MAROON yrr XhAJLVolume 77, Number 51 The Chicago Maroon Friday, April 4, 196964 Faculty Sign Disciplinary PetitionBy Wendy GlocknerSixty four faculty members have peti¬tioned dean of students Charles D.O’Connell, demanding that “no disciplinaryact'on” he tafc'm “until a committee isconstituted which conforms to the recom¬mendations of the American Association ofUniversity Professors (AAUP).”The AAUP guidelines, which were estab¬lished last June, designate that “the hear¬ings committee should include facultymembers or students, or, if regularly in¬cluded or requested by the accused, bothfaculty and student members.The guidelines also state that dis¬ciplinary proceedings should be institutedonly for violations of standards of conductformulated with significant student partici¬pation and published in advance throughsuch means as a student handbook or agenerally available body of institutionalregulations.”The petition, which expresses the feel¬ ty statement of student rights establishedby the AAUP with the committee of thecouncil, but according to one member ofthe chapter, they “didn’t get too far.”The spokesman said that the AAUPwould probably not conduct extensive in¬vestigations of the University’s violaton ofthe guidelines, since they do not necessi¬tate it. He stated that if the chapter didcall for action, then some action would betaken.About 150 faculty members are in thelocal chapter.The text of the petition follows:A number of students have recently been expelledfrom the University of Chicago. They were expelled by adisciplinary committee which violates the guidelines setup by the A.A.U.P.*We, the undersigned faculty members, feel, therefore,that no disciplinary action should be taken until a com¬mittee is constituted which conforms to the recommen¬dations of the A.A.U.P.•AAUP Guidelines (A.A.U.P. Bulletin, June 1968, p. 261)"The hearing committee should include faculty mem¬bers or students, or, if regularly included or requestedby the accused, both faculty and student members.""Disciplinary proceedings should be instituted onlyfor violations of standards of conduct formulated with significant student participation and published in ad¬vance through such means as a student handbook or agenerally available body of institutional regulations."Samuel Aronson, Enrico Fermi 'nstituteRalph Austen, HistoryThomas Bergstresser, James Franck InstituteDavid M. Bevington, EnglishBianca Conforio, Enrico Fermi InstituteCharles Derber, Social SciencesGuido Donini, ClassicsRichard Ehlin, Enrico Fermi InstituteFanita English, PsychologyDonald A. Fischman, BiologyRichard Flacks, SociologyAudrey E. Forbes, MD, PediatricsBarbara Forman, Enrico Fermi InstituteD.G. Freedman, Human DevelopmentRaymond Gadke, Social Science Collegiate DivisionRose Giallombardo, SociologyFrederick Glick, StatisticsMichael Goldberger, AnatomyBrian W. Grant, Divinity SchoolRobert Graunick, MathematicsDonald C. Green, EnglishI.N. Herstein, MathematicsPeter K. Jansen, Germanic Languages and LiteraturesI. Martin Issacs, MathematicsDavid R. Jones, English and College HumanitiesEmile Karafiol, HistoryB. Robert Kreiser, Social Science Collegiate DivisionMartin A. Kramer, Enrico Fermi InstituteRichard K. Laschoff, MathematicsA.H. Lesser, PhilosophyRichard Levins, BiologyLester K. Little, HistoryMonte Lloyd, BiologyContinued on Page Five PRESIDENT LEVIPetition receiverings of faculty who believe that the presentdisciplinary committees violate the AAUPguidelines, was initiated by Joan Scott, lec¬turer in history.The council of the senate and Edward Friday Ruml Race Program OffLevi also received the petition.O’Connell could not be reached for com¬ment.The faculty have not yet made plans tofollow up on the petition. “Ideally, weshould get the people together and decidehow we are going to follow through,” saidMrs. Scott. “But we don’t know what wewant to do — either as a group or as indi¬viduals.”The group has been in touch with thecommittee of concerned parents, but no ac¬tion has resulted yet.Members of the local chapter of theAAUP recently dicussed the student-facul- By Mitch BobkinThe Beardsley Ruml colloquium on“What- Can Be Done to End White Rac¬ism” scheduled for Friday and Saturdayhas encountered problems similar to thosewhich caused its postponement last quar¬ter. dropped out, but many assumed that racialtrouble on the first anniversary of MartinLuther King’s death was responsible.The Friday night panel discussion onblack politics, scheduled to feature Rich¬ard Hatcher, mayor of Gary and HaroldBaron and Richard Wade has been calledoff because of Mayor Hatcher’s cancella¬tion. Members of the colloquium could notreach Hatcher to find out why he had Another problem causing the cancella¬tion of Friday’s panel is the 7 pm curfewput into effect Thursday night. Members ofthe police force could not say as of lateThursday if there would be another earlycurfew Friday.Members of the worker-student alliance,the group which had threatened to disruptthe colloquium last quarter, met Thursdaynight to decide what action to take thisweekend.Dr Colin Williams QuitsTo Head Yale DivinityThe divinity school’s doctor of ministryprogram, thought to be temporarily savedfrom demise winter quarter, is again injeopardy.Promised funds and teaching com-m i t m e n t s that failed to materializeprompted Colin Williams, internationallyknown theologian and popular director ofthe radical experimental, professionaltraining program, to resign. He will be¬come dean of the divinity school at YaleUniversity. “The resources I had hoped would beavailable here will be available at Yale,”the 47-year-old Australian-born directorsaid.COUN WILLIAMSUC to Yale The financial squeeze is a problem com¬mon to the school. Williams estimated thatan endowment of four to five million dol¬lars was needed to produce adequate inter¬est for an operating budget.Glen Davidson, associate director of theDMn program, said that faculty shortagesalso hurt the program. Except to Williamsand himself, Davidson said, the teaching ofDMn courses is done as part-time work bydivinity faculty primarily interested in oth¬er fields of the school.Student reaction to Williams’ resignationhas been “We don’t blame you, but we’resorry to see you go,” Davidson said.Divinity school dean Jerald Brauei1 saidthat a member of the school’s facultywould probably serve as acting directornext year.On the future of the program, Brauersaid, “This school has a responsibility toprofessional education in the ministry. It iscertainly too early to say the DMn is theright or wrong way to exercise that re¬sponsibility.”Brauer announced Thursday at a meet¬ing of the school’s academic policy com¬mittee that he will not seek another termas dean after his term expires a year from Some 20 people at the meeting decidedthat they should try to convince people ofthe University’s basic racism as opposedto violently disturbing the colloquium.“We should try to win people over andshow the University’s racism so it doesn’tseem like we are just trying to do our ownthing”, one member said.Many students felt that standing up atmeetings and shouting down speakerswould not be effective unless they had firstconvinced the audience of the University’sracism. However, it was suggested thatmembers of the alliance challenge speak¬ers and ask pointed questions in an effortto trip up the speakers.It was further suggested that leaflets bedistributed on campus and that dormmeetings be held to communicate with thestudent body.“Racism is not a sickness but a con¬scious perpetuated ideology that keepspeople convinced that they should fight oneanother and not their class enemies” thealliance said. Tim Lovain, ’70, student chairman of theBeardsley Ruml colloquium committeesaid that the colloquium would not be can¬celled for any reason this time. “We arefirm in our stand. There will be a Beard¬sley Ruml colloquium.”With the cancellation of the Friday pan¬el, the colloquium has been reduced to thefollowing five different discussions:• 10:30 am in the Law School auditorium.“White Racism and Public Education” withWarren Bacon, Francis Cain, Roald Camp¬bell, Ann Kolheim and Meyer Weinberg.• 1 pm in the Law School auditorium. “ToEnd Exploitation in the Ghetto” with LewiFinney, John Kain, Jan Linfield, CalvinLockridge, Arthur Saltzman and GeorgeTolly.• 3 pm in the Law School auditorium.“White Racism and Economic Participa¬tion” with Rev George Riddick, MiltonFreidman and Robert McKersie.• 6 pm Hutchinson Commons — Informaldinner. “The University and Racism” withHarold Baron, Maynard Krueger and JeffKuta.• 8 pm in Mandel Hall. Summary withKenneth Prewitt, Ira Kipnis and A1 Raby.500 Plan ActionEarly Curfew IgnoredJune. Brauetyears. XE6L *°Nspumiaivagrytfisoa s n for 13 Campus police are not expected to en¬force the city’s dusk to dawn riot curfew.Last night as there were minor out¬breaks of looting on the north and westsides, campus police had no orders to en¬force the city’s curfew. There were no oth¬er special orders issued to security police.City police were reported doubled up inarea patrol cars. The curfew, which ordersanyone under 21 off the streets between 7pm and 6 am will be lifted only by order ofMayor Richard J Daley.More than 200 persons have been ar¬rested in outbreaks following memorialservices for Dr Martin Luther King at twocity high lu oSli0ZZ-N J6C5J13H The steering committee of the committeeof 500-plus voted to urge a “boycott” and“mill-in” at Cobb Hall next week at ameeting Thursday night.The group called a mass meeting for 4pm Tuesday in Mandel Hall to consider anaction “establishing a precedent withoutphysical obstruction of students or physicaldisruption of classes.”The action, however, would entail “non¬violent confrontation with students not hon¬oring picket lines,” said Mike Dunlap, ’70,a member of the steering committee.The committee of 500-plus demands thatthe University rescind all disciplinarymeasures taken last quarter and drop theKalven report. Marlene Dixon will speakat the meeting Monday.The committee also voted to send lettersto major college newspapers to urge pros¬pective University of Chicago graduate stu¬dents to “boycott this University in orderto demonstrate that its present politicallyrepressive policy is intolerable to potentialstudents.” “Follow your conscience; don’tcome here” the letter says.f *V103©H I'BOipOTJOdO£lJ0 JO ATUflEVERY DAY IS SALE DAY AT THE CO-OP“Happy Trails’’ the new Quicksilver MessengerService album and all other $4.98 recordsOnly *3»19'Switched On Bach" and all other $5.98 recordsOnly *3.89Books at absurd discountsSTUDENT CO-OPREYNOLDS CLUB POOL HALL ANNEXis for QuicksilverBIKES LIKE MOTHERUSED TO MAKECheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh. Robin Hood. Falcon,Peugeot, Gitane, Vlercier,Radius and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. Used bi¬cycles spasmodically.Fly-bv-night rentals.TURIN BICYCLE CO-OP2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 - 8.30, S&S 10 - 8Alice B. 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Oak St,—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95ln St.-779-65002/The Chicago Maroon/April 4, 1969*■ DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lenses.in theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 Cohn St Stemuhnmt Sc (EantmtaShopA MIXED BAG OF BELLBOTTOMS BY H.I.S.Just arrived... hell bottoms in an assortmentthat includes several solid colors, some stripe'and various patterns we can onlv call psy¬chedelic. Waist sizes 28-36: inseams 28-32. S10-811 -812IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsWhat’s so special aboutBeechwood Ageing?We must be bragging too much aboutBeechwood Ageing.Because we’re starting to get someflak about it. Like, “Beechwood,Beechwood . . . big deal.” And “IfBeechwood Ageing is so hot,why don’t you tell every¬body what it is?”So we will.First, it isn't big woodencasks that we age Budweiserin.But it is a layer of thinwood strips from the beechtree (what else?) laid downin a dense lattice on thebottom of our glass-linedand stainless steel lageringtanks. This is where we let Budweiser ferment a second time.(Most brewers quit after one fermen¬tation. We don’t.)These beechwood strips offer extrasurface area for tiny yeast particlesto cling to, helping clarifythe beer. And since thesestrips are also porous, theyhelp absorb beer’s natural“edge,” giving Budweiserits finished taste. Or in otherwords, “a taste, a smooth¬ness and a drinkability youwill find in no other beer atany price.”Ah yes, drinkability. That'swhat’s so special aboutBeechwood Ageing.But you know that.Budweiser. is the King of Beers,(Bui you know that.)ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK . LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON • COLUMBUS» » » hi *: *»v 14-t * * » t» • i r< *- -«•' ■ ■ * X '<* U » hLaw Students Write Counter-Kalven ReportBy Leslie StraussLaw students who acted as counsels forpeople appearing before the disciplinarycommittees have submitted a counter-re¬port in response to the Kalven committee’sreport on disciplinary procedures.Meanwhile Harry Kalven, law professorand chairman of the Kalven committeestated that the committee “will probablyseriously reappraise its report in light ofthe events which have occured since it waswritten and the reactions we have receivedabout it.’’Kalven said that the committee has re¬ ceived and will consider a “substantial’’number of comments from both studentsand faculty since the report was issuedFebruary 25.The law student’s report agreed that“discipline should play but a minor role inthe University”, but stressed the idea thatwhen problems arise, “they may providetoo much of a threat to the continued oper¬ation of the University to entrust to any adhoc group.”The report therefore recommends thatsome permanent disciplinary institution beestablished, and proposes a structure in-Workers Sue University;Charge MisappropriationA Circuit court suit filed Tuesdaycharged the University with misapplyingmere than 12 million dollars allegedly be¬longing to employees of Argonne NationalLaboratory, which the University adminis¬ters for the Atomic Energy Commission(AEC).The suit charges that the University hasbeen converting to its own use money thatwas earned by a pension fund for Argonneemployees. Bernard M. Mamet, attorneyfor the plaintiffs, charged that Argonnelias used the earnings to pay part of itscontribution to the pension plan, ratherthan buying additional benefits.The pension plan, began in 1948, stipu¬lates that employees contribute 2.5 percentof their salaries to the fund with Argonneithe University) making a matching con¬tribution of 7.5 percent.The money was invested in group insur¬ance from the Prudential Insurance Com¬pany of America. In the year ending Jan31, the laboratory paid $1,095,633 to Pru¬dential for premiums and received rebatesof $487,627. Mamet said Argonne has used the rebates towards paying its 7.5 percent.George Dickerson, assistant businessmanager of Argonne, said that this is true.He maintained, however, that the employ¬ees were aware of the situation, and thatthe government had approved it in order toreduce the cost of the program to tax¬payers.The University of Chicago was in com¬plete control of the fund and was not re¬sponsible to the contributors for an ac¬counting.In 1968 when the first employees beganto retire, they found that the benefits fromthe pension were disproportionate to whatwas expected, precipitating a six-month in¬vestigation leading to the suit.Mamet said, “The nature of this actionarises out of a monumental travesty com¬mitted by the University of Chicago where¬in it, acting as a fiduciary and retainingexclusive control of the employees’ pensionfund, converted to its own use many mil¬lions of dollars of money which did notbelong to it.”White Racism and Liberal EducationThis column by Roger Black was originally published one year ago on the death ofMartin Luther King.It was the day after Martin Luther King had been shot by a white madman inMemphis and I was walking south on the sidewalk next to the park by theHyde Park-Kenwood neighborhood club. Three young black men were walking throughthe park in the other direction, and one of them, with some force, threw a rock straightat me. It hit the top of the low cyclone fence and flew into the air. I quickened mystep. The spades, without stopping, shouted, “White motherfucker!”A minor and almost unremarkable incident at a time when parts of Chicagowere in a state of “insurrection.” And yet it set me to thinking. Here I am,enlightened, leftist, student at one of the best universities in the country, concernedabout social problems, alarmed at racism, shocked and saddened at the assassinationof Dr. King, proponent of open occupancy, advocate of black power. I concede eventhe most militant argument of the most militant blacks.I realize there are shreds of racism within me not yet exposed and stamped out.I repent my racism. I repent my Southern heritage. I repent my ancestors and theancestors of my white neighbors who brought the black men here in chains. I cry -out for the sins of the white man. I cry out for the death of Dr. King. I cry out forthe black, bayonetted, maced, shot, burned.I sit here typing my grief with my school books ranged around me. My books forthe University that drove the poor black people out of Hyde Park. My notebooks forthe University that is driving back the ghetto to the south. The University whosebank was part of a consortium to help racist South Africa. The University that ignoresa black group that is trying to get housing built for the people the University displaces,that shunts off to a back room the group that is trying to tutor black children, thatautomatically checks the ID cards of black people entering buildings at night, thatshuts the black community out of the closest thing it has to a community center.Howard K. Smith gets on the TV and tells us how everything is really okay, noneed to worry; progress is being made. And the University offers not one course intelevision. Not one.Bookstands are glutted with racist pornography. And the University offers onecourse this quarter in pop culture. One.The army is called into Chicago. A machine gun is set up on the Capitol stepsin Washington. And the dean of the college jokes about urban studies in a “liberalarts conference.”And when the great mob of blacks charges out of Woodlawn across the midwaythis summer or the next summer or fifty summers from now, when they knock outthe leaded windows, and throw in gasoline bombs, when the dean of the college inGates-Blake can smell the books burning in Classics library, he will ask “Why are theyattacking us?“ The staff of the Humanities department will look up from their desksand say “But we are their best friends.” The Master of the social science collegiatedivision will shout, “But I have always been sympathetic to the black powermovement! We are not white motherfuckers, we are liberals!1But it will not matter, what we ask or what we shout, because then it will be toolate. If Chicago is burned down, we will go to Harvard. And if Boston is burned down,we’ll go to Berkeley. And if San Francisco — well there is always our privateresearch, and the scholarly journals to catch up on, and the articles on The Importance°f a Liberal Education, and the treatises on The Relevance of the University inModern Society. eluding full student participation.The report chiefly criticizes “the role theKalven study gives students in dealingwith student action which is determined tobe offensive to the University”, becausethe structure recommended by the Kalvencommittee “is repugnant to the concept ofa university as a community,. . .to the eth¬ic of judgment by peers and the notion thatstudents may indeed be ‘responsible’.”A University-wide committee of dis¬cipline was recommended that would:• Formulate “a full statement of theUniversity’s position and policy and proce¬dure on discipline”,• Act as an appellate body for casesarising from other committees, and• Provide a place for appeal other thanthe dean of students if a student so desires.Five faculty and five students would bechosen by lot from the entire body of facul¬ty and students to serve on the committeefor a term of one year.The report stated that the “proceduresoutlined by the Kalven committee reportare essentially adequate to achieve thegoal” of stiking a balance between the Uni¬versity’s right to inquire fully into eachcase, and a student’s right to protect his“first amendment” rights.However, the report stressed the stu¬dent’s rights at disciplinary hearings shouldinclude representation by friend or counsel;clear and specific notification of thecharged offense; adequate time to preparea defense; the right to appeal either to thedean of students of the standing appealsboard proposed; a delay appeal until acalm political and emotional climate is HARRY KALVENReport Writerestablished on campus; having the trialboard dispose of the case promptly onceit is heard; having a record of the initialhearing kept to make an appeal feasible;having the decision based only on therecord, meaning that no adverse inferenceshould be drawn from a student’s refusalto answer a particular question; presump¬tion of innocence; public hearings; present¬ing witnesses and other evidence; collectivedefenses if desired.The report was issued by the law stu¬dents who “believe it is not an undue bur¬den on the University to require that be¬fore any disciplinary action be takenagainst a student, we must allow him theright to a fair hearing.”O'Connell Warns Class of ‘73Charles O’Connell, dean of students has The letter warned that “because the Uni-recently sent letters to all the candidates versity is a community of intellectual pur-admitted to the University informing them pose, actions which attempt to harass orof the University’s policy concerning dis- coerce individual members of the Univer-ruptive actions. sitey community or actions which deliber¬ately interfere with the University’s teach¬ing activities, research activities, or sup¬portive administrative or operational activi¬ties, in an effort to coerce Universitydecisions, are prohibited and subject stu- *dents who engage in them to disciplinaryaction, not excluding expulsion.“The University you have been invited tojoin provides an encouraging environmentfor intellectual growth through free in¬quiry. It does not claim to be all things orto serve all purposes. Its faculty recog¬nized that a healthy diversity of aims prop¬erly exists among colleges and universitiesin the United States. We hope that if youjoin us it will be in the spirit of that pur¬pose which has informed the University ofChicago since its founding.”Speakers Named in Urban LecturesRev Andrew Young, Richard Goodwin,Kenneth Boulding, and James Farmer areamong speaker who will come to the Uni¬versity this quarter to participate in theCenter for Urban Studies’ 1969 lectureseries on “Centralization and Decentraliza¬tion.”“We’re trying to examine the issue froma variety of viewpoints — social, political,economic, and educational,” said ShirleyStarr, project director at the Center.“We’re exploring the question of commu¬nity self-determination and its implicationsfor the central city and the power struc¬ture in black communities.“The issue also has meaning for the sub¬urbs,” she added, “which are analogous tourban ghettos but which are autonomousand already have community self-determi¬nation — and which need to consolidateand centralize some of their activities.”All of the lectures which are not specific¬ally titled, are scheduled for 8 pm inBreasted Hall. Most are on Mondays andThursdays. Admission is without ticket orcharge.• April 10—Rev Andrew Young, execu¬tive vice-president of the Southern Chris¬tian Leadership Conference,missioner ■'f the New York State Board of• April 14—Ewald Nyquist, acting com- Education who currently has a bill beforethe legislature on the school decentraliza¬tion crisis.• Aprill 17—Richard Goodwin, authorand former adviser to President John F.Kennedy, and senators Robert Kennedyand Eugene McCarthy.• April 28—Kenneth Boulding, econo¬mist from the University of Colorado.• May 1—Scott Greer, urban sociologistat Northwestern University.• May 8—James Farmer, assistant sec¬retary of the Department of Health, Edu¬cation, and Welfare (HEW) and former ex¬ecutive director of the Congress on RacialEquality.• May 15—Floyd Hyde, assistant secre¬tary of HEW.King ServicesThe late Rev Dr Martin LutherKing Jr will receive special tributein Good Friday services from noonto 1 pm at Rockefeller MemorialChapel today, one year after the re¬nowned Civil flights leader was slainin Memphis.The University will be open FridayApril 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3He********* **************************The Festival of the Artsand the Department of MusicpretextsAn informal ReceptionI’m sorry about yourparade, sir. I guess Isplashed on toomuch after shave. ,)j°>£jy/ffEven the might of the military can’t protect you if you’re notcareful how you use Hai Karate"' After Shave and Cologne. Onewhiff and females get that “make love not war" look in theireyes. So to maintain military discipline arid keep your uniformintact, we put instructions on self-defense in every package.Just in case it comes down to hand-to-hand combat.Hai Karate-be careful how you use it. n*****************#**************************************■ ji-^ * X* Tc*GEORG SOLTIFuture Permanent Music DirectorChicago Symphony OrchestraSaturday, ^4pri(5, 19691 1:30 Jl. W.KeynotJs CU Soul/, Xoun r~Jltt students and faculty inui tedYou're under 25but you drivelike an expert.Why should youhave to payextra for yourcar insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY UINSURANCE Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. ••.big solutions in stocknow forth*biko riding son son!RALE/&HSPORTSModel DL22II 1Robin Hood LightweightCBby Raleigh *39”• Sturmey Archer 3 speed hubwith trigger control• Brooks leather saddle• Dunlop Amberwatl Tires• Front and rear caliper brakes• AH steel tubing construction• Three-point chain guardanchorage• Shock stop frips• Boy’s and girl’s modelsavailable• Double rear mudguard staySae tha D122 today.You’ll know quality whanyou sae it. LIGHTWEIGHT RACERBUY NOW ONEASY TERMS ‘509 5The Schwinn Racer i$ an ideal tour¬ing model at a low budget price.Lightweight styling, Schwinn tubu¬lar rims, sports touring tires andfoam cushioned saddle. Schwinnquality throughout.Only « R*high is cudJy* Ra highmUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor ART'SCycle &Hobby ShopsI63S E. 55th ST. 363-7524mo E. 07th ST. SA 1-5883 ART'SCycle &Hobby Shops1036 E. 55th ST. 363-75241710 E. 87th ST. SA S-58834/The Chicago Maroon/April 4, 1969SG To Hold Vote for Bicameral LegislatureA referendum for a constitutionalamendment to make SG a bicameral bodywill be presented to the study body for pas¬sage next week, announced SG presidentJerry Lipsch yesterday. Because of thefar-reaching consequences of the proposedamendment, regular SG elections will bepostponed until the fifth week of the quar¬ter.The amendment would divide studentgovernment into two houses; a lower houserepresenting the College and an upperhouse representing the graduate schools.In joint session, each member of the lowerhouse would have one vote, each memberof the upper house would have two votes.The number of representatives from theCollege would be increased. College houseswith more than 35 undergraduate residentswould be considered an electoral unit; asPeace March SetFor State StreetMayor Daley’s police have promised tobehave themselves during this Saturday’speace march downtown. At least 10,000people are expected for the march whichoriginates at State and Wacker at 1 p.m.and will proceed down State St. to the Coli¬seum (14th and Wabash) for a rally. Thisyear permits were granted without trouble.Three campus organizations have joinedtogether in chartering buses which willleave from Ida Noyes parking lot at noonSaturday (cost 50 cents a person). Thegroups (the Independent Action Coalition,Students for an Open Chicago, and Stu¬dents for a Political Alternative) say themarch wilU^rotest continuation of the Viet¬nam war,' diversion of funds from thecities, the growth of the war machine (andABM’s now), and the trial of eight con¬vention protestors and eight policemen for“the crimes of Mayor Daley and PoliceSupt. Conlisk”. the constitution now reads dorms with over100 residents make up a single electoralunit. Thus, individual houses in Pierce,Woodward, and Burton-Judson would haverepresentation.In addition, University apartment houseswould have individual representation. The number of first-year representatives wouldbe increased from five to ten.The amendment is the result of a peti¬tion signed by 800 students and presentedto the SG election and rules committee lastfall. Mitch Pines ’69, a backer of the peti¬tion, said that the amendment would “en¬ able the representatives to work moreclosely with the students they represent,something that is missing in the presentsystem.”A 15 percent voter turnout is necessaryfor the vote to be valid; a simple majorityis all that is needed for passage.Frederika Opposes DUR's OffensiveThe Department of Urban Renewal(DUR) has launched another broadside inan effort to obtain the apartment buildingat 6043-45 So. Woodlawn Ave. belonging toFrederika Blankner. While she was appeal¬ing to the Illinois Supreme Court to re¬verse the decision condeming her property,DUR entered the building and informedthe tenants that the residence has beensold to the city and was now its property.Miss Blankner isqu estioning the right ofthe city to obtain her property and thenresell it to the University as part of itsexpansion program under the law of emi¬nent domain. The building is also beingthreatened with destruction before the casecomes up on appeal, another crucial issuewhich, if carried out, would nullify themeaning of the appeal.In a Monday editorial, the ChicagoAmerican also expressed doubts about thelegality of the DUR’s operations saying,“To judge from the recent legal history ofa building at 6043-45 Woodlawn Ave, thecity’s urban renewal program doesn’t havetime to spare for trifling questions likeconstitutionality and due process of law.The corporation counsel’s office, with acourt’s approval, is moving full speed totake over the apartment building for demo¬lition, even though the owner, Prof Fred¬erika Blankner, has appealed to the IllinoisSupreme court on two issued involved—is¬sues that seem to us of major importance. . . The city’s attempt to bulldoze first, and find out later whether it could legallydo so, indicates a curious view of law—onethat needs checking before it spreads.”Miss Blankner reports that her tenantswere taken completely by surprise, know¬ing that she was appealing while the cityclaimed to own the building. The city fur¬ther asserted that no rent was to be paidMiss Blankner for March, and that thefoundation was unsound although checked by the building department and declaredsound.On February 28 Miss Blankner’s attorneythe building and on March 10 Miss Blank-which to appeal the lower court decisioncondemning the building and offering her$40,750 for the building valued as $111,000in 1964. Within one week the DUR was inthe building and on March 10 Miss Blan-ker’s attorney told her that the “sale hadnot been completed.”Faculty Send Petition to O'ConnellContinued from Page OneJ. Peter May, MathematicsMarvin Mirsky, HumanitiesFred B. Morris, PortugeseThomas E. Morton, Graduate School of BusinessIan Mueller, PhilosophyJanel M. Mueller, English and College HumanitiesCharles Nissim-Sabat, Enrico Fermi InstituteDavid Orlinsky, Social SciencesLeonard Radinsky, AnatomyJohn Ruvalds, James Franck InstituteRobert W. Roberts, Social Service AdministrationEllen Ross, Social Science Collegiate DivisionMelvin Rothenberg, MathematicsEdmond Schonberg, Enrico Fermi InstituteDonald M. Scott, History Joan W. Scott, Social Science Collegiate DivisionLeonard L. Scott, Jr„ MathematicsWilliam Sewell, HistoryIrving A. Spergel, Social Service AdministrationJohn A. Taylor, English and College HumanitiesL Van Valen, AstronomyAlba Watson, PsychiatryFairinda West, EnglishGilbert F. White, GeographyJoseph M. Williams, EnglishColin M. Williams, Divinity SchoolDavid M. Wolfe, Enrico Fermi InstituteAntoni Zygmund, MathematicsPaul J. Sally, Jr. MathematicsHerbert S. Klein, HistoryMarch 31, 1969CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREETTouring Europe in ’69?RememberCZECHOSLOVAKIA!It’s easy to go there!Meet the young people of Prague. See thehistoric landmarks: Hradcany Castle,Wenceslaus Square, the little Golden Streetwhere Kafka lived, the oldest university InCentral Europe. And gorge yourself ona feast of all the arts ... Mediaevalto multi-media, Baroque andRennaissance, Dvorak and rock,frescoes and films.Not more than ninety minutes from thefarthest point in Europe ... Prague isone of the most exciting capitals inthe world today and Bratislava, theromantic capital of Slovakia on theDanube is just an hour's drivefrom Vienna.Group tours from $57 per personfor 7 days, all InchVisas issued within 48 hours.Contact your travel agent or writefor information:CED0K CZECHOSLOVAK TRAVEL BUREAU10 East 40th Street, New York, N Y. 10016Name:Address:CityState -Zip.My travel agent is:lAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYI300 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 — Batteries107c discount to students with ID cards JOSEPHA recital of The New Music JARMANWed. Apr. 9, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes, Si .50 at the doorPOLICE DISCRETIONA Conference at the Law SchoolSATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1969 • Law School AuditoriumProgram10:00-12:00 a.m. • THE POLICEMAN IN THE COAAMUNITY1:15-3:00 p.m. • PROBLEMS OF POLICE DISCRETION3:15-5:00 p.m. • WORKSHOPS:5:00-6:30 p.m. • SOCIAL HOUR: $3 00 per person. AdvanceLUMCHEOM RESERVATIONSLuncheon for conferees will be available at the Center for Continuing Educareservations must be received at the Law School by April 9th.RtGISTRATIONFor additional information sec the Dean of your school or address inquiries direct to the University of ChicagoLaw School, 1111 East 60th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Phone: MI 3-0800 Ext. 2408.AH interfiled persons are invitedSCHOONERSCHOOLFREDERICTON, N BCANADA Encounter groups, communication skills, dramatic education,visually creative arts, mad music, sailing, watersports, sailingand more sailing in an eight week free school setting to turn onthe new young, help them meet academic and personalhang ups. Junior School 12*16. Senior School 16-20-1-. Co-edFees: Junior—$1000, Senior — $1200. Limited openings Applyearly. Brochure: Box 9769, Towson, Md., 21204 Phone:301-661 3284 or 506- 454 3907 onytimeFACULTY: FRANCHISES AVAILABLE FOR 1970 SEASON GOLD CITY INN*•** Maroon"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10 %Student DiscountHYDE PARK S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT OrdersApril 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5r * •*- « - ’* '********** ****************************,The Festival of the Artsand the Department of IfMusiepresentsAn informal Receptionf°rGEORG SOLTIFuture Permanent Music DirectorChicago Symphony OrchestraSaturday, ^4pri(5, 196911:30 ^4. W.Reynolds C^luh South rJdounyeSill students and faculty inti ted #************************************************«|f|* oLe *Je "t*VVVVVVVVVnhVVVVVVVV if.You're under 25but you drivelike an expert.Why should youhave to payextra for yourcar insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY IfINSURANCE Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-58 S 8866 No. Wabash Ave. ••.big solutions In stabnow forth*biko riding season/l RALE/&HSPORTSModel DL22L .3]Robin Hood LightweightCB by Raleigh *39” IKHTWtKHT RACERUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1433 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor Sturmey-Archer 3 Speed hubwith trigger controlBrooks leather saddleDunlop Amberwall TiresFront and rear caliper biake*All steel tubing constructionThree-point chain guardanchorageShock stop gripsBoy’s and girl’s modelsavailable• Double rear mudguard staySee the DL22 today.You’ll know quality whenyou see it.Only a Rahigh is auUy a & Ra highARTSCycle &Hobby Shops1630 E. 55th ST. 363-75241710 E. 87th ST. SA 1-5883 tUY NOW ONEASY TERMS W 5The Schwinn Racer is an ideal lour¬ing model at a low budge! price.Lightweight styling, Schwinn tubu¬lar rims, sports touring tires endfoam cushioned saddle. Schwinnquality throughout.ART’SCycle &Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th ST. 363-75241710 E. 87th ST. 3A 1-58834/The Chicago Maroon/April 4, 1969SG To Hold Vote for Bicameral LegislatureA referendum for a constitutionalamendment to make SG a bicameral bodywill be presented to the study body for pas¬sage next week, announced SG presidentjerry Lipsch yesterday. Because of thefar-reaching consequences of the proposedamendment, regular SG elections will bepostponed until the fifth week of the quar¬ter.The amendment would divide studentgovernment into two houses; a lower houserepresenting the College and an upperhouse representing the graduate schools.In joint session, each member of the lowerhouse would have one vote, each memberof the upper house would have two votes.The number of representatives from theCollege would be increased. College houseswith more than 35 undergraduate residentswould be considered an electoral unit; asPeace March SetFor State StreetMayor Daley’s police have promised tobehave themselves during this Saturday’speace march downtown. At least 10,000people are expected for the march whichoriginates at State and Wacker at 1 p.m.and will proceed down State St. to the Coli¬seum (14th and Wabash) for a rally. Thisyear permits were granted without trouble.Three campus organizations have joinedtogether in chartering buses which willleave from Ida Noyes parking lot at noonSaturday (cost 50 cents a person). Thegroups (the Independent Action Coalition,Students for an Open Chicago, and Stu¬dents for a Political Alternative) say themarch will^rotest continuation of the Viet¬nam war, diversion of funds from thecities, the growth of the war machine (andABM’s now), and the trial of eight con¬vention protestors and eight policemen for“the crimes of Mayor Daley and PoliceSupt. Conlisk”. the constitution now reads dorms with over100 residents make up a single electoralunit. Thus, individual houses in Pierce,Woodward, and Burton-Judson would haverepresentation.In addition, University apartment houseswould have individual representation. The number of first-year representatives wouldbe increased from five to ten.The amendment is the result of a peti¬tion signed by 800 students and presentedto the SG election and rules committee lastfall. Mitch Pines ’69, a backer of the peti¬tion, said that the amendment would “en¬ able the representatives to work moreclosely with the students they represent,something that is missing in the presentsystem.”A 15 percent voter turnout is necessaryfor the vote to be valid; a simple majorityis all that is needed for passage.Frederika Opposes DUR's OffensiveThe Department of Urban Renewal(DUR) has launched another broadside inan effort to obtain the apartment buildingat 6043-45 So. Woodlawn Ave. belonging toFrederika Blankner. While she was appeal¬ing to the Illinois Supreme Court to re¬verse the decision condeming her property,DUR entered the building and informedthe tenants that the residence has beensold to the city and was now its property.Miss Blankner isqu estioning the right ofthe city to obtain her property and thenresell it to the University as part of itsexpansion program under the law of emi¬nent domain. The building is also beingthreatened with destruction before the casecomes up on appeal, another crucial issuewhich, if carried out, would nullify themeaning of the appeal.In a Monday editorial, the ChicagoAmerican also expressed doubts about thelegality of the DUR’s operations saying,“To judge from the recent legal history ofa building at 6043-45 Woodlawn Ave, thecity’s urban renewal program doesn’t havetime to spare for trifling questions likeconstitutionality and due process of law.The corporation counsel’s office, with acourt’s approval, is moving full speed totake over the apartment building for demo¬lition, even though the owner, Prof Fred¬erika Blankner, has appealed to the IllinoisSupreme court on two issued involved—is¬sues that seem to us of major importance. . . The city’s attempt to bulldoze first, and find out later whether it could legallydo so, indicates a curious view of law—onethat needs checking before it spreads.”Miss Blankner reports that her tenantswere taken completely by surprise, know¬ing that she was appealing while the cityclaimed to own the building. The city fur¬ther asserted that no rent was to be paidMiss Blankner for March, and that thefoundation was unsound although checkedContinued from Page OneJ. Peter May, MathematicsMarvin Mirsky, HumanitiesFred B. Morris, PortugeseThomas E. Morton, Graduate School of BusinessIan Mueller, PhilosophyJanet M. Mueller, English and College HumanitiesCharles Nissim-Sabat, Enrico Fermi InstituteDavid Orlinsky, Social SciencesLeonard Radinsky, AnatomyJohn Ruvalds, James Franck InstituteRobert W. Roberts, Social Service AdministrationEllen Ross, Social Science Collegiate DivisionMelvin Rothenberg, MathematicsEdmond Schonberg, Enrico Fermi InstituteDonald M. Scott, History by the building department and declaredsound.On February 28 Miss Blankner’s attorneythe building and on March 10 Miss Blank-which to appeal the lower court decisioncondemning the building and offering her$40,750 for the building valued as $111,000in 1964. Within one week the DUR was inthe building and on March 10 Miss Blan-ker’s attorney told her that the “sale hadnot been completed.”Joan W. Scott, Social Science Collegiate DivisionLeonard L. Scott, Jr., MathematicsWilliam Sewell, HistoryIrving A. Spergel, Social Service AdministrationJohn A. Taylor, English and College HumanitiesL. Van Valen, AstronomyAlba Watson, PsychiatryFairinda West, EnglishGilbert F. White, GeographyJoseph M. Williams, EnglishColin M. Williams, Divinity SchoolDavid M. Wolfe, Enrico Fermi InstituteAntoni Zygmund, MathematicsPaul J. Sally, Jr. MathematicsHerbert S. Klein, HistoryMarch 31, 1969CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURT?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 I. 41st STREETFaculty Send Petition to O'ConnellTouring Europe in ’69?RememberCZECHOSLOVAKIA!It’s easy to go there!Meet the young people of Prague. See thehistoric landmarks: Hradcany Castle,Wenceslaus Square, the little Golden Streetwhere Kafka lived, the oldest university InCentral Europe. And gorge yourself ona feast of all the arts ... Mediaevalto multi-media, Baroque andRennaissance, Dvorak and rock,frescoes and films.Not more than ninety minutes from thefarthest point in Europe ... Prague isone of the most exciting capitals inthe world today and Bratislava, theromantic capital of Slovakia on theDanube is just an hour’s drivefrom Vienna.Group tours from $57 per personfor 7 days, all Incl.Visas issued within 48 hours.Contact your travel agent or writetor information:CED0K CZECHOSLOVAK TRAVEL BUREAU10 East 40th Street, New York, N Y. 10016Name:Address:CityState.My travel agent is: -Zip.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-911 I- 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 cards POLICE DISCRETION GOLD CITY INNA Conference at the Law SchoolSATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1969 • Law School AuditoriumProgram * * * * Maroon"A Gold Mine of Good Food9910:00-12:00 a.m. • THE POLICEMAN IN THE COMMUNITY1:15-3:00 p.m. - PROBLEMS OF POLICE DISCRETION3:15-5:00 p.m. - WORKSHOPS:5:00-6:30 p.m. • SOCIAL HOUR io %Student DiscountLUNCHEON RESERVATIONSLuncheon for conferees will be available at the Center for Continuing Education at $3-00 per person. Advancereservations must be received at the Law School by April 9th.REGISTRATIONFor additional information sec the Dean of your school or address inquiries direct to the University of ChicagoLaw School, Mil East 60th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 2408.At! ialerts ted persons are invitedEncounter groups, communication skills, dramatic education,visually creative arts, mad music, sailing, watersports, sailingand more sailing in an eight week free school setting to turn onthe new young, help them meet academic and personalhang ups. Junior School 12-16. Senior School 16-204-. Co-edFees: Junior — $1000, Senior—$1200 Limited openings Applyearly Brochure: Box 9769, Towson, Md., 21204 Phone.301 —661 3234 or 506- 454 3907 anytimeFACULTY: FRANCHISES AVAILABLE FOR 1970 SEASON HYDE PARK S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT OrdersSCHOONERSCHOOLFREDERICTON. N BCANADAApril 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5EDITORIALConfrontationWe hope the cold weather is not auspicious for the quarter.At the end of the last one, few people were talking to each other,fewer were listening. It was a very bitter quarter. Most do notwant to stir the bitterness again.But there are some issues that cannot be set aside. The capital“U” University hoped to dispose of the winter sit-in and teach usall a lesson by expelling 37 students. In a way they did: Mrs Dixonhas now passed almost completely out of the collective mind of theUniversity; equal student power in faculty appointments is a for¬gotten cause; the leadership (if not che whole membership) of SDShas been eliminated from our midst. But in the attempt to putdown student dissent on issues that arouse only a few, it has raisednew issues — over the disciplinary committees — that arouse agreat many. (Sort of like trying to put out a fire by pouring gaso¬line over it.)Thirty-seven students have been expelled; 62 have been sus¬pended. Heavier penalties than those given by any other university.The decisions were hardly uniform; the wide divergance of punish¬ments can only be put down to a kind of systemmatic politicaldiscrimination. There were no voting students on the disciplinarycommittees. The trials were rushed; most motions from the studentcouncils were ruled out of hand. The only appeal is, in effect, tothe executioner.So far no one of the faculty has defended or even explainedin any detail to the students why the punishments were so severe,why students can’t be on disciplinary committees that have to dowith the bloody Sacred Mission of the University, and why it isn’tour University, too.Certainly we are at least entitled to a complete statement ofthe faculty view of the University and the students’ role in it. Ittook the editors of this paper a solid week of calling to even find onefaculty member to set out in the effort to explain the faculty stand(and it is a unified stand as we learned in an informal meetingcalled by the President after the last winter quarter editorial).In the absence of any explanation, in the absence of anyrationale (unless you can call the Kalven Report a rationale), weare left with the feeling that most of the faculty regard the dis¬ciplinary process as their property, i.e.: “This is our universityand if you don’t like it you can leave.” And the corrollary: “Ifwe don’t like the way you act, we’ll kick you out, and to hell withthe consequences.”In that last editorial, we said that some definite action, likea sit-in, should be taken if the disciplinary procedures were not re¬versed. Not only have they not been reversed, but they haven’teven been publicly defended.Our patience has been exhausted. How any faculty which issupposedly committed to educating inquiring minds can expectus to be content with the injustice of the disciplinary actions musthave themselves lost sense of “rational discourse.” We are readynow to join other students to demonstrate our convictions! Thatmay mean a sit-in. It may mean a strike. But something other thancontinued submission while the faculty defends its actions with itsauthority instead of its reason.Tuesday’s paper will discuss tactics.RacismThere is no better time, or more necessary time to talk aboutwhite racism than this weekend. Friday we remember MartinLuther King, a leader of the black race but a teacher of the white.The University, regrettably, is not closing to honor him; but thisweekend we can, all, get together, and bring out some of this racismthat is in us, and hold it up and see it for what it is.It would be tragic if this opportunity were lost because somecampus politicans don’t like the organizers of the Ruml conference.The radicals did, after all, have their own conference on racismlast quarter; Saturday a paper will be delivered on racism in theUniversity. The idea of the conference is for everyone to meetand maybe purge a little of this demon. We need it very badly.6/The Chicago Maroon/April 4, 1969 LETTERS TO THE EDITORSPolitical PurgeThe acquiescence of most students andfaculty to the expulsion of 37 students, inwhat amounts to a political purge of theLeft on campus, earns for this Universitythe unenviable distinction of being one ofthe most reactionary in the country. Ac¬tions far more disruptive than the sit-in oflast quarter elicited at other universitiesreactions less hysterical and penalities farless severe than at our own oasis of in¬tellectuality.The University’s image of moderation,based on its refusal to call in city police,was belied by the consistent refusal of thegoverning faculty to discuss the relevantissues with the students who felt movedenough to risk their careers by sitting-in.The administration did its best to generateand maintain an atmosphere of hysteria byits almost daily dissemination to the facul¬ty and the community at large of state¬ments of outrage from prominent facultymembers, and by conducting guided toursof the administration building after it wasvacated. The sentiment of the faculty atlarge is reflected by the willingness of onlyabout 5 percent of them to sign a petitioncirculated to all of the faculty, requestinga suspension of disciplinary action untilprocedures consistent with the AAUPguidelines were adopted.The failure of the faculty to respond tothe injustice perpetrated by a hand-pickeddisciplinary committee makes a hollowmockery of their highly touted life of themind. Why do we no longer hear fromthose faculty who, during the crisis, calledon the students to leave the building but atthe same time called for compassion andunderstanding? And is it fear or apathythat keeps silent the vast majority of stu¬dents, many of whom feel they have ben¬efited from the reforms generated by thesit-in?Before the smug expounders of reasonedanalysis and rational discourse gloat over¬much on their mass cleansing of thecampus of what they find undesirable, theyshould consider the lesson they taught thestudents. When faced with major decisions,students in the building voted for moder¬ation: they didn’t open University files toget material to document their charges,they didn’t take over other buildings, andthey left peacefully without causing muchdamage.And the response to this was the harsh¬est penalty possible, expulsion. One won¬ders what would have happened if it hadTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyHews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothAssistant Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Board:Disciplinary Committee- Leslie StraussUndergraduates: Wendy GlocknerNational Student News: Con HitchcockGraduate Students: Rob CooleyNews Staff: Jim Hafemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Bruce Norton, Steve Cook, Paula Szewzyk,Gerard Leval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Freida Murray, Marv Bittner, DebbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest, Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert.Senior Editor: Jeff KutaContributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, John Recht.Production Chief: Mitch Kahn. Assistant: Rob¬ert Swift. (Zowie.)Sunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during Ihe tenthweek of the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Business office: Midway3-0800, ext 3265. Editorial: ext 3260. Distributedon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhoodfree of charge. Subscriptions by mail $7 peryear. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III.Subscribers to College Press Service. been a more militant confrontation andone wonders what will happen when thenext one is.Leonard RadinskyAssistant ProfessorAnatomy DepartmentOverkill?The Maroon has noted that it has in¬sufficient space to publish all views on lastwinter’s confrontation. Its ability to re¬print, as a “public service,” the Committeeof Parents’ “Overkill” advertisement twicein the same issue adequately representsthe Maroon’s generosity to that particularviewpoint. Perhaps you can squeeze in anopposing viewpoint.The Committee of Parents of studentmilitants charges that their childrens’ ex¬pulsion for repeated campus disruptionswas a case of “overkill.” The vogue slogan“overkill” apparently has replaced the“domino theory” as a favorite intellectualsubstitute for serious examination of thefacts.The parents proclaim that their childrenwere punished for their dissenting opin¬ions. That is untrue. Their children weresuspended because they tried to imposetheir will on the University by seizing theadministration building. They were grant¬ed hearings, which they attempted to dis¬rupt, conducted by a committee, whichthey harrassed and reviled. They were ex¬pelled after they broke through Levi’sdoor, invaded a faculty dinner and ha¬rangued the guests, and assaulted a coupleof deans. No one denied their rights, butthey trangressed the rights of others.Their parents charge that more studentswere expelled from here than at Columbia,Berkeley, and San Francisco State com¬bined. I am thankful that President Leviachieved more discipline and we sufferedless violence than at these other campuses.The parents of the campus disrupterscharge that there are a “dozen decentways” to discipline students instead of sus¬pending or expelling them from school. Butwhat are these ways? A bust or no TV? Isuspect that the parents would object toany disciplining of their children. Theyseem to favor dissent without limitations.I dissent from attempts by SOS militantsto impose their minority program on thisUniversity by threats and violence. Thereis a distinction between peaceful dissentand coersion, and because the parents ofthe militants apparently failed to impressthis distinction on their children the Uni¬versity was obliged to discipline the mili¬tants.Carleton W. SterlingGraduate StudentDepartment of Political ScienceDear BrunoTo Bruno Bettelheim (on reading ex¬cerpts from his statement to the HouseSpecial sub-committee):“To the psychiatrist, both the craving forUtopia and the rebellion against the statusquo are symptoms of social maladjustmentTo the social reformer, both are symptomsof a healthy rational attitude. The psy¬chiatrist is apt to forget that smooth ad¬justment to a deformed society created de¬formed individuals.” (Arthur Koestler)Marilyn WeltzContinued on Page NineMurphiesApril 14 is the application deadlinefor Murphy scholarships. Applica¬tions are now available in the Under¬graduate Admission and Aid office,5737 S University.Murphies are awarded to studentswho because of their participationin activities vital to the Universitycannot engage in term-time work. ;The awards are based on financialneed, academic standing and thenature and extent of the student’sactivity.■ i i : ii,*. j„i i i' • „mHyde ParkThe streets of Hyde Park are gettingsafer __ at least safer than last year.Although the FBI national crime rateshot up 19 percent in 1968 and the city raterose 3 5 percent, total reported crimes inthe 21st police district dropped 6.8 percentaccording to Chicago police statistics.Police commander Charles Pepp, who di¬rects the 341 policemen of the 21st districtsaid the drop in crime is the result of in¬creased police activity and more effectiveenforcement of the laws.Speaking in his headquarters at 300 E.29th St., Pepp said there were 3,465 morearrests in 1968 than in 1967—14.174 over 10,-709.The 21st district includes an area ofsome 137.000 persons stretching along thelakefront from 15th St. to 61st St. Hydepark _ in the 47th to 61st St. area — is alow crime neighborhood compared with therest of the district, he said.No place in the country is completelysafe, but statistically, Hyde Park is just assafe as most of the suburbs, the 39-year-oldcommander asserted.How To Police Sit-Ins“A good policeman is a nosy person,”because the more information he has, thebetter equipped he is to handle a problem,21st district police commander CharlesPepp said.For this reason, Pepp said, he “keyedup” his information sources during the ad¬ministration building sit-in Jan 31-Feb 14.Although plainclothesmen were used inthe area, Pepp pointed out that tenplainclothesmen work for the district vicesquad every day.No Chicago policemen were needed inthe ad building during the demonstration,however, Pepp said, because students werewilling to report meetings and doings in¬side. “There are enough people who wantto ingratiate themselves,” the commandersaid. s Crime Rate Decreases In 1968But crime here is very real. The monthof February was the first since Pepp tookover as commander in which there wereno murders, he said. As he talked with areporter, a detective came into his officeto say he had just arrested two men onnarcotics charges.The crime is real, but some of the resi¬dents’ fears of the streets are unfounded.Catcalls from youths who mean no realharm, for example, frighten many persons,and one hot day last summer, police re¬ceived call after call that there would be ariot on 53rd St. The unfounded calls, Peppsaid, were prompted simply because resi¬dents saw large numbers of youths fromout of the neighborhood using the street toget to the lake to swim.What he called the community consciouspeople of Hyde Park also had a lot to dowith the crime rate drop, he said. The resi¬dents demand good police protection.Pepp said crimes against persons—suchas murder, rape and aggravated as¬sault-increased 1.2 percent in the city in1968. In the 21st district, they dropped 22.1percent. Crimes against proper¬ty-robbery, burglary, auto theft, andthefts of $50 or more — rose 4.9 percent inChicago and dropped 3.8 percent in the dis¬trict. Early 1969 figures appear to followthe same pattern, he said., Using a 1962 base, the nationwide totalcrime index rose 75 percent in the last sev¬en years. Chicago’s rate dropped 3.7 per¬cent during the same period.Arrests for drug use are rising. In 1967there were 27 arrests on warrants and 55in 1968. The total arrest rate for suspectednarcotics users is probably ten times thatof warrant arrests when the tip-off arrestsare combined with the number of catchesmade when the drugs are found during oth¬er investigations.Although there are legitimate complaints HYDE PARK ALLEYPossible crime sourceabout police activities, much talk of policeharrassment is unfounded, he said.“We’re simply not in this business to ha¬rass people,” the red-haired policeman de¬clared.Enforcement of curfew laws, whichbrings alot of resentment, is necessary anda crime deterrent, he said. But the en¬forcement must be fair, he added.Chicago regulations say persons 16 andunder have to be off the streets by 10:30p.m. weeknights and 11:30 Friday and Sat¬urday nights. Illinois state law orders per¬sons 17 and under off the streets by 11:30p.m. weeknights and 12:30 a.m. weekends.Complaints by citizens of police activitiesin the district dropped by 27 last year. Thedepartment’s Internal Investigation Divi¬sion (IID) received 144 complaints from CHARLES PEPP21st district commanderthe district in 1967 and 117 in 1968, he said.IID findings for 1967 showed 69 complaints unfounded, 50 sustained, 17 non-sustained and 8 officers in question exonerated. The 1968 findings were 59, 40, 17 ant5 in the same categories. Departmental action ranged from an oral reprimand to dismissal from the force, he said.Patrolmen have been ordered to give arapology to citizens if the citizen is inconvenienced without cause, Pepp said.Pepp said he does not know why complaints went down last year while the arrest rate went up. Usually, complaints increased as the arrest rate increases, hesaid.Pepp became district commander Feb27, 1968, replacing former commanderThomas Lyons.V.'. • •<>•11 < » t m April- 4> * 1969/Tho Chicago Maroon/7lt.Hl »lna.Kv.iaxiuv,(/l/letcu/y Portable CassetteTape RecorderlisteningLook to Lowes for service...selection...savings$5995Now sleep thru lectures whileyour cassette does all the1538 East 55th StreetMUseum 4-1505 Mon-Fri 9:30 to 9Sun 12 to 5• vu meter • dynamicmicrophone * earphone• external jackWhaffs New at LowesThis summer, study a languagewith the world’smost experienced teachers.TWA will fly you to the language of yourchoice.Your teachers will be waiters, waitresses,bartenders, barmaids, shopkeepers, bellboys,chambermaids, hotel clerks, policemen, cabdrivers...and just plain and fancy natives.You’ll do more than learn a language.That, you can do through text books.You’ll learn how to communicate with thatlanguage.What language do you want your forte tobe? French, Italian, German, Swahili,Spanish, Portuguese, Greek???? You name it.And TWA will fly you there for your summer vacation....Why TWA?Because we have more flights going towhere you’re probably going during thesummer, than any other airline.That means you can leave when you wantto leave—not when someone tells you it’syour turn to leave.Call TWA, your travel agent or the TWAcampus representative.TWAThe things we'll do to make you happy.you can hear yourself think ,want to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapand if you don'tTHE EAGLEcocktails luncheon dinner late snacks5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933 HY 3-8282Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd. GREAT BOOKS ""*1I am interested in purchasing "Great Books of the Western World" at jstudent or educators discount prices. Please have a representative call |me.Send to:Campus Rep.Great Books847 E. 57th St.Chicago. III. 60637Student □Educator □ Name:.Street:.City:....Phone:.JeWelr— —-'—aCome select from our new collection of gypsy-look jew* lry!Add verve, eolor and dash to any wardrobe. Hoop earrings,coin bracelets, belt chains and poison and snake rings. Allhandcrafted in wood, metal and precious stones. Now readyfor giving or getting.$900Prices start at ““fticKs %& &ou&sInternational Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7600Convenient HoursShop at home: Ask jor our catalogueOver 1400groovy ways> 4to spend a few years, get moreout of life, increase your earning power(and maybe even beat the draft).Guide to AmericanGraduate Schoolsby HERBERT B. LIVESEY,Director of Admissions, N.Y.U.and GENE A. ROBBINS,Former Chairman of Admissions, School of Education, N Y Upaperbound $3.95 • hardcover $8.50at your bookstore or fromTHE VIKING PRESS, 625 Madison Avenue, N.Y. 10022CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324*7998Has what you need from a $10used 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants &. Mill returns at afraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qualities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERY authorized BMC5424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615 mi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.JB/Jhe Chicago Maroon/April 4, 1969Continued From Page Sixletters to theDissentThere are too many persons on thiscampus who would like to isolate theevents leading up to the sit-in from themore general issue of the right to dissentin this country. It is no accident that theKalven Report spoke not only of specificoffences against the University but also ofthe threat to a University “mission” orthat President Nixon saw student unrest asa menace not only to academic freedombut to civilization as well. Many of thosewho criticize students support dissent onobviously malicious practices such as theWar or Mayor Daley’s tactics, but theyfeel an attack on the university is illegiti¬mate because it jeopardizes America’sonly hope for rational discourse.This belief in the sanctity of the univer¬sity has brought about the replacement ofa social elite by an educational elite. TheEnlightenment emphasis on education asthe key to social improvement, the sub¬sequent faith in a “career open to talents,”and the expansion of a civil service wereessential elements in lessening the dead¬ening weight of social connection as thearbiter of advancement. The definition of EDITORS OF THEtalent, however, has always been circum-sribed by the social groupings and politicalpriorities of the period. For example, civilservice examinations in 19th century Eng¬land were constructed around the peculiarinstruction given at Oxford and Cam¬bridge. This meant that those who had for¬merly come up through the ranks werenow hindered by not having a universitydegree.The definition of talent in this country isas clearly limited by political and socialdistinctions as it was in England. Talent istoo closely indentified with a college edu¬cation. Often the degree is more importantthan what is learned. To be a social workerone must have a degree—in anything; also,many businesses will accept almost anymajor as requisite training for its execu¬tive candidates. It appears that business,government, and often academia are moreinterested in the level of responsibility andsocial and cultural achievement attainedduring a college career than in any learn¬ing that might have occurred. Or, to applythe limited definition of “talent” to“knowledge” as well the student is oftenasked to take for “knowledge” that whichmerely sets off one discipline, from anoth¬ MAROONer. So what is good sociology and what isgood history become more important ques¬tions than what is truth. In other words,those qualities which distinguish one pro¬fession from another often become theends rather than the means of learning.All of this comes back to the first area ofcriticism and that is the tendency to con¬nect missions and civilizations with thenarrowly proscribed interests of modemuniversities. It often boils down to a pro¬fessor believing that if one threatens him,Friday, April 4RECRUITING VISIT: University of Hawaii Departmentof English, Honolulu, Hawaii. Interested in inter¬viewing MA English candidates for temporary appoint¬ments as freshman-sophomore instructors.FILM: "Far from Vietnam", Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30.LECTURE: "The Jews of Eastern European Society andCulture'', Arcadius Kahan. Hillel House, 8:30.Saturday, April 5FILM: "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Law SchoolAuditorium, 7 to 9:30.FILM: "Yeh Raste Hain Pyarke'', Hindi movie withEnglish sub-titles. Judd Hall, 7:30.CONCERT: Buddy Guy and Junior Wells Blues Concert.Mandel Hall, 8 pm. Tickets available at the MandelBox office, $3, $2.50, $2. one is threatening the search for truth anddestroying any hope for rational discourse.In a university system where expertise isso often confused for rationality, this is amost serious accusation. When a small el¬ite, chosen in terms of their limited dis¬ciplinarian view of truth, chose to see anythreat to their position as tantamount to anattack on reason then the “career open totalents” has taken a full swing and talenthas lost any objective meaning.Hilda SmithEASTER EVE VIGIL: a service sponsored by theEcumenical Christian Council. Holy communion will beheld. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 10 - midnight.Sunday, April 6UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES, PALM SUN¬DAY: Reverend E Spencer Parsons. Rockefeller Chap¬el, 11 am.FOLK DANCING: International folk dancing. Teachingfrom 7:30, requests from 9. Ida Noyes Hall.FILM: "A Man for All Seasons", Mandel Hall. 8 pmonly.Monday, April 7LECTURE: "Zen as Self-Awakening", Masai Abe, pro¬fessor of religious philosophy at Nara University,Kyoto, Japan. Swift Hall commons, 4 p.m.BULLETIN OF EVENTSTheMusical SocietypresentsA Concert ofBach Chamber WorksLaurence Libia,harpsichordwith members ofThe ContemporaryChamber PlayersThe l C SymphonyI he Collegium VlusicumBond ChapelTuesday, April 8th8:30 P.M.f ree and Open to the PublicPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price! Watch for New Home ofUNIVERSALARMY STORE(1364 E. 63rd St.)Will be 1150 E. 63rd(Betw. Woodlawn& University)NEW ENLARGEDSTOREMens - Children'sLadies - Infants WearUNIVERSALArmy Dept. StoreHY 3-1187Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-68561460 E. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVER j, C^orn .3forhtIt 1645 E. 55tk STREET ?^Chicago, ill. 606is*y& Phone: FA 4-_165J ^whatever is new in hairstyling . . .PERMANENTS e TINTING e CUTTINGWAVING]RANDELLBeauty and Cosmetic SalonAIR CONDITIONED— Open Evenings by Appointment —5700 HARPER AVFNIJF FAirfax 4-2007MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.eye EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark PlazaI 200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 TAKSAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out When you pay a little extra for a Volks¬wagen Sedan, you get 390 square inches ofsunshine.We call it the VW Sunroof Sedan (and for$2029 you can call it your own).The Sunroof makes like easier for peoplewho can't decide between a sedan and aconvertible.When you're in the mood for a convertible,just crank open the Sunroof as much as youlike. Or as little.And when you want a roof over your head,just crank the cover closed. It's made of steel,and padded and lined like the rest of the top,so you hardly know it's there.This makes the car as airtight and wa¬terproof as our regular Sedan.If you're still not con¬vinced the sun is worth onextra $90*, how aboutthis:For the same price,we'll give you the ^moon.A place in the sun: $90. WHAT CHICAGO RADIOSTATION PRESENTS APROGRAM PRODUCEDIN COOPERATIONWITH THEBLACK-P-STONENATION EVERYMONDAY AFTERNOON!THREE TO SIX?•whpk fm 88.3(deesPOUR PR0TEGER V0TRE REVENUII faut songer a planifier la protec¬tion de votre bien le plus precieux!La police Sun Life revenu-invaliditevous assure contre la perte completede revenu par suite de maladie oud’invalidite. Disponible avec touteune gamme de supplements. Je meferai un plaisir de vous fournir plusde precisions.Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390— 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE DU CANADAJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FORUNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTH-FIFTH & WOODLAWN SOUTH IMPORTMOTORS1511L 71st (West of Stony Island)BU 8-4900Contact: George McCtowiy General Manager TYlitzie i Slower Shop"FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53rd STREETV A_A_ —iApril 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/9COLLEGE CURRICULUMCONFERENCESCHEDULE OF EVENTSThursday, April 10Discussion of General Education Biology. Business East 103, 8-10 p.m.Friday, April 11Student Forum. Quantrell Auditorium, 3:30 p.m. Love and Justice in Student Faculty Relationships. Orlinsky,Browning, Aronson.Continuing Discussion. Reynolds Club South Lounge, 8:00 p.m. Student-Faculty Relations: Mutual Obligationsand Responsibilities Butler, Hellie, Lewontin, Lowi.Saturday, April 12, MORNINGBiology Departmental Meetings 10:00 a.m. to 12 noonDepartmentBiochemistryBiologyBiopsychologyPhysiologyMicrobiologySaturday, April 12, AFTERNOONDiscussion of the Common Core. Mandel Hall, 1:00 p.m. What Are We After and How Can We Get It?Informal Discussion: General Education Reynolds Club Lounges, 2:00 p.m. Reynolds Club Lounges will beavailable for carry-over discussions from each of the meetings dealing with the common core and specificcommon core courses.Discussion of General Education Social Sciences. Mandel Hall, 3:00 p.m.Discussion of General Education Humanities. Mandel Hall, 4:00 p.m.Discussion of General Education Physical Sciences. Mandel Hall, 5:00 p.m.Saturday, April 12, EVENINGBiology Collegiate Division Meeting. Rosenwald 2, 8:00 p.m.Sunday, April 13The Non-General Education General Education Discussion of courses required of non-majors from variousdepartments and divisions. Location of MeetingCobb 101Cobb 110Cobb 102Cobb 104Cobb 103COURSE LOCATION TIMEGerman Cobb 101 • 1:00 p.m.Romance Languages Cobb 110 1.00 p.m.Russian Cobb 102 1:00 p.m.African Civilization Cobb 104 2:00 p.m.Asian Civilization Cobb 116 2:00 p.m.Indian Civilization Cobb 103 2:00 p.m.Islamic Civilization Cobb 112 2:00 p.m.Latin American Civ. Cobb 115 2:00 p.m.Russian Civilization Cobb 107 2:00 p.m.Western Civilization Cloister Club 300 p.m.Mathematics (101,2.3, &150,1,2,3) Cobb 112 4:00 p.m.Statistics Cobb 101 4:00 p.m.A Radical Approach To Curriculum ReformCloister Club. 1:00-3 00 p.m.Foreign Studies And Student Exchange ProgramsIda Noys Library. 3.00 p.m.The Quarter System and Alternative SystemsEast Lounge, Ida Noyes. 4:00 p.m.Note-. We have other rooms available for different discussion topics on Sunday. If you wish to hold such adiscussion, call ext. 4207 and we will arrange for both location and publicity.Monday, April 14: Departmental Meetings 8:00 p.m.DEPARTMENTHumanities Collegiate DivisionClassicsEnglishLinguisticsMusicNear EasternPhilosophyRomance LanguagesSlavicCollegiate Division of the Social SciencesAnthropologyEconomicsGeneral StudiesGeographyHistoryPolitical SciencePsychologyPublic AffairsSociologyPhysical Sciences Collegiate DivisionChemistryGeophysicsPhysical SciencesPhysicsMathematicsStatistics LOCATION OF MEETINGCobb 101Lounge INHCobb 102Cobb 103Cobb 104Cobb 119Cobb 110Cobb 116Cobb 106Cobb 107Cobb 201RO 41Cobb Coffee ShopLibrary INHE Lounge(contact ext. 3924)Cobb 115Cobb 202Cobb 203Cobb 204Ry 251Eck 206(contact Dept. Chrmn.)Note: It appears that several departments have been and are continuing to discuss curricular problems to suchan extent that they felt another meeting would be unnecessary at this time. Other departments will be holdingmeetings on Monday evening off campus.- in this case, phone numbers are given instead of locations. If yourdepartment is not listed and you feel a meeting would be useful, call ext. 4207 and we will arrange a time, aplace and publicity.Tuesday, April 15, 8-10 p.m.Divisional Meeting with Recording Secretaries.Minutes of all proposals raised in Divisional Meetings will be published in a Guideline for Curriculum Reform atthe conclusion of the conference. Hopefully these proposals will be those raised in and forwarded from theDepartmental Meetings.DIVISION LOCATION OF MEETINGHumanities Lounge, Ida Noyes HallNew Collegiate Division Social Science 122Physical Sciences Rosenwald 2Social Sciences Kent 107 Now there is an addition in the Volvo family.We think you should see it... our new"6 cylinder Deluxe"May we invite you for a test drive?VOLVO SALES & SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1 -3800We specialize in European delivery — call usMR. KIMBARK SAYSNow is the time to buy your Easter Wine and Spirits at agreat savings.Special Sale on German Estate Bottled WinesGood with your Ham or Poultry DinnerGraf Matuschka 66 vintage Schloss Volrads Red Silver Capsule $2.69Von Simmern 66 vintage Hattenheimer Nussbrunert Reisling cabinet.. $2.89Reinhold Senfter 67 vintage Niersteiner Rehbach Feine Spaetlese $2.79Von Schorlemer 66 vintage Ockfener Bockstein Spaetlese $2.79Von Schorlemer 66 vintage Brauneberger Juffer Spaetlese $3.19Dr. Thanish 67 vintage Graacher Himmelreich $3.39French Wine by Alexis Lichine66 vintage Cotes du Rhone Estate Bottled $1.79Fine Petite Chateau Chat Dowrron 64 vintage $1.89Hannah & Hogg Gin 90° $2.98 Imperial Napoleon Brandy $3.291214 E. 53rd St. FREE DELIVERY Specials Fri., Sat., Sun.HY 3-3355Committee on African and BlackAmerican HumanitiesandCommittee on African StudiesTwo Lectures:"Traditional Ethiopian Poetry" Abram DemozTues, April 8 4:00 Ida Noyes Library"Villages, Chiefs and Central Governments'' Marc SwartzWed, April 9 4:30 Swift CommonsSEMINARY COOPERATIVEBOOKSTORE, INC.• theology •philosophy /• political scienceand related fields• course books in philosophyand political science5757 So. University Mon.- Fri. 12 noon - 4 P.M.10/The Chicago Maroon/April 4, T969rrrrrrrrrffnw.v.v %%v ,...'M>' ,, i r t t • I .*■■.*•■».*■ * I II HU. • I(Maroon Classified Ads)ROUND TWO-TUESDAY, MANDEL HALL, FOUR PMRATES- For University students,faculty, and staff: SO cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line. 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMA¬TION: phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3266. FOR SALECHARTER FLIGHTSThere are still some seats availableon SG's summer flights to Europe.NY — Lon — Par rt. June 24 - Sept.2 $285; Chi — Par — Rome return¬ing from London Aug. 5 - Sept. 1S275; a few seats left on Chi — LonPar rt. June 21 - Sept. 20 $265.Call extension 3598 or come to rm306 Ida Noyes, 1-5:30 P.M. Week¬days.TYPINGMay I do your typing? 363-1104. For photographic excellence buy thisNikkormat FT with 50mm FI.4 lens,$124.95. Call Mahood, BU 8-1100, ext.1211. Leave name and phone.160 lb. weight set. 493-4603.KLH special: the last KLH 25 inChicago reg. $425, now $325 SAVES100. MUSICRAFT, Bob Tabor 324-3005.LOWREY port, organ, 2 keybd, ownamp, home or group, $300 or best.Power amp, 2-15'' spkrs, 100 watts,$200 or best. Call 363-1328 eves.4 romping silly kiddys — cheap —reasonable, FREE. 667-6639.Volvo '65, 122s AM-FM low mi,imm. 374-5662 evenings 8. weekends.Moving to California sale. Sony TC-100 Cassette Tpe Rec. $40, recharg-able batt. $10. 2 Dyna 60 wattamps (120 watts) — new tubes —$85. Unbelievably beautiful Brazilianguitar — pearl inlay Rosewood body— $100. AM-FM tuner — HarmonKardon — $25. Zenith portable ster¬eo — good cond. $40. 667-6788.STEREO COMPONENTS AT DIS¬COUNTS ONE WEEK ONLY. Ken¬wood TK88 stereo FM-AM receiver,90 watts solid state. Reg. $340, now$219.95. Sherwood S7800 AM-FM ster¬eo receiver 140 watts solid state Reg$420, now $299.95. Discounts on AR,Dyna, etc. MUSICRAFT on campusBob Tabor 324-3005.Typing — Greek symbols, equations,stencils, Judy Herder 238-6109.Typing 684-6589 after 5:30.PEOPLE WANTEDActors: tryouts for The Duchess ofMalfi. 13 m 4 w. Apr 5th, 6th 2 P.M.7th 6:30 P.M. REYNOLDS CLUB.New York-based social agency sum¬mer camp needs counselors, special¬ists, supervisors. Low pay, hard butrewarding work. 643-7473.Waiter or waitress needed at thenicest restaurant in Hyde Park—TheMad Hatter. Luncheon shift 10:30 -3:00 daily except Monday. 1656 E.53rd.8 weeks on Martha's Vinesyard,room, board and $20-week in ex¬change for babysitting for 2 chil¬dren. June 12 to August 7 or so. Call624-8363, eve.Babysitter wanted Tuesdays, morn¬ing or afternoon. HY 3-0019.Persons interested in working in anycapacity for the Festival of the Arts,the phenomenal 2’/i week springhappening at the U of C, are invitedto our meeting — Wed, Apr. 9, 8:00P.M. Reynolds Club S. Lounge orcall Doug Kissel, 829 B-J.Wanted for sleep studies: goodsleepers willing to spend two week¬ends in the lab. Those selected willbe paid. Call Ml 3-0800, ext. 2349, 10am - 5 pm Fri, Mon, or Tues (April4, 7, 8). Sri NerodeDO 3-0155 Sony TC-200 stereo tape recorder —complete, $100, Harmony 2 P.U.electric guitar 8, case fine action$80. FA 4-9500, room 1802.FOR RENTNEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO3-5 room apartments, all with tile-baths 8, showers. Ideal for students,interns, nurses, young couples. NOCHILDREN. Rental $85-8105. CallRE 4-4141.Room for rent; board available, inlovely Hyde Park home, 3 blocks toI.C. Phone 288-3630 up to 4:30. Phone538-4121 after 4:30.Room for girl in private home. $40-mo. MU 4-5076 5-9 P.M.Want someone to take May 1st leaseand sublet to me thru June. 2’/2 rmson E. 53rd st„ a few doors fromHyde Park's own Hobby House. Suit¬able for couple or individual. $90mo. Will relinquish anytime afterJune 1. Call 363-1328 eves.Pvt inexp rms 8, suites laundry 8.rec. facilities. 5555 Woodlawn. PL2-9704.WANTED TO RENTApartment in Hyde Park, 3-4 bed¬rooms, want to rent either Junethrough next school year, or Sep¬tember through year. Please callWendy, Annette, or Laurie at 1205,1206 or 1209 Woodward Court (BU8-6610).Want 3 plus bdrm apt. for nxt yrwill take now 8, sublet to you ifwanted BU 8-6610 rm 2214 Debbie.ROOMMATES WANTEDOwn room near lake for fern over21. Beg. June. 493-2250 eves.Male stud badly wanted to assumesingle room, w-meal contract, inBurton-Judson. Larry Siedel, BJ orcall PL 2-9718.Female roommate wanted for sum¬mer and next year. 56th 8< Univer¬sity. Own room and bath. Furnished.Call 955-5036 evenings.Roommate wanted: male grad sdtlarge 7 rm. apt. on 53rd near lake.$60 per mo. May - Oct. Option onnext year. 363-3546.PERSONALSThe WASH PROM will be held Fri¬day, April 18. Tickets will go on saleFriday, April 4 at the price of $5.50a couple. On Friday, Apr. 11, ticketswill go up to $6.50. Tickets areavailable immediately at WoodwardCt, Rm 1221, and 5400 GreenwoodAve, Rm 44. By Tues, several moresales places wil! be available, andwill be designated in the Maroon.Buy early — SAVE A BUCK. Formore info on tickets, etc., call 363-5826 or-and read Maroon — WPC.Sunday, April 6, Folksinging led andtaught immediately following Pass-over supper at Hillel House, 7:30P.M.AURORA BOREALIS has arrived!The candles are still here. See themat Swift Hall today till 5.BUDDY GUY, JUNIOR WELLS Sat,April 5, 8 P.M., at Mandel Hall,Tickets at Mandel Box Office — $3,$2.50, $2. It's gonna be a 4 hou. con¬cert."He (Joseph Jarman) uses the mostunmanageable ranges of his wood¬winds to blend squeals, overtones,squawks, shrieks, and chirps intobeautifully formed lines." John B.Litweiler.Joseph Jarman himself April 9.Student photographer wants Biblical-types (male) for last supper pose.363-8231.For real authenticity, the shots willbe taken on the Seder.Butt Steak a la Judy, with tomato,garlic, and red wine, now at Ah¬mad's.'Twas brillig and the slithy toves didgyre and gimble. . .TO THE BEATOF LAY. — Wash Prom.AURORA BOREALIS records cheap¬est 324-3005. Sokitous (?) NOW.Solid state light show. Swift Halllobby today.BUDDY GUY revitalizes with JU¬NIOR WELLS for 4 hours 8 P.M.Tomorrow night Mandel Hall — $3,$2.50, $2.Colored lithographs by Marc Chagallnow on exhibit at Hillel House.Student hang-ups at Chicago?Invite a prof home to dinner. Ext.2825.MARCH APRIL FIFTH.HEAD CROSSWORDS can be done.I just haven't met anyone who gotmore than five entries.Know a lot about ?.iuc$, Folk, Rock,or Classical Music and little aboutJazz. Learn from the best of theAACM (Association for the Advance¬ment of Creative Musicians), spear¬head of "The Chicago Movement"that starts where Coltrane leavesoff. Experience Jarman — April 9, 8P.M., Ida Noyes.April 18 — April 18 — April 18 KLH Model Twenty-FourCIHCVITRY: All solid-state,designed and built entirely byKLH. 35 watts IHF music power(over GO watts EIA — Electric In-dustries Association — peakpower) . Low frequency power contoured to speaker requirementsSensitive, drift-free FM sterectuner.TURNTABI.E: Garrard recordchanger made to KLH specificstions. Very low-mass tone armresists jarring, tracks even badlywarped records. Pickering V-15magnetic cartridge with diamondstylus.CONTROLS: Zero-center tuningmeter Phono-FM Auxiliary selector. (On “Phono,” turntable automatieally shuts off entire systemafter last record—whether onautomatic or manual.) Mono¬stereo selector switch. Stereobroadcast indicator light BassTreble. Speaker Balance. VolumeVernier FM tuning.SPEAKERS: Designed and builtbv KLH. Two 8" acoustic suspen¬sion woofers, with contoured amplifier power, give more low-bassresponse with less distortion (banfar larger speakers. Two 2" wide-dis|>ersion tweeters.FLEXIBILITY: Tape recorderjack. Headphone jack. Speaker onoff switch. Pair of input jacks forta pe or ot her mono or stereo sou reeLIMITATIONS: Not quite sopowerful as our own ModeTwenty.ETC.: Oiled walnut cabinets, eachfinished on four sides. Snap-out recoverable speaker grille panelsControl Center: 18" W x 14*■«" Dx 83,V' H (with automatic spindlein place). Speaker cabinets, each:10'/," YV x 18" H x 7:'ir." D.SUGGESTED PRICE: $319.95(includes Model 701 Dust Cover)MOD E L T W E N TY-FOULWITH AM: Both AM and FMradio. Suggested price (again with701 Dust Cover) $349.95.You've heard ofMUSICRAFTChicago's finestcustom AudioSpecialistsNowMUSICRAFToffers theKLH 24at aSPECIAL PRICENow$299.95includes dust coverwith AM$319.95includes dust coverAtuAirCvaft2035 W. 95th St.--779-85Q048 E. Oak St.-DE 7-4150On Campus CallBob Tabor324-3005 Sand candles, rice candles, fish can¬dles, Freudian candle stands. Guesswhere?Yuk, Yuk, I donno, Eagar.CHGO'S OWN SWINGERS CLUBSend $1 for 52 page illust. magazine.100s of personals. MKS, Box 3806,CHGO 60654.Marco Polo is a name that makessense for a complete travel agency.326-4422.WRITERS' WORKSHOP PL 2-8377.Dr. John F. Kramer, Director Stu¬dent Mental Health Clinic will speakat Pre Med Club meeting on studentmental health at Chicago, 7:30 P.M.,Apr. 10, Billings M-137. Come.A prof in every pot. Ext. 2825.Passover meals at Hillel this week.The New Music??? April 9, 8 P.M.Ida Noyes.March tomorrow for everything youbelieve. Like freedom of the press.Radical candles, come get them be¬fore they're expelled. Swift Hall.NOW.Four hours of BUDDY GUY and JU¬NIOR WELLS — April 5, 8 P.M.Great food — WASH PROM.Theatre of the stomach nitely at IdaNoyes.The Mad Hatter — nicest restaurantin Hyde Park — Sauerbrauten everySaturday & Sunday dinner. May I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?YOGA: Pot's euphorias 8< sex's ecstasies weaken kids' concentrationGrp or sngle class. Sri Nerode. DO3-0155.NEEDED: someone interested intaking care of FOTA workshops inpainting and film production: no ex¬perience necessary — just COMMU¬NITY KARMA — oversee dis¬tribution of film, camera use, etc.Contact Steve 324-4429.Musical society — Bach ChamberWorks Bond Chapel Tues. Apr. 8,8:30 P.M. FREE.Howard F.S. Greems is 100%pleased with his inner-glow candle.Same cast of characters — sametime — same place. Bandersnatch.Tickets for BUDDY GUY — JU¬NIOR WELLS Blues Concert avail¬able at Mandel Box Office and atthe door Sat. nite.SAM LAY — WASH PROMFREAKY, groovy, out-of-sight andyour mother wears army boots(that's going to sell posters?).JAN IS JOPLIN sock-it-to-me psy-chedelicious metallic silver reflec¬tive posters. $1.50. Maroon BusinessOffice. Friday til 6, Monday til noon,all day Tues and Wed.Will the people who placed the GAYPOWER ad the 3-14 Maroon pleasecontact Box 69, Maroon, as soon aspossible.The above ad is legit and con¬fidential. Why not?; Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EfendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkU of C 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.Same food too — but new records dnthe iuke box. Bandersnatch.SPRING is a many splendored thing— to find out about a couple ofsplendors — write Cupid Computer,5400 Greenwood No. 9, Chicago.Spring booksale of modern theo¬logical, scriptural, and church his¬torical works 30-70% off. CalvertHouse. 5735 Univ.Everyone welcome to the first meet¬ing of the bridge club Tuesday,April 8, 8:00, Ida Noyes EastLounge.FOR SALE: '49 Harley-Davidson"45" completely overhauled and re¬stored — beautiful condition — rideit to believe it. 363-8809 eves. $500 orbest offer.Little baskets, big baskets, so manyto choose from, baskets of everykind. You'll find exactly the rightone in Saers Candy Dept. They'refilled with scrumptious goodies —chocolates, brightly colored eggs,novelty candies and toys tuckedsnugly everywhere.Anybody that self-righteous deservedit.Any religious leader with more thanone suit is a hustler — Lenny Bruce.Select a bunny straight from won¬derland for your little boy or girl.Many colors and sizes in cuddlyplush pile. Made to be hugged.Goodbye Ike. as the world says itslast goodbye to its favorite toy sol¬dier, we all remember those partingwords that he gave to us when heleft office for the final goodbye. Re¬member the warning against themilitary-industrial complex? Well,they got him at last. They took con¬trol of the hospitals and preventedhim from having his God-ordainedfiftieth miraculous recovery. Wherewill we be without dramatic head¬lines? We'll miss you, Ike.LOST!!! Brittany spaniel (that's adog), white with orange medium¬sized patches. Answers to Renzaor Pie. Last seen at 8 and Univ. at6 pm Thurs. Reward. Please call493-5315.Overkill is the current "in" term.And now the question arises, shouldanyone be killed at all? CAMERA DEPT.Par Rexall Drug1204 E 53rd StOpen Every Day9 am to 10 pmWe carry:AgfaPentaxRolleiYashicaKodakPetriMinoltaHoneywell ElmoAccuraBauerMamiya SekorMirandaStrobonarOlympusVi vita rSoligorMelicoPattersonRowiUltimaKobenaExactaPolaroidMinoxDurst288-1177April 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11I'Ml■■ —SAVINGSCERTIFICATESUniversity National Bank offers you—• Savings Certificates paying the highest rateof interest permitted by law5% per year on certificates of $1,000 or more• Savings Certificates backed by bank safetymember: Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationChicago Clearing House AssociationFederal Reserve System• Savings Certificates tailored to fit your needsavailable for 3, 6,7, 8, 9,10,11 or 12 month periodsFor maximum income with maximum safety and maximumadaptability to your personal needs invest in fluctuation free UniversityNational Bank Savings Certificates.Just ask any of our officers. They'll be happy to handle thedetails for you.Isn’t this another good reason for doing business with University National?(. *v>> • UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615 1V - —....7TELEPHONE MU 4-1200 1 mstrength and service03 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association/ Federal Reserve System12/The Chicago Maroon/April 4, 1969THE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number 16 April 4, 1969Exclusive GCJ Interview!New Dean of Ex-Students Tells AllAS FAST AS THE UNIVERSITY can appoint new ad¬ministrators, the Grey City Journal provides you withpointed insights into the men and their positions. Thelatest addition to the fifth-floor staff is Aristide Saccard,dean of ex-students, appointed by President Levi duringthe spring interim. Last week, he was interviewed byGCJ gossip and advice-columnist Ian Wellington.Since your post has been newly created, Mr Saccard,perhaps you’d like to begin by explaining to our readersexactly what you do.Certainly. The office of the dean of ex-students arose outof a felt need by Mr. Levi and the committee of thecouncil to be of service to that ever-expanding segmentof the campus which, not yet alumni, is not served bythe alumni association, but which, no longer student,doesn’t fall under the jurisdiction of the dean of students.So far, of course, the duties of the office have not beenclearly defined, but I have already received a few gener¬al directives. For example, it is my responsibility to seethat ex-students are kept away from library books,classes, lectures — all of those sources of learning whichmust be kept in the hands of the faithful, so to speak. Iam also in charge of a three-man hutch patrol underassociate dean Lex E Ordnung, which will see to it thatthe commons isn’t over-crowded by having ex-studentseat there.Then you’re pretty much of a disciplinarian?What an idea! Of course, the post does have its oneroustasks, but basically I see it as a service organization.For example, we help ex-students get in touch with theappropriate local draft boards, we help them when theymove from their dormitories, we make sure they under¬stand the procedure for paying back their loans. We’reeven starting a care package program, and hopefullynext year we can begin to collect money to provideplaques for those of our ex-students who have gone over¬seas and have. .. .well. .. Besides, just suspending thesestudents in the first place is really a service to them.You may not know it, but they were being closelywatched by members of the Chicago police red squadwhile they were on campus. Thus, by getting them off-campus, we’re actually protecting them.Wouldn’t it be better to get the red squad off campus?Open Letter to Kalven CommitteeThe damage done to the senior faculty because of therole it has elected to play in the recent sit-in, has con¬firmed my initial negative reaction to the present dis¬ciplinary procedures and those recommended by the Kal¬ven Committee. Having decided that only the senior fac¬ulty could be trusted to define and maintain the “missionof the university”, faculty members have been forced toplay the role of police, prosecutor, judge and jury indisciplinary procedures. Faculty members have had tohand out summonses, “finger students”, photograph stu¬dents, spy on students, issue propaganda statements;conduct “treason trials”, and finally take responsibilityfor student expulsions and suspensions. All this to protectthe “Life of the Mind”.The participation of Junior faculty and students indefining and maintaining the “mission of the university”is not something to fear, but in fact is absolutely neces¬sary if the intellectual life of the university is not tostagnate in these times of rapid social, political, andintellectual change. The current student unrest is a re¬sult in part of insufficient and inadequate intellectualleadership by universities and their faculties in a time ofsocial crises. The effect of the present disciplinary proce¬dures is to further isolate the senior faculty and preventthem from responding to the urgent problems of society.Richard K- LashofChairmas,Department of Mathematics One of these two men is the new dean of ex-studentsWhich one is it? • And deny them their democratic right to utilize a freeuniversity? Besides, some of them are rather highlyplaced.In your official capacity, then, you will be dealing withonly a small percentage of the campus. What will be thesource of your operating funds, since the University is insuch desperate financial condition?In the first place, your initial assumption is quite wrong.While the number of ex-students presently stands at amere 100 or so, our figures indicate that the rate isrising rapidly: by 1976, more than half the campusshould be composed of ex-students. Furthermore, sinceevery student is a potential ex-student, the success of ouroperations requires that we have complete data on ev¬eryone so that we can serve them in case they shouldslip from grace. We will therefore have a staff of repre¬sentatives in dorms, classrooms, poolrooms. Oh no, youcould not say that we are dealing with just a smallpercentage.And the funds?Our officer operates on a commission basis.Since many of our readers are very much concernedwith the whole disciplinary procedure which resulted inthe creation of your office, perhaps you’d like to com¬ment on the events of last quarter.Of course, I wasn’t here and I don’t know all the details,but it seems to me that the Oaks and the whats-his-namecommittees performed their functions admirably. As wasdemonstrated by Tsar Nicholas I in 1825, the best thingto do with revolutionaries is to isolate them. Of course,this can’t hold off the revolution forever, but even ifOaks has only silenced this kind of outrage for a mere 92years, as Nicholas did, this is a substantial achievement.Not that discipline in and of itself, of course, can solveall the University’s problems: it must also be accom¬panied by some drastic structural reforms in its verynature. For example, we all know that most of theseradicals are. . .well. . .you’re not Jewish yourself, areyou?No.I only ask because some of them are a little touchy.Anyway, by reducing the number of entering students,particularly those groups which have shown themselvesin the past to be trouble-makers.. . .You know, troublemakers just happen to be, on the whole, of Hebrew per¬suasion. . . .1 mean, with Levi as President, you couldn’tcall it exactly anti-semitic.A lot of students have complained that, since the Oakscommittee was entirely composed of faculty, studentswere denied the right to a trial by peers. What do youthink of this?Oh, we couldn’t have students disciplining! They hadalready made up their minds about the cases — thatwouldn’t be justice, would it?But hadn’t the faculty already made up its mind too?That is a common misconception. Actually, the facultyhad only “made up its mind” in the sense that all mem¬bers of the committee were committed to the truth. Itjust so happened that in this case, the truth was so clearthat they were all in perfect accord. Much the samething happened during World War II, you remember.You mean that all American scholars were agreed intheir anti-fascism.That too. . . .Actually, though, I was thinking of the situ¬ation in the German universities.Glad to have been of service. Perhaps you’d better checkwith someone before you print the interview — Iwouldn’t want either of us to get into trouble.Protest the Vietnam WarMARCH FOR PEACEAssemble 1 P.M. State & WackerMarch to Coliseum for rallyJOIN US U. of C. Faculty ResistanceRichard BurtonMike Nichols' Elizabeth TaylorWHO’S AFRAID OF(plus“Boiled Egg”) VIRGINIAWOOLF?Saturday, April 5, Law School Auditorium7 & 9:30, $1 (Series $5) CEFDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicshave joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & r>i’ change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island « 734-6393 Now thru April 26Paul Fester's''historical happeuiig"Tom PaineStarring Michael Higginswith Ellen TravoltaGoodman Theatre200 S. Columbus Drive CE 6-2337what do the directors ofbreathless,la guerre est finie &a man and a womanhave in common?FAR FROM VIETNAMThe directors, of course, are lean-Luc. Godard (BREATHLESS, ALPHAVILLE,I.A CHINOISE), Alain Resnais (LA GUERRE EST FINIE, HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR.LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD) and Claude LeloucSi (A MAN AND A WOMAN) --three of France's most brilliant young filmmakers. They, in collaborationwith Agnes Varda (LE BONHEUR) and Chris Marker (LE IOLI MAI), filmedFAR FROM VIETNAM. Including a report on the October 1967 Pentagon marchand its aftermath, it is both a deeply felt plea for peace and a superb workof cinema art. EAR FROM VIETNAM is the most significant artistic statementof our times on the war in Vietnam. Held over 3rd. MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDNOMINEEBEST ACTORA bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CLIFF ROBERTSONCLARE BLOOM"CHARLY"a j m a Student rate everySII day BUT Saturdayf with I D. Card rrmrmooHYDE PARKSTARTS TRI.lAPRIL 4thCOMMOOfKAUHUNm;: "a session with *EudlytspfKtMtdUVE ou stage m Sjh f ranc,^*and LosArtcetes1COIOMPLAyCCVS /411-NM HI IliOH3 PERFORMANCES FRIDAY A SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREApril II»r Sellers Stanley Kubrick sDR STRANGELOVEwGWSWApril 12Robert MorseHOW TO SUCCEEDIN BUSINESSApril 18Steve McQueen James CoburTHE GREAT ESCAPEApril 19Alan Arkm Audrey HepburnWAIT UNTIL DARK April 25Gregory PeckTHE GUNS OF NAVARONEwfiasiuApril 26Madame LemmonIRMA LA DOUCETICKETS $1.50vliMuPLUS: FLASH GORDONAND THE CLAY PEOPLEEvery night a new chapterplayboy!vT M E AT E R Jtimeout • kHott ms u is May 2Fellini sJULIETTE OF THE SPIRITSwft*wVMay 3Burton Taylor Mike Nicb. •,WHO'S AFRAID OFVIRGINIA WOOLF?May 9Alan Bates de Broca sKING OF HEARTSMay 10Lester sTHE KNACK"1“THERE’S NOTHING LIKE IT AT ALL!”GROVE PRESS PRESENTSJEAN-LUC GODARD’SWEEKENDSI ARRiNG MIREILLE DARC AND JEAN YANNE. "A fantastic film in whichall of life becomes a weekend—a cataclysmic,seismic traffic jam. Thefilm must be seen for itspower, ambition, humor, jand scenes of reallyastonishing beauty. Oneof the most importantfilms Godard has evermade. There’s nothinglike it at all.”—Renata Adler,New York TimesTHREEPENNY^INEMA^^2424 N. Lincoln AvenueChicago, Illinois 60614phone 528-91262 Grey City Journal/April 4, J969 ~7v, . . ; .V,Yrvvr.Tr,1 1 1 f f ' C* r "I J ? I J . ( f. r HiVi, >< .'-Vi'•i-n: mmif:Francois Truffaut’s Stolen Kisses Beat His Soft SkinABOUT HALFWAY THROUGH The Maltese Fal-i con Dashiell Hammett had Sam Spade tell his secretarythat ‘ “The La is a lousy combination.’ ” I was remindedof this when I saw a “new” movie theater, in Chicago ad¬vertise itself as the “Le Image Cinema.” I couldn’timagine a theatre getting off to a worse start than that.Luckily for the “Le Image” their first picture makes oneI forget the marquee and be hopeful that another step mayhave been taken towards alleviating Chicago’s acutetheatre shortage. guide him Truffaut’s camera was simply not that inter¬esting. Unlike Chabrol who has been able to assimilateHitchcock into, something personal and relevant, TheBride Wore Black was the kind of Xeroxed paeon thatwas really not so many steps ahead of Roman Polanski,people acting at moments of emotional crisis and ap-The picture is Stolen Kisses and it is Francois Truf¬faut’s best work since The Soft Skin. I realize that con¬sidering Truffaut’s output since The Soft Skin this issaying very little, and I would love to report that StolenKisses restores one’s faith in Truffaut completely. Itdoesn’t, but like the theatre it occupies it is cause forhope. In Stolen Kisses Truffaut returns to an examination ofpears to care enough about his characters this time tolet the film begin to work. Antoine Duhamel has beenresurrected from The 400 Blows, perhaps as a crutch,perhaps merely as an excuse to use Jean-Pierre Leaud. Iam not sure how much longer I will be able to standLeaud playing a variant on the same basic character,but it still has not left me how wonderful it is when thatman shows up on a screen.Fahrenheit 451 was, for me, an easy film to overrate.Like any film by Truffaut it had an exact anddefinite style, something rare enough to be cause forminor celebration at least. If the people were emotion¬less and for all practical purposes dead, that seemed afunction of their world which was also dead. There wasno question that Truffaut was not nearly interestedenough in that kind of death to make the film work, butat least there were all the books and Fahrenheit ap¬peared a rather restful movie about how much F. Truf¬faut liked books. Duhamel goes AWOL from the army after acting total¬ly irrationally by signing up and not even waiting to bedrafted. Finally, he is discharged and loses a series ofcivilian jobs through a series of mistakes that alwaysevolve around his lack of reflection. It all doesn’t seemto matter too much to him because in the end he is ableto sleep with the girl he has been after for two years andfor the confirmed romantic that Antoine thinks himselfto be that should be enough. (“Baiser” in French meansto fuck and I feel fairly certain that Truffaut intendedthis euphemism-pun to act as a kind of cue for the typeof metaphors the film contains.)The Bride Wore Black made it clear, however, thatrather than a rest Fahrenheit was a new direction andan awful one at that. Truffaut here slipped right into theworld of style without content, and after about twentyminutes it became all too clear that without emotions to It should be made clear that irrationality does notmean that the actions of the people in this film areillogical. With the exception of a single major fault, ev¬erything that happens in this film is immensely belie¬vable. The error of Antoine’s (and few other’s) actions isthat they are acting almost entirely from emotions while('u It lire l ult lireA “Kosher” List of CultureTHE CULTURE VULTURE has flew the old coop thisweek and is busy making matzoh balls but returns in¬digested next week. In the interim we offer our trun¬cated Pareve Easter week run down:Dance: Meredith Monk and Company will perform Tour2: Barbershop, an evening of dance theatre combiningmovement, objects, and sound, at the Museum of Con¬temporary Art, April 8 and 9, at 8:15 pm $2.Music: The Episcopal Student Choir will perform Mo¬zart’s “Requiem in D Minor” in memory of Martin Lu¬ther King; the performance will be at the UniversityChurch of the Disciples, 5655 So. University Ave., Friday,April 4, at 8:30 pm.Distinguished music director of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra, Georg Solti, will conduct a discussion Satur¬day on the many aspects of the musical world with anyinterested students. Everyone is invited to speak toMaestro Solti April 5, noon, in Reynolds Club SouthLounge.Contemporary music lovers will enjoy the evening ofelectronic music with John Eaton at Harper Theater,Friday, April 11, at 8:30 pm. Contemporary compositionsand jazz improvs will be the order.Tuesday, April 8, is the date to remember for chambermusic concert-goers. The Musical Society will present aconcert of Bach’s chamber works in Bond Chapel at8:30 pm.Films: Movie buffs, take note! This week is full ofgoodies for everyone. Doc Films is offering a new artis¬tic statement on the war in Vietnam. “Far From Viet¬ nam,” filmed by Godard, is Friday night, Cobb, 7:15 and9:30 pm.Contemporary European Films presents two movingfilms this weekend. “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf”tells the tragic story of four people Saturday, 7 and 9 pmin the Law School. Beautifully filmed “Man for All Sea¬sons” is Sunday, Mandel Hall, at 8 pm only.During the week, Doc Films presents Renoir’s “GrandIllusion,” Tuesday, 8 pm, in Cobb; “Geography of Body”and “Eclipse of Sun Virgin,” 7:15 and 9:30 pm, Cobb;and the riotous “Pink Panther,” 8 pm, in Cobb.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. 53rdTHE 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. FoxThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions from'he University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.9MI FEATURINGKIBBUTZ HOLIDAYS IN ISRAELand Optional Archeological DigCO(irBGi£Te5-COfiD 117-25• 51 Days Israel, Italy, Switzerland. France $ 995• 52 Days Israel, Greece. Greek Isle Cruise, Italy 1195• 54 Days Israel, Italy, Switzerland, France, England 1095• 34 Days Israel and England 795• 22 Days Israel Holiday 699• 22 Days Israel, Italy, England 749• 45 Days Grand European Orbit (12 Countries) 1250• 22 Days Romantic European Swing (5 Countries) 599• 22 Days Classical Quest Italy and Greece 639RATES INCLUDEALL TRANSPORTATIONMEALSACCOMMODATIONSSIGHTSEEINGTRANSFERS & MORE EASTOURS, Inc11 West 42nd St.,New York, N.Y. 10036 21-AlWithout cost or obligation, please rushCollegiate Travel Guide to: freeMail this coupon today: 1OR SEE YOURFAVORITE TRAVEL AGENT | Addressj^CIty. State. Zip I■i m B Truffaut’s camera shows us that the world is much toolinear to accept this sort of behavior.The problem here is that Antoine himself does notseem to be affected either by crisis or by the world.Antoine is an incorrigible romantic but Truffaut seems toavoid all the concertns of change that go with romantic¬ism. Antoine is able to possess his dark woman (ex¬quisitely played by Delphyn Serynne) and neither fallhimself or have her fall in his eyes. He is able to seducehis fair woman and still have her remain pure. He is thegreatest of equivocators and what is more he is the onlycharacter in the picture who can act upon his emotionsand not have the world close in.This is particularly strange since Truffaut indicates fora good three-quarters of the picture that fate, in theperson of a man following Antoine’s girl, is going to dosomething drastic. At the end, however, the man merelyapproaches the couple and exclaims his undying love forthe girl, letting the couple dismiss him with a shrug.Here it is Truffaut who is playing the equivocator andnearly ruining his own movie. Unlike Antoine the man isan absolute romantic, a total anachronism. Antoine, how¬ever, is just as unchangeable as he is. Furthermore, it isfar from clear whether the presence of this man will bea real threat to the couple’s future existence or whetherit shall just be a rather funny incident in their life to¬gether, although the last shot rather indicates the latter.What bothers me most about the ending is that itclearly indicates that the crises of the film are not to betaken seriously. Truffaut has constructed a film whichshould indeed lead to a tragic confrontation (as indeeddo the three films following 400 Blows). By throwing thisconfrontation away and not substituting anything in itsplace Truffaut manages at one time to both dismiss hischaracters and his style as inconsequential. All this isparticularly annoying since there are so many in¬dications in the film that what we are watching is indeedof some consequence.from our University ShopGOOD-LOOKINGTWILL WEAVE SUITI iere, reflecting undergraduate interest inthe current slim, more-tailored appear¬ance, is a fine twill weave suit of Dacronpolyester and worsted blend with thesedistinctive features: a 2-button jacket,slightly squarer shoulders, waist suppres¬sion and deep side vents. The colors aretan or olive. Coat, vest and trousers, $ 1 1 0ESTABLISHED 111*•QLOYxjbMoT.'- )§£ens ir Boys furnishings.IHJats echoes74 E. MADISON ST., NR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. 60602ATLANTA • BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • NEW YORKPITTSBURGH • SAN FRANCISCO • WASHINGTONApril 4, 1969/Grey City Journal/3HOLIDAY SPECIALFRIDAY & SATURDAY - APRIL 4TH & 5TH ONLY"The Funiest Rock Show Of All Time"& THEBAB HOT NUTSUE¥& THE BABYSITTERSDIRTY g g& THE GREEN MENARAGONiin w. Lawrence sti-uzj eyesfor thenew sound7Lusdm 97.9 fmsmack dab in the middle of your fm dialLOOKING FOR A MEANINGFUL CHALLENGE?LOOKING FOR SELF-FULFILLMENT?If you are between 18 and 30PARTICIPATESHERUT LA'AM(Service Corpsvfor Israel)PROFESSIONAL A SEMJ-PROFESSIONAL(ONE YEAR)If you are a professional, college graduateor undergraduate, you are needed as ateacher of English, math, and physics; tutor,technician, nurse, group worker, chemical,mechanical, and civil engineer; arts andcrafts, music or sports director, draftsman,dentist, allergy specialist.DEPARTURE - July, 1969 KIBBUTZ PARTICIPATION PROGRAM(ONE YEAR)II you are a high school graduate, un¬dergraduate, or graduate, you can work inthe collective agricultural settlements, shar¬ing in the labor and culture of an imag¬inative experience in communal livingDEPARTURE - September, 1969ORIENTATION & ULPANKnowledge of Hebrew not essential. Before departure there is an orientation seminarfollowed by a three-month Ulpan, intensive Hebrew study in Israel.COST$670 round-trip air fare and orientation costs. Limited number of partial loans available toprofessionals onlySHERUT LA AM - ADDITIONAL PROGRAMS - SECOND YEARFollowing your one year of service and if you ore a professional, college graduate orundergraduate entering your junior year, you con register to participate in a second year ofstudy ot on institute of higher learning in Israel. Year of study will be covered by adequatescholarship, some cost os one-year program; same departure dote os professional ondsemi-professional group (July, 1969).ORYou may continue on the program for a second year either in the assignment you had or in onew oreo where neededSIX-MONTH KIBBUTZ PARTICIPATION PROGRAM (VIP)Living and working on a Kibbutz or Moshov, with the possibility of Special Work Projects orborder Kibbutz placements arising from new circumstonces in Israel HEBREW, LECTURESAND SEMINARS AVAILABLECOST$570 round-trip air fore for six-month program only.NEXT DEPARTUREJanuary, 1969 and approximately every four months thereafte-CHICAGO ISRAEL PROGRAMS 220 S. State St. - Rm 1308 Chicago, Illinois 60604Tel, 939-6427.I want to join □ SHERUT LA'AM □ SIX-MONTH PROGRAMPlease send meNAME □ MORE INFORMATION Q APPLICATION FORMSADDRESSCity Zip /bur last checkfrom homejust bounced?Think it over, over coffee.TheThink Drink.For your own Think Drink Mug, send 75C and your name and address to;Think Drink Mug. Dept N. P 0. Box 559. New York. N Y 10046. The International Coffer* Organ./atTOYOTA - TRIUMPHSales - ServiceCOMPETITION MOTORS7729S.CottageGrove AvePhone:783-3716 LIVE!!BLUES CONCERTRevitalization presentsA Four Hour Evening withBUDDY GUYJUNIOR WELLSat Mandel HallSaturday, April 58:00 P.M.Tickets atMandel Hall Box Office dailyReserved Main Floor $3.00l nreserved Main Floor $2.50Unreserved Balcony $2.00SUMMER SESSIONMonterey Institute of Foreign StudiesJUNE 16-AUGUST 23TEN WEEKS OF TUTORIAL-TYPE INSTRUCTIONinLanguages, Area Studies, Teacher EducationREGISTRATION JUNE 10-144'k /UXX y§ Qpfj S^EIGN STV^'A private liberal arts college 16 semester units in lower division languageAccredited by the Western Association study are equivalent to the normal collegeot School's and Colleges foreign language requirementFor informationWrite to REGISTRARP.O. Box 1978Monterey, California 93940NOW THRUAPRIL 13Direct From L.A.'s TroubadourJIM & JEAN3 Shows nightly Special 8:00 P.M.Shows Open to all agesFri.-Sat.-Sun.QUIET KNIGHT1311 N. Wells 944-8755Old TownPaul SchofieldA MAN FORALL SEASONS(Plus "A Chairy Tale")Sunday, April 6, Mandel Hall, 8 p. m. Only, $1 (Series $5), CEF Clark Ienjoy ourspecial studentrate75< at alltimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredaily• open 7:30 a.m.— lateshow 3 a.m.• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day—all gals 50clittle gal-lery for galsonlyclark parking—1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.write for your freemonthly program ACTORS:TRY-OUTSTHE DUCHESS OF MAW needs13 men, 4 women. Opens Mav22. All parts open. More goodparts than HAMLET. Places forbeginners. Casting now.Ferdinand--he loved his sisterenouah to kill her if she marriedDUCHESS OF MALFIThe Cardinal--he drove hisbrother and sister on, to watchthem torture each other.DUCHESS MALFITHE DUCHESS- ^eiookolover to defy her brothers.Antonio-politic serving-man,he loved THE DUCHESS inprivate.Cariola-the duchess's maidwho watched it to her deathBosola—o good man, Wforced by the Cardinal to playMachiavel-until he revolted.DUCHESS MALFIDeliO--tie plays Horatio toAntonio's Hamlet. DUCHESS OFMALFIJulia—her one motivation wassex.Castruchio-ltie comic cuckoldwho'd like to be a hero.DUCHESS MALFIMalateste--P»'e Renaissancedandy, more fop than Osric. THEDUCHESSTHE DUCHESS-eightmadmen released upon her inprison-each actor finds his ownform of insanity and plays it asdeeply as he dares.TRY-OUTS SAT-SUN APRIL 5-62:00 pm MON APRIL 7A.IA-O.'SH D*unfxlJ« flub4/Grey City Journal/April 4, 1969