Black Students Invade Northwestern FratBy Con HitchcockWarrants have been sworn out for thearrest of two black students involved in araid Tuesday night on a Northwestern uni¬versity fraternity house.Three residents were injured as an esti¬mated 30 black students entered the build¬ing, broke windows, smashed lamps, andoverturned furniture.The 18 fraternity students in the buildingat the time were attacked with fists andchairs as they defended themselves.One student has been charged with bur¬glary, criminal damage, and battery. An¬other has been charged with burglary andcriminal damage.The raid came as a result of an allegedattack on a black female student in herdormitory by a busboy who lives in theTriangle fraternity house, scene of theraid.The Daily Northwestern in a front pageeditorial Thursday recommended that deanof students Roland J. Hinz should resign if he refuses to make clear the facts of thecase.Hinz, chairman of the discipline com¬mittee, convened the group Wednesday af¬ternoon to hear fraternity members andblack students. About 150 black studentscame to the meeting. When Hinz said thehall was too small, the group gave him tenminutes to move to a larger hall. Hinz andthe black students met for 90 minutes, bar¬ring whites and the press from the meet¬ing.Tensions are running high on thecampus, although no more violent in¬cidents have occurred.Sixty students at Sarah Lawrence collegein Bronxville, NY, occupied the adminis¬tration building Wednesday to protest arise in tuition.Administration, faculty and the presswere denied entrance to the building.Classes proceeded as normal.The $350 tuition increase raised the totalestimated yearly expenses to $4,300.MURIEL CIGARSPRESENTSTHETIPALET®EXPERIENCEthe ubiquitousturtle neckThis lean, tapered short sleeve turtle neckcan be worn under practically anything. Incotton by Cooper. Black, white, blue, gold,green, red, light blue, yellow . SizesS,\1,L,XL. Mock turtle style $2.50; fullturtle $3.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings The AuditoriumTheatre, Chicago,Friday, March 218:00 p.m.Tickets $2.50; [$3.50; $4.50.Tickets on saleat the AuditoriumTheatre box officeor by mail,70 E. Congress Parkway60605, and atTicket Centralservicing Ward's,Marshall Fields, andall Crawford stores.FREE POSTERSCohn A SternSown $c (HamrniaShopJean Renoir’sTHE RULES OFTHE GAMESaturday, March 8, 7:30 & 9:30, Cobb Hall, $1,Pierce Tower CinemaIN CONCERTPROCOLHARUMTHE STAPLESINGERSTHECRYANSHAMESROTARYCONNECTION2/The Chicago Maroon/March 7. 19A9•I'i'mi-M ri-i T\'f • '• r: rrV University president Mrs Esther Rau-senbush said that she was studying otherdemands, but it was impossible to lowertuition.The faculty at the University of Wiscon¬sin approved creation of a black studiesdepartment Tuesday, one of the 13 de¬mands submitted by black students.MIT’s research projects were boycottedby workers Tuesday to protest the Univer¬sity’s alleged ties with the military-indus¬trial complex.Classes were cancelled at Colgate divin¬ity school this week after 20 black semi¬narians occupied the administration build¬ing.HEW Secretary Robert Finch announcedThursday that colleges with segregatedblack studies courses would lose federalfunds unless white students were also per¬mitted to register for the courses. Finchsaid that segregated courses violated the1964 civil rights act. Antioch college hasalready been threatened with a cutoff offederal funds. No reply from the collegehas been issued.At Florida State in Tallahassee, 75 stu¬dents were arrested Tuesday when they re¬fused to leave a meeting of Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) in violation of acourt order.The court order was one result of an in¬junction by acting president Stanley Mar¬shall prohibiting the meeting. The county sheriff entered the meeting,read the order and told students to leave.Those who did not leave were removedfrom the building by the police andcampus security officers.Abner J. Mikva, 2nd District Congress¬man from Illinois, introduced a bill to re¬vamp the draft system Wednesday.The bill provided for the establishmentof a “prime selection group” of 19 and 20year olds not deferred or exempted. Menwould also be eligible for induction for onlyone year. After one’s college deferment isended he will be placed in the group forone year.Mikva’s bill also leaves open the possi¬bility of a lottery, at the President’s dis¬cretion.The bill would also provide judicial re¬view of cases for those who wish it, re¬quire the local board to provide a regis¬trant with a complete transcript of hiscase, and repeal the requirement that theAttorney General prosecute on the word ofthe selective service committee.If adapted, the national director wouldserve a seven year term, and. if over 70,would have his term renewed or turneddown yearly. State directors must be civil¬ians, and local board members could notserve more than 14 years.The bill was the establishment of a com¬mission to review the present laws andstudy the other plans now proposed, suchas a volunteer army.MUSICRAFT SPECIALThis is our portable phonograph:KLH THE MODEL ELEVEN.CIRCUITRY: All solid-state,designed and built entirely byKLH. 15 watts IHF (Institute ofHigh Fidelity) music power. 30watts peak power. Unheard-of in aportable. Low frequency powercontoured to speaker requirements.TURNTABLE: Garrard recordchanger made to KLH specifica¬tions. Very low-mass tone armresists jarring, tracks even badlywarped records. Pickering V-15magnetic pick-up with diamondstylus.CONTROLS: Bass and Treble,allowing ± 15 db correction (i.e.,plenty) at 50 cps and 10,000 cps.Balance between speakers. Volume.(Turntable shuts off system auto¬matically, whether on automatic ormanual.) SPEAKERS: Two of the astonishing speakers used in the ModelTwenty-One radio. Forty feet ofcable.FLEXIBILITY: Inputs for stereotuner or tape player. Tape record¬ings may be made from the speakeroutputs. Headphones may be sub¬stituted for speakers.LIMITATIONS: No radio.ETC.: Weight: 28 pounds. Caseclosed: 2414" W x 13'/2" H x 7!/sD. Control Center: 1614" W x 13'/2D x 75/8” H (with automatic spindlein place). Speaker Enclosures,each: 13'/2" W x 7Vi" H x 4“ DChoice of gray or pearl white vinyl“Contour-Iite” case.SUGGESTED PRICE: $199.95THE Model Eleven is stereophonic. It can fill aliving room with the kind of sound once avail¬able only from massive, expensive and decid¬edly unportable sound systems. As a matter of fact ifwe hadn’t been able to make it do that we wouldn’thave built it. You can take any portable with you; buthow many can you take seriously?ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.DE 7-4150 MiuiCuift 2035 W. 95th St.779-650020 Students Expelled!!David TravisSTUDENT RALLY: Demonstrators meet on Ad building steps Monday to show their support for the 31 students threatenedwith expulsions.Adversaries Clash In Abbott Ten more students have been expelledfrom the University for participating indisruptive demonstrations, following rec¬ommendations by the Oaks disciplinarycommittee and the committee of the coun¬cil. This brings the total number of ex¬pelled students to 20.As of Thursday, the only final decisionthat the new Shireman disciplinary com¬mittee had reached was one recommenda¬tion of no discipline for a student who hadnot previously been suspended. The Shire¬man committee was formed last week todeal with the cases of students summonedto appear for having participated in dis¬ruptive demonstrations at the home of Uni¬versity president Edward Levi and at theQuadrangle Club February 24.Dean of students Charles O’Connell sum¬moned 23 students who were already sus¬pended to appear before the Shiremancommittee threatening them with expulsionif they did not respond. Fourteeen respond¬ed to the summons; the other nine havebeen expelled by O’Connell at the recom¬mendation of the committee of the council.The other 11 expulsions were made byO’Connell at the recommendation of theOaks committee. Three students who ap¬peared before the committee received a fi¬nal decision of expulsion. Eight studentswho had been previously suspended forparticipation in disruptive activites at theadministration building were expelledwhen they failed to appear before the com¬mittee after being warned to do so.Other disciplinary decisions appear be¬low. They are all decisions made by theOaks committee, and the figures are accu¬rate as of the evening of March 3, the lat¬est date for which official figures areavailable. In the figures below, “suspen¬sion” means effective suspension unlessotherwise noted:• Two quarter suspensions: 6.By Leslie StraussStudents and University police haveagain clashed at an Oaks disciplinary committee hearing.There were no injuries.Disturbances began Thursday outside £hearing room in Abbott Hall when securityguards told students they could not enterthe room because there were no seats leftAs a part of a “guided tour” program runby the committee of 500-plus, about IEpeople left after staying in the room forabout 20 minutes.More students were not allowed to enterto replace those who had left. When thehearing ended at 4:45 p.m. and people be¬gan to leave the room, one of the approxi¬mately 50 persons in the dark hall shouted,"There were 20 empty seats in the room!”Some students in the hall surged towardthe room, but were not allowed inside. Se¬curity officers said a private hearing wasin progress.As people were milling in the narrowand cold hall, several people leaving theroom were shoved by security guards,charged Steve Rothkrug, expelled ’70.A pushing and shoving match followedfor some five minutes. Committee mem¬bers peered through the partially-opendoor. "Two people had their shirts torn bythe University cops, but they were entirelyunprovoked,” Rothkrug continued.The shirt-tearing incident was not seenby a Maroon reporter present.Samuel Evans, one of the securityguards, said, “We do not want to hurt anyone. We’re caught right in the middle. WeLast MaroonThis is the last regular Maroonof this quarter. There will be no is¬sue on Tuesday but there will be aspecial issue on Friday with articlesby Howie Machtinger and a promin¬ent member of the faculty. Advertis¬ing will be accepted on the regularbasts. are neutral and we Jiave to keep the twosides apart. It’s hard, especially becausewhen we ask some one on either side —faculty or student — what they’re trying todo and they can’t tell us.“But we’re getting awfully tired of tak¬ing everything from both sides. We’re hu¬man too. Weeks of being called fascist pigsis starting to get to us.”One of the people in the hall said, “Se¬curity’s been really uptight all week. I canunderstand it, too. Those people have beenworking too hard. The University assignedthe best people they had to take care ofthese hearings, so all week I’ve seen acouple of the people at the Shireman com¬mittee in the morning and the Oaks com¬mittee in the afternoon. That’s just toomuch.” In a related action, graduate students inthe department of biochemistry deter¬mined in a unanimous vote that the dis¬ciplinary committee hearings at Abbotthall constituted a disruptive action becausethey interfere with the normal functioningof the building.In a letter sent Wednesday to PresidentEdward H Levi, dean of students CharlesO’Connell, and six other faculty members,the graduate students asked the committeeto leave Abbott hall because the libraryand lecture hall cannot be used because ofhearings, use of the halls and elevators isrestricted because of the crowds of peoplein the building, and what they called anatmosphere detrimental to study and re¬search programs has been created by thepresence of the Oaks committee. • One quarter suspensions: 11.• Suspensions of less than one quarter: 7.• No effective suspension, “suspended”suspentions of varying duration: 9.• Probation, no suspension: 4.• Recommendation of no disciplinaryaction: 17.• Charges dropped due to insufficientevidence or mistaken identity: 6.• Hearingspending: 14.• Had not responded to summons butstill had time to do so: 20.• Had not responded to summons, andtemporarily suspended, following adminis¬tration building sit-in: 3.In addition to the original summonses byO’Connell to appear before the Shiremancommittee, the committee has since sum¬moned 14 additional students identified asparticipating in the February 24 incidents.Turbulence Marks Shireman HearingsThe Shireman disciplinary committee,formed last week to deal with the demon¬strations at the president’s house and theQuadrangle Club Feb 24 has held eleventurbulent public hearings this week, but sofar has made no final decisions.Since Monday, when a dozen studentswere carried from the Stagg Field labshearing room by University security men,admission to the room has been carefullycontrolled.Thursday about 25 faculty memberswere let into the room at 9:15. They tookup most of the seats. Students were thenallowed in, but no one was permitted tostand. The room holds about 45.Many of the students heard have demon¬strated their disregard for the committeeby burlesquing its procedures.Committee chairman Charles Shireman,associate professor in the school of socialservice administration, halted the hearingsWednesday when about a dozen ”witches”Continued on Page 10 David TravisSTAGG LAB: Professor Nachtrieb, a member of the committee of the council,meets with students outside Shireman committee hearings.March 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. GOLD CITY INNMaroon"A Gold Mine of Good Food”IO %Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT Orders lour newboyfriend has anew girlfriend?Think it over, over coffee.TheThink Drink.For yOur Own Think Drink Mug, send 75C snd yOuf njm* ond address to:Think Dr.nk Mug. Dept N. P.0 Boa 559. New York. N Y. 10046 The Internat-onai Co*»ee Organ.iat*on4/The Chicago Maroon/March 7, 1969 TEL. 326-2550 Playtex invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it's softer and silky (notcardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent.. .it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardbonrdv kind...the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45 c/< more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.-Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. So the chance of a mishapis almost zero! _ r> ^Why liVe in the past? plcl\TCXw idjunmttamponsJ&esly imports, c7uc.2235 SO. MICHIGAN AVE.. CHICAGO. ILL. 50616L3SSTATION WAGON IICHAPTER TWO:THE RENAULT 16SEDAN-WAGONThings have been going very .well indeed for Chapter One —the Renault 10. Last year salesju mped 59.2%. So it seemeda good time to introduce an¬other member of the family:The Renault 16 Sedan-Wagon.The Sedan-Wagon. Besidesbeing a new chapter for us, theSedan-Wagon represents a newchapter in the industry.Until now, even if you onlyneeded a station wagon occa¬sionally, you had to drive onearound all the time. With theRenault 16, you drive arounda sedan. And when you need astation wagon, it turns into astation wagon. The front-wheeldrive.Quitelogical.The engine up front toget maximum hauling area inthe rear.The drive wheels alsoup front to get maximum trac¬tion from the engine’s weight.The engine. Pressure castaluminum block. 5 main bear¬ings. And a sealed liquid cool¬ing system that virtually elim¬inates the bother of having to add anti-freeze. It can milk 28miles out of a gallon of gas,and still manages a top speedof 93 mph. It is so well put to¬gether that you could roll up30,000 continuous miles at 85,as we did, back and forth andback and forth between Romeand Milan.The seats. They’re every bitas comfortable as those in the Renault 10. And the seats inthe Renault 10 have been stacked up against the seats in theRolls-Royce.The road manners. The sus¬pension is soft, without beingmushy. Each wheel moves upand down independently, controlled by long torsion bars.The price. The Sedan-Wagonsells for 12,445 P.O.E. The priceof most sedan-sedansI •* f t• , m > • i m »> i m »111 * > * i * % * ► * \v > \\Y\\\Y v \\V\\\ VAVAVA'.V ‘.V.W »*•*«♦•»»**»«*#,•*».*,»V>A\VAVA%%\V%W\\\W W ’ AV.\\\\V.Y \YAYAYAWV \\V \Y.YYA\VA*.\V,Sitting InAt The University of ChicagoTHE END: Students leave ad building February 14, final day of1969 sit-in._ wan ^iaa<—i isaiaProtesters block ed buildingin move to prevent draft rankxrjseasstrsssaas — rjSfSjjjI UC polity iam* |gggSIS:?[=5rr=r-rS?,SH-r-S Snhrcr: 1tmA Chicago Maroon [ ~ 1■IN AfTIKMATHAwaiting Separate Verdictsisgggifgjgprii^iasasIsrJSrCifflateeTHE MAROON*“400 STUDENTSOCCUPY AD BLDG! "With the increased militancy of both sides,a polarization has occurred. Neither sidewill talk. All they do is argue, throwaccustations at each other and becomefrustrated."By Mitch Bobkin“Sit-ins at the University of Chicago have become increasingly militant throughthe years.” So Clark Kissinger, an alumnus of the University and three of its sit-ins,Chicago reporter for the Guardian, the radical newsweekly, sums up in this statementperhaps the most obvious and most important trend concerning the five building sit-insheld at the University in the last seven years. Edward Rosenheim, spokesman for thecommittee of the council, looks at the increased militancy differently. He said, “I thinkessentially that people have become less concerned with the future of the University.”Jeff Blum, expelled ’69, says “People on this campus are beginning to realize thatthere are real political issues here that are being suppressed. The only way to fightcoercion is to be coercive back. I think we now have a political realization about thisUniversity.”Students in the 1962 sit-in against discrimination in the University housing systemwould be considered moderate or even conservative by 1969 radicals. The housingdemonstrators were very careful not to leave the fifth floor of the ad building and evenallowed administrators to get to their offices. In fact, President George Beadle walkedout of the elevator on the fifth floor and greeted the protestors with a cheery “Hi!”Demonstrators at the University realty office were arrested when they refused toleave the building at closing time. The first group arrested had their charges dismissedbut ten others from a southside chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)were convicted of criminal trespass and spent five days in jail but were not required topay any fines. A third group of demonstrators consisting of University students werealso arrested but they too had all charges dropped. A fourth and final group of protes¬tors were also arrested and released. This was the extent of the sit-in.Four years later in the first sit-in against ranking males for the selective servicesystem, 450 students took over the entire building instead of just one area. Adminis¬trators and University employees were not granted entrance to the building. Unlike thegeneral mass of confusion and unified communal living on all the floors during theDixon sit-in (as the last protest will undoubtedly be called in years to come), demon¬strators in ’66 split the building into areas of usefulness. The third floor was devoted tofood, the fourth floor to study and the second, fifth and sixth floors to sleeping.Students assembled in the lobby of the building to keep out employees but few showedup during the two days of the mass sit-in. On the second day of the sit-in, only a tokenforce remained and they left a few days later.The second sit-in against the rank in 1967, though smaller than the first, was an evenmore militant action. After the 1966 sit-in the faculty senate decided that the studentswere getting away with too much in the sit-ins because there was no set form ofpunishment (in the earlier sit-ins there had been no discipline at all). Out of the senatecame the now infamous classification of the “disruptive” sit-in. The ’67 sit-in wasclassified “disruptive” even before the students entered the building.This deterrent didn’t stop the demonstrators, however. They entered the building at 5pm after listening to speeches on the ad building steps and occupied all six floors.Students were warned by associate dean of students James Newman that they mustleave the building or be subject to disciplinary action. Fifty-five of the original 120students remained in the building in defiance of the administration.A second summons was then handed out to the students. “I would say that theattitude of the people in 1967 as compared to today was very different. In 1967 studentscomplied with administrators asking for identification. Perhaps people in ’67 felt thatthey had to support a principle and were willing to accept the consequences, unlike thedemonstrators of today,” says dean of students Charles O’Connell. The 55 receivingsecond summonses were later suspended although punishment was lifted from first andfourth year students.The chain of militancy is broken by the black students sit-in in 1968 for more privi¬leges and accommodations to black students. During the four hours in the building, 50black students inflicted little or no damage upon the building and even employed asecurity guard to help keep white students out of the building.Once in the building, the black students didn’t really disrupt anything although em¬ployees were sent home. When the first summonses were issued and the sit-in labled“disruptive,” the students left the building.On looking back on 1969 in years to come, the sit-in of 1969 will continue the line ofmilitancy. The length of the sit-in (15 days), the lack of any form of compromise by thedemonstrators and the hard core tactics of class strikes (whether successfully or unsuc¬cessfully), marches on the law school hearings of the disciplinary committee and the“attack” on President Levi’s house will surely point out the militancy of 1969.This increased militancy on the part of the demonstrators has brought varied respon¬ses from members of the University community. Clark Kissinger, who came down tovisit the Dixon sit-in every day has said “The only pattern is that students give up tooeasily. In an industrial strike, workers stay out for six months.” Charles O’Connellrepresents that opposite viewpoint when he says “There seems to be a trend towards anacceptance of violence that is totally, totally deplorable.” History professor WilliamMcNeill senses “a new shrillness” in the present sit-in and says “I feel very puzzled bythe sympathy that many students and junior faculty have for these demonstrations. Itpuzzles me. It is very easy to break down the manners of this University but it isn’t aseasy to rebuild them.”The response of the administration is the only index by which Rosenheim’s words atthe outset of this article can be judged. No other spokesman for the administration hasgiven any kind of statement concerning the administration’s viewpoints on the changein sit-ins and their appropriate response. Therefore, it must be accepted that theiractions speak for them.Continued on Page 11March 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5Any college studentwho is still spending 500 hoursper semesteron reading assignments... is wasting 350 hours.Ask Phil McAleer. Or Cathy Farris.They’re Heading Dynamics graduatesPhil is a graduate of theUniversity of Illinois andis enrolled at ColumbiaUniversity Law School.One of more than 400,000Reading Dynamics gradu¬ates, Phil says, “I firmlybelieve the Reading Dy¬namics Course is one ofthe finest educational ex¬periences I ever had. Myreading speed has increased6 times and my compre¬hension has gone up cor¬respondingly.” The aver¬age college student takingour Course enters theCourse at 350 words per minute and graduates, in 8 weeks, at2,200 words per minute. In fact, we guarantee to at least tripleyour reading ability or your tuition is refunded in full.Reading Dynamics is a scientific, new, tested, proved, andbetter way to read every kind of printed material . . . news¬papers, magazines, books, technical reports, legal briefs, memos,correspondence, in fact, anything. You use no machines or gad¬gets when you read dynamically. And you don’t skip or scan,either. You learn, in eight 2}A hour sessions, how to read downthe page, how to stop reading one word at a time, how to paceyourself according to the material, how to read as fast as youthink. You learn how to increase your speed from 3 to 10 times,or more, with improved comprehension and recall. You learnhow to put the fun and satisfaction back into reading, and stillsave at least two-thirds of your present reading time. Readingwill once again be a satisfying experience for you. Cathy is a 19 year oldmedical research major atthe University of Illinois.When she started theCourse, her rate was 321words per minute with80.5% comprehension. Shefinished at 2,552 words perminute with 88% compre¬hension. “The ReadingDynamics method not onlyimproves spefed but incor¬porates the study tech¬niques and proper attitudetoward the reading ma¬terial necessary for aboveaverage comprehension.”Reading Dynamics graduates . . . housewives, businessmen,Congressmen, college students, lawyers, professional men . . .have often started the Course at 300-500 words per minuteand graduated at 1,500 to 2,000 words a minute, and more.Accept our invitation to attend a FREE Orientation Session,now being held at various times and various locations.At this Orientation, you will see a documentary film of Wash¬ington Congressmen who have taken the Course. You’ll see anactual demonstration of Reading Dynamics. All your questionsconcerning Reading Dynamics will be answered, including ourLifetime Membership and positive guarantee of tuition refund.You’ll see how the Reading Dynamics idea has gained over¬whelming public acceptance to the point where there are nowmore than 350 Institutes throughout the United States and inEurope. “Reading Dynamics has helped me enormously,” saysSenator William Proxmire. We believe it can help you, too!PHONE NOW! ST 2-9787FREE ONE HOUR ORIENTATION SESSIONS:I!N CHICAGO - at the Reading Dynamics Institute,180 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 400Monday March 10 5:30PMTuesday March 11 12:15 PM^ ednesday ••••••••••••••••*•••••• *March 12,.,..,,. 5:30 PMThursday March 13 12:15 PM, 5:30 PMFriday March 14 12:15 PMSaturday March 15 1:30 PMat 10510 south Viestern Avenue, Suite 405Monday March 10 8:00 PMTuesday March 11 8.00 PM The Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute180 N. Michigan Ave. • Suite 400 • Chicago, III. 60601Q Please send more information.□ Please send registration form and schedule of classes.I understand that I am under no obligation and thatno salesman will call on me.City_State_ _z ip-67 The Chicago Maroon/ March 7, 1969TWO Opposes City On Model CitiesBy Jeffrey KotaThe Woodlawn Organization’s fight withthe city over model cities plans has cometo a head.The ghetto community organization hasaccepted nominally equal representationwith non-affiliated citizens on the city’sWoodlawn Model Area Planning CounciliMAPC) and is trying to persuade a ma¬jority of MAPC members to accept a mod¬el cities plan written by TWO and the Uni¬versity. However, the MAPC in a suddenmove quickly approved a tentative first-year action plan submitted by the city.The Woodlawn MAPC, like each of theMAPCs in three other Chicago neighbor¬hoods designated as model areas, is thecitizen participation structure appointed byMayor Richard Daley in conformance withDepartment of Housing and Urban Devel¬opment (HUD) requirements. Each mustgive formal approval before a model citiesplan can be funded.The TWO plan, which would give TWOcontrol over implementation of the planand federal money, is the product of meet¬ings throughout the summer betweenWoodlawn residents organized by TWO andfaculty and student advisors from the Uni¬versity.The recent developments stem from adowntown meeting early in January ofSouth Side politicians at which indepen¬dents attempted to gain support for theTWO plan. Later in the month TWO Presi¬dent Rev Arthur Brazier headed a TWOcommittee that met with Erwin France,head of Chicago’s model cities program,and Harold Anderson, chairman of theWoodlawn MAPC. Though TWO had beendemanding 51 percent representation onthe MAPC, Anderson offered Brazier 50percent with the provision that this wouldinclude dissident TWO members alreadyon the MAPC who were appointed by Da¬ley.Brazier reported the offer to TWO’ssteering committee. After debate, the com¬mittee voted to accept it, reportedly on theassumption that the quality of the TWO-University plan would allow TWO mem¬bers to sell it to the others on the MAPC.TWO’s delegates’ meeting, attended byabout 100 members of constituent organiza¬tions, subsequently approved the decision.TWO gave 12 names to Daley, who officiallyappointed eight new members for a total of30 on the MAPC. He had initially appointedseven dissident members of TWO con¬stituent organizations. But at the first meeting of the newly con¬stituted MAPC Feb 19, the city introduceda tentative first-year action plan for Wood¬lawn, a pamphlet consisting largely of one-sentence descriptions of improvements tobe made in existing municipal servicesa1 most identical to plans for the city’s threeother model areas. After a few brief reportsby city agency representatives, a vote wasasked. Despite objections by TWO’s eightmembers and htree others who opposed animmediate vote, the city’s plan was ap¬proved 14-11.Although the plan will almost certainlybe approved by the City Council, and besubmitted to HUD in Washington, TWOspokesmen maintain that the real fightwith the city is just beginning. They saythere is nothing in the city’s plan thatwould prevent them from convincing otherMAPC members to implement the sub¬stance of the TWO plan later on.According to one TWO member, TWOwill continue to try to place doubts in theminds of MAPC members about the city’splan and procedures. They intend, for ex¬ample, to organize Woodlawn residents toattend future MAPC meetings.Students Work In Alderman Raceswinning, or of significantly hurting ma¬chine candidates are good. They have at¬tracted the ardent support of liberal andradical politicians, community populations,and students in many areas of the city.Student support and campaign in¬volvement is being welcomed by many ofthe candidates.There are a number of reasons why thesupport of these men is important. If theywin, desperately needed, anti-machinemembers of the City Council can boastonly four members: alderman Leon Des-pres (5th ward), William Cousins (8thward), A A Sammy Rayner (6th ward',and Seymour Simon (40th ward).Not only is the development of a strong¬er anti-machine coalition at the City Coun¬cil level important; equally significant isthe opening up of community representa¬tion to new, non-machine dominated indi¬viduals. Particularly in wards with highblack populations, the installing of indepen¬dent aldermen can be instrumental inbreaking the myth of machine tyranny,and subsequently awakening a new senseContinued on Page 12By Margot GrayFor a long time most student politicalactivism has been limited to the campus.However, there are numbers of relevant,o f f-campus, non-University issues forwhich student activity could be valuable.During the past, the Democratic con¬vention, of course, was one. The Novemberelections was another. Still another hasbeen the Model Cities program in Wood¬lawn.On the state level one group, Studentsfor a Political Alternative (SPA), orga¬nized publicity and canvassing operationsin support of William Clark for senator.Another group, Students for an Open Chi¬cago (SOC), was organized in the early fallto support the projected black boycottwhich seemed to have potential for offer¬ing significant opposition to the Democrat¬ic machine. Consequently, SOC worked inwhite communities to bring out the anti¬machine vote on the state and local levels.Apart from any effect they had, the in¬volvements of groups like SPA and SOC inthese issues were felt by the students tohave been important in providing them ANALYSISwith a greater understanding of the natureand problems of the world outside the uni¬versity. In confronting and dealing withpeople of different social classes and politi¬cal viewpoints, in being forced to becomesensitive enough to community people’sways of thinking to overcome frequentmistrust of students, in learning to avoidexploitation, among other things, the parti¬cipants felt that the yhad gained an in¬sight into the difficulties and urgent needfor effective political activity.Recently, another extremely importantcontext for student involvement in the lifeof this city has presented itself. Tuesdayaldermanic elections will be held. Sig¬nificantly, at least six independent, anti¬machine candidates are being run, and ina number of cases the possibility of theirWOODLAWN: Model cities program meets opposition south of campus.March 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7J f M , I t’ M. < * * ' 1This investmentstarts paying dividendsin three years.Most rars last aliout as long as the loads that payfor them: three years.In Sweden, where it's tough being a car, Volvolasts an average of 11 years. :.And while we don’t guarantee that a Volvo willlast 11 years in America, we do know that over95'/< of all the Volvos registered here in the last11 years are still on the road.So if you buy a Volvo from us now, it'll still heworth owning three years from now when you getit paid for. You’ll l»e able to stop making car pay¬ments and start making payriifnts to yourself. Andinstead of paying interest to the hank, you’ll heable to have the hank pay interest to you.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1-3800 SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 8:00 p.mat the University of Chicago’sMANDEL HALL57th and UniversityTickets $2.50 (students $1.50)available atCHICAGO MAROONbusiness office, 1212 E. 59th St.Mandel Hall,or at the doorThe CHICAGO MAROON"THE TIBETAN BOOK OFTHE DEAD”A multi —media ballet directed byKim On Wong with music by Joseph JarmanpresentsEDITORIALPolitical SuppressionThe administration and the disciplinary committees of the University ofChicago have finally proven that they are deliberately engaged, not in reasonablepunishment for disruptive action, but in political suppression. Even the pretenseshave been all but dropped, to the point where any informed person can perceivethe truth of political suppression from public facts.The important facts are:• Last week the committee of the council ruled that all persons summonedfor activities at the president’s house and the Quad Club who did not appear fordisciplinary hearings would be expelled. They would not simply be indefinitelysuspended until such time as they chose to appear for hearings — perhaps afterdisciplinary proceedings had been reworked into some semblance of fairness. No.They would get the toughest penalty the University could muster — far worsethan most civil courts would apply even to persons proven guilty of the relativelymild (if not particularly politically pertinent) actions of that Monday night. Theywould be excluded from their community; their academic careers would beeffectively finished; men would be subject to the draft. We discern no attempthere at due process and fairness; we discern a raw power play, a deliberatemaneuver to eliminate “undesirables” from the University for their politicalviews. O’Connell has expelled nine students on this basis.• On Monday the Oaks committee considered the cases of ten persons whohad been told their cases would be tried on available evidence in their absenceif they had not appeared for hearings by Monday. The Oaks committee clearlydid not, however, try those cases on the evidence, since their evidence with rareexceptions includes only the first two days of the sit-in-for which the rough aver¬age of penalties is a two quarter suspension with the second quarter suspended.Instead, the Oaks committee expelled eight of these students—again, instead ofjust leaving them with indefinite suspensions. The committee by that actiondropped all pretense of due process and fairness and opted for blatant suppressionof political views it opposes."We discern no attempt atdue process and fairness; wediscern a raw power play, adeliberate maneuver to elim¬inate 'undesirables' from theUniversity for their politicalviews"• The decision by the committee of the council and O’Connell to get newstudent observers from FSACCSL instead of student government is a bit irrele¬vant, sine student observers have been unable to change to the course of the Oakscommittee and are apparently now included only as a sop to faculty and studentopinion. Nonetheless the action was again a violation of all due process, on thebasis of political views held by the faculty; it was a sheer display of force theonly conceivable aim of which was, again, political suppression.For those who may still have missed the point, we add that apparentlythe University’s disciplinary actions have been by far the stiffest meted out byany prestigous American university for protest. This supposedly benevolent,rational institution has stooped to a degree of repression which, in sheer quantity,(20 expulsions to date, more to come) sets quite a new precedent in America.And those actions have followed a non-violent but politically motivated sit-in andhave been taken against students who merely refused — on excellent grounds —to recognize the legitimacy and fairness of disciplinary proceedings.We believe that no person who values freedom of expression and differenceof opinion in academic life can passively accept these actions of the University.Toleration now is to allow the University to stand as an institution which usespolitical suppression to enforce its view of itself. And that, by whatever nameyou call it, is a form of government intolerable to free men anywhere.We ask, therefore, that all students and faculty at the University who carefor the political quality of their lives stand up, whatever their views of thesit-in or the radicals, and call a halt.We recomrr.-.-iid that all disciplinary action be stopped immediately and alldecisions be rescinded, and that no further disciplining take place until a formfor it, acceptable to students and faculty, be found. Alternatively we couldaccept the establishment of an appeal board acceptable to students and facultywhich would review and make new disciplinary recommendations on all cases.We suggest that the remaning two weeks of this quarter and the first weekof spring quarter be devoted to the use of every reasonable means to bring aboutsuch changes.If by then disciplining has not been changed, we recommend a new sit-in —one we would hope would have the active support of thousands of students andhundreds of faculty members — aimed at forcing the changes without which thisUniversity cannot preserve its “mission” to itself and to society in any decentsense.Many will not feel the need for any changes or any actions. We, and theworld, like Germany in the 1930s, will always have people with us who valuetheir comfort and their incomes above freedom at least until lack of freedomimpinges on them.But whatever your views, whether you face disciplinary action or not,whether you are faculty or student, your freedom is threatened here and now. THE SIT-IN AND ITS AIBy Jerry LemkeIn the past few weeks this communityhas been put to the test, and how manytimes it has failed all of us know only toowell. But in what did we fail, and why?Certainly there is some major undertakingthat these events all but compel us to if weare to survive as a community at all.In the beginning we failed to recognizethat two generations may define very dif¬ferently the needs which education mustmeet and the role those who benefit fromit must play on the larger world outsidethe university. We have failed to live byour ideal of a community of scholars bydividing ourselves students from faculty.Are we surprised then that in the class¬room we are strangers when the classroomis the only place we meet? There are facul¬ty members who eat lunch with students, _who even invite them to their homes andvisit them in turn — but they are the ex¬ception, and it is the rule which has insur¬ed maximal misunderstanding at everystage of the present confrontations.Why have we failed in this? Candidly, wemust admit that it is partly because weare afraid of each other. The prospect ofconfronting one another outside the safeworld of conventions and expectations thatprevails in the classroom makes us bothuneasy. The differences that divide thegenerations are profoundly disturbing toboth; they touch the foundations of ourlives and we fear them, and each other.We must look for the courage to live byour conviction that it is better to know thetruth and hurt than not to know at all.When the confrontation itself came therewere failures on both sides. The studentsfelt they had no recourse but to force thefaculty to listen to them. Coercion has noplace in a community whose members actin good faith, but the students had nothingto say to those few who told them that theuniversity did not act in good faith. So thefirst failure prepared the way for the next.The students failed to understand the realnature of the faculty, their good will andweaknesses both. If the students erred injudgment, they erred in ignorance, butthey erred nonetheless. An error of judg¬ment, however, is not moral depravity,and to judge the students as if they oughtto subscribe to moral standards which arenot in fact theirs is to ignore the importantfact that within their own, defensible sys¬tem of values their original action wasprincipled and sincere.On the faculty side there were errors noI 111 ( Ilk \(i() MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: Jofcn RachtNews Editor: Carolina HackPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothNews Board:Undergraduates: Wendy GlocknerGraduate Students: Rob CooleyHistorian: Mitch BobkinDisciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussThe Community: Bruce NortonNews Staff: Jim Hafemeyor, Sylvia Piechocka,Con Hitchcock, Stove Cook, Paula Szewiyk,Gerard Laval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, F ref da Murray, Marv Bittner, DabbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest, Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert.Senior Editor: Jeff KutaContributing Editors: Michael fnrkin, JessicaSiegel, Barabara Hurst, Robert Hardmar,.Production Chief: Mitch Kahn. Assistant: Rob¬ert Swift. (Zowie.)Sunshine Girl: Jeanne Wiklersit?—N . Pounded 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, lit. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3269. 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. less serious for the future of this commu- inity. Except for the success of the voicethat restrained those who would have aif Jswered coercion with coercion and esca- Jlated us into violence, the faculty has at |every turn fulfilled the expectations of the {most radical students and seemed to sup*- -Iport by its actions their interpretations. |The faculty became entrapped in appear- *ances, fearing to appear to yield whetherin fact an action was yielding or not. Thub- -they not only seemed but were intransigentand at times unwilling to talk. Theyallowed the word negotiations to acquirethe power to prevent tfie exchangeideas, because they feared appearances. 'They have allowed the idea of the Missionof the university to be used to silence care¬ful thought and argument and have cour-.ted a zeal which may well poison us witfi *fanaticism in the struggles of other yearsWho dares believe that there is a Missionwhich is the exclusive province of the fac¬ulty and from whose defense students mu.<fr ■+be excluded when it is threatened? Whowill defend your empty fortress a gener¬ation hence?"The differences that dividethe generations are profound¬ly disturbing to both/'The word Expulsion, like Ex-communication, is easily added to the vo¬cabulary of unreason. Now we are facedwith the results. The council of the senate *did not admit to itself that reacting emotio¬nally to a charged situation, when therewas no need for emergency measures,their best course was to trust in the proc£*- -dures of a standing University disciplinarycommittee. In the normal course of eventsstudents who were not already suspendedwould have been summoned, and, failing t£...rappear, have been indefinitely suspendedNow it must stand on our record as a com¬munity that students were expelled fromthe University of Chicago — on whatgrounds? That they appeared in two photo¬graphs taken at the scenes of a “dis¬ruptive” demonstration, at the Quad Club,or were seen there, and have refused toappear before a disciplinary committee^Circumstantial evidence has no weighthere without a hearing. Refusing to appearis a suspendable, not an exnellable offenseby our procedures. Will it be this faculty-<who refuse to admit that a man may de¬cline in conscience to appear before a com¬mittee? Is there anyone here who will ad¬vance arguments that those who do not d^ ,fend themselves must be guilty? We haveheard this elsewhere and at other timesand been quick to condemn. It may well bethat some students deserve expulsion, or itmay well not. In either case the council orthe senate earns my censure for abrogat¬ing the law and procedures of this commu¬nity and a standing disciplinary committeewithout sufficient cause. cMy generation can afford many moremistakes yet than can our elders. To myfriends and senior colleagues I offer thesame challenge: to define together the ur»~~derlying needs to which our educationmust make better response, and to ac¬knowledge that it is not the training of pro¬fessionals, or faculty research by itself, o$- ♦even the transmission of culture which de¬fines the highest purposes of this in¬stitution, but rather that it is the full andknowledgeable participation of both stu^. ,dent and teacher in the common pursuit ofan understanding wherewith to solve theproblems we set ourselves that defines usas a university. .Between now and October we must beginto engineer the greatest experiment in edu¬cation that has ever been attempted in re¬sponse to the needs of a world in revolu-tion. Let no one imagine that anything les* ”will save what he values most from theturmoil that has only just begun. We mustlead, or bt lost. I am preparing to take thefirst step; I hope I will not be alone. mJay Lemke is a graduate student inphysics.8/The Chicago Maroon/March 7, 1969»FTERMATH: COMMENTS FROM READERSDavid TravisTHE BEGINNING: Spectators mass outside ad building on day oneof the sit-in.^By David FinkelA group of students summoned by theOaks committee for participation in the sit-in has been expelled after refusng to ap¬pear individually before that committee.*The reasons for our refusal to appear hadbeen partly explained in a letter submittedto the Oaks committee on Monday, March3; an excerpt from this letter reads:“Chairman Oakes:“The undersigned are students sum¬moned for participation in the sit-in.We claimed what should be regarded*4. as an elementary democratic right —the right to present a collective politi¬cal defense for a collective political ac¬tion. Your denial of our request for a* collective hearing constitutes a denialof our right to defend ourselves.“Under these circumstances we seeno reason to appear before you at all.Your decision that we have no politicalrights whatever flows directly from thepurpose and mission of your com¬mittee; an appearance before thatcommittee at this point would only-» create the illusion of a legitimate pro¬ceeding where there is of course none.Accordingly we shall not make ap¬pointments for individual hearings atthis or any future time.”On Wednesday, students who refused toappear individually before the Oaks com¬mittee (we are speaking here of studentssummoned only before that committee, ie"•not also summoned by the Shireman com¬mittee, which is expelling a large numberof students in its own right) received ex¬pulsion notices from the dean of students:* “This is to inform you that, afteryour repeated failures to appear beforeUniversity disciplinary committee inresponse to documented charges of. » having participated in disruptive acts,you are expelled from the University ofChicago, effective immediately Thisaction is taken in compliance with the^ recommendation of the council of theUniversity senate.”We find, then, that non-appearance be¬fore the Oaks committee, ie refusal to as¬sist that committee in its mission of de-"9stroying political movement on thiscampus, constitutes grounds for expulsion.I leave it as an exercise for the interestedreader to compare the monstrosity of the•“crime” of ignoring the Oaks committeewith that of the “crime” of affronting thearrogant egotism of the patrons of theQuad Club; note in any case that severaldozen students are being expelled for oneor the other.The final sentance of the expulsion letterposes another interesting question; were.^those who chose not to appear before the*Oaks committee expelled on the recommen¬dation of that committee, or on the basisof a secret recommendation of the facultycouncil? Recall that the council publicly' •recommended expulsions for students in theQuad Club demonstration — presumablyto ensure that those students would receivea fair and impartial hearing — but made•no public statement on Oaks committeecases, so that the intervention (if any) bythe council was indeed secret. My purpose here is not to inspire freshoutcries for “due process” in the “dis¬ciplinary” hearings. I have indeed pointedout that these new expulsions, along withthose previously carried out and thoseslated for the immediate future, mark anew low in the administration’s politicaltactics; but this is not the main point.What deserves the most serious notice isthat the expulsion of at least 25 studentsand the suspension of scores more, accom¬panied by total abrogation of all student-rights, is unfolding at a time when the realsocial-political challenge to this Universityhas barely begun to scratch the surface.The refusal of masses of students to qui¬etly accept the right of tenured sociologiststo exercise their social biases against ayoung radical who is one of our own did infact mark a significant deepening of politi¬cal consciousness and action; but we haveyet to more than touch a far broader rangeof issues which go to the heart of the Uni¬versity’s institutional purpose and privi¬lege.Some of these issues — urban removal,employment practices oppressive of wom¬en, black people, and indeed of most Uni¬versity employees — pose the potential in¬volvement of social constituencies broaderthan the student body in struggles againstthis institution. Here we have potentially avery, very grave danger to the pre¬rogatives of the ruling elites in the Univer¬sity, a danger often better understood bythe people who defend those prerogativesthan by us who attack them.The fundamental lesson is that a deep¬ening political movement, ie buildingaround broader, more radical demandsand involving action from below by widen¬ing social layers, must expect increasinglysevere attempts at repression within par¬ticular institutions as well as in societygenerally.In this specific University, it is becomingevident that the level- of violence (“dis¬cipline”) applied against this movementwill run far ahead of the actual threatposed by the movement at a given time;that is to say, our experience shows thatthe University of Chicago is deeply back¬ward-looking and reactionary — a con¬clusion opposite to most previous opinionon the subject.In this connection I must reiterate thecentral principle of our letter to the Oakscommittee: we were denied on proceduralgrounds our right even to defend ourselvesin any real way, and chose to dramatizethis denial by refusing to attend any dis¬ciplinary proceedings at all. For this wehave been expelled.From this everyone must draw his ownconclusions; for my part I believe the Uni¬versity is carrying out a full-scale repres¬sion now for the long-range goal of crush¬ing political movement for the foreseeablefuture. I believe they will fail; but this willdepend crucially on our own ability toanalyze their strategy and develop our ownfrom at least as long-range a perspectiveas that our our enemies.David Finkel, ’69, has been expelled. By Susan Braude and Joyce Fingeroth“In no bourgeois republic (ie, wherethere is private ownership of the land, fac¬tories, works, shares, etc.), be it even themost democratic republic, nowhere in theworld, have women gained a position ofcomplete equality. And this, notwithstand¬ing the fact that more than one and aquarter centuries have elapsed since theGreat French Revolution. In words bour¬geois equality promises equality and liber¬ty. In fact not a single bourgeois republic,not even the most advanced one, has giventhe feminine half of the human race eitherfull legal equality with men or freedomfrom the guardianship and oppression ofmen .” (Lenin in Pravda, Nov. 8, 1919).Friday, the women of the University ofChicago, in solidarity with their sisters allover the world, will hold a rally in celebra¬tion of International Women’s Day — aday of dedication to women in struggleagainst their own oppression.This date has been significant to themovement since 1908 when a demonstra¬tion of working-class, socialist women, de¬manding the right to vote, and an end tosweatshops and to child labor, took placein New York City. Two years later, at ameeting of the International Socialist Con¬gress, Clara Zetkin, German Socialist lead¬er and later a founder of the CommunistParty of Germany, moved that March 8 beset aside as a holiday of the world proleta¬riat, in honor of women’s struggles. Sincethen, this date has been regularly observedas a revolutionary holiday by internationalproletariat movements.People tend to forget that the February1917 revolution in Russia grew out of aseries of factory demonstrations called bythe Bolsheviks in celebration of Inter¬national Women’s Day.In 1969, China and other revolutionarycountries will continue the militant tradi¬tion of rousing a whole people to the taskof women’s liberation.Unfortunately, in the Soviet Union today,this holiday has been transformed into a“socialist” Mother’s Day where men buycandy and flowers for their women, andbureaucrats’ wives invite diplomats’ wivesto tea."There is systematicdiscrimination againstevery woman of everyclass at this University."As in other countries where principlessuch as “liberty and justice for all” arevacuous rhetoric, little more than lip ser¬vice is paid to the women’s fight to endtheir real oppression.As Marx and Engels wrote in 1845, “Thedegree of emancipation of women could beused as a standard by which to measuregeneral emancipation.”Recent actions at UC have clearly at¬tested to the veracity of the above state¬ment. Preceding and during the sit-in, theproblem of the discrimination againstwomen at this University was raised timeand time again by radical women students.However, the University, material, in¬tellectual, and cultural perpetrator of theidology of male supremacy, refused to con¬front the issue. The response of the Graycommittee to WRAP’S (Women’s RadicalAction FToject) challenge that MarleneDixon was discriminated against becauseshe was a woman, was to be expected.Their answer, that, although women’s op¬pression is endemic to the society, therewas no evidence of it in her particularcase, there was no deviation from “normalprocedures”, is self contradictory.There is systematic discriminationagainst every woman of every class at thisUniversity—employees, students, and fac¬ulty. Women employees are hired to do “wom¬en’s work” as secretaries, nurses’ aides,file clerks and maids—the natural out¬growth of their role as slaves in the home.They are paid less due to the implicit as¬sumption that women’s salaries are merelysupplementary income, (while in effect,most women, married or not work fromeconomic necessity). Women are largelydenied access to most adminstrative andsupervisory positions. Even when men andwomen perform identical tasks, a systemof discriminatory job titles enables womento be paid less.In addition, the University has dis¬couraged any attempts on the part of wom¬en to organize a union. In Billings, our sis¬ters have constantly met with heavy andovert repression.Women faculty constitute only three per¬cent of the total faculty of the University.Although the University argues that itdoesn’t discriminate, that there are simplyno qualified women to teach here, their de¬fense is refuted by the fact that 20 percentof our graduate students with fellowshipsare women. Where do they go? They areseldom hired in high-pay, high-prestige po¬sitions. Woman faculty suffer under an op¬pressive nepotism rule and from more cov¬ert prejudices relative to their researchand scholarly activities.And again, we as middle-class unmar¬ried students who have not yet faced opendiscrimination in the job market feel anoppression more subtle yet just as psy¬chologically debilitating. We suffer malechauvinism in the classroom, in the cur¬riculum, in the establishment of dormrules, and yes, even in our own personalrelationships. We are relentlessly remindedor our ultimate social role as wife, mother,and sex object for our man.Women at the University have begun torealize that in order to end this economicand psychological exploitation, in order togain their rights, they must get togetherand fight for them. Last year women inWRAP conceived of the idea of a free daycare center for children of employees, fac¬ulty, and students financed by the Univer¬sity but organized and run by those whosechildren use the facilities.The lack of such a day care center is animportant indication that the University ofChicago, like the rest of society, dis¬criminates against women. WRAP foundthat canvassing women employees and stu¬dents was exciting and productive. WRAPreceived new proposals from the hospitalemployees suggesting that the center beopen 24 hours, 7 days a week. Women wereeager to participate in the center’s plan¬ning, yet of late, they have been more re¬luctant. This, due to the University’s in¬creasing intimidation and repression as theidea that it is a woman’s RIGHT to such achildcare center spreads.The University in its suppression of or¬ganizing activities and in its institutionaloppression of women reflects the statusquo of society. There is no provision for aday care center by any of the major in¬stitutions of the US, so women are forcedto pay a large portion of their income forbabysitters. Women are given the sole re¬sponsibility and psychological burden forwomen who must work. Instead, womenmust demand that this responsibility beequally shared by men and by the societyat large.WRAP believes that there should be free,comprehensive child care centers estab¬lished for children everywhere. Institutionstaking responsibility for the health of theiremployees must stop discriminationagainst women by ignoring their specificneeds.Women will have to fight hard for theirliberation.Come to WRAP’S rally celebrating Inter¬national Women’s Day Friday noon in Rey¬nolds Club South and join us in struggle.Misses Braude, ‘70, and Fingeroth, ’70,are members of the Women’s Radical Ac¬tion Project.March 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/9ivv. yi *Vi> *IWm Shiremaft L.I 1Continued from Page Threecrowded i.ito the hearing room and beganto lay a hex on the committee. the Quad Club, but that he should havebeen.The witches, mostly members of theWomen’s Radical Action Project, dressedin black, white-faced with black on theirlips, had come for the hearing of SallyStein, 71. After the room had quieted, thehearing was resumed. John Welch, 70, at his hearing Tuesday,asked that a group of about 20 pupils fromthe South Shore Co-Op School, 4625 SouthLake Park, who had been touring thecampus, be admitted to the hearing roomto “watch democracy in action.” Shiremanlet them in, and they stood at the back ofthe room watching carefully. One student in the audience held up asign reading, “Youth Be Bold,” the social¬ist slogan in 1940. saying that in a situation where the stu¬dent’s academic life was in question sched¬uling should be secondary.All the students heard by the committeehave defended themselves on politicalgrounds, admitting that they were at theQuad Club demonstration, but saying theiractions were justified. Charles H Shireman, associate professorin the school of social service adminis¬tration, who usually always has spoken forthe committee, said that Polon’s “rambl-ings” were irrelevant.Harold Sheridan, 70, called ten wit¬nesses as his defense Tuesday. Eight ofthem testfied thait they had been withSheridan—at the time of the QuadrangleClub demonstration—all at different places.One girl was asked what she was doingwith him. About 10 of the witches Wednesday testi¬fied that Sally Yagol, 70, was justified indemonstrating at the Quad Club because ofpolitical suppression at the University anddiscrimination against women. The committee, all-male, all-faculty (onestudent observer) meets in a bare, formerlaboratory, soon to be demolished to makeway for the new library. Olive drab cur¬tains cut off most natural light. A bulkysecurity man stands behind the committee.“Fucking,” she forthrightly answered.Steve Rothkrug, expelled 70, a radicalleader, said that Sheridan hadn’t been at In her defense. Miss Yagol read excerptsfrom a campaign pamphlet written by eco¬nomics professor Mainard Krueger, amember of the disciplinary committee andNorman Thomas’s running mate on the so¬cialist ticket in 1940. In almost all the hearings the committeehas hurried witnesses along “because ofthe time limit.” On Tuesday at the hearingthe committee asked Andy Polon, '69, tostop his statement because of the time. Hiscounsel, law student Paul Berch, objected. Eventually Polon complied and cut hisstatement short. The committee, havingdenied seven procedural motions, then re¬fused to issue their rulings in written form.In all, the committee heard 14 students,three of them in private. One hearing isscheduled for Friday, and 11 next week.The third committee member (in addi¬tion to Shireman and Krueger) is Mark G.Inghram, chairman of the physics depart¬ment. The student observer is David F.Kohl, a student in the divinity school.PHONE 224-6500-01BOOK SALE CJOver 2000 Vols. ^JhomaS interiorsSpecialists in Home &Office FurnishingsCustom DraperiesSale Tables SALES MANAGER - Bill EdinburgPROFESSIONAL DRAPES - Ruth JohnsonHOME CONSULTANTS - Bill Thomas JackieMcCoyRe-Stocked Daily8612 South Cottage GroveLibraryDuplicates and Discardsto be sold by College Relations Directorc/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008Please send me a free Sheraton Student I.D. Card:Name:Address:.We’re holdingthe cards.eof (ChicagoSeven Days OnlyniversituL store Get one. Rooms are now up to 20% off with aSheraton Student I.D. How much depends onwhere and when you stay.And the Student I.D. card is free to begin with.Send in the coupon. It’s a good deal. And at agood place.Sheraton Hotels & Motor InnsSheraton Hotels and Motor Inns. A Worldwide Service of inooMarch 7 -14, 1969 8 A.M. - 5 P.M.(Sat. until 12:30) AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsBOOKS TWENTY FIVE CENTSAND UPO/The Chicago Maroon/March 7, 1969jv'rV* • D'WC v» i i- authorized BMC servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, Illinois 60615^ r* •foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.» « » «'x* * 1J <WV I is-State ActionThe Illinois state legislature this weekpassed two bills empowering state univer¬sity authorities to cancel the state scholar¬ships of rioting students and reducing thefirst offense for possession of marijuanafrom a felony to a misdemeanor.The Senate passed the bill to cancel statescholarships 37-10. The senators, during the90 minutes of debate, denounced “destruc¬tion. brutality and obscenity in the name ofstudents’ rights” and passed the bill to thehouse for consideration.The House vote on the marijuana billwas 138-16. Rep John Merlo (D-Chicago)reasoned his sponsorship of the bill by say¬ing that because of the present harsherpenalty, judges had been hesitant to findusers guilty.The bill, now awaiting Senate action,would reduce the first offense from a 2-to-10 year prison sentence to a maximum ofone year in prison and a $1500 fine.Sit-In Effects David TravisFROM THE MIDWAY: Harper library viewed from 59th street during Thursday'ssnow.The effect of the sit-in on Universityfund-raising efforts was “very severe,” ac¬cording to administrative sources.Michael Claffey, assistant vice-presidentfor development and public affairs, esti¬mated that approximately one full monthof fund-raising time was lost because ofthe sit-in. Exact figures of financial contri¬butions cannot be estimated, he said.The fund-raising committee, reshapingits future plans prior to the sit-in, wasunable to make plans while attention wasfocused on the sit-in. This loss of momen¬tum, in planning and actual fund-raisingwill be difficult to regain, Claffey said.It is difficult to make numerical esti¬mates of the possible loss of funds becauseit is impossible to make comparisons withlast year’s efforts, which were part of aspecific ten year campaign, according toClaffey.The efforts of the faculty in the area offund-raising are always of prime impor¬tance and it is impossible to estimate theimpact of the sit-in on these efforts, heSciir] •nancial affairs of any student said Giese-Claffey was uncertain of the effect the man. He also denied rumors that the bur-Registration forms, said Mrs Sullivan,must be picked up in the registrar’s office;as forms will not be mailed out. Graduatestudents will have less time to register.Transcript requests for graduate schools,scholarships, or jobs were filled late. Let¬ters were sent to the institutions explainingthe delay and asking postponement of deci¬sions on the applications. However, MrsSullivan said, only individual students willbe able to tell whether actual damage hasbeen done.Rumors DeniedA. Wayne Gieseman, University bursar,and George Playe, dean of undergraduatestudents, denied rumors Thursday that theUniversity was penalizing suspended andexpelled students beyond the academicpunishments.Gieseman denied that the bursar’s officewas not returning prorated tuition andhousing payments to the students.“We have no desire to meddle in the fi-sit-in may have on “big donors.”Claffey said that the years the Univer¬sity has built up a measure of financialsupport that is of critical importance to itsexistence. In view of the huge budget ofthe University, he continued, the sources ofthis support must be continually tappedand expanded. The sit-in’s effect on theflow of contributions can only be deter¬mined in terms of its effect on these ef¬forts and this is presently indeterminable,he said.Effects of the sit-in on activities in theregistrar’s office were not terribly serious,according to Maxine Sullivan, Universityregistrar.The exam shcedule came out Wednesdaysomewhat behind schedule. sar’s office was going to freeze deposit ac¬counts of these students.Gieseman emphasized that the bursar’soffice could not refund any money unless astudent has a dated change of registrationcard from the registrar’s office.Playe denied rumors that his office wasnotifying draft boards of the change instatus of expelled and suspended students.“We do not communicate with draftboards’s except at the specific request ofstudents,” said Playe.Playe did add that the parents of thesestudents have been notified in accordancewith the University rule of informing theparents of all students under 21 years ofage when their academic status changes. O bitFuneral services were held yesterday forHerman Finer, professor emeritus of politi¬cal science here.Finer died of a heart attack Tuesday, inMichael Reese Hospital.An authority in the field of comparativepolitics, Finer has written many articlesand books, including “Mussolini’s Italy,”“The Presidency Crisis and Regeneration”and “Dulles Over Suez”.Finer became a full professor here in1946.Born in Romania, he also has taught atHarvard and at the London School of Eco¬nomics.Finer is survived by his wife, daughter,and two brothers.Chess WinsThe Maroon national champion chessteam gained sole possession of first placein the Chicago Intercollegiate ChessLeague by demolishing Northwestern lastSaturday, 3-2. The NU Purple Pawns, un¬defeated in five starlj, were subdued byRichard Verber, Harry Ploss, and HaroldWinston. Soc EssaysStudents in the college are invited to be¬gin work on essays to be submitted for$800 in prizes awarded through the socialsciences collegiate division.Entries must be typed and submitted intriplicate by May 1 in Room 428 Gates-Blake Hall.Judges for the Goettler prizes will beProfessors John D. May, Kenneth Prewittand Donald M. Scott, together with JoshuaNelson, fourth year student in the College.Judges for the Bernhard Prizes will beProfessors Emile Karafiol, Richard Flacksand Terrence Turner together with stu¬dents Donald H. Abel, Anthony T. Grafton,and Jerry Lipsch.Curriculum ConferenceA conference on college curriculum isbeing planned for April 12-16.A college forum will open the conferenceFriday April 11, followed by workshops onSaturday dealing with common corecourses. Discussion will continue Sunday.Department meetings will be held Mon¬day to evaluate course requirements andpossible changes. The results from thesemeetings and workshops will be collectedand actual recommendations made at a di¬vision-wide meeting Tuesday.The conference, the first of its kind, isbeing planned by a subcommittee of col¬lege dean Wayne C. Booth’s advisory com¬mittee, according to Steven Cope, confer¬ence chairman. Cope says that conferenceis completely open. Anyone can suggesttopics and set up seminars. He asks inter¬ested people to call him at ext. 4206 or 955-3299.L/C on TVA high-powered, high-tempered televisiondebate (starring radical leader Steve Roth-krug, the lovely Atina Grossman, sociolo¬gist Elihu Gerson, liberal fascist TomBlau, and Maroon editor Roger Black) willbe broadcast on channel 11 Sunday, March16 at 6:30 (prime time).The show was taped the day the sit-inended and was directed and produced byWTTW’s Larry Long the man that engi¬neered the fireworks on the first PBL ayear ago.Sit-In HistoryFr'day, March 7"Placental Circulation in the Rhesus Monkey,,,an',, Elizabeth M. Ramsey, Carnegie Institution01 Washington. Dora DeL.ee Hall, 12:30.MEETING: Independent Action Coalition, Subject: ap¬peal board, open to general public. Kent 107, 2:30.SEMINAR; "The Hafex Problems", Robert Rehder, de¬partment of comparatible literature, University of Wis¬consin. Center Seminar Room, Kelly 413, 4 pm.SOUTH ASIA SEMINAR: "After Punjabi Suba: Politicalniarests and Trends in the Sikh Community", Kush-wan' Singh, Swarthmore College. Foster Lounge, 4:10.L^lCTURE: "Suppression of Established Leukemia inwan and Mouse by Inductors of Interferor", E Fred-ick Wheelock, Case Western Reserve University. Bil-lln9s Hospital, P-117, 5 pm.Chicago and Midwest Conference, Field House,o:30.C<^nJ^MP0RARY FILMS: "Cat Ballou", Cobb Hall, 7and 9.*DR^iiE WORKSHOP: Bulganian dance, Yves Moreau,ixan dance expert. Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm. AdmissionTR/twc.S^en,s $1- Brin9 a belt.. *ELOGUE: "Africa'', International House homeroom, 8:15.■ Ali Akbar Khan, one of India's foremost mu-. ViJ“n*' wi" perform on the sarod, Mandel Hall, 8:30.'ckets at the concert office. Saturday, March 8CONCERT: University symphony orchestra. Gene Nar-mour, conductor. Mandel Hall, 8:30.DANCE: Magic Sam and his Blues Band, Cloister Club,Ida Noyes Hall. Admission $1. 9 pm to 1 am.CANVASSING: Students for a political alternative. 10:30from Chapel House.Sunday, March 9FORUM: "Crisis on the American College Campus",Fine r -ts Building, 410 S Michigan, 10:45 am. Spon¬sored by the Ethical Humanist Society of Chicago. Allwelcome.SERVICE: "The Quest for Fulfillnoent'V Bovkefeller Me¬morial Chapel, 11 am.CONCERT: The University Chorus, Beniamin Hadley,director. Works by Haydn, Rossini, Poulenc, Palest¬rina, Lassus, Britten, and Dallapiccola. LexingtonHall, 3:30.Monday, March 10SEMINAR: "In answer to Antoun: on the modesty ofArab Women", Nadia Abu Zanra, University of Calga¬ry. Anthropology Library, SS 224, 3:30.LECTURE: '‘Hawks and Doves 1776", J H Plumb, Cam¬bridge. Quantrell, 8 pm. Continued from Page FiveThe actions of the administration toward the sit-ins have been understandable, cooland smart. (After all, Edward Levi is no Grayson Kirk. And you can be sure that Levihad quite a hand in the administration policy towards the demonstrations during hisyears as provost.) Considering that the demonstrations have become increasinglymilitant, it is understandable that the administration had developed a hard line policyagainst them.The major change in the administration’s policy has been the classification of the sit-ins as disruptive and the beginning of disciplinary procedures for the 1967 sit-in. Thispolicy was not, however, the idea of the administration; it was fostered by the faculty.The administration has always remained cool in every sit-in on campus. They havenever needed outside help to keep the demonstrations under control and Edward Levihas been rumored to have said that he would rather close down the University than callin the cops. At least his actions during the last seven years support this stand.Among the prime tactics of the administration has been to virtually ignore the sit-ins.In 1966, the only response to the takeover of the ad building was a statement by thenPresident Beadle. There was no attempt by the administration to block the entrance ofstudents into the building. This policy is practically the same one employed during therecent disturbances and has proven effective in both cases. Students got fed up and left.The administration has also refused to negotiate during most of the sit-ins, especiallyas they got more militant. In 1962 they talked with demonstrators. In 1966 they wouldn’ttalk with students before they left the buildings. In fact, at the end of the ’66 sit-in,demonstrators only left a few people at a literature desk in the lobby for the last fewdays, but the administration refused to reenter the building until all the demonstratorshad left. In 1969, no negotiations were held or are being held to anyone’s knowledge.The discipline, naturally enough, changed when the classification of “disruptive” sit-ins began. Prior to 1967, there bad been no discipline against any demonstrators. Sincethen, the discipline has become increasingly hand-line. In 1967 there were suspen¬sions and suspended suspensions. In 1969 there are suspensions and now even ex¬pulsions.With the increased militancy of both sides (if you call disciplinary procedures andlack of negotiations militant) a polarization has occurred. Neither side will talk. Allthey will do is argue, throw accusations at the other side and become frustrated.Calling for more “meaningful dialogue and rational discourse” is not a particularlypopular thing to do on this campus at this time, but if the trend toward militant actionis ever to stop, and if some kind of peace is ever going to be established, some realtalking seems to be the only solution. Let’s just hope that the polarization hasn’t goneso far that discussion will be impossible.March 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11Tully, Singer, Hubbard Seek ElectionContinued from Page Sevenof the possibilities of self-determinationand change.UC-based groups, independently and incooperation with groups on a number of other campuses, will be working for inde¬pendent candidates in three wards: BillSinger in the 44th, John Tully in the 14th,and Fred Hubbard in the 2nd. All threepresently stand good chances of success..LETTERS TO THE EDITORSChild CenterThe interest in child day-care expressedin demands on the University appears tome very appropriate. Just a rock’s throwaway from Pierce Tower is an agency, theChicago Child Care Society, built up overthe past thirty years by a faculty wife.Two years ago 30 percent of the childrenleft for day care were children of studentsor University employees who were part-time students. I would have supposed thosewho are interested in providing child-careservices would have spoken with thepeople at the Child Care Society either tofind out for whom their facilities are avail¬able or how one goes about establishingneeded facilities. I even placed a call to itsdirector, who informs me that she has nothad any inquiry from our students aboutchild-day-care.Roger WeissAssociate ProfessorSocial Sciences Collegiate DivisionTraditionIn the spirit of antiquarianism, and in anattempt to shed light on the “tradition” weall so piously revere, I would like to sharewith you some information gleaned fromRay Ginger’s fascinating book “Altgeld’sAmerica.” In a section on “Leisure-ClassReform”, speaking about movements forwomen’s liberation, Ginger says (p. 237):“There was a constant danger thatwomen would lose ground they had al¬ready gained. In 1889 the Chicago Theo¬logical Seminary became the first Con¬gregational Seminary in the country toadmit women on equal terms, but inthe same year the Chicago EducationCommission recommended that womenbe eliminated from teaching posts in the public schools, that women teachers bereplaced by men in the upper grades ofthe elementary schools and that men bepaid more than women for teaching inthese grades.“The chairman of the Commission wasPresident William Rainey Harper of theUniversity of Chicago, and three yearslater his own school acted upon his phi¬losophy. The trustees of the University,by a vote of 13 to 3. voted to segregateinstruction for men and women.”David Bensman, 70Brecht Again(Tuesday’s Maroon incorrectly identifiedthis letter to the editor as one addressedto the Shireman committee. The letter,however does constitute the signers’ res¬ponse to their summonses to appear be¬fore the committee.)Those Who Take The Meat From TheTableteach contentment.Those for whom the taxes are destineddemand sacrifice.Those whose bellies are full speak to thepoorof wonderful times to come.Those who lead the nation into the abysscall ruling too difficultfor ordinary men.—Bertolt BrechtJeffrey BlumRandy CowenJohn FoxMike GoldfieldM. B. GuttshallChristopher Z. HobsonDavid KlafterHowie MachtingerCandace ReckingerSalasinASSASSINATIONa special series of four lectures atThe University of ChicagobyDr. Lawrence Z. Freedman8:30 P.M. Law School AuditoriumMarch 10Personal and Social PathologyMarch 17Personal Violence and Political Violence$10 for the series, $3 each lectureSTUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFFFREEFor information call Ext. 3139COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 So. Yates 363-9842 °PWitzie i 3tower Sk“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS1308 EAST 53rd STREETMORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST. Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FThe Orientand Around The Worl1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-685612/The Chicago Maroon/March 7, 1969 As a young lawyer with an extensive ca¬reer as a liberal democrat, Bill Singer hasattracted the support of large parts of thecity’s liberal, democratic establishmentand of many students in both high schoolsand colleges. Singer worked in the sena¬torial campaign’s of Robert Kennedy in1964, Paul Douglas in 1966, and in the AbMikva congressional campaigns in 1966and 1968.In the ward, Singer seems to be especial¬ly interested in developing citizen controlover the local and city institutions whichadminister the schools, transportation andpublic recreation facilities, public works,sanitation services, and housing.The situation in the 14th ward is quitedifferent from that in the 44th. There aretwo independent candidates. One, Eliza¬beth George, recently became a resident ofthe 14th ward. Mrs George is not request¬ing student support.The other independent candidate, JohnTully, has the advantage of long term fa¬miliarity with the 14th ward; he has livedthere for many years and participated in avariety of its major institutions.Tully’s present operation of a real estatebusiness in the ward has given him a goodgrasp of the area’s housing problems.As alderman, Tully would like to initiateand push the exposure of real estate specu¬lators, to force reluctant insurance com¬ panies to support ghetto businesses, beginto level charges against savings and loanassociations refusing to serve ghetto areas,and establish loan companies specificallyto finance black property owners. This hebelieves would help improve and stabilizeboth black and white poor communities.Above all, however, Tully says he be¬lieves it is important to defeat the ma¬chine, which he feels very strategically en¬courages the downgrading of neighbor¬hoods and the expansion of black ghettoareas as lucrative fields for city-run UrbanRenewal and the establishment of econom¬ic and political control.Of all the aldermanic candidates, FredHubbard seems to have the greatestchance of success. Having barely lost in1967 to the machine candidate, he is knownin black and liberal circles as a well orga¬nized fighter who relates to the middleclass, integrated and hard core black-poorareas of the ward.The support of these aldermanic candi¬dates in the coming election is important,because many have a good chance of win¬ning or drawing significant political sup¬port away from machine candidates. Iftwo, three, or more of these men actuallywin, the growing foundations of anti-ma¬chine political power will have been sig¬nificantly strengthened.Margot Gray is a member of Studentsfor an Open Chicago.Chicago Sinai Congregationcordially invites you to hearRABBI MAX D. TICKTINDirector, B'nai B'rith Hillel, University of ChicagoandSeveral Students from the University of Chicagospeak onTHE GENERATION GAPThe second in a series of 1Three Sabbath Seminars intitledin the D. Schwartz Hall "CONFRONTATIONS 1969"Friday, March 14, 8:30 p.m.A question and answer periodand social hour will follow the lecture- no charge - 1720 East 54th StreetBe Practical!BuyUtility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, “ Levis,"etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd. St. HY 3-8282Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd. Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.Most complete photoand hobby store onthe South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3*9259Student-Discounts The Corpef BornA division of Cortiond CorpefWe have an enormous selection otnew and used wall-to-wall car¬petings, staircase runners, rem¬nants and area rugs (a large se¬lection of genuine and Americanorientals).We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 - 3.1228 W. Kinzie (at Racine)HU 4-1840 24*~n71CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY TH ECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREETpizza H • hSUMMER JOBSIN EUROPETHIS AUTHORITATIVE DIGEST COULD HELPYOU FIND THE SUMMER JOB IN EUROPE THATYOU WANT.WISE CATSKNOWyou savewhen you buyCOOK'STRAVELERSCHEQUESSTILL ONLY75c issuance charge ON $100Backed by the world’s largest travel organizationTHOS. COOK & SON166 N. Michigan Ave.CONTENTS INCLUDE* Job opportunities listed by country* Placement organizations for student jobsoverseas* International student camps* Voluntary work camps* Governmental regulations on summer jobsTME IS GROWING SHORT SO ACT NOWRush $2.00 Cash, Check or Money OrderTo:STUDENT OVERSEAS TRAVEL SERVICESBOX 7686PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA 19101Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FORUNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFI FTH-FIFTH & W00DLAWNTOYOTA - TRIUMPHSales - ServiceCOMPETITION MOTORSWas The Quarter That WasTues, Jan 7:Fri, Jan 10:Sun, Jan 12:Mon, Jan 27:Wed, Jan 29:Thurs, Jan 30:Sun, Feb 2:Mon, Feb 3:Tues, Feb 4:Fri, Feb 7:Sat, Feb 8:Wed, Feb 12:Thurs, Feb 13:Fri, Feb 14:Mon, Feb 17:Tues, Feb 18:Thurs, Feb 20:.-Mon, Feb 24:Tues, Feb 25:Thurs, Feb 27:Fri, Feb 28:Mon, Mar 3:SMEDLEY'S PUBA real fun place to greet old and meet new friendsMusic by Seeburgchili spaghettiInquire about private roomOpen for Lunch5239 So. Harper Harper Courtparking in city lot at rear Maroon article publicizes Dixon firing.Committee of 85 formed at ad building picket, petition circulated.Dean of social sciences D. Gale Johnson calls open meeting for Jan17 to discuss policies of faculty appointments.Sit-in in social sciences, Dean Johnson’s office.Levi rejects student demands; students vote for militant action.Later, students decide to take the ad building at noon Thursday.Disciplinary committee appointed by committee of the council.Four hundred students occupy ad building, demanding rehire ofMrs Dixon, equal student say in hiring-firing, compensation of em¬ployees for lost time and amnesty.Dean O’Connell announces 61 suspended until they appear beforedisciplinary committee.Discipline committee suspends hearing for one week. Three de¬mands added: “suppressed studies” division, 51 percent quota ofwomen faculty and students, opening University files. Three prin¬ciples added: end of destruction in Woodlawn, day care centeropened, admission of more third world, black and workers as stu¬dents.61 students notified of suspensions, several claim they never re¬ceived summonses. Administration refuses to negotiate.Twenty administrators enter ad building handing out summonses.Ten minutemen break into ad building, fight in lobby. Securitytightened.Gray report made public.Students in the building vote to leave Friday afternoon; 22 moresuspensions issued by O’Connell.Students leave building.50 suspended students request a public hearing to present a collec¬tive defense.Disciplinary committee rejects collective defense.200 students invade law school, block exit of Oaks committee.Ad building reopened. Students meet in Mandel to discuss collec¬tive defense, march on Abbott Hall and rally in front of Levi’shouse and Quad Club; 38 students identified for disciplinary action.Kalven report issued. Committee of the council and council of thefaculty senate recommend that people participating in Monday’sactions who have previously been suspended show cause why theyshould not be expelled.Studnts rally at ad building and march to a locked law school.Stink bombs set off in several campus buildings.Students again rally at ad building and march to Quad Club. Sec¬ond disciplinary committee appointed.Hearing of the second discipline committee disrupted; 11 expelled.Schlitz on TapFree PeanutsServing the Extra LargePitchers of Beersteakburgers 7729S.CottageGrove AvePhone:783-3716 BRITISHLEYLAIMOThatMarch 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/13(The Maroon Classified Ads)METAPHANTASMAGORICALNOVA EXPERIENCE SUNDAY MANDELRATES: 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, ill. 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.LOST AND FOUNDIdentify lost clock Admin 4417.Reward Offered — black, leathershaving kit with contact lenses, sha¬ver, etc. Lost on 57th between Kim-bark and Stony Island. Call 752-3162.Male puppy — very small — mostlyShepherd Sat P.M. near 60th and In-gleside. Valuable only to me. Re¬ward. 493-7164.THE SEMITIC CENSORSIt has caused me a rather consid¬erable amount of grief, though notsurprise, that a number of peopletook extreme exception to my pub¬lishing a letter to the editor in lastFriday's personals. The consensusseemed to be that I have an obliga¬tion not to print material which is inbad taste. Now, agreed that the let¬ter in question (from Ahbed) was inexecrable taste, is there any justifi¬cation for my having printed the let¬ter?This question is not relevant. No onehas to justify having printed any¬thing. The only justification neededis when something is censored. Ipersonally believe that nothingshould be censored under any cir¬cumstances. As soon as you censorsomething for good reason, you areleaving yourself open to suggestions(from within or without) to censor¬ing other things, for perhaps notsuch good reason. Either censor ev¬erything according to your taste, ornothing. I choose to do the latter,because of a personal commitmentto free thought, and because I liketo raise a little shit every now andthen. — KS.It seems as intelligent and aware apolitical person as Leon Despresagrees with my position. The follow¬ing is a letter from him: "Since youmay receive comments on the Ah¬bed "black is beautiful?" letter andmay want to continue some devel-o p m e n t of Ahbed's unpleasanttheme, you might find Louis Mar¬tin's column on black anti-semitismuseful. Yours, Leon M. Despres."Please observe that Mr. Despreshad not objection to the letter beingpublished, just to the content of theletter.For those of you who want to see arebuttal of Ahbed's theses (is it nec¬essary) the following are quotesfrom a letter to the editor fromCharlotte Podolner: "... Nothing ismore ignorant than to make sweep¬ing derogatory remarks against awhole people ... I do not condoneany slum landlord be he Jew — non-Jew or Black . . . Instead of peddl¬ing hate, why don't you work to¬wards establishing common bondswith all people of good will."I invite comments from all readers(you too Virginia).WANTED TO RENTCouple renting Hyde Pk apt. thrusummer, willing to transfer lease tous for fall worth $25. 684-7411.Room wanted, spring qtr„ privi¬leges desirable. Ken, 955-8387.Wanted NOW: 3 bedroom apt. withkitchen. Call 288-9530 (rm 435).FOR RENTBest of both apt. & dorms! Pvt,turn, inexpensive rms. Board, laun¬dry facilities, etc. Available imme¬diately 5555 Wood lawn, 955-0305.Apartment available April 1, 57th 8,Harper, 3 rooms, $125, call 493-8207.Eff. apt., turn., 34 & Blackstone,$95, April 1, 324-7776.J. Lipsch, L. Handelsmen of Stu.Govt, recommend unfurn. aprts, 2 8.3Vi rms. $75 up. Free gas 8. elec.Short-term lease. Clean. Quiet. Wil¬liams, 6043 Woodlawn.TAhSAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outJ^U^iastj63ix^MU4Hjj>£7 ROOMMATES WANTEDFern, rmmate wntd apt. nearcampus. 4625/month 8< util. Call493-6147.Fern, rmmte wanted for spr. qtr.53rd Cornell, Call 324-5405.Roomate wanted. Now. Male grad,stud, own bedr. in 6-roorh apt., 55th8. Dorch. Part. turn. 288-2115.Female roommate wanted HydePark blvd. and 55th. Call 667-8487.Fern, roommate wanted Univ.owned house 55th 8. Ellis. HY 3-3721.Roommate for corner double inWoodward soring quarter 1307 Wall¬ace, BU 8-6610.Roommate wanted for Hy Pk AptGred pref. 493-6399 after 5:30.3'/2 rm Greenwood Hall 363-8945.Third man for townhouse apt.; 1372E. 58th. $80 mo. 288-2411.Female own room clean spaciousSouth Shore apt. on 1C 324-4177.Fern. rmmt. wanted own huge roomspr. qtr. Linda 667-5809.5th roommt for house in SouthShore. 731-8135.PEOPLE WANTEDStudents, student wives, and house¬wives, wanted to read newspaperspart time, at home, for urban newsservice located in Hyde Park. Call955-3050, ask for Dave.Tutors heeded (paid or volunteer)Mon-Thurs, 3:30-6 to teach readingor math to children age 6-12 atChildren's Center, 46th i. Wood-lawn. Call Sue Duncan, Bu 8-6003 atnoon.Part-time at hospital in area TVattendant. No TV knowledge neces¬sary. Placing charges only. CallMr. Eastman 375-7544.AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATIONLADIES ... YOU ARE IMPOR¬TANT TO US IF YOU ARE AN EX¬PERIENCED SHORTHAND SECRE¬TARY OR A DICTAPHONE SECRE¬TARY WITH A BACKGROUND INDISSERTATION OR SIMILAR ACA¬DEMIC TYPING. WE HAVE SEV¬ERAL ATTRACTIVE OPENINGSFOR PEOPLE WITH THESESKILLS.WE OFFER EXCELLENT WORK¬ING FACILITIES AND HOURS,AND AN EXCEPTIONALLY FINEPROGRAM OF BENEFITS.FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 493-0533Ext. 250. American Bar Association,1155 E. 60th St., Chicago.MEETINGNew Democrats meet Wed. Mar. 12,7:30 P.M. 1508 E. 53 St.LAST DANCE OF QUARTERDance to MAGIC SAM and his mag¬nificent blues band tomorrow night,March 8, at Ida Noyes' CloisterClub, 1212 E. 59th. 9 P.M. to 1 A.M.Admission $1.PEOPLE FOR SALEWill exchange babysitting for room8, board spg. qtr. Sandy 684-7411.May I do your typing? 363-1104.AUTHENTIC CHINESE COOKING~Chinese cooking taught in lovelyChinese home. Tuition and materials$30. Limited enrollment 7 per class.324-8070.RIDES AND RIDERSRides wanted roundtrip colo: inter¬im, 374-1632.Ride wanted — anywhere southwestabout Mar. 15. Heading for Mexico,any ride in that direction welcome.Will drive and/or pay. 324-9358.eves.Rider needed to share expenses toColorado,, leaving Mar. 20. Call 363-3742 eve.Ride wanted to San Franciscospring break — Linda, 667-5809.CHARTER FLIGHTSeats are still available on June 21-Sept. 30 S.G. Charter Chicago-Lon-don-Paris rt. $265. $50 deposit withbalance due in one month. Rm. 306,Ida Noyes Hall. 1-5:30 P.M., ext.3598.FOR SALE Gibson solid-body elec, bass $125.Gibson 12-string acoustic guitar w.hard case $200. 752-2102 after 6 P.M.Rickenbaker 6 str. with case greataction $100 . 288-0987.Antique fur coats for sale.. Somereal beauts. James Schultz Cleaners,1363 E. 53rd St. 752-6933.Royal Typewriter w/case almostnew, $40; Zenith 21'' rem. controlTv, $50; 288-2411.Roll top desk, table, chairs, kitchenwork bench, etc. Many antique.Priced low. 643-6563.1960 Volvo 544. good tires, battery,and brakes. Radio. Marv Wigder,324-8930 or VI 2-0222.Clarinet $60 perf. cond. 285-0336.Ski boots, siz 8, 5 bkls. Orig. $100-now only $60. 363-8211.Groove with a '62 Corvair Monza.New muffler, engine good. Bodygood? Well, you can't have every¬thing. $200 or best offer. MU 4-6100X5177, 9-5.Lonely mynah bird needs a newowner to talk to him — love him.w/huge cage 324-4626.PERSONALSCorrection: That should have been— Up against the Victoria, Mother!— records from r/h at the StudentCo-op.Why does Mayor Daley hate NewDemocrats? Call 684-3619.Modern Dance Master Classes withthe artists performing at the HarperTheater Dance Festival. With AnnaSokolow, March 15, with NikolaisCompany, March 22, with Cunning¬ham Co., March 29. For information,come to Ida Noyes 201 or call Ex¬tension 3574. Sponsored by the Wom¬en's Division of Physical Education.Wanted: home for an affectionate,playful cat. FA 4-1355.JOHN PAUL, GEORGE, ANDRINGO plan to dance to the musicof MAGIC SAM's BAND Sat. nightat Ida Noyes, 9 to 1. How aboutyou? Only a buck.At least Zionist imperialists aren'tmale chauvinists! — Golda Meir,Premier, Israel.Kol Hakavod L'Sabine V'RochelleMeiKafe MaPitom.Why is there a Union Prayer Bookbehind the podium in Soc Sci 122??— Edward Levi's Gideon Angel.See Kim On Wong and his companyof dancers; hear the Joseph JarmanCompany; experience a super lightshow. Sunday night. THE TIBETANBOOK OF THE DEAD.John Lemmon is a nowhere manwith a Japanese girlfriend. They'reboth daytripping to the MAGIC SAMdance tomorrow night from 9 to 1.Sublimate your libido. Come folk¬dancing Ida Noyes Sun. at 7:30.A . A . C . M . needs food, money,clothes, books, love, peace.Join Paul Mac Cart Ney at the Mag¬ic Sam dance Sat. night. He'd ratherdo it at Ida Noyes than in the road."I will; how about you, Julia?"Ab Mikva, Adlai Stevenson, andPaul Simon support New Democrats— will you? Call 684-3619.This Sunday the Chicago Maroonpresents a phantasmagorical per¬formance of an original balletcreated and performed by Kim OnWong, with music by Joseph Jar¬man and a super light show.Contaflex SLR 35mm caera. Coupledlight meter, 6 lenses, 7 filters, flash8, case. $150, 667-0636. eves.Good used TVs reconditioned. $24.958, up. American Radio, 1300 E. 53rd,53 Kimbark Plaza.1961 Mercury, very clean, new tires,BU 8-9106 after 6. Double-breastedsport coatsHNAL CLEARANCEon all sweaters and jackets.Bring this ad in and getJockey turtlenecks for$1.75JOHN'SMENS WEAR1459 E. 53rd.EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVER YOGA. Exercise, quiet nerves,meditate. Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155.Look who's got a NEW LOOK! Ah¬mad's had remodeled and addedsome items to the menu.Isn't it about time to get seriousabout your music? Stereo com¬ponents at discounts. Free deliveryfor students at MUSICRAFT oncampus Bob Tabor 324-3005.NEXT WEEKEND — Premierscreening — BRING DOWN DARK¬NESS a film by TC Fox. Ring O'Starr begs you, ‘'Don't passme on your way to Ida Noyes Sat.night for the MAGIC SAM dance. Iheard he's got yer blues and it's mybirthday too. So dance, take a cha-cha-cha-chance.Quick, somebody revitalize me.For all your travel needs, MarcoPolo caters to the University Com¬munity. 326-4422.What is Balkanophitia?Coming end of March under the 1Cat 51st. The Israel Shop — Israeliimports, jewelry, pottery.LITERARY AND ARTISTIC WORK¬ING PEOPLE! The Chicago Liter¬ary Review (305 Ida Noyes) needsyour mental and physical labor. Sev¬eral opportunities for editorial posi¬tions available soon. The largestU.S. student publication needs com¬rades in the fight against illiteracyand non-verbal feed-forward. Comein now or call X3276, X3277, 752-5383,955-0378, or 955-7640.Wondrous kittens — solidly black orgolden-orengey. Call 288-2590 orllene X4756.It is irksome to find in such a"Great'' institution as this thatteachers with great undergraduateappeal and perhaps little graduate(perhaps) have some graduate ap¬peal and absolutely no under¬graduate appeal are retained. ..Come on now, spit it out. . .Arbitrary punishment? Find out thetruth — WE DARE NOT FORGET! Next Weekend — TC Fox — BRINGDOWN DARKNESS with Dan Heit,T a m a r a Horowitz, and JeromeMcGann. Also films from MIT andYALE.Yves is Balkanophiliac! See himI.N.H. 8:00 Tonight.WRITERS' WORKSHOP — PL2-8377. inable and outrageous disasters winhappen. Except, of course, \ro"your seeds point of view mOriginated in Los Angeles at Chrsitmas Time 1968 as a jointthe Paratheo-Anametamystikhood mThe fundamental perversion is thatof honoring Death above Life Thwinter is the testing of those quan.fied to live with the blessing 0f Life,tied to live with the blessing JLife; to reproduce with the funsperm-energy of life. The VernaEquinox of March 21st is the mosblessed moment for those attuned tothe living knowledge of soil and Sk!and seed - not the dead knowledgeof books and teachers unorowinndisintegrating, decaying. 9'Which famous, talented and diver¬sified editor of which well-knowncampus publication (is there morethan one?) mysteriously was castas the female lead in a play di¬rected by a young man with whomshe can be seen at all hours ofthe day (and of the night?)Beef Wellington is a dirty old man.Have you noticed that a certainyoung man around campus (whenyou can catch him on campus)who in his spare time creates "dis¬ruptive" demonstration by incitingthe student body with words insteadof actions, is beginning to look asif he stepped right out of thepages of Esquire? (or is it theGentleman's Quarterly?)TIBETAN BOOK OF THE DEADSunday.What is I AC?BELL BOTTOM JEANS and double-breasted sport coats. Wrangler bluejeans. Shipment just arrived. John'sMens Wear 1459 E. 53rd.While George Hair Is On's guitargently weeps, he'll be dancing toMAGIC SAM's great music Sat.night. Maybe it's crying cause itdoesn't have the buck to get in.Well, cry baby, cry — I'm heartless— the happy punster.DARKNESS — the quality of black,the shadow of the Grey City.Noobies?Escape from reality. See ALICE INWONDERLAND Sunday, 7:30 8,9:00, Cobb Hall, 75 cents.Why was Morris Janowitz deliveringIce Cream in a spaghetti colander toa resident in Woodward Court Sun¬day?? — a secret follower.WANTED: Liberal woman in needof funds in exchange for occasionalliaisons with discreet executive. BoxM, Maroon.Is Balkanophilia catching?SEXUAL FREEDOM LEAGUE, Inc.Chicago Area. For information writeSFL P.O. Box 9252 Chicago, Illinois60690.Renoir's RULES OF THE GAME,Saturday, 7:30 8. 9:30, Cobb, $1.DARKNESS — March 15 and 16. Looking for a good ruck? 5335 Kim¬bark, Fri., 9 P.M.Adult Activity Nite. Potluck at 7,talent show, exhibits and folk danc¬ing led by Hardy Freeman from 8-12P.M., Sat., Mar. 8. Bring food for 5and your talents. — hobbies toHPNC, 5480 Kenwood. Students 75cents.Prospective ruggers and rugger-hug-gers. Introductory and organiza¬tional meeting and party for RugbyClub, 5335 Kimbark, Fri. 9 P.M.THIS IS A CHAIN LETTER. Withinthe next fifty-five days you will re¬ceive thirty-five hundred pounds ofchains. In the meantime, plant yourseeds. If a lot of people who receivethis letter plant a few seeds and alot of people receive this letter thena lot of seeds will get planted.PLANYOURSEEDSPLANTYOURIn parks, on lots, public flower beds,at city hall.Best to soak in water for a few daysand plant them fingernail deep inbunches of about 5. Don't worryabout weather, they know when theweather is wrong and will wait fornature. Don't soak them if its win¬ter. Seeds are a very hearty lifeform and strongly desire to growand flourish. But some of them needpeople's help to get planted.PLANYOURSEEDSPLANTYOURMake a few copies of this letter andsend them to friends. Try to mail todifferent cities and states, even for¬eign countries.There is no truth to the legend thatif you throw away a chain letterthen all sorts of catastrophic abom- Marlene WHO???No stupid, not Dietrich.Ken, get your hands off Barbara.Barbara, get your hands off Ken.Sloth is a cardinal sin.May I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EfendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkUofC Tuesday Night Special20% reduction. The Efendiinvites students, faculty andstaff for memorable entrees($3.50-5.75) This ad entitlesbearer to 20% reduction ofdinner cost, includingcocktails and wines.1CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998H s what you need from a $10used 9 x 12 Rug, to a custor-carpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants 8r- Mill returnsfraction of the original cost.De oration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERY14/The Chicago Maroon/March 7, 1969 THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount1540 E. 55th ST. MI3-75I I You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until to¬morrow if you call ustoday.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411JANISJOPLINat Northwestern's McGrow Hall, 2705 Ashland, EvanstonFriday, March 7, 8:00 P.M. Tickets $3.50 available atMaroon Business Officeroom 304 Ida Noyes Hall or at the doorHandcrafted Ringsto dazzle and cherish( tune select fiom nttr new expanded collection of exeitine rintts fromAlri<>*, Asin anil Latin America. Ilaiiderafted in precious metals, wood,Ixaie anil ivory. Many new shapes, dimensions and patterns, as wellas classical favorites. Some huge and hold to show anil da/./.le. Manysmall and petite to ttroilp anil cherish. All are handcrafted. All some-',rv friers start: $1.25$ticK§ SlatesINTERNATIONAL arts and crafts center. JVuWry - - Hundinafi's - SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7600Convenient Shopping; Hours —Ask for Our Free CataloKtie if you smoK£ cigarettes you oujeIT TO yOURSELF TO TRy TIPflLETS.3 GREAT nEW TASTES FRORImURIEL CIGARS. ^CHERRYBURQunoyOR nPITURCIL >iWHAT CHICAGO RADIOSTATION HAS REASON TOBELIEVE IT HAS THEFASTEST GROWINCAUDIENCE IN TOWN, BUTCAN’T AFFORD THE COSTOF A SURVEY TO PROVEIT?-whole fm 88.3 .JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870. PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. S3rd MrV£*EPUTATI0NGREATESTVS0" ASSET149■tearsSPECTACULARFULLPRICE'68 IMPALA CUSTOM CPE - PREDRIVEN61 CHEV. IMPALAvdoor hardtop*1788FULL price W M IMPttir4 °00R harotdp*1288fULL PRICELISTEN TO THE YVONNE DANIEL S SHOW. STAR OF WSOM fVRADIO: 7.It P.M, 97.9 ON YOUR FM OtAl. MON 0 AY THRUSATURDAY.Free Credit Check' Phone Mi 3-3500 Low BMAC TermsFOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYVWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY IIAS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYPLUS 9'/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-17 ISMarch 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/15f>Vl 'f.'eiiVrM1**. fI'fltn ‘Mr. Doan:Dear Mr. Doan:Just once and for all—will business admitthat it does make mistakes? Over and overagain we see the major corporationsstamping out criticism as they cover upflaws. Somehow the "ethics" alwaysseem to get lost in the rhetoric.Several notable cases come to mind, themost recent being the much-publicizedaffair of the General Motors Goliathversus Ralph Nader. Here Big Businessexposed itself as being oversensitive toconstructive criticism—as well as callous inits ignominious attack on its critic.Surely, while we don't expect Big Businessto change its ways overnight, we canexpect a rational consideration—and not merely a cover-up job.Yet the Nader episode is not unique.One recalls a similar overreaction—andthis time by the chemical industry—toRachel Carson's expose on indiscriminateuses of insecticides. The Big Businessresponse to Jessica Mitfords eye-openingportrayal of the realities of the funeralbusiness was equally bitter—not so muchagainst her arguments in "The AmericanWay of Death" but against the authorherself. In none of these instances didbusiness admit its imperfections on itsown accord. Only public pressure—and thefear of continued negative publicity—wasable to draw out the truth about autohazards, bug sprays and casket costs.It's instances like these that prove businessis responsible for the myth that it seesonly the facts it wants to see. It'sinstances like these that reinforce theimage of business justifying any meansthat maximize the ends—the ends being -monetary profit. It's as if Mammonhimself had updated the businesscode of ethics.Twentieth Century Big Business appearsto be nothing more than a reincarnation ofthe Nineteenth Century stereotype, theRobber Barons. Jay Gould's stock-marketrigging has its 1961 counterpart in G.E.and Westinghouse price-fixing. We haveour Billie Sol Estes and our Bobby Bakers.Today's business covertly sanctions suchnoble practices as bribes, kickbacks,company callgirls and tacit collusion.The "ethics" of Big Business havecreated a business unto itself—industrialespionage. Here anything goes —fromduplicated office keys to parabolicmicrophones. And even packaging fraudsare becoming more and mdre blatantin today's age of the 10-ouncegiant economy size.Thus, when college youth are asked,"What's wrong with Big Business?", weanswer most simply, "What's right withBig Business?" Very little, it seems.Stan Chess /Journalism. Cornell Dear Mr. Chess:Big Business does not hold itself out as asacred cow whose actions or ethics arenot subject to scrutiny or valid criticism.But in making value judgments of the"rightness" or "wrongness" of business,I question whether isolated instances aredefinitive criteria.Critical judgments should be made inperspective with the phenomenal growthof our national economy since the end ofWorld War II; a period during which ourgross national product more than tripledfrom $208.5-billion to approximately$740-billion last year.This growth has resulted from a continuouseffort on the part of the business com¬munity to respond both to society'sdemands, and its needs. On the one hand,the constant demand for productimprovement leads to better design andgreater performance through advances intechnology. Similarly, society's needsprompt extensive research for thedevelopment of completely new products—which create the additional profit¬making opportunities essential for thenation’s economic growth—whilesatisfying a social purpose.The measles vaccine developed at Dow isan example. The benefits to society fromplanned inoculation programs multiplyin astounding geometric proportions. Notonly can the total incidence of measlesbe cut substantially, but also a far lessernumber will suffer the crippling mentaldefects which before destined many to alife of perpetual care in institutions.Human lives are being saved, their usefulpurposefulness unimpaired, while millionsof dollars are freed for reallocationto other uses.The focus on profit-making products toserve definable social needs reflects thetimes just as the community's moresalways affect standards of ethics. In thisless-than-perfect society in which we live,the ranks of business, and government,and education, and virtually every othersegment of the community, unfortunatelyharbor those who cheat and scheme togain their personal ends. It's probablyrather remarkable that our times have notproduced more Billie Sol Estes and BobbyBakers. But usually they are found out inshort order. Neither I, nor any otherresponsible businessman, condone theiractions. Certainly their conduct cannot beregarded as typifying business any morethan the activities of the S.D.S. on variouscampuses speak for the majority segmentof the student body. Equally, an inquiry into press-sensationalized episodes of bribery,collusion, kickbacks and callgirls probablywill reveal involvement of the same kindsof cheaters and schemers looking for afast dollar. No company that I knowcondones this conduct. It simply does notrepresent the ethics of business, any morethan does industrial espionage. Frankly, Ithink its significance has beenquite exaggerated.What it all adds up to is that mostbusiness enterprises, under the strictdiscipline of our competitive profit-makingsystem, constantly are providingimproved products and better service. Indoing so they mirror the community—ofwhich they are an integral part—both inthe advances made, and in their standardsof performance. In the course of this,mistakes, as distinguished from unethicalpractices, occur. I suppose that thosewho make them are no less reluctant toadmit their mistakes, or to sustain publiccriticism, than people in otherwalks of life.I am not acquainted with all the factssurrounding General Motors' issue withRalph Nader, but it is a matter of recordthat James Roche, then President of GM,made a public apology on this matterbefore the Senate's Investigating Com¬mittee.As regards Rachel Carson andinsecticides, I will say that my owncompany had done research on thetoxicology of insecticides long before theFood & Drug Administration voiced anyconcern in this subject. Research was notforced by Miss Carson's work. Thechemical control of agricultural pestscertainly has a direct bearing on the verycritical question of world food supply.Such control measures, coupled withapplied research by agronomists improvingcrop yields, constantly are increasingfood supplies to meet expandingpopulation needs.I feel, therefore, that while your questionas to "What's Right About BigBusiness" focuses on its conduct, ratherthan its accomplishments, real objectivityrequires that both be weighed in balance.On this broad scale, then, business ispace setting the times in accordance withthe community's needs and the groundrules of its environment.Cordially,z ^ —H. D. DoanPresident, The Dow Chemical CompanyWHO CARES ABOUT STUDENT OPINION?BUSINESSMEN DO.Three chief executive officers—The GoodyearTire & Rubber Company's Chairman. RussellDeYoung. The Dow Chemical Company'sPresident. H. D. Doan, and Motorola's Chairman.Robert W. Galvin—are responding to seriousquestions and viewpoints posed by studentsabout business and its role in our changingsociety and from their perspective as headsof major corporations are exchanging viewsthrough means of a campus /corporate DialogueProgram on specific issues raised by leadingstudent spokesmen. Here. Stan Chess, a Journalism senior atCornell, is exploring issues with Mr. Doan.With experience as a working reporter on theLong Island Press, and as Editor-in-Chief ofthe Cornell Daily Sun, Mr. Chess is pointingtoward a career as a newspaperman.In the course of the entire Dialogue Program.David M. Butler, in Electrical Engineeringat Michigan State, also will exchangeviewpoints with Mr. Doan; as will MarkBooks pan, a Chemistry major at Ohio State,and David G. Clark, Political Science MAcandidate at Stanford, with Mr. DeYoung; andsimilarly, Arthur M. Klebanoff, in Liberal Arts at6/The Chicago Maroon/March 7, 1969 Yale, and Arnold Shelby, Latin AmericanStudies at Tulane, with Mr. Galvin.These Dialogues will appear in this publication,and other, campus newspapers across thecountry, throughout this academic year.Campus comments are invited, and should beforwarded to Mr. DeYoung, Goodyear, Akron,Ohio; Mr. Doan, Dow Chemical, Midland,Michigan; or Mr. Galvin, Motorola, FranklinPark, Illinois, as appropriate.<7fe'universityOF CHICAGOJlrchivesT i iff I'm'! lyiWWVJYmvi^yr^TsTrr ii vswv- ?•?'? * r? r*^ *•*-* w t M W Mt*uttiUUM1Ut}THE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number 15 March 7, 1969Dallin Oaks AsThe Grand Inquisitor“It is unfortunate that this almost perfect production is marredby several minor flaws, not the least of which is Oaktfstereotyping. He himself is perfect as the archtype HUACmember, uttering an unending series of statements suchas ‘This is not a triaV and ‘we won’t hold anything yousay against you but. . . ? ”The trial is a play, adapted from the original Kafkanovel by Ed Levi, produced and directed by DallinOaks, presented by the University of Chicago facultyand students.IT IS NOT OFTEN that the University of Chicago ischosen for the premiere run of anything, let alone adrama as exciting and timely as this updated version ofKakfa’s great masterpiece, The Trial, now playing atAbbott 103. Under the direction of the until-now unknownDallin Oaks, the horror and terror that each and everyone of us might wake up to tomorrow has never been sobrilliantly dramatized before. My first reaction afterseeing Monday’s performance was to ask myself whetherwhat I had just seen was, in fact, a play. Or was it anightmare, or a brief psychotic illusion. It is unfortunatethat this almost perfect production is marred by severalminor flaws, not the least of which is Oaks’ stereo¬typing. He himself is perfect as the archtype HUACmember, uttering an unending series of statements suchas “This is not a trial” and “we won’t hold anything yousay against you but. . . Ordinarily this would be justfine, but it is difficult to believe that Ed Levi really hadin mind such an unimaginative arm of the system whenhe chose Mr Oaks to finally bring this long awaitedmasterpiece to the stage. Nor is it reasonable to assume,as Oaks seems to have done, that the rest of the char¬acters are minor when compared to himself. The othermembers of the committee, as well as the defendanthimself, utter hardly a word during the performance be¬fore being shut off by Oaks’ commanding “you are outof order!!”But let not these minor flaws deter you. It is enough tofeel once the chill that runs through your mind as yourealize that you yourself are the defendant to make a visit to this free-to-the-public performance well worth theprice. And Oaks deserves an Oscar for the ability tomake each of his commands fill the room and grip thehearts of all within. It is obvious that Oaks is an admir¬er of Julian Beck, whose Living Theater troupe seemedto set the stage for the present production. You will findyourself surrounded by numerous members of the cast,whose seeming bravery in being there make you feelbrave enough yourself to risk a few catcalls and somemild applause. But don’t be fooled by the fact that yourecognize the people around you, may even have had oneof them once as an instructor. They are watching everymove you make, simultaneously taking your name, rankand photograph, while your private thoughts are beingrecorded in their tape-recorder minds. Later (perhapstomorrow, perhaps next quarter, perhaps next year) youwill find yourself sitting in front of that very same room,and the catcalls will be aimed at you.But it is the brilliant changes in the original castingthat makes this version so memorable. In the first place,Levi has replaced the single victim with a revolvingcompany of quietly suffering Jews, whose attempts touphold their dignity while, at the same time, saving theirown necks, go well towards reconciling the original withtoday’s days of mass paranoia. And the shy court attend¬ants have been replaced by the committee of 500 plus’sfrontmen and women. Mouton coats and beards have re¬placed the webbed fingers of Kafka’s day, but the mes¬sage is still the same — you are guilty and have beenaccused, judged, — sentenced and executed without everpassing Go and collecting your $200. Walk, hobble or rideyour electric wheelchair over to Abbott 103 for the mosthorrifying show in town.Fairweather EastDavid TravisJane Fonda Lee MarvininCAT BALLOU(in Color )FRIDAY, MARCH 7, CORB HALL, 7 & 9 PM, SI, CEFClarkenjoy ourspecial studentrate7Rf a,a"f Y timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office# different double feature ■daily ■• open 7:30 a.m.— lateshow 3 a.m. ■a Sunday film guild ■a every wed. and fri. is ■ladies day-all gals 50clittle gal lery for gals ■only ■• dark parking-1 door ■south4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m. ■• write for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-2843] TONIGHTand SaturdayThe Electric Theatre Co. presents atTHE KINETIC PLAYGROUND4812 NORTH CLARKJOHN MAYALLRICHIE HAVENSDoors open 7:30—tickets at the doorNEXT WEEKJeff BeckSweetwaterVan MorrisonTickets: Marshall Field's, Ticket Central,Crawfords, at the dooror call 784-1700'Waft ^biiney iALICE INWONDERLANDSunday, March 9, Cobb Hall, 7:30 & 9:00, 75', Pierce Tower Cinema Held over 3rd. MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDNOMINEEBEST ACTORA bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CLIFF ROBERTSONCLAIRE BLOOM"CHARLY"* . _ • Student rale everyKI1 day BUT Saturdaywith I.D. CardDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicshave joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & oi1 change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island % 734-6393... La Sun Life est une des grandescompagnies d’assurance-vie du mondeet les dStenteurs de police en sont lesseuls propri6taires.Puis-je, en tant que repr6sentant local dela Sun Lite, vous visiter & un moment devotre choix?NOM ET ADRESSE DE L’AGENTRalph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays, Others by Appt.SUN LIFE DU CANADA CLANCY BROS. &TOMMY MAKEMMAIL ORDERSNOWSt. Patrick'sSAT., MAR. 15, •,» mi. • OPERA HOUSEOpera House box office opens Mar. 10. Tickets also: 212 N.Michigan, A all Ward's, Field's A Crawford staresTICKETS: $4.00, 5.S0, 5.00, 4.50. 3.00Mail Orders to Opera Hoasa, 20 N. Wacker Dr., Chicago,lactose stamped self-addressed envelope with cheek. STARTS FRIDAY, MARCH 7TH-]NEIGHBORHOOD & DRIVE-IN THEATERSPaxton Quigleywent to collegeto learn about Love.He learned and learnedand learned -Too muchlearning isn'tgood fora youngman.AmCCCan InIeRnaTiouu. W^Vette MMieUx56lRi9oPWERJoNeSjud?Pace ■ Maggie Tu^eTt- nan Martin■ Parsons under 14 not adm.fiad /77Q*Q\uniats etcompenwd by parent or atfub |uarOanWlDC SCREEN • STEREOPHONIC SOUNO • METROCOLORSeats also available at Ticket Central. 212 NorthMichigan Ave and all Montgomery ward, Marshallr.eid & Company and Crawford Department Stores170 N. Dearborn 782-8230DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping CenterISIO E. 55th St.DO 3-76442/The Grey City Journal/March 7,1969 First Screening - Shot in Hyde Park!BRING DOWN DARKNESSa film by T.C. FoxFri. & Sat. March 15 & 16, 7:30/9:30a three roads film presentationi < », t i t i >Interview With Famous Directors—IIOr T.C. Fox Meets The Culture VultureTHIS IS THE SECOND IN OUR SERIES of interviewswith famous directors, the first being the one with JulianBeck and Judith Malina (or as some consider them, in¬famous directors). The vulture was going to wing its wayover to London to interview Alfred Hitchcock but thewinds were in the wrong direction so he had to stickaround Hyde Park. T. C. Fox’s new film, Bring DownDarkness, is premiering March 15 and 16 in Cobb for aformal (jeans are the thing) gala.—The Culture VultureDid you take the name T.C. Fox before or after youbecame interested in films? *I’ve had the same name since I began my premiereengagement at Brooklyn Hospital. The first movie I eversaw was Dumbo though I must say I didn’t become pro¬fessionally interested in the film until I was about tenand learned to thread a projector. I made one 8 mm filmin high school so except for The White Devil film this ismy maiden venture.Can you tell us something about your newest film, BringDown Darkness —the exotic locations, the superstars,and how much production cost?The interior scenes were not filmed in Biograph Studiosor Hollywood but rather in an apartment on 51st streetand Kimbark. The other scenes were filmed in theC-Shop, Campus Foods, Reynolds Club Theater, the Ma¬roon Office. Woodward Court, the Bandersnatch, Reyn¬olds Club Poolroom — it’s a real travelogue. The cast(whom I assembled from all over the world) includesDan Heit and Tamara Horowitz as the leads, JerryMcGann as a narc-cum-dealer, Timothy Naylor as theMaroon Editor I Ed. — What is that — a species?] andSusan Kimmelman and Robert Eiserman as a marriedcouple who drug our hero. They all live ambiguously everafter. By the way, a la Hitchcock — I make a tinyappearance. The cost of this lavish costume epic was$800.What are you trying to say in the film?I thought I was making a film about kids in Hyde Parkand terror. It ended up I was making a film aboutpeople, objects and immediate environment. And I likethis much better. I did nothing else during the film ex¬cept read Raymond Chandler and listen to Oliver Nelson.I’m sure that had some effect. T. C. Fox filming his new movie Bring Down DarknessWhat do you think of film as a media of communicationas against the written word or the theater? (That’s aquestion straight off some television interview show).I write reviews only as a way to keep my hand in whilenot filming.Like sublimating your sexual impulses?You might say that. As far as the theater goes — I neverwill recover from seeing Mary Martin as Peter Panwhen I was six.T.C., here's a question Vm sure our readership hasmeant to ask you for a long time — how do you manageTheater David Travisto have seen so many films? Sometimes we think thatyou've even seen the home movies Don Siegel's fathertook of him.Well I try to see everything I canmovies a week. I see about eightAt that rate any time between movies is like the inter¬mission and you pay to get out of the theater.TC: Yes, pop corn for breakfast, lunch and dinner doesget to be pretty boring.Thank you, TC — I’ll be there at the premiere with mybest bedraggled feathers.Yeats, Cuchulain and RockefellerOF ALL THE ARTS, the theater may be least able toaccomodate the new. We cannot turn back the page orstudy a moment in the spectacle. Because of its tempor¬al existence, the theater can but remind us of what weknow.Perhaps this is one of the reasons why the old story,the myth of legend, the historical event commands theplaywrights’ attention. A famil'ar plot frees the audiencereceive complexities of action, subtleties of theme. ItI frees the playwright too from laborious exposition, italigns his play with the richness of culture, it invokes awealth of ready associations and sympathies. This veryfreedom may, however, mar the play for an alien cul-W.B. Yeats designed the three plays being presented inRockefeller Chapel by Cain’s Company for an audiencefamiliar with the Cuchulain legend. That audience couldappreciate the delicacy of his treatment, the implicationsof decision which are but scantly explained. We have togrope for those moments, and our awkwardness causesus to miss much of the plays’ power.These plays, like much of Yeats’ work, deal with theconflicts of change and form, of time and immortality, ofan unchanging perfect beauty which is out of nature andthe force of our desire for life. Virgil Burnetts’ produc-uon emphasizes the spectacle of Yeat’s plays in a subtleand thoroughly decorous manner. A large sculpted table»n the center of the playing area bears the emblemmatice|met, sword and fire of Cuchulain’s fate. Beyond it. onlya large throne-chair serves for set. We see the battle ofuchulain and the Young Man silhouetted in slow motionan a screen. The costumes are appropriately colorful anderoic. Rockfeller Chapel provides an atmosphere ofnjgh seriousness.Yet for all this visual joy, we are left with thatt,n^orP,lous sense only of “atmosphere.” The grandeur of,,e chapel cannot give substance to the lofty emotions ofe legend. Indeed its performance in the chapel sug¬gests its inadequacy both in form and in content to a; * i" ■■•fif.-M-P'Tmptn»in i i). I conteniporary audience. It needs an “atmosphere” it didnot need in Yeat’s original drawing room productions.Yeats discovered in the Noh plays of Japan a ritual¬istic form, a lyric starkness which suited his tempera¬ment. He borrowed from their form for his dance playsof the Cuchulain legend. As the Noh plays derive theirpower from their use of the conventions of an ancientculture, Yeats hoped by his productions to ignite an Irishculture renaissance at the beginning of this century.In his zeal, Yeats overlooked one element crucial tothe effectiveness of his plays, a common body of believ¬ers for whom the ritual is true. For an American au¬dience of our time the rift even greater. We do not knoweither the subject or the form. The ritual does not workfor us, because ritual cannot convert.Corollary to a sense of the substitution of atmospherefor ritual or cultural efficacy was the feeling I had atpoints in the evening of an almost embarassed hastewith the “heroic” actions. In the first of the plays, OnBaile’s Strand, Cuchulain’s isolation and his sense thathe alone of all men has not changed with time finallypersuade him to take the oath to King Conchubar. In thisproduction, his moment of discovery so sped by that wewere left feeling that he had merely succombed —^ un¬characteristically — to public pressure. It is difficult toassign the fault for this; part surely lies in pace, butpart also in the unfamiliarity of the audience with thelegend.‘Cain’s Company’ carry from last year’s productiononly James O’Reilly and Arthur Morey among actors,Virgil Burnett and Jerome McGann in inspiration. Theprofessionalism of O’Reilly’s and Morey’s stage presenceand diction, as well as that of Judith Taylor, carry theproduction. Yeats’ poetry can be peculiarly difficult tospeak; the women’s and clown parts particularly canapproach a stiltedness almost impossible to overcome.The actors clearly felt most comfortable in theirspeeches of conflict and action, least in the lyrical andstylized speeches of the dance plays. The absence of music in the passages written to be sung deprives theplays of much beauty. The drum which provided rhythmand counterpoint, while occasionally effective, at othertimes made me nostalgic for my well-tempered radiator.An invective digression on diction. I reserve a spe¬cial hell for ruminant actors who stretch their offstagecoffee breaks by munching their lines, cracking them,blowing vast bubbles with them which burst all overtheir noses and gum up their delivery. It may be thatfamiliarity has endeared to others the whistle which her¬alds Chicagoland broadcasters with loose false teeth. Imaintain however that the actor owes his audience theminimum clarity of final consonants and differentiatedvowels.If Cuchulain was flawed by occassionally sloppy linepickup, regularly noisome diction (I except O’Reilly, Mor¬ey and Taylor) undue haste coupled with only spasmodicalterations in tone, one could taste, in places, the coolingrefreshment of direction. One of the saddest com¬monplaces of theater at the U of C is a habitual rever¬ence for the received texts. How many plays have wellseen that falter and collapse either from the insistentimposition of a local canon of direction (rant) or fromthe maddening refusal of direction, from the confusion ofactors who have never been told to think what their linesmean, from the chaos of a minor classic transplantedwithout vision from page to stage. There seems to becommon notion around here that direction consists ofcasting, blocking and shouting. This accmpanies thecritical notion that plays exist in books. They do not.They exist in time and space. They live in produuction.They demand interpretation. While one may not agreewith every detail of interpretation in this production(I found Judith Taylor as Emer a bit too shrewish, butI was quite taken with Arthur Morey’s slightly feyBricrui, and the suggestion that the audience were theattendant kings in Baile’s Strand delighted me, oneluvuriates in having an interpretation to disagree with.Fairinda WestMarch 7, 1969/The Grey City Joumal/3••••»••** • i•« *tvrtwwwwnwwmwvirrtrrt-:nCULTURE VULTUREThe Mangy Bird Roosts Until Spring\S INDICATED BY THE REVIEW of Mr Oaks’ committeemeeting included in this issue, there is more entertain¬ment on campus than just the kind Doc Films presents.Now there are two places all you masochists and/or sad-ists can go to get your kicks. There is the Oaks com-littee in Abbott and the Shireman committee in StaggField Labs. I must say that the directors of both produc¬tions are very unimaginative—they both seem very in-?nt in providing an exact theatrical replica of Kafla’s■imous conception. Yet admittedly both are extremely:accessful. The tiny trial room in Stagg Field Lab has,’ vo tables placed together in a V-shape design. Thedefendant and his counsel sits on one side along with thejourt secretary. Mr Shireman and his cohorts sit on theether side. The windows are covered with dark brownurtains and a burly University security guard (spelledop) standing behind the committee. All that’s missing isinaked lightbulb (who slipped up?) At every door goingnto the committee room is any number of security men•nd faculty members (spelled faculty cops). Students areit into the tiny court room only one at a time as some¬one leaves. Faculty have free entrance. Outside, therocedure is the same: one person leaves and one maynter to replace him. Unfortunately you may be dis¬appointed because the producers of these epics maylose the hearings. (Can you imagine a public perform-nce closed to the public?) Anyway they are the most.^expurgated performances on campus-what you always-uessed is acted out in its most enlightening pieces ofleater ever to come to this campus.Tonight Contemporary European Films presents Catiallou (since when, except in Italy, are cowboys Eu-opean?). In it Lee Marvin makes love to his horse“Everybody to his own taste,” said the farmer as heissed the cow.)Saturday at 7:30 and 9:30 is The Caretaker. True to allTHE GREY CITYJOURNALHere 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 CathedralEditorMichael SorkinManaging EditorJessica SiegelStaff ExtraordinairePeter RabinowitzT. C. FoxTh« Grty City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All Interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.*31 Pinter, the dialogue is unmistakenly his own until youbegin overhearing conversations very similar.Some strange things are happening in RockefellerChapel tonight, Saturday, and Sunday nights when thespirit of William Butler Yeats mesmerizes bringing withhim three short plays about an Irish epic hero, Cuch-ulain. You never thought you’d see a “dance of the sevenveils” in Rockefeller did you but this play has it withJames O’Reilly as Cuchulain and Jeanne Wikler as thedancer. The atmosphere (charged as it is by the spirit ofthat Irish giant of letters) is partially the star along withthe other cast members: Arthur Morey (who also di¬rected it), Judith Taylor, Lewi Krug, Joel Cope and Ar¬thur Heiserman.Monday brings to Mandel Hall an orchestra unlike anyyou can find in Orchestra Hall or anywhere in Chicago.It is the Blue Nile Group — a group of sixteen Ethiopianmusicians who perform traditional and contemporaryEthiopian music. The troup (which also includes danc¬ers) is the first such group to perform outside of Eth¬ iopia. They will also hold a workshop on Monday at 3:30in Lexington.The Harper Theater Dance Festival is something mostpeople look forward to. They are satisfied with merelygetting a look at their favorite dancer, Now many of thedancers who will be appearing at Harper Theater will beholding “Master Classes” in Ida Noyes Gym the weeksof their performances. Hie masters giving Mastersclasses will be $3.00 each. Contact Mrs Elvi Moore inAlwin Nikolais company members — Murray Louis andPhyllis Lamhut, March 22 at 1 pm; and Merce Cun¬ningham Company members, March 29 at 1 pm. Theclasses will be $3.00 each. Contact Mrs Elvi Moore inIda Noyes.Shorey House, cultural oasis that it is, is sponsoring acreative writing contest open to all undergraduate stu¬dents. The prize is $25 and the entries may include poet¬ry, short stories, or essays. The deadline for entries isApril 25. Further information can be gotten from JackLevin, 11002X Pierce Tower.Beef WellingtonDear Ian,My boyfriend and I got into a big fight last weekwhen he started to eat before I had even served myself.He claims that with Women’s Liberation, old-style chiv¬alry is not only unnecessary, but even reactionary. Ireplied that Women’s Liberation didn’t mean that womenhad to give up their privileges, but only that we wereentitled to equality—besides, it was me who had to re¬member to take my pill every day, so I was entitled to alittle extra consideration. We haven’t talked to each oth¬er for three days, and things are getting a little tensearound the apartment, so could you please help us bytelling us who was right? We both agree to abide by yourdecision.AlbertineDear Albertine,From your letter, I’d guess that your problems aremore serious than mere etiquette, but since you didn’task for general advice, I won’t give it. Historicallyspeaking, the practice of having the woman start to eatfirst goes back to eleventh century England. At the time,poisoning was a favorite method of getting rid of impor¬tant political figures, and this was seen as a cheap andeffective way of keeping the danger to a minimum. Sincepoisoning is no longer terribly probable, there is littlereason to keep up the antiquarian form on a regularbasis—although it can surely be revived in case of emer¬gency.Dear Ian,Maybe I’m still a little naive (I’m only a second yearstudent), but I still take Plato seriously. As I see it, thedialogues argue that the rational man is the one who isprepared to change his mind when new convincing argu¬ments are given: in fact, he is always searching for sucharguments. Rationality is thus imcompatible with per¬manent, irrevocable opinions. If this is true, how canexpulsion (which is distinguished from indefinite suspen¬sion by the added stipulation that the student thrown outcan never return under any circumstances) be consid¬ ered a rational act? I tried to ask my Hum teacher, buthe's on one of those disciplinary committees, so he’sbeen too busy to talk to me.Polly MarkusDear Polly,You’ve got your terms mixed up. The quality ofmind you have described above is “open-mindedness.’’Rationality is quite different: it merely refers to theability to use the rules of logic to come to some con¬clusions from a set of assumptions. W lile a rational mancan be persuaded by pointing out a mechanical error inhis process of reasoning, there is nothing inherent inrationality which would make him receptive to argu¬ments about first principles. Given the University’s basicassumptions, therefore, expulsion is just as rational asthe 1919 World Series or the Soviet invasion of Czech¬oslovakia. Since no one has ever argued that the Univer¬sity was open-minded, there is nothing hypocritical intheir stance.Dear Ian,I want to buy a birthday present for my ex-girl¬friend, who is a classical music buff. Can you tell me theworst record ever made?Warren PeaseDear Warren,If you’re willing to invest in a two record set, youcan’t go wrong with the complete piano music of Stock¬hausen (CBS 32 21 0008). For a tighter budget, however,I would recommend the Dover recording of three unac¬companied violin sonatas by Max Reger (HCR 5267).This disc is particularly pernicious, since unaccompaniedviolin music has such a reputation of being severe andhard to get into. Your friend is therefore likely tolisten to it five or six times before realizing that it is buta musical equivalent to the Kalven report. This not onlymakes the point of your gift all the sharper, but it alsogives you an extra day or two to get out of town.Ian WellingtonNow thru March 155 Shakespeare's "black" corned/Measure forMeasureStarring Donald Harronsnd Clayton CorzatteSoodman Theatre200 S. Columbus DriveCE 6 2337UnversitySymphonyOrchestraWinter ConcertWorks byBeethoven,Debussy,Britten,Respighi.Mandel Had,Sat. Mar. 8,8:30 p.m.ADMISSION FREE Revitalization presentsMAGIC SAM BUIES BANDfor a dance in Ida Noyes Cloister Club, TicketsSaturday, March 8, 9-1 COMEII \ All -NH I I M3 PERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREFebruary 28Mercouri/PerkinsPHAEDRAMarch 1Robords/HarrisA THOUSAND CLOWNSMarch 7Charlton Heston"Best Western"WILL PINNYMarch 8Somontho EggorTerence StampTHE COLLECTOR March 14Alan BatesKING OF HEARTSMarch 15Marlon BrandoREFLECTIONSIN A GOLDEN EYEPLUS:ACCLAIMEDSHORT FEATURESWITH EVERYPERFORMANCETICKETS *1PLAYBOY VTHE AT 6 R»?04 H DEARBORN • PHONE 944 3414 March 21Ingmar Bergman sPERSONAMarch 22Alan AldaPAPER LIONMarch 28James Joyce sULYSSESMarch 29Stanley Donen sBEDAZZLED•i.atftv* otjiMUUThe Grey City Journal/March 7,1969 HYDE PARKStarts Fri. March 7 ONE WEEK ONLY!Two great film classicsPaxton Quigley is aprisoner of love... TO DIE IN MADRIDand completelyexhausted!Ak$U‘Ca>. nTeCna'’C^TTEMiMiBJx36tRiSoPtceJoNES. mmcH 'DV DaCf MAG&E ThReTt nan A/w?t:n (8:00 P.M. only)powerful semi-documentary ofthe Spanish Civil Warand Bunuel's classicVIRIDIANA(6:30&10:00)Starts next Friday, world premiere “WHO'S THAT KNOCKING" + Chicago premiere of Godard's BAND OF OUTSIDERS.2424 N. LINCOLN PHONE: 528-9126FREE PARKING AT 2438 N. HALSTED