Letter to Westbury May JeopardizeAdmission Status of Ex-StudentsBy Mitch BobkinStudents applying to Old Westbury Col¬lege, Oyster Bay, New York, who hadthought that their applications were com¬pleted and were awaiting decisions, will beinterviewed by a representative fromOld Westbury at a downtown hotel today.The students, mainly composed of thosewho had been suspended and expelled bythe disciplinary committee, have chargedthat their cases are being reexamined be¬cause of a letter sent by the administrationMass MeetingPlanned TodayThe committee of 500-plus will hold amass meeting today at 4 pm in MandelHall to decide upon action in response toUniversity disciplinary procedures. Mar¬lene Dixon will speak at the meeting.The meeting was called to consider astudent strike and “mill-in” in Cobb Hall.In a meeting of the steering committeeThursday night it was decided to hold themass meeting. At that time the steeringcommittee voted to urge action “withoutphysical obstruction of students or physicaldisruption of classes.”Chicago biggest demonstration since the Democratic convention^ /when over 10,000 people marched down Michigan Avenueopposition to US foreign policy. T>« m*I* "“few'violent incidents occured,t;rrV~lr9.Vl*:ndr.rNa,°nIl Guard died by Mayor Daley tokeep order on the West side.Proposal Will Reorganize SGElections for the proposed amendment tomake Student Government (SG) a bica¬meral body will be held Thursday and FrJday. The proposal would set up one houselor the College and one for the graduateschools in an attempt to make SG morerepresentative of the student body.The new set-up, if passed, in establishinga specific body for both undergraduatesand graduates, will increase the level ofrepresentation from one representative per100 students to one per 50. Under the newformat the College would have 50 represen¬tatives and freshman representatives asopposed to 15 now. The graduate schoolswill continue to eiect members from divi¬sions and schools, but the level of repre¬sentation will be also increased in that in a joint assembly vote, each graduate repre¬sentative will have two votes to each voteof a college representative.According to Mitch Pines, '69, a backerof the petition, the new SG would increasecontact between students and their repre¬sentatives, which he feels would combatapathy prevalent on campus. He alsothought that SG is at present “elitist” be¬cause it is organized and run by the samepeople.Another feature of the program is therepresentation for residents of University-owned apartments. The new format woulddouble the present representation of sevenstudents for 700 apartment dwellers.Each residence unit with 50 people willSee “Referendum," Page Three The Torch HasThe staff of the Maroon voted in anew era Monday, as Caroline Heck,70, was elected to succeed RogerBlack, ’69, current editor of theMaroon.Miss Heck, who was elected by ac¬clamation, announced her appoint¬ments for manging editor and newseditor, naming Pumpkin Bobkin, 72,and Susan Loth, 72, to those respec¬tive posts.The change in positions will take ef¬fect at the end of spring quarter.The last time a woman served aseditor of the Maroon was 1962-63.Miss Heck, an English major, is agraduate of Columbia High School,Maplewood, New Jersey, and servedas editor of its paper, The Columbian.Bobkin, a prospective political sciencemajor, is a graduate of JFK HighSchool, Iselin, N. J. and served aseditor of its paper, Tlie Torch. MissLoth was also editor of her highschool paper, the New Trier West Been PassedNe,vs, and plans to major in psy¬chology.In her acceptance speech. MissHeck said that she plans to make nomajor changes in this year’s format,at least until Roger Black has lefttown.THE NEXT SIMON LEGREETHE CRISISto the admissions office at Old Westburyinforming them that these students had ap¬peared before the disciplinary committeesand that action had been taken againstthem.One student, who went to Old Westburyover the spring break, said that she hadhad an “unusual” interview with membersof the admissions committee at which shewas asked to define her political positionand to explain just how she had partici¬pated in the “disruptive” demonstrationshere.A faculty member of the University alsoreported that she had heard from a sourcewithin Old Westbury’s admissions officethat the office received a letter stating thatmost of the Chicago applicants were dis¬ciplined for participation in recent campusdisturbances and if their transcripts didnot say that, it was only because time hadbeen lost between the disciplinary actionand the changing of the transcript.Jane Campbell, director of admissions atContinued on Page ThreeTHE MAROONBy Con HitchcockThe University of Chicago is the onlyuniversity to exp si students, 42 in all, aftera massive protest. At Columbia, San Fran¬cisco State, Berkeley, no students were ex¬pelled, and the most suspended is five atColumbia after the occupation last spring.Furthermore every previously mentionedcollege except SF State includes studentson their disciplinary committees. cipline affairs and from there to the presi¬dent, who alone can pardon students. dents who have uncategorically refused toappear before the committee.However, approximately 1000 peoplewere arrested of which 500 still have casespending. About 300 of these 500 are stu¬dents. Another 500 have had their casesdismissed or resolved.Following the Columbia sit-in of 1968 fivestudents were suspended while none weredismissed, according to Robett Landicina,assistant dean of the college. Disciplineprocedures at the present time consist ofthree tribunals, one in each division, offive people each including two facultymembers, two students, and one adminis¬trator. Students may appeal a disciplinarydecision to the joint committee on dis¬ At San Francisco State College no onehas been expelled or suspended, but 200students have been arrested. Disciplinehearings have been proceeding slowly,with 30 of about 330 hearings completed.The SF discipline committee is composedof three faculty members who volunteeredand were selected for the board by EdwinDuerr, coordinator of internal student af¬fairs. Berkeley suspended one student and dis¬missed three following the Third WorldLiberation Front (TWLF) strike of lastmonth. Arrested were 174 people of whom49 were not students. The remaining 125students, in addition to being subject toprosecution are also liable to discipline bythe University. single hearing officer, usually a law pro.fessor, and the third and final appeal is thechancellor.Chicago has expelled far more studentsthan other campuses for protests of similarsize.After an SF student is summoned to ap¬pear before the committee, if he does notappear within two weeks he is temporarilysuspended. President Hayakawa will de¬cide later this week what to do with stu¬ The regents have introduced a new pol¬icy of “interim suspensions” which speci¬fies that students engaged in disruption areimmediately suspended and must have adiscipline hearing within two weeks. Thispolicy, applicable at other California stateschools also, has been applied in the caseof 59 students to date. The University, however, did not call thepolice, while high numbers of arrests re¬sulted at other schools where the author¬ities were summoned. Schools calling thepolice in most cases failed to disciplinestudents through their own committees.There are three routes by which studentsare disciplined. The first is a combinedstudent-faculty committee, the second is aJOSEPHA recital of The New Music JARMANWed. Apr. 9, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes, $1.50 at the door Thus for all campus protests studentsare disciplined either by police or the Uni¬versity. There is, of course a distinctionbetween arrest and academic punishmentsuch as suspension or expulsion, and thequestion is whether these punishments canbe considered equivalent.LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.Telephone 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarYW’s encouraged now. 2 • actory trained mechanic shave joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Creasp & r>i’ rhangp done evenings by appl.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island « 734-6393COLLEGE CURRICULUM CONFERENCEANNOUNCEMENTSThe College Curriculum Conference was called in an effort to crystallize the current ferment into concrete curricular reforms. In developing a schedule we attempted todeal with all curricular problems from the first year of study on through to degree programs in a consistent fashion. Thus the schedule moves from the general to thespecific and culminates in Divisional meetings whose proceedings will be published as a guideline for curriculum reform. In order that this record may be of realvalidity and merit it is essential that members of the college community attend numerous programs, and witness the various kinds of hearings on topics anddepartments. In order that the departmental hearings be useful we urge students to prepare proposals in advance, to notify the relevant faculty of the questions andproblems which could be discussed, and to communicate the necessity for these measures to other students. This conference is not faculty held or guided-it is the effortof students to collectively work to improve and revitalize the college curriculum. Its success or failure, the productiveness of the current ferment, and the futurecurriculum at UC, depends on the contribution of student effort to this endeavor. Don't let yourself down.In addition to the formal discussions scheduled during the CurriculumConference, we have tried to provide the opportunity and the impetus forinformal discussions by subsidizing student-held dinners, coffee and sherryhours. You can be reimbursed for dinners at the rate of $1.25 per guest andfor other gatherings at the rate of $10.00 per group. All you have to do isinvite your guests then call ext. 2825 with the guest list and you will bereimbursed at the conclusion of the conference. If you have any questionscall ext. 4207. Act quickly-these funds are limited.Mutual obligations and responsibilities in student-faculty relations will bediscussed at 8 p.m. in Reynolds Club South Lounge on Friday, April 11. Thepanel members will be John Butler, Richard Hellie, Richard Lewontin,Theodore Lowi, and James Wolsh. Everyone is urged to attend this debateon reciprocal expectations, and to defend yourself and your viewpoint. The afternoon of Saturday, April 12, is devoted to a discussion of the -common core courses- "What Are We After and How Can We Get It?" - withfaculty members who teach the common year courses. At 1:00 p.m. inMandel Hail a general discussion will center about such questions as: shouldgen. ed. parallel division structure? Rooms in Reynolds Club have been madeavailable for carry over discussions from this meeting in the hope that peoplewill circulate freely and informally into various discussions including thosethat follow in Mandel. The existing common core programs will be examinedin meetings at 3 p.m. (Social Sciences), 4 p.m. (Humanities), and 5: p.m.(Physical Sciences).The Biology Department Meetings scheduled for Saturday, April 12, 10 a.m.to noon have been canceled. In their place will be held meetings fornon-pre-med bio majors and for all pre-med students in the North and SouthLounges of Reynolds Club respectively. Faculty are invited to attend thesemeetings. Gen. Ed. Biology will be the topic for discussion on Thursday, April 10, at 8p.m. in Business East 103. The proposals for next years course will bediscussed. If you are taking this course, or have taken this course in the past,come and contribute to the molding of a new course.Non-Gen. Ed. Gen. Ed. On Sunday, April 13, all the various courses requiredby many departments but not designated as part of the common core will bediscussed in terms of their relevance to non-majors. The civilization courses,math and statistics courses and the language courses are the central focus. Adetailed schedule of these forums will appear in this Friday's Maroon. Dosomething to make your "Guided Electives" get you where they should.Be sure to look in this Friday's Maroon for a detailed listing of all the events in theCollege Curriculum Conference or listen to WHPKannouncements on the following day's events. each evening at 9:45 for2/The Chicago Maroon/April 8, 1969The four deans of students of the gradu¬ate divisions have permanently left theiroffices in the administration building.New offices are now near the class¬rooms of their divisions.Although the move took place directlyfollowing last quarter’s sit-in, plans forsuch "decentralization” had been madeearly last fall, administration spokesmensaid.Joseph Ceithaml, dean of students in thebiological sciences, said the sit-in only pre¬cipitated this move. “Since we found our¬selves out of the building and since wewere disrupted anyway, we simplymoved.”Peter Dembowski, dean of students inthe humanities, echoed this feeling. “Wewere interrupted in our work by the sit-in,so we decided never to go back (to theadministration building).”Dembowski elaborated on the originalreasons for undertaking the relocating ofthe offices of the deans. Among the mostimportant of these reasons was the desireof the deans of students to be closer totheir academic deans who are located inthe buildings of their respective divisions.Also he noted a desire on the part of thedeans to be with the students in their divi- of a second sit-in as having played anyrole in the move. Jerome Frese, assistantto President Levi .pointed to last summer’srelocation of the undergraduate admissionsand aid offices, a move he said was ac¬complished prior to any talk of a sit-in.Frese also said that the office for devel¬ opment and public affiars have movedmore personnel into the administrationbuilding, further discrediting any attemptto link relocation of the deans with an ad¬ministration desire to limt the importanceof the building.The deans of students have, by now, all been permanently relocated in their divi¬sions’ physical areas. These new locationsare: biology dean Ceithaml in Billings Hos¬pital, humanities dean Dembowski inWieboldt 105, phy sci dean Krasner in Eck-hart 208C, and soc dean Zimring of theSocial Sciences in Botany 313.Council Action on Petition PendingThe council of the senate has not yet metor responded to the faculty-University em¬ployees petition which protested the recentdisciplinary actions.The petition demanded that all dis-CurriculumConferencesions.The only reason that the decentralizingwas not done earlier was because of thesecretaries, Dembowski added. Through lo-caltion in the administration building itwas possible to be continually assured ofsecretarial assistance due to the concentra¬tion of office staffs in that building.Most in the administration disclaim fear Because all college courses will be re¬vised for next year, College administratorsurge all interested students to attend theCollege Curriculum Conference, to be heldThursday through Sunday.Students desiring the time and place ofmeetings and programs concerning theirmajor or particular interest can call Ext.4207 or see last Friday’s Maroon for acomplete schedule.Subsidies are available for students whowant to host coffee hours or dinners aspart of the Curriculum Conference. Thoseinterested should call Ext. 2825 with theirguest list.Discipline Recorded on TranscriptsContinued from Page OneOld Westbury, said that although she hadknown that some of the Chicago studentshad appeared before the disciplinary com¬mittees, no letter or official correspond¬ence had been sent to her by the Univer¬sity.However, dean of students CharlesO'Connell affirmed that a letter had beensent by the University registrar to OldWestbury, alt!.ough his office had not beenalerted that this action had been taken.Albert Hayes, new registrar of the Uni¬versity, had sent a letter to Old Westburytelling them that transcripts of studentsapplying to the school were not up to dateand that new transcripts should be re¬quested. Among the information missing on the students’ transcripts, according toO’Connell, was the fact that disciplinaryaction had been taken against them.Mrs Campbell also said that any rumorsthat students who had been accepted werealso going to have their cases reopened issimply not true because no one has beenofficially accepted yet.However, Cheryl Cohen ’71, an applicantto Old Westbury, said that she knowssomeone in the area, not a UC student,who has already been accepted.Mrs Campbell expected the announce¬ment of admissions to go out some timenext week and said that Old Westbury iscurrently considering admitting between 10and 15 Chicago students although she couldnot give out the exact number.ABOUT THE MIDWAYGeorge L. Playe, dean of undergraduatessays: if any graduating seniors have heardthat their applications were not acted uponbecause of transcript delays, please seeme I will try to help. F. Regis Kenna, as¬sistant director of the hospitals, is takingover as acting director of the Hospitals and- linics from Charles R. Goulet.. .Theodore1-owi, John Dickinson May, assistant pro¬fessors, and James G. O’Hara, US repre¬sentative, discussed electoral reform onthe UC Round Table, televised Monday. . .Richard Wade, history professor, is one°f five appointed by our beloved Mayor Dick as a Chicago Housing Authority(CHA) commissioner. One of the five willbe elected CHA president. Best of luck . ..Only students will be able to participate inthe new colloquium on Marx and the Marx¬ist tradition being organized by MorrisPostone, Tom Mandel, John Leary, andAndrew Arato. First meeting scheduled forWednesday, this 9 April, in the Ida NoyesSun parlor at 8 pm . .. and the formerprivate secretary to Leon Trotsky, RayaDunayevskaya, will lecture on Wednesdayin Judd 128 at 7:30 pm (try to make both?)BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, April 8 Wednesday, April 9i Angeies uiy scnooi oisTricr,Los Angeles. Will interview in the following areas ele-entary K-6, self-contained classrooms, and secon-. all fields in grades 7-12. Interested only in quali-goic c®nclidatfcs who are eligible for certification.LPr-rim*' Roosevelt' and I IT, White Pines, 1 pm.Pai * ■ "Bach's Late Works and the Tradition of the* ,,na Style", Christoph Wolff, University of To-LF?TMDLrfxing,on *■ 3 P"»-tURE: "Traditional Ethiopian Poetry", Abram De-visiting professor of linguistics. Northwesternuniversity. Ida Noyes library, refreshments at 3:30,LECTUre at 4 pm'r,roUl?,^"The. Evofurion ot Computer Science", Mau-i W. es' director of the University mathematicalpm 0^10^, Cambridge. Research Institutes C-117, 4M(fnE”AD?.,UC Science Fiction Society. Panel discussionc|i ». ,"'*>* and Atomic Defense." Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.DANriu/.Grand ,l,us'on<" Cobb Hall, 7 pm.ha.,. G: Folk and square dancing. InternationalCONCERTaSSemblV ha,l> 8 pm‘Chapei/a;30°pm° ••'•.Back dumber work*.. BondL ciplinary actions be rescinded until Ameri¬can Association of University Professors(AAUP) guidelines are recognized.Council members received the petitionlast Friday.According to several members of thecommittee of the council, council membershave been aware of the AAUP guidelinesfor some time; they maintain, however,that no action has been taken because theguidelines are not applicable to the recentdisciplinary situation.“It would be taking the AAUP sugges¬tions out of context to apply them to thecurrent problems which universities face,”said Norman Nachtrieb, professor andchairman of the chemistry department.“AAUP guidelines were not designed tomeet the type of disruption which is goingacross the nation.”Several members also commented on the“ineffectiveness” of the number of peoplewho signed the petition. Phillip Kurland,professor of law, said “the arguments arenot new. I am impressed by the smallnessof the number of people who signed thepetition. I am unimpressed by the reason¬ing they used.”Several of the committee members be¬lieve that recent disciplinary actions didnot, in fact, violate AAUP guidelines.Nevertheless, six more faculty membersnot listed in Friday’s Maroon have signed the petition. They are assistant pro¬fessors of English Jerome McGann, Har¬vey Gilman, Michael DePorte, WilliamCarpenter, and Alan Nelson, and VirgilBurnett, associate professor of art.Signers of the petition have not yetplanned further action.ReferendumContinued from Page Onebe given one representative. Representa¬tives from dormatory houses will have 22seats out of 50 as opposed to seven out of15 now, thus giving apartment dwellersmore representation.Pines said that the $4500 allotted annual¬ly to SG is now spent on secretarial helpand documents, but could be used better ifSG was more important and respected.Another provision of the proposal is astatement making it possible for the SGpresident to call a joint assembly meetingon issues concerning the University as awhole. Pines feels that this will make SGmore flexible than before, and sees it asable to truly get student opinion across inthe new organization.At least 15 percent of the student bodymust vote to validate the proposal. Asimple majority of those voting is neededfor passage.opment", Frank H Cassell, Northwestern graduateschool of business. Business East 103, 1 pm.LECTURE "The Development of Ottoman Historiogra¬phers", Fahir Iz, NATO Visiting Professor in Canada.Cobb 201, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: "Variational Methods in Electron AtomScattering", Irving Wladawsky. Kent 103, 4 pm.LECTURE: "The Allosteric and Genetic Regulation ofBacterial Glycogen Synthesis", Jack Preiss, Universityof California, Davis. Abbott Hall 101, 4 pm.LECTURE: "Villages, Chiefs and Central Govern¬ments", Marc Swartz, Michigan State University. SwiftCommons, pm.REHEARSAL: University Chorus, for concert on Satur¬day. 5:30-7:30.LECTURE: "Communism and Marxism: the RussianRevolution to Czechoslovakia", Raya Dunayevskaya,Judd 128, 7:30 pm.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from the British Islesand Scandinavia. Ida Noyes Hall dance room, 8 pm.LECTURE:. Michael Hoskin, Cambridge University, lec¬turer. 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Oak St.—DE 7-4150April 8, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3roon/3EDITORIALi .'H v iStrikeToday at 4 pm the Committee of 500 is holding an openmeeting in Mandel Hall. We urge all students to attend and votefor definite action in response to the University’s disciplinarydecisions. We support a strike against classes — centering on CobbHall — Wednesday.We have waited two months. There has been no public quarteragainst participants in the sit-in.In the absence of any defense or explanation of the actionstaken by the disciplinary committees last quarter, we must takethem as an expression of political discrimination, not of justice.The discrepancy among the punishments, the severity of them (42expulsions, 62 suspensions), the lack of due process in the hearings,the lack of student participation on the committees; these make theobjective observer question the justice of the sentences.We demand the University reverse the cases of the disciplinedstudents.•* The University should re-try the cases of the disciplinedstudents from scratch. New disciplinary committees should be setup, with students participating, with the same due process assureda defendant in a civil court of law, and with some sense thatpenalties fit the crime should be set up.• Alternatively, if the University finds it impossible to startover again, at the very least an appeal board with voting studentmembers should be set up under the sarr? conditions of justice.As it stands, appeals are heard by the dean of students, who isthe person who hands out the sentences in the first place.It seems obvious that the issues at question here affect notonly the students who were disciplined, but every student in theUniversity. Justice is at stake here, and it is the duty of the studentsto insure their political rights and the integrity of our institution.How can this be done? The committee of 500-plus is callingfor non-disruptive action in Cobb Hall this week. We support theirsuggestion for a student strike. We cannot stand by.SGIn the impetuous youth of this year’s Maroon we came outenthusiastically for the amendment to the Student Governmentconstitution which is actually going to be voted on this Thursday.The argument was SG was unrepresentative; that it was unlikelythat the powers that be in this University would accord SG morepower as long as it was unrepresentative; and that it was (justbarely) conceivable that a change in the structure of the organiza¬tion might get more people interested in the elections; and the morepeople voting, the more representative SG would be.Unfortunately, the whole thing hinges on the ability of theamendment to get people excited about student government. Sofar it hasn’t. For example, we are not excited at all.Doubling the assembly and then breaking it into two halveswould not result in a much different SG then we have now.And what we need is something entirely different. One of theproblems with SG (and with the amendment) is that much of theundergraduate representation is based on dormitory residence.The main concerns of this University have always been academic,and living accommodations traditionally have not been very impor¬tant. The answer might be to abandon SG altogether in favor of anexpanded joint student council: a constitutional student senatesimilar to the faculty senate.In the meantime there is a referendum Thursday, and whilesome might consider it another Maroon half-assed stand, we urgeyou to vote on it (one way or the other), and to vote again in thefifth week at the SG elections. In the long run this amendmentwill only affect SG if it somehow revives interest in it and makesit more representative. A big turnout Thursday and the fifth weekwill help, and help the movement to get a student senate withconstitutional power. Letters to the editorsBy Jerry LipschThe amendment to the SG Constitution coming up this week urges two changes,basically:• It would enlarge and intensify subdivision of the College electoral unit by givingrepresentation to each individual dormitory house. (It would then increaserepresentation of non-dorm College reps in a degree proportional to the increasein dorm representation; and it would double the voting weight of graduate repsto compensate for the increased number of College reps overall.)• It would divide the SG Assembly into separate undergraduate and graduatebodies, for joint and separate sessions.Though these changes are not presented as separate choices by the originators,I would like to discuss them separately here. It would be unfortunate were aninterest in some independent voice for the College to induce passage of the moresignificant and, I believe, destructive change — namely, making the Collegevoice based largely on dorm house units. This proposal is harmful because it failsto recognize — indeed obfuscates — the necessary path to change in the University.It should be clear that change in the institution requires primary initiativesin the academic structures of the University. Of course, the University is not the oftprojected ideal of oceanic pluralism. But there is enough practical and ideologicalcommitment to decentrality to make an approach to change on the level of academicsubdivisions necessary.Recent events have shown also that few issues have a latent potential for“liveliness” comparable to that of educational issues — i.e., those that concern theessential affiliation of students with the institution. The key source of dissonancebetween students and faculty concerns educational problems, rather than ancillaryaspects of student life like housing, social rules, or facilities.Though one can generalize somewhat about the University-wide problem, theseall-important educational issues are fairly subtle and differ from discipline todiscipline. They must be pressed among those persons directly involved: thestudents and faculty of the academic subdivisions — on the level of divisions,departments, committees, even courses themselves. Only through the concreteeducational relationships can discontents be articulated and change effectively pursuedTo my mind, all this adds up to the perspective that any future relevance for anSG lies in aiming (both structurally and programmatically) at the specific centersof education affiliation and activity, and at the specific constituencies concernedwith those problems. In that light, the proposal to make dorm houses the basis of a“new revitalized SG” seems rather misconceived.The amendment’s advocates argue thatTiaving reps arise from individual houseswill somehow keep them “closer” to the people they are supposed to represent. Ithink that notion is based on a superficial and erroneous idea of “closeness.” Closenessto or among members of a political community is based not on physical proximityitself, but on commonly shared concerns. Some objectively shared concerns are, ofcourse, generated by common living situations. But it is important to understand whatcommonalities of concern are not in any way related to the geography of commonliving. As regards the most important problems we face, a student shares much morewith a classmate than with a neighbor, though they may ocacsionally be thesame person. As for the communication advantages of physical proximity,that idea suggests only the need for vastly increased opportunities for studentsin the same department or field of concentration, or even course, to get togetherindependent of faculty in order to discuss common problems.Hope does not lie, however, in the rather unconvincing imputation of specialvitality to houses as political communities. Houses are temporary residences forthe vast majority of college students and are rather artificial groupings. If, as a newbase, they were capable of investing SG with new vitality, house governmentswould long ago have become, de facto, important spokesmen on major studentproblems. For good sociological reasons, however, they have not! Future progressmust be based on communities of interest among people in the same academic, notresidential, “boat,” so to speak.The proposed amendment would,rather than revitalize SG, commit it evenfurther to self-preoccupation instead of acreative, outward orientation. It isalready difficult enough to get enoughpeople to run a full slate, and seats areoften uncontested. The amendment wouldonly exacerbate this problem by enlargingthe number of seats that must be soughtif any unified group with a coherentprogram is to win a majority. In apowerful parliament such incoherenceand diffuseness could conceivably bedesirable. In a powerless SG, it is plainlydestructive. It is much better for variousgroups with different coherent programsto compete for the favor of the studentbody in a struggle for a few seats,than it is to have a great many factionswithin the Assembly but no coherentapproach. The diffuseness encouraged bythe size of the proposed Assembly wouldnecessarily favor more preoccupation-withthe “terms of consensus” among thefactions than with the vital constituenciesoutside — where the action must be,if there is to be any at all.In short, in its powerless situation,SG must be a catalyst, a promoter ofaction, not a would-be legislative body.The action to be catalyzed, promoted, andand made more effective lies outside SGitself, in the educational relations I des¬cribed earlier. The proposed amendmentdiscourages that outer-directed role.Continued on Page SevenTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews 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, Stove Cook, Paula Siowzyk,Gerard Levat, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Freida Murray, Marv Bittner, DebbyDebish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Photog aphy Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Steltar,Howie Schemes!, Stove Aeki, Ben Gilbert.Senior Editor: Jeff KutaContributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, John Rocht.Production Chief: Mitch Kohn. Assistant: Rob-art Swift. (Zowie.)Sunshine Girl: Joanne WiklcrFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues-r;ydays and Fridays through-]' ,'iVV'X out the regular school1year and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of the academicquarter and during exam'yttCr*—*ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 5»th 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.4/The Chicago Maroon/ April 8, 1M9 U, t , I Hit * 9► -(p m fgg iH M ■■ ■! All ■§NORTHWEST YAMAHA —;,:,-y; iij£\IN Dej'qMk> fBw«rttlisKRin/SJcw^iy"giM«N*/ood8880 N. MILWAUKEE AVE., NILESOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEKALL 250 & 305 MODEL YAMAHAS$200 OFF LIST WITH THIS ADFormerly NOW5 SPEED 695.00 495.005 SPEED 790.00 590.00Matching WeddingSetsThe Revitalization Speakers Programpresents *Joan../tfii$isKind of personalbut do you useTampax tampons?*''Wouldn't useanything else...they're convenient,easier iv use,comfortable,endthey don't shout... **1 guess ftos u/byyou can warall those-fantasticclothes jj/tto+ime.Wish I could!*IPthatmeans youdon't use TampaxTampons, youOught to gi ve themti try. duf don'tjust take my wordforit...ask Annand Jane andwe//,millions ofgir/sallover the US.would fe/lyou thesame thing/*Th&tt/iMy,huh?''Probably more.'RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYAFormer personal secretary to Leon Trotskyon“Communism and Marxism: The RussianRevolution to Czechoslovakia”Wednesday, April 98:00 Judd HallAdmission FreeFrederick WisemansLAW & ORDERa documentary film on Kansas City Police produced by the maker ofTiticut Follies and High School.FRIDAY, APRIL 11,8:00 P.M.LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 50* floferte Dusk ion jeweler*asb jor student discounts1422E. 53rd St. 363—0161auto ©leuropeH I dept. 7ASTUDENT/FACULTY GRANT ProgramSpecial rates in European overseas travelfor purchase, lease, & rental of cars. Fordetails and brochure write: UniversityGrant Dept., Auto Europe, 1270 Second.Avenue, New York, New York 10021.authorized BMC servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615foreign car hospital & clinic, incBell Bottoms (Limited Supply)John's Men's and Boy's Store1459 E. 53rd TAMPAXtampon*SANITARY PROTECTION WORN INTERNALLYMAC E ONLY «r TAMPAX INCORPOlUTEO.PALMtA. MAS*.OVERLAND EXPEDITION TO IN¬DIA. Leaves London June 24th. SeeGreece, Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan,Pakistan, India and Nepal. Cost*485 indudes food, insurance, etc.Details from David Aarons, 23 Man¬or House Drive, London, N.W.6.April 8, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5nitYou won't hove to putyour moving or storageproblem off until to¬morrow if you call ustoday.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 :. * i ll 14.: 1118 .; * t • • *r r r ?' % * vrr / * • < v- - • vum .*MliDR. AARON ZIMBLER* t 11Optometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 l j 111 ? t: j r ■ • ‘ ’ r r 11 v ■\ A I /O M 1Chicago Sinai Congregationcordially invites you to hearRABBI RICHARD L. RUBENSTEINLecturer in Humanities, University of PittsburghandMR. MARTIN E. MARTYProfessor, University of Chicago Divinity Schoolspeak onRELIGION IN A SECULAR AGEThe Third in a series ofThree Sabbath Seminars intitledin the D. Schwartz Hall CONFRONTATIONS 1969'Friday, April 11,8:30 pmA question and answer periodand social hour will follow the lecture—no charge— 1720 East 54th Street Special!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!70% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8 ' ’ I ? “ 1 ■ y |J M ' I 1WHAT CHICAGORADIO STATIONTAKES FIRMEDITORIALPOSITIONS ON ISSUESOF IMPORTANCE TOSOUTH SIDERESIDENTS?whpk fm 883Students for Israel presentsGENERAL UZINARKISSDirector General Department of Aliyahand Absorption - Jewish Agency in anINFORMAL CONVERSATIONWITH STUDENTS4:00 P.M. Hillel House Wed. April 16Same Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERS1363 E. 53rd Custom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount 752-6933lookperfectonly21day§eveiymontH?It has nothing to do withcalories. It’s a specialfemale weight gain...caused by temporarywater-weight build-up.Oh, you know... thatuncomfortable fullfeeling that sneaks upon you the week beforeyour menstrual period.This fluid retention notonly plays havoc withyour looks but howyou feel as well.(It puts pressure ondelicate nerves andtissues, which can leadto pre-menstrualcramps and Headaches,leaves emotions on edge.)That’s why somany women take PAMPRIN5It gently relieves water-weight gainto help prevent pre-menstrual puffiness,tension, and pressure-caused cramps.PAMPRIN makes sure a perfectsize 7 never looks less than perfect.Nor feels less than perfect, either. SUMMER SESSIONMonterey Institute of Foreign StudiesJUNE 16 -AUGUST 23TEN WEEKS OF TUTORIAL-TYPE INSTRUCTIONinLanguages, Area Studies, Teacher EducationREGISTRATION JUNE 10-149>’'^EfGNSt'5^% For informationWrite to REGISTRARP.O. Box 1978Morterey, California 93940A private liberal arts college 16 semester units in lower division languageAccredited by the Western Association study are equivalent to the normal collegeof Schools and Colleges foreign language requirement.SH0RELAND HOTELSpociol Ratos forStudent* and RolativosSingle room* from $9.00 dailyDouble bod rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive “I defyanyone to beuncomfortablein this car.”"I can t recall a car in which theseats afford such an astonishingdegree of luxury. Correction. TheMercedes-Benz 600 does-but itwill cost you 10 times as much asthis one. Covered .in leather-cloththe Renault 16’s seats are tilledwith thick foam cushions and givefull support where you need it."The front ones are fully recliningand are adjustable through a multitude of positions...”"The rear bench seat is also ad¬justable: in fact, you can take thewhole thing out if you want to.(So said Stirling Moss in QUEENMagazine, a British publicationHe was talking about the Renault16 Sedan-Wagon. The sedan thatchanges into a station wagon. Andback again, whenever you want.)“.. . and I would like to offer mycongratulations for producing thissensational motorcar for a veryiow price.” jo.H.-, p.O.K.COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 So. Yates 363-9842 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. imports, s^»io.ins SO MICH SAN AVE CHICAGO ij. SIS 6TEC 326 2550TheMusical SocietypresentsA Concert ofBach Chamber Works[.aurence Libin,harpsichordwith members ofThe ContemporaryChamber PlayersThe LC SymphonyThe Collegium VlusicumBond ChapelTuesday, April 8th8:30 P.M.Free and Open to the Public •prrnvrvnwwnflnvyyvvvwvrvYYvmvwfYVvyvifYVVvyviLUIOM, APRIL 18,19&20WVtkkhj\a*nrusAn/iMAAAnM»iinMjvi/innnnniahnnamutmaivi/iMnnnm“LIKE ‘POVERTY’ and ‘civilrights' and ’integration’ beforeit, 'hunger' is a slippery, vague,open-ended word, loaded withemotional impact. Typically,newspaper coverage begins, in theheadlines, with ‘hunger'; only wellinto the story does it become clearthat what is usually at issue is mal¬nutrition, disease or ignorance. Itis, lace it, easier and more excit¬ing to talk about | topy ot‘hunger’ than I Wm F. Buckley'sabout malnu- I w.fTIONAl, ■ ■ VIEW, write: Dept.trition. ■ f, 150 £ 35 St,«t,■■■■HBBBHi N V. 10016. theatreFirst, Inc.presentsEugene Ionesco'sDramatic Chiller“THE KILLER"April 11, 12, 13,1819,20, 25, 26,27(8:30 p.m.; Sun., 7:30)$2.00 - STUDENT DISCOUNTAdmn. with I.D., $1.25AT THE ATHBIAEUM. 2936 ^Southport - 463-30996/The Chicago Maroon/April 8, 1969letters to the editors of the maroon t Jt ) c t v 3 ( < C / J t | ;] jtt A i1 f » l * f H 5 irt i& f i P ** i ; MA Representative SGNext Thursday, April 10 there will be animportant election which will determinethe quality, direction and impact of studentpower at this University. An amendmenthas been proposed which would make Stu¬dent Government a bicameral body withseparate houses for the College and gradu¬ate schools; smaller representative unitslone representative for each fifty students)would insure a body reflective of all pointsof student view, rather than the presentsituation in which small groups wield amajority of votes.A more representative body would be abetter vehicle of student opinion, particu-arly in the College, and would receivegreater attention among the members ofthe administration and faculty. We feelthat this amendment to the Student Gov¬ernment Constitution will upgrade repre¬ sentation, insure Student Government’s re¬sponsiveness to student needs, and confirmits legitimacy.Respectfully,Bernabe F. Feria, *71Edwin T. Lee, 72For the AmendmentAs first-year representatives to studentgovernment, we have seen it function andfound it wanting. It seems curious thatrepresentatives of people admitted becauseof their hyperactive intellects can be sodormant both in mind and body when giv¬en the responsibility of improving this in¬stitution. Think only of the ineffective stu¬dent government leadership that all too of¬ten holds views that are exactly oppositethose held by the majority of students.This same leadership is always crying forinstant action but delayed three months onGADFLYContinued from Page FourA few brief words about the second change — dividing SG into graduate andundergraduate bodies. First, a serious problem with the current amendment is thatit provides no means to resolve jurisdictional disputes on controversial issues. Second,there is already in the By-Laws of SG the formation of Graduate and UndergraduateCouncils, each composed solely of appropriate reps. It is a little perplexing thatnone of the proponents of the present amendment who are now Assemblymen haveever proposed that a single matter be committed to one of those councils, northemselves introduced any resolution specifically labeled a “collegiate” or “graduate”matter. I think this suggests that, however sincere, the issue of college vs. graduatevoice is much ado about nothing. There is no evidence that the current by-lawsprovision is an inadequate mechanism for independent collegiate self-expression, orthat this awkward and poorly worked-out Constitutional division would do better.I share with most readers grave doubts about the value of SG as it is now. Butthe ineffectiveness of SG is largely a manifestation of the powerlessness of students.The issue should therefore be how to best alter that fundamental condition. Byreserving seats in SG for irrelevantly grouped constituents, the framers of theamendment would, in effect, seek only to better “represent” the hollow apathy andcynicism that is a sympton of that condition. They fail to assess intelligently thesocial basis of the student body’s monumental political rigor-mortis — which, Ibelieve, originates largely in the stultifying posture of educational authority. Untilthe pervasive problem is addressed and a momentum generated thereabout, nogreater spontaneity or involvement is likely — whether one is concerned with theUniversity’s internal life or its corporate agency. Students must first free themselvesof their psychological and political constraints and make a creative self-assertionover against the malaise of self-denial that our whole educational system has sadlycultivated. In encouraging that process alone lies the future efficacy of a studentgovernment.I AC Proposes Dissolution of Council CommitteeA proposal to dissolve the committee ofthe council and hold new elections to re¬constitute the council of the Universitysenate has been put forward by the Inde¬pendent Action Coalition, a coalition of stu¬dents working for change in the University.IAC has charged that because no action has been taken by the Council concerningtheir proposal for a disciplinary appealsboard, this body should be reformedthrough an election by both students andfaculty.No member of the committee of thecouncil was available for comment.1WILL WE DO NOTHING? 8fi 8$ We °IJ know by now that over 40 have been expelled, and many more suspended. $Discipline at Chicago has been harsher than that at any prestigious university in the £,, University's policii _ _ _ . .ft Whether or not you supported the sit-in, the situation has gone far beyond that. All >$ reasonable people must realize that the terror of arbitrary expulsion and suspension •:X cannot be tolerated at a free university. We urge all concerned people to come to a :•ft meeting.TUES. APRIL 8 (today)MANDEL HALL4:00Keynote speaker: MARLENE DIXONCOMMITTEE OF 500 plus8 C;S'* xjf • . ' ' ■ t A ' the petition to change the student govern¬ment constitution. We have found SG fol¬lowing the rhetoric of some of its membersinstead of performing the tasks of studentgovernment.However, given the present way SG rep¬resentatives are selected this campus canexpect little more. Several of the graduatestudent representatives were elected by ahandful of votes, and we ourselves wereelected by students who knew little aboutus and what we wanted to do.For SG to be a responsible voice of stu¬ dent opinion, it must be changed. Theamendment being voted on this comingweek brings representatives closer to thepeople they represent and allows the Col¬lege the special voice it needs to solve theproblems peculiar to it. This amendment,by changing the structure of SG, will bethe first step toward creating an effectivestudent voice that can make itself heard inthe building of a better institution.Jerome M. Culp, 72Richard L- Fleming, 72Laws Deny Demonstrators AidStudents participating in campus dis¬ruptions can have their funds from the fed¬eral government cut off only under certainconditions, an analysis of current lawsshows.The first Congressional act pertinent tocampus unrest is the 1969 appropriationsbill for the Department of Health, Educa¬tion, and Welfare (HEW), which providedthe money for such programs as NationalDefense Education Act (NDEA), Educa¬tional Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, government fellowships, NationalScience Foundation (NSF-, and NationalAeronautics and Space Administration(NASA).Part of the law states that ”no part ofthe funds ... shall be used” for aid to anystudent or faculty member “convicted byany court of general jurisdiction of the use,of or assistance in the use of force, tres¬pass- seizure of property under control” ofthe college “to prevent officials or studentsfrom engaging in their duties or pursuingstudies.”The financial aid office of the individualcollege has the obligation to deny aid ifone disrupts campus life and is sub¬sequently convicted It can withhold aid or an application for it while the case is pend¬ing.Aid cut-off is mandatory and automaticif one is convicted of a crime.If one is not arrested for participation iha protest provisions of the 1968 HigherEducation Act applies. Aid can be deniedonly if the university determines that one“wilfully refused to obey (its) lawful regu¬lation or order” and that the refusal “wasof a serious nature and contributed to asubstantial disruption of the adminis¬tration.” The university can decide wheth¬er to investigate and could determine in¬nocence by defining “serious refusal” and“substantial disruption.” If guilt is deter¬mined, aid must be denied for two years.The two laws caused cries of inter¬ference with academic freedom fromeducators, and President Nixon urged col¬leges to keep their houses in order. Hecalled the anti-riot provisions “moderateand justified” and warned that campusviolence threatened academic freedom inAmerica. The House higher education sub¬committee is studying the President’sstatement now in an effort to decide whatto do with the cut-off provisions on thebooks.POLICE DISCRETIONA Conference at the Law SchoolUniversity of ChicagoSATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1969 • Law School AuditoriumProgram10:00-12:00 a.m. • THE POLICEMAN IN THE COMMUNITYPanelists: Rennie Davis, Obed Lopez, A1 Raby, Renault Robinson, Sgt. LamomeThreet, and Judge Minor K. Wilson1:15-3:00 p.m. • PROBLEMS OF POLICE DISCRETIONPanelists: Prof. Kenneth Culp Davis, Prof. Morrisjanowitz, Judge George N. Leighton,and David Long3:15-5:00 p.m. • WORKSHOPS:1. Civilian Review Boards2. Self-Policing; Internal Control3. Legislative Solutions4. Police Recruitment and Training5. Judicial Screening ;5:00-6:30 p.m. • SOCIAL HOURUMCHE0N 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 information see 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.All interested persons are invitedApril 8, 1969/Th* Chicago Mareon/7(Maroon Classified Ads)ROUND TWO TUESDAY, MANDEL HALL, FOUR PMRATES: For University students, jfaculty, and staff: SO ceits per !line, 40 cents per repeat line. |For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents per [repeat line. Count 30 characters jand sprees per line.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoI Maroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. I59th St„ Chicago, III. 60637. M^il- jin forms new available at Cen-| fral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.| DEADLINES: For Friday's pa- j! per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues- |day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMA¬TION: phone Midway 3-0800,| Ext. 3266.TYPINGTyping? Call Ruth 363-5609 (eve)TYPING, Greek symbols, equations,stencils, Judy Herder 238-6109May I do your typing? 363-1104.APARTMENTS WANTEDWant 3-plus bdrm apt for nxt yr willtake now & sblt to you if wanted BU8-6610 rm 2214 Debbie.Apartment in Hyde Park, 3-4 bed¬rooms, went to rent either Junethrouah next school year, or Sep¬tember through year. Please callWendy, Annette, or Laurie at 1205,1206, or 1209 Woodward Court (BU8-6610).PEOPLE WANTEDPersons interested in working in anycapacity for the Festival of the Arts,the phenomenal 2Vi 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.DELIVERY MAN FOR THE MA¬ROON. We need someone (male orfemale, sticklers) to deliver copy toour printers in Hinsdale twice aweek — at 1:30 Monday and Thurs¬day. $5 a trip. Call 3266 and leavename and number.8 weeks on Martha's Vineyard,room, board and $20 week in ex¬change for babysitting for 2 chil¬dren. June 12 1o August 7 or so. Call624-8363 eve.Help wanted part time at hospital inarea. T.V. Attendant no T.V. knowl¬edge necessary. Good pay — prefersummer student. Call Mr. Eastman,375-7544 after 4:00.CHARTER FLIGHTSThere are still some seats availableon SG's summer flights to Europe.NY —■ Lon — Par rt. June 24-Sept. 2$285; Chi — Par — Rome returningfrom London Aug. 5-Sept. 1 $275; afew seats left on Chi — Lon — Parrt. June 21-Sept. 20 $265. Call exten¬sion 3598 or come to rm 306, IdaNoyes, 1-5:30 P.M. weekdays.ROOMMATES WANTEDMale grad student with Airedaleneeds roommate (female or male)to share cottage off Rainbo BeachRent $55 734-2197.Male stud badly wanted to assumesingle room, w/meal contract, inBurton Judson. Larry Siedel, BJ orcall PL 2-9718.Needed: female roommates to sharewith same — 3 bdr — 3 bthr. apt.across from point. For immediateoccupancy until June or Sept. Call493-1884 after 10 weekdays, anytimeon weekends.FOR RENTSUMMER SUBLET: Clean furnished6 room apartment one block fromcampus. Stereo, books, yard, porchand tree. 684-3839.ALL RIGHT, TREE FREAKS,HERE'S YOUR CHANCE.Sublet l’/a rm. apt. 52nd Kenwoodsummer; option till June '70. BU8-6669 or 684-7037,Pvt. inexp rms & suites laundry 8.rec. facilities 5555 Woodlawn PL2-9734.NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO3-5 room apartments, all with tilebathes 8. showers. Ideal for stu-d e n t s , interns, nurses, youngcouples. NO CHILDREN. Rental $85$105. Call RE 4-4141. WASH PROMThe Wash Prom will be held on Fri¬day, Apr 18th. Ticket cost is $5.50per couple, and will go uo to $6.50after Friday, Apr. 11. Tickets areavail'ble at: U of C Books'oreStudent Activities OfficeReynolds Club deskNew Dorms — Room 12215400 Greenwood Ave. Apt. 44.THE "NEW MUSIC"The "New Music" ??? April 9,8 P.M. Ida Noyes.WANTED TO BUYAmplifier — adequate but cheap.324-6640.FOR SALEDd. bed and excellent desk —cheap. 324-6640.Sony TC-200 stereo tape recorder —complete, $100. Harmony 2 P.U.Electric Guitar end case fine action— $80. FA 4-9500, room 1802.LOWREY PORT. ORGAN,KEYBD, OWN AMP, HOME ORGROUP $300 OR BEST. Poweramp, 2-15" spkrs, 100 watts, $200 orbest. Call 363-1328 eves.160 lb. weight set. 493-4603.1 949 HARLEY-DAVIDSON "45"completely overhauled and restored—• beautiful condition. Ride it to be¬lieve it. 363-8809 eves. $500 or bestoffer.Armstrong flute for sale $50. ContactFA 4-7400 room 204.Shortwave radio excellent conditionmust sell new $230 asking $100 oroffer. 363-1742.PERSONALSA MESSAGE TO THOSEWHO DON'T HAPPENTO THINK THE LANDOF MILK AND HONEYIS GOING ALL SOUROur country is in a strange moodthese days.Uncertainty surrounds us.So what can you do about it?Well, first of all, maybe you shouldtake a long, hard look at this coun¬try of ours. Maybe we should lookat our healthy side as well as ourills. And maybe, just maybe, you'llfind we're not all that bad.Sure we have our problems. Andthey're not going to go away if youjust stand along the side-lines as aspectator.But they might start to go away ifyou seriously want to do somethingfor your country.A U.S. Savings Bond. . .However you look at it, it simplymakes a lot of sense to invest inyour country.After all, it's the only countryyou've got.SMYRD IS COMING FOR 69."His playing sounded like a long,sustained explosion to me (and forthat matter, often still does), yeteven in the midst of Jarman's raw¬est, fiercest work, what impressesmost is his amazing clarity and con¬trol." FOCUS Midwest.Who sent 75 WHPK storm-troopersacross the Midway armed only withkazoos?FREE MONEY — for inviting facul¬ty and students to dinner during theCollege Curriculum Conference. Orthrow a party and let us pick uppart of the tab. We'll subsidize din¬ners at the rate of $1.25 per personand parties, coffee hours, and sher¬ry hours at the rate of $10.00 pergroup. Simply call Ext. 2825 withyour guest list end you'll be reim¬bursed at the conclusion of the con¬ference.Shipment of Wrangler jeans just ar¬rived. On sale for $4.98. Bell-bot¬toms, Edwardian suits and jeanjackets. Johns Men's Wear. 1459 E.53rd.FOTA art exhibit applications avail¬able at Reynolds Club Desk, Berg¬man Gallery, Student Activities Of¬fice, Midway Studios, and yourfriendly local dorm.Why is Joseph Jarman playing atthe University of Chicago & not at alocal famous nightclub? "The musicis not a sideline for other people'sfolly." April 9, tomorrow night, IdaNoyes 8 P.M.Where else but UC would they haveto pay you to talk to faculty? Callext. 2825 for dinner and party sub¬sidies in connection with CollegeCurriculum Conference.JANUS JOPLIN Poster available atMeroon Business Office, $1.50.Yes Virginia, there IS a WashProm.Auditions for the Student FacultyRecital (FOTA) will be held Fri.April 18th beginning at 1:30 P.M.Call Katie Tolies 955-8571 for rulesand an audition time.Everyone welcome to the first meet¬ing of the Bridge Club Tuesday,April 8, 8:00, Ida Noyes EastLounge.Can you dig Zap Comix? The Peter Patrol is laying for Chris,they have request to make.WP...WP ..WP...WP...WP.. WPAPR 18. APR 18. APR 18. APR 18Fcoooocood. . .Foco:ocd. . .foccdBlues. . Blues. . .Blues. . .BluesSpring Bcoksale of modem theo¬logical, scriptural, ard church his¬torical wo'ks. 20-708o off. CalvertHouse 5733 Univ.The "establishment" will pay you toe?t with the "elite." Faculty-studentdinner subsidies from College Cur¬riculum Conference. Ext. 2825.FREAK OUT on phantastick JanisJoplin metallic silver posters. IdaNoyes Room 304 $1.50.Done anything creative later? Shareit with the world. Enter FOTA artexhibit.Fly to Israel this summer. Roundtrip $320-5380 for students. For mereinformation call Students for Israel288-8488 eves. Musical Society — Bach Chamberwerks Bord Chapel Tues. Apr. 88:30 P.M. FREE.Do ycu believe faculty are people?Even ex-students? Invite one to din¬ner and see. Call ext 2825 w/guestlist.Dr. John F. Kramer, Director, Stu¬dent Mental Health Clinic will speakst Pre Med Club meeting on studentmental health at Chicago. 7:30 P.M.,Apr. 10, Billings M-137. Come.WRITERS' WORKSHOP PL 2-8377CHGC'S OWN SWINGERS CLUBSend $1 for 52 page illust. magazine.100s of personals. MKS, Box 3806,CHGO 6)654.Help breakdown the barriers be¬tween faculty ard students. Servebooze — we'll pay. Call ext. 2825w/guest list.SAM LAY — WASH PROM.Peter demands Julia.Wonder what Plato Jones, (BabyHuey's conga drummer, among oth¬ er things) is doing these days??? OrCharles Clark, Chicago's best bassplayer (currently with the Civic Or¬chestra)??? Or Michael Bruce, notedblack carpenter and sculptor???Check them out in the audience atJarman'S concert, Tomorrow night,April 9, 8 P.M. lda„Noyes.The WASH PROM will be (chooseone):APRIL 18th. A gas. Noisy. An orgy.Wierd.Free Money — call ext. 2825w'guest list. Faculty really do want tT^Tex"V5.9iVe ,hCm 3 Chdnce Cali"The streets of our country are inturmoil. The universities are filledwith students rebelling and riotingCommunists are seeking to destroyour country. Russia is threateningus with all her might, and the re¬public is in danger. Yes, dangerfrom within and without We needlaw and order or our nation cannotsurvive."Adolph Hitler, 1932Student hang-ups at Chicago?Pretty obscure, Jude. vomroi me price or movies ($2 50 atleast at downtown ABC theatres)will have to lower their pricesGroan Pat. Eating and drinking with faculty onyour own terms, call ext. 2825NSF checks welcome at MUSI-CRAFT. Special prices on KLH,Kenwood, A.R., Dyna. MUSICRAFTon campus Bob Tabor, 324-3005."God helps those who help them-se ves" — hell, try Cupid Computer1st, write C.C., 5400 Greenwood No.9 Chicago, III. Remember the reaction to the 19thCentury impressionists at their firstSalon appearance? — this is the re¬action Jarman h>s elicited from"Classical" Establishment JanLovers. Prepare for an experience,'oseph Jarman, April 9, 8 P M . IdaWe’re putting our money whereit does you the most good*TWA is giving its people a million dollarbonus if they can make you happier than anyother airline.And you students are going to help makesure we put the money in the right pockets.When you fly TWA, you'll get a ballot.Write in the names of the TWA people whogave you super service.Drop your ballot into any of the bonusboxes you’ll find at all of our terminals. And we’ll see that those people getrewarded with some of that money.Now, for a change, you can have a chanceto grade others on thei r work.TWAOur people make you happy.We make them happy.8/The Chicago Maroon/April 8, 1969