THE MAROONTuesday, April 29, 1969Only 18% VFSACCSL Posts^Archives«c~Phil LathropTHIS IS SPRING? No one visiting our hallowed stomping ground would realizethat May day is only 3 days away.Wade Object of Latest ProtestDreary Drizzle FizzlesSit-In as CommitteeOf 500 Strikes AgainThe Committee of 500’s plans for a dem¬onstration in the office of Richard Wade,professor of urban history, fizzled Monday.Some 50 students braved rain and cold ata 1 pm rally in front of the administrationbuilding to hear graduate student LenHandelsman attack Wade for his participa¬tion in the Chicago Housing Authority andhis participation in other City Hall spon¬sored committees.Meanwhile rumors circulated among stu¬dents that Wade was not present in his of¬fice in Soc Sci. After half an hour in the cold drizzle, the rally broke up.“It’s silly to go over,” said Handelsman.During the rally, Eleanor Kaplan, ’69, amember of a group calling itself the “com¬mittee of five-plus,” handed out leaflets op¬posing the demonstration against Wade.“We don’t think he’s a racist, by our defini¬tion,” she said. “We feel that attacking himis unfair and malicious.”Frederika Blankner, celebrated crusaderagainst Urban Renewal was present at therally.The Committee of 500 is co-sponsoring ademonstration today at 12:30 pm in front ofthe ad building in protest of the day-carecenter proposed by the Social Service Ad¬ministration (SSA). Women’s Radical Ac¬tion Project (WRAP) asked that the Com¬mittee support the demonstration at the 500 Eight Chosen InElection Are Now"Officially It"By Mitch BobkinLess than 18 percent of the Universitystudent body voted in the faculty studentadvisory committee on campus student lifeFSACCSL) elections held last week.The eight representatives chosen in theelection are “now officially it,” accordingto Charles O’Connell, dean of students andsponsor of the committee.Elected were: in the college, CorneliaSchwartz, ’70; Jerry Webman, ’71; andTimothy McGree, ’70; Peter Rabinowitz inthe humanities division; Robert Cooley inthe social sciences division; William Cooleyof the divinity school and James Kerwin ofthe business school in the professionalschools division; and David Friedman inthe bio-phy sci and med school division.Officially, the new group will take over atthe May 7 FSACCSL meeting but the oldgroup will continue to serve until the endof this year to give some kind of unity tomeeting last Thursday. A march to SSA isplanned after the rally.The 500 will plan future tactics and actionat another meeting Thursday.By Steve CookThe New University Conference (NUC)has just completed its first national action,the Week to Confront Militarism. More than30 local chapters participated; the UCchapter sponsored lectures, workshops, apoetry reading, and a folksing. “Its successhere was about as good as could be ex¬pected, considering the expulsions and all”,said Mel Rothenberg, assistant professor ofmathematics and a member of NUC’s gov¬erning Interim Committee. Results of activ¬ities on other campuses cannot be deter¬mined yet,NUC is a national organization with about40 chapters on campuses across the coun¬try. Its members are primarily faculty andgarduate students. Bob Ross, national di¬rector, and Judy Longley, assistant execu-tve secretary, are the only full-tme staffof NUC. They work out of a one-room na¬tional headquarters on the second floor ofChapel House and their pay cames out ofmembership dues.Politically, NUC resembles a graduate-faculty version of SDS: “The issues are thesame”, said Rothenberg, “the difference isin our constituency.”NUC’s goal is a “democratic university”in which politically active faculty are freeto be judged by purely academic standardsand scientific research is free from mili¬tary uses.Rothenberg noted that NUC has 40 sub¬stantiated cases of faculty expulsions in USuniversities in its files. Local chapters havesupported the Cleaver incident at Berkeley,the Cornell black sit-in and the recentROTC protest at Harvard.NUC officially supported the Dixon sit-inhere last quarter and several of its mem¬bers participated, but as an organization ittook no active participation. Since then, the committee, O’Connell said.“I’m sure that the new group will becomposed of strong-minded people who willprobably oppose each other,” O’Connelladded.The old FSACCSL representatives arepresently working on a revision of the Kal-ven committee report and will issue theirideas even though the new group will offi¬cially become the representatives. How¬ever, the new group can issue their ownstatements if they wish, O’Connell said.Of the 1426 votes cast in the election, 653were cast in the College. Vote totals in theCollege were: Cassie Schwartz, 74; JerryWebman, 69; Tim McGree, 66; Frank Day,64; Stanley Becker, 49; Jeff Spurr, 47; Al¬bert Eng, 45; Diana Berg, 44; and 195 othervotes for 12 other candidates.In the humanities division election, 132votes were cast. Rabinowitz received 71votes; Mark Auburn, 31; Michael Buckner,29; and one write in vote for Philip Reich.Rob Cooley was the only candidate run¬ning in the social sciences division race andreceived 87 of the 122 votes cast. DennisDevlin received 19 write in votes, AntoniaPeeva got two write ins and 14 others gotone vote apiece.In the professional schools election, 375votes were cast. William Cooley received115 votes and James Kerwin received 109.Other candidates and their votes wereDoug Huron, 79; Wilbur Weder, 58; and 4other votes cast for two candidates.Friedman received 60 of the 44 votescast in the bio, phy sci and med school divi¬sion race. Jay Lemke received 54 votes andAlbert Parr got 30.NUC has supported the AAUP petition andthe demands of the Committee of 500.The New University Conference grew outof a conference held a year ago at the Cen¬ter for Continuing Education. Since then itsnational membership has grown to 1,000;the local UC chapter draws from ten to 30people to its weekly meetings held in theBlue Gargoyle on Fridays at 3 pm.Policies and actions up to now have beendecided by individual chapters. Next June,however, NUC will hold its first nationalconvention to elect leaders and decide uponfuture national programs. No new nation¬wide actions are planned until the con¬vention.See "NUC” Page TwoRICHARD FLACKS: Could be the nexttarget of "political supression.”Phil LathropABORTIVE ATTEMPT: a pseudo-rally in front of ad bldg for fizzled sit-in. NUC Finishes First NationalWeek to Confront MilitarismSG & NSA Elections to Be Held Next WeekRecent ReferendumChanges DelegatesStudent government (SG) and nationalstudent association (NSA) elections will beheld on Thursday, May 8 and Friday, May9. Candidacy forms and petitions, nowavailable in the SG office, second floor ofIda Noyes Hall, are due at 5 pm Friday inthe Student Activities Office.With the splitting of SG into two houses,delegate appropriations have been changedfrom the past few years. Representation ofnext year’s SG will be:Undergraduates: One delegate — Tufts,Henderson, Thompson and Shorey Houses;Lower Wallace and Lower Flint; Mead,Chamberlain, Vincent and SalisburyHouses; and Snell.Two delegates — Upper Wallace, UpperFlint and Rickert; Blackstone; Boucher;Hitchcock; Greenwood; and Eleanor Club.Three delegates — Fraternities; and 16delegates from the College at large.Graduates: One delegate — library scien¬ces; two delegates — education; three dele¬gates — medicine and biological sciences;four delegates — divinity school, law schooland social service administration.Five delegates — business school; sixdelegates — physical sciences; seven dele¬gates — humanities; and 14 delegates —social sciences.Five delegates and five alternatives willbe elected to serve as the NSA representa¬tives.Two parties, the reform alliance and theparty of change, will offer slated candi¬dates for the SG and NSA seats.The reform alliance, composed of inde¬pendents including Bill Phillips, this year’sSG delegate from Woodward Court, has is¬sued a three principle statement saying “We believe that the Student Governmentof the University of Chicago should:• Emphasize issues which affect stu¬dents in their roles as students and mem¬bers of the University community;• Promote genuine and effective com¬munications with the students it representsand with the faculty and administration itmust deal with; and • Restore SG-sponsored student ser¬vices.”The party has asked all interested stu¬dents to meet in Kent 107 at 8 pm Tuesday.The party of change states “The party ofchange offers a left-liberal voice to studentsat the University of Chicago. Student gov¬ernment under the party will do what it cando best — investigate and deliberate.” The party has called on left-liberals andradical liberals to join at a caucus meetingTuesday at 4 pm in the Cobb Hall coffeeshop.The party of change sponsored FrankDay, Cassie Schwartz, Rob Cooley and BillCooley in the faculty student advisory com¬mittee on campus student life (FSACCSDelections.'Spartacus' Studies Disciplinary BiasAttempt to Prove DisciplinaryAction Unjust, Called uBiased& Scandalously Unscholarly"By Jim HaefemeyerAuthors of the “Spartacus II” publicationreleased last week will publish severalthousand copies of a revised edition laterthis week.The new edition contains minor correc¬tions resulting from methodological criti¬cism of the first edition, according to LucyMoore, graduate student in human devel¬opment and an author of the study.The committee of 500 study has chargedthat last quarter’s disciplinary actions were“flagrantly unjust,” but administratorshave received the study with incredulity.Basing their conclusions on a telephonesurvey of approximately fifty students whoappeared before the Oaks committee, thegraduate students in social science whopublished the “Spartacus II” publicationfound that:• “There was no relation between theseverity of punishment and the amount ofevidence.”• “There was a strong relationship be¬ tween the student’s political ideology andthe severity of punishment.”The document presented case studies inthe violation of due process and in “doublejeopardy.”Both dean of students Charles O’Connelland dean of the college Wayne Booth criti¬cized the methodology of the report.“It’s kind of sloppy,” said DeanO’Connell.“I hope all students will see through it,”said Dean Booth.Booth called the report a “scandalouslyunscholarly and biased job,” but said, “I don’t think that attacking the report an¬swers the objections it raises.”O’Connell further criticized the study forcorrelating only degree of participationwith severity of punishment. He said thatthe student’s “nature of response to thesummons also figured into the severity ofpunishment.”Miss Moore said that the new edition al¬lows for degree of punishment, but comesto the same conclusion anyway.Dallin Oaks, professor of law and chair¬man of last quarter’s disciplinary committee, refused to comment on the study.Noted Economist Calls ForAdaptability in City PlanningFast DependableServiceT.V. - Radio - Tape Re¬corder - PhonographSalesConoll Electronics Service1635 E. 55th St. PL2-7730I DiscountArt Materials• school, office &filing supplies• drafting materials• mounting - matting -• framingDuncan's1305 E 53rd HY 3-411 ICANOE TRIPSInto the Quetico-Superior Wil¬derness. America's Greatest Ad¬venture by America's largest out¬fitter, Free folder and map - write:BILL ROM, DEPT C, CANOE COUN¬TRY OUTFITTERS, ELY, MIN-NESOTA. Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs.'exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED866 664-5858No. Wabash Ave. Kenneth Boulding, the noted Universityof Colorado professor of economics, calledlast night for “adaptability” in city plan¬ning, which he charged is presently too“ritualistic” in response to the uncer¬tainties of evolution. “There is fundamentalsurprise in any evolutionary system,” hesaid. “The well-adapted is unable tochange.”How much centralization or decentraliza¬tion is optimum for a system at a giventime depends on economies and dis¬economies of scale, Boulding said. “I don’tknow what the optimum size is,” he de¬clared. “You just have to find out. Thingsthat are of optimum size tend to surviveand those that aren’t don’t.”The optimum size of a system wouldchange he said, only if there were struc¬tural changes within the system.Boulding spoke at Breasted Hall in theCenter for Urban Studies’ free lectureseries on “centralization vs decentraliza¬ tion”. Northwestern University sociologistScott Greer speaks at Breasted this Thurs¬day at 8 pm."NUC//Continued from Pago OneLocals Decide PolicyThe governing Interim Committee con¬sists of chapter representatives and mem¬bers elected at the conference last year.Rothenberg noted that NUC is not strongenough now for national actions such asfaculty boycotts against specific univer¬sities. When campus crises arise, localNUC chapters decide, upon action afterevaluating student and faculty opinion.If, for example, Richard Flacks were notgiven tenure here next year, NUC would be“very upset”. “We would feel that decision(to fire Flacks) was made on political cri¬teria,” said Rothenberg.authorized BMC5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, illinois 60615'T* ■—^ foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.-Same Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSCustom Quality Cleaning1363 E. 53rd 10% Student Discount 752-6933WHAT CHICAGO RADIO STATIONREALLY AND TRULY CARESABOUT THE PROBLEMS OFPEOPLE ON THE SOUTH SIDE?whpk fm 88.32/The Chicago Maroon/April 29, 1969 LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.Telephone 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue IEZZZjbZSZEZSZeZE^ZeZ e^hWE RENTEVERYTHINGIN TOOLSUTILITY TRAILERSFOR RENTLAKE PARK RENTALS, INC.6633 SO. COTTAGE GROVE AVENUECHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60637DAILY 7 A.M. TO 8 P.M.SUNDAY 8 A.M TO 3 P.M. PHONE667-8700 \ THE MOTHERS'"UNCLE MEAT"NEW DOUBLE ALBUMONLY ‘5.39MOST RECORDS ONLY s3.19at the Student Co-OpReynolds Club Basement JCOUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 So. Yates 363-9842PLANTS ALIVE!HARPER COURTliving rock, split rock. THE MUSICAL ISOCIETY ipresentsBEETHOVENTRIO INEb MAJORFor Viclins, Cello,and PianoWed net day, April 30Mandel Hall 12:30 P.M.FREEv.v.v.v.vy,:.;.: BELL BOTTOM SALELEE BRAND NAME$7 regularNOW $5.98Wrangler jeans spe¬cial $4.98Double breasted sportcoats and Edwr rdiansuits.JOHN’SMENS WEAR\1459 E. 53rd.7 *y.NY Alumni Ask for ReconsiderationResolution Asks ThatUC Reconsider RecentDisciplinary MeasuresSome members of the University of Chi¬cago Alumni Club of New York have issueda statement calling for reconsideration ofthe disciplinary action taken against 123students who participated in last quarter’ssit-in.The resolution passed 59-4 at a meeting of109 people held in New York City April 17.The remainder of the “alumni and friendsof the University” had either left the roomby the time the resolution was presented or declined to participate in the vote. The textof the resolution follows:“We, the concerned alumni of New YorkCity, are troubled by what we know of thedisturbances at the University of Chicago.We wish to recommend:• To reconsider disciplinary measures inthe suspension and expulsion of 123 stu¬dents;• That measures be taken to make itpossible for students to have more of avoice in the University.”The New York group has not announcedany plans for further action.Eddie Williams, recently appointed vice-president for public affairs, said Mondaythat he has not yet received a copy of thestatement and that no similar statementhas been issued by other alumni groups.New RoostThe department of geophysical scienceswill officially move into their new building(the one with the towers) just west ofSearle on Ellis Ave., Thursday. Moving daywill be marked by various celebrations, in¬cluding an outdoor graffiti session, a MayDay dance, and a party that evening.All members of the University are invitedto join. Beginning at 3:30 pm, there will bea computer markup. Sheets of computeroutput will be attached to the sides of Ro-senwald Hall, and will be decorated byanyone who cares to bring a pencil. Amaypole dance will follow.The party will be held at the FairfaxBallroom, 1369 E. Hyde Park Blvd. at 8:30pm. An auction of objects collected over theyears will take place there.100 Wasted DaysAn analysis of the first 100 days of theRichard Nixon administration to the tune ofwandering musicians will highlight a rallySunday at 2 pm in the Hyde Park ShoppingCenter mall.The aim is to shock people out of thecomplacent attitude toward Nixon, accord¬ing to Paul Booth, co-chairman of VotersCommitted to Change, the sponsoring orga¬nization. So far, Nixon has had a free ride,Booth said.Speakers will include 8th ward aldermanBill Cousins, Dr. Quentin Young, and Dan k* * *' Y^ fi m ADavid Lawrence Fisch who claims tohave been appointed in the last will andtestament of William Raney Harper to beninth and last president of the Universityof Chicago, will be inaugurated in Man-del Hall on Wednesday at 11 am, witha dinner and dance following in IdaNoyes.Criley, executive director of the ChicagoCommittee to Defend the Bill of Rights.Cousins and Young ran as McCarthy dele¬gates to the Democratic convention lastyear.Co-sponsors are the 4th and 5th ward In¬dependent Voters of Illinois, Students for aPolitical Alternative, Women for Peace, theWelfare Rights Organization, and HydePark SANE.New pocket-size travel book"London Discovery 1969” fea¬tures money-saving discountcertificates at places whereLondoners themselves eat,shop, have fun. Save on res¬taurants, clothes, pipes, leathergoods, car rental, theater tickets,etc. Book saves you many timesits price. Send $4.95 (ppd) to:LONDON DISCOVERY, INC.■ DEPT. CN . P 0. BOX 2021■ DETROIT. MICH. 48231J Please send copy(ies)■ of "London Discovery 1969."| $4 95 per copy enclosed.I| NAME| A00RESSJ CITYSTATE FOTApresentsLeRoi Jones'DUTCHMANCritics Award, Cannes Film FestivalStarringShirley Knight &AI Freeman Jr.SUNDAY MAY 4 7:30 & 9:00SOC.SCI 122 $1.25A Black Colony ProductionI REE WEDDING CATALOG_ FOR THE BRIDE-TO-BEEverything for the wedding and re¬ception. Wedding invitations, gifts forthe bridal party, novel decorations,personalized bride’s cake knife, toast¬ing glasses, napkins, matches andpther unusual, exciting personalizeditems. ^ , _Creations by Elaine Dept.*633 W, 7lit St. Chicago, III. 60629 Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicshave joined us* Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & oi' change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 He also said that the resolution was “Apersonal statement of feeling” on the partof those who approved it and not a formalstatement of alumni policy for the NewYork Club. In addition, Williams said thatsome of the advocates of the resolutionwere not alumni, and that roughly six weremembers of the parent group that spon¬sored the “Overkill” ad in the New YorkTimes. Peter Rabinowitz, graduate student incomparative literature, Caroline Heck, ’71,and Laura Chenven, ’68, spoke in favor ofthe resolution at the New York meeting.Miss Heck said “We were very pleased thatsome action was taken. We went to themeeting expecting another "rational dis¬cussion’ and were surprised and encour¬aged that some definite action was taken.”FOTA Celebrates AestheticsThe Committee for, the 1969 Festival ofthe Arts (FOTA) has announced its sched¬ule for the two weeks of activi es whichwill compose this year’s $18,000 celebrationof the aesthetic.Chairman Peter Ratner, ’69, said, “Key¬notes in this year’s FOTA are informalityand involvement.” Ratner hopes to use theresources of the Chicago area to a greaterextent than past festival committees havedone.The large budget provided to FOTA en¬ables almost all the events to be offeredfree. This will answer the complaints ofmany students in past years.The FOTA committee urges Universityaudiences to take advantage of specialworkshops in the arts, to be held in CobbHall at various times throughout the festi¬val. These workshops will involve oil, clay,and a special film workshop. As otherevents this year, the workshops are bothfree and open to students and the neighbor¬hood.FOTA also plans to exploit the beauty ofthe campus in spring, by offering numerousoutdoor events. These will include free the¬ ater, concerts and dance. The sculpture ofVirginia Ferrari will again grace the qua¬drangles in the next few weeks, as will thework of Chicago sculptor John Henry.Student exhibits in the graphic arts, com¬bined with exhibits from outside the Uni¬versity will constitute the contribution ofthe festival to painting and printmaking.Also planned for the two week schedule isthe revival of the Liberal Arts Conference,this year modeled on the original LAC ofJanuary 1966. Ratner sees in this meetingof artists and intellectuals the possibilityfor meaningful communication, bringingthe vitality of the arts into close contactwith academia. This will be the theme ofthe conference as well as that of the festi¬val itself.In addition to the formally scheduledevents, there will be a number of impro¬vised “happenings,” including a paint-in, acrayon-in and a chalk-in on various datesthroughout the festival. There will also be atheater workshop of a relatively unstruc¬tured nature. These happenings and work¬shops are representative of the informalityand involvement that the festival as awhole will provide.MUSICRAFT SPECIALAcoustic Research DiscountsARAmplifierPower output, each channel with both channels driven: 60watts RMS, 4 ohms,- 50 watts RMS, 8 phms,- 30 watts RMS, 16ohms.Distortion at any power output level up to and including fullrated power: IM (60 & 7,000 Hz, 4:1), less than 0.25%;harmonic distortion, less than 0.5% from 20 Hz to 20 kHz.Distortion figures include phono preamplifier stages. Reg.$225$189“NOW20% Discount on all SpeakersA R 3a walnutA R 5 walnutA R 2ax walnutA R 4x walnut listNOWlistNOWListNOWlistNOW $250$200$175$148.50$128$104$56$45MubifivaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500April 29, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3EDITORIALSCollege DeanEven in the midst of the current upheaval on campus, studentsstill are the first to admit that Wayne C. Booth is probably themost widely respected, admired and appreciated man on campusand all are saddened at his decision not to accept another five yearterm as dean of the college. However, can anyone really blame himfor his desire to return to the world of academics rather than theworld of administrators? No one could think that Mr. Booth likesbeing hissed and hooted on the Mandel Hall stage even though hehas the nerve to appear before what he knows is an antagonisticaudience. We will miss Dean Booth, anl now is the time to giveserious thought to his successor.The Clayton committee is presently considering possible suc¬cessors to Mr. Booth. No matter whom the committee has beenconsidering, there are certain basic criteria that they must takeinto account if the next dean is to have any student support atall. Without such support, the job of the dean will be impossible.If the committee is considering anyone who was affiliated inany way with the administration during the disciplinary actions andcommittee reports of the last three months, we hope that theywill reconsider before they make a final judgment. Students arenot about to accept any such appointee with open arms. Some ofthese men might even make good deans, but simply being associatedwith the disciplinary actions makes them distasteful enough in stu¬dents eyes to make them unacceptable.With the cutting of the college for next year, the new deanmust be concerned enough with the college to make the usefulnessof the smaller size really prove something. The next dean should bewilling to put the College’s needs first among the University’spriorities. Foremost in this respect must be the desire to reformthe curriculum of the college to the point where being a first-yearstudent here is more bearable than the torture that new studentsgo through now.Possible considerations for the job (if they would be willing totake it) are Richard Lewontin, whose forebearance and intelligencehas been proven time and time again; Julian Goldsmith, one of themore pleasant, concerned and approachable men on campus; Rich¬ard Hildebrand, whose sensitivity in making Phy Sci 115 liveablecould be used to reform the rest of the common core; and EricCochrane, whose liberal viewpoint and excellent teaching makehim respected by students. Men such as these should be huntedout by the Clayton committee and seriously considered. If not thenext dean is going to have the hardest job in this University.Go To ItDespite the unspeakable weather lately, you should make theeffort to get out. There’s lots of fine things happening that aren’tgetting the attendance they deserve. The Maroon doesn’t usuallyuse its editorial columns to plug cultural events, but it seems ashame that with all the complaining students do about the lack ofentertainment in Hyde Park, they still do not support other stu¬dents’ productions. Last weekend there were on campus an originalmusical, an original film, and a student directed play. None ofthem got the attendance they deserved.Hyde Park is a strange place, highly conducive to variousneuroses. It’s a shame however, that students themselves, whilethey complain bitterly about the place, take a perverse pleasurein increasing their isolation, refusing to support, let alone con¬tribute to other students’ activities.To those who disparage the quality of students’ artistic offer¬ings we might point out that a large audience for an exhibition isimportant not only for morale, but also for finances. The Univer¬sity doesn’t support a full fledged student activities program, andyou can be sure that if audiences don’t give groups the money theyneed, no one else will.Festival of the Arts begins Thursday, starting a stupefyingarray of things to go to — for free. There is a student writtenmusical being presented this weekend. Go to see these things.You’ll be giving other students much needed support, and whoknows? you might even find yourself having a good time. LETTERS TO THE EDITORSParadoxObserved anomaly: Several of the facultysignators of a letter to the Maroon on Feb¬ruary 7, 1969, supporting the students in¬volved in the sit-in, especially condemning“finking” by members of the faculty,apparently concerned about the welfare ofstudents, have submitted proposals forhumanities courses for next year whichmention topics and materials that interestthe teachers, but the students are men¬tioned in the proposals mostly, if at all, asbeing permitted or not being permitted tochange sections between quarters!The only proposal that concentratessquarely on the education of the studentwas made by two older members of thestaff who have not supported the sit-in oramnesty. Two others, who have been mostenergetic in listening to student opinionabout humanities courses were two of theoriginal “finks.”Question: Those faculty and students whoappear to be most generous in their support of the student, are they, when out of ear¬shot of the tooting, really the least con¬cerned about the education and devel¬opment of students? Are those quietly work¬ing behind the spectacle the most com¬mitted? Will all concerned come to recog¬nize, sometime in the future, that the an¬swer is yes?James R. BennettDanforth Tutor in HumanitiesCONTATAThe nostalgia of a cold, dreary day over¬comes us with the remorse of the plightof our society and the general apathy ofmankind. With deep introspection and agentle burp, we paint you a picture:Tulips and violets dirty with coal dust areWashed clean by a spring shower,Buds closed all spring, burst open onA Gray dismal day.An avocado plant grows old,Big enough to go into a coffee canIs dropped out the window.Lesmit KahstraBULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, April 29NOTICE: Students intending to take the History of West¬ern Civilization this summer are asked to fill out thebrief form available in the college history office. GB206, by May 15. Enrollment is limited, with prefer¬ences given to students who must take the course tocomplete degree requirements.APPLICATIONS: Teacher Corps Intern Applications arenow available in the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 201.TENNIS: University of Illinois, Circle Campus, StaffCourts, 1:30.SEMINAR: “Voltage and Clamp Studies on Myxicola Gi¬ant Atoms", Lawrence Goldman, University of Mary¬land. Abbott Hall 324, 3 pm.LECTURE: "Viral and Cellular Interactions: Polio¬virus", Andre Lwoff, Billings P-117, 3:30.LECTURE: “The Computer as an Experimental Tool",search department. Bell Telephone Laboratories, Re¬search Institute Room C-117, 4 pm.MEETING: The Party will hold an organizational meet¬ing to select candidate for SG at 4 pm in the CobbHall Coffee Shop. Meet the Party's four successfulcand:dates for the Student Life Committee.COLLOQUIUM: “X-ray Photoelectron SpectroscopicStudy of Metals", Charles S Fadley, Lawrence Radi¬ation Laboratory. Research Institutes 480, 4:15.DANCING: Folk and Square dancing. InternationalHouse 8 pm.FOLK SINGING: Folk song workshop, Hillel, 8 pm.LECTURE: Chef Louis, master chef of one of Chicago'soutstanding gourmet restaurants, The Bakery, will bethe guest speaker at the meeting of the OC LawWives, Lower Lounge of B*J, 8 pm.MEETING: Bridge Club, South Lounge of ReynoldsClub, 8 pm.Wednesday, April 30SEMINAR: "Consumption Coagulopathy", Edwin W Salz-man, Henry S Kingdon. Billings P-117, 12:30.CONCERT: Beethoven's trio for piano, violin, and cello.THt: CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Carolii.e HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothAssistant Editor: Mitch BobkinProduction Chief: Mitch KahnNews Board:Leslie Strauss, Wendy Glockner, Con Hitch¬cock, Rob CooleyNews Staff: Jim Haefemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Bruce Norton, Steve Cook, Gerard Leval,Richard Paroutaud, Alfred Ryan, FriedaMurray, Debby Dobish, Blair Kilpatrick,Leonaid Zax, Chris Fraula, Greg FergusonPhotography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Steve Aoki, Bon Gilbert, Mark IsraelSenior Editor: Jeff KutaContributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, John RechtSunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. Mandel Hall, 12:30.LECTURE: "Decision Making in the US Congress",Thomas B Curtis, attorney at law, Biggs, Hensley,Curtis and Biggs. BE 103, 1 pm.LECTURE: "The Development of Ottoman Historiogra¬phers", Fahis Iz, Cobb Hall 201, 3:30.BASEBALL: University of Illinois, Circle Campus, StaggField, 3:30.SEMINAR: "Atomic and Molecular Emission SpectraProduced by Eledtron Impact", F J de Heer, Nether¬lands. Kent 103, 4 pm.SEMINAR: "Problems of Biological Organization",Humberto R Maturanr, University of Santiago, Chile.Experimental Biology 117, 4 pm.FILM: "Fireworks" and others, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and9:30.DANCING: British and Scandinavian Country Dancers,Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Thursday, May 1FOTA EVENTS: Maypole Celebration, Madrigal Singing,English Country Dancers, Renaissance Players: "TheFour PP", Swift Commons, 12 pm.LECTURE: "Molecular Mechanisms of Repair in Mam¬malian Cells", J Cleaver, Laboratory of Radiobiology,University of California. Ricketts 1, 2:30.LECTURE: "A Programming System for StatisticalComputation", Brian E Cooper, Atlas Computer Labo¬ratory, Chilton, England. Eckhart 13, 2:30.INTRODUCTION TO FOTA*LAC' "Strange BedfellowsSome Notes on the Glorious Wars Between Scholarshipand the Arts", Wayne C Booth. Quantrell, 3:30.LECTURE: "Myths, Archaic and Modern", Sara JSchaffner, Lecturer, Oxford, England. SS 302, 4 pm.SYMPOSIUM: "Casework and Science: An HistoricalEncounter", Carel Germain, University of Connecticut.SS administration, 7:30.FOLK DANCING: Israeli fold dancing, Hillel, 7:30.LECTURE: "Classical References in the Art of Raph¬ael: The Formative Period." SS 122, 8 pm.LECTURE: Centralization vs Decentralization series,Scott Greer, Urban Sociologist, Northwestern. BreastedHall, 8 pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: University of Wisconsin, BondChapel, 8 pm.CONCERT: Rock concert, Jeff Carp Band, HutchinsonCourt, 8:30.Friday, May 2TENNIS: Wabash College, Stagg Courts, 1:30.SEMINAR: "The Radiosensitivity of Mammalian Ooc-ites", Heather M Beaumont, University of Birming¬ham, England. Dora De Lee Hall CLI, 12:30.LECTURE: "Arrangement and Behavior of CrossBridges in Insect Flight Muscle", Michael Reedy, Uni¬versity of California. Rl 480, 4 pm.FILM: "Fahrenheit '451", Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30LECTURE: "The Uses of Biblical Materials in ModernLiterature", Mervin Mirsky. Hillel, 8:30.DANCING: Folk dance party, Ida Noyes Theater, 7:30.INDIAN POETRY AND MUSIC: AK Ramanujan, SS Re¬search Guikling, 122, 7:30.Arise and Be HeardContrary to popular belief, the Ma¬roon does not manage the news. Wecan barely manage the news we’vegot. In any case, we find it a veryserious charge that the Maroon is a“leftist rag”. (Can we help it if theleft is more articulate than theright?)We are always willing and eagerto print interesting, and coherent“think pieces” (that means lettersand gadflies) from anyone of anypolitical viewpoint if we get them.The problem if that we don’t. So, youwho charge the Maroon with sup¬pressing the moderates, write some¬thing. Submit it. And if then we don’tprint it, you can feel entitled to throwa Molotov cocktail through our win¬dow (remember though that we’reon the third floor.)4/The Chicago Maroon/April 29, 1969 » > « *THE130 MPH TIREFor people who don’t do over 70, but want a ridiculousmargin of safety.A Pirelli Cinturato can do 130 mph. For 24 hoursstraight.It can cut corners at speeds your car can’t muster.It’ll stop your car faster than any other tire made.It’s less prone to skid than any other tire on theroad. Wet or dry.How do you make a tire as safe as this? Eas/.You build a tire for American cars to Ferrari GTtolerances.Other radial plies use tubes. We’re tubeless.Other radials use two plies at the sidewall. Weuse three.By the time we’re finished laboring over aCinturato, it's tough enough to withstand three timesmore road impact than an ordinary tire.Someday, every car will come equipped with atire as safe as the Cinturato. But until that dayyou can get it from us. ■ ■■■■■■■1■ BELLIFRONT ENDSERVICEBRAKE & MUFFLERSERVICE9200 STONY ISLAND AVE.CALL 374-1500 SHORELAND HOTELOffice space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveYou won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until to¬morrow if you call ustoday.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price! "THE STATE DEPARTMENT hasbarred two Cuban envoys becausethey gave ‘financial and direc¬tional’ aid to the Black Panthers.Five more may have their entryvisas revoked. The action, comingas it does shortly alter the indict¬ment of 21 Panthers on charges ofplotting to blow up New York de¬partment stores, may signal acoordinated crackdown. We gotWarbucks, now ■ c ,“ For o free copy oflet’s grab thekid and thedog." Wm. F. Buckley'sNATIONAL RE¬VIEW, write: Dept.H, 150 E. 35 Street.N. Y. 10016.146' i l*. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE OELIVER DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644IMPORTANTMEETINGFESTIVALOF THE ARTSCOMMITTEEWEDNESDAYEVENINGAPRIL 308:00 P.M.Reynolds ClubSouth LoungeANYONEINTERESTED INWORKING FOR EOT AWELCOME MSpecial!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!l(f/o Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8NEW 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 - 1COLLEGE STUDENTSPart-time Employment2 to 10 P.M. Shift Only395 PER HOUR4 day min. per weekCALL 263-0618 Chicago IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.1 gallonevery35 milesThat’s only part of what the Renault 10 willgive you. The 4-wheel disc brakes give you straightsure stops. (Disc brakes are used on Ferraris andother racing cars.) The 4-wheel independent sus¬pension gives you a ride without bumps. (The 11cu. ft. trunk gives you a lot of empty space to fillup. And all you’ve got to give us is $ 1775 P.O.E.But only a little at a time.cJ^eslu imports, <$nc.2235 SO. MICHIGAN AVE.. CHICAGO. ILL. 60616TEL. 326-2550April 29, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5———-p(Maroon Classified Ads)i5!A5!*":i i1 IIAk tv |IU«•! BACK TO LOGIC CLASS, JOHN MOSCOWRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, 111. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephene or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMA¬TION: phene Midway 3-0M0,Ext. 3366.PEOPLE WANTEDLIKE TO COOK? Responsible per¬son to work nights 5-1. Full timepreferred. Apply at the Medici orcall 667-7394.How do you like my new ribbon?Deliver the Maroon this Friday.Earn $5 hr. Must have large car.Call Ext. 3266.PEOPLE FOR SALETyping? Call Ruth 363-5609 (eve).May I do your typing? 363-1104.AUTHENTIC CHINESE COOKING,taught in lovely Chinese home. Tui¬tion and materials $30. Begin May19. Limited enrollment, 7 per class.324-8070.FOR SALESTEREO COMPONENTS AT DIS¬COUNTS Sony 250A was $150 ONLY$99.95Kenwood, Dyna, Scott, AR Scott 2505compact was $450 ONLY $339. MUSI-CRAFT on campus Bob Tabor 324-3005.FENDER-RHODES electric piano.73-note keyboard, built-in 100 wattamp, 4 speakers. Home or band.Over $900 new; sacrifice for $550,best. 684-3934.1961 Merc. 6 cyl. clean, new tires,call BU 8-9106 after 7P.M.1 9 4 9 HARLEY-DAVIDSON, com¬pletely overhauled and restored,beautiful condition — ride it to be¬lieve it. 493-8726 e«es.USED VOLKSWAGENS'61 Bug'64 Bug'66 VW fastback very clean'67 Bug very cleanReasonable but haggelable. LeslyImports, 2235 S. Michigan 326-2550.1965 PONTIAC LEMANS hardtopautomatic, power brakes, powersteering, AM-FM one owner, well-maintained, best offer over $800.Ron Moore, 643-0304.Air Conditioner 6,000 BTUs West-inghouse. Perf. Cond. $100 or offer.684-7838.HORSEBACK RIDINGAnyone interested in horseback rid¬ing and in forming a riding clubplease telephone Madeleine Muetze643-6524 after 6 p.M. Beginners andadvanced; jumping and dressage.LOSTPair glasses in brown case, nr. theflagpole or something like that. Re¬ward. Call Jim Haefmeyer, ext.3541, Apt. 13. Lv. mess.Thick glasses in shirt-pocket case,lost 4-23 pm between 49th —Woodiwn & 53rd — Dorchstr. JimQuinn 955-2532. Reward.FESTIVAL OF THE ARTSFOTA — an exciting program —themost comprehensive program of theperforming, graphic and plastic artsever to be presented at this Univer¬sity. OVER 60 EVENTS. Practicallyeverything FREE of charge to UCstudents.WANTED TO RENTWanted to rent for next year 3-4bedrm apt. near campus call BU8-6610 ex. 2107 or 2106.APT WANTED, 3 room furnishedcall FA 4-8200 ext. 450 leave mess.Large apt in Hyde Park wanted 3-4bedrooms desired Call FA 4-9500;rm 1410 or 1423 If not in PLEASEleave message.Need 1 bdrm furn. apt. to start inSept. — will sublet to you now. 493-0020 betw. 5-7.Young College professor and wifewant to sublet small house or townhouse June thru August, (no chil¬dren) furn. or unfurn. Call Ml 3-7582after 5 P.M.EXPANDING OPPORTUNITIES INMONTESSOkl PRE SCHOOl TEACHING(Demand it Twice the Supply)For Information* onNeil Treiaief Prefrete, June J4- Aafwt IWrite: OPPORTUNITY'MMwert Meet11teri Teacher Irelates Ceater1911 (Test derate Aveaae, Oacafe. HI. Mtn*open only to college groduotet.N. 8. Some Scholarships ondinteract free loom available HOUSE FOR SALE8211 CRANDON. Ideal home for uni¬versity family Custom built Geor¬gian, 8 rooms, 3 large bedrooms, lVibaths, full completed basement, gasheat, 2 car brick garage. Reduced to$29,000 by owner. Essex 5-6938. •ROOMMATES WANTEDShare 6 rm, 2 bath apt. near 53rdSt. with 3 men. Spacious, cheap. 643-4821.Fern to share apt w/2 fern gradstudents. May-Sept. 288-3694.2 mate grad students want 2 othersto share large South Shore apt.48.50/mo. summer and/or nextyear. 324-2671'Summer sublet w opt. for next yr.Washer 8i dryer, dishwasher. 6750Chappel (1 block East of Jeffrey).$55 mo. Dave, 493-8863. Apt. summer sublet 3 bedrms$160 mo. WILL BARGAIN. 324-9463.Apt. summer sublet with option onlease. 3 bedroom — air condt. —girls only — avail. June 15, 955-5517.BROOKLYN, N.Y. Six-room apart¬ment available for sublet, July 1 toSept. 1, 1969. Married couple pre¬ferred, no children. $200 a month.Subway one hour from TimesSquare. Write Dr. George M. Fur-n i s s, Department of Sociology,Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, N.Y.11210.SUM SUBLT SW rm hge Ivrm, FPL,sunrm, study (or xtr bedrm) stereo,TV $160. 493-6507 FAB PAD.NEW ORLEANS, summer sublet. 2bedrm, furnished apt. in FrenchQuarter, balcony, $70 month — Lar¬ry 955-3575.Summer sublet — 4 bedrms. 55th &Cornell — $150 mo. 363-8211. The HAUNTED PALACE — a hor¬ror classic — at the Blue Gargoyle.Smryd COMeth again 5/10 for 69.May 6 — CHUCK BERRY Concert.The DOGS is barking May 1.See the "king 8i high priest of rock8i roll music" one week from fonightat Mandel Hall — It's CHUCK BER¬RY — tickets tomorrow Mandel BoxOffice $3, $2.50, $2.The BLUE GARGOYLE, 5655 Uni¬versity, presents three classic films:TELLTALE HEART, Vincent Priceand Peter Lorre in HAUNTED PAL¬ACE, W.C. Fields In FATAL GLASS brary 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.Johnny, be good and get me 2 tick¬ets for the May 6 CHUCK BERRYConcert at Mandel Hall.LEE HARVEY OSWALD**tlcketsavailable at Maroon Business Office,304 INH.At Chicago's newest dinner theatre,specializing In steaks, and providingtheatre unique in Chicago.FOTA will shock this university Intoa participation In its fantastic sched-3 male grad stds to share 8 rm aptnr 51st Sum — next yr $45 mo 324-7431 aft 7 P.M. Summer sublet May 1st or after. 4rm Hyde Park coachhouse $125.00.373-6618.Male for May, or May —Sept, ownbdrm in big furn apt, 53 A Wood-lawn, $45 month 752-4733. Summer. One bedroom, partly fur¬nished. Close to campus. $100 permo. Call Doug, 538-1027.FOR RENT POISONALSApts, available now and May 1. 4rm 8, 1W rm eff. Call BUI Stoll DO3-6200; Steve FA 4-0342.IVSt rm apt 52 8< Kenwood 1 pers orcouple Sept '69 — June '70 & optionfor Summer '69 BU 8-6669.Studio apt 57 & Blackstn June 1 $98incl util, 324-5950 6 P.M.Unde Meat - by the Mothers ofInvention - now on sale at the Stu¬dent Co-opFurnished rm. 493-3328Nice clean room avail, nr. campus.Call Ml 3-9257.SUMMER SUBLETSublet 6/10-9/1 South Shore, 5rooms, one air-conditioned. Fullyfurnished with piano, books, paint¬ings. Beautiful courtyard. Nearcampus bus and 1C. $160 month.Call X2408 8:30-5:00 , 493-9276 after 6.Looking for a groovy apt for thesummer? IV* rm apt available June15 — Sept. 15. Comes complete withcat. Call 643-3088.3-4 bdrm sum sblt Wdlwn nr 53rdfurn. porch $160. 643-6669.2’/2 room apt., 54th & Woodiwn, $87per month, sublet w. option for nextyear. 363-3689.Sum sblt 6/14-9/1; 3 spac rms, fur¬nished, sun porch, air cond; 53rd &Hyde Pk; 752-7689.Summer sublet May thru Sept. Forinfo call Barry 752-9891.Summer sublet: Lg. 2 bath, 2 bdrmcorner apt. 51st 8i Blackstone. Fur¬nished. 955-9256.So. Shore, 6 rms, porch, garage,$110. 221-4756 or X4121 days.3Vi rm sublet July 1-Sept. 30w option to renew. 52nd & Univ.$107.50 mo. 288-0708. Roll Over Beethoven! It's ChuckBerry In just one week!PHIL OCHS — May 19.After Renoir tonight at Doc Films,make It to the Courthouse for a postcinematic beer.May 1 — RingaroundtheRosieWald.CHUCK BERRY — May 6.Male grad student has developedmethod for improving bust-lines. Forfree trial with obligation apply toassistant BU 8-1100 Ex. 612. Satisfac¬tion guaranteed.Musical Society — Beethoven Trio inEb Major. Mandel Hall Wed. Apr.30, 12:30 P.M. FREE.Saturday at the Gargoyle: JAZZwith the COSMICS, 8:30, $1.May 19 — PHIL OCHS Concert.Happiness is a balloon. Blackfriarsand Tolstoy. See CHARGE OF THENUMIDIAN CAVALRY. Friday andSaturday, tickets at Mandel HallBox Offcie, X3567.Memphis — Chuck Berry.CHICAGO PREMIER! W.C. FieldsIn "The Golf Specialist", Wed. at8:30. Free at.the Bandersnatch.And Laurel 8, Hardy if you like.Wed. at 8:30, free at the Band¬ersnatch.M. Please Call B.P.NEWS ITEM: "3 Panthers accusedin arms case. Three members of themilitant Black Panther Party havepleaded innocent of charges of pos¬session of weapons ... U.S. DistrictCourt Judge Joseph Sam Perryallowed Junior and v Hontyeream(sic) free on $5,000 personal recog¬nizance bonds over the protests ofthe U.S. attorney's office. White hadbeen held on $100,000 bond chargewith attempting to murder a Chi¬cago policeman. Judge Perry warn¬ed the defendants to refrain from in¬timidation tactics in the courtroomand added:"YOU WILL GET A FAIR TRIALHERE, WHETHER OR NOT YOUDESERVE IT." (emphasis added, ofcourse)."Open obvious question to Judge Per¬ry: Why might they not deserve it.Judge, 'cause they're black andmilitant?Also, what about the ONE HUN¬DRED THOUSAND BOND? You justgoing to say sorry, or are you goingto find out what happened and why,and do something about it? OF BEER, Wed. 8 P.M. 50c a trick.WATCH for MULTI-VALUED THI-NGAMABOBS.You know the one about how it's along way to trip a rarey?Smyrd has been resERECTED for69.CHUCK BERRY in concert Tues.May 6. Tickets at $3, $2.50, $2 onsale in Mandel Box Office daily.BELL BOTTOMS, WRANGLERJEANS $4.98, converse gym shoes$5.98. Limited supply. Johns MensWear 1459 E. 53rd.Tonight at the BLUE GARGOYLE.5655 University, an evening withReuven Gold: Zen and Hasidic sto¬ries, songs of the Jewish resistance.8 P.M., free.They talking about the Jewish resis¬tance to cultural assimilation ? Ididn't think that resistance lastedlong enough to take on songs.Maybellene — CHUCK BERRY.Student discounts on renting andbuying cars in Europe. Call LarryGoldberg 493-8863.THE PHOENIX (U of C student li¬ ule of concerts, plays, art exhibits,liberal arts conference 1969, galaperformances, poetry readings, may-pole dancing, chalk-in, paint-in,crayon-in. Free use of film, clay,oil, iazz, folk, rock, blues, bands,Beaux Arts Ball, and many otherevents. See our full page ad in to¬day's Maroon.WRITERS' WORKSHOP PL 2-8377.Rock 'n Roll Music —Chuck Berry.The Courthouse welcomes you thisThursday after Man's FavoriteSport.Friday, 8 P.M., Blue Gargoyle:NEWSREEL FILMS (Panthers.Haight-Ashbury) FREE.CHGO'S OWN SWINGERS CLUB.Send $1 for 52 page illusf. magazine.100s of personals. MKS, Box 3806,CHGO, 60654. LECH THAN WRETCH"Smyrd's 1928 address to the Oar.'CHUCK BERRY - Ne^Tr^TThe ultimate CHEAP thrill atthe Blue Gargoyle: three film* «hEAT|1' 'J** Telltale Heart, TheHaunted House, the Fatal Glass «Beer. Wed. 8 P.M., 50c a trickThe one 8i only CHUCK BERRY uKomputer Mark Up. Ring Aroundthe Rosie Wald. More. May iRosenwald. Join the DOGS.<o go when you want toGO? Marco Polo, 326-4422.HARPER THEATER COFFEEMOUSE, 5238 S. Harper, reopen,April 25. Shows Friday and Saturday» and 11. No charge. Donations.If you don't donate, car. you get in?Donation is the most watered-downword in English language.PHIL OCHS — May 19.AMERICAN PREMIER OF LEEHARVEY OSWALD, at The PlayHouse, 2515 W. 69th, students' tick¬ets $2.50 avail, rm 304. Ida NoyesHall.LEE HARVEY OSWALD, so iheysay, is a stimulating, provocativedramatic experience, one that willleave you with a clearer picture otthe man who assassinated PresidentKennedy.Folk dance in the quads by the ten¬nis courts. Sunday May 11. 1-6 P M.Dunav Tamburitza orch. In case ofrain dance will be in Ida NoyesBeaux Arts Ball tickets NOW ONSALE $2.50 each Mandel Mall BoxOffice 11-5 daily. This dance in Bar¬tlett Gym features PAUL BUT¬TERFIELD BLUES BAND, MAGICSAM BLUES BAND and an unbelie¬vable LIGHT SHOW. Everybody willbe there. You?Me? I'll be stoned out.THE COOLEST PLACE IN TOWNTake your hands off me misterI ain't jumping, I'm leaning overPicking up some of this breezeThis is the coolest place in townCome on Baby rap to meAin't but one detailWhat's that supposed to meanYou some new king of comicOr somethingWhat's that crap supposed to meanCome on June BugYou supposed to be my friendTENTH AND GREENWICH(WOMEN'S HOUSE OF DETENTION)Hey fourth floorHey fourFourDorothyIs that your light sugarHow they treating you sugarMake me some kind of signSo I know it's youCause you so far awayDorothyI miss youBaby Is you gonna every come backAnd Dance with meGuess whatThey got a new klnda hair sprayI know you'd dig itYou got a can waitingOn the shelf for youSugarI'm waiting for you tooBaby is you gonna ever...at DOC FILMS this weektonight: Renoir’s CRIME OF M.LANGE and NANA 8pm/Cobbtomorrow: Experimentals! by Anger,Marker, Russell 7:15/Cobb/9:30Thursday: Howard Hawks’ MAN’S FA¬VORITE SPORT? 8pm/CobbFriday: Francois Truffant’sFAHRENHEIT 451 7:15/Cobb/9:30 MAY 2,3 ONLY!Mandel Hall 8:3052nd Annual Blackfriars PlavTheQDAFtGEof ihe \umideart CavalrvA Musical Drama based on the life of Tolstoy. May 2, 3Students & Faculty $1.50, 2.006/The Chicago Maroon/April 29, 1969THF MAROONFESTIVAL OF THE ARTS 1969Schedule of EventsDATf: Thursday. Moy l to Soturdoy, Moy 17PLACt: Bergmon Gollery Cobb Holl. 5811 -27 South Edit AvenueEVENT. Student Art and Photography ExhibitJIMIf: Regular HoursDATt Monday. May 12 to Soturdoy, Juno 21HACf Goodspeed Noll. Room 108 5845 South Edit AvenueIVINT: 1. 19th Century French Cartoent.7. ligature 6t—contemporary poems el ten Midwestern poets withaccompanying prints.TIMt: Regular HoursDATI Thursday May 1 to Saturday Moy 17PLACt Quodrongles OutdoorsEVENT: Sculpture exhibit by Virginio Ferrari and John HenryTIMt: Ad the timeDATh Thursdoy. May 1PLACt Swift Commons[VINT: Maypole Celebration Madrigal Singing RenaissancePlayers: the four* PP English Country DancersriMI: !2>o7pmDATt: Thursdoy. May 1HACI Qvontrgll AuditoriumEVENT: Introduction to FOTA-IAC by Wayne C. Booth, Dean of theCollege: "Strange Bedfellows: Some Notes on the Ancient andGlorious War between Scholarship and the Arts."TIMl: 3 30pmDATt Thursday. Moy 1HACi Joseph Bond Chapel ot the rgar of Swift HollEVENT: Collegium Musicum, University of WisconsinTIM! 8pmDATt: Thursdoy Moy 1HACi Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Outdoor Jazz Concert: Early Editions UnlimitedTIM 8 30pmDATt Friday Moy 2HACI Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Outdoor Luncheon Concert: Brass Chamber EnsembleTIM 12 00amOATI Friday. Moy 2HACI: Soool Science Research Building. Room 122. 1126 East 59thEVENT: Evening of Indian Poetry and Music-A. K. Ramanujan etalTIM 7 30pmDATt: Saturday. Moy 3HACI: QuonWI AuditoriumEVENT. Jan Workshop, featuring lecture by Joe Segal, avant-gardejan afneionadoTIMl: I to 5 p mDATt: Soturdoy. Moy 3HACI Cob© HodEVENT: Meeting of Rim Workshop GroupTlMf 2 30pmDATt Saturday. Moy 3HACI Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Outdoor Concert: Mouthwatering Assortment BandTlMf 8 30pmDATt: Sunday Moy 4HACI Quantrgll Aud.for.umEVENT: Jazz WorkshopTlMf 1 to 5p mDATt Sunday. Moy 4HACt -Mond*. HollEVENT: Student-Faculty music RecitalTlMf 7 30pmDATt Sunday May 4HACt Social Science Research Build.ng. Room 122EVENT: Movie: Dutchman by LeRoy Jones (Price $1.25)TIMl 7 30 ond 9pmDATt Monday. Moy 5HACt: Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Chalk-In on SidewalksTlMf AfternoonDATt Mondoy. May 5HACt Quontrel! AuditoriumEVENT: Movie: Stereopticon (Noadmission charge)TIMl 7 30 and 9pmDATt: Tuesday Moy 6HACt Mandell HallEVENT: Crayon-Inf/Mf AfternoonDAT! Tuesday Moy 6HACt: Reynolds Club Theater, Ido Noyes HollEVENT: Unity Players: The Whore CamilleTlMf 8 30pmDATt Tuesday Moy 6HACt Social Science Research Building. Room 122EVENT: Evening of Experimental RimsTlMf 7 30 p mDATt Wednesday. May 7HACt: Reynolds Club. South LoungeEVENT: Erik Satie; Vexations For Piano. Free Refreshments.TlMf am and p mDATf Wednesday, May 7HACt Mandel HallEVENT: Greek Poetry: Constantine Trypanis, University Professor ofClassical Language and literaturesTIMl 3lo 5pmDATf Wednesday. May 7PLACE Ida Noyes Holl. Room 308IVCNT: Modern Dance lecture and Films. Selma Jeanne Cohen,Editor, Dance Perspectives Magazine, lecturer. "Dance: Stepchild orSister Art?"Films: Nikolais' Totem; limon's Moors' Pavanne; Wanova's SwanLake, etal.TIMl 7 30 pmDATf: Wednesday May 7PLACE Ouontrell AuditoriumEVENT: New Old Fashioned Baroque Compass Players-workshop DATf: Thursdoy. Moy 8HACI: Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Outdoor Concert: University Concert Band, Music ofWagner, Mendelssohn, Sousa, Bennet, etalTIMl: NoonDATt: Thursdoy. May 8HACt. Joseph Bond ChapelEVENT: Cello and Recorder Recital: Chamber Music of theEighteenth CenturyTIMl } to 5 p mEVENT: New Old-Fashioned Baroque CompassFlayers—PerformanceTIMl 8 30pmDATt: Friday, Moy 9HACt Joseph Bond ChapelEVENT: Preliminary Readings: Florence James Adams PoetryReading ContestTIMl 3 to 3 p mDATt: Friday, Moy 9HACI: Reynolds Club Lounge. 5706 South University AvenueEVENT. Reception for lili KrausTlMf : after concertDATt. Friday, Moy 9HACt: Bergman GalleryEVENT: light Show, Jazz Band and Paint-In; with MouthwateringAssortment BandTIMl: 8 30 p mDATI: Friday. Moy 9" ruci Rtynoldi CKrb TbootorEVENT:! Inity Players: The Whore CamilleTIMl: S: 30 p m.DATt: Friday, Moy 9HACt: Cloister Club. Ido Noyes HollEVENT: Modern Dance Recital-University Modem Dance Group andGuest Artist, Gabrielle Gramatte, from BerlinTIMl: 8 p.mDATt: Saturday. Moy 10HACt: Stogg FieldEVENT. Cricket Match: University of Chicago Salisbury Cricket Clubvs. Winnetka Cricket ClubTIMl: 1130amDATf: Saturday, May 1CHACi: Cobb HallEVENT: Art Workshops: Clay and OilsTlMf 2 to 5 p.m.DATf : Saturday. May 10HACt Cloister ClubEVENT: Pittsburgh Experimental Theater Group: Cerebral SpermTlMf: 730 pmDATf: Sunday, May 11HACt Cobb HailEVENT. Art Workshops: day and OilsTlMf: 2to 5p mEVENT: Pittsburgh Experimental Theater Group: The ClownTlMf 1 pmDATI: Sunday, Moy 11HACI: Moir QuadrangleEVENT: Folk Dancing: Serbian Folk Dancing OrchestraTlMf. 1 to 5 p.mDATf: Sunday, Moy 11PtACt: Quantrell AuditoriumEVENT: Bergman's Wild Strawberries, and Student Film: Up Againstthe Wall, Miss AmericaTIMl: 2 30 p.m.DATf Sunday. May 11HACt: Quantrell AuditoriumEVENT: Bergman's Naked Night and Student Him: The CaseAgainst Lincoln CenterTIMl 7 30pmDATf Sunday, May ] 1HACt: Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Outdoor concert: Los ConquistodoresXIMf: 8 30 p m.DATf: Mondoy. May 12HACf: Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Chalk-In on SidewalksTlMf: AfternoonDATf: Mondoy May 12HACf Reynolds Club, South LoungeEVENT: Dramatic Dialogues from SwedenTlMf: 3 30pmDATf: Monday, May 12PLACt: Quontrell AuditoriumEVENT: Bergman's Smiles of a Summer Night, and Student Film:GarbageTIMl: 7 30 p mDATt. Tuevdoy. Moy 13HACf Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute 1155 Eos* 58fh StreetEVENT: Experimental RimsTlMf : 7 30pm DATf: Tuesday. Moy 13PLACt: Social Science Research Building. Room 122EVENT: Evening of Persian Poetry and Music: D. A. Shojai, etalTIMl: 8 30 p.mEVENT: Azie Mortimer and Jazz Ensemble. Refreshments to beserved.TIMl: 8 p mEVENT: "Nothing but a Man"-MouieTIMl 7 30 4 9 00DATf: Wednesday, May 14PLACt: Quantrell AuditoriumEVENT. LIBERAL ARTS CONFERENCE 1969: "The Conference <Scholarship as Exoression"of CreativeI. Opening Forum: "The MediaTIMl 2:30 p.n Self-ExpressionDATt: Wednesday, Moy 14PLACt: Quantrell AuditoriumEVENT: Convivium: Refreshments in Cobb Coffee ShopTIMl: 3 p.mDATt: Wtdnndoy. May 14PLACt: Quantrell AuditoriumEVENT: Lecture-Demonstration by Easley Blackwood, Professor ofMusicTIMl 4pmDATf: Wednesday. May 14PLACt: Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Outdoor Folk Concert: Lake Country String BandTIMl: 8:30 p.m.DATf: Thursday, May 15PLACE Hutchinson CourtEVENT: Luncheon Chamber Music Concert, Bach: BrandenbergConcerto No. 3, No. 4, and No. 5TIMl: NoonDATt: Thursdoy, May 15PLACt: low School AuditoriumEVENT: Bergman's The Seventh Seal, and Student Him: CountryTIMl: 2 30 p.mEVENT. LIBERAL ARTS CONFERENCE-Cont'd. Student-Faculty OpenDiscussions I. The inventions of Discovery. II. The Critic as Creator. III.Science and Personality. IV. Scholarship as Personal Expression. V.Theory as ArtTIMl: 130 ond 3 30 p.mDATt: Thursday, May 15PLACt: Cobb Holl Coffee ShopEVENT: Convivium: RefreshmentsTlMf: 4 to j p.mEVENT: Student-Faculty Dinner (charge-to be announced)TlMf 6 p.m.DATf: Thursday, Moy 15PLACt: Faculty HomesEVENT: Informal dinner discussionsTlMf: EveningDATt: Thursdoy. Moy 15PLACt Low School AuditoriumEVENT: Bergman's Personna, followed by Mrs. Brigitte Steene,Guest Lecturer from Temple University: "The Narrative Style ofIngmar Bergman."TIMl. 7 30 p mDATf: Tuesday, May 13PLACt *da Noyes LibraryEVENT: Student Poetry ReadingTlMf . 7 30pmDATf: Tuesday. Moy 13PL ACE Beigmon GalleryEVENT: John Cage Radio PieceTIMl: 7 3C p mDATt: Tuniday. May 13PLACt: Quantrell AuditoriumEVENT: Bergman's The Silence, Student film: HaightTIMl: 7 30pm EVENT. UBERAL ARTS CONFERENCE-Cont'd. Concluding ForumTopic: "The Personal Dimension"TIMl: 3 30 p mDATf: Friday. May 16PLACf Cobb Hall Coffee ShopEVENT: Convivium: RefreshmentsTlMf 5 p.mDATt. Friday. May 16PLACt: Joseph Bund ChapelEVENT: Rnals: Florence J. Adams Poetry Reading ContestTlMf: 3tcSo.ni.DATt: ’..day. Mar 16PLACt. Midway ond Rockefeller Chapel GroundsEVENT. FOTA GALA PERFORMANCE: Handel: Musk for the RoyalFireworks. Bach: Concerto in E Major, as realized for Carillon andMoog SynthesizerLarge fireworks Display; Balloons, etc.One other selection to be announced(Rain date - Sunday, May 18)TIMl: 8 30pmDATt Saturday. Moy 17HACf: Ida Noyes Hall Donee RoomEVENT: Lecture-Demonstration: Modem Dance-Technique andPhilosophy, with Modern Dance Group and Teacher, Cary Rick(Admission $1 for University students)TIMl:DATf Soturdoy. Moy 17PLACt: Quontrell AuditoriumEVENT. UBERAL ARTS CONFERENCE 1969 Closing Sossion:ConclusionsTIMl I p.m.DATt: Saturday. Moy 17PLACt Bartlett GymnasiumEVENT. BEAUX ARTS MASQUERADE BAIL: The Paul ButterfieldBlues Band, Magic Sam, light Show Extraordinaire, Refreshments($$3.50 each)TIMl 8 30pmALSO AN ANTICIPATED VISIT FROM POET ROBERT LOWELL DURINGTHE SECOND WEEK.All events FREE except where indicated jf??..*I *lx.If;I .14■ir i "i ,r : EXT BOOKSALL REQUIRED& RECOMMENDEDBOOKSBILLINGSLEY: Black Familiesin White AmericaVANDERBERGHE: South AfricaLYONS: Forms & Limits ofUtilitarianismWAIS: ManualPOLYANI: The Tacit DimensionGEERTZ: The Religion of JavaTHESE AND MANY, MANY MOREAVAILABLE NOW at the c/>o9ooir>oooo Brighton Foreign auto Repair, Inc.4401 SO. ARCHER AVENUE CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60632Phone 254 3840 — Cable BrightonBrighton foreign Auto offers Special 10%discount to all students upon presentation ofvalid registration card.ON ALL VW REPAIRSMuffler: 1200, 1300, installed $27.00Clutch: 1200, 1300, installed 42.00Clutch: 1500 installed 52.00Tuneup: 1200, 1300 15.00Replace ling link on front end 38.00Steering damper installed 8.50Original shock absorber installed 7.95 ea.Brakes all around 28.00Machine drums 6.00Give your Love Bug a spring check-up