then that’s very short¬sighted.” He added “they’ve been leaflet¬ting factories for years; they have no busi-nss telling us wha’s effective and whatisn’t.”The question of whether or not radicalsshould be working in research institutes be¬comes an important one, then. For Ruben¬stein, the dialogue and debate that takesplace between liberals and radicals there isinvaluable, while for SDS such radicals areonly playing the liberal’s game of workingto adjust the system, and not to overthrowit.The question of just how constructive theInstitute’s work is and of whether or notit is unconsciously helping a corrupt sys¬tem is an important one. At the same time,these issues are distinguishable from theoriginal attacks upon the orientation of itsresearch and the integrity of the peopleconducting it. The Institute seems to havenegated those charges.May 15, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5CEF PRESENTSIN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHTSaturday in Cobb Hall - 7 & 9:15andTITICUT FOLLIESThanks to theStudents and Facultyof the University ofChicago for theirAwareness andInterestTHEBOOKCENTERHARPER COURTOVERLAND EXPEDITIONTO INDIAleaves London late June.*485Details EncounterOverland23 Manor House Drive,London, NW6 WEATSHITWORLD★★★★★★★★★★★★★ SUNDAY IN MANDEL HALL7 & 9:15Hold upyour local gasstation./It you’ve got a bit of larceny inyour heart.you’ll love theRenault 10.You see. it gets 35 miles to thegallon.And as far as gas stations areconcerned, that’s highway robbery.Si' don’t be too harsh when thebovs at your local gas station acta little grumpy.In fact,you can stiffen the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suggest they get one torthemselves.Alter all, they might have a bitof larceny injtheir heartstoo.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILLTEL 326-2550 Ths University Theatre andFestival Of The Arts prassntwaitingM* ^ a *1forGodotMay K 15.16 &1? 8 30 pmLutheran School of Theologyat The University of Chicago1100 East SSth StreetTickets S200. on sals atThe Reynolds Club Desk,ot call Ml 3 0800 ext. 3582for reservationsPART 2 IS HERE MONDAY NIGHTMARX BROTHERSFILM ORGYMON., MAY 18 - 7 PM MANDEL HALL"BIG STORE""A DAY AT THE RACES""GO WEST"SEE 1,2, OR ALL 3 FUCKS FOR ONLY $1FUNDS WILL BE USED TO PRODUCE FREE OUTDOOR DANCE MAY30 IN HITCHCOCK QUAD WITH CORKY SIEGEL HAPPY YEARBAND6/The Chicago Maroon/May 15, 1970Strike Closes Hyde Park Shopping CenterThe new Hyde Park shopping centerparking lot at 55th and Lake Park was thescene of a business strike by the HydePark-Kenwood community Tuesday morn¬ing from 9 to 10 am.Organized by the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference, the strike suc¬ceeded in closing all shopping center stores for the hour, along with the A&P at57th and Harper Ave, several stores on 57St, and the 53 st YMCA. The crowd of about500 included workers from the Hyde ParkBank, Ray School, and Hyde Park and Ken¬wood high schools. Housewives with theirchildren, University students, a small num¬ber of businessmen and historian StaughtonLynd were also present. Speakers were Quentin Young, a doctorfrom Billings hospital, and fifth ward aider-man Leon Despres.Depres said the rally was significant “be¬cause it is an offshoot of one of the mostextraordinary protests our country hasever known. dehumanization of the Southeast Asian land 1war,” he continued, “the protest of Ameri¬can college students was unbelievable. No !organized preparation could conceivablyhave produced such a response.”“When Nixon announced that he wouldextend to Cambodia the brutalization andStudents Work For Peace Candidates Despres also noted Hyde Park’s uniquehospitality to the rally. “In many Americancommunities, indeed in most of them, theneighborhood attitude to such a meetingwould be inhospitable,” he said.New Congress (NC) members at the Uni¬versity are speerheading efforts throughoutthe midwest to organize students to electpeace candidates to Congress in 1970.Founded less than a week ago, the Uni¬versity chapter has already sent 30 stu¬dents to major campuses in Illinois, Iowa,Michigan, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Indiana, and Ohio to help start local chap¬ters.College FacultyWill you use the pass-no passgrading system this quarter? If so,how will you define “satisfactorywork” in the context of your originalrequirements?The Maroon is conducting a surveyof the use of the new grading systemamong college faculty and students.We would appreciate it if you wouldanswer the questions above specify¬ing your course, your original courserequirements and your present re¬quirements. Please include the per¬centage of your students who willtake P grade option. Also, pleaseexplain if you can’t use the gradingoption.We would like your replies in IdaNoyes Hall, Room 303, by Tuesdayif possible. Thank you! A meeting with representatives of majorIllinois schools will be held Friday at 1 pmin Ida Noyes to discuss progress to dateand future plans.On campus, workers are gathering ad¬dresses of students willing to work for elec¬tion of peace candidates and peace legisla¬tion. Over 1000 have been collected.Names gathered here and at othercampuses will be added to a computer fileat national headquarters in Princeton, NJso that students can be kept involved overthe summer at home and at school nextfall.Princeton will send each student informa¬ tion on peace candidacies nearest him andwhom to contact at his summer address.With an observer core in Washington andresearch at national and local levels, NCwill compile information on candidates’ po¬sitions and the feasability of electing peacecandidates in various races. It will then de¬cide where student effort is most likely tosucceed.Sign-up forms are being distributed indormitories and at tables in Social Science,Cobb, the ad building, Mandel corridor, thelaw school, and the school of social serviceadministration.Students interested in organizing shouldcontact the NC office in room 306 Ida NoyesHall, ext. 3576. The alderman also spoke of the signifi¬cance that the rally was constitutionallypermitted and protected, “despite policephotographs and name-taking.”Despres concluded, “To change the Nixonpolicy, protesters have to be willing to workat the political process and to give thatwork the staying power it requires for suc¬cess. If we do give it staying power, it canbuild a tempest which a Nixon — whetherin the White House or a state house or acity hall — cannot ride out.”Jane Kennedy, a member of the Beaver55 draft resistors from Indianapolis, alsospoke briefly.Though a morning rainstorm threatenedto disperse the crowd, a march to the qua¬drangles expressing solidarity with thestrike there followed the meeting.Neugarten Committee 1100 StudentsContinued from Page Onedescribed their work situations as grat¬ifying, and their positions as ones that pro¬vided freedom to pursue their teaching andresearch interests in ways that were per¬sonally rewarding,” it adds.Data for the report was gathered from aquestionnaire administered to approximate¬ly 1100 undergraduate and graduate stu¬dents in October 1969. The results indicatedthat in some ways student women differfrom student men in their experiences, but for the most part they have the same prob¬lems, satisfactions and frustrations.A fifteen page appendix of dissents andcomments included in the report points topossible sources of bias in the interviews offaculty.The report was prepared by a committeeappointed last May chaired by BerniceNeugarten, chairman of the committee onhuman development.The committee consisted of Norman Bradburn, professor of business; Ann MLawrence, assistant professor of medicine;Gregg Lewis, professor of economics; SoiaMentschikoff, professor of law; Jane Over-ton, associate professor of biology. Also, Su-sanne Rudolph, associate professor of polit¬ical science; Barbara Buggert, student inthe college; Jo Freeman, graduate studentin the social sciences; Catherine Ham, as¬sistant professorial lecturer, department ofEnglish; and Barbara Waugh, graduatestudent in divinity.MEMORANDUM TO ALL U.C. PROFESSORS:FROM: THC UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREMUCH OF THE TEXTBOOK INFORMATION FOR THE SUMMERQUARTER HAS NOT BEEN RECEIVED. IF ORDERS ARE NOTPLACED WITHIN THE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS, IT IS UNLIKELY THEBOOKS WILL BE RECEIVED BEFORE CLASSES BEGIN.ALSO, PLEASE FORWARD TEXTBOOK INFORMATION FOR THEAUTUMN QUARTER AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.THANK YOU.:»xMay 15, 1970/Tha Chicago Maroon/7EDITORIALSOther ActionsWhile picketing activity and other efforts to continue the strikeare petering out this week, there are other activities aimed at build¬ing greater support for the student demands. The continuation ofclasses has not really affected the attendance at the ContinuingAction Project meetings and the canvassing efforts operating outof the SG office. There are now Chicago students in Washingtonlobbying for the McGovern bill, and more are going this weekend.The pressure should not be let up. The effect of the steady,concerted pressure students are placing on the policy-makers can¬not be determined yet. But the nation has been stunned at theenergy suddenly unleashed from the campuses. We hope that itcontinues.P.S. Have you written to your congressmen yet?Registration AgainIt is not for nothing that the University registrar is a pro¬fessor of literature, for the fiendish parallel between this year’sregistration procedures and the descent into Dante’s Inferno, witheach step on a lower and more tortuous level, has not gone un¬noticed. "In the first circle, high in the reaches of Gates-Blake, thehapless wanderer observes the innocent infidels, professorial ad¬visers, who send them on their downward path. Next, on theground floor of the administration building, numbers are distrib¬uted to the muddy denizens of this hell. Finally, after hours ofdespair and anxiety, the luckless student descends the stairs intothe basement of the ad building, through the chill halls, to walkinto the final, deepest, and innermost chamber, there to witnessin horror the devouring of wretched sinners by the Optical Scan¬ning Sheet.Sound like fun? It isn’t. Administrators seem to regard thechao§ of registration every year with amused disapproval. For thestudents, it is an infuriating, disgusting, boring process in whichthey are treated like plastic things. Harried personnel have nochoice but to become impatient; it is not of them that we complain.On the contrary, we think these people have an incredibly diffi¬cult job and handle it admirably.We do not have the same sympathy for the people in charge.Year after year, registration is badly organized, and doesn’t im¬prove. A totally bureaucratic problem, deans and other lofty per¬sonages forget about it most of the time, and regard complaintsabout it as trivial. If those deans could ever experience the feelingstudents get from registration — the impression of utter con¬tempt for them by the University — they would probably wakeup fast to the importance of bureaucracy from the point of viewof the victim.The process of registration operates on a penny-wise-pound-foolish principle. For instance yesterday a Maroon reporter wastold by the office of the registrar that they were too busy to takefive minutes to tell him for an news article what classes wereclosed. Today, because this information does not appear in theMaroon, they will waste 100 times this five minutes in tellingstudents individually what courses are closed, or in explaining thatthey haven’t the time to give them this information. Students willwaste frustrating hours trying to get into classes they are alreadylocked out of, the whole maneuver will prove expensive in money,frustration, and spirit.Similarly, if the University would just spend a little moneyto hire someone whose job is to organize such record-keepingfunctions — and such professions exist, serving corporations withhuge personnel lists and records — the money they spend willbe saved hundreds of times over. The present inefficient processmust be a costly one, and definitely is a depressing and infuriatingone. Let’s not get the University’s primarily intellectual directionconfused with bureaucratic inefficiency; it isn’t always so cutefor the students when the professors are absent-minded. SDS Member Reveals CausesOf Stevenson Institute AttackBy Mike DunlapI would like to clarify a few points withrespect to SDS’s anti-Pahlavi campaignand the Adlai Stevenson Institute. First,apologies are in order to Professor Binderfor two inaccurate statements made abouthis research in our pamphlet “Pahlavi:Friend or Foe?” His recent political re¬search in Tunisia was on an Air Forcegrant, not a contract.The last sentence in the section dis¬cussing his research should be deleted alto¬gether as it resulted from a misreading ofour working notes. It was not ProfessorBinder, but rather the US economic devel¬opment team from Harvard that activelydissuaded the Iranian government from de¬veloping heavy industry and in particulardelayed the construction of Iran’s first steelmill for years.I would now like to go into a little of thehistory of SDS’s dealing with the StevensonInstitute and the University officials re¬sponsible for the Pahlavi Building, since itwell illustrates the duplicity, hypocrisy andmoral corruption of the liberals of the Uni¬versity. Over the two month period inwhich we of the SDS Pahlavi Committeeresearched our pamphlet, we talked manytimes with Richard Rubenstein, assistantdirector of the Institute and armchair radi¬cal, about research there. From the begin¬ning he cast himself as a radical oppositionleader in the Institute who constantlyfought with the director William Polk toprevent “bad” research from being done(such as the Peru project, according to MrRubenstein).We met behind closed doors because MrPolk would not approve of Mr Rubensteingiving us much of the information he didgive us, especially in regard to the exis¬tence of secret files, contrary to the In¬stitute’s claim that all is open to the public.Rubenstein indicated to us that Polk wasdeeply involved with the powers that beand was contributing tc the maintenance ofimperialism. Rubenstein pointed out to usthe names of CIA, State Department, Jus¬tice Department and military hacks whoappeared at Institute conferences. He thencontrasted this with his own efforts andthose of several other Institute fellows. Heexplicitly stated that he had come to beopposed to the Institute’s avowed purposeof developing specific pilot projects to beimplemented by US policy makers. Hestated that he was seriously consideringleaving the Institute, and certainly would ifMr Polk’s pet project, the Pahlavi Building,were used to house the Institute.He gave us much information that wecould not have got in any other way for ourpamphlet, which we submitted to him forTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editors: Mitch Bobkin, Con HitchcockNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy OlocknerAssociators: Steve Cook (News), Chris Froute(Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsoform, Paul Bernstein, EllenCassidy, Nancy Chisman, Allen Friedman,Sarah Giazer, Pete Goodsell, Gordon Katz,Susan Left, Gerald Leval, Joseph Morris, TomMossberg, Janet Pine, Audrey Shalinsky, CarlSunshine. GADFLYcorrection and which he privately endorsedas accurate.Then two weeks ago, Rubenstein told usthat President Edward Levi called directorPolk in the early hours of the morning de¬manding that the information ‘‘leak’’ in theInstitute be shut up since our pamphlet‘‘Pahlavi: Friend or Foe” revealed infor¬mation that was to be withheld from thepublic. Polk responded by firing the nextday Susan Dodd, a good friend of Ruben¬stein, a research assistant who had talkedto SDSers several times and who was thenagitating among the secretaries there forwomen’s liberation. Polk told the surprisedRubenstein that Levi had an informer whohad the dope on who had said what to SDS.After our attack on the Stevenson In¬stitute last week, Rubenstein suddenly ap¬peared with a letter in the Marron lastWednesday (Vol. 76: no. 58) praising Polk,calling SDS’s charges “a grotesquelie,” “ludicrous and irrelevant” and a“caricature.” In the letter a completely dif¬ferent Rubenstein emerges (like after aStalinist brainwashing). He knows nothingof the conferences attended by the CIA, theState Department, the Justice Departmentand the Military. He no longer knows any¬thing about the imperialist research of thePeru project, or of the Mexican projectwhich a few weeks ago he called “hor¬rible.”Most tragic of all was the statement thatno “purge of radicals” existed; a direct de¬nial of a close, loyal friend, Susan Dodd,whom Polk purged only two weeks ago. Iwould still like to think of Richard Ruben¬stein as my friend. I can only assume thatPolk is blackmailing him with the loss ofhis job.A few words about Polk. This great liber¬al used to be a Trotskyite in the good oldContinued on Page 14BULLETINFriday, May 15l-EAFLETTING: (Gl Anti-war rally): leafletting forSaturday rally at the loop, pick up leaflets fromReynolds Club North; 10am and after.MEETING: (Adlai Stevenson Institute): Robie House,interested students invited, 2 pm.DISCUSSION: Hamish Fraser, international journalistand lecturer (and former communist revolutionary)will speak on American Revolution, Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge, 7:30 pm.DISCUSSION: "The Security Treaty and the futureRelations between the US and Japan," Hideo Sato,grad student in political science, Crossroads StudentCenter, 5621 Btackstone, 8 pm.COLLEGE FORUM: "The Lives I Live," Roger Hilde¬brand, dean of the college, Suzanne Rudolph, as¬sociate professor of political science, Ralph Shapey,professor of music, Swift Commons, 3:30 pm.CONCERT (Contemporary Chambers Players WoodwindQuintet): Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.GALA (FOTA): Robert Lodine, University Carilloneur,Rockefeller Chapel Lawn, 8:30 pm.THEATER: "Waiting for Godot," Lutheran TheologicalSeminary, 8:30 (also will be presented Saturdayand Sunday).Saturday, May 16RALLY (Anti-war Gl rally): buses will leave IdaNoyes Hall for Great Lakes Naval Base, 10 am, $2.MIKVA: meeting with Abner Mikva and assistant LeonDavis, taw school, l pm.FOTA (Hillel): Reuven Gold, "Tales of Hasidic andZen Masters," Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.CONCERT (Folklore Society): Carl Martin and TedBogan, blues, country songs, hoedowns, Ida NoyesHall, 8:15 pm.CONCERT (Fota): Back Cantatas, Bond Chapel, 8:30pm, free.DANCE: Gay Guerilla, Fred Hampton Gym (nee IdaNoyes), Pane ho Pilot Band, 9pm-2am.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, ill. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and In theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mall 88 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscriber*to College Press Service. Sunday, May 17UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: Bernard OBrown, assistant dean of the chapel. RockefellerChapel, ll am. . „LECTURE (Hillel): Rabbi Milton Kanter, Skokie ValleyTraditional Synagogue, "The Jewish Attitude toBirth Control," Hillel House, 7:30.FILM: "The Smile of Reason (philosophers of the Ageof Englishtenment), Soc Sci 122, 8 pm.FILM (CEF): Titticut Follies, Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:15 pm.Monday, May 18MEETING: SSA building (to organize groups to go tosettlement houses and talk to poor about the war seffects on them), 12:00.MEETING: FOR graduating seniors to plan format otcommencement, Reynolds Club South, 1 pm.FLICK: Marx Bros, film orgy part II, "Go West,"Big Store," and "The Day at the Races," MandelHall, 7 pm, 81.8/Tho Chicago Maroon/May 15, 1970Grotowski: Misfit in Americamediate, something real. In a recent production of one ofthese groups, the only real thing, besides unconventionallighting and a half-hour of “ommmmmm-ing” was thetrue experience of masturbation onstage. This was some¬thing the actors knew by themselves. It was never taughtto them and it meant nothing but itself, direct and puretheatre, Grotowki on the lowest level.However, in this society, anti-intellectual, purely phys¬ical expression in art can only be understood as a reactionagainst the Western philosophy of the superiority of mindover body, which is deeply based in the medieval system.The Roman ideal of a healthy body in a healthy mind, aharmonic training of body and intellect, has been vastlyneglected in the history of Western theatre. Theatre hasbecome a place of moral and intellectual discussion. FromAristotle to Schiller and Gunther Grass, this has been thetradition of Western theatre: a more or less healthy mindin a sick body.Numerous have been the attempts to reestablish thephysical aspect of man — the body — in theatre. As dis¬ciples of Antonin Artaud, the originator of a physicaltheatre, groups like the Living Theatre and the PeterBrooks Company in London, and a few off-off groupscreated a tradition of true theatre, in which the picturesseen onstage mean nothing but themselves. Ideology inany form is banned from this stage. In such a theatre thephysical existence of bodies is being presented. As inprimitive ritual, the bodies are sacrificed and perhapscrucified onstage. The difference between this theatre andprimitive ritual is that, since Hegel and Kant have provedto us that we are alone, the idea of God in this ritual isnow eliminated. We are starting from the beginning, butwith a new knowledge. In true Grotowski theatre, art is nolonger a world for itself (art as a condensation and imita¬tion Of reality, as defined by bourgeois theoreticians);rather, it is simply another form of existence, a contin¬uation of life, on and off of the stage, in and out of thetheatres.In a world of inequality, racism, exploitation and in¬justice, matter seems to be the only true existence.Words, on the contrary, are lying and manipulating.Words are being used, bought, sold, thrown away. Wordssmell and words kill.Grotowski developed his ideas in a society which ispurportedly based on the materialistic and dialecticalprinciples of Hegel and Marx. In such a society, a totallyaesthetical theatre may be acceptable and positive be¬cause it is — to say in in Hegelian terms — the negationof a totally rational system in society. In an ideal socialistsociety, the “new man” is no longer blinded by the ideolo¬gical lies of a ruling class. In such a case, theatre mightno longer need to be a critical analysis of an unperfectsociety. Grotowski obviously considers his society a happyone, and one can concede (even if the restrictions on theindividual still seem to be stronger there than elsewhere)that the society as a whole might be aiming towards abetter tomorrow. At least, that is what Grotowski as asocialist must believe.But in a society in which this process is reversed, andin which normal forms of self-expression are more limitedwhile society tends more towards an irrational policestate, Grotowski’s theatre and technique are condemned tobe mere aesthetical entertainment. In this country, wherethe future seems to bring nothing but greater problems,this kind of theatre only contributes to the agony ofsociety in not rationalizing, not demonstrating, not con¬tradicting the inhumanity: in being silent, when it has tobe spoken. Under such circumstances. Grotowski s theatreis nothing but a nice and beautiful game, unwittingly per¬petuating hunger and racism, exploitation and fascism, orwhatever the terms are for this society of cruelty. Tcbring Good Polish Man Grotowski’s techniques into Good¬man Theatre as mere techniques, and not to employ themas a dialectical contradiction, seems to be nothing but anew ideological American contradiction.i i'ii ,v,v . v *: - » . • • Vil •<By Werner KrieglsteinGrotowski’s Production of “The Constant Prince”where millions are spent for the research of hunger butlittle is really done to eliminate it. Action, true actionseems to be the desire of the young American on all lev¬els, the political as well as the artistic. Productions by themany groups of young actors who attempt to employ “di¬rect action” theatrical techniques in this country, demon¬strate the dilemma of true action in a society which de¬stroys all conventional values in favor of economic enter¬prise. Doesn’t it seem difficult to discuss the problem oftruth in philosophy when a new cigarette brand advertisesunder the name TRUE? or how do you attempt to explainreality when CocaCola makes you believe “IT’S A REALTHING!” or how do you speak truly about love, when acommercial showing a priest and a wedding couple bearsthe caption “YOUR LOVE IS OUR BUSINESS.”After the stimulus of the Living Theatre, these groupswant to do theatre by themselves, without theatrical con¬ventions to dictate their actions or a director to movethem about the stage like dolls. They want something un¬trained and developed.PERFECTLY TRAINED BODIES fly through the air. Atrainer gives commands with a calm and stern voice:“Now the tiger, two together, and now one from the oppo¬site direction, and one across.” The circuslike show goeson for about half an hour. Two spotlights focused towardsthe ceiling shed only a dim light on the scene. The actorsseem exhausted, but all of them eager and enthusiastic.No word is spoken except for the sporadic commands ofthe “trainer,” Mr. Joseph Slowik of the Goodman TheatreSchool.That scene, brought to the campus by FOTA 70, wasa theatrical demonstration of the theatrical techniques ofthe famous Polish director Jerzy Grotowski, with whomMr. Slowik had the chance to study and work for a shorttime. Five students from the Goodman Theatre gave animpressive demonstration of what Mr. Slowik had tried toexplain beforehand in a theoretical sjxech.The Goodman actors had been training in Grotowski’stechniques for only five months. This resulted in a shal¬low, though physically adept performance. They demon¬strated athletic techniques without placing them, as Gro¬towski does, in a ritualistic context. Hiis necessarily limit¬ed training shows the difficulty in applying such a theoryto American conditions. Grotowski’s actors receive grantsand stipends from their government which enable them tostudy with their famous director while receiving an as¬sured income. TTiese grants run for years, and often anactor does not appear in public before a year or two yearsof hard training. Goodman Theatre students, as all stu¬dents in the United States, are somehow pressured to fin¬ish their studies as soon as possible. Unless one is ex¬tremely wealthy or intelligent, one does not get the chanceto study without financial problems or to study indepen¬dently one theory in depth, as Grotowski’s actors are ableto do. In this country, Grotowski’s theory is learned alongwith a doen other ones, as each actor must be preparedto sell himself to any director that might come along. Andnone of these theories can be learned in much depth, sincethe run for the money and the time pressure necessitatequantity and not quality as the end result of training.It is on this background of economic security whichGrotowski could develop his theory, and only on the condi¬tions of a postrevolutionary society could a theory likeGrotowski’s be halfway understood ... but these problemswere not discussed in Mr. Slowik’s lecture.“Grotowski never explains things; he demonstrates,he shows. There is never a methodological discussion;they just do it,” he explained. Little wonder that such aphilosophy is widely appreciated in American society,OBEYCITTji muNumber 25 Friday, May 15,1970ciiTtti mmiLook Out for Them Purple NetsDID I HAVE THE SCARE of my life last week! I was saun-ering my way through the highways and byways of thecampus when I noticed a runty little man following me.\ssuming of course it was one of my many fans (friends,n case you don’t know they are constantly beseiging meor autographs and asking me to be the toastmaster at/arious dinners, etc.) Well, preening my feathers I noticedle was slinking along carrying a large purple net. Awk!- it’s a vulture catcher. Us vultures are completelymocked out when we look at the right shade of purple andhat was the right shade of purple. I make feeble attemptsjo get off the ground and just as he touched my last tailfeather, he slips into the SVNA trenches. I crawl off tosafety and collapse. Long live SVNA!CAMPUSFilmIn case you don’t know already Doc Films has canceledall the rest of its films for the quarter in respect for thestrike — Godard would be proud of you.Sunday, CEF presents Titticut Follies by Robert Wise¬man. About a mental institution near Boston, it got the hot-potato treatment by Boston and was banned here becauseit hit a little too close to home. In Cobb at 7 and 9:15.Monday The Marx Brother Film Orgy returns for itssecond night. This time with Go West, Big Store and A Dayat the Races. It’s hard to decide which classic scenes tomention but Tootsie Frootsie ice cream and Dr. Hackena-buch must be up there (that’s in A Day at the Races alone).At 7 in Mandel for $1. All proceeds are going to a freedance on campus on Memorial Day on the lawn.TheatreSamuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot is being performedthis weekend. The absolute classic of the absurd, it abso¬lutely destroys our good old friend Aristotle (when he saideverything must have a beginning, middle and an end.) Itis directed by Roger Dodds and it stars Bill Reddy, SteveMencher, Leonard Kraft, and Jim Miller. It’s tonight to¬morrow and Sunday at 8:30 at Lutheran School of Theo¬logy 55th and University.They Shall Not Pass the improvisational work takenfrom the Federal Theatre drama about the Spanish CivilWar is playing again this weekend. Directed by ChrisLyon, it stars Lyon, Annette Fern, Lee Strucker, GerryFisher, Linda Gossen, David Cole and David Chase. Musicby Buzz White, films by T.C. Fox (not Twentieth Century)and photographs by Ann Beckerman. In the Chicago Theo¬Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHLITZFIFT,-FIFTH & WOODLAWNMR. REUVEN GOLDTELLSMYSTIC TALESOFZEN AND HISIDICMASTERSIIDA NOYESLIBRARY8:30 P.M.SATURDAYMAY 16 logical Seminary at 58th and University at 8 and it’sFREE.MusicTonight, the CCP (the Contemporary Chamber Playersnot the California Cotton Pickers) Woodwind Quintetcomes to Mandel. They will be performing Milhaud’s LeChemine de Roi Rene, Villa-Lobos’ Bachianis BrazilianisNo. 6, Fine’s Partita Quintet, and Beethoven’s Quintet forPiano and Winds. At 8:30 and it’s FREE.Saturday the good old Folklore Society presents CarlMartin and Ted Bogan. Their combined capacities encom¬pass fiddle, mandolin and guitar and their repertoire in¬cludes blues, country music, popular songs of the 20’s and30’s, Polish, German and Irish ethic music. In Ida NoyesTheatre at 8:15 for $1.Tuesday FOTA presents an Evening of Song with songsfrom Germany, Italy, France, and England and operaticareas and duets. With Catherine Malfitano, soprano; PriceBrowne, tenor, and Michael Krauss, piano. Look at FOTAschedule for time and place.MiscellaneousFOTA’s Gala Performance is tonight. If you hear somebooms, it’s not someone blowing up Rockefeller, (chapelthat is.) It’s 4th of July come early. They’re playing Rach¬if you thinkyou've heardtom rush before.. .Tom Rush is the title of Tom Rush's firstalbum on Columbia. And it s like nothinghe's ever done. Cause wherever Tom Rushhas been, he's not there now. He's singingabout living and dying. And everything inbetween. Like never before. you haven'theardtom rush.tom rush,on Columbia.SiAvailable At:Paul B's — New TownThe Wecord Woom - Old TownGramma phone Records - Clark St.Round RecordsSights & Sounds — Sheridan Rd.Flyp Side Records — 3314 W. FosterRecord ShackSkippers Discount - CarpentersvUleBoth Discount Records - In The LoopAll One Octave Higher StoresAll Polk Bros. Stores9m«!Rmp! PIZZA 1PLATTER;Pizza, Fried Chicken .Italian Foods |Compare the Price! I1460 E. 53rd 643-280(>!WE DELIVER Iu t r .TiW - - r ~ mn p 12/Grey City Journal/May 15, 1970 MODERN DANCE CLASSES4,30 to 6.00Monday • SofvrdoyMet, Rock A Jazz fought.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. StotoStovem fciW ingRoom 1903333-9933 PAR EAST KITCHENCHINESE & AMERICANFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen daily 10 -10Fri.&Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd955-2229 maninoff’s Easter Sunday on carillon and brass, Handel’sRoyal Water Music on the carillon. It’s at 8:30 in front ofRockefeller. At 9:30 will be a concert of Jazz and Contem¬porary Music by the Chicago Arts Quartet.Woodstock is the film of the event. Help the poor starv¬ing rode festival exploiters by going. At State LakeHieatre.A Man Called Horse is not about a centaur but ratherabout an Englishman who is captured by Indians andmust prove his manhood. At Roosevelt, State near Wash¬ington.Fellini Satiricon is ancient Rome (before the collapse)as seen through the eyes of Fellini. The collapse would bean anti-climax. At the Michael Todd, 170 N. Dearborn.Tell them Willie Boy is Here is Abraham Polansky’sfirst film since his blackout following the blacklist. WillieBoy is an Indian. At the Threepenny, 2424 N. Lincoln.There is a double bill of Prologue and Last Year atMarienbad. The former played here and deals with- ayoung Canadian radical who comes to Chicago for theconvention. The latter is Resnais’ famous film about mem¬ories. At the Biograph, 2433 N. Lincoln.Women in Love is an adaptation of D.H. Lawrence’sbook'about women and men in love. At Cinestage, 180 N.Dearborn.Bloody Mama is the newest addition to Roger Corman’sopus about Ma Barker and her gang. At the McVickers,Madison near State.This Week at the GargoyleFridayWomen’s Liberation rap session at noon.MondayGay Liberation and Women’s Liberation rap sessions at12.NUC meeting at 8.TuesdayCrafts Workshop 3:30-5:30.Committee just forming to make the Nike site moveinvites all to come at 8.WednesdayAn evening of experimental films — Art of the Shortfilm at 7:30 and 9:30.Folk song get-together at 8.ThursdayGay Liberation rap session at 12.Continued on Page SevenTAI-JAM-YMJCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders co take outFor group rates call DE 711182nd BIG WEEK!THELOVECHILD..A HUNGERWITHIN HEREXPLODED...•NOW PLAYINGSpiciest Picture of the Year!“My Brother'sWife”P&9 LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337-2113« t V I * I » v M ■. . :. i ;,iPOTPOURRI ««■»••■■ ■«■ •«» '• Mttr rui*H* t-wiFighting the Military from the InsideSaturday is Armed Forces Day (otherwise known asArmed Farces Day.) In celebration of the fact that forone day the Great Lakes Naval Training Center (like aUbases) will be open to the public, anti-war forces arescheduling a rally there and are inviting all to come.THE GI MOVEMENT against the Vietnam war started,according to a man who is currently working with a localGI underground newspaper, Navy Times Are Changin’,with the Vietnam war. Though it shouldn’t, this oftencomes as a surprise to many people who consider theAmerican government imperialist for being in Indochina.Why shouldn’t American servicemen recognize that — af¬ter all they’re at the scene of the crime. Obviously though,they’re more than just observers — the ones that do comeback are usually so shell-shocked that once they hear aword of Vietnamese or see a familiar place in a photo¬graph they go into shock.In whatever way yoii define the term, the GIs are anoppressed class. To say they have no power over their lifeis to understate. They are inducted against their will. Ofcourse, the people who are hit the hardest are the non¬whites and poor whites who are inducted for the mostpart, in larger proportions than other whites. Not usuallyhaving access to a draft counselor (as opposed to collegestudents) they aren’t aware of some possibile loopholesFILM that may exist (physical or psychiatric deferments, con¬scientious objector status, etc.) Hardship defermentswhich might apply to many of them are so difficult to getthat in some ways it is easier to get a hardship discharge.Once in the armed forces, they are the manpowercontrolled by the ruling elite — the brass. Oppressionwhich in some sectors of the outside society is covert, isovert inside. One thing which should be remembered —disobeying an order is punishable by death. Thus a manwho files discharge papers because he claims to be aconscientious objector is faced with a difficult problem —what to do if he is given a direct order to kill. If herefuses he can be court-martialed; if he doesn’t the valid¬ity of his case is questioned. Until March 6, men who filedCO papers were supposed to remain at the,base at whichthe papers were filed to wait until the papers were actedupon. Thus large batallions of anti-war GI’s were beingformed on the west coast (the last stops before Vietnam)since the officers wanted to keep those men separate so asnot to contaminate the others. On March 6, the armedforces changed their regulations so that men who hadbeen waiting at the main shipping points in Oakland Cali¬fornia and Tacoma Washington were shipped off to Viet¬nam where they were faced with that conscientious objec¬tor’s quandry. Right now that new ruling is being foughtby the ACLU.Anyone who has only been keeping a casual eye on thenewspapers has noticed that at least once a week thereare articles about mutinies on both Vietnam (mostrecently the brigade who refused to go into Cambodia)and cm bases (especially in brigs and stockades) here inthe US. Perhaps one of the most famous incidents here inthe US was the one which took place at the stockade atPresidio near San Francisco in late 1968-69 where a guardshot and killed a prisoner. After the shooting a group ofmen sat down and refused to move. They were tried (andit must be remembered that defense lawyer, prosecutorand judge are all appointed by the commander) and sen¬tences of 16-18 years of hard labor. The civilian outcrywhich followed got the sentences reduced to two-threeyears hard labor.Great Lakes has had three major riots since the be¬ginning of the year. One seaman apprentice William Rea¬mer went AWOL for twenty days after he had been threat¬ened by a Seal — (underwater demolition experts whosupposedly “make the Green Berets look like BoyScouts”) for wearing a peace medallion under his uni¬form. Seaman Reamer was fined forfiture of his $82.50pay for a month and restriction to the base for 30 days.The sentence was so light only because many anti-warcivilians attended the trial.All the brigs and stockades in the US and even moreso those in Vietnam, are crowded up to double capacity. To say that sadism and brutality are rampant is to under¬state the matter. Tortures described by men are beatingon the soles of their feet, being dropped from four feetabove the ground with hands and feet tied and hangingfrom the thumbs. Another method is keeping them wherethey are prevented from going to the bathroom for threedays.Considering these conditions it is not surprising thatmore than 250,000 men went AWOL last year. Of thesemost return but the deserter population in Canada hasbeen estimated to be 1500 by defense department sourcesand 15,000 by anti-war sources. There is a bounty on re¬turning deserters — $15 if you inform the MP’s and $25 ifyou return the deserter to custody. Canadian mountieshave been making extra cash doing just this.The anti-war feeling among GI’s has been manifestedmost noticably in the proliferation of underground news¬papers in places near bases both here and overseas. Atthe present time there are 30 or more such papers pub¬lished in places from Vietnam to Germany to Alaska toLouisiana. Underground in the military has a much sharp¬er meaning than outside. Though it is not supposedly ille¬gal to distribute such material, the harassment which ac¬companies the possesion of a copy of such a paper istremendous. If the hassle doesn’t come from the brassitself, it comes from the “lifers.” Furthermore, peoplewho are politically suspect are given maximum sentencesfor even the smallest offenses.Here in Chicago, the Great Lakes Naval Training Cen¬ter is served by Navy Times Are Changin’. Established inJanuary, and now in its second issue it backed the AprilContinued on Page Seven“Women in Love”: Wasted TalentWOMEN IN LOVE is a disappointing experience, particu¬larly since it is the second feature of Ken Russell, a youngBritish director who has shown much promise in the past.Russell’s last feature, Billion Dollar Brain, was a joyfulsurprise — an intelligent, gutsy, and highly watchable ef¬fort that went against the grain of the Sixties spy picturesin which it had been cast. Good sources inform me thatRussell’s biographical study of Federick Delius (made forBBC and now circulating here through NET outlets) isthat supreme rarity, a film about musicians that is trulymusical. Women in Love is the first of Russell’s featuresto have pretentions to “Art” and I am afraid that thistime he is simply not up to them.Russell has a lot going for him in Women in Love, notthe least of which is his cast. Alan Bates’ Rupert is per¬fect — energy intelligence and inhibitions in precisely thet-oiTect proportions. Oliver Reed’s Gerald, ugly, physical,staunchly tormented, matches him wonderfully. Likewisea very pretty girl named Jennie Linden whose Ursulaexhibits suitable bewilderment during the whole proced-ings. Glenda Jackson (Gudrun) is exactly what one wouldexpect from a star of the Brook-Hall Royal ShakespeareCompany: she is exemplary of everything good in modernBritish acting. With these actors Russell has managed avery difficult affair, making D.H. Lawrence’s literary dia¬logue (which has remained intact in the script) sound, ifnot like speech, then at least like something so close thatwe accept it almost without hesitation. It is impossible todescribe in print Bates’ off-hand “given there is qo God,”but that line reading is almost reason enough to see thefilm.Russell is also blessed with a divine sense of period.It does not matter whether or not he is historically accu¬rate; we accet his world as one that existed somewhere,sometime, exactly as he has reproduced it. He is aided inthis by his wife Shirley Russell, a costume designer of nosmall talent. He is also blessed in having found in BillyWilliams a photographer who creates color definitions and shadows like nobody’s business.Why, given these actors and their performances, Lar¬ry Kramer (who produced as well as wrote the picture)should choose to eschew all character development m hisscreenplay is beyond me, but he 'did. This in turn contrib¬utes to the almost total lack of pacing in the film. As faras I can tell the purpose of this abomination of construc¬ tion was to concentrate on the varieties of passion, tomake Women in Love a kind of “Analytica Passionata.”Unfortunately, Russell’s camera can’t seem to decidewhether it is analytical or involved, and the result is thatmost of the picture seems full of either stilted passion¬playing or pseudo-lyrical television spot commercials.Russell appears to be at his best either with the abnormaland perverse (Oliver Reed and Glenda Jackson’s love-making) or with the plainly common (Laura and her hus¬band always in the background having simple, legal, lov¬ing fun). Everything else (and there is a lot else) seemsto be straining for effect.What is most disappointing is Russell’s visual style.The good things in Women in Love are almost all straightout of Billion Dollar Brain. (Russell has a greater feel forsnow than anyone in the business, and one of his picturesshould be seen if only to learn how to make potentiallyarid background work for you.) Freed from the exigencesof Panavision, howe’ver, Russell seems to have reverted tothe banalities of television shooting. Women in Love is fullof those boring conversations consisting entirely of inter¬cut close-shots, showing us only the face of the speaker.What had impressed one about Russell was that heseemed far more freed of these television cliches thanmost new directors with similar backgrounds.A final note on the theater at which Women in Love isnow playing. The Cinestage is cursed with a Cineramascreen (2001 was the last attraction) and apparently noth¬ing else. Besides seeming disproportionatly small, the pro¬jection of the image on this screen makes it look like aMilkbone dog biscuit. In these days of bad projection onefeels like one is crying in the wilderness, but this, afterall, really is toe much. I have never said this before, but 3think Women in Love will look better in the neighborhoodsthan it does downtown.Terry Curtis FoxNOTE: The Maroon typographers notwithstanding, thename of the actress in Bloody Mama is Diana Varsi.May 15, 1970/Grey City Jounml/3' DIRGEPaul Taylor Co: Eclectic AssortmentTHE PAUL TAYLOR DANCE COMPANY opened at theHarper Theater Tuesday night with three oldies-but-goodies and two Chicago premieres. The three golden old¬ies, “Junction,” “Duet,” and “three Epitaphs,” werechoreographed by Taylor between 1956* and 1964, vyhile“Churchyard” was commissioned in 1969 and “ForeignExchange” is new this year. These five works all bear theTaylor trademarks, involving dancers with a wide rangeof skills and utilizing an ecclectic assortment of music,movements, and humor.“Junction” was danced to, with, and around Bach’sSolo Suites for Violincello. The dancers made some inter¬esting sculptures, standing on one another in their multi¬colored leotards. Here — and throughout the performances— all of the movements, large and small, classical andmodern, were well executed. The piece ended with Caro¬line Adams being passed around as a petite bundle fromone male dancer to the next.Miss Adams and Daniel Williams danced the nextpiece, “Duet,” smoothly and serenly. Miss Adams has acontained, very feminine warmth about her, a quiet peace¬fulness that comes across in a somewhat mysterious andtemptuous manner. Her choreography seemed more suitedto her than Mr. Williams’ was to him. Daniel Williams hasa sinewy body, great technical skill, and classical grace.But there is a restlessness, a sort of hardness about himthat makes one hope he’ll dance it out with large, forceful,quick movements. He seemed restrained by the cho¬reography, though the total effect of his performance wasgood. Only occasionally did he manage to assert himself,in provocative hand-on-hip stances.“Three Epitaphs” presented the dancers completelycovered in grey tights and hoods by Robert Rauschenberg.They moved with the music of an American country brassband that sounded as if the Salvation Army had come out early for Christmas. The piece was an amusing one, withslow, heavy movements, then bursts of humorous energy,followed by exits by the drooping, sluggish figures. Thedancers had small mirrors on their heads and hands, andthese were reflected as jumping patches of light againstthe plain backdrop.Time and space are always effectively utilized in thePaul Taylor Company, but in “Foreign Exchange” thestage seemed too tight for the company of nine, especiallywhen they executed flying leaps over Alex Katz’s cubisticset of grey, rock-like structures. Even so, Taylor has aknack for sustaining an aura of lightness and classicalproportion, with bodies of varying shapes and sizes.“Foreign Exchange” has inventive choreography call¬ing for a wide variety of linear movements. There aresome eye-catching surprises: One occurs during Taylor’sduet with the small but determined Jane Kosminsky, whoclimbs up and down his massive body as if it were a moun¬tain.“Churchyard,” with music by Cosmos Savage, finallylet Daniel Williams reveal his power as a dancer. Costumedesigner Alec Sutherland dressed the dancers in colorfultights and added white head-bands for the girls in order toeffect a nun’s habit. Although the costumes were inter¬esting, the piece could have used something in the way ofa set. The work included some energetic acrobatics, suchas three linked men sommersaulting across the stage withprecise timing like a tank tread.The Taylor Company is a poised and polished group.They will be performing the same program on Fridayevening and Sunday afternoon. Saturday and Sunday eve¬ning they will offer “Orbs” and the Chicago premiere of“Private Domain.” Students receive a $2 discount on alltickets for all performances.Paula Meinetz ShapiroTHEITBERemembering the Civil WarTHE CLOISTER of the Chicago Theological Seminary isthe arena in which a whole nation is crushed by the forcesof oppression: Republican Spain and European Fascism.However, in this new version of the crime, another evil isdenounced: uncommitment, neutrality, and isolationism.They Shall Not Pass is a collage of historical events,actual speeches, and theatrical images woven together ina continuum of sequences. These sequences convey themajor social forces that participated in the Civil War as, well as the International Brigades, France, Hitler, Musso¬lini, the Pope, Chamberlain, Eleanor and Franklin D.Roosevelt. La Passionaria is the only fixed characterthroughout the play; the other six actors are constantly» metamorphosed, embodying both the characters men¬tioned above as well as “the people,” “the children,” “thesoldiers,” “the dancers” or even the cathedral, the tank,the wheelchair, etc. All these images, or comments aboutthe Civil War, are confronted by the speeches of La Pas¬sionaria, who not only provides a link for the otherwisedisconnected scenes but also reminds the audience of thetragic reality of the war and the need to fight and win it.It is through her consciousness and through her unheardpleas that we realize we are witnessing a monstrous mas¬sacre.There are several ways to tell the story of this crime.To Die in Madrid has shown all of its terror, violence andpolitical intricacies. Bertold Brecht (The Rifles of SenoraCarrar) has dramatized the suicidal nature of individual neutrality in a time of war. Panic, absurdity and madnessemerge from the ruins of the bombed town in Arrabal’sGuernica. In They Shall Not Pass, the strongest idea isthat those who, using the justification of neutrality andisolationism, refused to hear the desperate cries for helpof a devastated nation, are the ones to be blamed for thecrime. This is the idea that feeds most of the images ofthe play, all of them wrapped in an atmosphere of tensionand despair and centered around the cohfrontation of twoopposed realities: suffering and oblivion, death and si¬lence, cries and jazz. The painful plea (“Listen to me!”)is ignored by the exhausted dancers of the marathon (i.e.,the tiresome end of the American depression); to the beg¬gar (the Spanish people) that repeats “please,” those who“hate war” (Chamberlain and Roosevelt) chant “isola¬tion;” children playing in the streets are killed while thedead of Spain are counted; Franco is described as a herowhile clinging to the trousers of Hitler and Mussolini.A poster in the wall reads: “Madrid sera la tumba delFascismo.” In refusing to consider the Civil War ended,the play refuses to solve the confrontations that it hadrecreated, the tension and the despair remain in the airuntil the last body falls, that of an American youth whojoined the International Brigades. And when the ritual isover, the audience is faced with a reality which still con¬tains the same despaired confrontation.The war goes on. In fact, it is not by coincidence thata poster in Mandel Hall stated that “Cambodia is the tomb of Fascism.” The incapacity to act, the search foralibis and the tragic confrontation of death and silence arealso present in the stage in which all of us act. In thissense, They Shall Not Pass is a good reminder.But why Spain? If the victims and murderers of Spainare so familiar to us, why not enact the bullfight with fullcolors in our own arena? In a certain way, this choicereflects the guilt that Americans are coming to feel forthe atrocities committed with their silence, and the Span¬ish Civil War, atlhough not the only and certainly not thelast, is a powerful source for this feeling. Since this guilthas not yet been fully digested, exercised and counter¬acted, the replacement of a blurred present (Indochina)by a clear past (Spain) was imperative. Besides, aimingat the decantation of a political truth without impairinghistorical accuracy, the play is somehow lost between therealms of drama and politics: it is a play in search ofitself, in search of an aesthetical shape of its own. Thepresent shape is that of a political pantomime operating ona symbolic level: actual events are transformed and epito¬mized into symbolic images. But since these images areingrained in a specific situation, the viewer is constantlyfaced with the task of deciphering what belongs to theCivil War and what belongs to the play. Furthermore, thekey to open the symbols, in order to examine them fromthe insdie, is not easily given to the audience.For these reasons, the play is not entirely able to com¬municate its truth. Something vital gets lost in the passingfrom the intellectual framing to the final visual image.Something dries out, and the image remains incomplete.Something is seen, but the play itself reminds us that amore complex understanding of reality is required in atime of War. To see beautiful images is not enough. Ironi¬cally, the confrontation between the play and the audienceis similar to that between La Passionaria and the mara¬thon dancers.Roberto GambiniTheatre AnnouncementsThe Renaissance Players (which presented The FourP’s last year) will give a FREE performance of John-John, by John Heywood (who wrote The Four P’s) onMay 25 at 1 pm in Swift Court, and indoors on May 26 at8:30 pm in the Cloister Club. The play, which is aboutcuckoldry, concerns a wife (Barbara Bernstein) whofornicates with a priest (Donald Swanton) in front ofher husband (Tom Busch). It must be seen to be believed.The in-French production of Ionesco’s Jacques, on laSoumission has been cancelled, in deference to the strikeand current national issues. Director Michael Issacharoffplans to re-schedule the production for early in the fallquarter, using basically the same cast.To The Good Germans of the UniversityFrom N.U.C.Indeed I live in the dark ages!A guileless word is an absurdity. A smooth forehead beto¬kensA hard heart. He who laughsHas not yet heardThe terrible tidings,Ah, what an age it isWhen to speak of trees is almost a crimeFor it is a kind of silence about injustice!And he who walks calmly across the street,Is he not out of reach of his friendsIn trouble?It is true, 1 earn my livingBut, believe me, it is only an accidentNothing that I do entitles me to eat my fill,y chance I was spared. (If my luck leaves meam lost.)4/Grey City Journal/May 15, 1976 They tell me, eat and drink. Be glad you have it!But how can I eat and drinkWhen my food is snatched from the hungryAnd my glass of water belongs to the thirsty?And yet I eat and drink.I would gladly be wise.The old books tell us what wisdom is!Avoid the strife of the world, live out your little timeFearing no oneUsing no violence,Returmng good for evil —Not fulfillment of desire but forgetfulnessPasses for widsom,I can do none of this,Indeed I live in the dark ages!Bertolt BrechtFrom “To Posterity”Clean Mud at the SoundstormForest fires provide added fun«I KNOW THIS ISN’T a nice thing to say, but I’m havinga mother f good time,” said Mmni of the Rotary Con¬nection. That’s what it was like. The kids at the Madisonrock festival, Soundstorm, had a mother f good time.The festival was held on a 500-acre forested farm, twen¬ty-five miles north of Madison, near Poynette, Wisconsin.The weather was warm, the music was fine, and the potand wine flowed freely. The stage and sound system faceda broad, lgihtly forested hill. A creek flowed nearby in theforest, the air was clear, and the night sky was star-studded. Golden Freak Enterprises, who advertised theSoundstorm as ‘‘produced entirely by freaks,” were luckyto get the site in Columbia County which was offered tothem by an eighty year old woman from Poynette. Colum¬bia County was unable to mobilize its political and legalmachinery against the event in time to stop it.* * *The Grateful Dead were playing. A great-grandfatherwith his wife sat with a group of students smoking pot anddrinking Ripple. ‘‘Oh, we’re having fun! I’ve got threegreat-grandsons, I’m younger than they are! You won’tget anywhere sittin’ in front of a goddamn television.”There were thousands of people, mostly long hair andfreaks, doing anything they wanted with no cops (therewere no busts) and only a conspicuous handful of adult“tourists.” The music provided a permanent backdrop ofvibrations. Occasionally, a good band brought special at¬tention to the stage, but at any one time most people wereengrossed in smoking and talking and eating and lookingat the colorful community of freaks around themselves.Laughing and smiling faces were everywhere. Food,drink, and drugs were freely shared. To stop and talk to ablanket of kids meant a couple tokes of grass and a gulpof wine, all accompanied by friendly conversation. It wasout of sight.* * *The festival took place in a natural amphitheatre onMrs. York’s farm. A valley a quarter of a mile long,bounded on one side by concession tents and on the otherby fence and forest, led to a steeply sloping, wooded hillseveral hundred feet high. The very first afternoon peoplehad separated out into their most suitable niches. The gregarious city types crowded down in the valley near thestage, braving a blazing sun, overcrowding, and dust inexchange for a good view of the stage, the chance to lookat a lot of people, impaired hearing and a sense (hopeful¬ly) of belonging. Some of the straighter people tended toshade back towards the hill, thus getting a little morespace, losing any view of the stage, and approximatingthe suburban situation they seemed to come from. Thepioneers took to the hills, looking for a majestic view ofthe valley and the assembled horde, and frequently settingup elaborate leantos among the trees. (Ecological foot¬note: The festival mirrored many of the flaws of the larg¬er society, as the vast majority of people huddled togetherin the valley, silently suffering gruesome overcrowding,and pollution from smoke and dust and garbage. On theother hand the pioneers in the hills went to great lengthsto tear down lots of trees to build picturesque, non-func¬tional, leantos. Also, their campfires frequently startedforest fires, the fighting of which was a major diversion ofthe crowd.)* * *For those with money, concession stands providedfood at nearly reasonable prices. But they had stiff com¬petition from the free food kitchen run by a Madison freakco-op, which provided organic (oats, brown rice, onions,carrots, celery, raisins, peanuts, etc.) stew several timesa day. Thousands clamoured for their plain, but nutritiousand economical dishes.SVNA bolstered its reputation as the student organiza¬tion which gives students what they really want by show¬ing up with 25 people and a circus tent wherein theydistributed free doses of an obscure psychedelic.There was a built-in bias towards the use of drugs, in that the music ran 20 hours a day, from 11 to 7. Most ofthe music didn’t come across very well. It might havebeen because of overexposure, it might have been due toinadequate equipment for the outdoor format, or it mighthave been the mediocre bands. I found it no more in¬spiring than listening to my car radio for 20 hoursstraight. (Maybe less so.)One of the highlights of the festival was Baby Huey,mindless on acid at the time, singing various nonsenserhymes and obscenities for 45 minutes. At the end of theset, a chick from Women’s Lib castigated Huey (for malechauvinism) and the crowd (few digging Huey), saying, “Isuppose you’d dance to Deutschland Uber Alles if it had agood beat.”* * *The bikers were generally quiet, only occasionally rid¬ing around and churning sand into people’s faces. Mostly,they stood around placidly with their nose rings and bear.But at dusk of the second day, one wiry biker jumped onthe stage, brusquely grabbed a mike, and demanded tohave a vote, yes or no, as to whether people had sup¬ported the Viet Cong flag that had been on the stageearlier in the day, seeing as how he had three brothers inVietnam, one in the hospital. The vote was strongly pro-Cong, and the guy left the stage in disgust. But headorganizer Pete Bobo had heard this and took it as a threatand came up to the stage where he said (seemingly trip¬ping) : “If any of you bikers try to cause any trouble at mybash, I’ll string you up. Come on back up to the stagewhoever said that!” The biker came back stripped to thewaist for a fight. The only thing that averted a fight wasContinued on Page SixTHB1TREGod and MammonBLAKE’S “THE MARRIAGE OF Heaven and Hell” is apoetic manifesto of the imagination. It is Freudian m em¬phasizing the imperatives of supressed desire, Marxist inits implicit revolutionary utopianism. Desire and reason,or devil and angel, battle there, and from the blood oftheir wounds grows love, creation, imagination, Art, Eden.Blake’s eccentric genius for combining poetry, prophe¬cy, and aphorisms with illustrations and engraved designhas now been translated few the stage by Cain’s Companyof the U. of C. The leading forces behind this effort areJerome McGann (adaptation), and their production hasthe class and artistic flair we have come to expect ofthem. Using a mixed-media technique, which Blake’s workseems naturally to lend itself to, the company tries to dofor the words what Blake’s illustrations do in the originaledition: to provide a visual (and aural) frame for what issaid. The staged frame is indeed impressive: projectedcolor slides, strobe lights, music, sound effects, costumesand stage properties (including masks and dragons), all ofwnich in combination evoke expressionistically the sym¬bolic antinomianism of Blake’s odd vision. Here we see anangel and a devil whacking each other with crosses; achorus of prisoners whisper through iron gates, “Prisonsare built with stones of Law, Brothels with bricks of reli¬gion”; the Poet talking with the prophets Ezekial andIsaiah, asking of the latter whether a “firm persuasionthat a thing is so, make it so?” and getting for answer,“Ml poets believe that it does, and in ages of imagination this firm persuasion moved mountains; but many are notcapable of a firm persuasion of anything.”Mr. McGann has seen fit to introduce other materialinto his script, notably two of Blake’s companion poems,“The Lamb” and “The Tyger,” in addition to a blas¬phemous version of the Lord’s Prayer, which is addressedto Augustus Caesar. This gives strength to the conceptionin that it provides clear images of ihe lines of opposition,besides filling out Blake’s “minor prophecy” with dramat¬ic material.Rockefeller Chapel, of course, is a fitting setting forsuch a show. God and Mammon in one temple, you see. Italso makes for minor irritations such as echoes and visi¬bility difficulties, but these do not seriously undermine anappreciation of what is going on. In fact the echoes oftenadd to the effect. The Chapel is also appropriate for amarriage. Here the angel and the devil are joined beforethe alter, the fruit of which union is a Child, who uttersthe final line, “For every thing that lives is holy.”Blake’s sympathy for the devil is not mere diabolism.He is ultimately beyond good and evil. “Good is the pas¬sive that obeys Reason. Evil is the active springing fromEnergy.” “Energy is the only life, and is from the Body;and Reason is the bound or outward circumference ofEnergy.” Like his hero, Adam the resurrected, or Christ,who transcended Energy and Reason with Love, Blaketranscends them with Imagination. “Eternity is in lovewith the productions of time.”John R. Holt muGITTjovbhilHere 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. EliotEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxC. F. Z. HitchcockFrank MalbrancheThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroTlw Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.May 15, 1170/Grey City Joornal/5RECORDSSomething Old, Something New...LIEGE & LIEF by Fairport Convention (A&M SP 4257):LIKE PENTANGLE, Fairport Convention delights in rear¬ranging old ballads and songs for a modem audience.LIEGE & LIEF has five such songs, all of them fascinat¬ing and creative. The combination of backwoods tunes andelectric guitars is striking. Fairport Convention has helpedto establish traditional music as an honest area of modemmusical creativity and experimentation.The other three songs on the album are compositionsby group members, yet it is almost impossible to differ¬entiate between the new and old songs; the traditionalnature of these new songs makes the entire album a uni¬fied whole, and proves that modern writers can capturethe essence of traditional music.IISIC =====Continued from Page Fivethe band which, having moved as far to the back of thestage as the cords to their amplifier allowed, broke into avery loud version of “Hpw’d You Like to Bite My Ass.”* * * *There were occasional forest fires on the hill whichwere actually just brush fires because luckily the treesdidn’t catch. A shout would ring out and hundreds offreaks would storm up the hill to the wind-blown fire.They beat it to death with feet and hands and blankets.The kids were really heroic, chokmg on the smoke, theireyes stinging, building a human wall twenty-five guysdeep. The choking kids were relieved by fresh fightersfrom the fringes, and they would dig away the dry leavesahead of the flames and extinguish the fire amid shoutsand cheers of “POWER TO THE PEOPLE!”Sunday afternoon was especially hot and dry in frontof the stage. The creek Was freezing, however, and thetrees were cool and shady, and dozens of kids were scat¬tered along the water, sitting in the shade or wading andsplashing. Many of them were naked or nearly so. Therewere water fights and squirt gun fights and mud fights, allm fun, with laughter and cheers. Joints and jugs of winecirculated beautifully. A mud slide was built and a MudKing was crowned with a slab of mud topped with a mud- But Fairport Convention is, above all, Sandy Denny.Her voice is strong and sweet. She encourages the mem¬bers of the group with the clarity and forcefulness of herown voice. When the Jefferson Airplane plays, Grace Slickhelps out all the other members of the group by givingthem moral and physical support. Sandy Denny does thesame thing. She drives her group along to new heights ofexcellence and creativity. Even in long instrumental cutsthey exude the same aura as they do when Sandy Dennyis singing. This is a group that knows exactly what it isdoing and where it is going. Unfortunately, Sandy feels ithas gone as far as it can, so she left the group aftermaking this record.plant. It was clean mud somehow.* * *The second night a couple of guys from the band TheHog Farm took over the emcee spot. “There’s a guy uphere in front of the stage in a brown hat who wants somegrass. Someone come up and give him some weed.” Or“We got a bottle of Thunderbird up here with 50 doses oforange (acid) in it. Someone give us fifty more to put init, and we’ll pass it around.” the liberated microphoneproduced such raps as: ‘To whomever ripped off the blackblanket from me, I hope you have a good time with it,because I ripped it off someone else and enjoyed it forfive months.” Or “Whoever took my sleeping bag lastnight, I hope that you had a good night’s sleep, and Iwonder if you would put it back near the tent.” The freefood people came on irate Sunday morning because some¬one had stolen a can of donations and a large sack ofapricots during the night. (How can you steal free food?)I came home that last night, grimy, sore, and exhaust¬ed. I wasn’t really sure whether I’d liked it or not, but thenext morning a feeling of exhiliration, of rejuvenation pos¬sessed me, and I felt better than I had in weeks. Which'says a lot for music, people, trees and organic free food.Gordon GroebeDavid Nofer A BEARD OF STARS by Tyrannosaurus Rex (Bln*Thumb BTS 18):If Fairport Convention has helped to open a new doorfor modern music, Tyrannosaurus Rex, perhaps the mostinnovative group has opened the newest. TyrannosaurusRex is two Englishmen, Marc Bolan (who writes all themusic and plays guitar, organ, bass and sings all thesongs) and Micky Finn (playing Moroccan clay drumstabla, bass and finger cymbals). On the inside of the al¬bum is a picture of a Greek-type statue with some sortof a nymph playing the pipes,. This picture is a prettygood representation of the record’s sound. This group com¬bines classical, folk and jazz into a combination that iseerie and rather hard to accept. But they do have fineinstrumentation with all those instruments, intriging vocals(Bolan’s voice sounds as if he were singing hrough tissuepaper) and inspired lyrics reminiscent of the IncredibleString Band.A BEARD OF STARS is new and different. Yet at thesame time, it brings forth images of things as old asGreece, Elizabethan England and medieval castles andtroubadours.; A BEARD OF STARS hopefully will be thetie between groups that now seems very divergent likePentangle (in their traditional splendor), Jethro Tull (withtheir flute and violence) and all the English blues groups.The role that this album can play is an important one;however, it should not be taken merely as a showcase.Bolan and Finn deserve to be listened to as well as beingexamined in light of other groups. They are brilliant in¬strumentalists and in this capacity, should be admiredas well.The Great PumpkinContributorsRoberto Gambini is a graduate student in the depart¬ment of political science.Gordon Groebe is majoring in sociology in the College.John R. Holt is a member of the committee on socialthought and teaches at the University of Illinois, CircleCampus.Werner Krieglstein is a doctoral candidate in thedepartment of Germanic languages and literatures andteaches at St. Joseph College.David Nnfer is majoring in the social sciences in theCollege.People, Trees, Organic FoodCarillon and brassRachmaninoff and HandelEaster Sunday” and “Royal Water MusicGigantic Fireworks Displayat theFOT4 70ala Performanceand aConcert of Jazz and Contemporary Musicby the Chicago Arts QuartetHutchinson Courtoutside Rockefeller ChapelMay 15,-8:30Rain Date May 17Co-sponsored by Sears, Roebuck Foundation and Rockefeller Chapel8/Grey City Jouroal/May 15, 1870Peter O’Toole * Petula Clark“Goodbye, Mr. Chips”- Look MagazineCiMnia TheatreMay IS, 1970/Grey City Jouraal/7“O’TOOLE BEST ACTOR OF THE YEAR!... Chips’ One Of The Year’s Ten Best!"-NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEWMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer PresentsAn Arthur P. Jacobs Production starringco-starring Sir Michael RedgraveScreenplay by Terence RattiganDirected by Herbert RossProduced by APJAC ProductionsMusic and Lyrics by Leslie BricusseBased on the Novel by James HiltonPanavision® and Metrocolor| Orifii—I •ousdtrtk am MOM rncord.. 11HISuggested forS? HYDE PARK THEATREgvltukb mmiKeep them Trenches Cornin’Continued from Page TtooU High Student-Teacher Coalition at 9.Poetry Group at 8.Z is a film of political suspense and intrigue. Who couldbe more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topical andcontemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, Chicago and Michigan.MASH 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 die Band is the film version of the playwhich seemed to break the ice in the subject of homosex¬uality on Broadway. At the Carnegie at Rush and State.I Am Curious (Yellow) has caused a lot of furor becauseof what the people are doing but the picture is reallyabout what the people are thinking. At the Playboy, 1204N. Dearborn.Fantasia — Disney’s classic featuring Night on BaldMountain — great for heads. At the Esquire, 50 E. Oak St.The People Vs. Ranchman is the name of Megan Ter¬ry’s new play (she wrote Viet-Rock).) as you can guessit’s political and includes a lynching. It’s at the KingstonMines Theatre, 2356 N. Lincoln, weekends at 8:30.Justice I? Done or Oh! Cal Coolidge is the newest of thefamous Second City revues. Second City, 1616 N. Wells,Tuesdays through Thursday and Sunday, Friday at 8:30and 11, Saturday at 8:30,11 and 1.MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST. Adaptation-Next is two one-act plays, one by old Chica¬goan Elaine May and one by Teranee 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 Paul Sills’story theatre. Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln Tuesdaythrough Thursday at 8:30, 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 Hullhouse PlaywrightsCenter, 222 W. North, Friday and Saturday at 8:00.The Lady of Larkspur Loffon and The Happy Journeyfrom Trenton to Camden are two plays by Tennessee Wil¬liams and Thornton Wilder respectively. Cafe TOPA, 904W. Belmont. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30.Theater in Media is multi-media works in television,film and radio. The Theatre of Phynance, 2261 N. LincolnMondays at 8 and 10.The Fourth Force improvisational farces and work-in-progress, 4715 Broadway, Monday and Saturday at 8:30.The Epiphany Theatre Company presents three one-actplays 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 952 W.Diversey, 477-1977, and tickets are $2.50 except on Thurs¬days when students can get in for a buck.To the Induction Center is an original drama performedby the Actor’s workshop at the Unity, 656 W. Barry. Fri¬day and Saturday at 8:30.Naked Lunch is a drama made from the works of Wil¬liam Burroughs. At the Columbia College Performing ArtsCenter, 1725 N. Wells, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 andFREE.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. 63rdClub DeLisa’s 56th and StateBlue Flame Oakwood and Cottage Grove1 i.111 i111 r I 11111 r i. CHARTS/GRAPHS. South Side Jazz every Wednesday 9-4 am at Josephine’sPumpkin Room, 2015 E. 71st St. Call 288-9331 for moreinformation.WEST SIDEShantay 4654 W. MadisonEddie Shaw’s Lounge 4423 W. MadisonL and A 1422 S. PulaskiWalton’s Corner S. Roosevelt and Washtenaw1815 Club Annex 1815 W. RooseveltLicking Stick 1700 W. RooseveltSportsman’s Roosevelt and KedzieKey Large Roosevelt and DamenPOTPOURRICome to the RallyContinued from Page ThreeMoratorium and has had articles on racism and the his¬tory of the independence struggle in Vietnam. As one per¬son involved closely in it says, “NTAC is an educationaltool of a political movement. It is opposed to imperialism,racism, sexism and proposes a socialist alternative to thepresent system.”For quite a while, counseling of IG’s at Great Lakeshas been going on in Chicago. This counseling consists ofhelping them find ways to get out and giving them infor¬mation about servicemen’s rights. Alice’s Restaurant, acoffeehouse specifically serving enlisted men and otheranti-war people opened in July, 1968. It was forced to closelast September by pressure of police (specifically the RedSquad etc.) With the closing of Alice’s, there are evenfewer places where the men from Great Lakes can feelcomfortable in going (though for the first six-eight weeksthey are confined to the base and right after that are onlylet out for 18 hours.) Most of the men are just 18 and thusare too young to go to straight places and have been toohassled when they go to campus-linked places.Saturday, Armed Forces Day, then, is an opportunitythat the benevolent military allows for civilians to seewhat is happening. It has been renamed Armed FarcesDay by the men who are inviting all anti-war people toinnondate the place. Buses will be leaving from campusand will cost a couple of dollars for the long trip up north.The rally will take place in a nearby park and then willproceed inside the base. Right on!Jessica SiegelLeroy lettering(Near campus)363-1288 * CornJ(3Lisl ** 1645 E.55»h STREET ** CHICAGO, IU. 60615 *I^Wjwie.fA 4-1651 JESSELSON’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186- 1340 E. 53rd> t *Xaide faxk s new a«t onkfieslaurant !iratKCU5Sa Grenouille/435 E Hvdt fWN ft***|f^«rd ^W«A^V<-oe 0«Cwill have a trip through the historic provinces ofFranceEVERY MONDA Y EVENINGat the special prix fixe of $4.50THIS MONDAY’S MENUE (MAY 18)La Cote BasqueCOLD CREAM OF CELERYSALADPAELA BASQUAISE(Fish and chicken with Spanish seasonings)DESSERTSBEVERAGEWe are open every day with a menue a la carte, or completedinner. Lunch served daily. Closed TuesdayFOR RESERVATIONSCALL RENE684-4050 Via TWA VisitCOPENHAGEN - 2 NIGHTSBERLIN -2 NIGHTSMADRID — 2 NIGHTSROME - 3 NIGHTSVENICE-2 NIGHTSLUCERNE - 2 NIGHTSPARIS-3 NIGHTSLONDON -2 NIGHTSIRELAND-2 NIGHTSALSO 1 DAY TRIP TO SWEDEN*889“,^FULL PRICEfrom ChicagoAll nights to. thiou|h and from Europe(no long, tiresome bus rides), carelullyselected hotels (All rooms with privatebath), most meals, bauage handling,transfers, tips, sightseeing tours withmultilingual guides and tour manager toescort group through Europe A qualitytour run by experienced professionalsGROUPS DEPART CHICAGOEvery T*o Weeks for Nest 12 MonthsSOME GROUPS LIMITED TO STUDENTSFree trip to teacherswho get 13 student reservationsAmerican International ToursS12 Church Street. Suite clAEvanston, Illinois 60201or PHONE COLLECT 312/491-1740Choice Summer Departures Filling fast15 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-6933... 7:30 AM to 7:00 PM -10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRY Clarkll'Hlrr Ienjoy ourspecial studentratec at^0 timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officee different double featuredaily• open 7 30 a m - lateshow midnight• Sunday film guilde every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gels 85little gal lery for galsonly• clerk perking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c efter 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly program Richard Brautigaris■vV • - } Here are two poemsfrom the book:Jules Verne ZucchiniMLin are walking on the- moon today,planting their footsteps as if they werezucchini on a dead worldvv hile over j,000,000 people starve todeathevery year on a living one1-jtrthJuly to, 1969Critical Can OpenerThhere is something wrongwith this poem. Can youfind it?Hardcover edition $4 95; Delta paperback. $1.95urtfl photo limumM She*Richard Braungan’s three previous bestsellersTrout Fishing in The Fill versus the In WatermelonAmerica Springhill Mine SugarDisasterfoeket photos It tor > fnk Wrkt* fdmund Shea tdmund She0 Delta paperbacks, SI 95 eachAlso available togelher in /CJC\one hardcover volume, $6 95I SCYMOUR LAWAINCC BOOHSMil .UUOtMiNG CO“Go see ‘Putney Swope'. A pacesetter with outrageous wit, cou¬rageous creativity, guts and intelligence. Tells it like its never beentold before.” > -Judith Crist, N.B.C.“ ‘Putney Swope’ is a stinging, zinging, swinging sock-it-to-themdoozey. It is going to take off and be one of the most talked aboutflicks in recent times. By all means I suggest, hell, I damn well insistyou see ‘Putney Swope’ and be prepared for the nuttiest, wildest,grooviest shock treatment. Will leave you helpless with laughter.”-Westinghouse Radio“It is funny, sophomoric, brilliant, obscene, disjointed, marvel¬ous, unintelligible and relevant. If anybody tries to improve it,he should be sentenced.” -N.Y. Times DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSCCP WOODWIND QUINTETWorks by Wellesz • Villa-Lobos • Fine • BeethovenFRIDAY • MAY 15, 1970 • 3:30 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission is free The public is invitedPUTNEY SWOPE"The Truth and Soul MovieNOW AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU Robert RedfordKatharine RossRobert BlakeSusan ClarkTell Them Willie Boy Is HereCOVERINGBsrry SulllV3fl-Written for the Screen and Directed by ABRAHAM POLONSKY • A JENNINGS LANG PresentationA PHILIP A. WAXMAN Production A Universal Picture Technicolor* • Panavision* fGPj*“l*l“1*"1* **—*-'*“•2424 N. LincolnFree ParkingTel.: 528-9126 30neDFiQ Student Rate$1. 50at all times8/Grey City Journal/May 15, 1978' " n 1 » i ',i » i.M * 5’ 1Council To Distribute Neugarten ReportContinued from Page Oneber 3 to allow University members to par¬ticipate in the national elections.John Wilson, provost, said that Leviwould confer with the academic deans andGeoffrey Plampin, University editor of offi¬cial publications to see if this plan was fea¬sible. Levi will then report back to thecouncil and make his recommendation. Wil¬son said this procedure would take aboutone week.Nachtrieb said that although the Councilitself could not make official policy on this matter (“this is an administrative deci¬sion”) he added that the council’s desireswould play a great role in President Ed¬ward Levi’s decision.The 130 page report of the subcommitteeon University women will be distributedaround campus some time today, Nachtriebsaid. The Council wanted the general Uni¬versity community to see the report to getreaction both from students and faculty be¬fore the Council begins deliberation on thereport.The Council also added three paragraphsSG Election RescheduledStudent Government (SG) elections arerescheduled for Tuesday, May 19, andWednesday, May 20.The elections, originally scheduled forMay 5 and 6, were postponed due to lastweek’s strike.According to acting election and rulescommittee chairman Jonathan Dean, a stu¬dent in the law school, the new dates forthe elections are tentative. Should studentsvote to continue the strike into next week itis likely that elections will be postponedagain.All 100 seats in SG’s bicameral assemblyare to be filled. However, only 45 studentshave filed candidacy petitions.Elections for delegates to the NationalStudent Associations (NSA) are to be con¬ ducted simultaneously. Five candidates arerunning for the ten delegate positions.Ballot boxes for both elections will beplaced at various locations on campus.They will be placed in the following loca¬tions Tuesday: Cobb hall main entrance, 9am — 4:30 pm; social sciences, 9 am to11:30 am; Mandel hall corridor, 11:30 am to2 pm; and Hitchcock-Snell, Pierce andWoodward, 5 to 7 pm.Wednesday ballot boxes will be at Socialservice administration and the businessschool, 9 to 11:30 am; the law school, Cobbhall and Mandel hall corridor, 11:30 am to 2pm; Harper library, 2 to 4:30 pm; and Bur-ton-Judson, Pierce and Woodward 5 to 7pm. to a two paragraph statement of May 7deploring the deaths at Kent State and theescalation of the war in Southeast Asia. Theadded paragraphs read:“In our view it would not serve the aimsof the University, faculty or students forthe University to abandon its program ofinstruction. We recognize that some stu¬dents may decide not to continue their aca¬demic studies during the remainder of thequarter.“We therefore recommend that each ofthe faculties speedily devise methods bywhich students who conclude that theymust suspend academic work may make upthe work without having to repeat the quar¬ter, or may be given credit as is appro¬priate for the work which they have com¬pleted.“The council notes that the College hasalready developed such procedures. Be¬cause of the diversity of modes of instruc¬tion and academic requirements in the sev¬eral faculties we expect such adjustmentsto take varying forms in the different areasof the University. In some areas this maymean that ordered alternatives to the usualclassroom procedures will be consideredappropriate, but it is to be understood thatin any case academic credit will be grantedonly for academic work.”Major changes in disciplinary procedurein the council’s report are: two studentsand five faculty members will constitute adisciplinary committee all as voting mem¬bers; a review board will be created thatwill reconsider disciplinary procedures and can call for new hearings; sanctionsagainst students being disciplined havebeen defined; procedures have been set upfor hearing procedures; and failure to re¬spond before a disciplinary committee willno longer be held against students.The Council’s report will become policyas soon as appointments can be made tothe disciplinary and review boards. Underthe new procedure, the University Presi¬dent will appoint, following consultationwith faculty members, 25 faculty membersto serve on five disciplinary committeeswith one designated as chairman. Thirty-two students will be chosen to serve oncommittees with student government ap¬pointing 16 and each division in the Univer¬sity (collegiate division, graduate and pro¬fessional school) appointing one eachthrough their student councils. When acommittee is then needed, one faculty pan¬el and two students will be chosen at ran¬dom.For the review board, the dean of stu¬dents, one academic dean and one seniorfaculty member chosen by the President,and one graduate and undergraduate stu¬dent nominated for the disciplinary com¬mittees will be chosen to serve one yearterms beginning in winter quarter.The board of trustees are also requestedto make certain statutory changes statingthe reasons for taking disciplinary actionbefore the report can become official.Nachtrieb said, though, that the success ofthe report did not rest on the board’s deci¬sion.^jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH| The Place for || Posters || in Hyde Park iI is THE I1 WALLER 8| GALLERY!zz 5300 S. Blackstone iz Raleigh bicyclesdon't cause cancer.Roll one todayCheapest pric es for Carlton.Raleigh. Kobin Hood, falcon.Peugeot. Citane. Mereicr.Coppi and Daws, factorstrained mechanics. I sedbieveles spasmodicalI\.Kl\-b\-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8Smoke a Raleigh bicycle today You doift have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip” l Mir Muai igmIdeasFOR 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 S»., Chic 60602FR 2-2390 - 798 0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SI IN TIFF, OF CANADA SUMMER INBEBKELEY:Spend your summer vacationwhere it all started, picking up somecredits or just grooving on the cli¬mate, the people, the Bay, and theCity (San Francisco).Cal offers two six-week ses¬sions for credit, beginning June 23.We offer super-low-cost, co¬ed, co-op housing, owned and op¬erated by students, for students.Room and board $112/session,vif you share the work; $159/session,if you don't.write for more information:UNIVERSITY STUDENTS'CO OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION2424 RIDGE ROAD:Y BERKELEY. CALIFORNIA 94709 >K‘ ‘M* *WMKr »Ri iJCi i5!« r!5!i rTCi »J5J« »!5N i!?«»I5I« »5!i »KiWE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTERwith a rank ofDOCTOR OF DIVINITY"And ye shall know the truth and the truthshall make you free"John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who believe as wedo, to join us in the holy search for Truth. We believe thatall men should seek Truth by all just means. As one of ourministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for ex¬emption from property and other taxes,3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ec¬clesiastic powers.4. Seek draft exemption as one of our workingmissionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, the¬aters, etc., give reduced rates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinityand I.D. card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use whenyou wish to ordain others. Your ordination is completelylegal and valid anywhere in this country. Your moneyback without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send yourOrdination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND NOW TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHP.O. Box 1393, Dept. 66Evanston, Illinois 60204* > < « I n May 15, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOW FOR SUMMER WORKDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA5-6692 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. 0^ IN PERSON0*voter, vcuiland clfiarySUN., MAY 24,7:30OPERA HOUSE$6.50,5.50,4.50,3.50BOX OFFICE OPENSMONDAY, MAY 4thMAILORDERSEnclose a self-addressed,stamped envelope, postmarked no later than May17th, with your order to Op¬era House Box Office, 20 N.Wacker.HIGH RISK/HIGH GAIN,A Free Wheeling Account of Peace Corps Training.BY ALAN WEISS.An articulate young Chicagoan, M.S. from MIT, Alan Weiss joinedthe Peace Corps in June, 1963, and spent that summer training inNew York City. One of a mob of 200 "volunteers" being "preparedto live and work" in an alien culture, that of Nigeria.Mr. Weiss came dose to being flushed from the program: he waswarned that he was a "highrisk, high gain" candidate that the PeaceCorps did not want to loose him but that he had better "shape up."(Less intellectual arrogance please, less out-spoken critirism.)Like everything he writes, his book is highly personal, as much a storyof social and private life (induding a few hilarious sexual escapadesand a romantic interlude) as it is the Peace Corps training story.Mr. Weiss is a damned good writer and a hell of a funny man.Available at Woodworth's. PLATCCrJ ALL-NIGHT 4HO\vP(»H»M£N<h HtIDflT I UTU.0AV KXlOWING 1AM BfGUlU MAIUGtMay 15Bole Leges! • Boris KertoffDRACIHA A FRANKENSTEIN May 16BATTLE OF ALGIERSMay 22Potor Setters - Bingo SterrMAGIC CHRISTIAN May 23Arfe GuthrieAlla'S RESTAURANTMay 29Sheroe Tele h Re— Pelaniki'sFEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS May 30Mie Ferrew - John CessevetesROSEMARY'S BABYJune 5 June 6Lee Marvin - Jhn Breww w*w Jnhn Wayne-Glen CampbellTHE DIRTY DOZEN TRUE GRITJune 12 June 13Terence Stamp-Samantha Egger wM Cliff Roberts**-Clair BloomTHE COLLECTOR CHARLEYTICKETS SI SBFOTA EVENTSMay 15noonMain quads8:30Rockefeller Chapeloutdoorsrain date: May 17 May 15-19Folk DancingU.C. Folk DancersGALA PERFORMANCE - Outdoor Murol/Visual ExtravoganioRachmaninoff: Easter Sunday - carillon and brassHandel's: Royal Water Music - carillonOne other seledion to be announcedGigantic Fireworks Display9:30Midway orMain quad GALA PERFORMANCE - Concert of Jan and Contemporary MusicChicago Arts Quartetco-sponsored by the Sears, Roebuck Foundation and Rockefeller ChapelMay 15, 16, 178:30Lutheran Theological Seminary1100 E. 55th St. Woining for'Godotdirected by Roger DoddsTickets: $2.00co-sponsored by University TheoterThey Shall Not Passadaption of a play about the Spanish Civil Wardirected by Chris LyonsMay 15-178:00Chicago Theological SeminaryCloisters58th and UniversityMay 168:30 U. of C. Musical Societypresents a concert of Bach CantatasBond Chapel************ ******************************May 17 The South Side Dance Workshop3:00 P.M. Contemporary interpretative donee, includingimprovisations and choreographyMay 18 Student Produced Film8:00 P.M.Ida Noyes Lounge8:00Law School SHIRLEY CLARKwith her underground film. Portrait of Jasonco-sponsorcd by Emily Talbot, Miriam Talbot Fund,the Interhouse Council, and the Woodward Ct. HousesVV*!*Vm**T*V•§*■••T*■•T*VVVVvVMay 198:00Law School8:30Mandel SHIRLEY CLARKwith her film The ConnectionAn Evening of SongGerman, French, Italian, and English songs.Operatic arias and duets.Catherine Malfitano, soprano.Price Browne, tenor.Michael Kraus, pianoandUniversity of Chicago Symphony Orchestraspring concert.presented by Department of MusicMay 16BergmanGallery last Day For the Following ExhibitsSenako Senonoyake Exhibitone of Ceylon's major paintersand. Student Art Exhibit***************************** *************This is the official up-to-date schedule; al events free unless otherwise specified10/The Chicago Maroon/May 15, 1970 •j« »»letters to the editors of the maroonStaff SpeaksAccording to Paul Bernstein’s report inthe Maroon of the strike meeting Mondaynight, those present voted to continue thestrike and to encourage “University stu¬dents, faculty and staff to use the remain¬der of the quarter to engage in politicalactivity.”Yet many members of the staff havefound that this mandate has been inter¬preted by students and faculty, with no¬table exceptions, to use the staff as “facil¬ities” much as they use the xerox ma¬chines. That staff members might sharethe political views, at all points on the con¬tinuum found on the campus, and that theymight share the need to express their ownviews, seems not to have occurred to manyof the students or faculty.Department meetings and workshops areheld and it is expected that the participa¬tion of the staff, regardless of their con¬victions about the issues and actions, willbe limited to their usual functions. No ques¬tion arises whether staff members are insympathy with the points of view they arebeing asked to help express. Further, noquestion arises whether staff membersmay use their skills and working time toassist in campus activities with which theyare in sympathy.The staff recognizes that to a certain ex¬tent they must continue business as usualto facilitate the issue-oriented activities ofall groups and departments of the Univer¬sity. But they would like to have the optionto engage in or abstain from political activ¬ities, activities outside their routine duties,equitably with other members of thecampus community.Jane Hoagfelt, department secretary, SouthAsian Lang. & Civ. Ronald Inden, assistant professor, HistoryShirley Payne, secretary, South Asia Cen¬terBarbara A. Wichura, administrative asst.,South Asia Center .Edith Greenough, administrative asst.,New Nations CommitteeFlorence Levinsohn, managing editor,Amer. Journal of SociologyJackie Peterson, secretary, AnthropologyAmy Louise Barnett, secretary, Anthro¬pologyConnie Davis, secretary, AnthropologySusan Lubin, secretary, AnthropologyAda Belcher, secretary-receptionist, SouthAsia CenterA. D. Moulton, student, Political ScienceMichael J. Wichura, assistant professor,StatisticsJudity H. Aronson, asst, to director, SouthAsia CenterNaomi M. Shoop, office manager, Grad.School of BusinessIlene Haniotis, supervisor, faculty, secre¬tarial service, Grad. School of BusinessMosle Schwartz, student, SociologyJohn Schmitt, student, Far Eastern Lang.& Civ. - vMarilyn Kolodziejczyk, editorial assistant,American Journal of SociologyPercy SpeaksThis is to acknowledge receipt of the peti¬tions addressed to Senator Smith and mewhich were signed by a great number ofstudents at the University of Chicago to in¬dicate disapproval of the Cambodian in¬cursions, to urge rapid US troop withdraw¬als from Southeast Asia, and to questionPresidential war-making powers in the ab¬sence of a congressional declaration of war.I appreciated the opportunity to receivethese petitions in person and to hear the views of a representative group of campusleaders during the course of the two hourmeeting last week.I opposed every escalation of the war inSouth Vietnam by the Johnson adminis¬tration, supported President Nixon’s pro¬gram of troop withdrawals except that Iurged a more rapid rate of withdrawal, andhave been unalterably opposed to the in¬cursions made into Cambodia. After Presi¬dent Nixon’s speech, I made a public state¬ment urging withdrawal of all Americanforces from Cambodia.With respect to the United States Senatereasserting its constitutional authority inforeign policy and questions of war andpeace I am consulting with Professor PhilipB Kurland, the distinguished constitutionallawyer on the faculty of the University ofChicago Law School, and other authoritiesin the field of constitutional law with a viewto redefining and clarifying the war-makingpowers of the President and the Congress. Ithink it crucial that there be a restorationof the balance of power between the execu¬tive and legislative branches, as envisionedby the Constitution. By the time you re¬ceive this letter I shall have initiated legis¬lation to this effect.For many years Congress virtually rub¬ber-stamped military appropriations re¬quested by the President, the Pentagon andthe Armed Services Committees of bothHouses. So far as the United States Senateis concerned, those days have ended. Wehave successfully blocked certain appro¬priations, and though we have failed by onevote in the fight against ABM deployment,there is a good possibility that this year wecan prevent extension of the ABM pro¬gram. Various proposals are also underconsideration to limit and end the war inSoutheast Asia. I worked closely with Sena¬ tor Cooper of Kentucky on his amendmentto prohibit funds for American forces to en¬gage in any ground conflict in Laos andThailand, and this was passed 86-0. I testi¬fied before the Senate Foreign RelationsCommittee on ways to reassert Senate au¬thority in the field of national commitmentsto foreign powers; the resolution to accom¬plish this was passed, 70-16.Much more needs to be done. Your peti¬tions encourage me to move forward and Ithank you for them.Charles H PercyGay Lib DanceToday, Tuesday, I went through the prop¬er channels to reserve Ida Noyes gym for aGay Liberation dance Saturday night. MissMulvaney of the Women’s Physical Educa¬tion Department told me we could use thegym if the student activities office gave itsapproval.Skip Landt, director of that office, saidwe would have to submit a plan in writingfor limiting attendance to Universitypeople, one guest per person. We refuse toplan the exclusion of our non-University sis¬ters and brothers, gay people, high schoolstudents, and community people. Ratherwe intend to resist the administration’s rul¬ing and have the dance.The dance is advertised all over the city.The band is hired. We wish all to under¬stand that we feel responsibility to pay forhaving the floor rewaxed, and for any otherexpenses that may result from the dance, ifthis is the usual arrangement with sponsorsof dances in the gym. Cigarette burns dam¬age the gym floor, so we ask people tosmoke in other areas of the hall. We wantto leave the building in fine shape for allthe people who will share its use. If theContinued on Page 14Where's the 3 largestwedding ring selection?119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOODEVERGREEN PLAZA*'Nt fWflftS >Ot 59 VfAtS EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rato* forStudent* and Relative*Single rooms from $ 10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10- 500. Please call H. FingerhutPL 2-10005454 South Shore DrivetMmiCiaft Special PurchaseGarrard BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMMT STOREPL 2-474411 SO E. 63nl St.Complete WithPICKERINGDIAMOND CARTRIDGEAnd BASE Record Changer Ton don't needinsuranceprotectiontor your car(if yon liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).FEATURES:Synchro-Lab Motor, Pickering V-15 AT-3Cartridge, Diamond Stylus»MruiOvaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St —779-6500•SAVE - $20j$a|aMcj|c $$$$* *********! 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 CRANE238-0971SENTRY.frINSURANCETht Hardware Mutuals Organization1 \ i 1 May 15, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/11TO: The Members of the University of Chicago CommunityIn recent days, a number of attacks, verbal and physical, have been made on the Adlai Stevenson Institute of International Affairs.Despite frequent meetings with faculty, students and members of the community, letters and articles in the press, the Fellows and staff 0fthe Institute find that a great deal of misinformation about the Institute is still current.Prior to their attack on the Institute, certain members of the community, who said they were members of the SDS, visited the Insti¬tute and spent the equivalent of several working days with various members of the staff and Fellows. They were given full access to papersfor various meetings, about which they appeared to have questions, and were fully briefed on the finances and other matters of the Institute.The result was a lengthy document they wrote and circulated around the university campus. The document, by any standards, was quiteremarkable. Much of the information in it was patently false. Some was distorted by being pulled out of context, and truths known to theauthors of the document were omitted.We wish, therefore, to set forth the complete facts as clearly as we can. Our books and records are open. Moreover, the staff andFellows of the Institute, whose names and telephone numbers are appended hereto, stand ready to discuss their work personally with allinterested parties.The Adlai Stevenson Institute was founded on February 5, 1967. It is a private, non-partisan, educational foundation. Its sourcesof financial support are private individuals, foundations, and a Consortium of colleges and universities. It accepts no government funds.It does no defense or counter-insurgency research. It accepts no contracts. It lends no support whatever to the war in Vietnam and Cam¬bodia.The Institute’s central purpose is to help advance man’s progress toward a rational world order by seeking and urging the appli¬cation of practical solutions to the stubborn problems which beset men everywhere.During the past three years, it has brought together scholars, statesmen, activists, journalists, businessmen, politicians and profes¬sional men to think through collegially detailed aspects of major public policy issues. A full description of the current resident Fellows andtheir programs follow:*EQBAL AHMAD (B.A. Forman Christian CollegeM.A. Punjab University, Lahore, Pakistan; Ph.D. Prince-ton), the author of numerous articles on revolutionarywarfare in the Third World, has participated in confer¬ences and seminars sponsored by the Institute on the sub¬ject of political violence and social change.Eqbal Ahmad’s major project in 1970-71 will be thecompletion of two books, one on the Algerian Revolutionand one entitled Revolution and Reaction in the ThirdWorld. In addition, he will continue to function as an edi¬tor of the new French language magazine AfricAsia —The Magazine of the Third World.Mr. Ahmad presently resides in New York.FREDERICK S. ARKHURST (M.A. University ofAberdeen, Scotland), Assistant Director of the Institute,former Senior Economist in the African Economic Com¬mission, former Permanent Secretary of the Foreign Min¬istry of Ghana, and former Ambassador from Ghana tothe United Nations, is studying aspects of economic in¬tegration in Africa. His symposium, Africa in the 1980’s,which brought together African, American and Europeanexperts on African problems to discuss and make recom¬mendations on the problems of African development —politics, economic development, population trends, agricul¬ture, industry, trade, education and law — will be pub¬lished in the fall.The object of the symposium was to try to project aportrait of Africa in the 1980’s on the basis of events andexperiences in the past decade and also on the basic prior¬ities which could help policymakers bring developments inAfrica in the 1980’s in line with African needs and aspira¬tions.Mr. Arkhurst’s telephone number is: 924-5528.THOMAS J. BOODELL, Jr. (A.B. Princeton, J.D. Har¬vard), a Chicago attorney, became a Fellow of the In¬stitute in August, 1968, to work on the problems faced byinstallment buyers of real estate. Boodell acts as a lawyerand consultant for the Contract Buyers League of Chicagoand is one of the group of lawyers representing contractbuyers in law suits filed in State and Federal Courts inChicago. He helped draft the original Federal Court CivilRights complaints filed in January, 1969 on behalf of theContract Buyers League and its members and has partici¬pated in all major legal battles to date in those law suits,including defense against the recent evictions.Boodell also acts as the director of the Institute’s Con¬ sortium of Colleges and Universities which consists of ap¬proximately 10 member institutions located throughout thecountry. Institute Fellows help plan and participate in con¬ferences, courses, seminars and lectures at the variousmember institutions throughout the academic year. In ad¬dition, students and faculty from member institutions areinvited from time to time to join with the Stevenson Fel¬lows for discussion and programs at the Institute.Mr. Boodell’s telephone number is: 493-0519.PAUL R. BOOTH (B.A. Swarthmore College), LaborEconomist and former Research Director, United Pack¬inghouse Workers AFL-CIO; free lance journalist (Ramp¬arts, Nation); National Secretary, Students for a Demo¬cratic Society 1965-66; co-author, Port Huron Statement(1962). At the Institute, Mr. Booth has conducted a studyof labor unions and the urban crisis. He is also developinga pilot educational program relating to major domesticsocial and political issues for use by American laborunions, is organizing a seminar for rank-and-file laborunion leaders, on labor and economy.Mr. Booth’s telephone number is KE 8-3063.MRS. JANE C. BROWNE, former Executive Director,Planned Parenthood Association, Chicago Area, and one ofthe founders of the Family Planning Council of Metropoli¬tan Chicago, is a noted expert on family planning andpopulation problems. As a Fellow, she has made threetrips around the world visiting family planning programsand studying the problems of poverty in their relationshipto population. Her fellowship terminated April 30, 1970 andshe is now engaged in planning projects for the Govern¬ment of Nigeria.ALLAN B. CUNNINGHAM (B.A. Durham University,M.A., Ph.D. University of London), author of severalbooks and articles on history and international affairs, hastaught at the University of London and Oxford. He is nowDean of the Faculty of Arts (on leave) at Simon FraserUniversity in British Columbia. Under his Institute Fellow¬ship, Mr. Cunningham is engaged in a survey and ananalysis of the problems Of institutionalization of highereducation in North America. In this connection, he is vis¬iting and surveying universities to provide materials for acomparative analysis of problems of university reform.Mr. Cunningham resides in West Vancouver, BritishColumbia.PETER DIAMANDOPOULOS (Diploma in Mathemat¬ ics, Athens College, Athens, Greece; B.A., M.A., PhDHarvard), Dean of the Faculty and Professor of Philosophy and History of Ideas, Brandeis University, is Directoiof Studies at the Institute. He is studying the evolvingstructure of the university and the problem of “relevance’in education.Mr. Diamandopoulos resides in Boston, Mass.WILLIAM W. ELLIS (A.B. Oberlin College, Ph. DNew York University), on leave of absence as AssociatProfessor of Political Science at Northwestern University.A specialist in Urban Politics and Political BehaviorEllis has worked as a member and consultant for a nunber of community organizations in recent years. He is thauthor of White Ethics and Black Power, published i1969. During 1969-70 he studied ways of increasing thtechnical and other intellectual resources available tblack leaders in the United States. In January, 1970, hresigned his Fellowship to become Vice-President and Drector of Research of the Black Strategy enter in Chcago.Mr. Ellis’ telephonenumber is: 328-6428.RONALD A. GRZYWINSKI (B.S. Loyola Universityis working on a project to create a structure which wiattract a massive investment of private capital, crediand know-how into the development of urban ghettos. Thwould be accomplished through the formation of a larfscale, privately capitalized, economic development GrouThe Group would serve as a resource to the urban poodelivering the capital and talent required for developingIt would be legally and internally structured to fully utiize existing legislation and government incentives to hethe poor help themselves.The following would be the objectives of the Group:1) To help poor individuals to accumulate personwealth;2) To increase per capita income by creating tlopportunity for upward mobility of poor individuals;3) To physically rehabilitate urban ghetto neigborhoods; 14) To assure control of the development Proce'by the poor.While President of the Hyde Park Bank he establishan Urban Development Division which utilized busin* For descriptions of past Fellows and their programs, see the Institute's 1968-69 Annual Report, which is available to interested parties onrequest.12/Tho Chicago Maroon/May 15, 1970government, and religious deposit support to finance acomprehensive program of credit and counseling to Blackentrepreneurs and community organizations. He is a'• member of the Economic Advisory Board of The Wood-f lawn Organization.Mr. Grzywmski’s telephone number is: 285-8394.i-s EDWARD W. GUDE (A.B. Dartmouth), Assistant Pro¬fessor of Political Science at Dartmouth College is study-!* ing political violence in particular domestic and inter-e national environments. Professor Gude developed the cur¬riculum for the Institute’s advanced seminar on politicalviolence and social change. This year, his fellowship waspart-time.Mr. Gude resides in Hanover, New Hampshire.JOEL F. HENNING (A.B., J.D. Harvard) providedlegal support for various organizations including the Na¬tional Vietnam Moratorium Committee and the Afro-American Patrolmen’s League of Chicago. He is a mem¬ber of the Board of Governors, Chicago Council of Law¬yers, a new association dedicated to reform of the law andthe legal profession.At the Institute, he is analyzing the problems of corpo¬rate power and legitimacy. His current work involvespreparation of a study which will deal with the currentdebate over corporations and the public interest.Subsequently he will attempt to construct a workablemodel of effective public control by examining the rela¬tionship of one industry to the federal government andproposing substantial legal reforms in that relationship.Mr. Henning’s phone number is MU 4-0048.Dlty-.101nimthCh SIDNEY HYMAN (B.A., M.A. University of Chicago),formerly with Johns Hopkins University in Bologna, Italy,and European representative for the Saturday Review, isthe author of Beckoning Frontiers, The American Presi¬dent and the recently published Politics of Consensus. Atthe Institute, he has undertaken two projects: “Churchand State and the Modern World” which examines thepost-Vatican II interplay between the religious realm andthe secular realm. The second proejct, “The Lawfulness ofthe Law,” examines the reasons why particular groups ofAmericans have lately come to question the “legitimacy”iat of the law as it applies to them. The study, among otherthings, analyzes the effects of “delegation” in the law¬making process, the uncontrolled use of discretionary pow¬er in the administration of justice, the “blind spots” in thecommon law, the relationship between courts of law andpolice powers, the limitations on access to counsel and theright of appeal.Mr. Hyman’s telephone number is: 373-3099.JUAN MANUEL MAIGUASHCA (B.A. Princeton, D.Phil. Oxford), a lecturer on Latin American history atManchester University, Manchester, England, is an Ecua¬dorian Indian. His work at the Stevenson Institute stemsfrom the fact that throughout the world, a major inhibitionto the achievement of human dignity and development hasbeen the confusion among people in the sense of their ownnational identity. When people are unsure who they arebecause the majority of them have not had the opportun¬ity ity to regard themselves as part of the national commu¬nity, they obviously lack a sense of common purpose. Thisin turn deeply affects their capacity for progress.ou00enutihe Mr. Maiguashca seeks to promote a solution to thisproblem in three ways in an Ecuadorian context. He isproducing the first detailed social and economic history ofEcuador. He is trying to create a regularized study ofEcuadorian history in the Ecuadorian university system.He plans to make available a version of his history inquechua, the language of the Ecuadorian Indians.Mr. Maiguashca’s telephone number is: FA 4-8200.THEODORE R. MARMOR (B.A,. Ph.D. Harvard) ison leave of absence from the political Science Departmentat the University of Wisconsin, where he has been associ¬ated with the Poverty Research Institute. In 1966 heworked in the initial administration of the Medicare pro¬gram and since has been a consultant to the President’sCommission on Income Maintenance Programs. At the In¬stitute he edited a book on Income Maintenance Proposalsto be published in 1970 and studied current proposals forwelfare reform and income guarantees in the UnitedStates and Europe. His Fellowship terminated in Febru¬ary, 1970.JOSEPH C. MUSKRAT (B.A., L.L.B. University ofOklahoma), former Assistant Attorney General of Okla¬homa and attorney for the Cherokee Nation, has con¬ducted a study of present programs and legislation appli¬cable to American Indian. He designed a program to ex¬plore Indian legal and political issues and to bring legaland professional services to Indian community organiza¬tions.Mr. Muskrat has finished his project and his fellow¬ship was terminated on January 16,1970.WILLIAM R. POLK (B.A., Ph D. Harvard, M.A. Ox¬ford), Director of the Institute, is a former faculty mem¬ber of Harvard University, and from 1961-65 was a mem¬ber of the Policy Planning Council of the Department ofState. He is also Professor of History at the University ofChicago, former Director of its Center for Middle EasternStudies, and author of The United States and the ArabWorld and other books. He is now working on two books:Violence and Man’s Hope and The Bureaucratic and In¬tellectual History of the Field of International Affairs.Mr. Polk’s telephone number is: 373-0655.RICHARD E. RUBENSTEIN (B.A., J.D. Harvard,M.A. Oxford) is Assistant Director of the Institute forDomestic Affairs, a former lawyer and Associate Profes¬sor of Political Science at Roosevelt University.Rubenstein came to the Stevenson Institute in 1967 tohelp organize its programs on member campuses of theInstitute Consortium of Colleges and Universities and towrite a book on the subject of political violence in theUnited States. The book, entitled Rebels in Eden — MassPolitical Violence in the United States, was published byLittle, Brown and Company in 1970. Rubenstein has par¬ticipated in many of the Institute working groups and con¬ferences on political violence and social change and orga¬nized special working groups on Making Black PowerWork (winter 1968/69) and on Revolutionary Youth Move¬ments in Chicago (spring 1970).In 1970-71 he will be writing a second book on thesubject of revolutionary change in the United States and will be continuing research begun in 1969-70 on methods ofachieving community control of urban police departments.Mr. Rubenstein’s telephone number is: 643-3077.REINALDO SCARPETTA (B.S. Georgia Institute ofTechnology), former Dean of Social and Economic Scien¬ces at the Universidad del Valle. At the Institute he hasbeen developing graduate programs for management for aConsortium of Latin American Universities.Mr. Scarpetta may be reached through the Institute orthe Universidad del Valle.HEREERT SEMMEL (B.S. New York University, J.D.Harvard), Professor at University of Illinois College ofLaw, was doing research in the area of community con¬trol. Mr. Semmel serves as Labor Arbitrator, NationalPanel, American Arbitration Association, and a Consultanton Legal Service Programs for OEO. His Fellowship ter¬minated on January 15,1970.DANIEL A. SHARP (B.A. Berkeley, J.D. Harvard),Assistant Director of the Institute was former Deputy At¬torney General of California, staff member Adlai Steven¬son’s delegation to the United Nations, Director of StaffTraining Center and Division of Educational Resources ofthe Peace Corps, Director, Peace Corps programs in Bo¬livia and Andean Peru. Mr. Sharp directs the study group,jointly undertaken with the Chicago Council on ForeignRelations, on Peruvian-American relations. The aim is notto issue resolutions or to take policy positions; rather, it isto improve mutual understanding. It seeks to do this bybringing to bear on the problem of formulating foreignpolicy a broad representative group rather than merelythose with a special interest. Participants include offi¬cials from both governments, spokesmen for oppositionparties, leading businessmen, scholars, lawyers, labor andchurch leaders, reporters and other citizens with relevantexperience and interest. The working papers as revisedfollowing critiques and discussions by project memberswill be published this summer.Mr. Sharp’s telephone number is 493-2863.MOHAMMED OSMAN YASSEIN (Graduate of Univer¬sity of Khartoum, B.S. London University), former Per¬manent Secretary of Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sudanand Governor of the Nile Province, is now Resident Rep¬resentative of the United Nations Development Pro¬gramme in the People’s Republic of Yemen. An economistby training, he brings great experience in African affairsand diplomacy to his lectures for Consortium members.He is planning a solution to regional particularism andnational development in the Sudan. Due to illness, Mr.Yassein has returned to the Sudan.FELLOWS APPOINTED BUT NOT ABLE TO TAKE UPAPPOINTMENTS WERE:GERT ROSENTHAL (B.S. and M.S. University of Califor¬nia)ANTONIO S. TARNAWIECKI (B.S. National EngineeringUniversity, Lima, Peru)on.tl The Institute is, of course, housed in Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House. At the time the Institute was formed, Robie House wasempty and in extremely poor physical condition. Together with the University, the Institute invested its own meager funds in the restora¬tion of the building. Its primary use is for the Fellows and staff of the Institute to carry out their own work. However, we have attemptedwithin reasonable limits to make it as available as possible to visitors, faculty and students of the University and members of the commu¬nity. Regular tours are conducted through the Institute and it has played host to a number of community affairs includi"? the recent meet¬ing of the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference. The building is a national monument. It is regrettable that in the recent attacksfig on the building, several features of the building were ruined and original Frank Lloyd Wright furniture destroyed.ce: The late Senator Joseph McCarthy perfected the technique of the 1950’s where a man’s career and an institution’s reputationcould be wrecked merely by sustaining an attack against them. Each false charge could be met only by a lengthy refutation, and beforeone charge could be fully exposed as a he, another false charge could easily be brought forward. Distinguished men of learning and higher6 institutions of education fqlt the lash of this technique in the 1950’s. It would be a supremely ironic tragedy if a small group of studentswho claim to be the vanguard of a new and better society made themselves the heirs of Joe McCarthy’s squalid tactics, and effectively used\ it to victimize the University of Chicago intellectual community — this, by imposing on it a grotesque version of what the Adlai StevensonInstitute is all about.May 15, 1970/Tho Chicago Maroon/13Adlai Stevenson Institute 4*M\TO: The Members of the University of Chicago CommunityIn recent days, a number of attacks, verbal and physical, have been made on the Adlai Stevenson Institute of International Affairs. * 'Despite frequent meetings with faculty, students and members of the community, letters and articles in the press, the Fellows and staff ofthe Institute find that a great deal of misinformation about the Institute is still current.Prior to their attack on the Institute, certain members of the community, who said they were members of the SDS, visited the Insti¬tute and spent the equivalent of several working days with various members of the staff and Fellows. They were given full access to papersfor various meetings, about which they appeared to have questions, and were fully briefed on the finances and other matters of the Institute.The result was a lengthy document they wrote and circulated around the university campus. The document, by any standards, was quite <remarkable. Much of the information in it was patently false. Some was distorted by being pulled out of context, and truths known to theauthors of the document were omitted. *We wish, therefore, to set forth the complete facts as clearly as we can. Our books and records are open. Moreover, the staff andFellows of the Institute, whose names and telephone numbers are appended hereto, stand ready to discuss their work personally with all ^interested parties.The Adlai Stevenson Institute was founded on February 5, 1967. It is a private, non-partisan, educational foundation. Its sourcesof financial support are private individuals, foundations, and a Consortium of colleges and universities. It accepts no government funds. *It does no defense or counter-insurgency research. It accepts no contracts. It lends no support whatever to the war in Vietnam and Cam¬bodia.r •The Institute’s central purpose is to help advance man’s progress toward a rational world order by seeking and urging the appli¬cation of practical solutions to the stubborn problems which beset men everywhere.* -During the past three years, it has brought together scholars, statesmen, activists, journalists, businessmen, politicians and profes¬sional men to think through collegially detailed aspects of major public policy issues. A full description of the current resident Fellows andtheir programs follow:* * .EQBAL AHMAD (B.A. Forman Christian CollegeM.A. Punjab University, Lahore, Pakistan; Ph.D. Prince¬ton), the author of numerous articles on revolutionarywarfare in the Third World, has participated in confer¬ences and seminars sponsored by the Institute on the sub¬ject of political violence and social change.Eqbal Ahmad’s major project in 1970-71 will be thecompletion of two books, one on the Algerian Revolutionand one entitled Revolution and Reaction in the ThirdWorld. In addition, he will continue to function as an edi¬tor of the new French language magazine AfricAsia —The Magazine of the Third World.Mr. Ahmad presently resides in New York.FREDERICK S. ARKHURST (M.A. University ofAberdeen, Scotland), Assistant Director of the Institute,former Senior Economist in the African Economic Com¬mission, former Permanent Secretary of the Foreign Min¬istry of Ghana, and former Ambassador from Ghana tothe United Nations, is studying aspects of economic in¬tegration in Africa. His symposium, Africa in the 1980’s,which brought together African, American and Europeanexperts on African problems to discuss and make recom¬mendations on the problems of African development —politics, economic development, population trends, agricul¬ture, industry, trade, education and law — will be pub¬lished in the fall.The object of the symposium was to try to project aportrait of Africa in the 1980’s on the basis of events andexperiences in the past decade and also on the basic prior¬ities which could help policymakers bring developments inAfrica in the 1980’s in line with African needs and aspira¬tions.Mr. Arkhurst’s telephone number is: 924-5528.THOMAS J. BOODELL, Jr. (A.B. Princeton, J.D. Har¬vard), a Chicago attorney, became a Fellow of the In¬stitute in August, 1968, to work on the problems faced byinstallment buyers of real estate. Boodell acts as a lawyerand consultant for the Contract Buyers League of Chicagoand is one of the group of lawyers representing contractbuyers in law suits filed in State and Federal Courts inChicago. He helped draft the original Federal Court CivilRights complaints filed in January, 1969 on behalf of theContract Buyers League and its members and has partici¬pated in all major legal battles to date in those law suits,including defense against the recent evictions.Boodell also acts as the director of the Institute’s Con¬ sortium of Colleges and Universities which consists of ap¬proximately 10 member institutions located throughout thecountry. Institute Fellows help plan and participate in con¬ferences, courses, seminars and lectures at the variousmember institutions throughout the academic year. In ad¬dition, students and faculty from member institutions areinvited from time to time to join with the Stevenson Fel¬lows for discussion and programs at the Institute.Mr. Boodell’s telephone number is: 493-0519.PAUL R. BOOTH (B.A. Swarthmore College), LaborEconomist and former Research Director, United Pack¬inghouse Workers AFL-CIO; free lance journalist (Ramp¬arts, Nation); National Secretary, Students for a Demo¬cratic Society 1965-66; co-author, Port Huron Statement(1962). At the Institute, Mr. Booth has conducted a studyof labor unions and the urban crisis. He is also developinga pilot educational program relating to major domesticsocial and political issues for use by American laborunions, is organizing a seminar for rank-and-file laborunion leaders, on labor and economy.Mr. Booth’s telephone number is KE 8-3063.MRS. JANE C. BROWNE, former Executive Director,Planned Parenthood Association, Chicago Area, and one ofthe founders of the Family Planning Council of Metropoli¬tan Chicago, is a noted expert on family planning andpopulation problems. As a Fellow, she has made threetrips around the world visiting family planning programsand studying the problems of poverty in their relationshipto population. Her fellowship terminated April 30, 1970 andshe is now engaged in planning projects for the Govern¬ment of Nigeria./ALLAN B. CUNNINGHAM (B.A. Durham University,M.A., Ph.D. University of London), author of severalbooks and articles on history and international affairs, hastaught at the University of London and Oxford. He is nowDean of the Faculty of Arts (on leave) at Simon FraserUniversity in British Columbia. Under his Institute Fellow¬ship, Mr. Cunningham is engaged in a survey and ananalysis of the problems of institutionalization of highereducation in North America. In this connection, he is vis¬iting and surveying universities to provide materials for acomparative analysis of problems of university reform.Mr. Cunningham resides in West Vancouver, BritishColumbia.PETER DIAMANDOPOULOS (Diploma in Mathemat¬ ics, Athens College, Athens, Greece; B.A., M.A., Ph.D. <•* ■Harvard), Dean of the Faculty and Professor of Philoso¬phy and History of Ideas, Brandeis University, is Directorof Studies at the Institute. He is studying the evolvingstructure of the university and the problem of “relevance”in education. 9Mr. Diamandopoulos resides in Boston, Mass.WILLIAM W. ELLIS (A.B. Oberlin College, Ph. D.New York University), on leave of absence as AssociateProfessor of Political Science at Northwestern University.A specialist in Urban Politics and Political Behavior, *Ellis has worked as a member and consultant for a num¬ber of community organizations in recent years. He is theauthor of White Ethics and Black Power, published in1969. During 1969-70 he studied ways of increasing the «technical and other intellectual resources available toblack leaders in the United States. In January, 1970, heresigned his Fellowship to become Vice-President and Di¬rector of Research of the Black Strategy enter in Chi- 4icago.Mr. Ellis’ telephonenumber is: 328-6428.RONALD A. GRZYWINSKI (B.S. Loyola University)is working on a project to create a structure which willattract a massive investment of private capital, credit,and know-how into the development of urban ghettos. This *would be accomplished through the formation of a largescale, privately capitalized, economic development Group.The Group would serve as a resource to the urban poor,delivering the capital and talent required for development. m ,It would be legally and internally structured to fully util¬ize existing legislation and government incentives to helpthe poor help themselves.The following would be the objectives of the Group: «1) To help poor individuals to accumulate personalwealth;2) To increase per capita income by creating the -opportunity for upward mobility of poor individuals;3) To physically rehabilitate urban ghetto neigh¬borhoods;4) To assure control of the development processby the poor.While President of the Hyde Park Bank he establishedan Urban Development Division which utilized business, ** For descriptions of past Fellows and their programs, see the Institute’s 1968-69 Annual Report, which is available to interested parties onrequest.e12/The Chicago Maroon/May 15, 1970government, and religious deposit support to finance acomprehensive program of credit and counseling to Black„ entrepreneurs and community organizations. He is amember erf the Economic Advisory Board of The Wood-lawn Organization.Mr. Grzywinski’s telephone number is: 285-8394.EDWARD W. GUDE (A.B. Dartmouth), Assistant Pro¬fessor of Political Science at Dartmouth College is study-V ing political violence in particular domestic and inter¬national environments. Professor Gude developed the cur¬riculum few the Institute’s advanced seminar on politicalviolence and social change. This year, his fellowship wasa part-time.Mr. Gude resides in Hanover, New Hampshire.•-JOEL F. HENNING (A.B., J.D. Harvard) providedlegal support for various organizations including the Na¬tional Vietnam Moratorium Committee and the Afro-American Patrolmen’s League of Chicago. He is a mem-* * ber of the Board of Governors, Chicago Council of Law¬yers, a new association dedicated to reform of the law andthe legal profession.r . « At the Institute, he is analyzing the problems of corpo¬rate power and legitimacy. His current work involvespreparation of a study which will deal with the currentdebate over corporations and the public interest.Subsequently he will attempt to construct a workablemodel of effective public control by examining the rela¬tionship of one industry to the federal government andproposing substantial legal reforms in that relationship.Mr. Henning’s phone number is MU 4-0048.SIDNEY HYMAN (B.A., M.A. University of Chicago),formerly with Johns Hopkins University in Bologna, Italy,and European representative for the Saturday Review, isthe author of Beckoning Frontiers, The American Presi¬dent and the recently published Politics of Consensus. At9 * the Institute, he has undertaken two projects: “Churchand State and the Modern World” which examines thepost-Vatican II interplay between the religious realm andthe secular realm. The second proejet, “The Lawfulness of<> the Law,” examines the reasons why particular groups ofAmericans have lately come to question the “legitimacy”of the law as it applies to them. The study, among otherthings, analyzes the effects of “delegation” in the law-, ^ making process, the uncontrolled use of discretionary pow¬er in the administration of justice, the “blind spots” in thecommon law, the relationship between courts of law andpolice powers, the limitations on access to counsel and theright of appeal.Mr. Hyman’s telephone number is: 373-3099.JUAN MANUEL MAIGUASHCA (B.A. Princeton, D.Phil. Oxford), a lecturer on Latin American history atManchester University, Manchester, England, is an Ecua¬dorian Indian. His work at the Stevenson Institute stems• from the fact that throughout the world, a major inhibitionto the achievement of human dignity and development hasbeen the confusion among people in the sense of their ownnational identity. When people are unsure who they areL- because the majority of them have not had the opportun¬ity to regard themselves as part of the national commu¬nity, they obviously lack a sense of common purpose. Thisin turn deeply affects their capacity for progress.t Mr. Maiguashca seeks to promote a solution to thisproblem in three ways in an Ecuadorian context. He isproducing the first detailed social and economic history ofEcuador. He is trying to create a regularized study ofEcuadorian history in the Ecuadorian university system.He plans to make available a version of his history inquechua, the language of the Ecuadorian Indians.Mr. Maiguashca’s telephone number is: FA 4-8200.THEODORE R. MARMOR (B.A,. Ph.D. Harvard) ison leave of absence from the political Science Departmentat the University of Wisconsin, where he has been associ¬ated with the Poverty Research Institute. In 1966 heworked in the initial administration of the Medicare pro¬gram and since has been a consultant to the President’sCommission on Income Maintenance Programs. At the In¬stitute he edited a book on Income Maintenance Proposalsto be published in 1970 and studied current proposals forwelfare reform and income guarantees in the UnitedStates and Europe. His Fellowship terminated in Febru¬ary, 1970.JOSEPH C. MUSKRAT (B.A., L.L.B. University ofOklahoma), former Assistant Attorney General of Okla¬homa and attorney for the Cherokee Nation, has con¬ducted a study of present programs and legislation appli¬cable to American Indian. He designed a program to ex¬plore Indian legal and political issues and to bring legaland professional services to Indian community organiza¬tions.Mr. Muskrat has finished his project and his fellow¬ship was terminated on January 16,1970.WILLIAM R. POLK (B.A., Ph.D. Harvard, M.A. Ox¬ford), Director of the Institute, is a former faculty mem¬ber of Harvard University, and from 1961-65 was a mem¬ber of the Policy Planning Council of the Department ofState. He is also Professor of History at the University ofChicago, former Director of its Center for Middle EasternStudies, and author of The United States and the ArabWorld and other books. He is now working on two books:Violence and Man’s Hope and The Bureaucratic and In¬tellectual History of the Field of International Affairs.Mr. Polk’s telephone number is: 373-0655.RICHARD E. RUBENSTEIN (B.A., J.D. Harvard,M.A. Oxford) is Assistant Director of the Institute forDomestic Affairs, a former lawyer and Associate Profes¬sor of Political Science at Roosevelt University.Rubenstein came to the Stevenson Institute in 1967 tohelp organize its programs on member campuses of theInstitute Consortium of Colleges and Universities and towrite a book on the subject of political violence in theUnited States. The book, entitled Rebels in Eden — MassPolitical Violence in the United States, was published byLittle, Brown and Company in 1970. Rubenstein has par¬ticipated in many of the Institute working groups and con¬ferences on political violence and social change and orga¬nized special working groups on Making Black PowerWork (winter 1968/69) and on Revolutionary Youth Move¬ments in Chicago (spring 1970).In 1970-71 he will be writing a second book on thesubject of revolutionary change in the United States and will be continuing research begun in 1969-70 on methods ofachieving community control of urban police departments.Mr. Rubenstein’s telephone number is: 643-3077.RE1NALDO SCARPETTA (B.S. Georgia Institute ofTechnology), former Dean of Social and Economic Scien¬ces at the Universidad del Valle. At the Institute he hasbeen developing graduate programs for management for aConsortium of J atin American Universities.Mr. Scarpetta may be reached through the Institute orthe Universidad del Valle.HERBERT SEMMEL (B.S. New York University, J.D.Harvard), Professor at University of Illinois College ofLaw, was doing research in the area of community con¬trol. Mr. Semmel serves as Labor Arbitrator, NationalPanel, American Arbitration Association, and a Consultanton Legal Service Programs for OEO. His Fellowship ter¬minated on January 15,1970.DANIEL A. SHARP (B.A. Berkeley, J.D. Harvard),Assistant Director of the Institute was former Deputy At¬torney General of California, staff member Adlai Steven¬son’s delegation to the United Nations, Director of StaffTraining Center and Division of Educational Resources ofthe Peace Corps, Director, Peace Corps programs in Bo¬livia and Andean Peru. Mr. Sharp directs the study group,jointly undertaken with the Chicago Council on ForeignRelations, on Peruvian-American relations. The aim is notto issue resolutions or to take policy positions; rather, it isto improve mutual understanding. It seeks to do this bybringing to bear on the problem of formulating foreignpolicy a broad representative group rather than merelythose with a special interest. Participants include offi¬cials from both governments, spokesmen for oppositionparties, leading businessmen, scholars, lawyers, labor andchurch leaders, reporters and other citizens with relevantexperience and interest. The working papers as revisedfollowing critiques and discussions by project memberswill be published this summer.Mr. Sharp’s telephone number is 493-2863.MOHAMMED OSMAN YASSEIN (Graduate of Univer¬sity of Khartoum, B.S. London University), former Per¬manent Secretary of Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sudanand Governor of the Nile Province, is now Resident Rep¬resentative of the United Nations Development Pro¬gramme in the People’s Republic of Yemen. An economistby training, he brings great experience in African affairsand diplomacy to his lectures for Consortium members.He is planning a solution to regional particularism andnational development in the Sudan. Due to illness, Mr.Yassein has returned to the Sudan.FELLOWS APPOINTED BUT NOT ABLE TO TAKE UPAPPOINTMENTS WERE:GERT ROSENTHAL (B.S. and M.S. University of Califor¬nia)ANTONIO S. TARNAWIECKI (B.S. National EngineeringUniversity, Lima, Peru)The Institute is, of course, housed in Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House. At the time the Institute was formed, Robie House was. empty and in extremely poor physical condition. Together with the University, the Institute invested its own meager funds in the restora¬tion of the building. Its primary use is for the Fellows and staff of the Institute to carry out their own work. However, we have attemptedwithin reasonable limits to make it as available as possible to visitors, faculty and students of the University and members of the commu¬nity. Regular tours are conducted through the Institute and it has played host to a number of community affairs including the recent meet¬ing of the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference. The building is a national monument. It is regrettable that in the recent attackson the building, several features of the building were ruined and original Frank Lloyd Wright furniture destroyed.The late Senator Joseph McCarthy perfected the technique of the 1950’s where a man’s career and an institution’s reputationcould be wrecked merely by sustaining an attack against them. Each false charge could be met only by a lengthy refutation, and beforeone charge could be fully exposed as a lie, another false charge could easily be brought forward. Distinguished men of learning and higher• institutions of education felt the lash of this technique in the 1950’s. It would be a supremely ironic tragedy if a small group of studentswho claim to be the vanguard of a new and better society made themselves the heirs of Joe McCarthy’s squalid tactics, and effectively usedit to victimize the University of Chicago intellectual community — this, by imposing on it a grotesque version of what the Adlai StevensonInstitute is all about.« May 15, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/13pLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page 11University places obstacles in our way, themeans that will be necessary for us to holdthe dance may include one or some wewould rather avoid. Finally, we feel thatthis dance is potentially one of the mostbeautiful events ever to occur here — no¬body should hesitate to come — we can allbe together.Step MayGay LiberationBlacks and MaroonI wish to take issue entirely with Mr Sto¬vall’s letter that appeared in the 5 May 1970Maroon. In the first place I do not thinkthat the staff has to apologize for their cov¬erage of the Gregory article. The Maroonhas always, in my experience, done a de¬cent job of covering issues fairly and frommany angles, and its forums are open to any who wish to make use of them. Fur¬thermore, to say that most whites could notunderstand what Gregory was saying be¬cause they were silent following “some ofhis most salient satirical remarks” is tosay that blacks have the right to decidewhat is humorous for whites, an arrogantassumption of thought control which I amnot prepared to grant to anyone, black orwhite, and to say that therefore no Maroonreporter could decently cover the speech isto say that because of lack of under¬standing no white should write aboutblacks, and that therefore unless there areblacks around nothing should be writtenabout blacks, which leads to the kind ofunbenign neglect that made blacks, invis¬ible people for well over a century! Is thatwhat Mr Stovall wants?Next: I worked on the Maroon for aboutnine months, until forced to quit due topressure of other work. In that time I never breathed any “air of white elitist snob¬bery” in its offices, Also during that time Inever knew another black person to comeand offer to work for the paper. I under¬stand that some have come and so offered,so I will not say that the offer has neverbeen made. But, in my opinion, if “any realintegration of the staff is effectively pre¬cluded” it is as much due to black paranoiaand reverse racism as to any unpleasant“collective attitude” op the part of whites.In the third place, the editor’s call forblacks to work for the Maroon if they donot like the coverage black affairs are get¬ting is perfectly reasonable and courteous,indeed self-evidently so. The Maroon doesnot discriminate among staff and writers,nor is it known for censorship. For blacksto say that the campus organ is unfair tothem and then not to use it or any of itsforums to present their side of the case isirrationality at its most ridiculous. For blacks to let their fear of racism gen¬erate reverse racism and extreme paranoiais understandable, but debilitating. To seeanything less than kowtowing as “snob¬bery” and possible surprise as “rejection’is only a handicap. Let the blacks and anyothers come to work prepared to extend thesame standards of courtesy and craftsman¬ship that they have the right to expect.They will certainly find that “atmosphereof welcome” that Mr Stovall claims is notto be found at present.Frieda A. Murray, 70Mod and SoggyASI Officials Refuse Public DebatesContinued from Page Eightdays. Then came Joe McCarthy and Wil¬liam R. Polk finked out on his comradesand became a “political realist.” He wassubsequently stamped with the seal of ap¬proval by HU AC and became a member ofthe policy planning council of the State De¬partment for four years. He has contactsthroughout the liberal establishment, thismaking him an ideal retailer of special“projects” and the like. On which, I mightadd, he is not adverse to making a pennyor two, in the case of the micro-filmlibrary project. Ask him about that one athis open house meeting Friday,the format to be mutually agreed upon, I was met with a hail of abuse. SDS was “in¬tellectually irresponsible,” “absolutely notinterested in the facts.” When I tried todiscuss specific points in the pamphletwhich he found objectionable all he couldassert was that we had “no real desire toCARLOAD TIRE SALEit Mobil Premier n Premium Quality100 LevelNylons Full 4 MyWhitewallsSAVE 50%Buy 2 And Get 2 FreeTIRE SIZE775-14/775-15825-14/815-15855-14/845-15900-15/915-15And Away You Co.,tor Smooth DrivingNew tires? Oil change? Whatever yourcar needs, you can be sure of fast,friendly, efficient auto service, here. HYDE PARKCAR WASH13M E. SM St\ 14/The Chicago Maroon/May 15, 1970i!'•t : >. t i ♦ I have learned more about why I am aradical and not a liberal from this cam-understand my true motives.” He called us“slanderers” and said he would not wastehis time in a public debate. When I saidthat the community had a right to have theissues clarified, he said that they would is¬sue statements and that was the end of it. Asimilar response was obtained from D. GailJohnson after some very insincere double-talk. Only Marvin Zonis of the Middle EastStudies Center appeared to be interested-in“rational discourse.” paign than from any other experience ofmy life. The hypocrisy and double dealingwhich Adlai Stevenson personnel and Uni¬versity officials have displayed with re¬spect to this most important community is¬sue clearly reveal once more the true na¬ture of this liberal university, which drove25,000 poor people, mostly black, out ofHyde Park, leaving many many homeless.Liberalism and armchair radicalism standexposed for all to see who have eyes. As I opened my windows every day thisweek, I was appalled at the greyness andmist that pervaded the atmosphere. Surely,all you scientists who can put men on themoon can learn how to give us beautifulweather in May! But until that times comeswhat can we unsuspecting students do totell the University, the city and the coun¬try that we are distressed at the state ofthe weather.Let us strike! We can sit out in the rainand let it fall on us. The pictures of thehorrible sight would make page one ofevery paper in the country and the Presi¬dent would surely know then that we wereright about the rain. Being a man with aheart, wouldn’t he help us then? Right On!Wendell GlovainkinMike Dunlap is a member of SDS here. Letters PolicyThe Maroon accepts for publica¬tion all signed letters and gadflies.We will withhold names upon request.FRIDAY,MAY 15th8 P.M.JOECOCKERTickets avavlabla at all TICKETRON localincluding FLIP SIDE records and at the cARAGON BALLROOM.1106 W. LawrenceCARPET BARNWAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur CoatsInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Days Tues.-thru Sat. 9-41228 W. Kinzie 243-2271DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShoppirig Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 Reserve YourPlace with the SunADMITTANCE CAN ONLYBE GUARANTEED WHILETICKET SUPPLY LASTSOrder tickets direct from:KICKAP00 CREEK INC.BOX 606, HEYW0RTH, ILLINOIS 61745NameAddressCity State Zip.School Age.I enclose $ for tickets.HWRaWNWMMaRM ''?:r;r,f *'* r *'+'■* f f'.rs > r/T-frr n»rr(Maroon Classified Ada)GOD'S DOING THE JERK AND IT'S THE JERK'S FAULTSCENESBARBECUE-TONIGHT! 5-8:30, AtHitchcock Court.Don't miss the exhibits at theBergmann Gallery May 16 lastday-__Big Store — May 18 7PM Marx.revolutionary T H E A T E RComes To Campus: They Shall NotPass Presented By The Collective9:30PM Fri, 8:30PM Sat & Sun InCTS Quad 5757 Univ. FREE.Minnette's Custom Salon' 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing, clothes copied 8i designed./T Natural High is the Best High.Transcendental Meditation. Frl.May 15, 8PM. 107 Kent.TONITE! "Security Treaty andU s.-Japanese Relations" by HideoSato, Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone8PM.Phonographic Literature Free! 11Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8i Tape Decks $ave$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.Three Marx Flicks for only *1. ThisMonday 7PM Mandel Hall.The NIGHTCLUB, Is open till 2PMSat Night with Live Jazz.After Air-Conditioned Chicken what'snew at the BANDERSNATS? Blin-tzes-Blintzes-Cheese, BLUEBERRYBLINTZES, SOUR CREAM.Shirley Clark and Portrait of Jason;underground film, May 18 LawSchool 8:00.Help raise money for free outdoordance on May 30; Come to MarxBros. Film Orgy with $1.CANDLELIGHT Flickers andVAUGN sings at the NIGHTCLUBSat.CRAFT CO-OP now open Mon.-Frl.1-5, 3rd fl. Blue Gargoyle.Marco Polo Travel. 2268 S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.A Day at the Races—May 18 7PM.Contemporary interpretative dance,including improvisations and choreo¬graphy—SOUTH SIDE DANCEWORKSHOP—May 17—3:30 pm.This Week A Revolution In food atthe Bandersnatch: Presenting BLIN-tzes-blintzes-blintzes.SESITIVITY TRAINING with TheMaster Pro—Dr. Jack Gibb—June12-14—$25. 684-1121 or 643-8538.Go West — May 18 u PM MARXBROS.JUKES IS BACK! Same Low PricesSame Location. Help Us Re-OpenBy Buying a Side. 53rd 8, I.C.SHIRLEY CLARK and her under-ground film The Connection May 198:00 Law School.Turn on Naturally. TranscedentalMeditation. Fri. May 15, 8PM 107I Kent Hall.i°h." Wa*ne Does His Thing InTRUE GRIT Sat May 30 COME!!!STOP! DON'T REGISTER UNTILYOU'VE SEEN THE SOC SCIBOURSE & TEACHER EVALUA-• IONS.The U. of C. Chapter of YAVHEHis undertaking a Survey to Ascer¬tain the Feasibility of establishinga Kosher Food Facility on CampusNext Year. This Service Would BeFor Sunday-Thursday Evenings AndWould Be Competitively Priced.Please Let Us Know By Sunday,wiy 17 if Interested. Form at Hll-ei- 5715 S. Blackstone or Call BobUpbin, x3769.Now That You've Gotten That "P",its Time To Go To Work. TheBest Way To Get There Is Ameri¬can Airlines. Call Campus Rep.Jim Sack 684-6667 For Information.A FESTIVAL OF INDIAN MUSICcoming next weekend. Friday, May42, Lalmani Misna, vichitra vina,and Jnan Prakash Ghosh, tabla.Saturday, May 23, V. Ranganayaki,Larnatic vocal, Ranganathan, mri-oangam, and L. Shankar, violin.5tudent tickets $2.00 each concert,available now in Foster Hall 106.Law School Auditorium, 8:30 P.M.Shirley CLARK and Portrait ofJason; underground film, May 18Law School 8:00.Writers' Workshop (PL 2-8377).An evening of song and the U ofl Symphony Orchestra spring con-cert — May 19 — Mandel — 8:30.n^VAL, T,ME: AI1 PPL with legal-ooiiticai interest or expertise, inter-es ed m groundwork for case re.Rual mass media time for oppos-fg views to presidential mass me-?nnD?.ee^!es: mtfl: Sun- May 17,cSA (|obby) 609 Ellis, orLa 11 493-5190.wmt*ay ^ay 17 6pM Dan RossingAn! speak on "Jewish and ChristianBnn!^«hes t0 the s,a,e Israel"Bonhoeffer House. 5554 S. Wodlawn.i, VALUATIONS: GATES-BLAKE 428 Don't miss the exhibits at theBergman Gallery — May 16 lastday."The Blessings of the Fields" APagan Liturgy Sunday 5PM MeetBehind Museum of Science 8, In¬dustry.SHIRLEY CLARK and her under¬ground film The Connection May 198:00 Law School.GAY LIB CALL 324-1327.Pentecostal Party: BonhoefferHouse 8PM Sunday May 17 Booze,Live Music all for 50c. FlamersWelcome.Plan Ahead. TRUE GRIT May 30.FREE MARSHMALLOWS! AN ALLCAMPUS BARBECUE — Cook YourOwn Hamburgers, Hotdogs (Cheap!)Tues, May 19, 5 To 8:30, In TieHitchcock Courtyard.Bach Cantatas — May 16 — 8:30 —Bond Chapel.War is subsidized. Peace is not.Work for peace.Contemporary Interpretative dance.Including improvisations and choreo¬graphy — SOUTH SIDE DANCEWORKSHOP — May 17 — 3:30 pm.GALA PERFORMANCECarillon and brass; Rachmaninoffand Handel; fireworks at FOTA 70Gala Performance — May 15 out¬side Rockefeller at 8:30 plus iozzand contemporary music concert at9:30 in Hutch Court. Rain date May17.AN UNBELIEVABLEBARBECUEFree Marshmallows, Food (Cheap)Watermelon (For Music). Tues,May 19, Quads at 57th 8> Ellis, 5Till 8:30. Be There.CINEMANow Available! The premier issueof FILM REVIEW DIGEST. A newidea in film magazines, featuringarticles by Dr. Eric Berne, authorof Games People Play and BruceMorrissette. Interviews with NilsPetter Sundgren and Stanley Kauff-mann. Available at the UniversityBokstore and at The Book Centerin Harper Court.METAMORPHOSIS955-9347, 5638 S. Woodlawn.AMAZING SPACETWO ROOMS in a 3-bedrm apt areavailable for summer with optionfor next year. Both are large andairy, furniture will be available,rent is cheap ($45 a month each),and the apartment is super-safe,with pawnbroker bars and a Rape-O-Matic. Also, It's 3'h min. walkfrom campus. Call 643-6803.SPACEFor Rent 2 bdrm apt. 137. 5443 S.Cornell 955-5871 Ju. 1.Furnished Rm. 493-3328.7 Rooms S Shore $145 Avail July1. Furnishings For Sale Too. Call721-6638 Evenings.Two out of three charming femalesneed replacements for a summer ofairy (and cheap) living. Two big,furnished rooms available in safe,close-to-campus apt. for summer,with option for next year. $45 mo.each. Call 643-6803.Very bright and airy 3Vi rm apt.1 block from Co-op and 1C, $140incl all util, avail June 1. Call D.Eisenbuc Skdays NO 7-4700, x2743,Wkends 955-1360.2 female roommates wanted forJune 1st ccupancy. Beautiful Apt.53rd Dorchester. 363-7932, x3447.Available June 1, Very Lorge 4Rm Apt Hyde Park Day DO 3-6700Ext 307 Even: 324-1117.Avail June, V/i rm bsmt apt, furnbright, sep entrance $105/mo nearUniv, 288-3197 or 324-9444.Rmmt wntd Big Apt near Lakeon 53rd Own rm 8> bath 65/mAval June-Sept 30 + opt. 363-3546.REWARD for info leading to ac¬quisition of 2- or 3-bdrm apt. be¬tween 55th and 59th best. Call324-6048 eves.Need fern rmmate now-9/30. $70.E.H.P. Martha, Ml 3-0800, x3891.Fern rmmtwntd f sum plus Iter55th plus Kim own rm $66/mo. 493-4462.F. RMT.Wd. 568iDrr.AnyLengthTimeAskForSylvia667-5695 Own Room.Roommate WantedFor Apartment 2 Blocks From MainQuad. From June and Thru NextYear. Call 955-8155 After 6PM.HOUSE FOR SALE4 bed atoms 2 full baths 2 car ga¬rage large garden. 955-5916.House near campus for summer forfamily. DO 3-3710. 6Vi Room apt-4 Bed rms-Near Cam¬pus — 150/Mon-Sublet Sum-Opt ForFall Lease — 3632383 6PM.5 rm. furn. apt. near campus. (5712S. Maryland ave). Call 363-5029.Sum Sublet: June 15-Sept 20, 3-4bed. Near Lake $200/Mon. Furn.324-7148.R MMT. Wntd. Summer, Poss. NextYr 1400 E 57. $65/mo. 288-4595.Large 1 bdrm Apt. 57 8, Kimbark.Avail June 15 $155 mo. 324-3456. Bossass apt. sublet thru Sept 3bed prime location balcony likenew/ cheap' 955-3971. PEOPLE WANTEDLg furn 3 bdrm apt in So. ShoreJune 15-Sept 15, $100/mo. eves: 731-4188.Summer Sublet: Lg Furn Apt. 2bdrm 1B1 From Campus Free Park¬ing $120 Per mo. 288-7780.Summer Sublet: Lg Furn Apt 2Bdrm. 1 bl. from campus. Freeparking, $120/mo. 288-7780.3V4 Furnished Rms 6/15-9/15, $135/mo. 955-8874. E. Hyde Park.Sub-Lease 6/24-9/19, 1 bdrm. Sunporch, 57 8, Dor. 493-4426.SUBLET: 2Vi rm nicely furn apt.54 & Woodlawn. $9?/mo. Mid-June-mid Sept. Call: 752-4219.SUMMER SUBLETTo sublet by June IS with optionto lease 4 room apt near lake HydePark unfurnisred. Call 288-6304.4 rms June 20-Sept 1. $200 total.Ideal for Couple. 684-0753 Eves.Summer Sublet 3 bdrm apt modernkitchen bathroom near camousshopping adjustable rent. 363-3990.2 Blks Off Campus June-Sept RoomBathroom-Cooking-Ext 8165 Karl.Summer Sublet: 5428 Kimbark 4rms. $104/mo. Couple Preferred ButNot Necessary. Phone 324-9303.Dee-luxe sublet 3 bedroom aptfurnished $130/mo. 288-4234.Sum Sub Incredible Furn 2 PersSpacious 5330 Harper 684-3026. ANew Concept In Living for Sure.Make Love June-Sept in great 6Rm. Apt. 58 8, Maryland. 363-0551.Sublet-Own Room In Lrg. Apt. Air-Condit. Thru Late Sept. $50/mo.Call Ml 3-6000, Rm 314.Beautifully Furn. 3’/*z Large RmsCarpted, Freezer, Cool. 363-4555.Great for Married Students.4 rms plus porch, spacious, safe,3 blocks from quads. June-Sept.$96 mo. Call 955-6232.Sublet with option for the fall; 5rooms, large and airy and with aview; 54th and Dorchester; call363-5644.Apt to Sublet Summer 8 Rooms 8,Sunporch 51 8> Kimbark $200/Mo752-5416.Clean modern furnished, air condi¬tioned one bedroom apartment withlarge living room — Located EastHyde Park. Available mid of Junewith possible option for next year.Call 643-6706 after 5 P.M.SUM SUBLET: Breezy 7-rm. apt.in ideol loc: 53 and Woodlawn. 3-4bedrms. Sunporch. Mid-June to Mid-Sept. $179. Call 684-8412.Sublet-4 bedrooms, stained glasswindows, washing machine, dryer,2 blocks from campus. 324-1999.Beautiful Apt to Sublet 2 Bedrooms,Kitchen, LR, and Foyer 53rd8,Ken-wood June Thru Sept $135/Mo 324-3623 Windows, Porch Etc.Ideal Summer Apt 1 or 2 PeopleMid-June-Sept Balcony Stereo TVNear Campus $100 643-0140.Roommate Wanted for Summer Sub¬let. Mid-June to Mid Sept. One Blkfrom Campus Own Room. Possoption for Next Year 493-3037.3 Bedrooms 2 Bathrooms, Sunporch,Furniture, 4 Blcks From Campus$150/Mo. Possible Fall Option, 363-3436, 53rd8iGreenwood.Summer Sublet: Spacious, cleanfurnished four room apartment.Various goodies (e.g. air condi¬tioner, television . . .) Near shop¬ping, campus. Call 493-5858.Rmt For Beautfl 10-Room 2 FloorAttention! Special Opportunity. Sub-Smr Sblt 5738 Maryland 684-7994.let An Excellent, Airy, Fully Furn¬ished, One Bedroom Married Stu¬dent University Apartment. To Sub¬let For Summer Months. WalkingDistance From the University.Rent — Reasonable. Please CallImmediately: 643-7503.Male Grad Rmmt Wanted. Own RmLarge Furn Townhouse, Nr CampusSummer 8,/Or '70-71. $50/Mo. 955-7436.Ju-Sept w option for next year. 2bl campus $48/mo. 643-9894.Sublet — 4 rms, $150/Mo., nearcampus & Shopping; option for nextyear; selling furniture. Call HY3-3508. SMR SBLT V/z Rm Unfurn $100 UtlInc. 6/15-10/1, X3995, 493-3643.Sum Sub Jun thru Sep own roomin spacious furnished 6-room apt 2roommates 54 8, Dorch'r phoneJohn or Brian 667-7086.SBLT 6/15-9/30? For 2 - 5 Rooms$110/mo. 57th 8, Blkst. Basement.Call BU 8-6610 x 1318 or X2121.Sublet Clean, Safe, 2Vi Room: STU¬DIO. Avail June 15-Opt. Oct 1, $113.mo. Near Lake. Call Jackie. 363-9580.To Sublet June 20-Sep 15, 2Vi Rm.Apt Furn 51st 8, Dorchester, $116per month. Call 955-3022.Summer sublet: 5 rm (3 bdrm) apt54 St. 8, University Av $120/mo.Call 288-8665 evenings.1 Bedroom In 3 bedroom, Quiet AirConditioned Apt. Male Pref 6/10 to9/25 $67/Mo. 5114 S. Harper, 752-1469.FOR SALEOLD tbl, 6 high back chairs, 2huge barrel-back chairs, desk, van¬ity, reclining chair, CHEAP dys-x3251 ngt 324-3205 Rosmann.1961 Volvo, good motor. Body inFair Condition $150.00. 324^4812.2 Bicycles, 26" Like New $30.00Each, 3 Speed, Hand Brakes, Call324-4812.Kingsize Mattress, 5000 BTU AirCond., Table plus 6 Chairs, Desk,Books, Clothes plus Many OtherItems. HY 3-8127. 5473 Everett #2N.King Size Mattress Dual Springs 8<Frame. 1 Mo. Old $425 New; $300or Best Offer. 978-1033.4-Double Beds, Bunk Bed, Washer8i Dryer, Extra Long Sofa andMore. 538-8487 or Gene at MU 4-6100 x5068 after 7:00 P.M.FOR SALE — Fender Jazz Bass —$150 Or Best; Ludwig Drums w/Zildian Cymbals — $250. TransceiverHam Radio-$50. Framus Bass-$60.667-2156 pms.1963 Peugeot For Sale. Good en¬gine; New snow tires, generator,starter, and battery $425 — Negotia¬ble. Call Rick at PL 2-3204.'65 Chevelle for sale to the highestbidder. AC, Sta Wag exc cond.74,000. 493-4426.Air Conditioner 11,000 BTU CarrierExc. Cond. $180. 493-4426.PSST! — special - 9 only - YAMA¬HA steel-string guitars w/minorproblems 60% off. The Fret Shop.Harper Court.Dinette set, dble bed, desk, easychair Hi-Fi (component parts) —all reasonable-good shape. Call 538-2907.For Sale: Double bed and springsand dining room table — CHEAP.After 5, 667-0988.FOR SALE: din rm table plus 6chairs, desk, twin bed, dressers,rugs, lamps, end tables. All exccondition. Call 363-3534.4-Track Stereo Pre-Recorded Tapes8> Records, Classical, Pop. Cheap!Sell or Trade 667-0903.ASSORTED JUNK for sale pt brokncouch, dining rm table, TV, air-conditioner, other stuff too. Call955-4261 ev.AM-FM Stereo-Casette Portable: USRetail-$190, But From the TokyoWholesale Mart-$100. Will Haggle.J. Unger 955-6330 Evenings.Regretfully must sell my 1960 Mer¬cedes 220Sb. Leather interior; bodyvery good, to fair in spots; mechan¬ically excellent. $700. 324-9358.SALEH Shure M91E Cartridge Reg$50 Now Only $25 With Trade ATMUSICRAFT. For Lowest Priceson all Components. Call CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 Save $$$.Mercedes — 1959; model 150, stillruns — not too hot but fun forcar freak. Will separate. Cheap.Call HY3-3508.WANTED3 plus bedrm. apt. x3756. Ask forSue.Need 1 Airconditioner For CasementWindow. Should Be RelativelyCheap. Call Joel at x3263.Used bicycles wanted. Both men'sand women's needed. Call Don at667-5012 or Wendy at 955-0348.Please leave message.GALA PERFOMANCECarillon and brass; Rachmaninoffand Handel; fireworks at FOTA 70Gala Performance — May 15 out¬side Rockefeller at 8:30 plus jazzand contemporary music concert at9:30 in Hutch Court. Rain dateMay 17.GOING TO ALASKANeed Companion To Drive, CampTo Alaska. June. Eve. 955-8755. Open minded & resourceful? Likeambiguity & challenge? Urban Re¬search Corp. needs major-domo/sec.for Education Division (involved ininnovative urban education 8, otherurban affairs projects). Need tothink independently 8> type well.Full time starting May 25. CallKaren Woodworth at 939-3157.Girls or married couple for 3 rms.Kenwood, 3rd floor in return forbaby sitting. Start June or fall;373-0454.We saw these little kids, and theyrealty are adorable. Look at theireyes, especially.Starting Fall Quarter, baby sittingneeded in exchange tor room andboard; call 288-5174.RESEARCH SUBJECTS: Femoleswith color blind fathers wanted forcolor vision testing (We will alsoneed to test the father for onehour) $1.75 per hour with minimumof 12 hrs. work. Call x6039.COLOR-BLIND research subjectswanted for color-vision testing $1.75per hour. X6039.WANTED: Driver with III. Lie. todrive U of C pickup truck to San¬dusky and back. Sun. Map 17-Mon.May 18. $60 plus expen. Call Ext.8621.Free Room + Board in ExchangeFor Evening Babysitting — StartJune — Female Only — 684-1369.HELP WANTED: SUMMER~STUUDENT. T.V. Attendant for HospitalIn Area. No T.V. Knowledge Ne¬cessary. Part Time Four Days aWeek. Approximately 3 Hours aDay. Call Mr. Eastman 676-2226After 5:00.STUDENTS, STAFF. Participate Inan experiment on the perceptionof speech. $1.50 for an hour's work.On campus. Call X4710 for an ap¬pointment.Baby Sitter Needped For HalfdayWednesdays 8, Fridays. Two SmallChildren. Call 643-8169.Waitress or Waiter. 3 eves weeklyfrom 5-8:30 PM. Expd. Gordon'sRestaurant. 1321 E 57th St. 752-9251.BABYSITTER NEEDED FORThursdays. 1 Child My Home. 667-6251.SERVICESI CAN TYPE! Manuscripts, termpaper, confd'l, proofread and cutstencils. Can pick up after 6 PM,326-4745, Mrs. Adams.Responsible Fern Student Will BabySit or House-Sit in Exge RoomA/Or Board Jun-Ag. Call 643-2577.3rd year undergrad in generalstudies in humanities needs summeremployment. Would like to do re-serch Call x3777 Room 501 Pleaseleave Message.MUSICIANSBach is coming, June 7.LAKE COUNTRY STRING BANDget us while still cheap. Bluegrass8> country. Suitable for all occa¬sions. HY 3-3508.WE NEEDADVERTISING!We want to cover all strike activi¬ties, as well as all other news asextensively as we did last week.Contrary to popular opinion, we arenot enormously wealthy. In fact,we will end the year in the redif we aren't careful. If you wishto get publicity for strike activitiesas well as normal news coverage,we would greatly appreciate It Ifyou would buy an ad so we can.LOST AND FOUND$5.00 Reward for bracelet of linkedgold flowers lost Sunday. Call VerneCulberson, Blackstone Rm 310.LOST — Kodak Instamatic Camerain Rosenwald 2 Please Call PL 2-9704.LOST — Prescription Sunglasses inBrocade Case. Call Jini 324-4457.Lost, Strayed or Borrowed — 3Plate-sized Gongs. From UC orch¬estra. Call 955-2875 or X2615. RE¬WARD.GALA PERFORMANCECarillon and brass; Rachmaninoffand Handel; fireworks at FOTA 70Gala Performance — May 15 out¬side Rockefeller at 8:30 plus jazzand contemporary music concert at9:30 in Hutch Court. Rain date May17.NEED NEW HOMESPLEASE: We are leaving town andmust get rid of our cats, Homer(female) and Haniibal (male) Helpsave them from the gas ovens.Call 363-5644.FREE KITTEN MALEGrey/White Hsebroken 10 Wk Old.We Pay For Shots. 955-7281/Nite.RIDESI am driving out to the Berkeley- S.F. area on or about June 19.I need one or two people to sharedriving and expenses. Plan to takea few days getting out there. It'sa convertible, automatic shift. CallJeanne at 643-6803. Need Rider To Share Driving AndExpenses To Calif. 262-0398.TAKE THE MALECHAUVINIST PIG TESTDo you flinch more when a womangets socked in the mouth than whena man does? Are you the one whonotices when your son needs newshoes, or is It your wife?Are you uneasy at how "aggressiveand un-feminlne" your woman edi¬tor is behaving? Or a woman law¬yer? Or a Weatherwoman? Do youenjoy reading Henry Miller? Flau¬bert? Do you smile when a lunch¬ing Con Ed workman elbows hisbuddy at a passing minishirt andannounces "I could eat that witha spoon" Do you call womenchicks? Do you call them ladies?Do you think of them as chicks?Do you think of them as ladies?Or bitches? Are you sorry thatchivalry is dead?—The Village VoiceMay 7, 1970PERSONALSHIRLEY CLARK and her under¬ground film The Connection May 198:00 Law School.Why Pay More Than $3.23 ForYour Records? JUKES.FOTA 70 Presents THEY SHALLNOT PASS, Student Adaptation OfA Federal Street Theatre PlayAbout The Spanish Civil War. 9:30Fri., 8:30 Sat 8, Sun in CTS Quad¬rangle, 5757 Univ.A Day At The RacesBig StoreGo WestMARX BROS. FILM ORGY-Part 2Mon. May 18 7PM. Mandel HallJUKES RECORDS—$3^23 Not #89.SOC SCI EVALUATIONS NOWAVAILABLE IN G-B 428.NIGHTCLUB NIGHTCLUB - Sat.Night.Blintzes and EGG ROLLS are theLatest Dinner at the BANDER-SNATCH; also CHICKEN.An evening of song and the U ofC Symphony Orchestra spring con¬cert — May 19 — Mandel — 8:30.BRENDA — I Know You Are OutThere. I Can't Wait To See YourBlonde Hair. Call 643-2845. GREG.Bach Cantatas — May 16 — 8:30 —Bond Chapel.Buy A Share In Jukes Co-Op Clifo—10% Off AH Your Records.Next Monday, Part 2 of MarxBrothers Film Orgy — only $1.The strikers over.The war ii not.CANVASS for McGovern-HatfteldAmmendment, 2nd floor Ida Noyes.This weekend, all day.Points of Rebellion by Justice"Commie" Douglas.The Open Classroomby Herbert KohlNew Supplements toWhole Earth Catalogueat the Book CenterHarper Court.Shirley CLARK and Portrait ofJason; underground film, May 18Law School 8:00.BUY JUKES.Ever Hear Of Adult Stand-By? It'sThe Cheapest Fare to L.A. CallAmerican Airlines Campus Rep.Jim Sack For Details At 684-6667.Bach Cantatas — May 16 — 8:30 —Bond Chapel.An evening of song and the U ofC Symphony Orchestra spring con¬cert — May 19 — Mandel — 8:30.THIS WEEK — 10% Off New Mc-Cartney 8. Ringo With This Ad.JUKES.Food, Fun, Music! Watermelon WillBe There, So Will Phil And TheFastbacks. So Will You. Tues, May19, Hitchcock Court.No Pasaran-They Shall Not Pass.Why was there so little destructionhere as opposed to other campuses?We would like to think part of thereason was that we sacrificed con¬cern for profit and gave you in-depth coverage of all events, fast,as they happened, so that the ac¬tions taken were based on FACT,and not rumor. We absolutely cannot do that kind of coverage againwithout advertising support. Buy abigger ad than normal — even ifit's only a classified. Every littlebit helps. Thank you.The Pentagon has its own army.The peace movement doesn't.CANVASS this weekend.Contemporary interpretative dance,including improvisations and choreo¬graphy — SOUTH SIDE DANCEWORKSHOPS — May 17 — 3:30 pm.Flight N.Y. — Tel. Aviv. Sept 1 —Return Sept. 23. $360. Less If morepeople. Call Blythe. YO 6-9445."We slander, but never pander."Soc Sci Evaluation Conspiracy.NUDIST TRAVEL CLUB for singlewomen, etc, describe yourself, send354, MYW CLUB, P.O. Box 1342,Aurora, III.Some Sound AdviceSave $ On Stereo Components atMUSICRAFT. Save $20.00 On Gar¬rard; Save $170 on Scott Receiver;Save $50 on AR 3A Spkr. On Cam¬pus Bob Tabor 363-4555.EVERYBODY'S COLORED OR ELSE YOU WOULDN'T BE ABLE TO SEE THEM. Captain BeefheartMay 15, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/15WE ARE PAYING TOO MUCH MONEY FOR THIS ADVERTISEMENTIN AN EFFORT TO DIRECT YOUR ATTENTION TO OURSALE20% DISCOUNTALL BOOKS IN STOCKLAST DAY TODAYBEST BOOK SALE INTHE HISTORY OF THEUNIVERSE!AND, MANY OTHER ITEMS ON SALEAT DISCOUNTS RANGING AS HIGH AS65 %.THE BOOKSTORE1020 E. 57th ST.t t ’1 '• '■» . I V i | •’ f • •-* «»