mam Ten Students Expelled;SG's Power’ UsurpedBy Rob CooleyTen students have been expelled and theadministration has by-passed student gov¬ernment in appointing new student observ¬ers to faculty disciplinary committees.In other weekend disciplinary devel¬opments, one open hearing was disruptedMonday morning and further disruptionswere planned.The University’s new three-man dis¬ciplinary committee started hearings onMonday.Summonses were sent to about 20 stu¬dents among the 500 who signed a com¬plicity statement and turned themselves inas participants in the sit-in.The Oaks committee sent letters to 40-50students who have not yet appeared beforeit to answer summonses. Cases will be de¬cided in the absence of the students if theydo not appear, according to assistant deanof students James Vice.Meanwhile, both law students and a com¬mittee of the joint student councils contin¬ued work on documentation of detailedcritiques of present disciplinary proceed-*ings. Recommendations for changes whichwould improve fairness of the proceedingsare being prepared.The administration broke precedent onthe appointment of student observers byfailing to ask the student government tomake appointments or consult with studentgovernment on the matter. Instead, at the suggestion of the com¬mittee of the council, dean of studentsCharles O’Connell requested the studentmembers of the faculty-student committeeon campus student life (FSACCSL) tomake the appointments, O’Connell said.Since two of the eight student membershave been suspended and no longer havethe rights of students, they were not in¬vited to the meeting, O’Connell said.The other six met with no faculty ordeans present, O’Connell said, and recom¬mended one student observer for the newthree-faculty disciplinary committee, andthree observers to replace the three whoresigned from the Oaks committee Thurs¬day.The eight students were chosen incampus-wide elections last spring quarter.O’Connell explained to the Maroon thatstudent government was by-passed becauseit was felt SG could not be objective inappointments at this time.Student government has, “as far as Iknow, formally gone on record endorsingthe sit-in,” O’Connell said, and a numberof its officers have been summoned to ap¬pear before the discipline committee towhich they would be appointing members.O’Connell said that under these circum¬stances student government would have“been embarrassed” if asked to make ap¬pointments and that “it couldn’t have beendone objectively by them.”Continued on Page Three50 May Lose Hearings;Committee HarrassedPhil Lathrop. . . THE WALLS CAME TUMBLING DOWN? Students circle Quad Club duringFriday's march protesting disciplinary procedures.500+ Threaten ActionThe ecommittee of 500-plus against dis¬ciplinary procedures called for a rally andmarch on disciplinary hearings at 11:45Tuesday.The committee has threatened “furthermilitant action” unless the committee ofthe council responds satisfactorily to itsdemands by Tuesday noon.The group demands:• The recent expulsions be recinded.• All cases pending before the disciplinecommittees be dropped and sentencespassed this quarter be rescinded.• That the Kalvin committee report berepudiated.• That the existing disciplinary com¬mittees be dissolved.After rallying at the administrationbuilding, the group planned to escort a stu¬dent threatened with expulsion to his 12:15hearing at Stagg field lab.The group planned a “demonstration of solidarity,” not a disruption, according toone leader.The march is then to proceed to andthrough the Quadrangle club and then toAbbott hall where the Oaks committeemeets.On Friday the committee of 500 plus ral¬lied about 300 .students at the ad buildingto protest disciplinary proceedings.Blowing a shofar “Rabbi” Jeff Mason,suspended ’69, led a block-long processionto the Quad club chanting “amnesty now”and “walls fall down”. Demonstratorsmarched around the building seven timesand moved into the streets to watch thebuilding collapse.It did not.J Ross McCleallen, 71, was summonedfor breaking a glass pane in the rear door.When another student pitched a handfulof pebbles at windows, other demonstra¬tors shouted against him. By Jim HaefemeyerCampus security policemen have pushed,dragged, or carried about a dozen kickingand shouting demonstrators from hearingrooms of the new disciplinary committee.Shoved onto the sidewalk in front of Staggfield lab Monday at noon, chanting demon¬strators moved into the street to block acar containing two campus policemen. Oth¬er policemen scuffled with them and pulledthem from the car.There were no injuries.The committee had ordered the roomcleared after taking abuse for more thanan hour. Most demonstrators were pre¬viously suspended students appearing toarrange hearings under threat of ex¬pulsion.Harold Sheridan, suspended 70, ap¬peared before the committee shirtless,wearing a black bush hat and a blacksportcoat.John Welch, suspended 71, appearedwith his counsel Jeff Blum, suspended ’69.Blum blew cigar smoke in the face of com¬mittee chairman Charles H. Shireman,stood on a chair and shouted and mockedother committee members.Amid confused shouting, the committeethen withdrew hastily to a back room.Claiming he was Welch’s counsel, Blumtried to push his way into the room, butwas knocked back by policemen.Continued on Page Three DALUN OAKS: with security guard.By Leslie StraussBetween 40 and 50 students who have notanswered their summonses to the Oaks dis¬ciplinary committee have been sent letterswarning that failure to reply to the com¬mittee by Monday night will forfeit theirright to a hearing, James Vice, assistantdean of students, said Monday.At least 20 of the more than 500 peoplewho gave statements to dean of studentsCharles O’Connell saying that they hadbeen in the adminstration building duringthe sit-in received summonses from thecommittee.Continued on Page Three: : —1MAROOVolume 77, Number 47 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, March 4, 1969<. /*. t I *r nitli I J1The Great ADC 404Compact Speaker System.Now only139.95.Here >s .in achievement in sound never matched before in aspeaker this size, at a price that may never he equa'ed againThe famous ADC 404 compact that regularly I sts for $56 is nowonly $39.95.This is the same speaker system that was top rated by the leading independent consunier study, and is one of the most talkedabout speakers on the market today.The ADC 404 is the perfect bookshelf speaker system Its ver¬satility is limitless as it provides you wth excellence of sound,matching the capabilities of the most up-to-date amplifiers Andmost important, it utilizes the same component features found inthe more expensive ADC systemsIts exclusive high flux mylar dome provides wide dispersion Anda 6 linear travel piston cone offers excellent sound with extremelylow resonance the ideal power performance p'ay you want from aspeaker system.Take advantage of our sale offer today The ADC 404 at only$39 95. with a five-year warranty on all Darts and labor.Eh^XON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. 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The beautyof mv system is thatI usually can’t findwhere I put it. 5.1 think you’d be a lot betteroff putting some of vourdough into -Living Insurancefrom Equptable. It not onlygives you anti the familyVou’re going to have alifetime of protection,it also builds cash valuesyou can use for emergencies,opportunities, or evenretirement.I wonder if it could hewith the french fries?For information about Living Insurance, sec The Man from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, <>rwrite: Lionel M. Stevens, Manager, College Employment.theIequitableThe Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10019An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/E <Q Equitable 1968Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarYW’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicshave joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & ni1 change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island # 734-6393Same Day 5 Hr. 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AARON ZIMBLER Fast DependableOptometrist Serviceeye examinationscontact lenses T.V. - Radio - Tape Re¬corder - Phonographin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3*7644 Cornell Electronics Service1635 E. 55th St. PL2-7730 WHAT CHICAGO RADIOSTATION HAS THE MOSTSTRAIGHTFORWARD.TRUTHFUL UNINHIBITED: FIFTEEN MINUTE NEWS¬CAST IN TOWN EVERYNIGHT, 8:45 WEEKDAYSAND 9:30 WEEKENDS?whpk f m saiWe AreSTUDENTS WAIT: Demonstrators stand in the door of the Stagg laboratory waiting for their friends being heard by the newdisciplinary committee.O'Connell Denies Political BiasContinued from Page OneInside the room, Welch asked that Blumor other counsel be admitted, but the com¬mittee denied his request on the groundsthat Welch had “forfeited” his right tocounsel by appointing Blum, Welch saidlater.Outside the private room, demonstratorschanted, pounded ashtrays on tables andbanged metal trash cans on the floor.“We couldn’t hear what was going on,even inside the little room,” Shireman saidlater.As the din rose, the committee orderedcampus police to clear the room.One policeman, Samuel Evans, said,“We’ve tried to be nice to these people.We re not being nice any more.”When Harold Sheridan went limp, police¬men dragged and threw him out the door.Then they hustled Blum out.A young blond policeman lifted SallyStein, suspended 70, onto his shouldersand carried her out kicking. Other policecarried out four other screaming girls.At the door police restrained Andy Po-lon, suspended, from attacking a universityphotographer. Later police had to restrainanother photographer from attacking MilesMogulescu, suspended ’69.Outside in the scuffle around the car, agirl kicked a policeman in the groin. Oth¬ers shoved with police.When the car got away, police movedinside to guard the door. Demonstratorspounded and kicked on the door.The committee minutes later finished itswork, adjourned, and left by a rear en¬trance.The new disciplinary committee, namedThursday to recommend discipline for par¬ticipants in disruptions at the President’shouse and the Quadrangle club last Mon¬day, is: Charles H. Shieman, associateprofessor in social sciences, chairman:Maynard C. Krueger, professor of econom¬ics, and Mark G. Inghram, professor andchairman of physics.The committee also held a hearingMonday afternoon for John Siefert, 71.Hearings continue throughout the week.No decisions were given at the Mondaysessions.Two administrators, director of studenthousing Edward Turkington and director ofstudent activities, Skip Landt submittedstatements identifying students as being atthe Quadrangle Club.Landt identified as in the dining room:Steve Rothkrug, Jeff Blum, Sally Stein,Howard Machtinger, Harold Sheriden, JoeLubenow, Atina Grossman, Ernest Donn¬ed, Daniel Cohen, Michael Krauss, JeffMaso, Natalie Rosenstein, John Welch, Sal¬ly Yagol, and John Siefert.Landt said he saw Michael Goldfield,Chris Hobson, Andres Polon, Timothy Row-ton, Robert Salasin, and David Baron leav¬ing the dining room. He said he “ob¬served” Jessica Seigel in the downstairslobby.Turkington fingered John Fox, Dan Co¬hen, David Clafter, Candace Reckinger,Natalie Rosenstein, Richard Stomper, andPaul Felton leaving the building as well asBaron, Blum, Domfeld, Goldfield, Macht¬inger, Maso, Polon, Miss Siegel, Miss Stein,Stomper, and Miss Yagol.SF State TalkSeveral of the striking studentsfrom San Francisco State will be oncampus Tuesday to discuss the sit¬uation there with students. Themeeting will ’>e held at 4 p.m. inKent 107 and is sponsored by Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS) and the New University Con¬ference (NUC). Continued from Page OneAsked why he did not at least contact SGon the matter, O’Connell replied: “Do youmean that if Lipsch had thought he couldbe objective, we should have let him pickthe students?”O’Connell said he was disturbed by thenecessity to go through another studentchannel since, though the administration isnot required to get its appointments fromSG, “we usually do.” He said the changein policy is only temporary.O’Connell complained that Lipsch, in aWHPK statement, “made it sound as if wewere choosing people who were amenableto the administration point of view.”“That’s simply not true,” O’Connell said.Poetic ResponseTen students who do not intend to appearbefore the Shireman committee, the newdisciplinary committee, submitted to it in¬stead a poem by Bertolt Brecht which theyfeel “shows cause why they should not beexpelled.” This poem (in the form of aletter) constitutes their response to theirsummonses:Those who take the meat from the tableteach contentment.Those for whom the taxes are destined,demand sacrifice.Those whose bellies are full speak to thepoor of wonderful times to come.Those who lead the nation into the abysscall ruling too difficult for ordinary men.Candidate Needs HelpJohn Stevens, black independent candi¬date for alderman in the 42nd ward imme¬diately north of the Loop, is seeking assis¬tance from University students Saturdayand Sunday.More than 10,000 registered district vot¬ers have not yet been canvassed by Ste¬vens’ workers. If they are not contactedbefore -election day, March 11, votersturned out by the Daley machine will de¬feat Stevens, a campaign worker said.Stevens, once considered a long-shot, hasdrawn strength from poor black residentsin the Cabrini-Green public housing proj¬ects and from affluent white residents inthe Gold Coast high-rises.Mrs. Marion Stamps, an organizer forthe Stevens campaign, will speak on hisbehalf at a meeting 8 pm Tuesday, spon¬sored by the Students for a Political Al¬ternative, at Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn.Mike Fowler, at MI-3-0800, ext 3392 (af¬ter 7 pm) or at 288-5248 (home) will an¬swer questions, provide information aboutStevens and make arrangements with vol¬unteers. Lipsch said “I was disturbed that theyby-passed student government. If therewere reasons for it, they still should havetalked with me. It’s interesting that theytalk about using normal channels and thenby-pass themselves, when it is convenientfor them to do so.”Thirteen students avoided immediate ex¬pulsion by replying in time to telegramsdemanding they make appointments fordisciplinary hearings, according toO’Connell.Another student replied late but said hewas out of town and did not receive histelegram in time to reply before being ex¬pelled, O’Connell said. He said that case isunder consideration.Ten students had not responded to thetelegram by Monday noon. Since their reg¬istered letter replies were to have beenpostmarked by Thursday afternoon,Continued from Page OneVice said the number of summonses is¬sued was small because “some of thestatements only had names, some were longstatements of opinion or political philoso¬phy, and some were only saying thatpeople had been in the building, but sincethose cases have been dismissed by thecommittee, they did not receive sum¬monses.”University security guards at the openhearing Monday indicated that they ex¬pected trouble, because of the disturbancesthat moring at the preliminary hearings ofthe new disciplinary committee. Therewere no student disruptions of the hearing.The committee of 500 conducted “guidedtours” of the hearing, but emphasized thatthe purpose of the visit was not to disruptthe hearings, but only to let a maximumnumber of people see the hearings.At least 70 people watched the hearing.Some stayed for only ten minutes, then leftto allow people standing outside to come into watch.The new student observers on the com¬mittee, appointed by the faculty-studentadvisory committee on campus student life(not student government as before) arePhil Burstein, 71, Steven Crockett, gradu¬ate student in the committee on the historyof culture, and Linnea Vacca, graduatestudent in the committee on social thought.One student said, “It’s interesting thatSG, with both the president and vice-presi¬dent suspended or expelled, didn’t get toappoint the student observers for the com¬mittee.”Jerry Lipsch, SG president, was sum¬moned after being identified as participat- O’Connell said, they apparently did not re¬ply in time and have therefore been ex¬pelled.The 24 threatened with immediate ex¬pulsions were students summoned for dis¬ruptive activities at the home of presidentEdward Levi and at the Quadrangle clublast Monday evening, and who had alreadybeen suspended.Another 13 students summoned for thoseactivities who were not then under interimsuspension were summoned in normalfashion without threat of expulsion for fail¬ure to reply, according to O’Connell.They had until Monday evening or Tues¬day morning to reply to avoid normal dis¬ciplinary action which would be, by prece¬dent, an interim suspension O’Connellsaid. Several had replied by Monday after¬noon, he said.ing in a WHPK program taped in the adbuilding during the sit-in. Vice, when ques¬tioned about the process of summoningpeople on the basis of newspaper or radioreporting, wrote “I should assume that noother people in the building who were in¬terviewed or photographed by the report¬ers for the Maroon or WHPK could notthereby gain immunity by ‘extension’ frominterviewers who did not have it them¬selves.”Lunatic FringeJeff Blum, expelled ’69, theMark Rudd of the University ofChicago, walked into the Maroonoffice Friday afternoon and seizedEditor Roger Black by the shirt.Black removed Blum’s hand andtold him to get out.The Maroon editor joins dean ofstudents Charles O’Connell, newcollegiate master James Redfield,director of student activities SkipLandt, and a mixed company ofpeople assaulted by UC radicalslast week. (Landt was physicallykicked out of student governmentpresident Jerry Lipsch’s apart¬ment Sunday by Howie Machtingerand Len Handlesman, expelledgraduate student in sociology.)Black said he didn’t know ex¬actly what had gotten Blum so ex¬cited but he suspected it mighthave been the reference in Fri¬day’s paper to the small campus“lunatic fringe”.20 Confessers CalledMarch 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3EDITORIALCoupChalk up another coup for the administration.They’ve thought of a way to get new student observers on thedisciplinary committees who will be more amenable to administra¬tion views of discipline, while maintaining an appearance of legalityand fairness.Quick thinking, huh?Especially since they did it in such a rush that it was all overbefore anyone could complain.Of course, the administration was in a quandary. Three liberalstudents appointed by student government president Jerry Lipschin the first two days of the sit-in resigned after a month with theOaks committee. Their resignation statement spelled out for allto see the reasons why the Oaks committee cannot deal fairly withstudents.And student government and its officers have largely supportedthe sit-in, so one could assume that any more students they ap¬pointed would at least be sympathetic to student views. Or, worseyet, student government might have refused to appoint any morestudents on the grounds that such action would legitimize thedemonstratedly unfair procedures of the Oaks committee.Embarrassing fix, what?But the illustrious committee of the council (those seven fac¬ulty members who seem to run this place) was equal to the chal¬lenge.They recommended that another group of eight elected stu¬dents — minus those two of its members who have participated inthe sit-in — appoint the new student observers. That the studentsof the faculty-student advisory committee on campus student lifewere in no way elected to take official action on behalf of Universitystudents apparently did not perturb the gentlemen who came upwith the idea.And of course there are enough available rationalizations to fillup a whole issue of the Maroon. All kinds of reasons why SGcouldn’t be “objective” because of its involvement with the sit-in.The administration is not required to go through SG, even thoughthat is the “normal channel” and the one that has always been usedfor appointment of student observers. Ad nauseum.It would have been easier for O’Connell just to pick fourstudents to his liking, but that wouldn’t have looked so good; andthe ingenious new device presumably accomplishes the same pur¬pose.Our congratulations: to the committee of the council, toO’Connell, to the six students who cooperated with them, and tothe four students who accepted appointments under such circum¬stances.Clever of you all.ExpulsionsThe recent expulsion of ten students ought to clear up a lotof arguments about the nature of our University.For instance, we know now that the University is entirelywilling to use academic punishments against non-academic offenses.It would seem to us that if you punish someone for breaking a win¬dow, you take a fitting action such as imposing a fine. If not, thenyou admit that it’s not the broken window you’re objecting to, butthe politics of the offender.It should also be clear that, incredible as it seems, the Uni¬versity really does believe in the sacred mission we learned aboutfrom the Kalven committee report. To preserve that mission theyare willing to take an action that has repercussions far beyond thepunishment itself. When a student is expelled it doesn’t stop there.Not only is any possibility of an academic future for an expelledstudent very dim, the person is a choice target for the draft.And finally, all students should be able to see by now that nomatter how cooly the University professes to foster a diversity ofopinions, there are some opinions that they will not tolerate, andthose are the very opinions that could possibly affect the University. I ih 1it Hi , ... " H:LETTERS TO THE EDITORSIncidentMy eye was caught by your sentence ofFeb 28: “The famous Jamie Redfield in¬cident was hardly an incident at all.”Since (as you can no doubt imagine) itdidn’t feel like that at the time I thought Imight try to say what sort of an incident,in my view, it was.I had only a few minutes of concern formy personal safety — concern not becauseI thought anyone really intended to injureme at that moment, but because I knowsomething about the psychology of crowds,and the way in which members of a crowdquickly lose control of their own intentions.This concern ended when the security menarrived on the scene.In general the whole affair was muchmore depressing than intimidating. It isdepressing to encounter so much anger,and I do not imagine that anyone enjoyshaving his face spat in — but then if I hadjust received notice to show cause why Ishould not be expelled I would be angrytoo. The anger was as comprehensible as itwas predictable. And then the whole thingonly lasted 20 minutes (although it seemedmuch longer at the time.)I was depressed most by some of theremarks that were made — not becausethey were hostile, but because they wereuntrue. Jeff Blum, for instance, shoutedsuch things as: “Why aren’t you walkingdown to Woodlawn, Jamie? You’re scaredshitless to walk in Woodlawn, aren’t you,Jamie? How’s your neighborhood, Jamie?You keep it lily-white, don’t you, Jamie?”Jeff Blum and I have known each otherfor years, and we have talked on manyoccasions. I find it depressing that angermakes him, and others, completely care¬less of the factual truth of statements.As a matter of fact I have never feltafraid to walk the streets of Woodlawn; 1worked from door to door, alone and usual¬ly at night, in Woodlawn and more often inOakwood, for years. Perhaps I should havebeen afraid, but I wasn’t, and I never hadany difficulties. Also, anyone who thinksmy neighborhood is lily-white hasn’t takena look at East 54th St lately.No doubt it is difficult for any Americanto be completely free of the racism whichhas for centuries been the open wound onthe body of the American consciousness.Also it is possible for reasonable men tohave quite different views as to the bestnext steps in the slow and painful processof eliminating racism from America.But whatever our positions we mustsurely try to see that our statements corre¬spond with the facts. Otherwise anger be¬comes our master, and we cease to be ableto act at all; we simply behave, and be¬come victims of circumstance.I have always believed that mutual trustdepends, not on agreement, but onstraightforwardness and on telling thetruth. Although I know that many thinkotherwise, I believe that our Universityhas a good record in this regard. I hopethat I do; God knows I try. I can respectthose who disagree with me, but I cannotrespect irresponsibility, of act or of state¬ment.James RedfieldRehire RogerAs employees of the High Energy Phys¬ics laboratories, we protest the firing ofRoger Wechsler. We are told that he wasfired because he was suspended. A notefrom Prof Sachs, the director of the in¬stitute, says that this is University policyand not a matter of his, Dean Albert’s norPresident Levi’s personal choice. But be¬fore the recent sit-in, it was not policy tofire all suspended students. The currentpolicy is contrary to precedent. We cannotlet it stand unchallenged.Aside from being unjust in Roger’s case,the policy violates the basic employee-management relationship. Roger’s suspen¬sion has nothing to do with his competenceas an employee. As employees, we shouldbe judged by our work and conduct on the job. Likewise supervisors should not beprevented from retaining competent staffby uniformed but higher authorities whoby remaining anonymous make it impos¬sible to redress grievances.Dean O’Connell implied that a suspendedstudent has no right to a student job. Whythis discrimination against the workingstudent? In any case, why was RogerWechsler fired from a non-student job9Why have non-students been fired fromtheir jobs?We have no alternative but to construethis as a policy of harassment aimed atstudents and non-students alike. Werequest that it be rescinded and that thosefired be reinstated.Patricia DiamondRachel StalnickSara HellerFranklin HartJohn HeckmanJean MilsteinGordon LukeshMaria Teresa MackPeggy TownleyWRAPOn March 7 the women of the Universityof Chicago, in solidarity with their sistersall over the world will hold a rally in cele¬bration of International Woman’s Day — aday of dedication to women in struggleagainst their own oppression.This rally, to be held in Reynolds clubsouth at noon Friday will be dedicated toMarlene Dixon, who has taught us that aswomen, we must struggle as all oppressedgroups must struggle — we must join to¬gether to understand our problems, ouranger, and our oppression and then wemust fight in order to gain our freedomand our rights.Women of this campus are demanding aday care center — free, comprehensivecare for the children of all employees, stu¬dents, and faculty. The lack of day carefacilities is evidence of the great and overtdiscrimination against women in this Uni¬versity and in this society.The just demand for a day care center isonly a small first step towards the liber¬ation of women in America. Join the wom¬en of WRAP at the International Women’sDay rally on Friday.Sisters must stand together and fight!WRAPWomen's Radical Action Projectllli ( IIK UK) MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry levyManaging Editor: John RochtNews Editor: Carolina Hock_____Photography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothNews Board:Undergraduates: Wendy GlocknerGraduate Students: Rob CooleyCrusades: Mitch BobkinDisciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussThe Community: Bruce NortonNews Staff: Jim Hafemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Con Hitchcock, Stevo Cook, Paula Szewzyk,Gerard Leval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Freida Murray, Marv Bittner, OebbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest, Steve Aokl, Ben Gilbert.Contributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, Barabara Hurst, Robert Hardman.Production Chief: Mitch Kahn. Assistant: Rob¬ert Swift. (Zowie.)________Sunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St„ Chi¬cago, III. <0637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext3269. Distributed on campus and in the HydePark neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptionsby mail $7 per year. Non-profit postage paidat Chicago, III. Subscribers to College PressService.4/The Chicago Maroon/March 4, 1969THE DEADThe CHICAGO MAROON ‘1 I jS /presentsTHE TIBETAN BOOK OFA multi —media ballet directed byKim On Wong with music by Joseph JarmanSUNDAY, MARCH 9, 8:00 p.mat the University of Chicago’sMANDEL HALL57th and UniversityJOPLINat Northwestern's McGaw Hall in EvanstonFriday, March 7, 8:00 P.M. Tickets $3.50 available atthe Chicago Maroon Business Officeroom 304 Ida Noyes Hall. Tickets $2.50 (students $1.50)available atCHICAGO MAROONbusiness office, 1212 E. 59th St.Mandel Hall,or at the doorwhereof Cthe Uprefersto eatShould you drink beerstraight from the bottle?If you’re on a blanket partyor something, carrying along aglass is pretty clumsy. Butwhen it’s convenient, we thinkit’s a shame not to use one.Keeping Budweiserinside the bottle orcan is missing halfthe fun.Those tiny bubblesgetting organized at thetop of your glass have a lotto do with taste and aroma.Most beers have carbonationpumped in mechanically. NotBudweiser. We go to a barrel of trouble and expense to letBudweiser create its own bub¬bles with the natural carbona¬tion of Beechwood Ageing. Soyou really can’t blame us forwanting you to get it at itsbest, can you?Just for fun, pour yournext four or five bot¬tles of Bud- into aglass. 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It’s a specialfemale weight gain...caused by temporarywater-weight build-up.Oh, you know...thatuncomfortable fullfeeling that sneaks upon you the week beforeyour menstrual period.This fluid retention not *only plays havoc withyour looks but howyou feel as well.(It puts pressure on *delicate nerves andtissues, which can leadto pre-menstrualcramps and headaches,leaves emotions on edge.)That’s why somany women take PAMPRINIt gently relieves water-weight gainto help prevent pre-menstrual puffiness,tension, and pressure-caused cramps.PAMPRIN makes sure a perfectsize 7 never looks less than perfect.Nor feels less than perfect, either.March 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5(The Maroon Classified Ads)- < • i l I t i i miiti 11BOOK OF THE DEAD, JOPLIN, TICKETS IN MANDEL CORRIDORRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.PEOPLE FOR SALEMay I do your typing? 363-1104.Minnette's Custom Salon. Dress¬making, alterations, sleeve short¬ening. 493-9713. 1711 ’/a E. 55th St.PEOPLE WANTEDI Stand Alone—the new Al Kooper al¬bum—in stock now at the Student Co-opfrom rockowitz/honeymanTutors needed (paid or volunteer)Mon.-Thurs. 3:30-6 to teach read¬ing or math to children age 6-12 atChildren's Center, 46th & Wood-lawn. Call Sue Duncan, BU 8-6003at noon.Students, student wives, andhousewives, wanted to read news¬papers part time, at home, for ur¬ban news service located in HydePark. Call 955-3050, ask for Dave.Bio. students wishing to be a nom¬inee for stud.-fac. committee to in¬vestigate ways of implementingstud, participation in academic af¬fairs of Coll. Bio. Div.: Givename, Bio. courses taken, to G-B101 on or before March 5.March 11 through 30. House man¬ager Harper Theater Dance Festi¬val. Evenings: Tues., Fri., Sat.,Sun., afternoon. 9:45 A.M. to 2:30P.M. Wed. and Thurs. 924-1530.FOR SALEStereo Components: New Speakerson Special Jensen X40 only $35.90,ADC 404 only $39.95, AR4x $48.00.MUSICRAFT on campus Bob Ta¬bor 324-3005.R o y a I Typewriter wcase almost new, $40; Zenith 21"rem. control TV, $50; 288-2411.Tibetan tankas 373-6618.Antique fur coats for sale. Somereal beauts. James Schultz Cleaners,1363 E. 53rd St. 752-6933.1963 VW Sunroof (roof rack, if desir¬ed). One owner, 67,000 mi. 3 newtires, 4th excellent, spare good. $495.Call 667-3107, good condition.Blacklight — unused — $10, 493-1843.Gibson solid-body elec, bass $125.Gibson 12-string acoustic guitar w.hard case $200. 752-2102 after 6 P.M.SPANISH LANG. INSTR.Native qualified Spanish Tutor tocoach undergraduate SDan. Coursesstudents or those to take SpanishExam as foreign lang. requirementfor PhD. 493-3328 or P.O. Box 9075Chic. 60690.ROOMMATES WANTEDFemale own room clean spaciousSouth Shore apt. on 1C, 324-4177.Sociable, quiet male to share 1bdrm apt. with same, 2 beds, BU8-1100, Apt. A 4:30-11.Adolph Hitler was first on the list ofthe century's greatest criminals in asurvey published by the MagaineStern Thursday in Hamburg, but healso was Uth on the list of this cen¬tury's most admired statesmen inthe survey.Third man for townhouse apt.; 1372E. 58th. $80 mo. 288-2411.Fern, rmmte 5410 Univ. 667-7911.Roommate wanted for spring woption on whole apt. for summer 8<fall. Cheap & charming. 363-6961.3Vz rm Greenwood Hali 363-8945.Roommt wanted for Hy Pk AptGrad pref. 493-6399 after 5:30. Roomate for corner double in Wood¬ward Spring quarter 1307 Wallace,BU 8-6610.RELIGIOUS MUSICMusic of the Spheres: The EddiePerkins Jazz Trio again at ReynoldsClub Thursday. "C‘ Shop 8-11 P.M.FOR RENTBest of both apt. & dorms! Pvt.turn, inexpensive rms. Board, laun¬dry facilities, etc. Available imme¬diately 5555 Wood lawn, 955-0305.2Vi rm. apt., $95, April 1, new bldg.,51 8. Wood lawn, 363-1293 (P,M.s).3 rm. apt., $155, April 15, new bldg.,55 & Everett, (air condit.) 363-1293(P.M.s).52 8. Kenwood, 3'/2 rms., $127.50.May 1st sublet w/option to renewSept. 1. Phone 752-7492 eves. 8.weekends.3-4 bedroom, cheap apt. availablefor summer 8< fall. Contact imme¬diately 363-6961.Spacious rooms, including bath andlounge. Entire 3rd floor of largeHyde Park house. For 2 womengraduate students. Available now. 3blocks from U. of C. Call 288-0928.Good, 5 room apt. available forsummer and next year. 5339 S. Ellis.But lease needs resigning beforeMay. Call 955-2693 for details.COOKINGAUTHENTIC CHINESE COOKINGChinese cooking taught in lovelyChinese home. Tuition and materials$30. Limited enrollment, 7 per class.324-8070.PERSONALSThe December issue of the Sovietgovernment magazine Soviet Lifewas distributed to its U.S. readersthis week with a page missing be¬cause the State Department ob¬jected to an article written to jus¬tify the invasion of Czechoslovakieby Russian and other WarsawPact troops last August.ZAP!! that'll teach those Commierats they can't be free aroundHERE! Yeah!The ressurection of the Divine:The Eddie Perkins Jazz trio againat Reynolds Club Thursday "C"Shop 8-11 P.M.WANTED: Ride to Toronto. 684-2385.TC Fox: BRING DOWN DARK¬NESS March 15th and 16th Cobb.Support your local head shop. Weneed you. 51st 8> Harper. Noon to9 P.M.What is Balkanophilia?REVITALIZATION presents MAG¬IC SAM in a big dance Sat. night,9 to 1. His blues band is amongSwitchhitter.The Renault 16 Sedan-Wagoncan go to bat for you as a sedanor a station wagon. Depending onwhich one you need.When you need a station wagonit's a station wagon with practically enough room in the back tobe a small moving van. When youdon’t, it’s a sedan with a trunk be¬hind the back seat.It can get 118 miles to the gallonHas front wheel drive. Independentsuspension. Seats so comfortablethey’ve been compared to those inthe Mercedes-Benz 600 (they evenrecline for sleeping i. And it costs°nly $2445 P.O.K.Xes Ixf 3*y% pc'rts, J„c.2235 So. MICHIGAN AVE.Tel. 326-2550 the best in the nation. Don't missthe last dance of the quarterMarch 8.Ship on out of here — 326-4422,Marco Polo.DARKNESS: the quality of black.SEXUAL FREEDOM LEAGUE,Inc. Chicago Area for informationwrite SFL P.O. Box 9252 ChicagoIllinois 60690.The Kingdom of God is at hand:Eddie Perkins Jazz Trio.Support your local head shop. Weneed you. 51st SiHarper, noon to 9P.M.SHADES: whose side are you on,anyway — DARKNESS.Is Balkanophilia catching?Wanted: Liberal woman in need offunds in exchange for occasionalliaisons with discreet executive.Box M, Maroon.TIBETAN BOOK OF THEDEAD!!! Students $1.50, other $2.50 avail¬able In Mandel Hall box office 10-4.MAGIC SAM pulls a blue hare outof his hat Sat. at Ida Noyes. It'sTHE dance.Divine Vibrations: The Eddie Per¬kins Jazz Trio.MIAMI(AP) — it's bad enoughwhen a guy steals your multi-mil¬lion dollar airpl tne with 30 passen¬gers and 7 crewmen. But if he andhis girl friend — identified as A.C.Ellis and G. Harvey — are ridingon half-fare tickets, that's addinginsult to injury. Trans World Air¬lines found out Thursday that thehijacker who forced one of theirjetliners to Cuba Wednesday andhis companion traveled on studenttickets.Support your local head shop. Weneed you. 51st 8. Harper, noon to 9P.M.He tried to reach her, and found akiller instead — DARKNESS Bible Study — Interested in start¬ing a bible study 8, discussiongroup here on campus? Jim X8381or 924-6145.WRITERS' WORKSHOP — PL2-8377.Looking for loveable female ortwo for weekend feasts. I travelto Chicago frequently.! am 40 8>Caucasian. Box J, Maroon.Yves is a Balkanophilia! See him.I.N.H. 8:00 Tonight.SIT-IN on meeting. Then join.Young Republicans. 8:00 TonightIda Noyes.MAGIC SAM brings his blues bandto Ida Noyes' Cloister Sat. night,9 to 1 for the last BIG DANCEof theq uarter. Admission $1.Pecksniffian cant! Guttersnipe!Sir! You will die either of vener¬eal disease or on the gallows. Re¬ply: That depends on whether Iembrace your principles or yourmistress. Wondrous kittens — solidly blackor golden-orangey. Call 283-2590 orllene X4756.Dear Eleanor,I think I could give you what youwant. I like your ad. I live out oftown 8, could only make arrange¬ments for weekends when I cometo Chicago on business. I am Cau¬casian 8t 40 years old if thismakes any difference. Let meknow. We can try something.Yours, NG.The Medici is peace.Up against the Victoria, Mother!— records from r/h at the Stu¬dent Co-op.Interested in attending a healthclub once a month? Tremendousfacilities, $1.50. Call Ken 3266."I love to make love In the morn¬ing — like first thing. The onlycatch is I can only do so when Icome to Chicago on business tripswhich Is rather often. If Interestedto try Si if we both enjoy eachother continue when we can,yours, NGEnter now! The giantPigpenlook-alike contestNormally, a contest like this one doesn’t hap¬pen along. But this is an honest-to-God realcontest Honest. With real prizes.The winner is the lucky guy or gal whosephoto looks most like Pigpen of The GratefulDead. So. send in your pictures to our BoxTop and Party Games Dept.Do not, please, send in the actual people.We got troubles ol our own.How to enter. First off, you should be hip toThe Dead's two albums on Warners, whichare:THE FIRST ONE THE SECOND ONEThese albums, in case you ve been in solitarylor the past 38 months, are very, very good.So good, in fact, that of them it has been said: “This album is possibly the finest yet by agroup in the general area of white blues-rock. Those who prefer another sort ofrock may disagree with the GratefulDead's predeliction for the blues, but noone could deny after hearing the recordthat the band is superb." _ nnwnhe;Now that you've waded through the adcopy, back to fun! Here are The rules. Send ina photograph of the Pigpen Look-Alike, withhis or her name and address on the back ofthe photo, PLUS a reasonable facsimile ofeither of the two Grateful Dead album covers.(We ask for the album cover picture be¬cause we hope you'll buy or steal an album todraw from. We do that because if we don'tmove those records, friends, there s no morecontests)So. send in the stuff, and we ll let you knowwho wonThe prizes. First prize is $200 worth of ourgrooviest albums (Jimi Hendrix, Van Morri¬ son, Joni Mitchell, Van Dyke Parks, etc.).Second prize is $100 worth. Third-through-tenth prizes: $50 worth.The fine print:All •nines become the property ol Werner Bros -Seven Arts Records Inc Entries must be received no Idler than March 15. 1969None can be returned If ere feel like it. we may use these photos inan ad later on. so lair warning If this contest is illegal somewherethen skip it where it is. Your facsimile of the album cover doesn thave to look terrific We already know what the album looks likeWhat we want to know is what you look like Sort c'Send in your things toBox Top and Party Games DeptRoom 206Warner Bros -7 Arts RecordsBurbank California 91503And please hurry. You have no idea howgames like this break up the day here in Bur¬bank.One more thing: if you can, buy a GratefulDead album. After all, can you afford in thislife to go without an album that The San Fran¬cisco Express said was .. as though wewere hearing for the first time in our lives"?Shove your entry in the mail. We'll get backto you.6/The Chicago Maroon/March 4, 1969about the midwayJoint CouncilsA meeting of the joint student councilsFriday concluded with the remark bychairman Lowell Livezey that “I just don’tsee how we can, as a body, do anythingwith respect to the immediate campusproblems.”Livezey pointed out that the joint coun¬cils are “formally unable to act; informal¬ly, the group as a whole does not want toact.”Despite a telephone campaign and Ma¬roon stories informing student representa¬tives of the meeting, the joint councilsonce again lacked a quorum.An undergraduate representative com¬mented that students who don’t approve ofthe joint councils are “voting-with theirfeet” by staying away from meetings sothat lack of a quorum will prevent anygroup action.Discussion of the joint councils’ problemsfollowed reports from three committees ofthe councils.Those committees are drawing up re¬ports on University discipline procedures,on student participation in faculty deci¬sions, and on a constitution for the jointcouncils.Several representatives commented that,since the joint councils as a whole appar¬ently will be unable to act on the report'’,they should be submitted to the individualdivisional councils for action and to thecommunity as a whole for discussion.FrederikaThe indomitable Frederika Blankner iscontinuing the fight to save her apartmentbuilding at 6043 S Woodlawn.At a trial two weeks ago a jury offeredher what she claims is only 80 percent ofthe value of the building and land. MissBlankner said she is prepared to carry hercase, if necessary, to the Illinois or UnitedStates supreme courts.The city condemned her building Oct 11without an inspection. Following pleasfrom Miss Blankner to reconsider, the citytwo days later sent out an inspector, whochanged the recommendation from con¬demnation to rehabilitation and mainte¬nance.In January Miss Blankner asked for acontinuance or withdrawal of her case inorder that she and the 18 families residingin the building could confer with MayorRichard Daley, who has stated that thereis an immediate need for housing. The con¬ference with the mayor was denied, andthe city brought the case against her Feb17.Miss Blankner had in the meantime dis¬missed her lawyers except for the purposeof a continuance. At the trial, however,Judge Egan refused to release them fromthe case, and they sat silently during thetrial, Miss Blankner said.Before the trial the Department of UrbanRenewal (DUR) offered her $43,000 for thebuilding for maintenance and rehabilita¬tion. Miss Blankner pointed out that notFREDERIKA'S piace only had she spent at least $45,000 in re¬building the apartment house, but that theland was also worth money; the propertyis presently mortgaged for $51,000.The jury offered her $40,750 for the build¬ing and land, but she plans to appeal thedecision, she said, not for the money, butfor the constitutional question involved.She is also demanding that her tenants begiven adequate rehousing if they mustleave the building.Miss Blankner cited cases similar to herown in San Francisco, Powalton, Pennsyl¬vania, and Huntington, Long Island, inwhich the landlord won the case and thebuilding was not demolished.The controversy surrounding the apart¬ment building was brought to light in anOctober issue of the Maroon. Student Gov¬ernment filed an “amicus ciriae” brief onbehalf of her building and staged a rallythen to protest the condemnation by thecity.Undergrad CouncilsUndergraduate student councils are nowworking to improve the curriculum in thedivisions.The five councils have met with facultythis quarter, informally or through orga¬nized faculty-student committees.The social sciences council is organizinga student government structure parallel tofaculty structure. According to Tim Lovain,’70, political science representative, the de¬partments will soon elect representativesto the student advisory council.Biology faculty and students are workingto improve the structure of general educa¬tion Biology 105-6-7, and of Introduction toBiochemistry.Members of the physical science divi¬sion’s student council are discussing “tech¬nical aspects of curriculum and degree re¬quirements” and content, quality, and re¬quirements, of general education courses,said committee chairman Keith Brown,’69.Both the humanities collegiate divisionand the new collegiate division haveformed student-faculty committees to dis¬cuss and possibly expand curriculum.Further attempts by the councils to in¬crease student participation in academicaffairs include social science teacher eval¬uation questionnaires, and a faculty-stu¬dent investigation committee in the biologycollegiate division.The social science student council ques¬tionnaires enable students in the division toevaluate professors and graduate TA’s.The council is also preparing a courseevaluation booklet, to be distributed beforepre-registration.New CoursesThe humanities collegiate division hasannounced three new courses for thespring quarter:English 205, Afro-American Thought andLiterature, will be a discussion of the so¬cial, intellectual, and cultural milieu lead¬ing to the rise of a serious American Ne¬gro literary expressionEnglish 293, The American Novel, willdeal with trends in American fiction.Humanities 279, Survey of Modern Afri¬can Literature, will trace the roots of mod¬ern African writings and the impact ofAfro-American writers upon the ^modernAfrican writers.Special attention will be given to theproblems of colonialism, cultural assimila¬tion, and independence, and their relation¬ship to the modern literature of Africa, aspokesman said.SFA CourtThere are vacancies on the student-facul-ty-administration court to be filled thisquarter, according to Jerry Lipsch, SGpresident. Applicants must have one quar¬ter of residency. The self-nominations mustbe in by 5 pm Wednesday in the SG officeon the second floor of Ida Noyes. STINEWAY: selling out because it lost its lease.StinewayStineway drug store on the comer of57th and Kimbark, which has advertised inlarge window placards that it lost its lease,may have been saved from an untimelyend.Walter Osborne, president of StinewaySystems, said Stineway had thought thatthe University was interested in leasingthe building to a restaurant and thereforedid not consider asking for a renewal oftheir expiring lease.“When you can’t renew your lease,you’ve lost it. It isn’t really ethical to saythat, but we couldn’t renew the lease,” Os¬borne added.Kendall Cady, general manager of theUniversity realty office, said “We nevertalked to Stineway. As far as we are con¬cerned, Stine way just decided to leave.“There had been a restaurant interested in coming in, but we have no real prospec¬tive tenants now,” Cady added.Osborne, when told what Cady said, re¬plied that he would talk to Cady and see ifStineways could now renew their lease.He added, however, that the Universitywas still interested in having a restaurantmove into the building. “Anything is pos¬sible,” he said.Happy BirthdayMore than 200 students — and peoplejust looking for freebies — mobbed theBandersnatch Friday night to celebrate theIda Noyes restaurant’s second birthday.Gallons of ice cream and hundreds ofpieces of cake were given free to thecrowd. Balloons of all colors were thrownaround the room and were popped bypeople waiting on a long, long line for theice cream and cake. The Bandersnatch isstudent run and non-profit.NOTICE:WINTER QUARTERTEXTBOOKSOn Monday, March 10th., it will be necessary for theTextbooks Department of the Bookstore to beginremoving Winter Quarter Textbooks from itssales-floor shelves, in order to provide space forincoming Spring Quarter books. Before March 10th.,please try to purchase any Winter Quarter texts whichyou may still require.TEXTBOOK DEPARTMENTTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueThe Teachers!..As a teacher in New York City, you will be helped by an_ \ outstanding corps of consultants and school supervisors who have<J&/ beten carefully selected and trained to give you sympathetic guidance and expertuniversity*] Esistance. Here are some facts about other benefits enjoyed by our teachers:OF CHlCAGOy salary schedule that ranks with the highest among the world’s great cities, withAt'ctiixrfy?salary placement for experienced teachers ■ Orientation program for newcomers^ Tenure and security ■ Health plans, welfare funds, social security coverage,excellent pension plan ■ Promotional opportunities ■ Innovative approachesAs a teacher in New York City you will be able to enjoy all this - and more.For additional information about joining the Teachers in New York City,please write, telephone or visit theBureau of Recruitment, Office of Personnel, DEPT. 27New York City Board of Education, 110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, New York 11201.$6,750-$11,150$7,250-$11,650$8,250-$12,650$9,350-$13,900BABA+30MA or equivalentMA+30 credits .Telephone: (212) 596-8060Salary range for teachers:September 1968-June 1969Teaching and supervisory positions are basedon a merit system with no discrimination. in licensure and appointment.SHORELAND HOTEL 1Office space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore Driveauthorized BMC servicemi 3-31135424 s. kirnbark ave.rhirago, illmois 60615/"foreign car hospital & clinic, inc8/The Chicago Maroon/March 4, 1969 DiscountArt Materials• school, office &fi ling supplies• drafting materials• mounting - matting -• framingDuncan’s.1305 E 53rd HY 3-4 I I I UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor Matching Wedding SetsHoferte iJash ion ffewe (erSash for student discounts1422E. 53rd St. 363-0161nr PHONE 224-6500-01cJ Dk omaS Jfnteri or.SJSpecialists in Home &.Office FurnishingsCustom DraperiesSALES MANAGER - Bill EdinburgPROFESSIONAL DRAPES - Ruth JohnsonHOME CONSULTANTS - Bill Thomas JackieMcCoy8612 South Cottage GroveSpecial!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!/0% Stmlent Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-84 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.INTERNATIONAL HOUSFGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th STREETGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLDTobace os-Candies-StationeryNewspapers-MagazinesCosmeticsOpen M-F Noon-6:45T