THE MAROONFriday, April 18, 196920 Students Continue HungerRain Soaks Tent-In Site Twice ButEffect of Starving Viewed Dubious ByFaculty & Administration Members.TENT-IN: Reporters interview two of the students in the hunger strike. David Travis By Rob CooleyThe hunger strike and tent-in on the quadsurvived rain and lightning Wednesdaynight and Thursday and continued to gainstudent adherents.But faculty comment made it appeardoubtful the demonstrations are having anysignificant effect on faculty thinking aboutthe disciplinary issues the students are pro¬testing.The hunger strike entered its fourth daythis morning.The tent-in grew from seven studentsTuesday night to 14 on Wednesday night,despite a couple of leaky tents. The hungerstrike apparently included at least 20 stu¬dents Thursday afternoon, some of whomhad been surviving on orange juice, waterand vitamins (only water in one case) sinceMonday evening.Most of the tenters-in are hunger strik¬ing, and some strikers have not joined thetent-in.The demands of the strike are that thedisciplinary procedure be revised in con¬sultation with students and that the revisionbe retroactive for any suspended or ex¬pelled students requesting a re-trial.500' Abandon Cobb Boycott2 Hour Sit-In Voted forMonday to Protest theUrban Renewal PlanThe Committee of 500 has given up on theBoycott of Cobb Hall classes.Two hundred fifty students in a meetingWednesday afternoon voted:• A two-hour sit-in Monday in the Uni¬versity’s redevelopment office in the Youngbuilding at 56th and Ellis to protest Univer¬sity expansion into Woodlawn. (The build¬ing also houses the security office.)• A teach-in Tuesday dealing with Uni¬versity disciplinary actions and Universityracism. affected by urban renewal were not beingrelocated.“We’ll be back in a week to see if de¬struction has stopped,” Kathy Rakocy, ’69,shouted when the protestors marched outafter fifteen minutes.According to Maroon tallies, the Cobbstrike did not exceed 20 percent effective¬ness this week. Only the west and northentrances to Cobb Hall were picketedregularly. The coffee shop in the basementof Cobb remained closed until Thursday.These are the demands of the Committeeof 500:• All disciplinary actions against studentsin the sit-in should be rescinded and allworkers fired for political reasons rehired.• Kalven report on student discipline berepudiated and consigned to oblivion. • A free day care center be establishedfor all University faculty, students, and em¬ployees.• All destruction of dwellings in Wood-lawn condemned for University expansionSee '500', Page Five• A mass meeting on Wednesday to de¬cide further action.• A canvassing and petition campaign tosolicit student support for the demands forthe committee.At the meeting it was voted to physicallyprevent the destruction of a building at 6021Drexel which is slated for renewal withinthe next two weeks.On Wednesday ,the committee sponsoreda march on the local offices of the Depart¬ment of Urban Development at 61st andWoodlawn.Chanting “UC out of Woodlawn now,”about 100 students marched into the DURoffices to demand an end to housing demoli¬tion in Woodlawn.After a guerilla theater performance bythe Salvation Air Force, the protestorshammered questions at Bill Smith, areacoordinator for urban renewal in southeastChicago.‘‘You just tear down houses, its not yourbusiness to know what replaces them,” ac¬cused Tim Rowton, expelled.“You can say that if we put the play fa¬cilities, there aren’t enough residences, butif we put up residences you’ll say therearen’t enough recreational facilities,” an¬swered Smith. Smith denied that residents AAUP SignersPlan ActionsBy Bruce NortonThe faculty group of AAUP petition sign¬ers will sponsor a meeting for all UC facul¬ty and staff next week to discuss the Uni¬versity’s handling of discipline after thesit-in.At a meeting Wednesday the group alsoheard reports from delegates of the groupabout their appearance before the councilof the senate Tuesday, and elected a steer¬ing committee for the ongoing group.The petitioners hope that all facultypoints of view will be present at the meet¬ing, tentatively set for Wednesday. Theyplan to have opening statements by a mem¬ber of the committee of the council, assum¬ing.that one will accept the invitation, andby a member of the group, followed by pub¬lic debate. No resolutions are expected. Asof Thursday, 125 faculty and 41 staff mem¬bers had signed the petition. A full list ap¬pears in the ad on the back cover of thisissue.4 , See 'Faculty', Page Three Most of the hungering students have saidthey do not intend to starve to death if thedemands are not met. Tenter Rob Cooleysaid his tent-in. however, may continue un¬til summer vacation if the requestedchanges are not made.Edward Rosenheim, spokesman for thecommittee of the council, commented, “Iwish to gosh they’d eat something. I havemy own personal picket from the hungerstrike right outside my office most of thetime.”Rosenheim quoted a fellow professor assaying that, “Of all modes of non-rationalappeal, this is certainly one of the leastoffensive.” Rosenheim added, however,that “this clearly does not involve per¬suasion or reasoning on any acceptable lev¬el of rational discussion. It does not affectthe character of my deliberations.”Dean of the College Wayne Booth said hehadn’t seen signs of any effect on faculty“except sadness: when people feel bad, ev¬erybody feels bad. But it (the hungerstrike) is obviously a sign of how deeplysome people feel.”Charles O’Connell, dean of students,repeatedly peered out his window during aninterview Thursday afternoon in the midstof a thunder and rain storm and expressedconcern for the health of strikers. He saidhe’d considered asking his wife to takestrikers a bowl of chicken soup but haddecided against it.The actions were organized by Sara Hel¬ler and Mary Leighton, both ’69. Some 20students in Burton-Judson dorm began ahunger strike, but most have given up.David TravisGUERILLA THEATER: A mock skit was presented Tuesday by the Committee of500 in front of the ad building.Tr v it.Tr&(e®floan's JbpsySirvyl[Cu$tard-style yogurtjAHMflMVHlSmoOA IVd'MOl31AXS aavisno<23E>CUSTARD STYLELOW-FAT YOGURTSTRAWBERRYFLAVOREDFRUIT AT BOTTOMA refreshing new taste treat...with fresh fruit at the bottom...that ends up as a topping.Here s yogurt that's something else agai.n. Dean makes it up custard style.Thick, rich, creamy smooth Turn it over and it flips out like a mold. Thefresh fruit at the bottom ends up as a delicious topping. You get a flavorthat s mild-wild. Refreshingly tart.Dean s Topsy-Turvy— the custard style yogurt. Low in fat. 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Kinzie (at Racine)HU 4-1840 243'2271rL A v a A -u MJ5Jt~fl_JL.lL'Faculty" Continued from Page OneFaculty Group Asks Discipline HearingsLittle Support ExpectedFrom Council On Plea;No Senate MeetingAn original motion to hold a University¬wide meeting was amended to limit themeeting to faculty and staff. The vote onthe amendment carried by a small major¬ity. One faculty member (the meeting re¬quested that direct quotes not be attributedto the speakers) argued for the amendmenton the grounds that “the object is to breakthe silence of the faculty”, and that thatcan best be done in a meeting at whichstudents do not predominate. Student ob¬servers will not be excluded, however.Assistant professor of anatomy LeonardRadinsky and assistant professor of math¬ematics Paul Sally expressed pessimismabout possible responses of the council ofthe senate to their delegation on Tuesday.The delegation read the statement which isreprinted in the group’s ad in this issue,and answered questions from the council.The representatives judged that there isprobably very little support on the councilfor the petition’s call to reinstate expelledstudents until a new discipline committeeincluding students is formed. Less wide-sweeping measures, they indicated, such asthe constitution of an appeal board in¬cluding students may pass.The group also discussed, but did not acton, the possibility of calling a meeting ofthe faculty senate to discuss disciplinaryprocedures. The senate consists of all facul¬ty of assistant professor status or higherwho have taught here more than a year. Arequest by 10 per cent of the faculty re¬quires that a special senate meeting becalled.Some members of the group objected to ameeting because they believed that therewould not be enough faculty support to passa resolution on discipline, and because theyfelt that senate meetings in the past havebeen controlled by administration spokes¬men. Faculty sympathetic to the adminis-ration, they said, set the agenda, chair themeeting, and control discussion.The proposal for a senate meeting wasput off until after the mass faculty andstaff meeting next week.The group also elected a steering com¬mittee Wednesday composed of associate professor of history Charles M. Gray,chairman of the department of mathemat¬ics Richard K. Lashof, associate professorof history Lester K. Little, assistant profes¬sor of mathematics Paul J. Sally, and as¬sistant professor of English Fairinda W.West.A number of faculty believe that thegroup will continue after the question ofdiscipline is settled. A full professor said at Wednesday’s meeting that “in the course of(our actions) we want to get justice donefor the students.. .but there’s more behindit.” The long-range goals of many of thegroup are to try to transfer some of thepower now held by the administration andtenured faculty to junior faculty and stu¬dents.In another event Wednesday about 50psychology students and faculty lined side¬ walks east of the administration buildingWednesday noon in silent vigil to protestdisciplinary actions.The informal group demanded that thesit-in issues be addressed, that AAUP dis¬cipline guidelines be followed, and that ex¬pulsion cannot be used as “a viable meansof settling disputes”, according to StevePerkins, third-year graduate student, anorganizer of the vigil.Shireman Committee Submits ReportDecisions Rested on theDegree Of Individual'sParticipation In EventsThe Shireman committee’s report on dis¬ciplinary action, issued this week but datedMarch 17, listed the individual disciplinarydecisions of the committee against 27 stu¬dents and gave the reasoning behind thepunishments..The committee distinguished two areas ofinfractions between those who participatedin both the sit-in and the events at the quadclub and President Edward Levi’s homeand those who were only in the latter.The punishments for the first area were:• Expulsions-9• Six quarter suspensions-3• No action-2Punishments in the second case were:• Three quarter suspension-1• Two quarter suspension-4• One quarter suspension-1• Suspended one quarter suspension-1• No discipline taken-2• Failed to appear and therefore givenindefinite suspension-3.One student was ordered to pay for a bro¬ken window in the quad club.The report states that all suspensions aremerely stated at a minimum and that stu¬dents will be readmitted “only upon presen¬tation of evidence of acceptable interim be¬havior.”Dean of students Charles O’Connell at¬tributed the delay in the issuing of the re¬port to his desire to have both the Oaks andShireman reports in before he issued eitherof them.The report also states the reasons behind the specific discipline decided upon by thecommittee as:“• The nature of the student’s inn-volvement in the incident in question;• The degree to which the student soughtto communicate realistically with the com¬mittee rather than simply to defy it or dis¬rupt its proceedings;• The extent to which the student, uponreflection upon his participation in the -in¬cidents in question, assessed his behavioras being justified and proper or in¬appropriate to a University community;and• In some few instances, the degree towhich the student had demonstrated capac¬ity for positive citizenship in other aspectsof his functioning at this University.”The Shireman committee was one of thetwo disciplinary committees formed afterthe sit-in. The Shireman committee dealtwith students involved in protests at Presi¬dent Edward Levi’s house and the quad-rangle Club February 24. Members of the committee were CharlesShireman, associate professor in the schoolof social service administration; MaynardKrueger, professor of economics; and MarkInghram, professor and chairman of thephysics department.HoaxIt could only happen at the Uni¬versity of Chicago. A memo ap¬parently issued by the council ofthe faculty senate Thursday morn¬ing calling for the formation of afaculty-student appeals board, stu¬dent-faculty committees for com¬munity planning and student eval¬uation of faculty, and investigationof a proposed day care center,seemed too good to be true. It was—outgoing dean of the College WayneC. Booth termed it “a completehoax.”by VAN HEUSENThe doers, the shakers-up, collegemen proclaiming their “now” thinking,demand the ultimate in “now" shirtfashion . . . Hampshire House byVan Heusen. 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Maroon BenefitIDA NOYES 304MON. - FRI.10-5Hunger Strike Worth It Says ParticipantBy Sue LothIt’s been.fun.It’s been miserable.It’s been worth it so far.For the past few nights I’ve been sleep¬ing in back of the administration building.And going without food since Monday.In a tent.In the cold.In the rain.I’ve been tenting on the quads — withsome 13 other moderate students — be¬cause I feel the disciplinary sentenceshanded to students by faculty committeeslast quarter were unfair. I want to see thecases reopened and reheard by either anappeals board composed of faculty and stu¬dents with any power on the old corn-faculty and students. There were no stu¬dents with any power, on. the old com¬mittees.Some people in the tents aren’t hungerstriking, but most have sworn off food untilthey get too sick to go on. By then we hopethere will have been some change.But it’s surprising how long people canlast on orange juice, water, and a vitaminpill a day.Some one brought over a bottle of wine Wednesday night as a gift. It was tempting.There’s a pot of coffee by the tents most ofthe time for non-tenting, non-hunger strik¬ing students who come by and want to talk.And frozen or canned orange juice (in themorning) and a jug of water for the rest ofus.There’s a feeling of community in thecamp, something like the ad building sit-ingenerated, but less isolated. Mary Leightonand Sara Heller, who organized the hungerstrike, have welcomed visitors from “out¬side,” whether members of the Commit¬tee of 500, TV interviewers like Lee Phil¬lips, Chicago and national press (News¬week came by Thursday), or curiouspassers-by.Night are welcome quiet from the hecticdays, broken only occasionally by visitsfrom photographers, barking dogs, andwhistling owners in search of their pets.Even the sound of rain on the tents ispeaceful and secure — until it soaks intothe sleeping bags. Jim Haefemeyer was un-luckier than most in that respect — hewoke up in a pool of rain 6 am Thursday,while the other half of his tent stayed dry!The strike’s been worthwhile for me so far— it has dramatized and publicized wella stand that cannot be forgotten in a wayconsistent with my views of protest. Thefast also appeals to my emotions as a morehuman way to ask for justice.It reminds me, too, of the .people thatcan’t quit their “hunger strikes” when theyget sick.And losing weight, for the time beingwon’t kill me.So far, the hunger hasn’t been as painfulas I expected — my stomach feels a dullThree students who were expelled afterthe sit-in have had their punishments re¬duced to indefinite suspensions according todean of students Charles D. O’Connell. Twoof the students are Jody Sokolower, 70 andJoan Facher, 71. The identity of the thirdstudent could not be found out.The three can now re-apply to the Univer¬sity for the quarter beginning in autumn1970. Re-admission is not definite, however,O’Connell stressed.Five other expelled appealed their casesto O’Connell. Two were denied a lessening gnawing, but little else. I hardly care, assome reporters seem to, what my “’fjrstmeal” will be. Food just doesn’t seem thatimportant any more.The tent-in and hunger strike have tiredbut not discouraged me. Mary wears a but¬ton that sums up my feelings: “CelebrateLife” it says. As she said yesterday aboutthe strike, “We’re not dead serious about it— we’re alive serious.”We intend to stay that way.of their punishment, and three cases arestill to be decided.As of Wednesday O’Connell had received36 appeals from suspended students ofhad “administrative action” taken, e g., awhich 28 had the length of suspensions re¬duced. 12 were denied reduction, and fivestudent who threatened with deportationwas allowed to keep his naturalized status.Four students have not had their cases de¬cided.The Committee of the Council appointeda subcommittee to study guidelines for there-admission of expelled students.O'Connell Reduces Three ExpulsionsNUC WEEK AGAINST MILITARISMSun. Apr. 20 FIGHT COLD WAR IDEOLOGYMon. Apr. 21 Tues. Apr. 22 Wed. Apr. 23 TOWARDS A PEOPLE'S CULTUREThur. Apr. 24 Fri. Apr. 25 Sot. Apr. 26 Sun. Apr. 27"Chicano'sStruggle inNew Mexico"ReiesTijerina(Pres.,New MexicoAlianza)3:00Ida Noyeslounge NewsreelMovementFilm: Film:“Salt of "The Brig"the Earth" with theCold War Ideology and LivingHoward Zinn discussion Theater8:00 8:00 8:30Quantrell Kent 107 Kent 107 OutdoorGuerillaTheaternoonWorkshop:“ChemicalandBiologicalWarfare"2:00Ida NoyesPanel:“Scientistsand theWarfareState"8:00Rosenwald 2 Mass MediaPanel:Ron DorfmanPeter KutnerMickey Leaner8:00Reynolds Club^ Lounge Folksing—mmmmmmtmmmmmmmJLmmmmmwmmmmammmmmm wTickets available at table in Hutch, 11:30-l :30 daily, April 21 -27, and at the door I Poets AgainstMilitarismRobert BlyPaul CarrollRobert CreeleyGalway KinnellBill KnottEugene PerkinsMuriel RukeyserEd SandersGeorge Starbuck2:30Mandel HallNew ResistanceGathering7:00Blue Gargoyle57th andUniversity4/The Chicago Maroon/April 18, 1969'500' Continued Frorri Page OneFlacks Charges University Conspiracyshould stop and construction of low-renthousing for displaced families begin.• University facilities should be open tothe community.Three hundred people gathered in frontof the ad building Tuesday to hear facultymembers and students discuss Universitydiscipline policies in what was billed as ateach-in by David Bensman, 70, an orga¬nizer of the program.Richard Flacks, assistant professor of sociology, opened the rally with a speechcharging the University with participatingin what he called “an experiment to seewhether student movements which havegrown up on US campuses can be sup¬pressed.”The success of this “experiment,”Flacks said, depends on the uniting of thefaculty behind an ideolgy which views thestudent left as being nihilistic and coer¬cive. However, Flacks added, “The only people with coercive power are the facultyand administration.”Assistant dean of students James Vice,although not prepared to give a formalspeech, consented to answer any questionsstudents might have.When asked about the AAUP guidelinesfor disciplinary action, Vice criticizedthem for being more concerned with thedisciplinary measures than achieving jus¬tice. “They are a product of state schoolFrederika's Place Being Saved? mentality,” he said.Reuben Smith, professor of history, toldhis audience that the faculty desires topreserve “rational discourse,” but if stu¬dents take coercive action they must ex¬pect the same in return.Kenneth Prewitt, professor of politicalscience, although stating his support forthe striking students, criticized them forusing up their energy on very marginalchange.“I would like to see this energy usedagainst racism and in the military-indus¬trial complex,” said Prewitt. “It is muchbetter to march around the induction cen¬ter than Cobb Hall,” he added.Judge Tells DURTo Manage Only,Not to Re-locate harassment of tenants could take place byDUR which has been urging residents toleave the premises and be re-located. Hefurther stated DUR could only enter thebuilding for management of it.He was going to render a verdict Friday, but the city requested the appeal be de¬cided before the full court. The request wascomplied with by the judge, and the casewill come up next month. FSACCSL ViewsNorthwestern HungerFrederika Blankner’s attempts to saveher apartment at 6043-45 South WoodlawnAve. were given a boost Wednesday whenstate Supreme Court Justice Thomas E.Kluczynski stated that no demonishment ofher building could take place while she wasappealing the condemnation decision of thelower court. Students at Northwestern are holding ahunger strike to protest the disciplining of21 black students for the invasion of a fra¬ternity house last February. Punishmentsranged from probation to two yearsuspensions. Since DUR occupied the budding the firstweek in March, vandals had entered thebuilding and tramps were living in some ofthe rooms. These facts were brought toJudge Kluczynski’s attention and he or¬dered a police guard for the place. Thurs¬day Miss Blankner telephoned Captain Voj-tech of the 21st precinct and while talkingwith h'm the apartment of one of her ten¬ants, Mrs. Evans, was robbed. Kalven ReportDestruction of the building had beenthreatened by the Department of Urban Re¬newal (DUR) which occupied the buildingshortly after the condemnation order andtold tenants that they would be re-locatedsoon. The strike started Wednesday afternoonas 21 students, not those who were dis¬ciplined, marched into the main campusarea and set up their tents. They werejoined by 60 black students from the blackstudent center.Judge Kluczynski agreed with MissBlankner’s request for “meaningful ap¬peal” and stated that no money could com¬pensate an owner for his building, MissBlankner reports, and sa*d that no more Julian Bond, Georgia state legislator,showed up Wednesday night to encouragethe students to “fight on” and not to give into the disciplinary committee’s decision. Hestopped by on his way to a speaking en¬gagement in Evanston. Mrs. Evans says that she had beenthreatened with robbery three times beforeThursday and three weeks ago asked DURto permit her to move to an apartment fac¬ing Woodlawn Ave. instead of the rear lot,a location vulnerable to robbery. DUR didnot allow her to change her apartment, butdid offer her two months’ rent if she movedout of the building soon. She intended tomove in June, and said she would acceptthe rent only if she could find her ownapartment and not one recommended byDUR. They d'd not agree to her proposal. The Kalven report on discipline is beingreviewed by the faculty student advisorycommittee on campus student life(FSACCSL) and will be sent to the com¬mittee of the council with its recommenda¬tions, Charles O’Connell, dean of studentsreports.The student life committee is hearingopinions on the report from many sources,including groups such as the IndependentAction Coalition (IAC) and various stu¬dents. O’Connell hopes their recommenda¬tions will be ready about May 1.O’Connell emphasized that the Kalven re-por s not yet been accepted by the Uni-vei as its policy on discipline. The re-vic v by FSACCSL was intended before therep t was written. He added that they willnot accept the report in whole or reject itentirely, but will make recommendationson various points of the report.O’Connell declined to comment on theprogress of the recommendations to date.t-'hTHE COMFORTABLE CHAIRCandles, Incense, Jewelery & nice things from nice places5 5 0 3 Vi Hyde Park Blvd Most complete photoand hobby store onthe South SideM0QEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Student'DiscountsTOYOTA - TRIUMPHSales - ServiceCOMPETITION MOTORSItovota 7729S.CottageGrove AvePhone:783-3716 • •• hiff fUcttouh stockforth*Uko rUlo9 soosool! RALEIGHiSPORTS cJuUJUUL.jRobin Hood LightweightCl by Raleigh *3r LIGHTWEIGHT HACBtTHE HIP HOPThe Hip Hop to Europe on Icelandic Airlines saves you $161 flyingto Luxembourg. Daily flights from New York to Iceland • Luxem¬bourg • England • Scotland • Norway • Sweden • Denmark. 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SA I-5M3 Cohn A Stem©mutt Sc (ftampuaShopPlayboy kickers from DexterThe newest, neatest new shoe stvle is this low risestrapped and buckled boot by Dexter. In smoothBritish tan leather. S22.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings..April 18, ,1?69/Thp pifcaflo Maroon/5EDITORIALHunger In SpringObstinately, Chicago refuses to let in the spring. It is cold andgrey; the leaves are keeping to their buds; and it is drizzling theinsidious drizzle that you don’t seem to notice until you arethoroughly wet.Most students are staying inside, reading their books, keepingdry. But 20 are out on the wet lawn of the quadrangle in smalltents, not eating anything, waiting for the administration to changeits mind.The hunger strikers are not crazy. Their leader, Mary SueLeighton, is one of the most intelligent students in the College.She spent three agonizing weeks as a student observer on theOaks committee. And when she resigned with two others, herstatement was about the best reasoned and most perceptive pieceof writing of the sit-in or since."If someone could explain to us akind of university where the Oaksand Shireman committees andtheir decisions are right and neces¬sary, we would be satisfied"Her fellow strikers aren’t crazy either. They’re not the kindwho take over administrators’ offices or burn computers. Theyare quiet and sane. But they tried for two months to talk to theadministration and faculty about the way discipline is handed outat this University. They couldn’t get through. And unable to getthrough they joined the radicals and attempted, by calling a strike,to engage other students in the fight against the attitude that stu¬dents don’t deserve a say in the important things in the University.But the strike didn’t work. And Mary Sue and a few others in aresigned and somewhat sad way set up tents in the main quad.Not sitting in Charles O’Connell’s office, they set down belowhis window, outside in the rain.It may be that we’re not very smart, but there are two thingsthat we simply have not been able to understand. One is the facultyview that students should have no power in important disciplinarycommittees. And second is why it is that students (who accordingto the poll overwhelmingly supported amnesty during the sit-in)are not upset enough over the disciplinary procedures and decisionsto refrain from attending class in one building for a day.It would be easy to put down our lack of comprehension of thefaculty position to the generation gap, and the student intransigenceto apathy. But if the first is true then there is no hove for theuniversities. And if the second is true then there is no hope forthe students of the University of Chicago.If someone could explain to us a kind of university where theOaks and Shireman committees and their decisions are right andnecessary, we would be satisfied.If someone could explain to us why the students are uncon¬cerned, why they go to class oblivious of the nature of the Univer¬sity they are tacitly supporting, why they delve deeper into theirdisciplines to become professors in a narrowing academic worldthat is death to its justice — if only someone could explain this,then perhaps we could shed the growing feeling that writing aneditorial, putting out a newspaper on this campus is a uselesswaste 0/ time and effort.The hundred and more faculty opposing the disciplinary de¬cisions on the grounds that students had no part in them and hadno part in making the rules that they were based on, are a signof hope. (Why are there not more of them?) They made us feel apart of this University again.And talking to Mary Sue and the 20 others in their tents onthe wet ground made us feel good. At least until we stopped andlooked up and saw the other students walking hurridly by in therain, clutching their books and umbrellas, and looking down. LETTERS TO THE EDITORSFSACCSL FarceI have served as a member of the facul¬ty student advisory committee on campusstudent life (FSACCSL) for the past year,and I would like to take this opportunity tourge anyone of good will who is consid¬ering running for this committee or votingfor someone who is running, not to. Fromits pretentious name to its absurd functionsit has shown itself to be a sham at bestand a cynical tool of the faculty and ad¬ministration at its most typical. Its facultymembers acted as cops during the sit-in,and its purged student membership wentalong with the committee’s scabby chargeof bypassing student government in ap¬pointing new observers to the Oakes dis¬ciplinary committee. (Not that they hadmuch of a choice: O’Connell used to assureus that whatever we decided, he was thedean).FSACCSL was a sop thrown at the stu¬dent body after the administration and fac¬ulty decided against going along with eventhe feeble recommendations of the Pagecommittee for student control over theirown lives. Its dividends for students werethat their elected representatives were per¬mitted to hobnob with the racists and im¬perialists at the Levi dinner and to gen¬ially chat with their betters once a week.Even under the very best of “studentpower” conditions we would be free only toincrease our own comforts and privileges,to do our own thing while the trustees andtheir technocratic toadies continued to dotheirs. (Perhaps we would be allowed tohelp them). This is at best. FSACCSL isn’teven that good.Stuart NewmanFSACCSL DefendedIn response to Stuart Newman’s letter,the undersigned candidates for positions onthe faculty-student advisory committee oncampus student life (FSACCSL) agreed onthe following statement:We recognize that in the past yearFSACCSL at times has been used to lendthe appearance of student approval to fac¬ulty-administration decisions. We vehement¬ly object to this use of students, but wedo not believe the proper response is forconcerned students to refuse to have any¬thing to do with the committee: thatcan only lead to the election once again of amajority of students eager to do the dean’sbidding.We intend to represent student interests,as we see them, and to refuse to com¬promise on any issue where a compromiseTHK CHICAGO MAROON!Editor: 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, Steve Cook, Paula Szewzyk, iGerard Leval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Freida Murray, Marv Bittner, DebbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Pho'ography 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 the tenthweek of the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 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. would lead to unsatisfactory results for stu¬dents. We would not, for example, agree atDean Charles O’Connell’s request to by¬pass SG and appoint replacement studentobservers to disciplinary committees, asfive student members of the past FSACCSLdid (after O’Connell had decided that thethree other student members could not par¬ticipate in the decision or the selection, onthe grounds that they had been suspendedor summoned and could not therefore be“objective.”) We would repudiate the Kal-ven Committee Report on discipline, andrefuse to submit or approve any alternativereport which did not allpw at the very leastfor equal representation of students, se¬lected by students in a manner of their ownchoosing.We will: insist that students decide whichstudents can run for student offices(O’Connell and dean James Vice decided toeliminate Marilyn Welts as a candidate forFSACCSL on the grounds that she is on pro¬bation and therefore not in good academicstanding — a decision which should havebeen made by SG’s elections committee,not by our deans); insist that FSACCSLmembers develop their own agenda, ratherthan allow O’Connell to set the agenda; ingeneral, insist that students have an equalor majority voice in all nonacademic deci¬sions directly affecting students; attempt toincrease the power of SG and of all studentgroups to make their demands for changeheard by faculty and administration.We are not optimistic about the possi¬bilities fcr student communication with fac¬ulty members at this University, but we seeno reason to allow the faculty and adminis¬tration to use students to their ends. We arerunning to prevent that, and we ask yoursupport as voters for this non-militant at¬tempt to make student views heard.Frank Day, 70Cassie Schwartz, 70Jeff Spur, 70Rob Cooley, Social SciencesDoug Huron, LawBULLETINFriday, April 18RECRUITING VISIT: US Office of Education, Washington DC. Interviewing for these positionsEducational assistant (trainee). Grants man¬agement trainee, education or program spe¬cialist. Call ext 3282 for appointments.PAPERS: "How do We Write about Love? Gottfriedvon Strassburg's Literary Criticism," W T HJackson, Columbia University; "New Dimen¬sions of Thought in the Eartly Middle Ages:Anselm and Abelard as against Augustine andBoethius," FE Cranz, Connecticut College, LawSchool Auditodium, 2:30.LECTURE: "Agriculture, Credit, and the Position ojthe Negro in the American South: 1865-1900Richard Sutch, Berkeley. SS106, 3:30.FOLK DANCE PARTY: Ida Noyes Theater, 7:30.DISCUSSION: "Abortion is a crime! Should it be arigTit?", Participants: Reverend Spences Parsons, dean of Rockefeller Chapel, Betty Rich¬ards, from Women Mobilized for Change, Wii-leva Lindsey, technical consultant in Educationfor Kenwood-Oakland community Organization,Gwen Robinson, on the national board ofYWCA. First Presbyterian Church, 64th andKimbark, 7:30.FILM: "Le Chinoise," Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS: "The Catand the Moon," and other works, Ralph Shapey,music director. Mandel Hall, 8:30.UNIVERSITY THEATER: "Liliom," by Ferenc Molnar,directed by Annette Fern. Reynolds Club Thea¬ter, 8:30.Saturday, April 19WRITING COMPETENCY EXAMINATION: all transferand all second year students who have not al¬ready taken and passes this exam are re^uir^to do so. For information, consult DonaioGreen, GB 326, ext 2892, or your advisor.UNIVERSITY THEATER: "Liliom," Reynolds CluDTheater, 8:30.Sunday, April 20CONCERT: Chamber music for piano, violin and celloIda Noyes Library, 2 pm. „FILM: "Forbidden Games" and "War of the Buttons,Cobb Hall, 7 and 9. r,„hUNIVERSITY THEATER: "Liliom," Reynolds CluDTheater, 8 pm.CancellationRichard Goodwin, former advis¬or to John and Robert Kennedy andEugene McCarthy, did not speakThursday as his plane was unableto land in Chicago. The lecture isrescheduled fcr next Thursday nightalthough the location has yet to bedetermined.6/The Chicago Maroon/April 18, 1969Ifc.NUC To Help Fight Militarism Next WeekPrograms To IncludeFilms, Demonstrations,Workshops, and PanelNext week the New University CounciliNUC) will sponsor a week againstmilitarism.The week of activities is part of a nation¬al campus plan which will focus on de¬mands to end the war in Viet Nam, demon¬strations against military agencies in uni¬versities, such as ROTC or military re¬search, and programs about the cold warideology and how it is affecting the presentculture.Melvin Rothenburg, associate professorin mathematics UC coordinator for the pro¬gram said that the main concentration hereBy Chris FroulaThree hundred medievalists from* theU.S., Canada, and Europe are meeting hereFriday and Saturday for the 44th annualmeeting of the Medieval Academy of Amer¬ica.The question of how medieval universityproblems are relevant to the problems fac¬ing universities today is a dominant themeof the meeting, the focus of whice will be apanel discussion in “Controversy and Dis¬pute in Universities: The Medieval Phase,”Friday night in Rockefeller Chapel.The discussion is organized around themain issues of student dissent: the objec¬tion that universities in our time are sellingout to the “technostructure,” that they arebecoming slavishly obedient to political,economic, and industrial power structures;the university has become an ivory towerisolate devoted to “pure” research, whicheither divorces itself from concern for mod¬ern society or sells itself to the power struc¬ture, either of which is a form of moraldelinquency; that the old liberal arts arebadly understood and hence, badly taught. will be on the effects of the cold war on thecountry.Two films will be shown in Kent 107:Monday, “Salt of the Earth,” on Tuesday,produced by blacklisted leftist Hollywooddirectors in the 50’s, dealing with the prob-1 e m s of blacklisting, strikes, laborstruggles, and women’s rights; and onWednesday, “The Brig,” a film of the Liv¬ing Theater acting out the Broadway playagainst militarism.Thursday will be a day concentrating onscience and the military with an outdoordemonstration at noon, workshops on chem¬ical and biological warfare in the afternoonat Ida Noyes, and a panel discussion “Sci¬entists and the Warfare State” in theevening.A panel will discuss mass media in Rey¬nolds Club Lounge Friday at 8pm, whichwithout relevance to our times and ourproblems.Further problems are the notion that theuniversity should fly the flag of dissent,with Lehrfreiheit, or academic freedom, fordissenting professors; that the universityshould be the fountainhead of socialchange, continually remolding society astimes and needs and resources change;that the university should not serve specialinterests of influences other than the “tech¬nocracy”: parents who want their children“socialized” and “acculturated,” or poten¬tial employers who want education gearedto their immediate needs.Speakers are: Lynn T. White ofUCLA—“Medieval Universities and theNew Technocracy.”Richard MeKeon, professor of classics andphilosophy at UC—“The Development of(Institutional Forms of Immunities andRights in Medieval Universities.”Barnaby C. Keeney, chairman of NationalEndowment for the Humanities—“TheHumanization of the Governance of theModem University.” will talk about censorship and distortionin the press.Michael Goldberger will hold a happening“Whatever Became of Folksinging” on Sat¬urday. On Sunday there will be a poetryreading in Mandel Hall at 2:30. Poets“The people who were there really cared.That’s why I can’t be too disappointed inthe conference,” said Steve Cope, ’70, stu¬dent chairman of the college curriculumconference which was plagued by poor at¬tendance.The conference, held from Thursday,April 10 until last Tuesday was proposed todiscuss the problems with curriculum inthe college and to offer possible changes tothe college dean’s office.Among the varied conferences held werediscussions of the mutual obligations of stu¬dents and faculty, the general educationcourses in the humanities, social sciences,physical sciences and biological sciencesdivisions and individual departmentmeetings.Cope said that probablu the poorest at¬tended meetings were the division meetingsscheduled for the 15th. He added that thosemeetings were in many ways the most im¬portant because “the divisional degree re¬quirements have not been questioned foryears.”“The faculty was there, the opportunityto air grievances was there, the chance tocommunicate was there, but the studentsweren’t,” was the response of one studentwho attended the conferences. present will be part of a national expeditionsponsored by National Resist and NUC, andwill include Robert Bly, Paul Carroll, Rob-ter Creeley, Galway Kinnell, Bill Knott, Eu¬gene Perkins, Muriel Rukeyser, Ed Sand¬ers and George Starbuck.Cope said “The faculty was impressedwith the discussions that went on. Therewas some unfavorable response from them,however but by and large, they felt thatthey got something out of it.”Council Meets ToDiscuss DisciplineThe council of the faculty senate weremeeting Thursday night to consider theproposals on student discipline by the facul¬ty petition group and the Independent Ac¬tion oalition (IAC) on Tuesday.Tuesday, the faculty group asked that thecouncil reexamine the discipline with con¬sideration of the American Association ofUniversity Professors (AAUP) guidelines.Later Danny Boggs, teaching fellow inthe law school and Jay Lemke and MikeBarnett, graduate physics students, repre-senatitives of IAC proposed the creationof an apellate review board for all of thedisciplinary actions.Dean of the College Wayne C. Booth de¬nied rumors circulating around campusthat the council had declined to vote Tues¬day on endorsement discipline action lastquarter which resulted in 42 students ex¬pelled, and 8 suspended.CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREETStudent Study Being MadeAmong Medievalists Friday Apathy Mars Meetingsideas^^FOR MONEY-BACK LIFE INSURANCECombine protection for yourfamily with a guaranteedsavings program! Sun Life’sSecurity Fund Endowmentprovides life insurance to yourAge 65—then returns all pre¬miums plus dividends. A wise'd like to discuss with you.Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU , ,, „ c wOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602 °”,ce "ours 910 5 Monday$'FR 2-2390 — 798-0470 Others by Appt.SUN LIFE OF CANADAFOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYVWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANfcS • CHEVY Il|AS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYPLUS 9*/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, k INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH(330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 gel MORE out of livingenjoy“fcs, Virginia, Hyde Park does have a Sporting Goods store!”in HARPER COURTPRICESBaseballsSoftballsBatsSoccer ballsSoccer shoesDart boardsTable tennis setsVolley ballsVolleyball-Badminton set.BasketballsRnrlmintnn rncauets 95* to $3.3595* to $3.25$1.35 to $7.00$12.00 to $18.00$12.95 to $18.95$3.95... $8.50 to $10.95$13.00$17.00...$7.00 to $12.50$5.95Golf jackets, men's and ladies $9.60Golf umbrellas $5.50Golf bags $12.00 to $42.50Golf socks, men's andladies $1.00 to $1.50Tennis racquets .$1.50 to $18.00Water Skis $49.95 to $69.95Karate Uniform $11.20 to $12.50Ankle & Wrist Weights $7.50 to $8.50 STARTER GOLF SETSDave Hill signature.. .$49.9514-pc. set includes: 5 irons, 2 woods, 5-pocketbag, 3 golf balls, 2 headcovers plus tees.Also: a complete line of the top names in golfequipment for men and ladies, including ap¬parel.a new dimension in golf ballsRAM 3D Burke-Worthington$15 dozen Sweetshot SS$14.75 doz.Plus other brands byTommy Armour, Bob Rosburg andmany great names.upper penninsula ski tours5210 Harper Court SPORTS CENTER955-5110April 18, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7SPRINGSALE20% to 66% %OFFSTORE-WIDEFABULOUS SAVINGSONEverything . . . Wicker Furniture/Decorative Items/ Gifts, Kitchen ware,Candles, Jewelry, and Much More!cooley's corner52! 1 S. Harper, in Harper CourtSpring HoursSunday - Wednesday, till 6 p.m.Thursday - Friday, till 8 p.m.Columbia On SaleatDiscount RecordsBlood Sweat & TearsLeonard Cohen; Songs from a RoomMoby Grape '69Cryan Shames; SynthesisBig Brother; Cheap ThrillsThese special prices apply with this adiscount records inc, 32"2"2"2"2’9 99201 N. La SALLE ST. (corner Lake)PH. CE 6-2187 55 W. MONROE ST. "Heart of The Loop'PH. 726-3691 “Francis Albert SinatraDoes His Thing”(One more time!)If you missed Frank’sshow last Fall, takeheart! We’re bring- MAIIANN CARROLL andTI1K FIFTH DIMENSION!And of course, same great sponsor.ing the whole Thing (But you know that.)back for an encore... same great Sinatra...same great guests: MONDAY, APRIL 21CBS-TV tj-10 p.m. EST(but chock your local listing just to bo sure.)Budweiser is the King of Beers(Bui you know lliul.)ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC • ST. IOUIS • NEWARK . LOS ANGELES . TAMPA . HOUSTON . COIUMBUSALLTHESEAND OTHERBESTSELLERSPAPERBACK f&CLOTHBOUNDNOW IN STOCK ON THEI) ISP LA Y TABLESTHEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE58th ST. at ELLIS8/The Chicago Maroon/April 18, 1969* « I « 4 4 * » •* » ** * «»«'»’«• « r « .O 4^y*» * « 4 •* <f* > Ifijl <*»««♦ 4 4I \ <i I t« Wl l »i > ««■ • I4<«tl »4»»»f«...«». »~ -■» A .V.I. A «- 4-4-« Aj# •««»«4«»around and about the midwayNew TrusteeMrs. Katherine Graham, president of theWashington Post Company, has been elect¬ed to the Board of Trustees of The Univer¬sity of Chicago.The announcement of her election wasmade by Fairfax M. Cone, Chairman ofthe Board.Mrs. Graham is a graduate of The Uni¬versity of Chicago, and her late husband,Philip L. Graham, was a trustee of theUniversity from 1951 to 1963. when he died.She has been president of the Washing¬ton Post Company since 1963. The Com¬pany includes several journalistic enter¬prises. including the Washington Postnewspaper and Newsweek magazine. Sheis also director of the Bowaters MerseyPaper Company.Mrs. Graham is a trustee of GeorgeWashington University and a member ofthe Advisory Committee of the John Fitz¬gerald Kennedy School of Government ofThe Institute of Politics at Harvard Uni¬versity. She is also a trustee of the Com¬mittee for Economic Development and ofThe American Assembly and is a memberof The Business Committee for The Arts.Inc.White LeavingGilbert White, professor of geographyand chairman of the college public affairsprogram, will leave the University.White declined to comment. He has an¬nounced his resignation to public affairsstudents and to AAUP petition signers.Former president of Haveriord College,White was an organizer of the faculty groupprotesting the University’s handling of dis¬cipline after the sit-in.He has not announced his future plans orhis reasons for leaving. He lives with hiswife at 5626 Dorchester Ave.Poli Sci ChairmanAristide R. Zolberg. associate professorof political science has been appointedchairman of the University’s department ofpolitical science.The appointment, which was effectiveMarch 1, was announced by John T. Wilson,Vice-President and Dean of Faculties at theUniversity.Zolberg. who is also a member of thel niversity’s committee < for the com¬parative study of new nations, the Com¬mittee on African studies, and the centerlor the comparative study of political devel¬ opment, is an expert in comparative poli¬tics, especially concerning emerging na¬tions in Africa and with Western Europe,and theories of political change.He replaces Grant McConnell, Professorof Political Science, who plans to take apost next fall with the University of Califor¬nia at Santa Cruz.Commenting on the appointment, D. GaleJohnson, dean of the University’s divisionof the social sc'ences, said, “In the sixyears since Mr. Zolberg joined our faculty,he has become recognized as one of theforemost authorities on Africa. The scopeand depth of his knowledge and under¬standing is impressive. My colleagues and Icongratulate him on his appointment.”ARISTIDE ZOLBERGNew Poli Sci ChairmanCongreve ResignsDr. Willard J. Congreve has resigned asproject director of the Woodlawn Ex¬perimental school district.Congreve, associate professor of educa¬tion at the University, offered to remain ashead of the board until a successor can befound.The board, composed of representativesfrom the Woodlawn community, the Uni¬versity. and the Chicago school system.The project is financed by federal fundsand is a pilot experiment in school de¬centralization.Designed to encourage community in¬volvement in area schools, the board is re¬sponsible for Hyde Park HighSchool at 6220Stony Island Ave, the Wadsworth elementa¬ry school, and the Wadsworth upper gradecenter, both at 64th St and University Ave.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 AVI RE 1-3800We specialize in European delivery — call us FSACCSL SplitA member of the faculty-student advisorycommittee on student life (FSACCSL), hassuggested that students boycott the up¬coming FSACCSL elections. Following aletter to the editor of the Maroon, StuartNewman, graduate student in chemistry,commented further on his position Thurs¬day night.“The only real charge given the com¬mittee during the year was the impressionthat plans for the Student Village would notgo ahead without its consent,” he said.“The same impression was given con¬cerning the Kalven report.”Newman said most of the members of thecommittee went along with Dean O’Connell.“He (O’Connell) made sure we understoodhe was dean.”Questioned about the position taken byseveral candidates in another letter to theMaroon that channels of communicationare necessary. Newman said, “We haveseen the poverty of channels of commu¬nication with the dean in the past. We havebeen heard, and we found out we were ig¬nored.”Miss UC and WRAPAithough WRAP (Women’s Radical Ac¬tion Project) damned the Miss Universityof Chicago contest for upholding a traditionof female oppression in a leaflet Wednes¬ day, it does not plan to act at the Washing¬ton Prom.Carola Burroughs, 71, a student in thenew collegiate division, says that “WRAPhas nothing against the prom itself.”The issue of the female image is aserious one and would not be treatedseriously at a place where people aregoing to have fun and be happy, sheadded.Picketing and guerilla theater were sug¬gested, but were ruled out.The flyer,which appeared on the last dayof voting, dealt with a woman’s place inacademia and the working world.PeopleThe Rev. Joseph A. Fitzmyer, S. J., hasbeen appointed professor in the departmentof near eastern languages and c'vilizations.Father Fitzmyer is currently professor ofnew testament and biblical languages atWoodstock NXOLLEGE, Woodstock, Mary¬land. He first joined the faculty there in1958. . .John Hope Franklin, chairman of the his¬tory department, has been elected alongwith 49 others to the new Black Academyof Arts and Letters . . . Milton Friedman,Chicago economist, has been named byPresident Nixon to a 15-member advisorycommission to develop a plan for eliminat¬ing the draft and moving toward a volun¬teer army...The SerfsThe Serfs stand proud nowIt is their landSounds of their livingAre the sounds of your lifeListen, hound to and transferredwith the soilNatural men sinjrinjrof unrealizeddreamsSinirinp of love and joyThe Serfs, almost free nowHut never free of lifeMaking their music-Of this place, this timeHound to our daysThe SerfsKarly I’.ird CafeOn Capitol.X(ja/uto£A *I io 1040/TU rkirann Maroon/9mmsssssaaBBBB(The Maroon Classified Ads)KEEP YOUR WICKS TRIMMED AT WASH PROM TONIGHT! RATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:i 75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AO: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0600, Ext. 3264.LOSTSASHA, friendly female medsize tanpuppy with white legs & chest, blackeyepatch, vie. Point. 363-2919 or EX6461.PEOPLE FOR SALETyping? Call Ruth 363-5609 (eve).May I do your typing? 363-1104.FORTRAN EXPERT: 3 years ex¬perience on 7094 IBSYS/FMS. Also360 JCL. Consulting at $5 hr. CallC. Musselman 363-5978.PEOPLE WANTEDCLERK TYPIST: Opening in Uni¬versity Office. Daily, M-F, 12-5 P.M.General office ability. An interestingjob for a student wife. Call Ext.4444. An Equal Opportunity Employ¬er.Persian and Indian musicians inter¬ested in performing for the Festivalof the Arts, Call Alan 363-0551.Pianists desperately needed for ateam performance of Satie's VEXA¬TIONS, eighteen hours long, forFOTA. If interested, call Alan 363-0551.SECRETARY- — committed tomovement. Desiring a stimulating,challenging job experience. CallBert at 667-1808.EDITORIAL ASSISTANT, full-time.Secretarial skills. U of C P.-ess. CallM. Fowler, Ext. 3336. AUDIO RECORDING ASST, hi-fi orhome tape background, to recordcampus lectures, 12-15 hours per wk,$2.00 per hr and up. Office of Radioand TV, X3182.CHARTERED FLIGHTS“••‘•CONSULTING ASTROLO-GER******••FUTURES CHARTED-W. J. Ken-nick***DANCESFri at Pierce Tower — Chicago All-Star Blues Band — 8:30 P.M.ROOMMATES WANTED(2)—nice, furn. apt. NEW YORKCITY, $200 ea, 6/1-9/15. Call Mari¬lyn 955-2455.Lrg. rm, fern. 57th Street. Now untilJune $40 call 288-2908.2 men to share spacious 6 rm apt.nr 53rd St. Cheap. 643-4821.Share lrg 6 rm apt w/2 femalegrad students — call 288-3694.ROOMMATE WANTED: Male GradSdt to room with 2 others. Large 7rm apt. on 53rd near lake. Only $60per mo. May-Oct. Option on next yr.363-3546.Two male grad students seeking fe¬male student to share 6Vi roomSouth Shore apartment for SummerQuarter. Own room, Vi block fromUC bus, 3 blocks to 1C, near Rain¬bow beach, partially air-conditioned,about $55 mo. Further info at 768-5410.Own room in nice apt near lake forfern over 21 beg June. Furn or un-furn. 493-2250 eves.1 or 2 roommates needed for sum¬mer sublet — own large rooms — 53& Kenwood. 684-3744.2 grads, own rm. $46 man 5327 Dor¬chester, 643-4821 after 6 P.M.FOR RENTClean, refinished apt nr. lake E. ofExchange. 6 rooms, mod. kitchen &bath garage avail, nr. I.C. Greatpad for 4 U. of C. types. $200 mon.288-8916.Roomer wanted to share 5 rm apt.Avail, immed. 7825 Yates. Mrs. R.Gonsky RE 4-7332 before 6 P.M.2 bedrm. Hyde Pk apt. 363-5935. Immed. Room in apt. option onlease. 47/m. 493-0499 5338 Harp.Modern 1 bedroom unfurnished withcentral air conditioning, ultra mod¬ern kitchen, free parking, 2 minwalk to I.C. 8< bus. Available May 1.South Shore, $150 incl gas. 363-2191late aftern or eve.3-room summer sublet, near campusrent reasonable but will negotiate.Call 955-7014.Spacious 7 rms. 2 ba., 3rd fir. So.Shore. Adults. RE 4-2813. M.D. & wife desire roomy 1 or 2 bdrunfurn. flat or apt. within walkingdistance of U.C. Hosp. for June 1-25.955-7180 eves, or wkend.REWARD: $50 reward (yes, FIFTYCAPITALIST DOLLARS) for findinga 4 or 5 bedroom apt. or houseavail, starting now, in the summeror in the fall for next year. Betterthan turning in your mommie as acommie. Call 363-2235.Med students need 3-4 bedroom apt.in Hyde Park before July 1. Joel955-5276 after 6..jJ DYLAN is alive andonly $3.89 AS ARE ALL‘5.98 RECORDSat the Student Co-OpReynolds Club Basement *\Sublet IVj rm apt. 52nd Kenwoodthis summer with option till June'70. BU 8-6669.Summer sublet, furnished, 4 rooms8< porch, $90 mo., length negotiable,955-6232. 5 responsible idealistic stdnts need5-6 rm Hy Pk apt to start collective.Rent from June. Mrs. Sarnat 271-5794 aft. 6.WANTED TO BUYLarge bedroom in basement apt.Hyde Park and 53rd. Semi-fictitiousroommate. $55 month. 363-2752.WANTED TO RENTFrshman girls want 4-5 bdrm apt.for next yr; contact BU 8-6610 SueS. — 1325x,Ellen C — 1405x, KarenK. — 1403x.U. of Mich, law student seeks 2bedrm apt. (with air. cond., if pos¬sible) in U. of C. area to rent orsublet May 23 to Aug. 15. Write:Richard Noble, 1015 Vaughn, Apt. 4,Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104. Motorcycle helmet — Diana Ml3-0800 Ext. 3776.AIR CONDITIONER, 5,000 BTU ormore. Call 684-5388 eve.WANTED: Old roll top desk. Call324-6706.FOR SALEGreat, wild Handmade ties cotton 8,silk. Call 667-8767 or come Sat., 19th1-5 5214 Kimbark.FENDER electric 12-string, smallGibson amp. huge Heath-Lansingamp. BU 8-6610, 3205 Mike.Want 4 bdrm apt June or Sept. Call 1961 Merc. 6 cyl. clean new tires.684-0980. Call BU 8-9106 afte r7:00. 64 Fiat 35 mpg $350 374-7829.Wright-style PRAIRIE HOUSE, E.South Shore. 10 min to campus via1C, Univ Bus. 7 rm, 3 bth. Large lot,trees. Low int FHA mrtge avail.X3857 or 288-4779.'61 Ford, $100, Paul 363-6314.STEREO COMPONENTS AT SAV¬INGSKLH 24 w/dustcover now $299.95Kenwood TK88 RCUR 90 watts$219.95Sherwood S-7800 Reg. $420, NOW$299.95.MUSICRAFT on campus Bob Tabor324-3005.MOVING TO CALIF — must sellrugs, tables, lamps, chairs, beds, tv,kitchen set, drapes. 363-8049.1 949 HARLEY-DAVIDSON. "45"completely restored and overhauled.Beautiful condition. Ride it to be¬lieve it. 493-8726 eves.USED VOLKSWAGENS'61 bug'64 bug'66 VW fastback very clean'67 bug very cleanReasonable but haggelable. LeslyImports, 2235 S. Michigan 326-2550.MOVING SALEDEMONSTRATORS — TRADESTV's, Recorders, Amplifiers, Tuners,Changers, Speakers. Everythingmust go. No reasonable offer re¬fused. Schwartz Bros. HIFI 1215 E.63 St. FA 4-8400.PERSONALSFOTA —May 1-17 WOW!DARKNESS the quality of black.Find out what a Christian Scientistdoes with an appendicitis at Mon¬day's lecture at 4:00 P.M. IdaNoyes.Charge of the Nomadlan CavalryCharge of the Numidian Cavalry?Charge of the New Calidonian Chi¬valry?Warrant for the arrest of the Biack-friars ad mgr — Count Leo Tolstoy.JOSEPH JARMAN; Tonight 8-? BlueGargoyle, 56th 8, University; only$1.Bandersnatch will be closed Fri.,Apr. 18 because of Wash Prom. Amimsy thing, but true. •run mar.FOTA — May 1-17 WOW!S udents for Israel presents Uzi Narkiss. Director of the Department mAMyah and Absorption of the JewishAgency in "A Conversation with Sh)dents" Wed. April 16th 4 P.M Hil|eT.Izzl? Wazzi? Uzi Narkiss!Three cheers and a matzoh ball.Do matzohs ball?Ahmad's — fine food in a newlaxed atmosphere. re-v.yaiilltLight Show. May 17, Bartlett Gym.Tickets only $2.50 each at MandelHall Box Office. This will be a sell¬out. No Tickets Sold at the doorDon't miss PHIL UPCHURCH to¬morrow night in concert at Cloister- DARKNESS thecity. shadow of the greyProf. Man. Radio-TV business, 7 yrsexperience, seeks Intelligent femalecompanion interested in psych, fenc¬ing, judo, chess, poetry, bowling,English Lit, drama. Phone days till12:30 and after 11:00 P.M. — 2486952.YOGA: builds and corrects habitsNerode, DO 3-0155. Grp, singleWHY IS THISWOMAN SMILING?JOG TO SISFor your casualLIVING ROOM CHAIR How to take a course in anatomyand stay awake in physics.DACRONWASHABLEFABRICAVAILABLEIN FOURCOLORS3995repeat of aformer selloutWHAT YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR!The quality the best, priced for less.inavianmmirlOystem 53rd &Lake ParkOpenEvery Day667-4040 If you don’t want to give upeverything physical for physics,we have something for you.NoDoz.*' The stimulating pill forthe unstimulating morning after.Nothing you can buy without a prescription has a stronger stimulant.And NoDoz is not habit forming.So after a course in anatomy has donesomething for your ego,take two NoDoz and dosomething for your grades.jLX10/The Chicago M.roon/April 18,196? (ma m mm ■ ,» 1 1.1 ,T ,^r■T,T,^ ■T.T■V■^rlT.T.T■T■r■T,T,T,,umis THERE NO END TO MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS?toniGHT! Extraordinary Jazz byJOSEPH JARMAN *»*he Blue Gar¬goyle, 56th & University. 8-?. $1.Gringos! Come hear Tijerina.Trained Kittens! Free. 667-7911.7paINED HUMAN!! Come to theMaroon Business Office and watchme t?y to sell you a freaky candleby peiken. They last forever maybe.Students for Israel presents Avra-ham Yehoshua, Israeli writer inresidence at U of Iowa, spea^ng on"Israeli Writers In Search of theirIdentity." Thurs, April 24th 8:00p.M. Hillel.yye're uptight with UPCHURCH.Sat 8:30 P.M. Cloister Club.FOTA - May 1-17 WOW! Solid state light show. Ida Noyesroom 304. Until 6 today.She tried to run away, only to find apit of evil. DARKNESSORANGE JUICER Sue Loth's poorfather.Bandersnatch will be closed Fri.,Apr. 18 because of the Wash Prom.A mimsy thing, but true.FOTA — May 1-17 WOW!ABORTION IS A CRIME! Should itbe a right? Come to the forum, Sun¬day, April 20th, at First Presby¬terian Church, 64th and Kimbark,7:30 P.M. Present your views of theproposed Illinois law.I think abortion should be com¬pulsory.Free Mutt Pups weaned Ml 3-9580. RETROACTIVELY!DISPUTE — Rockefeller Chapel 8:30p.M. this evening. The Crystal Ship and onion rings, 40cents Bandersnatch.“What Do YouMean — ChristIs AbsolutelyNecessary to Me?”Bill Cooley — Divine Student LifeDoug Huron — Professional StudentLife Rob Cooley — Social StudentLife Peter Rabonowitz — HumaneStudent Life Jay Lempke — Physi¬cal Student Life Frank Day — Colle¬giate Studeny Life Jeff Spur — Col¬legiate Student LifeWHAT if mind, love, and truth wereall synonomous? What would this doto the "mission" of the University?Christian Science teaches that theseterms are interchangeabel and howto make this truth practical anddemonstrable.Tonight and only tonight — JOSEPHin concert at the Blue Gargoyld, 8-?,SI.The furthest reaches are as close asyour hand. Dial 326-4422, MarcoPolo.BLACKFRIARS presents CHARGEa musical drama based on the lifeof Tolstoy. Problem: to live yourconvictions. April 25, 26, May 2, 3.Tickets Mandel Hall Box Office. Take a SHOEMAKERS HOLIDAYApril 25-27.CHGO's OWN SWINGERS CLUB.Send $1 for 52 page illust. magazine.100s of personals. MKS, Box 3806,CHGO 60654.CANDLES — Maroon Benefit. Inner-glow candles at the Business Office,Ida Noyes room 304.Want to hear Dylan Thomas withnew, now soundtape? UNDERMILKWOOD with acid rock, Grego¬rian chants, HAIR songs, hillbillymusic, Palestrina. Friday, April 18,8:30 P.M. in Lutheran School of The¬ology Theater, University and 55th.$3.50 and $5.00. With Student ID,$2.00.PHIL IS HERE — 8:30 P.M. SatNite at Ida Noyes — only $1.50.I've heard of Hair shirts, but Hairsongs?Professional man, college degree,age 24 seeks female companionship— phone days between 1 A.M. — 2P.M. J. Leonard 763-2952.Charles ClarkPEACE15 April 1969HHfHpizzasteakburgersSchlitz on TapFree PeanutsServing the Extra LargePitchers of BeerSMEDLEY'S PUBA real fun place to greet old and meet new friendsMusic by Seeburgchili spaghettiInquire about private roomOpen for Lunch5239 So. Harper Harper Courtparking in city lot at rear Millions of Baha'i's around theworld — of all races and in all na¬tions — speak softly but firmly tothe ills that plague mankind Almost100 years go Baha'u'llah wrote:"Arise, O people, and, by the powerof God's might, resolve to gain thevictory over your own selves, thathaply the whole earth may be freedand sanctified from its servitude tothe gods of its idle fancies. .."Sunglasses hid his eyes from theworld and the world from him.DARKNESS.FOTA — May 1-17 WOW1Try something new — Israeli stylehot dogs and hamburghers" at Is¬rael's 21st birthday party. Sun. April20. Humus too!WRITERS' WORKSHOP PL 2-8377.REWARD — $150.00, Stolen trumpetBach Stradivarius No. 6095 silver.Call Schilke Trumpet Co. WA 2-0570or Paul Meng BU 8-1100.Tomorrow night at Cloister Club —the top guitarist in Chicago**PHILUPCHURCH.CANDLE-SCNADLESCNADLESCANDLESCan Christianity be scientific? Forthat matter, can science be Chris¬tian? Find out at the Christian Sci¬ence lecture, Monday, 4:00 P.M.,Ida Noyes.FOTA — May 1-17 WOW!Help NUC smash the military April21-27.How DID Caroline Heck get herpart? Find out April 25-27.Singing, dancing, food, sunshine —all for $1.25 at Cafe Mapitom.BRING DOWN DARKNESS Apr 27th8, 28th Everybody knew him, none stoppedhim. Why? DARKNESS.FEAR ITSELF . . . WHPF5:00 P.M. SUNDAY, WEEKLYREVOLUTION IN WORDSYOU HAVE NOTHING TO FEAR,BUT. . .Vi lb. STEAKburger with tossed sal¬ad, fries $1.45 at The Mad Hatter.OMEGA STICKERS 8. pins 25c atthe Blue Gargoyle 57 8, University.FOTA — MAY 1-17 WOW!OW!The Student Co-op presents TheFireside TheaterBUTTERFIELD — MAGIC SAMDance Tickets Now on Sale $2.50each. Mandel Hall Box Office 11A.M. to 5 P.M.NEW DORMS RESIDENTS — ifyou're frumious with dorm food orcan't make supper some nite, trans¬fer your meal to the Bandersnatch.Get 60c credit plus 10c towards anydrink. Any nite but Sun. or Wed. —check at the desk the day before.FOTA — May 1-17 WOW!The U.S. is the only country thatprogressed from barbarism to dec¬adence without passing through acivilized stage. Your codpiece will fly to pieces atShoemaker's Holiday April 25,26, 27.Bobby Kind and Fred Below areALL-STARS.Can we survive the NEW TECH¬NOLOGY — come to RockefellerChapel at 8:30 P.M. this evening.JARMAN AT THE GARGOYLECANDLES AT THE MAROON.Come celebrate Israel IndependenceDay with Cafe Mapitom at a bar¬becue in Hillel's backyard. Sun April20th 4:00 P.M. $1.25 Dancing Sing¬ing, Humus! Studenth for Israel.THE PERFECT GIFT: an inner-glow candle (they last forever —just replace the core, the shell re¬mains). Maroon Business office, un¬til six today, and all next week.SMYRD BALL TO BE UNCOV¬ERED ON CAMPUS SOON.Fly to Israel this summer Roundtrip $320-$380 for students! For moreinformation call Students for Israel288-8488 eves.Tonight! Joseph Jarman in concertat the Blue Gargoyle.Louis and Dave Myers are ALL¬STARS.Coming Soon: FOTAMAY 1-17Look for our schedule of over 50events soon to appear in the Ma¬roon.FOTA — MAY 1-17 WOW!Stop complaining about StudentHealth. Investigate Christian Sci¬ence, this Monday at 4:00.Hey, maybe this is the answer to allthe abortion problems. PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 G. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVERFEATURINGKIBBUTZ HOLIDAYS IN ISRAELand Optional Archeological DigcoitesiATes -cofiD 117-25• 51 Days Israel, Italy, Switzerland, France S ?95• 52 Days Israel. Greece, Greek Isle Cruise, Italy 1195• 54 Days Israel, Italy, Switzerland, France, England 1095• 34 Days Israel and England '95• 22 Days Israel Holiday• 22 Days Israel, Italy, England• 45 Days Grand European Orbit (12 Countries) 1250• 22 Days Romantic European Swing (5 Countries) 599• 22 Days Classical Quest Italy and Greece 639 RANSOMThe people have seized into custodyten wall clocks from Cobb Hall. Theclocks will be held until the adminis¬tration pays a ranson: readmit oneexpelled student for each clock. Thepeople are advised to seize furtherproperty with the intent to forcereadmission of other disciplined stu¬dents.With love, FREEDARKNESS. A week from Sunday.FOTA — MAY 1-17 WOW!Come hear Avraham Yehoshua prizewinning Israeli writer. Doctoralwork in comparative literature at U.of Paris.Intellectual male seeks meaningfulrelationship with attractive girl —248-6952 12 A.M.—12:30 P.M.Dance to the CHICAGO ALL-STARSBLUES BAND at Pierce Fri. 8:30P.M.Beatles Course, Session 3 meets 7:30Mon. Ida Noyes Lib.SEE the plastic fantastic powderbeef quean — April 25-27.Tonight — Joseph Jarman at theBlue Gargoyle.THE PHOENIX (U of C student lit¬erary magazine) is back! Typedcontributions of verse and offers ofartwork and photos should be sub¬mitted by May 3 to Phoenix, IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.SERIES: Bod/* Consciousness 8.Dance Ida Noyes, 3rd FI., T.Th. 1:30Beginners Welcome."The Prayers Without God: Of aModern Hebrew Poet." Rabbi Brons-tein, Rochester, N.Y.; currently stu¬dent in UC History of ReligiousDept. At Hillel. Friday, April 18,8:30 P.M. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. (LNS) —after sentencing Emil Kangas tothree years of imprisonment for de¬stroying his draft card, the kindlySan Francisco Court then offered achoice between serving the full termor being released on probation afterfour months — provided he wouldaccept certain conditions.The conditions? "That he live aloneunless probation officials had a handin selecting his living companions,and renounce any direct or indirectpart in anti-draft demonstrations oractivities.''keeps your wicks trimmedBeneath that rough exterior beats aheart of gold. If you weren't so sca¬ry looking I'd give you a great bigkiss.I though I saw a pussycat.Maroon Candle Shoppe open til 6 to¬day. And all next week.PATR0NIZE 0UR ADVERTISERSs'xe^'us'i'vs o'i'is'Z!FOR CHICAGO AREA COLLEGE STUDENTS ONLYAPOLLO XIICOMPUTERRATES INCLUDEALL TRANSPORTATIONMEALSACCOMMODATIONSSIGHTSEEINGTRANSFERS V MOREMail thi* coupon today:OR SEE YOURFAVORITE TRAVEL AGENT EASTOURS, Inc11 West 42nd St..^ New York, N.Y. 10036Without cost or obligation, please rush freeCollegiate Travel Guide to:I Name| AddressCity, State. Zip 21C *III|II"mm B SLIDERULEWATCHmade ottCytttSovitfertandPERFECT FOR ALLSTUDENTSALL COMPONENTS OF THIS AMAZING INSTRU¬MENT WERE DESIGNED TO MEET EXACTINGREQUIREMENTS. CIRCULAR SLIDE RULE HASMOVABLE OUTER BESELS FOR ALL SCALES.LUMINOUS DIAL WITH SWEEP SECOND HAND.ALL SOLID SWISS QUALITYIGUARANTEEDFOR FIVE FULL YEARS\ /LATER-i B&5 NCW ONLY$12.95Send Check Or Money Order ToiAPOLLO ENGINEERING3917 West Touhy Ave.Lincolnwood, III. 60645‘S- '.ASSTATEMENT TO THE COUNCIL OF THE SENATEFrom: Concerned Members of the Faculty and StaffWe speak for a group of faculty and staff of the University ofChicago. We speak on behalf of members of our community who werepenalized in recent disciplinary actions with respect to the Sit-In in theAdministration Building and related actions.We are not here to defend the actions of these students. When theyhave proper hearings, they can make appropriate defense. We are nothere to impugn the character of faculty members involved in hearings orCouncil actions. We are concerned with the institution of the proceedingsand the excessive penalties which resulted. We are anxious for the futureof these students. We are deeply concerned about the future of theUniversity community.Disciplinary actions of the magnitude invoked in recen* monthsendanger the rights of members of a community unless they are institutedwith the fullest representation and carried out with utmost restraint. This is particularly true when penalties are imposed on some members of acommunity by those holding power over them. Such actions divide andmay ultimately destroy a community, leading to contagious mistrust andendless controveisy.We do not question the statutory grounds for these hearings. Wechallenge the justice of their institution and consequences. At the sametime, we confirm our membership in the community which carriedthrough this action, though we are shamed both by the procedures andthe consequences.The hearings were held in the heat of controversy. We believe theharshness of the penalties can be attributed to this climate as well as tothe lack of representation of students in developing criteria and in votingmembership on the Committees. In view of this, we sought a largerframeworkiin which to gain perspective on these actions, turning toguidelines proposed by major associations of higher education in the United States for dealing with such matters. Against this backdrop ofeducational practice, we ask the Council of the Senate to take thefollowing steps:{1) To rescind all penalties against students in the hearings of theOaks and Shireman Committees;(2) To reinstate at once all students who have been punished bythese Committees;( 3) To reinstitute hearings in line with the recommendations in the"Joint Statement on Rights and Freedoms of Students" as en¬dorsed by AAUP and other major bodies.We entrust this matter to your conscience and wisdom. We look to youto reestablish trust between faculty, students and staff. We consider theabove requests to be minimal conditions for restoring justice and mutualconfidence in this University.PETITIONT o the Council of the Senate:A number of students have recently been expelled from the University of Chicago. They were expelled by a disciplinary committee which violates the guidelines setup by the A.A.U.P.*We, the undersigned 108 faculty and 58 staff feel, therefore, that no disciplinary action should be taken until a committee is constituted which conforms to therecommendations of the A.A.U.P.A.A.U.P. Guidelines (A.A.U.P. Bulletin, June 1968, p. 261)"The hearing committee should include faculty members or students, or, if regularly included or requested by the accused, both faculty and student members.""Disciplinary proceedings should be instituted only for violations of standards of conduct formulated with significant student participation and published inadvance through such means as a student handbook or a generally available body of institutional regulations."Woyne Anderson Instructor Psychology Harvey Gilman Assistant Professor English Lester K Little Assistant Professor History Edmond Schonberg Research Assooote Fermi InstituteJudith Aronson Asst to Director South Asia Center Seymour Glagov, MD Assiciate Professor Pathology Monte Lloyd Associate Professor Biology Richard A Schonburn Staff NORCSamuel Aronson Research Associate Fermi Institute George Glauberman Associate Professor Mathematics Judith A Long Assistant R|ofessor Bunmess Donald M Scott Assistant Professor HistoryRalph Austen Assistant Professor History Frederick Glick Research Associate Statistics J Peter May Associate Professor Mathematics Joan W Scott lecturer History (College!Lawrence A Babb Intern College Galen Gockel Assoc Study Dir NORC Martin B Mathews Professor Pediatrics Leonard l Scott Instructor MathematicsKahcharan Bohl Assistant Professor South Asia Languages Michael Goldberger Assistant Professor Anatomy Jerome Me Gann Assistant Professor English W.ll.am Sewell Instructor HistoryKeith Baker Assistant Professor History Robert Granmck Instructor Mathematics Williom J McGrath Assistant Professor History Donald Sheehon Assistant Professor tngl.ihRichard K Barry Intern College Brian W Grant Instructor Divinity Susan Menken Stoll Psychology Irving A Spergel Professor Social Service Admin.Thomas Bergstresser Research Assooote Fronck Institute Charles Gray Associate Professor History Richard Miller Instructor Mathematics Joe l Spoeth Stoff NORCProfessor English Donald Green Assistant Professor English Morvin Mirsky Assistant Professor Humonities David Steedmon Assistant Professor Romance LanguagesS Bhatlacharya Research Associate History Peter Greene Associate Professor Mathematical Biology Barbara H Monter Assistant Professor Slavic Languages Susan Steedmon Instructor Romance LanguagesPat Bradley Stoll Biological Sciences Ph.ll.p A Griffith Instructor Mathematics Fred B Morris lecturer Portuguese Susan S Stodoesky Assistant Professor EducationKenneth Brown Research Associate History William A Hass Assistant Professor Psychology Thomas E Morton Assistant Professor Business Lars Svenomus Assistant Professor PhilosophyAnne Burnett Associate Professor Classics 1 N Herstem Professor Mathematics » Ian Mueller Assistant Professor Philosophy Noel Swerdlow Assistant Professor HistoryVirgil Burnett Associate Professor Art History R A Hinckley Staff NORC Jonel Mueller Assistant Professor English Christine Tonz Staff PsychologyJohn M Butler Professor Psychology James Hobson Assistant Professor Anatomy C M Naim Assistant Professor South Asia Languages John A Taylor Assistant Professor EnglishAssistant Professor History Gracia Holt Staff Romance Languages Alan Nelson Assistant Professor English Jack Tucker lecturer History (College)William Carpenter Assistant Professor English Celia Homans Staff NORC Robert C Newton Associate Professor Geophysicol Sciences Ralph Underhill Assistant Professor BusinessPaolo Cherchi Assistant Professor Romance Languages Peter Homans Associate Professor Divinity N Nie Assistant Professor Politico! Science l VonValen Assistant Professor AnatomyEnc Cochrone Professor History Eva Hunt Assistant Professor Anthropology Charles Nissim So bat Research Associate Fermi Institute J J Vorim Staff NORCEvelyn Cole Lecturer History (College) Ronald Inden Instructor History David Orlmsky Assistant Professor Social Sciences Peter Vos.te Stoll U of C PressBionco Conforto Research Assooote Fermi Institute Michael Issochoroff Assistant Professor Romance Languages Maureen Patterson Instructor South Asia Languages David B Wake Assistant Professor AnatomyGiovanni Conforto Assistant Professor Physics 1 M Issocs Assistant Professor Mathematics Eileen F Petrohelos Staff Humanities Alba Watson Instructor PsychiatryGlen W Davidson Assistant Professor Divinity Peter K Jansen Assistant Professor Germanic Languages Alvin Pitcher Associate Professor Divinity Eva Weinberg Stall NORCLouise Dennis Staff Psychology Robert Jenkins Lecturer Psychology Kenneth Prewitt Assistant Professor Politico! Science Charlotte Weissberg Staff New Collegiate DivisicMi c hoe I DePone Assistant Professor Engiish Richard H Jerny lecturer Human Development Leonard Radinsky Assistant Professor Anatomy Robert Wells Assistant Professor MathematicsCharles Derber Lecturer Social Sciences Max Jodeit Instructor Mothematics A K Ramanuian Professor linguistics Foinnda West Assistant Professor EnglishRobert Dombrowski Assistant Professor Romance Languages David R Jones Assistant Professor English Randoll Reid Assistant Professor English Anne Wetherby Stall PsychologyGuido Donim Assistant Professor Emile Karoftol Assistant Professor History Ruth Rhmes Associate Professor Anatomy Gilbert F White Professor GeographyRichard Ehlm Research Associate Fermi Institute Doro Keers Stoll Romance languages Robert Richard Slot! NORC Peter White Assistant Professor ClassicsFonito English Lecturer Psychology Stephen Keller Intern College William C Richardson Instructor Business Barbara Wickeera Stoll South Ana LanguageCarol Feldman Assistant Professor Human Development ond Psychology Herbert S Klein Associate Professor History Robert W Roberts Assistant Professor Social Ser Administration Colin M Williams Professor DivinityDonald Fischmao Assistant Professor Biology Martin A Kramer Research Assiciate Fermi Institute Humberto E Robles Assistant Professor Romance Languages Joseph Williams Assistant Professor EnglishRichard Flacks Assistant Professor Sociology Jeffery Kronzler MD Staff Billings Hospital Suzanne Ronneau Staff Politico! Science John H Wilson Intern History (College)Audrey Forbes, MD Instructor Pediatrics B Robert Kreiser lecturer History (College) Milton J Rosenberg Lecturer History (College) Gibson Winter Professor DivinityBarbara Forman Research Assooote Fermi Institute Richard K laschoff Professor Mathematics Melvin Roihenbera Associate Professor Mathematics David M Wolfe Research Associate Fermi InstituteMorvir Frankel Assistant Professor Psychology A H Lesser lecturer Philosophy DN Rudall Assistant Professor Classics Richard Wortman Associate Professor HistoryD G Freeman AstGf >ate Professor Hurnon Development Richord Levins Associate Professor Biology John Ruvalds Reseorch Associate Franck Institute Joanne Zarbock Stall LinguisticsRaymond Godke Lecturer History (College) Florence Levmsohn Stoll American Journal Sociology Paul J Solly Assistant Professor Mathematics Arlene Zide Staff LinguisticsEugene Gendlin Associate Professor Psychology Janet Lewis Staff Early Education Ellery Schclk Intern History (College) Norman Zide Associate Professor linguisticsRose GiollombordoKhomil Z veil be 1 Research AssociateAssociate Professor Sociologylinguistics Rirhord LmdzenMorvin Zonis Assiciate ProfessorAssistant Professor Geophysicol SciencesSocial Sciences Philippe C SchmitterAntoni Zygmund Assistant ProfessorProfessor Political ScienceMathematics sign here.If you support our position please sign this ad and return to H.S. Klein, S.S. 117ATTEND MASS FACULTY MEETING, WED., - APRIL 23 AND MANE YOUR VIEWS NNOWN12/The Chicago Maroon/April 18, 1969' ;-^\iJ3B^/*^VAV/A^V*VAVJ,AVAVAV#V.VAV/.V.V/.V.V.V/AV.*.*.*. .*.** V' ». ■ • .hhv-U's5**' *v *> ■ * -* *.*?:XHVn*V%Wv>*AMI**3THE GREY CITYJOURNAL■KMCBy Melvin RothenbergTHE FOLLOWING ARTICLE is intended to clarify someof the general ideological considerations that motivatethe campaign of the New University Conference (NUC)against the military on college campuses. For an actualdescription of the events on this campus of the NUCweek against militarism, April 21-27, see advertisementand story in this Maroon. The views expressed in thisarticle represent the opinions of the author, and wt nec-cessarily the official position of NUC.The militarization of our social order, and the in¬creasingly important role of military and para-militaryorganizations within it, is so evident that even retiringgenerals feel called upon to profess concern. Collegesand universities have become closely wedded to militar¬ism at all levels and in its diverse forms. Militarism oncampus is usually discussed in terms of agencies andactions (ROTC, IDA, chemical-biological warfare re¬search), or funding and personnel. Many elite univer¬sities wouldn’t exist without Department of Defensefunds, while high level Pentagon officials and high leveluniversity administrators are becoming more and moreinterchangeable. Even more pervasive, however, in thatit dominates all higher education from the elite in¬stitutions to the working class community and junior col¬leges, is the Cold War ideology of anti-communism whichjustifies the creation and maintenance of our militaryestablishment. Without this ideological rationale, thelegitimacy of what is in fact an elaborate system oforganized waste and oppression would be fundamentallyundercut.Anti-communism, as an ideological weapon in the U.S.,is very old. Examples can be found which predate theCivil War. After the 1917 revolution in Russia, anti-Bol-shivism became an important theme in the propogandaof the established interests. Anti-communism was the ex¬cuse given to justify the physical destruction of the IWWafter World War I, and was a central instrument fordividing the workers in the great labor struggles of the1930’s. However, Anti-communism as the basis for anentire system of political philosophy and values didn’tmature until after World War II and the beginning of theCold War.During World War II, anti-communism was generallysubmerged, in keeping with the politics of the U.S. —Soviet alliance and of the broad anti-fascist front. Therevival of anti-communism as a national ideology coin¬cided with the initiation of the Cold War, initially servinga limited and immediate political need. This need was tobreak the popular front, unify the people around a na¬tionalist and Anti-Soviet orientation, justify the new im¬perialism, drive the communists and other leftists out oftheir positions of influence in the trade unions, and purgefrom their jobs, or at least frighten into silence, thosemembers of the intellegensia (college professors, jour¬nalists, film makers, editors in publishing houses, schoolteachers, lawyers, etc.) who for one reason or the otherlacked enthusiasm for the cold war. For many com¬plicated historical reasons, including the sad fact that wehave never been able to develop a strong indigenousradical intellectual culture, this wave of national chau¬vinism and anti-communism easily and totally engulfedour institutions of higher education. Since that time theyhave developed an elaborate cold war culture and com¬plicated theoretical substructure to rationalize and jus¬tify their capitulation to cold war ideology.This cold war culture has manifested itself in a com¬plex system of myths, rituals, symbols, dogma, sacredevents, etc. It has fed on the elaborate and sophisticatedconstructs of academic social scientists, yet the oneconceptual essence of cold war anti-communism is verysimple and primitive: that is, the Forces of Freedomand Light, led by the U.S., were engaged in an inter¬national struggle to the death with the Forces of Dark¬ness, Communist Totalitarianism, led by the Soviet The Ideologyof Militarismin Society‘The cold war culture has man¬ifested itself in a complex sys¬tem of myths, rituals, symbols,dogma.. ? Union; everything must be subordinated to this struggleand defined by this struggle. Thus any extension of U.S.power and military might, no matter what the circum¬stances, was a victory for freedom and social justics;thus, any group that lined up on the side of the U.S., nomatter what their character, was part of the “freeworld”.That one could build even a temporary national unityaround such a spurious crusade was due to complicatedhistorical reasons which we can’t disentangle here. Suf¬fice to say, the center of internal conflict within the U.S.prior to World War II had been the labor struggles ledby the newly organized industrial working class. WorldWar II introduced both a prolonged period of class colla¬boration built around the politics of the anti-fascist frontand a rapid development of our industrial resourcesWhich provided the economic base for a dramatic postwar improvement in the material conditions of the indus¬trial working class. These two facts along with the inevi¬table nationalistic fervor which accompanies the success¬ful completion of a war served to muffle class strugglesand antagonisms.Beyond its identification of communism with the anti¬christ, there are two central myths to cold war ideology.The first is the omnipotence and benevolence of U.S.military power. The second is that all fundamental socialconflict within our society has been resolved. The firstmyth is necessary, of course, to justify the enormousbuildup of the military sector necessitated by the impe¬rial ambitions of our rulers. It was used in particular tocombat the anti-military perspective and traditions ofthe American people. This tradition is systematically fal¬sified in cold war ideology and when it is recognized ashaving valid historical roots at all, is put down as avestige of pioneer individualism or isolationist know-nothingism.The fact is that the fundamental historic roots of ouranti-militarism lie in the experiences of our lower classancestors from Europe who correctly saw the army asthe brutal instrument of an often foreign ruling class tomaintain the domination and to implement its schemesof self aggrandisement. Our ancestors saw the army as agang of alien thugs who came to loot, pillage, and kidnaptheir sons. It is this view of the professional military asthe enemy of the people, rooted in almost universal his¬torical experience, which is the major ideological ob¬struction to the unimpeded flowering of a military cul¬ture.For the last twenty years the churches, the schools,the mass media, the governmental and patriotic organi¬zations, occasions and rituals have been continuouslyused in an attempt to eradicate the anti-militarist ati-tudes and instincts of the people. The schools, as themajor socialization agencies of our society, have playeda key role in this effort. At the elementary level this hasgenerally taken the form of attempting to inculcate thecrudest sort of anti-communism (the reds torture littlechildren and old ladies for reading the Bible) along withthe crudest sort of nationalism and imperialism (Amer¬ica’s the best and most advanced country in every wayand she has always unselfishly attempted to share herfreedom, wealth, and institutions with the less fortunatepeople of the world). Further, there is a widespread at¬tempt to promote admiration of military ritual and dis¬cipline, and to associate the military with morality, viril¬ity and strength of character.Beginning in the high schools and continuing into thecolleges is the systematic falsification of U.S. history andobfuscation of the true character of our social structurein order to glorify, promote, and justify the military, andto ignore our anti-military traditions. The imperialist andracist character of the Mexican-American war of 1848,and the widespread internal opposition (which includedLincoln) is hidden. The widespread resistance in NewYork to conscription during the Civil War. led by theContinued on Page Sevenw"...the best movie Godard has made ... exhilarating ... dazzling ... beautiful . " - Harper's Magazine"Godard's best film by far since BREATHLESS. " - The New York Times"Remarkable ... fantastically original ... " - NewsweekSPECIAL JURY AWARD 1967 VENICE FILM FESTIVALJEAN-LUC GODARD’SLA CHTNOTSE TONIGHT!FridayApril 18Cobb Hall7:15 and 9:30one dollarDOC FILMSCLIP AND SAVE THIS SCHEDULE!Morgan‘ Howlingly funny.”-N. Y. TimesFRIDAYElvira MadiganPerhaps the most beautifulmovie in history.” -New YorkerSATURDAYThe EndlessSummer‘Dazzling ode to sun, sandand surf. —TimeNobodyWaved Goodbye"A marvelous movie.”The New Yorker MONDAYI’m All RightJackDevastatingly funny."NVTmes TUESDAYNothingBut A Man'A great movie A revolutionin the cinema."-LifeWEDNESDAYAccident‘Like a punch in thechest. A compellingfilm.”—NewsweekTHURSDAYHYDE PARKauthorized BMC servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, Illinois 60615"■foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.2/Grey C% Journal/April 18, 1969v.'.* i*: \v v111 p. fi.i , Premier ScreeningBRING DOWNDARKNESS1 film by T(. FoxSun. Apr 27 — Kent 107 Mon. Apr 28 - Cobb $1eyeshr thenew sound7 SUNDAY—ONE NIGHT ONLY!7ft.ot.-7 JPTZW 20tt& THE MIRACLESPLUS. . .h& THE COMETSThe Beautiful NewAI9AGON1106 W. Lawrence • 561-8323‘ \SEATS AVAILABLE FOR ALL PERFORMANCESt-or Mail Urder Couponujsdm 97.9 fmsmack dab in the middle of your fm dialCOUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 So. Yates 363-9842Now thru April 26Paul Foster's"historical happening”Tom PaineStarring Michael Higginswith Ellen TravoltaGoodman Theatre200 S. Columbus Drive CE 6-2337Held over 4th MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDA bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CUFF ROBERTSONCURE BLOOMu CHARLY n^ . _A Student rate every\ I Kll day BUT Saturdaywith I D. Cordj L. mTHEATREPresentsFERENC MOLNAITSA Fa Mass in Seven Scenes&a Prologuedirected by'ANNETTEFERNReynolds C lub rheaireFRIDAY. SiTllftDAV.4 SUNOftVAPRfl-18,19,208:30pmr,ck«t. SI 75 (SI 25 to *toU»nt»|available at Ifca Haynold, Club d«kfor information pHona Ml 3-0800, ant 3581 AT BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL' Cali ra 6 moVBe charitable to yourself and go see Sweet CharitySAM LESNER, Chicago Daily NewsWonderfully imaginative a happy-hearted musicalANN MARSTERS. Chicago's AmericanMakes The Sound of Music' look like an operettaGLENNA SYSE. Chicago Sun-TimesSWEETemmSHiRLEY MachlUNEA UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR EALL SEATS RESERVEDEvenings Mon thru Thuts 8 PM, fn 8 30 PMSat 5 PM and 8 45 PM, Sun 7 00 PMMatinees Wed . Sun & Holidays 2 PM Sat 1 PMSpecial Arrangements for Groups and Organnations.call Minnie Rice 72P 4675BISMARCK THEATRERANDOLPH AT LASALLE • CHICAGO. ILL 60601FOR THEATRE INFORMATION CALL RA 6 5400Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FORUNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTH-FIFTH & WOODLAWN ! ‘New Poetry from the Chicago SchoolA GROUP OF POETS — grad students, teachers, under¬graduates — has formed to talk, argue about their poet¬ry. Some of this poetry is good, some not; here is someof the better of some of the poets. Common ground:dislike of the academic, though backed by the study ofliterature, every one; dislike of pretensions, especiallydespairing pretensions. Eventually, a magazine, a book,a manifesto. Creative, then, not just as writers but asGreat inventors, movers: they have too a program, Sun¬days, 5:00 pm, WHPK; some of these poems will bediscussed.Strange to Sayfrom the jungleEdenicwhere primates un doub tedlycopulated relig iously — butnot while swinging from vinesthere comes a telegram:no music, just Western Union“Stop"and a package from CAREfor one dollar.T. Smythe Hunters on the RocksiTwo humped rock-serpents wrapworried warmnessaround their charge:The ingrate shiftless GRATINGshell-ridden shallownessThat slips its shoresfor mother-moonA tern has diedRough-red sand and detergent wavesAlternately mock him:No winter hail ever tore out his eyes like this,No air was ever so cold as that;HE laughs as though he were deadA translucent green pebble lay beyondfroth-death,Pocked and pricked and picked up by a boy.“Hold it in your hand; it is an ancient.”IIBrown and tan are the hunters onthe rocksCleft-hidden, watching bright pearl skiesStraining to vindicate their frozen nosesScanning the wave-ridden seaSoon their low and mean skiff sputtersoff angrilyleaving the sea to stiff terms and stolen trans¬parencyNov. 68LyonThe lady poet was a dancer dreamer too.Stiffly at first, but betterShe patterned her own choreography;Dancing in turn to polyphonous music she rose and shefell.Soon seasons remodeled their summetry on her—Former of dances, interested just in her living.She moved and deliberately dancedIn order to make all the seasons go round her,Silencing seasons with harmony purer than music andmovements unworn.She returned and progressed, and nightsLike the themes in her counterpoint stood out about her.Under her own rhythm’s aegis outdancing the nightsShe was briefly a dancer, swiftly a dancer in silence(polysemous music)And never a dancer at all.D. Gabrielson All I have now is the making of themes from your lyricalsubstance.You have outpassed all the reaches of artTo be only a poem;The old man, the old woman are nothing.The metaphor, all. And the metaphor less.I hate my own heresy: putting your passingIn words full unchosen by youWith your round of quotidian things.But it is the truthThat all I have now is a lyrical substance,Something that is unmet even in sleep,And that I am awed by such untimely going.Out of my wonder and sadness I make you a theme.D. GarielsonDance Laugh then sweat. “Ineluctable loneliness”:Perhaps; for sure, little communionIn such wrought verse; only, at times,Here’s a rhythm, a rhythm only, which catchesShadow dancing only on a wall’s mind.A shadow lonely, a rhythm lonely, lonely at times.Tiny grotesques run like roaches, noting“Strain is humour” or “Stress that humour”Querying “What’s the use?” and spouting so bitterlyWhat is use; echo use. till quietus.M. AndreInvitation to the Muse-MintSplot-gray the post-day rain and deadened thus.Yet inside on-trickle silphfest glimmer feet.Trace me down, Tractus, wyrd my time.Come T. Machus, the liquid gap is there.Shem me the river, shan me boy,The rhine wine port to silph the filmAnd trast me out the sound side slump.'*Where silph light sline soons down the dunes.Seem me, silph, the on-dance flightWhere scross the troughts the whinded hairAnd comely downded eyes that croon out floundTo soft me edgewise long direscenceIn and through the borwald flownedWhere Flern died wide and wavy laved.Several me out, silph my fline,The seavern glim sight caverns wideWhere endless fleening borwald downIs vast the drifting floor and gone.R. DoddsDureeWe have lost our wishless thoughtfulness,turned silently from that bounded style,like the flowing from shape of melting wax.We have spent the day, lain down at night;at the exact falling between eyes open and closed,awakened again, to arise, fully clothed,as smoothly as that one blind breath.Being solid, no sleep-marking dreamflickers in to show the way;as if, finally, a being seemsfrom expression’s suffering pause.4Giselle’PirouettesTo The ForeTHE AMERICAN BALLET THEATER (ABT) is inter¬nationally known and accepted as representing the finestin American ballet and having a striking confluence ofthe classic and the modern ballet genres. For 29 years ithas presented American thematic ballets in its reper¬toire. Unfortunately, like the Ballet Russe, it does nothave a permanent base from which to operate. LuciaChase, then bountiful director, and Oliver Smith, co-di¬rector, have held the company together with three prin¬ciples — the desire to recognize and support Americanchoreographers and dancers, preservation of classictechnique with due regard for modern forms, and accept¬ance of foreign influence and talent.This weekend the ABT, sponsored by the IllinoisFoundation for the Dance, is completing their 2-weekChicago engagement with a Friday and Saturday eve¬ning performance, and a Saturday and Sunday matineeat the Auditorium Theatre.Opening night, April 8, saw guest artists Erik Bruhn,a “danseur noble par excellence” of the generation, andCarla Fracci receive 4 or 5 curtain-calls amid the enthu¬siastic cheers of a diverse audience at the conclusion of"Giselle.”“Giselle” was first performed at the Paris Opera in1841. Theophile Gautier, a poet and critic, took his ideafrom the poems of Heinrich Heine describing the Slaviclegend of the Wilis. Wilis are the ghosts of girls who diedof unrequited love. They roam earth from midnight todawn, trapping men and forcing them to dance to theirdeath.A product of the Romantic period, with its sentimentand mysticism, “Giselle’1 has the idea, or story as the principal element. Production Director, David Blair, hasmade every pose, gesture, and step relevant to the story.Movements are sometimes diagonal — creating a feelingof flight and limitless space. For example, Albrecht(Bruhn) catches lilies that Giselle (Fracci) throws in theair with a diagonal leap. Then the Wilis line up in adiagonal to threaten Albrecht who is saved by Giselle’sforgiving gesture.Carla Fracci is a charming actress capable of han¬dling a wide range of pantomime from a young, vibrantgirl in love to a deceived woman dying of anguish, to adetermined Wilis. Her darting and soaring elevations andtoe steps possessed a fluidity, lightness, and lyricism ofmovement that was enhanced by a captivating stagepresence.Erik Bruhn’s dynamism and virtuosity did not over¬power Miss Fracci or the other members of the com¬pany. Foremost was the characterization of Albrecht.His dancing was consistently elegant, effortless in ap¬pearance, and precise. Especially well-executed wereBruhn’s “fish leaps” (pas de poisson).In Act 1, another expert team, Eleanor d’Antuonoand Ted Kivitt, performed a stylized villagers “pas dedeux.” Kivitt’s jumps were extraordinary, he is well onhis way to becoming a major soloist.Michael Smuin’s “Gartenfest” made its Chicago pre¬miere as the opening dance of the evening, and like“Giselle” had new and tasteful sets and costumes thatadded to the production’s romantic atmosphere. “Gar¬tenfest,” also a classical piece, took place in a courtyardand was accompanied by Mozart’s “Cassation No. 1 inG.” Its high point was the fifth Adagio movement withTed Kivitt, Ivan Nagy, and Cynthia Gregory. Theirmovements were arranged in superbly executed form.An aesthetic beauty persisted throughout the evening andfashioned two works of art which unfortunately were toosimilar in tone.Paula II. Meinets Back again, deja vu.though expected now,like heated gases expanding out:homunculi of private change,filling in transparent forms,infinitely grasping greater span.There is no visible movement yet.Motion impels a separate timefor noting the leap from there to here.P. JonesTHE 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 fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.brnfiirnifiyr r i nwif ■■ aApril li, tMt>)Gny City Journal/3Give yourcontact lensesa bathtonight In order to keep your contact lenses ascomfortable and convenient as they weremeant to be. you have to take care ofthem. But until now you needed two ormore separate solutions to properlyprepare and maintain your contacts. Notwith Lensine. Lensine is the one lenssolution for complete contact lens careCleaning your contacts with Lensineretards the buildup of foreign deposits onthe lenses. And soaking your contacts inLensine overnight assures you of properlens hygiene You get a free soaking caseon the bottom of every bottle of LensineIt has been demonstrated that improperstorage between wearings may result inthe growth of bacteria on the lensesThis is a sure cause of eye irritation andin some cases can endanger your visionBacteria cannot grow in Lensine which issterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.Just a drop or two of Lensine, before youinsert your lens, coats and lubricates itallowing the lens to float more freely inthe eye's fluids. That's becauseLensine is an "isotonic" solution,which means that it blends withthe natural fluids of the eyeLet your contacts be Lheconvenience they weremeant to be. Getsome Lensine, from theMurine Company, Inc. you can hear yourself think . , . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booxc.Bass ale and Schlitx beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails luncheon dinner late snacks5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933THE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSOF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORalph Shapey * Music DirectorMUSIC FOR THE STAGESources III BurgePieces of Eight (mixed media) OliverosThe Cat and The Moon (chamber opera) . Putsch^FRIDAY 8:30 P.M.APRIL 18 Mandel HallAdm: $1.50, reserved section; $1.00, studentsTickets at Concert Office, 5835 University Avenue ; or ot Mandel Hall on evening of concertwhatever is new in hairstyling . . .PERMANENTS* TINTING • CUTTINGWAVINGRANDELLBeauty and Cosmetic SalonAIR CONDITIONED— Open Evenings by Appointment —5700 HARPER AVENUE FAirfsx 4-2007 BClark tIhfdlffn ( All -NIC7HI snow3 PERFORMANCES FRIDA) t SAFURDAT FOFFOWING FAST REGULAR FEATUREApril 11Peter Sellers Stanley Kubrick sDR STRANGEL0VEwQMQt»April 12Robert MorseHOW TO SUCCEEDIN BUSINESSApril 18Steve McQueen James CoburiTHE GREAT ESCAPEusmSKfApril 19Alan Arkin Audrey HepburnWAIT UNTIL DARK April 25Gregory PeckTHE GUNS OF NAVAR0NErApril 26Maclaine LemmonIRMA LA DOUCETICKETS $1.50WtcOMsKiPLUS: FLASH GORDONAND THE CLAY PEOPLEEvery night a new chapterPLAYBOY I VTHEATER | In,I .*04 N (IIAR80RN - PMQNI MR 1414 May 2Fellini sJULIETTE OF THE SPIRITS•4W3WMay 3Burton Taylor Mike Nichol sWHO'S AFRAID OFVIRGINIA WOOLF?May 9Alan Bates de Broca sKING OF HEARTSMay 10Lester sTHE KNACK enjoy ourspecial studentrate75C 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 galsonly• dark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly program CREEK TOWN'SEXCITING...GREEKISLANDSRESTAURANT& GROCERYFeaturing OutstandingGreek CuisineAvgolemono Soup —Stuffed Vine Leaves —Mousaka Souvlaki —Pastichio — SpinachCheese Pie — Fresh Fish— Desserts — Baklava— Creme CarameleFINEST IMPORTEDGREEK WINESCognac — Ouzoand CocklailiOPEN DAILY— 11:30 TO11:30 P.M.FREE PARKING766 W. Jackson Blvd.782-9855AGITATING FORA BICYCLE?CONFRONT IS!Cheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh. Robin Hood, Falcon,Peugeot, Citane, Vlercier,Radius and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. Used bi¬cycles spasmodically.Flv-by-night rentals.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856 TURIN BICYCLE CO-OPI 2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 - 8:30; S&S 10 - 8Alice B. Toe Clips sold here FROM THE CHESS RECORDINGSTUDIO DIRECT TO THE LIVE STAGEJAZZ - BLUES GUITARISTPHIL ' 'UPCHURCHAND HIS QUARTETIN CONCERTTOMORROW 8:30 P.M.SAT. APRIL 19Cloister Club in Ida NoyesHall - 1212 E. 59th St.Admission SI.50 at the door.Clear Phil's records in the Mandel Hall Corridortoday until 2:00 P.M.A RE\ ITAUZATIO\ PRESEXTATIO\4/Grey City Journal/April 18, 1969 WHAT CHICAGORADIO STATIONPRESENTS A PROGRAMOF FINE ARTS CRITICISMSEVEN NIGHTS AWEEK AT 9:50?whpk fin 883IThe Best ofthe Pretty,Wispy BlondsYOUNG PRETTY FEMALE FOLKSINGERS are adime a dozen. Everytime you walk into a record storeyou can find a new record by a pretty girl with long,wispy blond hair. Even before you open the album, ifVou are game enough to buy it, you already have someindication of what the voice will sound like. The chancesare good that this new “star” will sound like a cheapcopy of Judy Collins or early Joan Baez. Or with thereemergence of the female rock star she might evensound like a toned down Janis Joplin or a weaker GraceSlick. In any case, the voice will be sweet and the talent,insignificant.Exceptions are few and far between; however, whenone does come down the road (as it were), you wouldexpect that jubilation and recognition would be imme¬diate. excited and well, jubilant. Believe it or not. thereis such a performer on the current pop scene, althoughshe has not as yet received the response she so honestlydeserves.On November 18, 1969. a young Canadian whose onlyreal claim to fame was having written Judy Collins’ hit• Both Sides Now” appeared in Mandel Hall. I thoughtthat Judy’s song was fantastic, but figured why in theworld should I waste two bucks on an unknown girlnamed Joni Mitchell? I had heard that she had an inter¬esting voice, but is an interesting voice worth wasting anentire evening near the end of the quarter on? So insteadof going to see her, I studied Thucydides instead. A fewdays later a guy on my floor bought an album entitled“Song to a Seagull”. I heard this beautiful voice driftingdown the hall and upon investigation learned that thepretty miss (yes, with long, wispy blond hair) who pos¬sessed this amazing talent was none other than the sameJoni Mitchell. Rushing out, I bought her album and lis¬tened. not only to her voice but to her words. Joni Mit¬chell. ladies and gentlemen, is a miracle. She is truly amodern poet. Let no one misguide you into thinking thatshe is merely a song-writer. She rates on my personalCulture VultureNo StrikeThis Week, Gang!IL PLEUT MES AMIS, il pleut. Mais ou est la greve, ouest la greve? At Harvard of course you ninnies and aren’tyou qphappy you couldn’t go there. Well you should bebecause such Cliffies tie your arm in bands squeezing justenough to inspire your hatred. How I hate you Pusey, howI hate you GJimp. I’ve been there, I have, I want a strike,I want it shut down. Oh shut it down, oh shut shut shutshut shut. But there is no shut, there is no strike. There isonly culture. How we hate you Levi, you give us movieswhen we want strikes, plays whem we want con¬flagrations, and discipline then we want justice. Go to noclasses, go only to the Wash Prom, go only to Lilliom, goonly to American Baroque. There ain’t no flies on Jesusand there ain’t no strikes out here;.Theater:This weekend’s all purpose best bet is University The¬ater’s production of Molnar’s Lilliom. All reports have itthat it will be the most unabashedly titillating productionto grace the stage of Reynold’s Club this year. AnnetteEern and her galaxy of stars can be seen Friday, Satur¬day and Sunday. Also the Players (their name) will bestaging Under Milk Wood Tonight at the Lutheran Semi¬nary (where you used to live, remember) in the guise ofan old time radio show. Terrific.Movies:So much to type. And why bother? Who could stand to seeso many movies? Who has such an indulgent girl friendthese days? The pimply snot that took mine some yearsago hasn’t the couth to require the dark anyway. None¬theless, some of these movies are free. At the Black-stone Branch Library, 4904 South Lake Park, this Tues¬day and Thursday at 7:00 can be seen a selection of MackSennett, Charlie Chaplin, W.C. Fields and other lovelymovies and it costs nothing. Nichts. Rien. New UniversityConference is showing good socially important movies onTuesday and Wednesday to wit Salt of the Earth Tuesdayat 8:00 in Kent 107 and The Brig Wednesday at 8:30 in thesame place. Doc Films is screening (we filmies areallowed to use such a word) on F, T, W, and Th respec¬tively, La Chinoise, La Marseillaise (Renoir), a batch ofexperimental, and Love in the Afternoon (in the eve¬ning). I thought I’d never finish.Music:The Contemporary Chamber Players (CCP) performing anumber of “pieces of new music for the theater” tonightin Mandel.' Joni Mitchell as she appeared in her November concert in Mandel Hallfavorite list up with Keats, Eliot, Cummings and Whit¬man.%Saturday night, April 12, Joni Mitchell appeared atNorthwestern, and completely restored my faith in thefuture of poetry and songs. Joni Mitchell’s images are asfresh and vibrant as Eliot’s etherized patient or Lennonand McCartney’s plasticine porters. Since the demise ofthe poetry of the Beatles (and don’t try to tell me that aline like “Why don’t we do it in the road” is poetic,) JoniMitchell now reigns as the poet laureate of pop.Joni’s concert had its good and bad points, althoughshe cleverly disguises the bad ones. She gives a veryshort concert. I imagine that she thinks that when youwalk out of her concert scheduled to begin at 8 pm atBSEDavid TravisJoan Mankin and Roger Dodds in LilliomI shall now quote from the press release. “Ralph Shapey. .. will direct the musicians in Sources III by DavidBurge, Pieces of Eight by Pauline Oliveros, and The Catand the Moon, an opera by Thomas Putsche . . . Pieces ofEight is a work in mixed media involving chance ele¬ments and improvisation. The elements include taperecordings, film, cuckoo and alarm clocks, musicians per¬forming as actors, and a bust of Ludwig van Beethoventhat is constructed so that its eyes will light up.” Theopera, stage by James O’Reilly is based on a text byYeats. Go. There is also a free piano recital to be givenSunday at. 3:30 in Int. Hse. by Sophia Benney and herfriends Scarlatti, Schumann, Haydn, and Beethoven.Art:Go to Bergman Gallery and the Hyde Park Art Center fortwo big funky surprises.Etc.:The Wash Prom for Chrissake. They’re not selling year¬books this year, so I fervently suggest that you go kissWalter good-bye. We’re all going to graduate, you hear.And Don’t Forget:Shoemaker’s Holiday is a mere week away. 10:30 pm you’ll say “WOW!! She performed for TJh.hours!” Actually though, she was only on stage for onehour and 15 minutes. She came on stage twenty minuteslate, had a long intermission and only sang five songs inher second half. That way the audience insists on a long,long encore (three songs and two standing ovations) andJoni has her own personal ego trip.However, her spirit and talent make an objection aboutlength almost ridiculous. (Does anyone object that “J.Alfred Prufrock” isn’t as long as “Paradise Lost?” Domoans and groans greet The Old Man and the Sea be¬cause it isn’t as long as Farewell to Arms?) Even if thestanding ovations can be called an ego trip of sorts, theaudience gave her every shout they could. (After ah, noone was standing with a shotgun at the back of theaudience saying, “Stand up, shout louder, clap harder!”)You stand for a performer when you are moved. Itmight take a four hour concert for some performers tomove you. Joni can do it in one fourth that time.Her voice is pure, clear and moving. She can do thingsthat seem unbelievable, yet she does them. Her inter¬pretations of the songs are impeccable (maybe becauseshe wrote all of them.) “Both Sides Now” as sung byJoni gives an entirely different tone and meaning to thesong, than Judy’s version.Maybe with the release of another album and wide¬spread critical support and backing, Joni Mitchell mightreceive all the recognition she deserves. But don’t waitfor another album to come out. If you haven’t heard“Song to a Seagull”, run out and buy it. Then sit backand listen and enjoy and appeciate.Mitcb BobkininstantHelpMany people areproving that thereis no more immedi¬ate source of helpthan God,Hear Jules Cern,C.S., of TheChristian ScienceBoard of Lecture¬ship explain howthis divine help isavailable to youright now.Monday, April 214P.M.Ida Noyes HallSponsored byCHRISTIANSCIENCE.ORGANIZATION V ! —MACBETHj *EXHAUSTED?I-UNDERSTANDING COMESFASTER WITHCLIFF S NOTES'i OVER 175 TITLES S1 EACHAT YOUR BOOKSELLER//Sal INC-Ot N Nf MMAskA »»H-April 18. 1969/Grey City Journal/5FROM THE AWARD-WINNING NOVELLA BYPHILIP ROTH,Author of ’.'PORTNOY'S COMPLAINT"This isBrenda.Ask herwhatlastsummer.BARGAINRELIGIONSJewelry mantfacti rers do a very profitable business in imita¬tion gold crosses. It’s human nature to hunt for bargains, evenin religious items That’s why so many people turn to religionsthat cost them little, modern cults and isms that offer a com-lorting sense of God’s nearness and do away with the idea of hellentirely. It is only human to want a religion that de-emphasizespunishment for sin. However, a bargain may have serious hiddenflaws. The thing you buy cheaply often turns out to be worthless.Genuine Christianity is not a |is over and find out that I wascheap religion, although many > wrong?offer bargains in its name. It was Yet Christianity is not a reli-a critical moment in fT»on of fear but of love. Fear mayhistory when Christ ?.ri.ve ® «"*" to religion, but re-had to tell His disci- l^ion will drive fear out of apies what His procla- j ™n- To.loV^ God and ^ loved }Pmation of the truth Hl.m makes ^roes^ut of cowards,would cost Him: cru- sober kTen °’?t of *l«>hohcs, re-Who wants to follow - ! sponsible and creative men andREADINGTIME:2 Minutes20 Secondscifixion.defeated leader? Christ’s offerwas, "If any man will come afterme, let him deny himself, andtake up his cross daily, and fol¬low me.”Christianity is a religion ofchoice. The consequences of thatchoice are clearly set forth in theBible. He who chooses Christ isreconciled with God, born anew,assured of eternal life. He whorejects Christ and chooses to con¬tinue in the sin of a self-directedlife condemns himself to troubleof soul, divorces himself from re-'ality and ultimate purpose, and in women out of floundering, un¬directed, confused human beings.Christianity is not mere morality,it is commitment to a person, theLord Jesus Christ. The price isn’tcheap. It cost Christ His life; itwill cost you your ego-filled per¬sonality, your right to self-direc¬tion; it will bring you into oppo¬sition with the world.But the cross was followed bythe resurrection. When you takeup the cross and follow Christ,your feet will be set on a roadthat leads to joy, peace, releasedcreativity, and relatedness towhat life is all about, here andr>! ..... „„„loss. Even ! hereafter. The Christian life willthe most sophisticated person is j cost you something, but it’shaunted at some time by the fear, worth it. Its joys surpass its sor-What if I wake up after all this I rows. Try it."But how do I come to Christ?” you ask. “Where is He?” Let mesend you my free booklet, “Which Saves?” to help you find Him.It can be secured only by writing toBoi 327. RiDcertELD. NJ. 07857. Dept. V - At HY 3-8282Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd. Discover Efendi. Tonight.EfendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkUofCTuesday 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. LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.Telephone 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueGOLD CITY INN* * * * Maroon"A Gold Mine of Good Food”IO %Stuveht DiscountHYDE PARK S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our CoNyenient TAKE-OUT Orders Touring 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 gorjge 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 $S7 per personfor 7 days, all incl.Visas issued within 46 hours.Contact your travel agent or writetor information:CEDOK CZECHOSLOVAK TRAVEL BUREAU10 East 40th Street, New York, N Y. 10016Name:Address:CityState.My travel agent is:. -Zip.6/Grey City Journal/April 18, 1969Jewelt*Militarismalong with the fact that a significant fraction of the sti-entific resources of this country is already under theirnominal control, is very much likely to shape the futurerelations of science to society. Rand and IDA serve asmodels for the mobilization of scientists to “attack” so¬cial problems like black rebellions, wild cat strikes, stu¬dent unrest, etc.In a society like ours where social control, manipula¬tion, and administration is becoming more and more in¬vested in large bureaucratic formations it is hardly sur¬prising that military values and modes of operation havebecome widely diffused among the governing elites. Insuch a context, an attack on the military tends to be¬come more than an attack on the Vietnam War, or onthe inequities of the draft, or even more than oppositionto organized violence and mass murder. An attack on themilitary is potentially an attack on the system as awhole. In the chain of institutions which form the firstline of defense of class privilege and power in the U.S.the military is perhaps the most vulnerable link.‘The military has alumys beenan instrument for the repres¬sion of peoples9 movements. .Continued from Page OneIrish working class, which often took violent forms, ispassed off as the criminal acts of racists, drunkards andthugs. The use of armed troops against striking workers,frequent in the labor struggles which occurred betwgfenthe Civil War and World War II, is ignored. The sharppublic debates attacking U.S. imperialism at the begin¬ning of the twentieth century, are rarely referred to, andwhile a good deal of admiration is lavished on TeddyRoosevelt and his rough riders charging up the Cubanhills, the actual mission of American troops in Cuba — todestroy militarily an indigenous Cuban movement fornational liberation — is never mentioned. Every Ameri¬can student learns that General Douglas MacArthurcomes from an illustrious military family, but few knowthat his grandfather’s major military achievement is themurder of tens of thousands of Philippine nationalistswhen the American army crushed the movement forPhilippine national liberation. Douglas MacArthur’s ma¬jor military accomplishment prior to World War II isalso interesting; it was to disperse with the use of troopsa march of World War I veterans who were demandingrelief during the depression.Thus, the military has always been an instrument forthe repression of peoples’ movements, both at home andabroad, which threatened the authority and vital inter¬ests of the ruling groups.Of course, cold war ideology attempts to obfuscatethis It argues that the U.S. military is simply an exten¬sion of civilian society, composed largely of conscriptswho are not professional soldiers, and therefore cannothave a political character or mission separate from thegeneral will of the people. Historically this is simplyfalse, since in periods other than large scale wars themilitary was composed mainly of professionals, and evenin the period since World War II, when there has beenlarge scale use of conscription, the style and tone of themilitary has been dominated by the career man, in par¬ticular, the upper levels of the officer caste What wehave seen since the end of World War II is the rise toinfluence of the bureaucrat-militarist-technologist: Rob¬ert McNamara, Herman Kahn, Hyman Rickover, WernerVon Braun. This is not a disintegration, but a restructur¬ing of the military elite to meet its altered and expandedtasks, specifically the vastly expanded imperialist aimsthat have dominated American international policy forthe last 30 years.A more sophisticated argument that is favored by coldwar social scientists to prove that the U.S. militarystands outside of or above politics, is the very profes¬sionalization of its upper ranks. That is, the fact thatthey have the ideology and values of professionals, i.e.an emphasis on technique, expertise, internal standardsand morale, “servicing the client” attitude which effec¬tively restrains them from acting out their own personalpolitical values. Along with this is a belief in the divisionof labor; “We take care of the fighting, the politicianstake care of the politics.” This argument would be moreconvincing if one were talking about the political valuesof some individual general. However, what we are con¬sidering are the political values that flow from the char¬acter of the profession and institution as such. Such val¬ues are likely to be strengthened not weakened by in¬creased professionalization. In fact, the politics of Her¬man Kahn and Curtis LeMay, whatever their differencesin tone and sophistication, are equally characterized asauthoritarian, anti-democratic, racist, contemptuous ofother peoples’ institutions and culture, indifferent to hu¬man suffering and misery, willing to engage in greatslaughter and mass destruction for abstract and rhetoric¬al nationalistic ends, i.e. preservation of U.S. prestige,credibility, morale of allies, etc., and finally, as having amystical faith in the efficacy and remedy of armedmight in resolving all political conflict.Of course, the military sector of the state, is not auto¬nomous. It is, as is the state as a whole, ultimatelysubordinate to the demands and requirements of thelarge corporate and financial interests. However, oneshould not, because of this, underestimate its role ineffecting the shape of future development of our society.For the military, in its logic, structure, and internal or¬ganization, embodies to a very high degree the notion orationality as defined by our contemporary Monopo y-Capitalist society. That is, the military serves as a mod¬el for bureaucratic formations and institutions, both gov¬ernmental and non-governmental, a model of organiza¬tion, discipline, and style, at least at the level of admin¬istration and control. For example, no other formation isclose to the military in their ability to utilize the outputand technique^ of social and natural science. This fact, >me select from our new collection of gypsy-look jewelry!Id verve, color and dash to any wardrobe. Hoop earrings,in bracelets, belt chains and poison and snake rings. Allndcrafted in wood, metal and precious stones. Now readyr giving or getting.$2°°Prices start at “St&cKs ml toe sInternational Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7600Convenient HoursShop at home; Ask for our catalogue' U * r l *» a -* AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 5 rd- TELEFl NKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -les 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 cardsM.. April UJ, 1%9/Grey City Journal/7All good things most tome to an end.Volkswagens die.Like everything else.Only some people don't believe it.Take Mrs. Carson Brooks of Oxford,Alabama. So far her '59 has gone over600,000 miles. And that's with only twoengine transplants.Try telling her the end is near and she'lllaugh you right off the farm.That kind of owner loyalty begins at theVW factory where 100% of productiontime is spent making our little bug workbetter and 0% is spent making it lookbetter (see ugly picture above).It's the only car that's put thrcrugfH5,397inspections before it's put up for sale.It won't give you radiator problemsbecause we never gave it a radiator.It comes fully equipped with 35 poundsof paint to protect its top and a protectivesteel bottom to protect its bottom.So when you see one that looks on itslast legs, feel no pity.It's probably led a healthier life thanyou have.SOUTH IMPORTMOTORS authorizeddealerBU 8-49001511 E. 71st (West of Stony Island)Contact: George McClowry General ManagerTake the Illinois Central to Stony Island, walk acrossthe street to South Import Motors, and we willreimburse you for trainfare.Or, take a cab and South Import will pay thecabd river.Better yet, give George a call, and he will send aBeatle out to pick you up.Bring this ad along, and we will pay your way toSouth Import Motors.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a $1^used 9 x 12 Rug, to a custorcarpet. Specializing in Rem'nants 8r Mill returns at'fraction of the original cosDecora.ion Colors and Qua*‘ities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERYWe’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.W hen 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. You keep flunkingyour best subject?for the University manOUR NEW SUITS FOR SPRINGAn ever-growing number of undergraduatesare being attracted to the trim lines of the suitswith waist suppression and deep side vents. Forthem, we have had lightweight polyester andwool blends tailored in this University model.Colors and patterns include solid grey or navy,tan plaids and oxford grey with blue striping.Coat and trousers. $90 to $95Our traditional model is also availablein strifes, flaids and solids oj thesame materials, jrom $ 8 0ISTABLISHIO 1(1«( c rip up WTn ©5 i. 3JJjficns v-Hoys IFurnishinqo. IKIats efibocs74 K MADISON ST., NR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL 60602ATLANTA • BOSTON • LOS ANCLLfcS • NEW YORKPITTSBURGH • SAN FRANCISCO • WASHINGTONThink it over, over coffee.TheThink Drink.ForyOu'OwnTh nUDrn- Mug. sen<j 7 5C a"dyOur''a'’''»a,'d address tO'Tho. Df -w Mug Crt N.PO Bo* NYorii N V 10046 The Int.'-'jf o«aCo"*' Oga" n’ rWitzie ’s 3tower Shop 1“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53rd STREETTAhSAM-YMiCHINESE-AMERICAN EYE EXAMINATIONSRESTAURANT FASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESSpecializing inCANTONESE AND DR. KURT ROSEN3AUMAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY Optometrist1 1 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS 53 Kimbark Plaza12 TO 9 P.M. 1200 East 53rd StreetOrders to take out HYde Park 3-83721318 East 63rd MU4-I0A7 —MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MART*Open to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rdo ST. NEW LOCATION!UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREis now at 1150 E. 63rd(Betw. Woodlwn & Univ.)NEW ENLARGED STOREMens — Children's —Ladies — Infants WearComplete line ofmen's sport, work and tennis shoesUNIVERSALArmy Dept. StoreHY 3-1187 PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 - 1 HANDCRAFTED GOLD& CUSTOM SILVERJEWELRY5210 HARPER CT.667-80408/Grey City Jonraal/April 18, 1969 : • 4 ’ • ■»