Youths Seeking Recreation ProgramBy Nancy ChismanWhere do high school kids in Hyde Parkgo and what do they do?After school hours, the community’sthree high schools, Kenwood, the LabSchool and Hyde Park High School closedown except for athletics and “special” oc¬casions.An administrative assistant at Hyde Parkhigh school said that school’s facilities we¬ren’t open to students because, “the schoolis used for night school and our childrendon’t always behave too well.”The assistant principal at Kenwood highschool said firmly, “There are no facilitiesopen to students after school. FarmersField has park facilities, so the board feelsthese facilities are adequate for the stu¬dents.”A Kenwood student passing lunch hour inHarper Court said, “Look at what we have.There isn’t anyplace to go except thestreets.”A boy sitting with her said he knew someof the Kenwood students who liberated IdaNoyes Hall last week, renaming it FredHampton Memorial Center. “They did it toopen Ida Noyes to the community.”A group of students and members of thecommunity met in Ida Noyes Thursday with Walter Walker, vice-president incharge of planning, to further their demandthat the University open Ida Noyes to thepeople.The group, about 40 high school and Uni¬versity students, NUC representatives, andworkers in the community discussed theirpetition for a summer recreation programwith Walker.The text of the petition, already signed by1000 people, accused the University of tak¬ing valuable land from the people and notusing it for the benefit of the community;tearing down buildings and fencing in prop¬erty in order to keep the people out; andnot doing anything about building neededrecreational facilities.“The University police tell people to getoff street corners, even though there is noplace to go,” the petition said.The petition proposed that Ida Noyes beopen three nights a week during the sum¬mer to members of the community. Thirtystudents and faculty members have al¬ready volunteered to help staff the pro¬gram, and one member of the group saidresponse in the community was high.Before the meeting Walker told a Maroonreporter, “I am going to ask them what isContinued on Page Three IDA NOYES STEPS: High school students at their new "center/THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 61 The University of Chicago Friday, May 22, 1970Albert Crewe Detects Single AtomsATOMS: Uraniumbrightest dots. atoms are the two ALBERT CREWEPhotographs atoms Albert V Crewe, professor in the depart-rent of physics and the Enrico Fermi In¬stitute, announced on Wednesday the photo¬graphing of single atoms for the first time,accomplished with a new scanning electronmicroscope.Crewe, who displayed photographs ofsingle uranium and thorium atoms, workedwith Joseph S Wall and John P Langmore,graduate students in biophysics, under acontract with the Atomic Energy Commis¬sion (AEC).The resolution of the atom was made pos¬sible by the use of the microscope Crewedesigned. It uses much lower beam volt¬ages while obtaining very high contrast, thekey to resolving the single atom; this com¬pensates for its weak resolving power offive angstroms, only half that of the strong¬est conventional electron microscopes.In the technique used by Crewe’s team, avery thin film of the substance to be photo¬graphed is sprayed on the surface of a 20angstrom section of amorphous carbon.Electrons, focused into a very narrow\r\fNot All Teachers in College Giving PThe College Council resolution, which en¬courages faculty to offer students the op¬tion to receive a “P” grade in a course thisquarter, is only being followed in partthroughout the College, a Maroon studyshows.Many faculty members in the biologicaland physical sciences are discouraging stu¬dents from taking a “P” grade “since,” asone professor put it, “the contents in scien¬ces courses are frequently the necessaryprerequisites for subsequent sciencecourses.” In several physics courses formajors, students are required to take thefinal and pass it if they wish to receive a“P”. The Maroon learned of no physics ma¬jors who are interested in taking the “P”option.Several professors in the social sciencesand humanities, who originally offered the“P ’ grade option to their students for com¬pleting work as of the beginning of thestrike, are reporting pressure from deans to raise their standards of the satisfactorywork which they will require to grant aitp»“I think there is a concerted effort beingmade to subvert even the mil<J resolutionthat the College council passed which left itup to the individual instructor to give out‘Ps,’ ” said Leonard Radinsky, associateprofessor of anatomy. The pressures whichdeans are exerting on faculty are ratio¬nalized in the name of preserving academicfreedom,” he said. “I think that’s bullshit. Ithink their motivations are political.”Another faculty member, who refused todisclose to the Maroon her requirementsfor receiving a “P” in order to guardagainst further pressure from deans, com¬mented that “the spirit of the original pro¬posal is being violated by pressure fromdeans; more lenient professors are subjectto much criticism.” Complaints of pressurein the social sciences have come mainlyfrom instructors of general education courses. Several have been urged by deansto require students to complete all work be¬fore granting a “P”.With regards to the general staff-taughtcourses, Arcadius Kahan, master of the so¬cial sciences collegiate division, believesthat the “criteria ought to be uniform withdiscrepancies at a minimum.” In general,he cited an “area of freedom within theresolution.” He urges positive evidence of astudent’s performance before the studentreceives a “P”.Several members of the faculty and theadministration have expressed concernover the effects of a “P” grade on a stu¬dent’s application to graduate school. Someprofessors believe that a “P” grade willhave little detrimental effect on studentsgrad school application, but others believethat the situation “involves risks which noone can predict for certain, in terms of theprice individual students will have to pay.”Continued on Page Two beam five angstroms in diameter, are runacross the specimen, much like a televisionscreen is scanned.The electrons collide with the nuclei ofthe atoms, scattering at various angles; al¬most all of the scattering electrons can becollected. In a conventional electron micro¬scope, imperfections in the lens cause theloss of 99% of the electrons.Crewe’s photographs are not those of ac¬tual atoms, but of their electronic represen¬tation produced by the beam of electrons.The microscope itself consists of a cham¬ber maintained at an ultra-high vacuum, atungsten tip filament that is the source ofelectrons, focusing electrodes, and an an¬nular ring and spectrometer for detectingscattered electrons. Surrounding the 10-foottall microscope are power supplies and thedisplay apparatus, a 600 line oscilloscopescreen.Crewe’s technique could prove to be enor¬mously helpful in determining the structureof complex organic molecules, a key to re¬search in fields like genetics and cancerstudy.Wall and Langmore are both interested instudying the structure of DNA and RNA,the substance believed to contain the gen¬etic code. According to Wall, “biologicaltechniques only allow us to determine theorder of about 10 successive bases, whereasthere would be no limit with this tech¬nique.”The noise level of the present machine,located on the first floor of the Enrico Fer¬mi Institute, limits its use to detectingatoms of atomic number greater than 80. Itis hoped that a new machine now underconstruction will increase the resolvingpower of the process; it would operate at100,000 volts, while the present one runs at35,000 volts.Crewe, former director of the ArgonneNational Laboratory, began his research onthe resolution of the atom six years ago,and has received about $1 million worth ofassistance from AEC. He said he soon real¬ized that the conventional electron micro¬scope, in use for about 35 years, would notbe sufficient for his needs. Such micro¬scopes were unable to detect a group of lessthan 10 atoms. j-18% of Students VoteIn FSACCSL ElectionThe office of the dean of students has an¬nounced the results of the elections for theFaculty-Student Advisory Committee onCampus Student Life (FSACCSL).Only eight percent of the student bodyvoted in the election which was held bymail last week.Winners in the College are ThomasBiersteker, 72, with 67 votes, Gary Naka-rado, 71, with 57 votes, and Eugene Gold¬berg, 71, with 49 votes. Also receivingvotes were Martha Armstrong, Marcia Edi¬son, Edwin Lee, John Siefert, David Steele,Leonard Wallock, Andrea Murray, JenniferSeiffert, Michael Gross, Paula Szewczyk,and Sanford Grossman.In the biological sciences and physicalsciences graduate divisions, and the Pritz-ker School of Medicine, the one seat waswon by Irvin Kaufman, student in the me¬dical school, who received 80 votes.The seat in the humanities graduate divi¬sion was captured by Douglas Adams, alinguistics student, with 27 votes. Runner-up was Kathleen Atlass with 20 votes.Winners in the professional schools were Howard Smithson, business student, with 72votes, and William Sullivan, law student,with 3 votes.In the social sciences graduate division,the winner was Manuel Cavazos-Lerma, aneconomics student, who received 6 votes.FSACCSL was created over two yearsago to advise the dean of students.A total of 672 ballots were cast in theelection, and 82 ballots were for candidateswho only received one vote.Mottier Is Leaving After 24 YearsBy Philippa SockerJohn Mottier, who has, for 24 years,served as the backbone, nay, the very soulof the Bursar’s Office, is leaving today.Mr Mottier declined to give the reasonsfor his departure. One Bursar’s officespokesman said that Mr Mottier desired,after 24 years in the same room, a changeof scenery. Mr Mottier has become famous as one ofthe few bureaucrats that students deal withpersonally. He has approved uncountedthousands of checks too big for the tellersto cash. He has called hundreds of studentsand dunned them for overdue tuition.As a consequence, he is one of the mostrecognizable figures on campus, and is of¬ten mistaken for Edward Levi. Mr Mottier began his career before manyof us were born, in 1946. While finishing upin the College (Russian Department andthe Committee on the History of Thought)he took a job as a messenger in the Bur¬sar’s Office.“I was late for my first day of work,” MrMottier told a Maroon reporter. “My bosshad to call me up in Hitchcock and wakeme up,” he chuckled.Professors Differ on Grading ActionContinued from Page OneThe professors who have expressed mostconcern over the effects of a “P” are in thebiology and physical sciences collegiate di¬visions. Most students applying to medicalschool in fact, are receiving grades insteadof “P”s for the quarter. Professors in thesocial sciences and the humanities do notthink “P”s in their divisions will be verydetrimental to grad school applicants.Most students are concerned over thelack of uniformity throughout the College incarrying out the Council resolutions. Sev¬eral professors, mostly in 200 level sciencecourses but also some in humanities and social science courses, require their stu¬dents to complete all work through the endof the quarter in order to receive a “P”Other professors require students to com¬plete one half of their quarter’s work inorder to receive a “P”. Some professorshave cancelled their classes entirely; oneof the professors gave all students A’s, an¬other all “P”s. Donald Sheehan, assistantprofessor of English, cancelled his coursesbecause “the idea that we can go back tonormal is impossible. There is no normalleft. Cancelling the course is a way of call¬ing attention to this situation.”Several professors resent the College res-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. DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSunday, May 24 - 11 a.m.EUGENE CARSON BLAKEGeneral SecretaryTHE WORLDCOUNCIL OFCHURCHES olution in that it is “an infringement of aca¬demic freedom.” “I object strongly to theCollege intervening between professors andstudents” in political matters, said DonaldMcCloskey, assistant professor of econom¬ics. McCloskey is requiring all work for thequarter. Mr. Mottier was the remaining half of thefamous Mottier-Montag Axis. Mrs. Montagleft last year.News of Mr Mottier’s departure spreadswiftly through the campus last night. Onegraduate student in astrophysics com¬mented, “One thing you can say, we willcertainly miss him.”And so, as the year comes to a close,another institution is gone. First ChapelHouse, and then the bookstore, and theStagg field fence. And now, Mr Mottier.***Ik\ Via TWA VisitCOPENHAGEN - 2 NIGHTSBERLIN —2 NIGHTSMADRID-2 NIGHTSROME — 3 NIGHTSVENICE-2 NIGHTSLUCERNE — 2 NIGHTSPARIS — 3 NIGHTSLONOON-2 NIGHTSIRELAND-2 NIGHTSALSO 1 -DAY TRIP TO SWEDENFULL PRICEfrom ChicagoAll flights to. thiough and horn Europe(no long, tiresome bus rides), carefullyselected hotels (All rooms with privatebath), most meals, baggage handling,transfers, tips, sightseeing tours withmultilingual guides and tour manager toescort group through Europe A qualitytour iun by eipenenced professionalsGROUPS DEPART CHICAGOEvery Two Weeks tor hex! 12 MonthsSOME GROUPS UMITEO TO STU0ENTSFree trip to teacherswho get 15 student reservationsAmerican International Tours612 Church Street, Suite c|6Evanston. Illinois 60201or PHONE COLLECT 312/49M740Choice Summer Departures Filling Fast'i i Geneva, Switzerland2/The Chicago Maroon/May 22, 1970 SH0RELAND HOTELSpatial Rotes forStudents and RalattvasSingle roams from $10.00 dailyTwin A doublet from $14.00 dailyW aaldy and monthly totes on raquastRooms available Forpartes, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500 Please call H. FingerhutPI 2-10005454 South Shore DriveWE 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;0. BoX 1893, Dept. 66Evanston; Illinois 60204»;«;< >:«:< »:•:« >;»;< >•>:« >;♦;« >;«;) >;«:< »:♦;« >■>;»;«;< »:<»;»;< »:< »;•:< »:< >>2* *21*tStfRitRttSttKtiKtiRttKifSitKttKitSttSttRtfSttRtfSItfRtt.SG Election MarkedBy Poor Voter ReturnIn an election marked by poor voter turn¬out and a lack of candidates for office, thenew Student Government (SG) was electedthis week and will take office next year.Connie Maravell, current SG president,said Thursday that a meeting would be heldnext week at which time officers of SG willbe elected. She said the time and place ofthat meeting would be announced earlynext week.At stake are all SG offices, includingpresident and vice-president, chairman ofall committees, including the committee ofrecognized student organizations (CORSO),which is responsible for allocating funds tostudent groups.A five man delegation was elected to rep¬resent the University in the National Stu¬dent Association (NSA). Three alternateswere also elected by write-in votes and sev¬en people are tied for the last two alternatepositions.Most constituencies for which there wereno candidates were filled by write-ins. Insome cases ties existed, which must be bro¬ken by the SG assembly in its first meetingnext week.NSA delegates were Mike Fowler, VerneCulberson, David Bensman, Mike Rainey,and John Siefert. Write-ins earning placesas alternates are David Friedman, EugeneGoldberg and Nick Singer. Tied for the lasttwo spots on the delegation are Roger Flor-key, Wayne Liao, Steve Froikin, RobertVan Arsdale, Steve Weinstein, and SophieCooper.In the graduate house, the physical scien¬ces division elected Pat Starzyk, Patt Gil-lis, Larry Lambert, John Wenzel, Don Hel¬ler, and David Schiferl, thus filling the sixseats. The humanities division elected Mi¬chael Buckner, Louise Coats, David Curley,Beth Ferner, Rob Streit, and Ken Dun,leaving one seat vacant.In the biological science division, there isa five way tie for three posts. Those tiedare Donna Oldham, Vicki Fried, Dale Fast,Barbara Meyer and Clark Brooks.The social sciences division elected 14representatives, and seven people wereelected, with 12 tied for the remaining sev¬en positions. Those elected are David Bens¬man, Nancy Foner, Jerry Hyman, PaulPeretz, Debbie LeVine, Daniel Weinberg,and Gary Gillum. Tied for the last postsare Margaret Mackenzie, Jerry Byman,Bok Bawkinson, Mario Hernandaz, SilviaWeinberg, Robert Gambini, Foreal Forni,Valeriano Garcia, Duranno Mareryo, DavidWalsh, and Diane Welch.In the law school, Peter Lauriat, RichardHudlin, Ester Lardert and Judith Bern¬stein were elected. All are members of theBullshit party. In the business school, Jam-shid Mobasser, Fred Dotzler, Louis Strike,Mike Torgerson, and Rosemary Schwartzwere victorious running as independents.Howard Pasternak won as a write-in in thelibrary school.In the undergraduate house, the sixteenseats from the other college (that is, stu¬dents not living in dormitories) were filledby Paul Barron, Mark Carey, JerryDahlke, Susan deRousse, Marcia Edison,Theodore Feisson, Mike Fowler, CharlesFuhrer, Rita Goldwasser, Stan Goumas,Dan Gray, Thomas Nooter, Mike Rainey,Vid Ravdin, Rick Shattuc, and John Siefert.All are members of the Action Coalition(AC).In Blackstone hall, Verne Culberson waselected. Debby Hoffman, Maxine Gold, andMarcia Edison tied for the second spot withone vote each. Karl Menninger, Craig Cookand John Belcher were elected to representthe fraternities.In Eleanor Club, Kathy Opperwall, EmilyBachman, Muriel Zober and Bonnie Jandawere tied for the two seatst The SG assem¬bly will choose the two members.In Pierce Tower, Terry Weiss was elect¬ed from Tufts, Gerard Leval from Hender¬ son, Paul Collier from Thompson, and JayRanney from Shorey.In Woodward Court, Irene Dymkar andJane Johnson were victorious in UpperFlint, Steve Froikin in Lower Flint, SophieCooper in Lower Wallace, Christice Chuteand Laurie Buehler in Rickert.In Hitchcock-Snell, John Trnagensteinand Ken Lindholm won in Hitchcock andAngela Lee and Carol Zitek in Snell. InBoucher Mary Penar and Steve Weinsteinwere victorious on the Federated Under¬graduate Christian-Kike Union (FUC-KU).Eugene Goldberg and Paul Birnberg won inGreenwood hall.In Burton-Judson Courts Robert Swiftwon in Dodd, Mark Ragan in Mead, AndyMathcett in Vincent, Tom Jahnke in Sa¬lisbury. A five-way tie exists in Chamberlinbetween Con Hitchcock, Joseph Morris,Steve Strahler, Ed Halper and RussellMarx. GUERILLA THEATER: Panther defense committee performs the murder of BobbyHutton.NC Builds Support At Other SchoolsThe movement for a new congress (NC)has initiated chapters at 70 midwestern col¬leges and universities which will organizecampaigning for peace candidates thissummer and fall.According to Larry Sherman, graduatestudent in the social sciences here and NCmidwest coordinator, some 30 studentswent to schools in Minnesota, Nebraska, Il¬linois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, andIowa to generate support for the move¬ment.Sherman said that the initial reaction atsome schools was negative (“They’re somilitant, electoral politics are not theirthing’’), but that later response was good.The nation-wide movement is trying toset up state centers which would providecongressional districts with informationabout this year’s races. Princeton Univer¬sity plans to send each center the names of interested students through the use of theircomputers.Four students from the Peace ’70 can¬vassing group met briefly Tuesday nightwith Illinois Republican Senator RalphSmith in the lobby of the Conrad Hilton Ho¬tel.David Bensman, ’70, Lucy Arimond, ’72,Cynthia Ward, ’73, and Robert Blacksberg,’72, presented Smith with petitions callingfor an end to military expenditures inSoutheast Asia, and bearing the signaturesof about 30,000 Chicago residents. Theyasked him to vote for the Cooper-Churchamendment, which would stop Americancombat operations in Cambodia after July1.The group waited over an hour at Meigsfield, where they had been sent by the Sen¬ator’s office. The office had agreed to ameeting with Smith, but failed to informthe students that he was arriving atO’Hare. All students interested in canvassing forpeace candidates should come to Ida Noyes306 or call ext. 3576.The speakers’ bureau of Continuing Ac¬tion Projects (CAP) sponsored two dis¬cussions of the war in Indochina by Univer¬sity students and faculty.At New Trier East High School, in Win-netka, John Murphy, graduate student inpolitical science and former Army In¬telligence officer in Vietnam, Charles Hor¬ner, graduate student in Asian studies, andJeffrey Perloff, ’72, spoke to a series offreshman and sophomore classes duringthe day. They said most students were“alert, sophisticated, and aware of thecomplexities of the issues.”At the University’s downtown center,Lloyd Rudolph, professor of political sci¬ence, and Deborah LaVeen, graduate stu¬dent in political science, spoke on the warto 40 adult extension students, a number ofwhom signed anti-war petitions.Peoples Park Partially Solves ProblemContinued from Page Onewrong with the YMCA and the Neighbor¬hood Club.”At the meeting he told them that Ken¬wood high school would be open five days aweek during the summer and that theNeighborhood Club had space for 100 peopleand is open to alternate programs.“Yeah but we have to pay to get into theNeighborhood Club — that’s $10,” one ofthe members of the meeting countered.Another man told Walker, “The Neigh¬borhood Club is nothing, it’s crackers andit’s geared to pre-teens.“The gang situation in the Kenwood areais very dangerous,” he continued. “Theseyoungsters don’t travel in the Kenwoodarea in the summer, it’s dangerous to evengo to the point, so they stand on 57th Sttrying to get away from the elements at theends.”Walker seemed more concerned with lia¬bility than the actual program. Who wouldtake responsibility for the program becamethe first argument of the meeting.One member said the program could getan insurance policy. Another said con¬cerned parents in the community would beasked to help supervise.“If you had any interest in improving re¬lations with the community you’d be one ofthose signing your name to the list ofpeople sponsoring the program,” anothermember challenged.“Are you asking me if I’d personally signmy name?” Walker said. “If you are, myanswer is no.”The group will hold an open meeting withWalker, to which all interested Universitystudents are urged to come, next Thursday ON THE STREET: Before the Park, manysat on the sidewalk.at 4 pm in the first floor lounge of IdaNoyes.Up to now, the most recent success insolving the problem of where to go hasbeen Peoples Park.Peoples Park was created by the youngin Hyde Park. It happened spontaneously —a few street people began to clean up avacant lot on 57th and Dorchester thatpeople used to pile trash cn.Now the grass is mowed, flowers areplanted and a piano, usually covered withplastic and kids, stands in the middle of thepark.The park more often than not offershaven to kids driven from Ahmad’s and the Medici by the cover charges or bouncers.These measures were in part brought on bybusinessmen on 57th St who called the cof¬feehouses responsible for the congregationof unwanted high-school age people who al¬legedly accounted for window breakage,fires, break-ins and drug traffic.At the time, Alderman Leon Despres saidthe coffeehouses were not responsible. Hecited a need to find decent facilities foryoung people.Yesterday in a telephone interview,Despres again criticized the community’sfacilities for high school students, callingthem very limited. “The NeighborhoodClub is good, but limited, same with the Y.Then there is the cafe in St. Pauls Episco¬pal Church and the Blue Gargoyle, afterthat, facilities come to an end.“I really have to admire the ingenuity ofthe youths who created the Peoples Park.Theirs was an effort to find a recreationaland creational diversion, an effort to solveine problems.Despres emphasized that adults have totalk to youths about the problem of placesto go. “We can’t solve the problem just bydeciding to do so.” He praised the cafe atSt. Pauls and the Blue Gargoyle becauseboth had been established through commu¬nication between adults and young people.“We have to set up a process rather thana facility,” Despres said. “If we talk to thepeople with needs, we might find them dif¬ferent from what we thought.”When told about Walker’s meeting withhigh school students he said happily, “Itsounds like a start.”He closed the interview saying the youngpeople of the community should be involvedas decision makers too.May 22, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3Pass Gradingand Political ActivityPass-fail grading, the University’s response to the nationalstudent strike, is running into some problems. Elements of bothfaculty and the student body have been ignoring the sentiment ofthe grading resolution passed three weeks ago by the Council ofthe University Senate.The intent of freeing students from classwork halfway throughthe quarter was to allow them to carry on political programs startedduring the strike. Too many students are not putting this time tobest advantage. They have taken “P’s” on the grounds that theyare involved in political work, yet spend their hours lolling abouton the quads. Meanwhile, canvassing, lobbying, workshops, draftresistance, and other forms of organizing are in need of volunteers.We are also aware that some professors have chosen to dis¬regard the strike and its resulting political fervor or even to userigid grade requirements as a way of showing that no one can tellthem what to do. A few professors are requiring students who wantto take “P’s” to do the same amount of work as those taking lettergrades, and demanding very high letter grade performance for a“P.” Of course, the council’s resolution left the requirements forpass grades up to individual professors. We hope that faculty mem¬bers understand the importance of the national situation, and thatthey support the efforts to pressure the administration to imple¬ment the strike demands. A reasonable amout of leniency, at least,would help those students involved in political activity.The council’s pass-fail resolution was a compromise betweenacademic demands and the demands of the strike. If the criteriafor the resolution are not honored by students or faculty, it won’twork.SG ElectionsSG this year has added a new dimension to the term “secretballot:” This year a lot of people didn’t even know there was anelection.The elections were publicized, and it was not difficult to vote,but only a tiny percentage of the University did.A similar lack of interest was evidenced by the candidates.Those seats that had uncontested elections were lucky; some didn’thave even one candidate.We do not mean to blame anyone, just everyone. Studentindifference, student government impotence are products of eachother. In previous years, SG was able to rouse at least a modicumof interest because of the participation in it of some flamboyantpeople, mostly radicals. This is not criterion for student govern¬ment excellence, but at least it was alive. This year, SG performedan amputational operation on itself due to excessive member absen¬teeism that reduced the entire body to less than half of the originalnumber needed to constitute a quorum.Our student government has not proved, these past few years,to be anything like an organization that would provide a frame ofreference for student needs and problems. This year, SVNA prob¬ably has come a lot closer to representing students’ states of mind,if not solving their problems. FOTA definitely does more thatbenefits or pleasures the individual student.In the past, SG has scorned to be a “service organization,” butthey are not even working effectively on the lofty problems theyset themselves, such as increasing “student power” (rememberthat old chestnut?) or uniting the University and the community.We know that it is easy to criticize, hard to effect improve¬ment. We do not so much doubt the persons who have worked onSG, expending much time and effort, as we doubt the potential ofthe organization itself. Our system of student government has notproved aitfcfl&tive or useful way f<jr students to organize. We en¬courage aa& pvite suggestions f or lakf alternative. Ot 0 f4/Hm Chicago Maroon/May 22, 1970 To ‘F or Not To 'FOn page three, column three, under theheading “Discretion Gives Concern over PGrading System,” of the May 15 issue ofthe Maroon, it was stated: “ ... problemsmay arise in the physical science collegiatedivision where chemistry majors have beentold they need a letter grade in order toreceive a B S degree.”The statement implies that the depart¬mental policy of our department is againstthe “P-N” ruling for this quarter as passedby the College Council.Being the departmental counselor and amember of the committee on academicstanding in the College, I wish to state thatit is not our departmental policy to beagainst the ruling of the College Council.However, since the contents in sciencecourses are frequently the necessary pre¬requisites for subsequent science courses, Ipersonally encourage our students to com¬plete their work for this academic quarter,and to receive a quality grade wheneverthey can.N. C. YangProfessor of ChemistryPoli Sci Criticize^On May 5 a lengthy letter written by po¬litical science undergraduate programchairman Lloyd Rudolph appeared in theMaroon. The purpose of the letter was toprove that the problems of the under¬graduate political science program in noway approach the staggering dimensions ofthe problems faced by the undergraduatepsychology program.As a matter of fact, Mr Rudolph’s letterwas designed to leave the reader with theidea that the undergraduate political sci¬ence program must be one of the best oncampus. A closer examination of the factspresented in Mr Rudolph’s letter, and thoseconspicuously omitted, reveals a totally dif¬ferent picture of the undergraduate politi¬cal science program. Th>s picture indicatesthat the program is deteriorating now, and,unless drastic action is taken by the politi¬cal science department immediately, theundergraduate political science programwill soon surpass the psychology programin mediocrity.- Mr Rudolph states that 16 200-level politi¬cal science courses were offered this year.Let us examine this statistic more closely.Mr Rudolph claimed that during the fallquarter four political science courses wereoffered, but he neglected to include the factthat one of these courses, political science202, was not listed in the time schedules orBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editors: Mitch Bobkin, Con HitchcockNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociators: Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula(Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy A Isoform, Paul Bernstein, EllenCassidy, Nancy Chisman, Allen Friedman/Sarah Glazer, Pete Goodsell, Gordon Katz,Susan Left, Gerald Loval, Joseph Morris, TomMosstoerg, Janet Pino, Audrey Shalinsky, CarlSunshine.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 Hail, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. <0437. Phone Midway 3-0000,Exti 3283: Distributed on campus and In * the iHyde Ppck neighborhood, free of charge. Sub- ,scriptions By 'mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non- -profit postdge paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. in any addendum to the time schedules; noCollege advisor of political science con¬centrators was told of the course’s exis¬tence. It is not surprising that the enroll¬ment for political science 202 was 11 gradu¬ate students and one lone undergraduatepsychology major. To this writer’s knowl¬edge, no political science concentrator hadany way of knowing that the course existed.Mr Rudolph claimed that there are six“regular courses being offered this quarter.Isn’t it strange that one of these courses isthe third quarter of the three quarter “In¬troduction to African Civilization” se¬quence? In order to reach the total of six,Mr Rudolph must also have counted Politi¬cal Science 296 with a total enrollment oftwo graduate students. Does this coursereally meet Mr Rudolph’s definition of anundergraduate course “not devoted to ...small group education?” On closer exam¬ination, then, the total number of courseofferings appears to be four.Mr Rudolph pointed to the success of spe¬cial undergraduate programs. However, of¬fering reading courses and tutorial pro¬grams cannot be considered an alternativeto offering good courses. No mention wasmade of the poor administration of the hon¬ors program. The fact that participantswere first officially notified of the deadlinefor papers during the week in which theywere due is indicative of the dis¬organization of the program.The obvious concern shared by politicalscience concentraters is what the programwill be like in the future. At present 17courses are slated to be offered next year,a remarkable number since eight of the 26members of the department will be out ofresidence or leaving the University nextyear, and only one faculty member will bereturning from a leave of absence. How¬ever, on closer examination one finds thatof the 17 courses, three courses were for¬merly l;sted as 500-level courses, and twowere listed only as social science courses.Of the seventeen courses, there are appar¬ently only two political theory courses —the one sequence in which all concentratorsare required to take three courses.Continued on Page SevenFriday, May 22LECTURE: Department of Biochemistry, Mr Atkinson,"Enzymes as Control in Metabolic Regulation,Patterns of Metabolic Interaction and Regulation.Abbott 101, 12:30 pm. cLECTURE: Department of Biophysics, Dr Richard tDickerson, Division of Chemistry and ChemicalEngineering, California Institute of Technology."Cytochrome C: Tne Structure and History ot aProtein." Research Institutes 480, 4 pm.LECTURE: Microbiology Club, Yechiel Becker, De¬partment of Virology, Hadassah Medical School,Hebrew University. "Rifampidn, Molecular con¬formation and Biological Activity." Ricketts 1, fP™-WORKS OF THE MIND LECTURE SERIES: Univer¬sity extension basic program, S Chandresekna ,Morton B Hull Distinguished Service Pr0,eis°£'Department of Physics and Astronomy, 65 t s.Water Street, 8 pm.CONCERT: Committee on Southern Asian Studies,Hindustani instrumental music, Lalmani Misra,playing vichitra vina and Jnan Ghosh playingtabla. Law School Auditorium, 8:30 pm.READING: Transcendental Horizon will present astaged reading of the Winter's Tale, directed byJames Redfield, Master, New Collegiate Division,Ida Noyes Theatre, 8:30 pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM MOTET CHOIR: John Klaus,Laurence Libim, Directors. Haydn, Lord NelsonMass. Lutheran School of Theology, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: Hillel Foundation, Rabbi Boris Rack°/.s^'Hillel Director, Northwestern University. Jewsand Non-Jews in Jewish Religious Sources. HineiHouse, 8:30 pm. ... ..DISCUSSION: 21 people went to lobby in Washingtonand will discuss experiences. Swift Commons, 12 pm.MEETING: For all graduating seniors concerning com¬mencement activities. Reynolds Club South, l pm.Saturday, May 23CONCERT: Committee on Southern Asian Studies, LawSchool Auditorium, 8:30 pm.TRANSCENDENTAL HORIZON: Winter's Tale. IdaNoyes Theater, 8:30 pm.FLICK: Shame. 7 and 9:15 pm, Cobb Hall.MARCH: Operation Breadbasket's "March AgainstRepression." Rally, Grant Park bandshell anamarch to Loop. 1 pm: .STORIES: Reuven Gold. Ida Noyes. 8:30 pm, FOTA.Sunday, May 24UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Eugene CarsonBlake,t .General Secretary, World Council otQturjtyes^Gene^a, Switzerland, Rockefeller Me-FILM SERIES: r Civilization "The Fallacies of Hope."(Napolean, War, and Imperialism). Social Sciences122, 8 pm. > .CONCERT: (Musical Society), Ronald Wilson, cello, andThomas Brown, piano. Ida Noyes Library, * P*"-.Ubw zb vfmusuinoj xosld oilHo aiolo^ bns floitcsifTBVio Iedo! s »;f;o sv lfe&h ton bifThe Black Panthers:By Carl DavidsonTHE ALAMEDA COUNTY JAIL contains an institutionknown to the black youth of the North Oakland ghetto asthe “soul-breakers,” the solitary confinement cells for“disruptive” prisoners. In 1964, the cells were more fullthan usual, following a series of food strikes and otherdemonstrations by black prisoners that rocked the jailduring the peak months of the civil rights movement.One of the prisoners later said the time in solitarygave him time to think “about the relationship betweenbeing outside of jail and being in.” The prisoner was HueyP. Newton and the “soulbreaker” cell was the birthplaceof the Black Panther organization of which Newton sub¬sequently became minister of defense. He is presently injail.Before being convicted and sentenced for a year on anassault charge, Newton had been a law student at MerrittCollege, where, like any number of militant young blacks,he had several run-ins with the Oakland police. When hissentence was up, he got in touch with Bobby Seale, who hehad known at Merritt and together with a few otherfriends they formed the Black Panther party for Self-De¬fense in the fall of 1966.“We’re going to draw up a basic platform,” Newtontold Seal and the others, “that the mothers who struggledhard to raise us, that the fathers who worked hard to feedus, that the young brothers in school who come out ofschool semi-literate, saying and reading broken words,and all of these can read ...”The Ten-Point ProgramFrom the very beginning, the Panthers’ ten-point pro¬gram has been their hallmark within the left movement.At the same time, this has been the aspect of the partymost obscured by the bourgeois news media which fromthe beginning has tried to pass the party off as a band ofapolitical gun-toting crazies.The press based its distortions on the fact that theparty openly advocated and practiced the right of armedself-defense. And, given the reign of white police terrorconstantly directed at the black citiezns of Oakland, thePanthers viewed this aspect of their program as a day-to-day necessity.“Our message is one and the same,” Newton said inFebruary 1967. “We’re going to talk about black peoplearming themselves in a political fashion to exert orga¬nized force in the political arena to see to it that theirdesires and needs are met ... So it doesn’t matter whatheading you put on it, we’re going to talk about politicalpower growing out of the barrel of a gun.”The party put the program into practice. Among theirfirst efforts in Oakland was the formation of communitypolice patrols. Newton put his law school training to workand instructed all party members in basic constitutionalrights governing arrests and gun laws. From there, theparty established a system of armed patrol cars, com¬pletely legal, carrying both guns and law books and fol¬lowed police patrol cars making their rounds of the ghetto.Whenever black men or women were stopped by thepolice, armed Panthers would be on the scene, makingsure their constitutional rights were not violated. The Oak¬land police were outraged. But the brutality, harassmentand obscenity directed at black men and women taperedoff. The program was a success and news of the party’sexistence spread rapidly. The sigh of armed and dis¬ciplined groups of Panthers soon became familiar in theBay area. The party went to great lengths, however, tostress two points about armed self-defense. First, ttyeywere operating within th6 by gun regu- 'lations and the constitutional right?fb*Bdafr -hiTns. Seclopd,'that the arms were to serve a political purpose and werenot to be viewed in purely military terms.At this time, the Panthers had about 75 members andwere based primarily in the Bay Area. The party, how¬ever, did not view itself as only a local organization and now faced the problem of expanding on a statewide andnational level. At the same time, the party’s initial suc¬cesses were already reverberated to the state legislature,wher California Assemblyman Don Mulford introduced agun control bill designed as an attack on the Panthers.The party had to meet both the problems of spreadingthe word and defending their legal rights. An action wasplanned by Newton that was one of the more controversialevents in the party’s history. While the gun bill was beingdebated, on May 2, 1967,50 armed Panthers, 24 men and 6women, walked up the steps of the Capitol Building, reada statement against the bill and stating the party’s prin¬ciples and walked into the visitors gallery of the legisla¬tive chambers.When the police and press arrived, creating a flurry ofexcitement, the Panthers left the building, read the state¬ment again and started to leave. Then they were all ar¬rested on a charge of conspiring to disturb the peace andheld for several days until bailed out.From the Panthers’ perspective, the action was care¬fully planned and completely legal at every step. Theywere acting no differently from any “gun lobby” register¬ing opposition to the new law. But the spectre of “blacks-with-guns-invade-legislature” was too much for the pressto take and the news media reported the event across thenation.But the success was not without certain drawbacks.On the plus side, the Panthers were now nationally knownand within a few months claimed branches in Los Angel¬es, Tennessee, Georgia, New York and Detroit. Hundredsof black ghetto youth were attracted to the party and itsprogram.On thp ^th^r oside, Bobby Seale and several othersserved asix-month^ prison-sentence as a restilt ofithq ac-tioh. 1^e! ^mT£&'tcic$pp4 Vere parsed and the police andnews media used-the publicity, which had worked for thePanthers in the black community, to initiate a racist hys¬teria against the party among the whites. The campaignwas often successful and the reaction reached into somesectors of the black community as well. Number 26, Friday, May 22, 1970A HistoryFrom the Panther point of view, the white reactionwas not the result of any “mistake” on their part, but anunavoidable initial aspect of the course of revolutionarystruggle in the United States that would eventually beovercome.Two Political Dynamics“We feel there are two things happening in this coun¬try,” said Eldridge Cleaver, the now-exiled minister ofinformation. “You have a black colony and you have thewhite mother country and you have two different sets ofpolitical dynamics involved in these two relationships.What’s called for in the mother country is a revolutionand there’s a black liberation struggle called for in thecolony.”What the “different dynamics” meant was that white,even revolutionary whites, would tend to distort or misun¬derstand the nature of the black struggle until black con¬trol over the movement in the colony had been estab¬lished. Once that was resolved, then unity between the twostruggles was not only possible but desirable.Following the Sacramento action and the legal defensethey had built around it, Panthers continued their oper¬ations in the Oakland black community. The police con¬trols continued, as well as the party’s educational workaround its ten-point program and the establishment of theBlack Panther newspaper.The party also continued and developed further itspolicy of following through on whatever immediate prob¬lems black people would present to it and see that theywere solved.Newton stated, again and again, that the party “wasthe people’s party” and was “like an oxen, to be ridden bythe people and serve the needs of the people.” If thepeople wanted a traffic light, the Panthers told the policeto install one immediately or the party would start direct¬ing traffic. If black children were being harassed in theschools, the Panthers organized mothers to patrol thehalls while armed party members stood outside. Liber¬ation schools were also set up after regular classes wereover.But as the party’s successes grew, so did the intensityof police harassment. Police bulletin boards blossomedwith descriptions of party members and their cars. Onfoot or driving around, Panthers would be stopped andarrested on charges ranging from petty traffic violation tospitting on the sidewalk.On October 28, 1967, the issue came to a head: earlyin the morning, a police car reported, “I have a Panthercar.” Several hours later, one policeman was dead andContinued on Page TwoServing the PeopleContinued from Page OneHuey Newton was under arrest with four bullet wounds inhis stomach. When he recovered, he was charged withmurder and locked in Alameda County jail without bail.Newton immediately proclaimed his innocence, but thepolice and press once again whipped up and intensified aracist, hysterical reaction to both Newton and the BlackPanther party. For its party, the party mobilized itsforces for a “Free Huey” defense campaign.While thousands of people, black and white, rallied toNewton’s defense, in the beginning the unequivocal de¬mand to “Free Huey” was the cause of some footdraggingin the white liberal and radical community. Many arguedthat the demand should be “Fair Trial for Huey” whichwould supposedly win wider support.But the Panthers were waging a political defense andheld to the position in their program that black peoplecould only receive a fair trial by a jury of their peers.Since the colonial and class character of the Californiacourts precluded that possibility, the only just demand —and the only one which made sense — was that HueyNewton be set free.What made the debate so intense was the emergenceof the Peace and Freedom party as a political force in theCalifornia left and eventually across the country. The PFPwas a coalition mainly of white left-liberals and radicalsorganized as a third party electoral alternative in opposi¬tion to the Vietnam war and in support of black liberation.The Panthers saw in the PFP’s campaign machinerya chance for a wider educational campaign in Newton’sdefense. But the party held that any “functional coalition”with whites could only be formed on the basis of supportfor the demand to “Free Huey.” Thus to form the al¬liance, the white radicals had to win over the liberals,many of whom saw the Panthers as a threat to the PFP’svote-getting “respectability.”As the time approached for the PFP to file its ballotpetitions at the end of 1967, the shortage of signaturesforced the issue. The radicals won out and the alliancewas formed. The Panthers took the petitions into the blackcommunity and put the PFP on the ballot — but withHuey Newton, Bobby Seale, and Kathleen Cleaver as can¬didates for state offices running on the basis of the Pan¬ther ten-point program. Eldridge Cleaver was to be theCalifornia PFPs’ Presidential candidate, pending the na¬tional convention.The party’s coalition with the PFP gave them an im¬mediate public political exposure — among both blacksand whites — that would have been difficult to attainotherwise. And, given the needs of Newton’s defense andthe probability of further repression, the move was seenas important, if not necessary for the party’s survival.The Panthers saw the alliance as principles, respect¬ing the rights of black people to self-determination. Themutual agreement was that the Panthers would set thePFP line on all issues related to the black community. Allother policy would be formulated on the basi?f of one-man,one-vote. As Eldridge Cleaver summed it up: “We ap¬proached the whole thing from the point of view of inter¬national relations. We feel that our coalition is part of ourforeign policy ..Nevertheless, a number of black radicals outside theparty viewed the alliance with whites with dismay, if notas a sell-out. The main thrust of black power — the legi-One day ...And II will shall bebe King! Queen!Sutherland Co-starring Hugh Gritlith Jack MacGowran Billie Whitman) Victor Spinatti and Oraon WelleaSpecial Gueat Star fwa holm • Muik Compoeed and Conducted by John Addiaon • Executive ProducerHoruan loar • Written by Fred Freeman and Lawrence J. Cohen ■ Produced and Oirected by lud York inTechnicolor® Distributed by Warner Ires. ESP)PLAYBOY VT M E AT E R 9IZ04 * Of APBOHN . PHONI 944 J4J42/Grey City Journal/May 22, 1970 The Terv-Point Program• We want freedom. We want power to determine the destiny of ourblack community. We believe that the black people will not be free untilwe are able to determine our destiny.• We want full employment for our people. We believe that the fed¬eral government is responsibte and obligated to give every man employ¬ment or a guaranteed income. We believe that if the white Americanbusinessmen will not give full employment, then the means of productionshould be taken from the businessmen and placed In the community sothat the people of the community can organize and employ all of itspeople and give a high standard of living.• We want an end to the robbery by the capitalist in our blackcommunity. We believe that this racist government has robbed us andnow we are demanding the overdue dept of 40 acres and two mules.Forty acres and two mules was promised 100 years ago as a restitutionfor slave labor and mass murder of black people. We will accept thepayment in currency which will be distributed to our many communities.The Germans are now aiding the Jews in Israel for the genocide of theJewish people. The Germans murdered six million Jews. The Americanracist has taken part in the slaughter of over 50 million black people;therefore, we feel that this is a modest demand that we make.• We want decent housing, fit for shelter of human beings. We be¬lieve that if the white landlords will not give decent housing then theland should be made into cooperatives so that our community, with gov¬ernment aid, can build and make decent housing for its people.• We want education for our people that exposes the true nature ofdecadent American society. We want education that teaches us our truehistory and our role in the present-day society. We believe in an edu¬cational system that will give to our people a knowledge of self. If aman does not have knowledge of himself and his position in society andthe world, then he has little chance to relate to anything else.• We want all black men to be exempt from military service. Webelieve that Black people should not be forced to fight in the militaryservice to defend a racist government that does not protect us. Wewill not fight and kill other people of color in the world who, like blackpeople are being victimized by the white racist government of America.We will protect ourselves from the forces and violence of the racistpolice and the racist military, by whatever means necessary.• We want an immediate end to police brutality and murder of blackpeople. We believe we can end police brutality in our black communityby organizing black self-defense groups that are dedicated to defendingour black community from racist police oppression and brutality. Thesecond amendment to the Constitution of the United States gives a rightto bear arms. We therefore believe that all black people should armthemselves for self-defense.• We want freedom for all black men held in federal, state, countyand city prisons and jails. We believe that all black people should bereleased from the many jails and prisons because they have not receiveda fair and impartial trial.• We want all black people when brought to trial to be tried in courtby a jury of their peer group or people from their black communities,as defined by the constitution of the United States . . .• We want land, bread, housing, education, clothing, justice, andpeace. And as our major political objective, a United Nations supervisedplebiscite to be held through out the black colony in which only blackcolonial subjects will be allowed to participate, for the purpose of deter¬mining the will of black people as to their national destiny . . .timacy and necessity for blacks to form independent, all¬black organizations — had only recently been established.Soon after the PFP campaign and the defense of New¬ton got underway, the anticipated police repression began.On Jan. 16, 1968, police raided the Cleavers’ home. “Fromthen on,” said Kathleen Cleaver, “the harassment of theParty intensified.”A month later, following a raid on his home, Sealewas arrested and charged with conspiracy to commit mur¬der. Newly formed party branches were harrassed acrossthe country. On April 3, a public party meeting was bro¬ken up by armed illegal searches by Oakland police. Then,on April 6, two days after the King assassination, dozensof police opened fire on a home where a Panther meetingwas taking place. Bobby Hutton, a founder of the party,was murdered while trying to surrender and EldridgeCleaver was wounded and placed under arrest.Hueys TrialThe trial of Huey Newton lasted from July 15 to Sep¬tember 8 and marked a high point in the Panthers’ his¬tory. The public attention given the trial, due in large partto the defense effort and the PFP campaign, provided thePanthers with an excellent opportunity, not only to defendFOR YOlfR CHILDREN'S EDUCATION' Let’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education forI your Children—whateverVyvJ happens to you! A Sun Life\ 7 Policy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’ss education. Why not call meRalph J Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470 Office Houri 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SIJN LIFE OF CANADA Newton, but to wage a political offensive as well.From start to finish, the trial was viewed as a modelpolitical defense. Newton’s lawyer, Charles Garry, ex¬posed the class and racial bias built into the court systemat every step. Within the trial, Newton managed to ex¬plain the Panther program and why he was a politicalprisoner, as well as demonstrate his innocence. Outsidethb courtroom, the party mobilized the community in acontinual series of mass rallies.When the verdict came in, the political character ofthe trial became apparent. Newton was convicted of in¬voluntary manslaughter, a charge of which he could notpossibly have been builty. The evidence of the trial wassuch that he could only be guilty or innocent of first de¬gree murder. The “compromise” verdict simply revealedthe political forces at play.Reagan Administration Riled• California’s Reagan administration and the Oaklandpolice who wanted Newton executed were enraged at theoutcome of the trial. Only hours after the verdict wasannounced, the Panther office was riddled with bullets bydrunken cops. On Sept. 27, the day Newton was sentenced,the courts reversed the decision on Cleaver’s parole andgave him sixty days to return to prison.Cleaver had played a leading role in Newton’s and theparty’s defense. After the California PFP named him itsPresidential candidate, several other states had followedsuit. This had opened up a wide range of speaking engage¬ments around the country, along with greater access tothe news media.In August, he won the national PFP nomination, eventhough his name was kept off several state ballots (in¬cluding California’s) because of his youth. The educationaleffect of the campaign had clearly helped the party’s sur¬vival and even led to its growth. In the end, the officialelection tallies gave him almost 200,000 votes. In Novem¬ber, Cleaver went into foreign exile rather than return toprison, where he believed he would be killed.The party, which had dropped the “for self-defense”from its name to reemphasize its political character, wasnow larger than ever, with 30 branches and parhaps athousand members at the end of 1968. “We gave the wholeyear of 1968 to the pigs,” said Seale, commenting on therepression, “and thank them for organizing our organiza¬tion.”While the party’s defense work had helped its growth,the worst was yet to come. Seale and the remaining partyleaders faced even greater tasks. Late in November, Sealepublicly said the party had been heavily infiltrated bypolice agents. By December, party branches everywherewere being hit by local police, with public indications forthe first time that the attacks were directed from Wash¬ington. On January 18, members of the black culturalnationalist “US” organization, known for working with thepolice, openly murdered two party members in Los Angel¬es.To survive the growing attacks, Seale effected a dramatic shake-up of the party’s character. Along with chiefContinued on Page Four3rd BIG WEEKNOW* MAT I NEE DAILY*OPENS 1:30 P.M.THELOVECHILD.A HUNGER 1 .WITHIN HER IEXPLODED... “NOW PLAYINGSpiciest Picture of the Year!“My Brother’sWife”IE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337-2113* '* 'i * k ’* *4Didi, Gogo, Lucky and PozzoTHE AUDITORIUM OF THE LUTHERAN Seminary isplastic; not a single warm or comfortable s potis to befound in it. When you walk in, listening to muted elec¬tronic music and looking at a bare, empty set, the sensa¬tions are really unpleasant. If you weren’t expecting aperformance of Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, you wouldn’tbe able to stand it.But then the house lights go down and Estragon appearson the stage tugging at his boot. All the world seems toconsist of that boot and his effort to remove it from hisfoot. He raises his foot above his head, wrestles with it,squirms. “Nothing is to be done.” That is Gogo.Enter Vladimir in response to those words and speakingto himself. “Vladimir, be reasonable, you haven’t triedeverything,” and it isn’t even his own boot. That is Didi.Gogo and Didi complement each other in the unstruc¬tured situation in which they find themselves. Gogo, withlimited vision, plays off of the situation and brings nointerpretation to what he finds. Steve Mencher, with hislong-faced casualness, did this well, although at times toocleverly for a decadent old poet. Didi (Bill Reddy) bringsa different language onto the stage — some concern withpropriety and hope and the Christian myth. Through theseconcerns, Didi lifts himself above the directionlesspresent. It is he who affirms that “We’re waiting for Go-dot.” It is he who struggles to remember what has takenplace in the past. Reddy’s face and body revealed Didi’sinvolvement in the agitation created by these concerns.Without each other, Didi and Gogo are lonely. By con¬fronting each other, they make the time pass less painful¬ly. Mencher and Reddy took this situation and gave it life.With their words and characterizations they created awhole world between them. The polarity of these two char-ContribuiorsJoe Adams is a third ygar.&tu^ept in. the jGpllege major¬ing in philosophy. | ’ ' f \ 1111 | ] fVance D. Archer III id k'studfenf m-ml Clricago Theo¬logical Seminary, a card-carrying member of Studentsfor Violent Non-Action (SVNA) and a member of theik rwc„?e Co*rl'rT>''tte/?. acters was not exploited, but was proved and disclosed bythe two actors in an excellent performance. Vladimir andEstragon, in baggy suits and bowlers, are a pair.Enter two neto characters. Pozzo — a landed aristocrat,brittle, hard, polished, an archetrypal elite, a useless hu¬man being. Lucky — his slave, a massive apparition,trembling servile flesh and mind, a gargantuan clowntrained to respond. When these two characters step on thestage, everything changes. The formless interaction ofVladimir and Estragon disappears. Pozzo assumes prima¬cy in the situation: all action generates around this man.Played by Leonard Kraft, he is harsh, concise, and empty.In order to function he requires a pre-existent situation, acertain formality, and when these fail to present them¬selves someone else is obliged to create them or Pozzo ishelpless. Time would weigh as heavily on him as on theothers if he were alone; he holds Lucky with a noosearound his neck.And Lucky can fill the time: he thinks. A large animalwith a red nose, a white face, coarse orange hair, baggypants and a striped shirt, his first words emerge with tremendous effort, and those following are alternately in¬spired and tormented as the “thought” appears and dis¬appears. “Alas, alas, abandoned unfinished the skull theskull . . . in spite of the tennis the skullalas unfinished ... ’’When James Miller performedthis speech, everything else on the stage disappeared ashe commanded the attention of the entire audience. It wasbeautiful.When Vladimir and Estragon are alone again, they haveonly their time and their language games. A boy enterswith a message from Godot. “Godot will not come.” Nextto this beautiful boy, Vladimir and Estragon look like oldmen. They breathe and talk like old men. They are oldmen in the presence of the boy.Whatever theatrical illusion was presented as reality inthe first act is challenged in the second. But all of thefamiliar objects and characters of the first act take onsome aspect which makes the past fact uncertain. Thetree has leaves^ Pozzo is blind, Lucky is mute — all thishas happened in one day. What is puzzling or perhapsdistinctive about this act is that in the midst of this im¬mense incongruity, Didi and Gogo remain much as before,with the same speeches, characterizations, and routines.Some of these have a touch of Vaudeville, and this lig-hheartedness contrasts sharply with the enigmas posed bythe inconsistency of the present and the previous daysevents. This tension between the comic and the grotesquepervade the escond act until its conclusion, when Vladimirand Estragon stand in the moonlight prepared to faceanother day.Vladimir: We’ll hang ourselves tomorroe. (Pause) Un¬less Godot comes.Estragon: And if he comes .. .Vladimir: We’ll be saved.It is difficult to isolate individual aspects of this produc¬tion, because the performance did not at any time inter¬rupt .itself, fhe set simply accommodated the actions ofthe cast. The costumes spoke of the characterizations andenhanced them. The free interaction 1 of the aetors evi-denced a clear understanding not only of their own rolesbut of the play as a whole. Such a unified production is atribute to all the people involved in it and particularly toits director, Roger Dodds., tz ^ f aia,. Jpe Adt^nsPolonsky Gets His RewardKatherine Ross and Robert Blake on the runABRAHAM LINCOLN POLONSKY has become a symbol.The author of Body and Soul and director of Force of Evil.Polonsky was one of the first victims of the Hollywoodblacklist. With the return of Polonsky’s name on thescreenplay of Madigan, the release of Tell Them WillieBoy Is Here, and a* large dosage of publicity, Polonsky hasbecome a symbol of what Hollywood has done to hurtitself. Polonsky was fairly lucky in that various patchworkjobs kept him financially sound and somewhat in his ownfield during the time of the blacklist. Thus while theblacklist did not succeed in starving Polonsky or in forc¬ing him out of the industry, it did deny Polonsky access tothe director’s chair. In doing so, America denied itself thechance of a literally incalucuable number of major worksof art. What a man must suffer by being unable to createdue to the most despicable of political reasons is unknow¬able, and America owes Polonsky a great debt. Happily,in honoring Willie Boy we are not merely restoring stolencredit. Willie Boy is the best movie in town (currently atthe 3 Penny) and the only thing that should amaze us isthat having been denied access to his reserves for so longPolonsky should be able to suddenly use them so wiselyand well.In terms of achievement, the only indication ofPolonsky’s past is that Willie Boy emerges as a writer’sfilm. This is not to say that Willie Boy is visually in¬competent — it makes half of the films being projectedlocally look green — but rather that the meaning of thefilm is contained in the structure of the screenplay ratherthan in visual configurations. There are, of course, ex¬ceptions to this rule. When Sheriff Cooper (called “Coop”throughout and played by Robert Redford) finally catchesup to Willie Boy (Robert Blake) he stands behind him,looking rather like the Minute Man sentry, while WillieBoy sits on the ground “Indian Style.” Willie turns, Coopshoots, and only after Willie is dead does Coop realize thatWillie’s rifle was empty.The iconography of this scene is, of course, crucial tothe understanding of the film. White man and dark manare seen in archetypical positions and then go ahead anddo their thing, the thing being mutual effort at the de¬struction of the dark man. But the reason that this is theirthing is explained in the screenplay, in the slow and rea¬soned tone that has developed along with the film. WillieBoy is an analytical film, a work of quiet logic that leavesus with despair.Willie Boy is not a liberal plea for racial under¬standing. Polonsky knows that we are far too late for that.Willie Boy is the depiction of how we get to the pointTHEATRE where the only thing a dark man can do is raise a futilegun and the only thing a white can do is to shoot whenthreatened.The key to this analysis is that all four of the majorcharacters are good men. They try hard not to destroyeach other and they act in accordance with moral codes.However, they are also people and being people they aresubject to psychology that is not only influenced by socialphenomena but that perpetuates that phenomena. Perhapsthe clearest example of this is in the character of Eliza¬beth (Susan Clark). Elizabeth heads the reservation thatWillie and his lover Lola (exerably played by KatherineRoss, the film’s only major flaw) come from. Elizabeth isa doctor and a graduate of John Hopkins. She is a descen¬dant of proper Bostonians, who takes her job and herposition seriously. Involved in a running battle with theIndian Department and Congress over the conditions ofthe reservation and with the nearby town over its treat¬ment of the Indians, she would be the embodiment of thewhite liberal, were it not for the struggle she is carryingon within her as she attempts to reconcile her roles as professional and as woman, a struggle emphasized in hersexual liason with Cooper. For reasons which she per¬ceives as good and essential (she wishes to liberate Lolaby letting her become a teacher and thus escape the res¬ervation and the traditional role of the Indian woman) andreasons she does not perceive at all (her desire to moldLola into an image of what she would like to be), Eliza¬beth starts the chase that is the mechanism that destroysall four main characters.The only way in which we can see Willie Boy as ele¬vated above the other major figures of the film is that healone takes an active and conscious part in the workingout of his destiny. By choosing death over capture, Williemanages to define himself while forcing definition on theothers as well. That is defining himself personally; thatWillie assumes an archetypical role is one of the ironiesthat gives the film its profound impact.Terry Curtis FoxThis review is a shorter version of a discussion of WillieBoy that can be found in the Spring 1970 issue of Focus!magazine, on pale this week.May 22, 1970/Grey City Journal/3Fighting Police RepressionContinued from Page Twoof staff David Hilliard, he ordered a three-month ban onrecruitment and at the same time began a program ofintensified political education. These measures accom¬panied a systematic purge of the party’s ranks of “foolsand jackanapes” refusing party discipline, indulging indrugs or petty crime, or operating in a “purely military”manner — as well as conscious police agents.Serve the PeopleAlong with the internal changes, a renewed emphasiswas placed on the party’s original “serve the people”programs in the black community. Four programs werespecified: free breakfast for children, free health clinics,liberation schools and petition campaigns for communitycontrol of police. Every branch was required to implementat least the breakfast program and the police petitions.The first breakfast program and the police petitions.The first breakfast program started in Oakland,January 20, 1969 and spread to dozens of cities within afew months. The breakfasts — cooked from donated foodobtained by the party from local businesses and served inlocal churches or community centers — were soon feedingthousands of hungry children every day.While immensely popular, the program was criticizedby some radicals as “reformist.” Seale answered: “a re¬formist program is one thing when the capitalists put it upand it’s another thing when the revolutionary camp puts itup.”In addition to its own merits, the breakfast programwas also an aspect of the party’s political defense. Themedia-created image of the Panthers as a “blackmafia”was still widely accepted by whites and even among someblacks where the party was not known. The nationwidepractice of serving the people by feeding hungry childrenwas a great help in shattering the false stereotype.The political reaction to the party’s new turn was evenmore severe and was now being directed by the Nixonadministration through the Attorney General’s office andthe Justice Department. Panther offices across the coun¬try were raided. Food supplies for the breakfast programwere destroyed. The New York 21 and the New Haven 14were framed, along with a number of smaller cases. OnMarch 20, Seale, along with 7 white antiwar activists, wasindicted on conspiracy charges stemming from the demon¬ strations at the Democratic National Convention in Chi¬cago.Faced with this onslaught — which decimated the par¬ty’s leadership, placed hundreds in jail, tied the rest up incourt cases, and resulted in at least 19 deaths — Seale andthe remaining functional leadership called for a nationalconference in mid-July to establish a “united front againstfascism.”As far as the Panthers were concenred, fascism wasnot only a theoretical possibility in the US, it was some¬thing they felt the brunt of everyday. “People have torealize,” said Seale, “that fascism is right in front of theirnoses in new garments.”The UFAF meeting was open to anyone — liberal,radical or whatever — who opposed fascism and had thesole purpose of approving and implementing one program:a nationwide campaign for community control of police.Although widely attended, the success of UFAF wasThe StatisticsThis compilation of cases of repression of the Pantherswas compiled by The Guardian in February. The fact thatmore recent cases can be thought of so easily shows theextent of the repression.“He afraid of our blackness! . . . They afraid of the powerof the people!” shouted one of the young Panther 21 atpre-trial hearings in New York this month. Perhaps hesummed up some of the reasons for the massive govern¬ment repression of the party that includes over 1000 in¬cidents of harassment and 19 cases of homocide betweenMay 1967 through the end of 1969.Compiled by the office of Charles Garry, chief attorneyfor the national Panther party, harassments range from afederal indictment for alleged connection to a murder withno bail for the accused — to a charge on July 6, 1969against John Washington, a Los Angeles Panther member,for spitting on the sidewalk.Charges included in more than two years of police ha¬rassment across the country were roughly the following:over 35 charges of disorderly conduct, loitering, etc.; over39 charges of resisting arrest or interfering with a policeofficer; over 24 narcotics charges; 4 Selective Servicecases; over 125 charges of conspiracy (to bomb, murder, limited. Its positive achievement was a renewed sense ofurgency among a wide spectrum of group to rally to thePanthers’ defense. However, the petition campaign, al¬though verbally endorsed, never really got off the groundIn the months since UFAF, the repression of the BlackPanther Party has continued to escalate. Seale has beenimprisoned for four years after having been bound andgagged and found in contempt of Judge Hoffman’s courtIn August he was charged with conspiracy to commitmurder in Connecticut. Fred Hampton and Mark Clarkhave been murdered in Chicago, followed by a policepara-military assault on the Los Angeles Panther officeDavid Hilliard is charged with threatening Nixon’s life.Yet the Panthers have continued to hold their own. tofurther their programs and to gain even wider supportamong growing number of people — black, brown andwhite. The party has its problems, to be sure and theassault against them will undoubtedly grow. But so will itswill to gesist and its chances of final victory.of Repressionsteal, commit arson); over nine minor formal court ac¬tions such as bench warrants; over 36 traffic violationsincluding the May 1969 incident where police rammed theback of Panther member Garry Tyler’s car and then gavehim a ticket for no tail lights; over 129 charges involvingtheft or stolen property; over 152 acts or charges of aviolent nature such as murder, arson, aggravated batteryand attack by police on Panther members and offices;over 150 charges involving weapons, such as failure toregister or concealment.The charges followed the Panthers wherever they went:In Mexico August 15, 1968, three Panthers — George Mur¬ray, Ladnon Williams and David Hilliard — were kid¬napped by the FBI; in Hawaii two days earlier, KathleenCelaver was refused entrance to Japan; Big Man wasrefused entrance to West Germany in December of lastyear.The west coast saw over 336 incidents including 149 inLos Angeles, 55 in Seattle, 42 in San Francisco, 32 inSacramento, 28 in Oakland, seven in Eugene and one eachin Richmond, Calif., Berkely and Salt Lake City.Continued on Page SixFOTA EVENTSMay 22 - May 26May 72,23,241:30 P.M.Hutchinson Ct.May 228:00Breasted Hall58th & University8:30Mandel8:30Ida Noyes Gym Three Plays bv BRECHT"The Exception and the Rule""The Measure Taken""The Elephant Calf"Directed by Professor Stephen JaegerKEN KESEYauthor of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and former head of the Merry PrankstersAn Evening of Music For Violin and PianoFranic AKOS, violin, and Eloise POLK, piano.Mr. Akos is the assistant concertmaster of the Chicago Symphony and the conductor of theChicago Strings.Eloise Polk studied with Casadeseus, Hozowski, and Serkin.Multi-Media Rock Cantata"The Civil War" by William RUSSO. Presented by the FREE THEATER of the Columbia CollegeCenter for New Music.★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★aMay 23 REUVENGOLP8:30_ mystical story tellerIda Noyes8:30 U. of C SymphonyMandel Spring Concert: Overture to Impressario bv MozartWorld premier of Circular Forms by Professor McKinley commissioned by the college for thesymphonyDvorak's 8th Symphony★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★*★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★*★★★★★**★★*★★★★★★★★★★★May 24 NELSON ALGRENBreasted Hall Algren is the Chicago author of Man With a Gold Arm. A Walk on the Wild Side and Chicago:8:00 City on the Make.Lexington Hall STUDENT FILMS FROM FOTA 705831 S. University Premier showing of "Metaphor of the First Time" and other films from the experimental period7:00 PM of Ron Meadow.Hutchesen CourtMay 26 Waiting for Godot directed by Roger Dodds'8:30 li )) [raindate May 28This is the official, up-to-date schedule. All events free unless otherwise specified.11 * • '4/Grey City Journal/May 22, 1170POTPOURRIC hie ago 15: Insane and InnocentIN THE PAST FEW MONTHS trials have often served asfocal points for the revolutionary movement in America.Notable among these occurances have been the trials ofH. Rap Brown, the Panther 21, the DC9, and two trialshere in the Chicago area, the Conspiracy and the Chicago15. The Chicago 15 trial has been somewhat overshadowedby events in Cambodia and the resultant turmoil on thedomestic scene and yet the significance of this group ofpeople and this trial should not be neglected.On May 25, 1969 thirteen men and two women brokeinto the Chicago Southside Draft Board complex at 63rdand Western and piled sixty sacks of paper in an alleybehind the building. The Chicago Police were summonedto the alley after receiving a report of a garbage fire.They found what looked like a group of drunks dancingaround a fire singing “Oh, happy day.” After a while thefire chief on the scene realized that the drunks were danc¬ing around a pile of burning draft files. Thirty-three draftboards had been rendered inoperable, thereby freeing sev¬eral working class communities from the oppression of anunfair draft system.This was neither the first nor the last draft boardaction. It was preceeded by such groups as the Catonsville9 and the Milwaukee 14 and was followed by actions inPasadena, California; Silver Springs, Maryland; Queens,Bronx, and Manhattan, New York to name only a few. Yetthe Chicago 15 action remains quite distinctive.In their initial statement of May 25th, the 15 made thefollowing points. They could no longer “confine theirpeace-making efforts to ordinary channels of polite dis¬course.” The urgency of the situation was simply toogreat and the evils of American militarism and racismwere too strong. The Southside complex had been chosenbecause it dealt primarily with poor people, the ones whosuffer both from indirect evil caused by tax dollars beingspent for war rather than social programs and direct evilof having their sons “forced to burn and kill poor peasantsin a land of the Third World in order to preserve a ‘free-'dom’ which they themselves do not even enjoy in theirown land.” Finally, it was their responsibility as whiteAmericans to do something about the situation. They couldno longer allow the system to run smoothly in their name.The Chicago 15 had taken a very clear step away from thesimple issues of the draft and the war and had made theextrapolations that must be made to domestic issues in amost direct and forceful manner. The onlv white middle The Devastated Draft Boardclass draft board that had been hit was that one coveringHyde Park, all of the others were black, Puerto Rican, orpoor white.Several months later as the trial neared, the 15 issuedanother statement. This statement concerned itself notonly with the issue of American institutions losing theirmoral authority, but it also concerned itself with the is¬sues of political trials and the growing mood of repressionin America. “The courts, instead of acting as a check ongovernmental abuse, have become instruments of the newrepression.” The country’s social, political and racialstruggles are being transformed into mere criminal mat¬ters under the banner of law and order. In political trialsdefendants are tried for their beliefs, yet they cannot in¬troduce those beliefs as evidence. When defendants chal¬lenge unconstitutional procedures, such as in the Con¬spiracy and Panther 21 trials they are even more brutallyrepressed. “The government is turning to author¬itarianism to deal with its deep economic, political andsocial crises. It has turned its economy over to a warfarestate to fight Third World peoples. It has suspended basicConstitutional liberties for those who dare to use them.TEE1TREA Brecht Bonanza“THE ARISTOTELIAN PLAY is essentially static; itstask is to show the world as it is. The learning-play(Lehrstucke) is essentially dynamic; its task is to show theworld as it changes (and also how it may bechanged) . .. With the learning-play, then, the stage be¬gins to be didactic. (A word of which I, as a man ofmany years of experience in the theatre, am not afraid.)The theatre becomes a place for philosophers, and for suchphilosophers as not only wi^h to explain the world butwish to change it.“If there were not such entertaining learning, then theentire theatre would not be able to instruct. For theatreremains theatre even when didactic, and as long as it isgood theatre it is also entertaining.”Thus Bertolt Brecht described his Lehrstucke in his es¬say on pre-Hitlerian German drama. Two of his most fa¬mous learning-plays, The Exception and the Rule and TheMeasures Taken will be presented (free) on campus thisweekend, with a humorous interlude, Brecht’s bizarre TheElephant Calf. The Lehrstucke are directed by StephenJaeger, professor in the German Department, and TheElephant Calf is directed by Peter Jansen, also of theGerman department. As part of FOTA ’70, the plays willbe performed outside in Hutchinson Court (behind MandelHall) at 8:30 pm Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. The playswill be performed in English.The Exception and The Rule concerns the exploitation ofa coolie (Steve Simmons) by a merchant (Bob Hopkins),witnessed in part by a guide (John Tsafoyannis). Whenthe merchant mistakes the coolie’s offer of water for athreat of violence, he is brought before a tribunal andacquitted through the machinations of the juridicial sys¬tem.In The Elephant Calf, Brecht demonstrates that “he canprove any God-damned thing you care to mention.” Assist¬ing him in a bizarre but almost foolproof logic are araggle-taggle troupe of actors, including a Moon (playedby Roberto Gambini), an Elephant Calf (Steve Simmons),an Elephant Calf’s Mother (John Tsafoyannis), and a Ba¬nana Tree (Jeanne Wikler). The play-within-the play inThe Elephant Calf does not ring at all of Hamlet.The Measures Taken is the most orthodox of the popularlearning-plays, with a highly didactic structure and almostevery alienation effect Brecht could think of (masks,signs, songs, you name it.) The Control Chorus sings, andthe Four Agitators (Jeff Howard, Jeanne Wikler, DaveRashin, and Neil Nathan) play all of the twelve-odd parts.»*. •. 1 v*. * * >». A Young Comrade (played by each of the actors at vari¬ous times) joins a group of Russian Communist Agitatorsin an effort to propagandize the Chinese workers in thecity of Mukden. His volatile and impatient nature is detri¬mental to the revolutionary work of the Agitators, andthey are forced to kill him. They present their story, in aseries of “demonstrations,” before the Control Chorus whojudge their actions.The music for The Exception and the Rule and TheElephant Calf was composed by Norman Siegel of Har¬vard. Hans Eisler wrote the music for The Measures Tak¬en.In case of rain or exceptionally cold weather, the playswill be performed in the Reynolds Club Theatre, also Fri¬day, Saturday, and Sunday, also at 8:30, and also free. Police murdered Fred Hampton in his sleep, and the gov¬ernment will attempt to murder Bobby Seale through aConnecticut court.”The repression through the court system even found away to stifle constitutional guarantees outside the court¬room. On February 24, 1970, Judge Edwin Robson orderedthat counsel and every defendant could make or issue nostatements “regarding the jury or jurors in this case,prospective or selected, the merits of the case, the evi¬dence, actual or anticipated, the witnesses or the rulingsof the court.” What this order did was to prevent theChicago 15 from being able to take their ideas to thepublic. They were in essence “gagged” by the court sothat their political message could not get through to thepeople. Similar “gag rules” immediately began to pop upall over the United States at political trials. Judge Rob¬son’s “gag rule” was finally overturned by the appealscourt a mere three days before the Chicago 15 trial began,it had served its purpose.What are the Chicago 15 all about? Four have pleadedinnocent by reason of insanity. “The U. S. foreign policyin Southeast Asia is considered ‘sane’ by the estab¬lishment. It is also considered ‘sane’ to murder FredHampton in his sleep. These defendants do not accept thissanity; they are deluded. To convict these four, the prose¬cution must prove them sane. What does that make thepolicies of this system?”What are the Chicago 15 all about? Ed Hoffmans, oneof the defendants, violated Judge Robson’s “gag rule” andmade the following statement:Because of the general repressiveness of courts in acapitalist society; because of the increasing repression ofAmerican courts as a response to domestic dissent fromU. S. racism, imperialism, and exploitation; and becauseof the manifestations of repression by this particularCourt; the defendant hopes the people of America willconsider representing his cause in the streets by repeatingactions similar to the alleged Motion for which he is underindictment. The defendant invites all Americans, but par¬ticularly middle class whites, to seriously contemplate en¬gaging in individual and collective action to destroy thiscountry’s Selective Service System, draft file by draft file,card by card, local board by local board. This monstrousmachine — processing the bodies of young American men,particularly lower class people, into numbers, automatons,killers, cripples and corpses — has no legal right to existamong a free people. The defendant wishes young Ameri¬can men to consider refusing induction to deny the mili¬tary the use of their bodies, publicly destroying or turningin their draft cards to show their refusal to possess humanhunting licenses, and sacking their local draft offices tohinder the conscription of their brother’s bodies into thegovernment’s genocidal wars against the people of ThirdWorld countries.Most of this country’s draft offices have weak secur¬ity. Like the bureaucracy they serve, Selective Serviceoffices are vulnerable to attack. Very few records in localboard offices are duplicated elsewhere, despite officialclaims and popular .mythology to the contrary. And thetwo most important elements of a local board’s record¬keeping system are almost never reproduced: the 1-A reg¬istrants’ files (contained in standard-size manila foldersContinued on Page Seven6 RETCITY JOURNALHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxC. F. Z. HitchcockFrank MalbrancheThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroThe Grey city Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthp ijniv«rcitv rnmiwmity »n<4 »n ch,c*oo. AM Interested personsshould contact -he editor n <he Varoor offices in Ida Noyes Hall.May 22, 1970/Grey City Journal/5cmm mmi'The Solution to the Grey MysteryAFTER HANGING AROUND this place for the length oftime I have, I finally discovered a major cause of thisplace’s greyness besides pollution, the weather and justthe emotional atmosphere. To discover it, first you need acontrol situation — a beautiful sunny day with clean clearair plus a particularly reckless optimism. Admittedlythose characteristics appear only very infrequently sepa¬rately, no less getting together on one day. Well whensuch a thing happens, look around to see what causes theinevitable hue of dirty feet and clothes on the quads. Youguessed what it is? Well it’s none other than the famousadministration building. Have you ever noticed how it isplotzed down right at the head of the quads and not onlyblocks out the sunlight, creates a gigantic shadow, butalso sits there ominously like a big grey blob?There are many solutions to this problem. Sink itdown under the ground so you have to descend six floorspaint it bright yellow, or turquoise, or chartruese. Anybodygot a lot of paint?Saturday, CEF presents Bergman’s Shame — his mostrecent film released here. It examines the inner workingsof people (like all of his films) of people caught in themaze of war. In Cobb for $1 at 7 and 9:15.TheatreThough this seems like a Brechtian quarter, you’vegot to remember, in a truly Brechtian ironic sardonicfashion, that that BB was pretty much forced out of thecountry for his political ideas. Political repression is anold story folks. Well the three plays presented this week¬end, The Exception and the Rule, The Elephant Calf andThe Measures Taken try to make things right? The bestway is to see for yourself. They star Bob Hopkins, SteveSimmons, Jeanne Wikler, David Rusche, Jeff Howard,John Isafoyanms, Neil Nathan and many many others.Two are directed by Stephen Jaeger and the other byPeter Jansen, both of the German Department. How canyou lose? It’s tonight, tomorrow and Sunday at 8:30 in thecourt outside Hutch Commons (in the open air!) and it’sFREE.MusicTonight, Collegium Musicum, that distinguished orga-riiation will perform Haydn’s Lord Nelson Mass. It willbe at the Lutheran School of Theology 1100 E. 55th St. at8:30 and it’s FREE.Tonight and tomorrow the committee on southernTO: Gunja-GraphicsP.O. Box 7792Atlanta, Georgia 30309QuantityCaptain AmericaCannibisplus handlingtotal enclosedGET IT ONSuper quality in; S, M, L,XL from Gunja-Graphics,T-Shirt craftsmen forthe discriminatingego-tripperTwo otherfar-out designsin color;Cannibis andPeace signDealer inquiriesinvited.Cash, MoneyOrders processedimmediatelyChecks about 15days for delivery Asian studies presents A festival of Indian Music. Tonightthey present a Northern Indian instrumental program fea¬turing Lalmam Misra on the vichitra vina and Jnan Pra-kash Ghosh on the tabla. Tomorrow is a South Indianvocal recital with V. Ranganayaki, vocal; R. Rangana-than, mridangam; and L. Shanker, violin. Tickets are $3,general admission; students $2 or both concerts for $5.50general admission, $3.50 for students. At 8:30 in the LawSchool.Saturday, The University Symphony presents theirquarterly concert. Works will include world premiere ofWilliam McKinley’s (of the Music Dept.) wild piece ofmodem music, Dvorak’s 4th Symphony and the Impres- sario Overture by Mozart. It’s at 8:30 in Mandel and it’sFREE.Sunday, Caranan, and internationally known folksingerwill do the Sunday service at 10:30 am at the 1st Univer¬sity Church at 57th and Woodlawn. Caranan is perhapsbest known as the composer of “We Shall Overcome.”Sunday, the Musical Society presents a recital of So¬natas for Cello and Piano with Roland Wilson, cello andThomas Brown, piano. There will be works by the threeB’s (Bach, Beethoven and Brahms for those of you whohaven’t taken elementary music.) In Hampton (ie IdaNoyes) library at 8 and FREE.Continued on Page SevenThe Law Presses Down Hard- Continued from Page FourThe midwest saw over 170 harassments in Chicago, 36 inIndianapolis, 19 in Milwaukee, 10 each in Detroit and Den¬ver, five in Kansas City, Mo., and two in Des Moines.In the east the Panthers were harassed over 152 timesin New York. They were also harassed in White Plains,Albany, Peekskill, Jersey City, Boston, Baltimore, Harris¬burg, Pa., New Haven and Philadelphia.Bails have ranged from $25 for 17 Panther members and$1000 for 60 members (one was forfeited) to $100,000 for 29members (two reduced to $50,000 and one to $10,000).The 19 homocides listed by attorney Garry’s office be¬gan with the finding of the body of Arthur Glenn Morris(name also given as Arthur Glenn Carter) in Los Angelesin March, 1968, with police claiming to have no informa¬tion about his violent death. The second death was thefollowing month when Bobby Hutton was shot by police inOakland as he surrendered with his hands in the air,unarmed. The last homocides were in Chicago on Decem¬ber 4, when police murdered Fred Hampton in his bed andMark Clark in a pre-dawn raid.Perhaps the most glaring example of actions against thePanthers is the total of 24 raids against Black Pantherparty offices during the past two years. This does notinclude the often fatal and destructive “visits” by policeto various Black Panther homes.The first listed raid was on April 3, 1968, when withshotguns ready police broke up a meeting of the party inFather Neil’s Church in Oakland.Other raids in 1968 included: July, police attack Seattleoffice; September 28, (night of Huey Newton’s sentencing)JESSELSON’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186-13401. 53rd Oakland office shot up; October, Denver office shot up;December, Newark office bombed by police; Denver officeraided twice (the second time police did $9000 worth ofdamage and allegedly stole $150); Indianapolis officeraided, ransacked and teargassed; Des Moines office at¬tack by police.The 1969 raids included: April, San Francisco, Los An¬geles, Jersey City and Des Moines offices attacked, thelast totally destroyed by bombing; June, raids includedoffices in Chicago, San Diego, Sacramento, and Detroit;July, police against the Chicago office in a 45-minuteshootout, attempting to burn the office down — stole $500and destroyed food for breakfast program; police at¬tempted to burn down Peekskill, N.Y., office; August, po¬lice retreated from attempted raid on Richmond officeafter attempt was announced on radio; November, SanDiego and Albany offices raided; December, police raidedthe Los Angeles office, setting off a five-hour gunfight.The list of harassments of Panther members in Mil¬waukee during the month of August 1969 is an example —minus the homocides — of continuing harassments againstPanther members across the country:Richard Smith: curfew violation. Richard Smith: same,following week. Richard Smith: arrested crossing in¬correctly at intersection. Richard Smith: arrested in¬vestigating arrest of two sisters. Richard Smith: arrestedfor selling papers, for littering, jaywalking or just walk¬ing. Jaki Simpson: harassed, red baited by police. NateBellamy: threatened with parking ticket, threatened witharrest for talking with people about arrest of sister forjaywalking. Karen Bundy: arrested for disorderly conductabout jaywalking ticket. Lovetta X. Brown: stopped bypolice, submitted to search after having gun pointed ather. Lovetta X. Brown: stopped in car. Lovetta X. Brown:stopped in car again. Jesse White: police tried to takepapers and harassed in several incidents.MODERN DANCE CLASSES4,30 to 6,00Monday - SaturdayBallot. Rock & Jazz taught.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. StateStevwns BuildingRoom 1902332 9923 MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.CARPET CITY «6740 STONY ISLAND <324-7998 <* Has what you need from o $10Tused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants ^f & Mill returns at a fraction of the <^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities,f Additional 10% Discount with this(Ad.{ FREE DELIVERYYou doifk have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.U YHTY■ yr • r» r I Just “hip”.6/Grey City Journal/May 22, 1970 //i m ; //v ,r\ unleash yournatural assetsOak Street may neverbe the same after youpeel off your terrybushcoat (white, goldor blue, $14) to revealyour torso sheathed inour new tank suit (flagcolors, $14).This could be your bestsummer. Get ready forit. Our store is full ofthe appropriate thingsIn the Hyde Park Shopping Center55th & Lake Park Phone 752-8100Open Thursday <t Friday evenings*GOODMANS EE-3388 Inch 2-way40-18,000 Hz-25 watts18" x 11" x 9"WAS - $49.95NOW - $29.95GOODMANS EE 126 I nch 2-way46-18,000 Hz-20 watts15" x 8" x 7"WAS - $29.95NOW - $19.95SCOTT S-11B12 Inch 3-way35-20.000 Hz-60 watts24" x 14y2" x 1V/4"WAS-$149.95NOW -$99.95GOODMANS EE 441010 Inch 2 way35-20,000 Hz-30 watts22" x 12y/' x9’/2"WAS - $69.96NOW - $48.88 ADC 303A8 Inch 2-way35-20,000 Hz-60 watts23%"x 13" x 11%"WAS - S99.50NOW - $67.77FISHER XP-15B15 Inch 3-way28-20,000 Hz-60 watts27" x 27" x-My*"WAS - $289.95NOW - $199.95FISHER XP-1212 Inch 3-way30-20,000 Hz-50 watts22% " x 24" x 13y4"WAS-$219.95NOW - $149.95ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-4555CULTURE VULTURE’Yellow? Turquoise? Chartruse?Continued from Page SixMiscellaneousThe Synthetic Theatre is running a benefit on Sundayfor the Chicago 15 (which is now really down to the Chi¬cago 11). The Synthetic Theatre is mostly dance with a lotof other things thrown.in. They will be performing at theFrancis Parker Auditorium, 330 Webster (2200 block northon Clark). It’s at 3 pm and tickets are $2, 3, and 4 at thedoor.WHPKThe only really big special scheduled this week so faris (but considering WHPK, you never know what mightappear):The Debutante Hour, Thursday at 9 with Mike Roykoand the University in Exile.This Week at the GargoyleDon’t forget the great Craft Coop, every day fromnoon till about 6. Terrific homemade stuff of all descrip¬tions. On the third floor.Women’s Liberation rap session at noon.Hyde Park Strike Committee open meeting for all in¬terested residents at 7:30.MondayWomen’s Liberation rap session and Gay LiberationRap session at 12.NUC meeting at 8.TuesdayCrafts Workshop from 3:30 — 5:30.From the man who brought you Flash Gordon and thetwo evenings of experimental films — a surprise. At 7:30and 9:30.WednesdayWomen Strike for Peace open meeting at 8.ThursdayGay Liberation Rap session at 12.Poetry group meets at 9 — contribute yourself or meetall the local poets.ELSEWHEREFilmWoodstock is the film of the event. Help the poor star¬ving rock festival exploiters by going. At State LakeTheatre. 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, 170N. Dearborn.Tell Them Willie Boy is Here is Abraham Polansky’sfirst film since his blackout following the blacklist. WiUieBoy 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.Z is a film of political suspense and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicalPOTPOURRI and contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreec. 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 the Band is the film version of the playwhich seemed to break the ice in the subject of homosex¬uality on Brodaway. At the Carnegie at Rush and State.I Am Curions (Yellow) has caused a lot of furor be¬cause of what the people are doing but the picture isreally about what the people are thinking. At the Playboy,1204 N. Dearborn.The Esquire theatre is sponsoring a three week “FilmOrgy” sponsored by Janus Films. Things on the programfwill be Hitchcock, Truffaut, the Marx Brothers, Bergman,Ophuls, King Kong, etc. Check at the theatre for specificruns (usually 1-2 days each). 58 E. Oak Street. DE-7-1117.Up Against the System(Continued from Page Five)kept in labeled drawers) and the 102 Form books, largearid heavy rectangular ledgers which are the sources ofinformation for determining the proper order of call forinduction. Any draft board’s legal induction processingcan be stopped for at least three months by removing and/or severely damaging these two elements of the board’srecord system. So the defendant would encourage Ameri¬can citizens to give special consideration to the possibilityof raiding this country’s draft boards and removing thesetwo kinds of records and damaging them with home-madenapalm like the Catonsville Nine and Milwaukee Fourteen,with gasoline and fire like the Chicago Fifteen, with waterand detergent like the Minnesota Beaver 55, or with theirhands tearing them up like the Indianapolis Beaver 55.The defendant would like for Americans to consider the great patriotic tradition of Thomas Paine, OsawatomieJohn Brown, Joe Hill, Bill Haywood, Nat Turner, W. E. B.Dubois, Malcolm X, and Bobby G. Seale. The defendantthinks it may be particularly appropriate for Americans tothink about raiding draft offices and committing otherpublic violations of Selective Service law around the timeof the trial of Frederick Joseph Chase et al 69 CR 364 (theChicago 15) to teach the operators of this country’s legalsystem that they cannot successfully stop public oppositionto coercive institutions like Selective Service by railroad¬ing draft office raiders to prison.Come to the Trial 10 A. M. Judge Robson’s courtroom;25th floor Federal Building. Groups wishing to attend thetrial should contact the Chicago 15 Defense Committee,431 S. Dearborn — Room 813, 939-5605. They will try to getgroups into the 2 P. M. session. Be prepared to be thor¬oughly searched.disrupting draft board operations, in light of carrying onTrrgWBTrTTgTfTrBTnrrrerevrgTTgwinmrgTTa-rinnryinrrinnnrrerrB^^ Vance D. Archer HI48 E Oalc St —DF 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.-779-6500 BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMENT STOREPL 2-47441150 E. 63rd St.Ton don't needinsuranceprotectionfor tout car(if von liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you ’llwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971sentryJCTINSURANCEThe Hardwire Mutuals Organization111.1,. ".TINGMAR BERMAN'SSHAMESaturday, May 23 (in 35mm.) 7:00 & 9:15 P.M. in Cobb HallXajde‘■Ridr s new and cm K]‘fiestaurant ‘iranyJL<Sa Cj renoui lie(i*?5 E Hvde f-t-S e.J,e*«-d rwo\av<.-it n<*will have a trip through the historic provinces ofFranceEVERY MONDA Y EVENINGat the special prix fixe of $4.50For MONDAY. Mav 25FROMLa Region ToulonnaiseCOLD TOMATOES STUFFED \Y. MUSCLESIN A SAFFRON SAUCEDAl'BE PROVENCALE(BEEF IN A LIGHT RED WINE SAUCE)PAPETON D’AUBERGINE(VEGETABLES)POMME DE TERREDESSERTBEVERAGEff e are open every day with a menue a la carte, or completedinner. Lunch served daily. Closed TuesdayFOR RESERVATIONSCALL RENE684-4050 Clarkenjoy ourspecial studentrateQ C C at alltimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsour box officefferent double featuredaily• open 7.30 a.m.-lateshow midnight• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 85*little gal lery for galsonly• Clark park mg-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly program FAR EAST KITCHENCHINESE & AMERICANFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen daily 10 -10Fri. & Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd955-2229I—."—TAKCAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN [MlLYI I A.M. 10 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders xo take out1318 East 63rd MU4-IJimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHUTZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNUNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAEugene Narmour, ConductorMozart: Overture to The ImpresarioMcKinley: Grculor Forms for Grand Orchestra(First performance: Commissioned by the College)Dvorak: Symphony No. 8 in GMANDEL HALL SAT., MAY 23 8:30 p.m.Admission Freeyou can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booxc.Bass ale and Schlitx beet on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . , , luncheon . . . dinner . , , (ate snacks , , ,I ro 00.SK wtnowu* *0014 a .'J i.toxcsd r-C'>«OH P' * H't' t ilf) ?'*> »•*' ■ • ff' •• ; i y •BANQUET ROOM MY 3-1933,S'3Yf rttA<h«T6frjE Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.But the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,! CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 MODERN DANCEAT LEHNHOFF Schoolof MUSIC & DANCE1438 E. 57th ST.ByJOANNA HALLreturning from concerttour in Norway.The newMILL RUNTHEATERat Golf andMilwaukeeRoadsin Niles,Illinois IKEand TINATURNERSHOWMsy 26 thru 27¥May 26 one show at 7 30 p m - May 27 twoshows 8=30andH:30P m - S5 50. S4 50Boi Office opened Mon thru Set - 10 00 am to9 00 p m Sun Noon to 7 00 p m Ot ell TICKETR0Nlocetions Mi eta iThe magic gardenof Stanley sweetheartMETRO-GOLDWYN-MAVERPresentsA MARTIN POLL PRODUCTIONThe magic garden of Stanley sweetheartScreenplay by ROBERT T WESTBROOK from hrs NovelProduced by MARTIN POLL D-.ected by LEONARD HORNMtTBOCOlOB MGMNOW IN RELEASE8/Grey City Journal/May 8, 878the committee on southern asian studiespresentsA FESTIVAL OF INDIAN MUSICFRIDAY, MAY 22a north indian instrumental programLALMANIMISRA, vichitra vinaJNAN PRAKASH GHOSH, tablaSATURDAY, MAY 23a carnatic vocal recitalV. RANGANAYAKI, vocalT. RANGANATHAN, mridangamL. SHANKAR, violinLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM8:30 P.M.student tickets: $2.00 per concert, $3.50 forboth. General admission: $3.00 per concert.Tickets available at the door. EYE EXAMINATIONSfashion eyewearCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372T ' I ' I 1 I T' I 1 I ' I 1 I 1 I- CHARTS/GRAPHS.Leroy lettering(Near campus)363-1288CARPET BARNWAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants and Rail EndsOriental RepraduetinnsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur CoatsInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Days Tues.-lhru Sat. 9-41228 W. Kinzie 243-2271are yourcontact lensesmore work thanthey’re worth?If you’re tired of usingtwo or more separate so¬lutions to take care ofyour contact lenses, wehave the solution. It’sLensine the all-purposelens solution for com¬plete contact lens care-preparing, cleaning, andsoaking. ■ Just a drop ortwo of Lensine before youinsert your contacts coatsand lubricates the lenssurface making it smooth¬er and non-irritating.Cleaning your contactswith Lensine retards thebuildup of foreign de¬posits on the lenses. ■Lensine is sterile, self-sanitizing, and antisep¬tic making it ideal forstorage of your lensesbetween wearing periods.And you get a removablestorage case on the bot¬tom of every bottle, a Lensine exclusive forproper lens hygiene. ■ !thas been demonstrated Bacteria cannot grow inLensine.m Caring for con¬tact lenses can be as con¬venient as wearing themwith Lensine, from theMurine Company, Inc.that improper storagebetween wearings mayresult in the growth ofbacteria on the lenses.This is a sure cause of eyeirritation and could seri¬ously endanger vision. LENSINE? " #%l ’ IVA VUO’ICUhi ofurw-c THE MORRIS FISHREIN CENTERfor the Study of theHISTORY OF SCIENCE AND MEDICINEThe University of ChicagoANNOUNCING THE THIRD AND FOURTHLECTURES OF THE “INAUGURAL SERIES OFFOUR LECTURES”to be held in Frank Billings Auditorium (PI 17), TheUniversity of Chicago Hospitals and Clinics 950 East 59th St.4:30 - May 25, 1970—Hippocrates and the Enigma of Life.A lecture by M. D. GRMEK, M.D., Scientific Collaborator at theNational Center of Scientific Research in Paris, France; Editor ofLijecnicki Vjesnik and the Archives Internationales cTHistoire desSciences.4:30 - June 1, 1970—Desiderius Erasmus: The Spirit and theFlesh.A lecture by C. D. O’MALLEY, Late Professor of the History ofMedicine, UCLA, and President of the International Academy of theHistory of Medicine. This lecture was completed for this Seriesshortly before Professor O’Malley’s death on April 7. It will Eve readby ALLEN G. DEBUS, Professor of the History of Science, TheUniversity of Chicago.These lectures will be open to the public without ticketand without charge.SUNDAYMAY 247:30OPERAHOUSE6.50 4.505.50 3.50 0* H* PERSON**cPeter, ohuland cffiaryDON'TBUGGEDby CAR REPAIRS!Switch to...BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO REPAIRS, INC.4401 S. ARCHER AVE. - 254-3840254-5071 254-5072"For Satisfaction in Service"3rd Anniversary SaleATTENTION VOLKSWAGAN OWNERS MlComplete dutch installed 1200-1300 V.W $48.001500-1600 V.W 60.00Shocks installed 1200-1300 V.W $7.50 ea.1500-1600 V.W 8.50 ea.Mufflers installed 1200-1300 V.W $28.00Mufflers installed transporter, 1500-1600 $32.00"Brake service with our modern machinery" all fourL wheels 100% guarantee $38.00 on 1200-1300-1500V.W. sedan, transporter brakes $42.00King link pin replaced - Front wheels aligned $38.00TUNE-UP SPECIAL. $16.00 (indudes parts A labor) * Pentax Spotmatic,all lenses, accessories.* Strobonar Flash* Rollei* Preview SlideProjector* Demonstrationby factory rep.Sat., May 2j* Pentax instruction byGeorge Jones,Daily Defender* Pentax colorlandscapesby Dr. Robert Lipgar* Free PepsiMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St-.y .HY 3-9259 7UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.aOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANKPARIS Iproprietor^ ■» H. U UJIS i- Z -iPIZZApLATTERj■ ri«a, meg v.nrtKvn .I Italian Foods ^p Compere the Price! I,! 1460 E. 53rd 643-28001I WE DELIVER IMay 22, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5f*K .(Maroon Classified Ads)SPRING IS SPRUNG, THE GRASS IS RIZ;SCENESCourt Theatre Auditions. ThreePenny Opera — Under Milkwoodand Henry IV (part two) tryoutsSaturday & Sunday May 23, 24, 30& 31. Frim 1 to 4 at Hutch Court.x3581.Ulysses Back in Cobb!Carpenter's course in consciousnessback to regular ime and placebeginning Monday.Free Pepsi Pentax-Strobanor.Nikordemonstration model camera 55 &Kenwood, 493-6700.Langdon Gilkey at BonhoefferHouse Sunday May 24, 6 pm onhis recent book, Naming the Whirl¬wind (5554 S Wood lawn).Rock service Sunday May 24, 5pm. Augustanna* Lutheran Church,5500 Wood lawn.Pentax demo Sat May 23, See dis¬play ad Model Camera, 55 & Ken¬wood.Lovable beautiful kittens need goodhomes. Call 324.1471.Jukes Records - Hyde Park's lowestprices - 53 & Lake Park, Under 1C.Bach is coming, June 7allegro conspirito.You deserve better than your owncooking. Taste the epicurian pleas¬ures of Buffalo, Hatford, and Dal¬las. Get there and get on AmericanAirlines. Call Jim Sack 684-6667for details.Cello Recital — Sunday 24th — IdaNoyes Library — 8:OOPM — WorksBy Bach and Beethoven andBrahms.Mr. Zecher will be giving readingcourse in introductory macroecon.(Econ282) 1 of 3 qtr in 1970-1.Others who want to join me intaking the course, call Birn —Birnberg — at 752-4081SENSITIVITY TRAINING with TheMaster Pro—Dr. Jack Gibb—June12-14—$25. 684-1121 or 643-8538.CRAFT CO-OP now open Mon.-Fri.1-5, 3rd fl. Blue Gargoyle.Marco Polo Travel. 2268 S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.Something for everybody!!! A week,end of Indian music, Carnaic andHindustani. TONIGHT, Lalmani Mis-ra playing vichitra vina with JnanPrakash Ghosh on tabla. TOMOR¬ROW NIGHT, Carnatic vocalist V.Ranganayaki with R. Ranganathan,mridangam and L Shankar, violin.Student tickets $2.00 per concert,boh for $3.50. On sale now in FosterHall 106 and at the door. Bothconcerts in the law school audi¬torium at 8:30 pm.Rabbi Boris Rackovsky (Hillel Di¬rector, Northwestern) will speak atHillel tonigh at 8:30 on "Jews andNon.Jews in Jewish ReligiousSources." Minnette's Custom Salon 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing; clothes copied 8. designed.BERGMANCEF shows Bergman's latest filmSHAME Sat at Cobb 7 8. 9:15.SERVICESExperienced Governess Prefer boysHarriet Marwood 363-1164.3rd year undergrad in generalstudies in humanities needs summeremployment. Would like to do re-serch Call x3777 Room 501 Pleaseleave Message.ABOUT THE RINGCharles S Porter loves Darrell DMcCormick and doesn't care whoknows it.CEF PRESENTSBergman's SHAME at 7 8c 9:15 Satat Cobb Hall.SUMMER JOBSNO FEESWe have several good jobs avail¬able for college and university stu¬dents. For info call Student Place¬ment Manager, 642-4210.HELP WANTED: SUMMER JOB.T.V. Attendant for Hospital inArea. No T.V. Knowledge Neces¬sary. Part Time Four Days aweek. Approximately 3 Hours aDay. Call Mr. Eastman 676.2226After 5:00.HOUSE FOR SALE4 bedrooms 2 full baths 2 car ga¬rage large garden. 955-5916.House near campus for summer forfamily. DO 3-3710.YOUTH PASSPORTTWA's New Concept in YouthTravel Regular Discounts OnDomestic Carriers ButMuch More!Discounts On Auto Rental AndPurchase In Europe Redu^ .dRates At Hotels HospitalityParties In London andAmsterdam. Come In To StudentCharter In Ida Noyes and PickOne Up It Only Costs $4Mother Would Want You To HaveOneSPACESopember rental idyllic 4 roomcottage, S Shore $85 secluded, pri¬vate garden, yet one block from1C station, 71st St. Married couplepreferred. Eve 324-5742.Three bedroom apt near campusavailable June 15. $135/month. Buymy turn. Take my lease. Call 324-2279.For rent — 1 bedroom apt-unfurn¬ished. 5445 S. Cornell availableJune 15. $140/mo. 955.9596.EVEN IF YOU DON'T LOOK THE PART.the Maroon is willing to train and pay you well to beASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER for next year. Yourduties would include handling some simple book¬keeping chores, some simple typing, answering thephone, and assembling the paper.This is really a fantastic opportunity to put off goingout into the real, ugly world. Stay in the womb-likewarmth of the University community - yet have all theadvantages of engaging in a full time, cop-out job.Submit a resume to the Maroon office in Ida NoyesHall - or call Joel for information at x3263. Apt with fine darkroom. Wdlawn8. 54. $75/monh. 288-3862.Own room, 2 blocks from campusbig apt. with 3 grad stdts. $57 mo.,684-1449.Female sublet. Own room, cool.56th 8< University 752-3896.Med student needs room in aptsummer and next year 324-10777.Roommate wanted for apt, 2 blksfrom main quad. Reasonable rent.955-8155.Roommate wanted, fern to sharelarge SS apt. wn room, perm pref.$60 approx. 721.4820.Roommates share 6-room apt. $65/mo. plus util. 493-2881.WANTED: 2 BEDROOM APT NEARUC. SEPT. 1. 955-2187 or 667-1517.Roommate(s) needed large apt stopby 1509 E 53 St. Sat 12-5.Wanted 4-5 rm apt animals al¬lowed. 363-1951 after 6.Female roommate wanted summerand/or next year, wn room, fullyfurnished, 1 block from campus andonly $57-Call 955-0560. Large 3 room apt near Kenwood,price negotiable. Ask for Dave at548-1535, 538-5599, 955-5826.Big sunny close 3-bdrm apt availfor summer. Cond, tv, fire, 5724Drexel; It's a good apt. $185, preffam. 955-1824.Apt for summer sublet 55th andUniversity. Call 493-0143.Female roommate wanted. June-Sept. Air-cond. $65. 1400 E 57th.324-6768.Sblt June 1, opt next yr, 1 blkfr camp $45/mo. 288-4631. TV.House for sub-let; S. Shore-7 rooms,2 baths, good for 4 or 5 People.6942 S. Chapel, call 493-7595 after6 pm.Summer roommates wanted toshare large So Shore apt, own rm.,$60/mo. 221-7021.Sunny airy 3-rm apt-perfect forcouple $135 June 5-Sept 15, 57 8.Harper, call 324-1471.Summer usblet mid-June thru Sept.4 rms, $105-near campus, hospitals955-8353.Mid-June thru Sept. Large 7 rmfurnished apt, $175/mo 752-5582. Lo¬cated at 55 8. Univ. FAC APT — Summer Quarter orpart thereof. Prefer married couple— references. Lowish rent. Close tocampus. 752-7045.Summer Sublet — 4 rms. clean onmidway near Law School. $100/mo.324-6871.Summer Sublet Avail. June 1 orlater. One rm 8> 2 bdrm apt. M,F or both O.K. Rent flexible. 5463Ingleside. Call 493-9846.Just to let you know we're knittingall your names into an argylescarf . . . when we knit we knit8i when we fuck we fuck.Fern roommate wanted for summersublet at 56 8i University; ownroom, $65/mo; mid-June to mid-Sept; call 955-4182 or 288-6610 room1308.WANTED: Furnished 1 bdrm apt.June 15-Sept 15. Write J. Teefi,Physics Dept, U. of Illinois. Urbana,III. 61801.Studio apt sublet: IVi rms, nearCoop, fully furnished. $80/mo. June-Sept. 288-1776.Summer Sublet: Well-appointed,fully-furnished, spacious comfortableapartment. Own room. Fully furn¬ished. Room for 1, 2, or 3. 2 baths363-1382, leave a message.RIDES * SUBLETS * DIVESTITURESOnly three more issues to get yourself together for the summer. Get on acar headed your direction, get your apartment rented, unload excessworldly possessions,BE FOREWARNEDThree more issues and we too disembark so get your classified in now...Chicago MaroonIda Noyes Hall auto used $25/martel 40 watt AMFM stereo receiver 8, 2 warfaTW30D speaker. $200 Bob 568-4749*Leaving country, everythinggo. Furn. rugs, appliances, books7Y,'. lamPS' FM filing cab bikeIndian saris 8. materials etcus or come browse. 667-4054 evesKingsize Mattress, 5000 BTU AirCond., Table plus 6 Chairs, DeskBooks, Clothes plus Many otherItems. HY 3-8127. 5473 Everett #2NOLD tbl, 6 high back chairs, 2huge barrel-back chairs, desk vanity, reclining chair, cheap' dvsX3251 ngt 324-3205 Rosmann.Kingsize mattress w/sheets padantique dining table plus 6 upnolchairs, sofa, kitchen items HY 18127, 5473 Everett.'61 Ford showing signs of neverstopping. Best offer around $250268-7601.Small refrigerator wanted - in goodshape, call BU 8-6610 X3426.16 IN TV, |ust repaired. 752-7689'67 MUSTANG CONVERT.Great shape 23000 mi must selldays call Ext 4794, eve. 493-2915.Upright piano/will pay up to $300.G. Herzog X8621.Honda 305 extras $325. 643 8210.Convert. XL Ford '62 good condi¬tion, must sell best offer. Call294-8079 Evenings.Foinicha — a gigantic apartmentfull. We have beds, desks, couches,(even a Freudian one) chairs,dressers, a secretary, lamps, table,mirrors, a TV and stand etc. etc.What a chance — get it beforeParke Bernet grabs it. 363-1352.Roommate wanted, good loc. Hp,$60/mo grad prfd. 493-2822.Full or light. 4 bedrooms, 1 full,2Vi baths, sun porch. Furnished.East, West, south exposures. Air-conditioned. Close to Lake, 1C. 324-1879.Fern rmmt wanted $60/mo nr coopLovely safe apt. aircond June-Septand next year. Call 493-6336 Evens.1 bedroom apt on 1C, campus buslines $125. 731-4145.Live in Friederika's Famous Build¬ing. Now, June, and October. Near¬by unfurn 2, 3 Rm Apts. $95 up.Free Utils. Stm. Ht. Quiet. Light.Pvt. Ba. 4-6PM. 6043 Woodlawn. 955-9209, or WA 2-8411, ext. 311.Lrg 5 rm apt 53 8< Woodlawn. June1 thru Sept. Opt. After $l65/mo.288-2236.Fern Rmmt Wntd. $60/Mo. 924-4691.or 644-2055 x64. 9AM to 5PM.For Rent 2 bdrm apt. 137. 5443 S.Cornell 955-5871 Ju. 1.Furnished Rm. 493-3328.Fern. Roommate to share largesunny luxurious apt. own rm +bath $55. Summer w. opt. fall. 752-0316.House near campus for summerfor family. DO 3-3710.FM. Rmt wd. 56 8< Dor. Any LengthTime. Ask for Sylvia 677-5695. Ownroom.58 8. Harper 5 rms 8, sunporch en¬tire 2nd floor of house. Rent nego¬tiable. Completely furn. Call BU 8-6610, X2318 Lv message.METAMORPHOSIS955-9347, 5638 S. Woodlawn.SUMMER SUBLETSummer sublet for 2. Option forone. $50/mo. Call 643-8548.HOUSE IN SUBURBS — furnished,3 bdrm, 2 bath. Large, privateyard. Trees, fresh air (?), etc. Nearto 1C. Mid-June to mid-Sept. $225/mo inc. util. X8122 or 799-8695.Bedroom 1 block from lake $45 mo.Option for next yr. 684-8120.Sublet 59 8, Harper 6 rms $40/ea.4 people 955-0707 great place.APT TO SUBLET for summer. Ex¬ceptionally good steup. Mr. Nelsonat 643-3157.2 rm frn apt, $113/mo. 955-2094.7 room apt, large 55th and Cornell,$210/mo. Sublease June 1-Sept 30.Option to renew. Furn or unfurn.3 bdr, 2 full bath, 684-3488.Furnished rooms in apt. for sum¬mer. 3 blocks no. of campus. Laun¬dry room, shopping center nearby.$40/mo, 324-9090.Town house Hyde Park summerrental. About June 17-Sept. 5. Furn¬ished, fully equipped, back yard,parking, $250/mo. 667-5608.Sum. sub. Whole apt, aircond. 3bedr, 1400 E 57 furn. 684-0527.Summer sublet large 4 room apt1 blk to campus, clean, can haveVi or all, negotiable, 667-4309. Sum sublet for 1 fern, share, newaircondt. apt at 57 81 Dorchester.Own room completely furnished,TV, balcony for sunbath. Washerdryer, space! 363-5267 nights.Rmmt wntd - 5Vi rm duplex nr1C 81 Harper Ct. avail 6/1 with optfor fall $45/mo 324-1768, libs andpig-dogs need not apply!)5 rm ept near campus start midJune option on next yr. CaH eve¬nings 288-3356. Part furn.Female rmmtes wanted. Share Ighouse with 5 girls. $63/mo incl util.Washer/dryer in basement. Ownroom, communal cooking. 15 minto campus. On bus route. Falloption. 493-5419 after 5.Roommate wanted for summer,very large room in quiet apt. 53 8<Dorchester. 667-3734.Summer sublet-3 rooms-So ShoreFurnit, garage, lease avail. 1C,Campus bus, $110/mo. 734-8442.2 roommates needed for summer,w/option to rent for fall — I roomapt, 3 baths, sunporchs $195/mo,or $48.75/person. 493-4867.Summer Rmmt(s) wanted to sharelarge inexpensive Hyde Park Apt.3 Bedrooms. June-Sept. 643-7219Eves. 8i Wkends.Male Grad Wanted To Share AptIn S Shore Furnished On Lake ForSummer Qtr. 734-4324.4Vi Rms, 1 Bdrm S. Shore Near 1C,Campus Bus BIG! Garage avail.Really GOOD Place July-Sept. CallBob 667-8863.Spacious Air-conditioned Apt 7 Rms,4 Beds June-Sept X2345, 643-6607.Rmmates wanted for large apt.Mid June-Mid Sept. Call 363-3997.Apt or Room Wntd Hyd Pk orClose Jun Only. Call 955-7061.Roommate Wanted for Summer Sub¬let. Mid-June to Mid Sept. One Blkfrom Campus Own Room. Possoption for Next Year 493-3037.Apt to Sublet Summer 8 Rooms 8tSunporch 51 81 Kimbark $200/Mo752-5416.Sublet-Own Room In Lrg. Apt. Alr-Condit. Thru Late Sept. $50/mo.Call Ml 3-6000, Rm 314.Summer Sublet 3 bdrm apt modernkitchen bathroom near campusshopping adjustable rent. 363-3990.2 Blks Off Campus June-Sept RoomBathroom-Cooking-Ext 8165 Karl.Dee-luxe sublet 3 bedroom aptfurnished $130/mo. 288-4234.Sub-Lease 6/24-9/19, 1 bdrm. Sunporch, 57 8< Dor. 493-4426.Lg furn 3 bdrm apt in So. ShoreJune 15-Sept 15, $100/mo. eves: 731-4188.5 rm. furn. apt. near campus. (5712S. Maryland ave). Call 363-5029.4Vi Furn. Apt. 54 Cornell Sublet6/20-9/11 for $240. PU 2-7999.Sublet 4 rms furnished $125 or bestoffer 6/15 to 9/15. 54th Si Green¬wood. 955-3865.2 bdrm apt to sublet, July 8i Aug,SS, unfurn. Option to renew lease.$140. 731-3337. Sublet-4 bedrooms, stained glasswindows, washing machine, dryer,2 blocks from campus. 324-1999.Apt. summer stAzlet 3 bdr 2 ba.Air cond. reasonable 929-3070 or*752-8109.6Vi rooms, air conditioner, fans,TV, FM, first fl, fenced yard, July81 Aug, 73rd 8, Bennett, call 955-5582 or 493-8382.Studio apt sublet: lVi rms, nearcoop, fully furnished; $80/mo. June-Sept. 288-1776.FANTASTIC BABYSITTERAVAILABLE IN JUNEIFor the last 2 years we have hada really fine lady who has takencomplete charge of our 2 pre-schoolchildren. She has made it possiblefor both my wife and I to workwhile I've studied for my MBA,and we've never had a worry. Sheis quite responsible, a hard-worker,and very dependable.BUSINESS MANAGERBECOMES BABYSITTER!Since I will no longer be BusinessManager of The Maroon after June17, I will attempt to take her placeand she is looking for anothersimilar position in the Universityarea. She wants to do light house¬work and take care of children,full time, Monday-Friday. If youwould like to talk to her, call 684-5813, Mon-Fri, 9-5 or call WA 4-0232after 6 pm, M-F. I recommend herwithout qualification. Emmet Gon-der, Business Manager.PART-TIME SUMMEREarn Big $$. If you are staying inHyde Park this summer and needto earn some extra cash, work forthe Maroon. We need salesmen orwomen to work in our large andexpanding Ad Dept. Generous com¬missions and mileage allowance.Call Joel at X3263.FOR SALENice, unusual furniture for sale,incl good beds, dressers, desks, etccall 324-3623.H8iW contrast control dev for 35Xenlargements $2.00 in stock ModelCamera, 55 81 Kenwood, 493-6700.Lrg. mahog dnrm table, 6 chairs,leaves, pads incl $40. 363-6249.Steel dinette set: good condition.Make offer 955-2067.Ilford films in stock Model Cam.Plymouth Station Wagon. 1964 mo¬del, purchases 1965. 44,000 mi.manual, power steering, AM-FMradio, heavy-duty battery, almostnew snow tires. $350, Call HY 3-3227.Buy the greatest furniture imagin¬able. Beds, desk (and what adesk!), tables, chairs, and youname itl Call Rich, 374-3456. Ifno answer, call again. Don't giveup!Records — $3.23, $3.81 8i $4.37 atJukes.Will pay $10 for copy. Brain andIntelligence, Ward Halstead, UCPress, 1947, Call 4775.Books for sale, poll sci, philo, lit,hist, many brand new. 955-8829. FREE: Grouchox, Chico and Harpo.2 All-BLACK kittens and their all-Black mother. What a chance! Call3631352.Regretfully must sell my I960 Mer¬cedes 220Sb. Leather interior; bodyvery good, to fair in spots; mechan¬ically excellent. $700. 324-9358SALE!! Shure M91E Cartridge Reg$50 Now Only $25 With Trade ATMUSICRAFT. For Lowest Priceson all Components. Call CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 Save $$$.'65 Chevelle for sale to the highestbidder. AC, Sta Wag exc cond.74,000. 493-4426.Air Conditioner 11,000 BTU Carr erExc. Cond. $180. 493-4426.64 VW for Sale-Very good eng-enew brakes 8, cart), snow tirk.30,000 miles-$550-Call: 324-5856.2 year, Queensize BED, wonderfulcondition — $85. Call: 3245856.1961 VW, not beautiful, but runswell and is cheap; asking $125.Call: Wkdays D Eisenbud at NO 7-4700; X8060, Wkends 955-1360.GLADIATORIALCONTESTU of C 7-A-SIDERUGBY TOURNAMENTSUNDAY, MAY 2411 AM - 5 PMEverything must go: desks, TV,chairs, dressers, sofabed, etc. amin good condition — prices nego¬tiable. Call 363-5644.>iano everet upright for $200 minus'2 of moving cost X2707, RichardRoberts.tikon Photomic FTN 50 mm F:1.4tew with case $350 . 363-4300 ext 501761 Peugeot — Very g«>d cond.iw mileage new tires, brakes. 1Movig soon-$200. 643-7450, MU 4-6100xt 5426.iamiya C22 TL.R camera 80 mm!,8 and f4.5 lens other accessories,xcellent shape. Original 450 asx-tg 225. Allen 493-4867.ible-model typewriters. New rol-in both. $15 each. 235-2175 or0084 "norman"Olds 88 runs really well goaly, fine shape all *round idealmoving summer trips with lojsituff or people to have no moretey heeded to put into it- *35U-y-itis, swollen inventory. '61 Fordng fast, 268-7601.y the greatest stuff you've^ evern for your apt. Chairs, desks.Is, tables, etc, etc, etc. canSee Scenic Cicero In your new'61 Ford. Must sell. 268-7601.Olivetti Inti. Tpwtr. 955-4388.6/The Chicago Maroon/May 72, 1970,V#ViV»V*V--Vf*»VV*V ■V«fVi‘*V>V'V/' V s'.-'! *’fV W ■ • ■AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYROTC ScheduleMonday the second week of liberationclasses will begin in the Right On TrainingCenter (ROTC), located in “Fred HamptonMemorial Community Center” (nee IdaNoyes).Daily events include noon women’s lib¬eration lunches and 1 pm meetings of thePanther defense committee. Other sched¬uled classes include:MONDAYPolitics of ecology, 10 am.Self-defense, 11 am.Socialism, 2 pm.Environment and society, 3:30 pm.TUESDAYEconomic imperialism: the Latin Ameri¬can case, 11 am.The American labor movement, 2 pm.Environment and society, 3:30 pm.Cambodian Invasion, 7 pm.WEDNESDAYRacism, 10:30 am.Self-defense, 11 am.United front against fascism, 2 pm. Radical caucus, 3:30 pm.Guerilla theater, 8 pm.THURSDAYThe case against congress, 11 am.Sex roles, noon.Continued from Page FourMr Rudolph pointed to the organization ofthe undergraduate political science associ¬ation as an improvement in the program.The UPSA presented ten recommendationsto the department during the Winter quar¬ter. To date only one of these has been act¬ed on. The department did recognize thefact that it did not offer enough courses toenable a student to structure his programaccording to the rigid distribution require¬ment, and so this requirement was modi¬fied. Many of the other recommendations require an administrator who has the time,dedication, ability, and power to channelthe energies of the department into provid¬ing a comprehensive and structured pro¬gram. Mr Rudolph will be on leave fromthe University during 1970-71, but the de¬partment has not yet named a new pro¬gram chairman. This is an urgent necessi¬ty.The Social Science CollegiateDivision Student CouncilUndergraduate Political ScienceAssociation Unionizing students, 2 pm.Radical teaching and high school organ¬izing, 3:30 pm.Movement panel: representatives ofcampus left groups will present their politi¬cal perspectives and take questions.FRIDAYWomen in the movement, 11 am.Working class culture, 2 pm.The Middle East, 3:30 pm.Ombudsman InquiryStudent ombudsman Steve Cope hasasked all students interested in taking aleave of absence for the fall quarter in or¬der to engage in political work to contacthis office.Sg?|C3|Cif6S|CSfCy3|m6}|C8|C3|C^* Cornell DLrisl ** 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *Phone. FA 4-1651 j| Cope explained that there is some dis¬agreement as to whether or not a short re¬cess in the fall quarter is the best methodof freeing students for participation in elec¬tion campaigns. He suggested that anotheralternative might be for students to take aleave of absence for the entire'quarter andmake up the work during the followingsummer quarter.Difficulties involved in such a plan in¬clude sparse summer course selection,scholarship schedules, housing, job needs,etc. Because of these difficulties, Copewould like all interested persons to informhim of the problems that would require ac¬commodation.The office of the ombudsman is located inReynolds Club 204, ext. 4206.Students who write should include a listof courses they would probably need duringthe summer quarter.Panther PlayThe Panther defense committee per¬formed “The murder of Bobby Hutton” inguerilla theater style Wednesday in themain quads.After announcing over a megaphone theperformance that would depict “the firstPanther killed by pigs,” the group gatheredat the flag pole. A car with several womenin red helmets with cap pistols pulled upthe central driveway., The women shot theunarmed actors “Eldridge Cleaver” and“Bobby Hutton.”The program was followed by announce¬ments that the Panther defense committeeneeds bail money, will be accepted at strikecentral, Reynolds club north.5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRYSHAME by BergmanCOBB HALL Sat., 7 & 9:15(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)I WONDER WHERE DE FLOWERS IS?TWAT MAGAZINEAll you people who missed out ongetting their reduced price on Play¬boy — TWAT MAGAZINE is offer¬ing guest subscription for the rad¬ical fetishest. The adult magazinewith appeal for the liberated male*■ '“male. Send $10 to Big T8. yourcampus rep., alias the Big Bunny,c/o The Maroon, Ida Noyes Hall.GUEST EDITORIALReprinted from the Iowa Respon¬sible Republican:It is understandable that in timesof crisis, the social fabric is sub¬jected to its greatest strains. His especially important, therefore,in such times to cool both our rhet¬oric and our judgments. Often, anunfortunate incident proxoked by anoisy, militant minority subjectsthe majority of responsible mem¬bers of a group to undue criticism.Such an incident occurred lastweek when President Nixon andbis small band of hardcore mill-far ists in the Cabinet and in thePentagon perpetrated the invasionof Cambodia. All members of theresponsible right deplore the inci¬dent. In these times of crisis, thesebarbaric, cleanly shaven, violence-prone demagogues are especiallydangerous to the body politic andthe social fabric which divides us.But we must not submit to theeasy temptation to denounce all ofthe Silent Majority and their repre¬sentatives for the irresponsible ac¬tion of a militant few. We cannottoo often reaffirm our fatih in re¬sponsible repression and imperial¬ism, part of the legitimate Ameri¬can heritage which divides us as -a nation and ds a world.The irresponsible repression andaggressive imperialism advocatedby Nixon and his immature fol¬ lowers, however, are crude at¬tempts to discredit all imperialism.Destroying property and perpetrat¬ing aggression in Southeast Asiadoes a disservice to all Americanmilitarists.If a permissive electorate hadnot lowered the admissions stand¬ards for high public office, wemight have far fewer of thesemilitant agitators in positions ofpower. Knowing the President-centered despisition of the silentmajority of Congress, it is too muchto hope for Nixon's expulsion fromoffice.We do hope, that the sternermembers of Congress will suspendhis Cambodian activities by ter¬minating his grant-in-aid.Let's keep these "bums" off ournational campus.LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA¬TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METH¬OD TRIAL LESSON NO CHG.CALL 236-1423, 9-5 WEEKDAYS.PEOPLE WANTEDThird person to share driving andexpenses through Europe June 30to Sept. 11. Call 955-5966.Free room and board in exchangefor evenings babysitting femaleonly, start June, 684-1369.Need companions to tour Latin Arp.around July 2, 955-3790, Sam.Young person to assist mother with2 yr old & infant & do chores.Wkdays 9-1. $2.00 hr. Call DO 3-51 j 2, 4-J0~ (jrrf. ' ' ' .Star)ingt Fairduarter, baby sittingneeded in exchange for room andboard; call 288-5174. Afternoon play leader for emotion¬ally disturbed children. Stable per¬sonality. Phys ed background pre¬ferred. Hours, 12-3:15 pm, Mon-Fri.Apply Pritzker Hosp. School, 800E 55 St. 643-7300, ext. 20. Mr. Kelly.SECRETARY/GIRL FRIDAYIBM-Exec typewriter. Diverse, in¬teresting work for Director of Be¬havioral Survey Projects. Non-UCjob; campus location. Salary com¬mensurate with skills. Contact: Mrs.Deutsch, 643-3022.BANKINGSUMMER EMPLOYMENTGRADUATE STUDENTBank personel officer needs girlfriday June 1 - Sept. 1. Applicantmust be personable, flexible & agood typist. Some office experiencerequired.Call Personnel Dept, Hyde ParkBank. 752-4600WANTED GOOD FIGUREATTRACTIVE GIRLSSALES DEMONSTRATORSYoung women with good figures todemonstrate and promote health andexercise equipment in the CosmeticDepartment of a major DepartmentStore group. City and suburbanstores. Part time 4 days 5-9 pm.Saturday 11-4 pm. Salary $2.50 perhour plus commissions. Car neces¬sary.NADCO CORPORATION3635 W. Touhy AvenueChicago, IllinoisCall Mrs. Marks HO 5-6000TEACHERS: Chicago suburban andmidwest placement service for allfields and levels. .Also Principals.Please write today. Lynne McLaugh¬lin, McLaughlin Employment Serv¬ice, P.O. Box 435, St. Charles,lllionois. GUIDE TO TEACHING JOBS INEUROPE. Covers 19 countries; 175English language programs; 250US college programs; commerciallanguage schools; teacher agencies.$6 check, money order MEMA Pub¬lications. P.O. Box 4359, Berkeley,Calif. 94704.2 f lawst seek 1-2 rmmates DCtnhse Summer 493-4830 ; 955-8472.Asst to Hickory camping outfitters,free board 8. comm. Ideal for sum¬mer student or resident.Do you know how to do repairson a Vespa motor scooter? Knowsomeone who does? Cali Hannah288-2270.Wanted — rider to share drivingand expenses to L.A. 262-1071.Escort wanted: car or motorbike,to Cleve. Female biker wants com¬pany on the road. Leave anytime6/9-6/13. Vicky X3753, 3751.Female student room in large HydePark apartment in exchange forbabysitting. Available now. MU 4-0S22.WHO NEEDS HELP? June gradua**seeks part-time summer job. June-July project? Research? Interview¬ing? Children? Translation Manu¬scripts? X4121 days, Cathy mes¬sages; eves 493-2663.PERSONALSAuthor of Walk on the Wild SideNelson ALGREN, will be here onMay 24 at 8:00 in Breasted Halt.The Establishment flies Amoricanairlines. Confront them 10,000 feetup in the air. They have to listen.Call campus rep, Jim Sack, 684-6667 for the inside dope. John WayneTrue GritA Sale every weekend at Jukes.Ida Noyes darkroom renovation iscomplete. Open for students 7 daysa week. Lockers available. Sign upfor time slots in student activitiesoffice.Most people in the United Statesdo not fly American Airlines. Getour of the silent majority immed¬iately. Call campus rep Jim Sack684-6667 for information.John WayneTrue GritTHE ELEPHANT CALF is one ofthe funiest things Brecht everwrote. See a Moon, an ElephantCalf, an Elephant Calf's Mother,and a Banana Tree in person, Fri¬day, Saturday, Sunday at 8:30 pmin Hutch Court.KEN KESEY — May 22 — 8:00 —Breasted Hall.What happens when a Young Com¬rade gives way to pity and hindersthe Revolution? THE MEASURESTAKEN, Hutch Court, Friday, Satur-day, Sunday at 8:30.George Volsky I Love You.Multi-Media Rock Cantata by theFREE theater May 22, 8:30 IdaNoyes.Some Sound AdviceSave $ On Stereo Components atMUSICRAFT. SaYe $20.00 On Gar¬rard; Save $170 on Scott Receiver;Save $50 on AR 3A Spkr. On Cam¬pus Bob Tabor 363-4555. Mystical Story teller, Reuven GoldMay 23, Ida Noyes 8:30PM.BRECHT BRECHT BRECHTFREE FREE FREE FREE FREEREVOLUTION REVOLUTIONHUTCH COURT HUTCH COURTFRI SAT SUN FRI SAT SUN FRIEIGHT THIRTY EIGHT THIRTYKEN KESEY — May 22 — 8:00 —Breasted Hall.John WayneTrue GritFor those of you who are grad¬uating at the end of this quarter,you should consider shipping theaccumulated trash of four yearshome by air freight. It costs onlya little more and things get therein two days, rather man twomonths. Call American Airlinescampus rep Jim Sack 684-6667 forall info.The assistant concert master of theChicago Symphony, FRANCIS AKOS,and ELOIS POLK piano in an eve¬ning cf music for violin and piano.Tonight at 8:30 in Mandel Hall.The assistant concert master ofthe Chicago Symphony, FRANCESAKOS, and ELIOS POLK piano inan evening of music for vijiin andpiano. Tonight at 8:30 in MandelHall.FREE Bunnies. Med students neednot apply. 955-4457 After 6.At 8:40 PM, May 18 in tne Uni¬versity if Chicago Graduate Schoolof Business the word "ethics" wasused.Take your favorite cop out - for acup of blood.May 22, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7maremolueswere legendary creatures who, upon drinking acarefully prepared mixture of hatred and greed,transformed into hideous creatures.They were not very choosy about theirclothes. either--always looking shabby andunkempt.This fate may befall those who walk the streetswith snarls on their faces and greed in their hearts.So, next time you're on the prowl, smile, love,be happy and turn into• nu ia rehouseM**UHOURS: Monday thru Friday - 12 to 10Saturday — 11 to 9Sunday - 12 to 62837 N. BROADWAY CHICAGO, 60657The WIMPUS illustrated her*with, w* batten*, tumi«h*» o nwosur* of safaty for tfcos* youngmomedi who dtsir* to <feioy family planning during tbs aarfy months of thoir honsymoon.In ravening tbs positions, tbs theory that water doss not run up Ml would apply in thisinstance. Th* male weon the WIMPUS with th* female mo ■ftetgpodlion above and facing!h* mala with foralsgs bant backward. Th* WIMPUS shortens tbs sax organ by nsorty 2inchat which would prevent th* mol* sparm from ranching th* mouth of th* womb for on•xtendad pariod of ten*. Th* thortenad sax orgon oho pravanh injury to th* uterus. Custommod* os ordarad. Barring dslay in procuring th* material ovar which w* hen* no control,w* trill ship within 5 days of rocoipt of ordsr. PRICE $3.00 *och or 2 for $3.00 postogspaid. Sand cosh, chock or money order to LANSING RESEARCH LAB., BOX 1284,LANSING. MICH. 48904.In us* th* mol* sperm tends to How down into the porous cabs of the WIMPUS. Cleonlinetsrequires that it be washed. This softens the spongy material and naturoRy prevents its useagain until dried the next day when the material hot gained its original firmness. Therefor*,if th* young morrieds or* going to get the most out of their wedding trip it is suggested theypurchase th* 2 for $5.00 offer.Women's sex urge rises much slower than it does with men. And to mok* the marriage asuccess he should troin himself to coincide his orgasm with hers. Otherwise, th* young wifemight feel she could just os well be married to a cigar store Indian sign. Mutuality should beth* watchword at all times when sex is involved. And gentleness on th* part of th* male willpay big dividends in affection from th* young bride. Caveman tactics or* not popular withgentle women.“GRANDOPENING^“•-...from 1*°*15 thru June 22vsaburtonpl/^^••look for the bubble LASTCHANCETo Buy SpringQuarter TextsBecause of the limited amountof space and the incoming text¬books for summer quarter, wemust begin returning texts nolater than May 28, 1970. Pleasemake every effort to purchaseany needed texts this week.UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGOBOOKSTORESMAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59«h St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: SO' per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75' perline, 60' per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.0C for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free.r ' — 11 T r—iTl——4_ [—i1 —I 11 r———1 1 t t.1 —1i i1 1 iT1 1 (. .1 | t1 ir 1 1 . RIMED IN CHICAGO!Story ofBEN HECHTBy the timeBen Harvey is21 years old,he won’t have a thrillleft In his bodynftmevleof aTWyearold^ ■who went to town^;gggBpttSCOTOOLE BEST ACTOROF THE YEAR'...‘Chips' One Of TheYear’s Ten Best!"—NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEWCANOE TRIPSInto Quetico-Superior WildernessPlan an exciting canoe trip for thehighpoint of your summer vacation!Rates you can afford. For in¬formation write or call BILL ROM'SOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota218—365-4046.Renaissance PlayersHeywood’sJOHN-JOHNOUTDOORS:Monday, May 25 - 1 P.M.Swift CloisterINDOORS:Thursday, May 26 - 8:30P.M.Cloister Club, Ida NoyesFREE FREE FREE FREE MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOW FOR SUMMER WORKDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.8/The Chicago Maroon/May 22, 1970