THE MAROONFriday, May 2, 1969New Committee Will Study DisciplfiFIFTH FLOOR SIT-IN: students study in President Levi's outer office. David Travis 6 Faculty to ViewNew ProcedureWith 3 StudentsBy Mitch BobkinThe council of the faculty senate has ap¬pointed a six member committee to “studypossible future changes in the disciplinaryprocedures with particular reference to dis¬ruptive activities and to the question of stu¬dent participation in disciplinary hear¬ings.” The committee will select three stu¬dents from a slate of elected candidates as“full members.”The council also reaffirmed support forthe actions of the disciplinary committeesand the decisions made by them and deanof students Charles O’Connell.The committee, created on April 22, 1969,was announced in a release to the facultyand students Wednesday, April 30. Facultyserving on the committee are Charles W.Wegener, professor in the humanities andnew collegiate divisions; chairman; HaroldDemsetz, professor in the business school;Edward Deutsch, instructor in chemistry;Paul Sally, assistant professor of math¬ematics; Ronald Singer, professor of anato¬my and anthropology; and Janice Spofford, me,NIVERSITYcom-rchwesassociate professor of bioolfy^The committee had itThursday with the membeimittee of the council.The faculty on the committee'were ask€to serve after long deliberations by thecouncil. Two members of the Kalven com¬mittee which reported on discipline earlierthis year, Wegener and Mrs. Spofford, werechosen for the committee to “put their ex¬perience to work,” according to EdwardRosenheim, spokesman for the committeeof the council. Sallv is the only member ofthe committee who signed the faculty peti¬tion protesting the disciplinary measures.The students who will serve on the com¬mittee will be elected by student councils inthe collegiate division, graduate divisions,and professional schools. From that groupof students the faculty on the committeewill pick three to serve.In their reaffirmation of the previousstatements of the committee, the councilsaid “the council has concluded that it isnot in the best interests of the University torescind the decisions that have been madeby the disciplinary committees or to revisetioners were not consulted about the mem-In its statement announcing the new com¬mittee the council affirmed “Its confidencein the fairness of the disciplinary proce¬dures employed in response to recent dis¬ruptive demonstrations and accepts thejudgments made by the relevant com¬mittees and by the dean of students.”Sit-In Staged By Ten StudentsIAC Members Stay AtLevi's Office 2 Hours;Protest Appeal DecisionBy Steve CookTen students pulled off a surprise twohour sit-in outside President Edward Levi’soffices on the fifth floor of the adminis¬tration building Thursday afternoon.The students, all members of the Inde¬pendent Action Coalition, were protestingthe decision of the council of the UniversityChange MadeBy FSACCSLThe faculty student advisory committeeon campus student life (FSACCSL) hascompleted its review of the Kalven reporton discipline and submitted its recommen¬dations to the council of the faculty senate.The committee’s report calls for the es¬tablishment of a tripartite body to deal withdiscipline, modeled after the federal gov¬ernment, having a legislative body, such asthe council of the senate; an executivebody, possibly the legal counsel for the Uni¬versity; and a judicial body, a standing dis¬cipline committee to consist of five facultyand five students.The report emphasizes the need for stu¬dent participation and recommended dis¬cipline for acts affecting subdivisions of theUniversity to be handled by that subdivi¬sion. It also says that “disruption of teach¬ing, studying, research or supporting ad¬ministrative activities is an offense againstthe University community at large.”On the makeup of the discipline com¬mittee, the report recommends that the ex¬ample of French universities be followed,calling for election of five students to thecommittee if 70 percent of the studentsvoted in general elections for the posts. If•i0 percent voted, the committee would havef°ur students. Although FSACCSL says thismight sound “utopian,” based on past par-See "FSACCSL," Page Five senate to ignore IAC’s proposal for a facul¬ty-student appeals board to review dis¬ciplinary cases currently before the dean ofstudents.“The Council rejected all forms of com¬promise. They refused to examine our pro¬posal in any way”, said Mike Barnett,graduate student in physics and organizerof the sit-in.The protestors slipped unnoticed past sec¬retaries and security guards up the stair¬way to the fifth floor. Once there they satdown in front of the door to the president’sinner offices. Although the demonstrationwas very peaceful, secretaries in Levi’s of¬fice slipped a plank through the door¬handles, preventing passage into the inneroffice.Barnett was unable to present a letter ofprotest to Levi, for the president was not inthe building when the sit-in began at 1 pmand had not returned by 3 pm, when thestudents left. A similar letter was sub¬ mitted to dean of students CharlesO’Connell.The letter announced the sit-in andblamed the defeat of the IAC proposal onLevi;“President Levi claimed to the Councilthat acceptance of this ‘extreme’ proposalwould be an affront to his handling of theentire crisis. So much for rational dis¬course.”Barnett claims to have received this in¬formation from a member of the council.The IAC is a coalition of moderates andradicals which grew out of the moderatefaction during the February sit-in. So far,IAC has focused on the issue of alleged dis¬ciplinary inequities of students punishedlast quarter. “We are more interested inaction then ideolgy, unlike SDS or the Com¬mittee of 500”, said Barnett.Assistant dean of students James Vice re¬fused to comment Thursday about possiblediscipline resulting from sit-in. David TravisCHARLES WEGENERNew Committee ChairmanFaculty PlansSecond VigilThe faculty AAUP petition group hascalled for a second silent vigil of facultyand staff “who are distressed with dis¬ciplinary procedures and their harsh ef¬fects.” The vigil will be held outside theQuadrangle Club Monday from 12 to 1 p.m.The demonstration was planned beforethe committee of the council issued itsstatement Wednesday which in effectturned down the group’s request for a re¬trying of disciplinary cases resulting fromthe sit-in.Paul Sally, assistant professor of math¬ematics and a member of the steering com¬mittee of the group, said “In light of therecent rejection of our petition by the coun¬cil the vigil takes on a special signifi¬cance.”At a meeting last Mondav the group alsodecided to give the Committee of 500 Plus$80 to help cover expenses for printingSpartacus, a periodical protesting dis¬cipline procedures.The group will meet again Monday at 5p.m. in Eckhart 206 to discuss furtherplans.DEAN BOOTH SPEAKS: A lecture helps open this years Festival of the Arts (FOTA).Wilson Says University-Government Relation CloseBy Con HitchcockAmid the splendor of Edward Levi’s in¬auguration as president last November wasthe quiet assumption of his former positionas the man in charge of academic mattersby John T. Wilson, 55, a modest mhn offorceful articulateness, who returned to theUniversity as vice-president and dean offaculties from the National Science Foun¬dation (NSF) where he was deputydirector.When he took over October 1, Wilson hadbeen previously associated with the Univer¬sity as special assistant to PresidentGeorge W. Beadle from 1961 to 1963 anddealt with the problem of the relation be¬tween government and the University, aproblem which he says has intrigued himsince World War II.Wilson’s prime job as vice-president anddean of faculties centers around the aca¬demic budget, for which he is directly re¬sponsible. He works with the various deans,determines needs, distributes funds, workson curriculum, and has final recommenda¬tory power over faculty hiring and firing.He also has a personal concern over hous¬ing and the dormitory situation.He spoke favorably of the student-facultycommittees which had been established byEdward Levi when he was provost to re¬view the academic programs in the Univer¬sity, and said their work was temporarily JOHN T. WILSONVice-President and Dean of Facultiesinterrupted by the sit-in. These committeesare primarily concerned with curriculum,the role of students in the University, andthe proper relationship between the Collegeand the divisions, particularly in suchareas as the balance between teaching andresearch by faculty members and the diffi¬culty of getting divisional teachers to teachin the college with its staff courses and set PROFILEcurriculum. He pointed out that the Univer¬sity places emphasis on a person’s abilityto teach and do competent research in hisfield, the problem being that the individ¬ual’s potential in both fields is not known.These are all points being discussed bythe committees “fruitfully,” Wilson said.Wilson, who taught psychology at GeorgeWashington University from where he alsogot his BA in 1941, believes that the govern¬ment and university communities are mov¬ing closer together as the latter struggle toobtain adequate funds to maintain theirquality. He does not believe this trend isbad, given certain conditions. He used hisexperience with NSF as an example of gov¬ernment’s relation with sciencean d scien¬tific research.“Universities obtain money from govern¬ment for three services,” Wilson said. “Thefirst is through services which are strictlythe responsibility of the government, suchas national defense.“The second class is functions whichhave an essentially legislative base, such as land-grant institutions, or responsi¬bilities relating to public service, such asPublic Health Service.“The third involves supporting sciencefor its own sake through institutions suchas NSF, the Arts and Humanities Founda¬tion or giving grants to people to do re¬search of their own liking.”Wilson opposes involvement of the firstkind and does not believe that classifiedwork, such as for the military, should notbe carried out in universities, as it is notproperly one of their functions. Services ofthe second category, however, can be han¬dled by universities easily, and the thirdkind is the best relatipnship as, for ex¬ample, it gives money to a chemist to dowork and research that appeals to him themost.Furthermore the problem of getting themoney to keep universities running is atricky one, as the school must be wary ofbecoming federally controlled, he said. Wil¬son does not believe that universities willeventually be faced with this extreme situ¬ation and thinks they must look beyond thefederal government for the funds. He fa¬vors more donations by individuals, whichcould be made tax-deductible, and tax ben¬efits to parents sending children to college.“Tuition, endowments, and governmentsupport only go so far,” he said.Cohn A Stem(Fount Sc dampuaShopEDWARDIAN SPORTCOATA unique sportcoat, tailored expressly for Cohn & Sternin our own version of the Edwardian look. French blue orharvest gold in an all wool diagonal weave. $75IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsWIVES WANTEDStimulate your brain. Activate your resources. Pooh pooh thediaper caper. The University of Chicago needs your brains andclerical abilities as a secretary or typist.P.S. You really don't hove to a wife to apply.Contact: University of Chicago Personnel Office, 956 East 58thStreet, Ml 3-0800, Ex. 4442. We are an equal opportunityemployer.2/The Chicago Maroon/May 2, 1969 what chrago novelsnew s levaWiSFMSTEREO 947/fm-lcmWE RENTEVERYTHINGIN TOOLSTRUCKS UTILITY TRAILERSFOR RENT FOR RENTLAKE PARK RENTALS, INC.6633 SO. COTTAGE GROVE AVENUECHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60637DAILY 7 A.M. TO 8 P.MSUNDAY 8 A M. TO 3 P M. PHONE667-8700LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions available]for students and student wives.Telephone 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW's encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanics havejoined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease 6 oil change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 SALEINEXPENSIVECRYSTALpricedfrom29' ea(4 for1.15)lo79' ea(4 for3.25) thanks toa newprocess,the thickbumper-rimusuallyassociatedwithmachine-madeglasswarehas beeneliminated53 rd &Lake ParkOprnItm 111)667-4040ideasFOR FAMILY PROTECTIONWith young children toprotect, you need addedinsurance coverage! Sun Life sFamily Security Benefit,added to a basic plan,provides coverage you neednow, at low cost.Let’s discuss it.Ralph j. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY QFj £ANADA- * V -n . . h 7 t\A * % . V . f*l **»• j m . V A V »\_ # 9 » • • • • • * » *, % » « ■.University To Prove No Argonne KickbackPension Fund IsAlleged SourceOf $12 Million The money came out of the employees’wages and was used by the University topurchase pension insurance from the Pru¬dential Insurance company.Usually, the employer sets up an indepen¬dent trustee to handle such matters. How¬ever, the University handled the in¬vestment of the money itself, and received 400,000 dollars a year in dividends fromPrudential.“The University wore two hats, employerand trustee,” said Nathan. “It’s a highlyunusual practice, and they were answer-able to nobody.”The pension plan was set up in 1949. Notuntil this year, when employees hired thenstarted to retire, did the apparent misuse of the dividends come to light. During thattime, the University told employees at Ar¬gonne they were using the dividends to buyfurther benefits.Argonne National Laboratories, in Ar¬gonne, HI., is run jointly by the Universityand the AEC. AEG apparently does notwant to get involved in the case, and isletting the University handle it.Booth Talk, Happenings Begin FOTAWednesday morning. April 30, Universityattorneys received a 30 day extension toreply to charges that the University is mak¬ing $400,000 dollars a year in kickbacksfrom an Argonne employees’ pension fund.By law, the University was given 30 daysfrom April 12, the day the suit was filed todevelop a defense but as of the 30th. moretime was needed.The Atomic Energy Commission was con¬sulted in the matter, and has decided to letthe usual University law firm handle thecase.No new developments are expected in thecase until the University’s defense ispresented, according to Harvey Nathan.Nathan is an assistant to Bernard Mamet,who is representing the workers atArgonne.The employees are suing the Universityfor 12 million dollars which, they claim, theUniversity has misappropriated from fundsthey were told were being used to buy pen¬sion benefits.WRAP HoldsA rally in support of the student-employee demand for a free, 24 hour a daychild care center moved spontaneouslyfrom the ad building steps to the Billingscafeteria at lunch hour Tuesday.The rally was called by Women’s RadicalAction Project (WRAP) and other groupsto build interest in a mass meeting nextCommittee PrintsOaks DefenseThe committee of the council has madepublic the statement of Dallin Oaks, profes¬sor of law and disciplinary committeechairman, which was delivered before thecouncil of the University senate Tuesdaynight. Responding to charges of politicalsuppression because of lack of due process,Oaks said:‘Differences in the degree of disciplineimposed in various cases reflect the com¬mittee’s judgment on differences in the na-tue 'and degree of the individual’sparticipation in the sit-in.”Oaks pointed out that the committee nev¬er asked accused students if they weremembers of SDS; the committee’s only in¬terest was “the nature and degree of theindividual’s participation in the sit-in, andthe individual’s delay or failure (if any) torespond to the summons”.In response to the charge that penaltiesmeted out by the committee often did notfit the crime, Oaks went through the num¬bers of students receiving varying penaltiesand the reasons for their punishment. Even the weather collaborated Thursdayin a May Day filled to bursting with eventsand “happenings”.At noon the Madrigal Singers echoed inSwift passageway, the English Countrydancers wound round a maypole on thequads and the Renaissance Playerspresented “The Foure PP.”Dean of the College Wayne Booth, offi¬cially opened the Festival of the Arts(FOTA) in Quantrell auditorium at 3:30p.m. His address was entitled “StrangeBedfellows: Some Notes on the Ancient andGlorius War between Scholarship and theArts.”Termed an “educational quartet” by theDean it dealt with a rational discussion be¬tween Bookmaker, a dedicated professor;Artsman, a devoted representational paint¬er; Goodman, a selfless and dedicated po-Thursday and to publicize the differencesbetween the student-employee proposal andthe administration’s SSA plan.Two of the speakers and a few others pres¬ent decided to extend the action to thehospital cafeteria. By putting a bull-horn ina baby carriage and carrying the baby, thesmall group was able to enter the cafeteriaand speak to the several hundred peoplethere for about ten minutes before beingremoved by a campus policeman and aUniversity administrator.The speech brought quiet to the room aspeople listened to a former hospital workerdescribe the poor treatment accorded Uni¬versity employees during pregnancy andthe difficulty and expense of child care.When the policeman ordered the group toleave, a WRAP woman announced the May8 meeting. Several diners pounded the ta¬bles in response.The demand for a University financed, 24hour a day, client-controlled child care cen¬ter for all employees, students and facultyis supported by a hospital workers group,the Campus Employees Committee, SDS,and the Committee of 500 plus as well as byWRAP. The Thursday meeting, at 7:30 pmin Ida Noyes, will discuss how to get theUniversity to accept responsibility for thechild care needs of its women.The speech in the cafeteria explainedthat there are no facilities for infant care inHyde Park, and child care costs from $12 to$30 a week, one participant said. In addi¬tion, women spend as much as $20 a monthon transportation. Working mothers pay upto 40 percent of their salaries for non-educational child care, she continued, and litical activities; and Feeler, an anti-formal¬ist, anti-esthetician experiencer, on theproper structure of a university.Bookman presented the case for the uni¬versity as an intellectual center and a cen¬ter for the teaching of rational thought;Artsman, as a place for the teaching ofcreative thinking; Goodman, as an in¬stitution of social change; and Feeler, asan institution of novelty and self-in¬dulgence.All were given equal time — the samenumber of words, according to Dean Booth.Artsman, appropriately, had the last word.The department of geophysical sciencesalso celebrated today, to mark their moveinto the new Ellis Ave. building, with awrite-in at Rosenwald.Sheets of computer paper and streamersflew from its grey towers. Te departmentthey are sometimes forced to exploit otherwomen by paying less than minimum wagefor baby sitting. The alternative, which thespeaker called “appalling,” is to leavesmall children locked at home alone. Shestated that the University has an obligationto make free child care a standardemployee right.A.R. MCINTOSHDYNACO SONYKLH TEACFISHER REVOXSCOTT EMPIREHARVIAN-KARDON DIALSANSL! GARRARDSHERWOOD THORENSMARANTZ A.DC. also scheduled a dance for Thursday night.FOTA Chairman Peter Ratner, ’70, ex¬pressed the guilding spirit of the festivaland the month when he said “Cast awayany inhibitions you have against self-ex¬pression.”FOTA PLAY: Students view RenaissancePlayers on quads.ofJBLALTEC LANSINGELECTROVOICESHIREAKGBOSEBOZAKRECTILINEARPICKERINGNSA RECORD CLUBNow...a record club with no strings attached—the official U.S. NationalStudent Assn. Record Club. Never any obligation to buy any specified num¬ber of records. Buy as few or as many as you please, whenever you please(no automatic shipments) at guaranteed savings of 331/3% ...and often up to79% — prices as low as 990! 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Oak St.-DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.-779-6500Rally and March to HospitalMUSICRAFT FOR SOUND ADVICEOn Audio EquipmentHundreds of UC Students & Faculty Are SatisfiedOwnersMay 2, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3HANDCRAFTED GOLD& CUSTOM SILVERJEWELRY r5210 HARPER CT.667-8040We’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 arc going to help makesure we put the money in the right pockets.When you fly TWA, you’ll get a ballot.Write in the names of the TWA people whogave you super service.Drop your ballot into any of the bonusboxes you’ll find at all of our terminals. And we’ll see that those people getrewarded with some of that money.Now, for a change, you can have a chanceto grade others on thei r work.TWAOur people make you happy.We make them happy.M. BERGFUR SHOPFur storage, cleaning and glazing Fullycovered by insuranceWe also clean leather goods and all generalcleaning1619 East 55th Street HY 3-94 V*4/The Chicago Maroon/May 2, 1969 THE EAGLEcocktails . . , luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks ...^3311 BlACKStONEi BANQUET-ROOM HY-4-1933^As we go to press, nobody has found a use forthe rear deck of a conventional sedan, except ofcourse pigeons.Well, the Volkswagen Squareback doesn't endin a rear deck.Instead, as you see, it ends in a square back—neatly grabbing an extra 14.5 cubic feet of lug¬gage space out of thin air.Then, for its next trick, the Squareback givesyou a 6.5-cubic-foot trunk up front where mostcars have their engines. And a rear seat that foldsdown to add another 17.7 cubic feet of space.With all this you can fit twice as much luggageinto the Squareback as any other sedan.And yet you don't need a big space to fit theSquareback into. It's shorter and narrower thanmost other sedans.So you can park it in places that other peopledidn't even know wereplaces.How's thatfor a happyending?SOUTH IMPORTMOTORSBU 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.Our story begins where other sedans end,you can hear yourself think . , . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitx beer on tapNineteen Professors Are PromotedTwelve Are Cited ForDistinguished Service;Seven Others ElevatedTwelve members of the faculty have beenappointed distinguished service professorsand seven others have been chosen tonamed professorships. The announcementof the appointments, effective May 1, wasmade by president Edward Levi.Distinguished service professors and oth¬er named professorships enable the Univer¬sity to provide special academic recogni¬tion for members of the faculty.The twelve distinguished service profes¬sors are:• Bruno Bettelheim, the Stella M. Row-ley professor of educational psychology inthe department of education, professor ofpsychology, psychiatry and human devel¬opment and principal of the Sonia Shank-man Orthogenic School, who will becomethe Stella M. Rowley distinguished serviceprofessor;• Benjamin S. Bloom, professor of edu¬cation who will become the Charles H.Swift distinguished service professor in thedepartment of education;• Dr. Albert Dorfman, the Richard T.Crane professor and chairman of the de¬partment of pediatrics, director of the Jo¬seph P. Kennedy Jr. mental retardation re- BRUNO BETTELHEIMRowler Distinguished Professorsearch center, director of the LaRabida-University of Chicago Institute, and profes¬sor of biochemistry who will become theRichard T. Crane distinguished service pro¬fessor;• David Easton, professor of polticalscience who will be the Andrew MacLeishdistinguished service professor in the de¬partment of political science;• John Hope Franklin, professor andchairman of the department of history whowill be the John Matthews Manly dis- JOHN HOPE FRANKLINManly Distinguished Professortinguished service professor in the depart¬ment of history;• Jacob W. Getzels, professor of educa¬tion and psychology who will be the R.Wendell Harrison distinguished service pro¬fessor in the departments of education andpsychology;• Julian R. Goldsmith, professor andchairman of the department of geophysicalsciences who will be the Charles E. Mer-riam distinguished service professor in thedepartment of geophysical sciences;Black Panfher Rally Held In MandelHampton Tells PantherPrograms, City Police'Repression' And RallyMonday night, Fred Hampton, chairmanof the Illinois Black Panther Party, cameto campus and spoke to a rally attended byover 500 people.In his speech Hampton emphasized thatthe Party is not interested in fighting rac¬ism with racism but with solidarity; that itUniversity LeftBy 2 AssistantsJerry Frese, assistant to President Ed¬ward Levi, and Jonathan Kleinbard, assis¬tant to the vice-president of public affairs,are both leaving the University.Frese will return to the University ofIowa to finish his doctoral dissertation inEnglish. Kleinbard will work under CharlesU. Daly in Washington, D.C. Daly, vice-president of public affairs, announced hisdecision to leave the University earlier thisyear.Frese, when asked if he was leaving be¬cause of dissatisfaction with the University,said “That’s a simple question, but a com¬plicated answer.”“It’s a myth that I’m newsworthy,” headded modestly. “Please don’t print any¬thing about me.”Kleinbard has already left the Universityand was unavailable for comment. won’t fight capitalism with black capital¬ism, but with socialism.He also spoke about the double focus ofPanther leadership: first, the breakfast forchildren program which is proving that thepeople can be served and socialism canwork and secondly, that their leadership insolidifying and pulling all the oppressedpeoples in this country together into a peo¬ples’ army to fight the state in armedstruggle.Hampton talked about the “pig” repres¬sion which has hit the Panthers because oftheir “vanguard leadership.” He spokeabout the necessity to free the Black Pan¬ther Party’s political prisoners such asHuey P. Newton, Eldrige Cleaver, BobbyRush, Nicky White and the New York 21.Jane Spielman, ’70, a member of SDS andWRAP, in introducing Hampton, spokeabout the need to follow Black Pantherleadership and the implications that thathas for the white movement in this country.She said that the Black Panthers haveproven their seriousness in really wantingto serve the needs of the people in thiscountry and that likewise the white left isgoing to have to start proving that it meanswhat it says and that at some point armedstruggle is going to be necessary to give thegreat wealth of this country back to thepeople where it belongs.She also spoke about the three demandscurrently raised on campus and the need tofight for them: end destruction and beginconstruction in Woodlawn, open Universityfacilities to the “oppressed community,”and a free child care center for employees,students and faculty. Thursday, the Panthers turned out 700people to a “Free Huey” rally at the Feder¬al building. Speakers from the Panthers;the Young Lords, a Latin group; the YoungPatriots, a white working class group; andSDS (together forming what they call aworking “rainbow” coalition) all empha¬sized the need to reject racism, to freeHuey and to solidify and fight the “pigs”who have been used as the tool of the stateto protect the property of the wealthy andthe powerful and to “keep the peopledown.” This attack on the “Pig” was es¬pecially timely because Fred Hampton,who didn’t speak at the rally as planned,had been supposedly arrested by the po¬lice earlier in the day.FSACCSL Cont. from Page OneProposals Madeticipation, but emphasizes the need for sucha set-up if the committee is to be truly rep¬resentative of student opinion.Concerning the “legislative” part of thedisciplinary procedures FSACCSL sug¬gested that the council of the senate state ageneral definition of disruption, specify il¬lustrations of various kinds of disruption,and set maximum and minimum penaltiesfor violations. Also recommended was thatthe sort of declaration of disruption readduring the recent sit-in be dispensed with.The function of the executive branchwould be to put the disciplinary machineryin motion. FSACCSL “definitely does notthink that the dean of students should servein this capacity,” suggesting instead the le¬gal counsel of the University. WILLIAM McNEILLMillikan Distinguished Professor• Clyde A. Hutchison Jr, the Caro’i Wil¬liam Eisendrath professor of chemistry andin the Enrico Fermi Institute, who will bethe Carl William Eisendrath distinguishedservice professor;• Mark G. Inghram, professor and chair¬man of the department of physics, who willbe the Samuel K. Allison distinguished ser¬vice professor in the department ofphysics.• Irving Kaplansky, professor of math¬ematics who will become the George Her¬bert Mead distinguished service professorir artment of mathematics;lam H. McNeill, professor of his-tc, > will be the Robert A. Millikan dis-t ied service professor in the depart-n (history;• Bernard Weinberg, professor of Ro-r ce languages and literatures who will’ the Robert Maynard Hutchins dis-juished service professor in the depart¬ment of Romance languages and liter-i jres;The seven faculty named to profes¬sorships are:• Dr. Daniel X. Freedman, professor andchairman of the department of psychiatrywho will be Louis Block professor of biolo¬gical sciences;• Chauncy D. Harris, professor andchairman of the department of geographyand director of the Center for InternationalStudies who will be the first Samuel N.Harper professor;• Donald F. Lach, professor of modernhistory who will be the first Bernadotte E.Schmitt professor;• Richard C. Lewontin, professor ofbiology and mathematical biology andchairman of the committee on evolutionarybiology who will be Louis Block professorof biological sciences;• Helen Harris Perlman, prgfessor in theschool of social service administration whowill be Samuel Deutsch professor in theschool of social service administration;• Stuart A. Rice, professor in depart¬ment of chemistry and in the JamesFranck Institute at the University who willbe Louis Block professor of physical scien¬ces; and• Edward Wasiolek, professor of Slaviclanguages and literatures and comparativeliteratures and chairman of the committeeon comparative studies in literature whowill be Avalon foundation professor inhumanities.whatever is new in hairstyling . . .PERMANENTS* TINTING • CUTTINGWAVINGRANDELLBeauty and Cosmetic SalonAIR CONDITIONED— Open Evenings by Appointment —15700 HARPER AVENUE FAirfsx 4-2007JiSSELSON'SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPI2-2870, PL2-8190, 003-9186 1340E.53rdi In ■ fliliLi — authorized BMC JjjjHi service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, illinois 60615~ foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTjen to Midnigffor your1516 E.Open to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience* *wr» m t I Milti Sait Utt i . i3io c. a3rd. ST. c3ZZSZjkZHi\v THE MOTHERS'“UNCLE MEAT''NEW DOUBLE ALBUMONLY s5.39MOST RECORDS ONLY s3.19at the Student Co-OpReynolds Club Basement *JM»y 2, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5EDITORIALNew CommitteeOur first reaction to yesterday’s announcement by the councilof the University Senate was one of bitterness, and our first at¬tempts at comment were satiric remarks about our benevolentleaders who watch over us so well. But then we realized that thepeople such remarks would be directed toward just wouldn’tunderstand, would dismiss such remarks as the badmouthing of afew vituperative students who could never be satisfied.Somehow the purpose of a newspaper, of an editorial column,is to increase communication, not alienate it. And so this editorialis directed to those undoubtedly sincere faculty and administratorswho supported the formation of the Wegener committee, seeingin it an acceptable solution to the controversy that has been tearingthis place apart since last quarter’s sit-in.When will you understand that this place does not belong toyou alone? You are the personnel of the University, but you arenot the University. We students are part of this community, apart that has been invited to come here, to participate in anexperience. Some time ago a decision was made that this Universitywas going to be a community of teachers and students. Havingmade that decision, how can those who hold the power persist inbarring students from full participation in that community?'There are 123 people who havebeen barred from attending thisUniversity... Just what do youthink everyone is so upset about?xYes, we’ve read the statement carefully, and we know that itprovides for three student members on the nine man committee.Do you really think that this answers students’ objections to thelack of responsibility allowed them in making decisions that affectthem?Aren’t students affected at least as much as the faculty bydisciplinary proceedings? Why aren’t there as least as many stu¬dents as faculty on the committee?Why can’t students pick their own representatives? Whydoes the faculty part of the committee reserve the option to pickwhom they want on the committee from the slate of elected candi¬dates? Why couldn’t this decision be given to students?And looking at the faculty serving on the committee, do youreally, honestly feel that it represents the spectrum of opinions?The chairman of the committee is Charles Wegener, who servedon the Kalven committee. Another member of the new committeeserved on the Kalven committee. Supposedly this is to “make useof their experience.” But doesn’t it also make use of their precon¬ceived opinions, outlined in the Kalven report, opinions which al¬ready state their approval of existing disciplinary procedures? No,we’re not saying that holding a certain opinion should precludeone’s serving on such a committee. But just how do you think wecan feel that we’re not being taken for a ride when the nine memberKalven committee is represented by two people on this new com¬mittee, while only one of over one hundred faculty who signed theAAUP petition is serving on the committee?And finally, most colassally, and most infuriatingly, you havesolemnly declared that the disciplinary decisions of last quartercannot even be considered. Just what the hell do you think this isall about? There are !23 people who have been barred—sometemporarily, some forever — from attending this University theywere once invited to attend. Just what do you think everyone is soupset about? Sure, we care about the principle of future disci¬plinary procedures, but what about these people? You just writethem off as an embarrassing episode in the University’s glorioushistory? You may find that embarassment harder to erase than youmight think at first, for if you refuse to acknowledge the outrageof many students, alumni, and faculty over this act, you insult andalienate them in a way that gravely, irreparably hurts this com¬munity. No Power Causes Problems'When a group of people feel commonly oppres¬sed, their condition only infrequently unitesthem - perhaps when the threat is felt mostovertly, as during the sit-in . . /By Tim LovainWithout (hopefully) indulging in too much psychological reductionism, it seemsthat a large amount of the problems that beset the student body of this University,as well as a large amount of the behavior of students that faculty find disturbing, aregrounded in feelings of powerlessness among students. (Naturally, this presumes adesire for power on the part of students and a belief in power as a useful means toa less definable end.)The extreme rhetoric and occasional irrationality of many students is partly due tothese feelings. A person doesn’t feel the need for guarding his words when he doesn’tthink they are being listened to by anyone influential.The impatience and disbelief of students when they are told that decision-makingat this University is informal, diffused, decentralized, and unquantifiable has thesame foundation. To a person without power, power is easy to locate—it’s all on topof him. He doesn’t see why he should waste his time locating it if he can’t share it,even if he thought that the decentralized model of power had creditability, whichhe doesn’t. Instead, he responds to arguments about the amorphousness of powerby interpreting it as an evasive measure. The general response at this University isone of cyncism and mistrust, and a simplistic view of good students and bad faculty.Many students construct a dual monolithic model and refuse to contaminatethemselves by having any political relations with the faculty or administration, whenthe latter make their all too infrequent friendly gestures.The faculty are probably most disturbed by the iconoclasm of students withregard to hallowed UC traditions and essential operating procedures which they allaccept. Many students don’t share those beliefs, however, because they don’t feel theyare participants in their formulation or implementation. Students aren’t about toaccept the University’s cultural norms until they feel they are part of the culture.Everyone bewails the lack of community on campus. When a group of peoplefeel commonly oppressed, their condition only infrequently unites them — perhapswhen the threat is felt most overtly, as during the sit-in (although the perceivedthreat took different forms). A more subtle coercion is felt more personally—eachperson feels manipulated, acted upon, and set apart, and the perceptions of threatand separation are felt far too differently by each individual to constitute any kindof uniting experience. In addition, each reaction differs—some don’t care, somewithdraw, some play the game they think is being required of them, some magnifythe enemy, some find other interests: As a result, a sense of community is virtuallyimpossible even among those who feel oppressed, much less with their perceivedoppressors.This is not to say that the oppression is not often overstated, nor that all studentsfeel oppressed, nor that power is the answer to all the problems of every student. Butfeeling oneself to be a part of this university rather than the object of it must includea feeling that one has some control over the decisions that affect him. If and whenstudents feel that they have influence, the faculty will be more pleased with theirstudents, students will probably be happier with themselves, and the University willbe in much less danger than it currently is.Tim Lovain, '70, is a member of the social sciences collegiate division studentcouncil, the joint student council and President Levi’s student seminar. He also servesas assistant student ombudsman and was student chairman of the Beardsley Rumlcolloquium.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, May 2TENNIS: Wabash College, Stagg Courts, 1:30 pm.SEMINAR: Heather M. Beaumont, Lecturer in Embr-THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Caroline 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,Leonard Zax, Chris Fraula, Greg FergusonPhotography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Steve Aoki, Ben 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, 3C4, 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 mall $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service.U * if II yology, Deoartment of An’tomv, n«:v«»rs'tv of Bir¬mingham, England. "The Radiosensitivity of Mammalian Oocites." Dora De Lee Hall, CLI, 12:30 pm.DOC FILMS: Fahrenheit 451, Cobb Hall 7:15 and 9:30pm.LECTURE: Marvin Mirsky, Associate Professor ofHumanities and Chairman, Fine Arts Program. "TheUses of Biblical Materials in Modern Literature," Hill-el House, 8:30 pm.FOLK DANCE PARTY: Ida Noyes Theater, 7:30 pm.INDIAN POETRY A MUSIC: A.K. Ramanujan, Professor. Department of Linguistics and South Asian Lan¬guages and Civilizations, Social Science ResearchBuilding, Room 122, 7:30 pm.MUSICAL DRAMA: "The Charge of the Numidian Cav¬alry," Blackfriars play, Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.TRAVELOGUE: to the Caribbean, International House,8:15 pm, students 50 cents, others $1.00.LECTURE: "Scientology — an applied philosophysweeping the world," 840 W. Wrightwood, 7:30 pm, noadmission charge.Saturday, May 3BASEBALL: Chicago State College (2), Stagg Field,12:30 pm.JAZZ WORKSHOP: Joe Segal lecturing, Quantrell, 1 pmOUTDOOR CONCERT: several bands featured, Hutchmson Court, 8:30 pm.MUSICAL DRAMA: Blackfriars' "The Charge of the Nu¬midian Cavalry," Mandal Hall, 8:30 pm.DANCE: Jams by the Moh, Ida Noyes Hall, 9-12 pm, Sl¬at the door.Sunday, May 4FILM: Thumbs Down, Hillel House, 7:30 pm.STUDENT-FACULTY MUSIC RECITAL: Mandel Hall,7:30 pm.STUDENT PLAYS: Ida Noyes Hall, Cloister Club, 9 pm.FILM: Dutchman, Social Sciences 122, 7:30 and 9 pm.SUPPER: Delicatessen, Hillel House, 6 pm, $1.CHESS TOURNAMENT: Speed Championship, 5 minutesper game time limit, Ida Noyes, 3rd floor, 3 pm.Students WantedAre you interested in helping to re¬cruit students to the college? Con¬cerned about admissions policies? Astudent advisory committee to theoffice of college admissions and aidis being formed for next year. If youwant to be involved, contact: ToniReed, 2102 Woodward Court; or KarlMenninger, 1606 Pierce Tower.'1 £16/The Chicago Maroon/May 2, 1969 .'•.!/ 1 ) J»bUf>N i', 1 " • \LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROON"That" MusicalThis is a short note to let you know thatBlackfriars opened its latest production,“The Charge of the Numidian Cavalry”last Friday, April 25. We thought that if y«uhad been waiting to read about the event inthe Maroon, you might still be uninformed.Blackfriars was, of course, mentioned inFriday’s Maroon. That the reference cameat the end of an article plugging a play withwhich four prominent Maroon staff mem¬bers were intimately connected is immate¬rial. That the loudly squawking CultureVulture would imply avoidance of a show ithad never seen hurts a little. But what puz¬zles us is why the Maroon would use as itscriterion for dramatic quality and appro¬priateness the parental status of its castmembers (‘‘Blackfriars cast features a Fa¬ther in the lead but Shoemaker has a Fa¬ther and a Mother.”). If familial virtuesreign supreme, then surely a play aboutTolstoy, who had nine children, ought to gettop billing.In today’s Maroon (Tuesday, April 29)you say, “There is a student written musi¬cal being presented this weekend.” Maybenext week you’ll mention its name. Ofcourse, by then the show will be history andnot news, and then the Maroon can write aretrospective editorial on the poor patron¬age of student events and projects.The Blackfriars Board:Alan Rudnick, AbbotBill Ravich, PriorRobert Walters, HospitalerDee An Holisky, ScribeOmbudsman ReportThis is an open note to Mr. John Mos¬cow, on the occasion of his public, Univer¬sity sponsored report of April 24:Rather than a reasoning and verbal om¬budsman you sound suspiciously like the usual company apologist (as when the PRman explains that his company has nothingto do with lake pollution). Not only are youclearly one-sided in the row between stu¬dents and administration, but you havenicely managed to sow seeds of anger be¬tween human development and sociologywith your inane and inappropriate com¬parisons of their relative merit.Nevertheless, it is just as well that wehave-heard from you since it makes the/Value of ombudsman at the University ofChicago crystal clear. For a student tobring a problem to you, Mr. Moscow, is likehis asking to be busted in the mouth a sec¬ond time.Daniel G FreedmanAssociate Professor ofHuman DevelopmentDay Care CenterBecause serious misconceptions seem toexist on campus concerning the day careservice in the Social Service Center, con¬cerning the day care service in the SocialService Center, we feel it is necessary toclarify some of these issues.First, the Social Service Center is beingbuilt as a neighborhood facility with federaland University funds to serve residents ofWoodlawn. University employees living inWoodlawn would be eligible to apply forday care services; however, University em¬ployment status would not in itself be aprimary criterion.Secondly, “control” of the day care ser¬vice has not been established; no contracthas been signed with an operating agency.An operating agency is needed because daycare services in Woodlawn cannot be fi¬nanced by the users. The SSC communityadvisory board has not as yet made finalrecommendations concerning the operatingagency or the eligibility policies. Thisboard consists of businessmen, assistance recipients, school personnel and others whoare concerned with the Woodlawn commu¬nity. These members also include represen¬tatives of TWO, other community advisoryboards, block clubs, and parent groups.If the Illinois Department of Childrenand Family Services operates the center,and this is a definite possibility, their feepolicy will be based on income. In the Lawn¬dale Center which is operated by this de¬partment, Public Assistance families andothers with minimum incomes pay no fees.A mother with an income of $350 per month(after deductions) who has one child wouldpay $4 per month.Finally, the SSC day care facilities willnot meet the needs of all Woodlawn moth-Rosenheim said “The new committee isnot bound by any previous legislation orreport. The committee has to take into ac¬count the Kalven committee report and therecommendation of the faculty student ad¬visory committee on campus student life(FSACCSL) which was submitted to thecouncil this week.”Rosenheim also said that the faculty peti¬tioners were not consulted about the mem¬bers of the committee, and that the chair¬man of the committee is now responsiblefor the initiation of the student members.Wegener said Thursday that the studentswill be chosen “as soon as possible. I hopeto confer with the councils today or tomor¬row.”Wegener added that he had assumed thatthe councils would nominate one of theirown members for the committee. A rumorwas spreading around campus that the ers nor was it designed to do so. No singlecenter could attempt to meet this need.Good day care costs at least $1,500 per yearper child, and research and practical ex¬perience indicate that centers serving over100 children in group day care are too largeto be operated efficiently.We agree, with the numerous campusgroups who are organizing for better day¬care facilities in the Hyde Park-Woodlawnarea, that the need is enormous and thatconcrete steps must be taken to alleviatethese needs, but we regret that an informa¬tion gap has existed concerning the SSCprogram.September ClassSchool of Social Service AdministrationSocial Service Center Studentscouncils might band together to choose onlya few possibilities or that they might nomi¬nate students other than council members.“We should have started meeting yester¬day. Seriously, the time is short. We onlyhave a month and a half now and anothermonth and a half in the fall before Lhe No¬vember 1 deadline when our report is due,”Wegener added.The committee will have an advisory ca¬pacity as do all council sub-committees andthe full council will vote on acceptance ofthe report.100 Days RallyThe rally submitting the first 100days of the Nixon administration toa “critical appraisal” will be heldon Saturday, May 3 at 2 pm insteadof (Mi Sunday as was reported in Tues¬day’s Maroon.Committee Continued From Page OneCommittee To Start SoonCANT AFFORD NEW FURNITURE?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGANCREEK TOWN'SEXCITING...GREEKISLANDSRESTAURANT& GROCERYFeaturing OutstandingGreek CuisineAvgolemono SoupStuffed Vine Leaves -Mousaka SouvlakiPastichio — Spinach jCheese Pie — Fresh Fish— Desserts — Baklava— Creme CarameleFINEST IMPORTEDGREEK WINESCognac — Ouzoand CocktailsOPEN DAILY— 11:30 TO11:30 P.M.FREE PARKING766 W. Jackson Blvd.782-9855&XSB oKssacnsa What’s sucha“funny”*bookdoing with sucha sad title?ProfessorUJilmess must Diea novel by Paul RaderBecause a sad title gives just the right twist of the knifeto what is surely the year's most insidious, most devas¬tating satire. All about a student uprising that makesColumbia look like a convent.* “Funny and trenchant."—Barbara a. bannon, Publishers'WeeklyJ4.95. now at your bookstore THE DIAL PRESSAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH——NEW & USED—Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders - Phones - AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% dhcount to studtnH with ID card: in all the world..f \ there'si 1 just*V I one\ / 1 you!rIn most companies, you as an individual accountant or auditor may be overlooked.“Overlooked’’ is something that doesn't happen here.You will be working in management-oriented field auditing—with continuing expansionand promotion. The responsibilities and duties are substantially the same as a medium-size or large Public Accounting firm, but with these exceptions: no tax rush—limitedovertime and travel—and you count!You will begin as an auditor traveling in the State of Illinois working in a key fieldwith 430 health care institutions. From there on, you can “write your own ticket”.Our promotions come from the ranks of those who know us best, our own staff. Thereis virtually no limit.But, that’s getting a little ahead of ourselves. The first step is to examine what wehave to offer you and . . . what you have to offer us.For the first few months you will be involved in an on-the-job training-program thatinvolves immediate responsibility—from then on you will be assigned to specificprojects that involve a minimum of supervision. And then . . . well, you determine that.You will receive an excellent salary, a comprehensive benefit package, expenses, andof course, a unique opportunity in the accounting field.Now . . . what do you have to offer Blue Cross/Blue Shield? We would expect you tobe a graduate with a major in accounting, and have the ability and drive to be ableto start a project and carry it thru to completion.We would like to hear from youBLUE CROSSBLUE SHIELD Please write to:College Relations CoordinatorBlue Cross/Blue Shield222 No. Dearborn StreetChicago, Illinois 60601art equal opportunity employerIJ May 2, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7HUGEf»RE- RETURN SSALE20% DISCOUNT!EVERY BOOK IN THESTORE!I Vt DAYS ONLYFriday, May 2, & Saturday, May 3.TEXTBOOKS, REFERENCEBOOKS, PAPERBACKSEvery Book in Slock—All Sales Final!Today and Tomorrow—20% DiscountFirst Time in the Store’s History,All Titles at 20% Discount for 1 Vi Days!THEBOOKSTORE58th & Ellis4 ] • , it ■-* -Ilf—in ■ i i8/Th« Chicago Maroon/May 2, 196?around and about the midwayInaugurationA solemn ceremony was held in MandelHall Wednesday morning for David L.Fisch, in what was announced as the “ninthpresidential inauguration” for president ofthe University.The program for the ceremony listedspeakers such as John de Rockofafeller IV,Avarice Brundage, and Miss Virginia Slims.Fisch delivered an inaugural address, re¬citing the phrases which he promised wouldbe the catchwords of his administration:•life of the mind,” “rational discourse,”“organic unity,” “community of scholars,”“publish or perish,” “mission.”Following the “inauguration,” there wasa reception at Ida Noyes Hall.No Pre-RegistrationBecause of extensive curriculum revisionin several divisions of the College, therewill be no formal pre-registration this yearonly. Next week, however, students will re¬ceive registration program informationcards from the office of George Playe, deanof undergraduate students, which theyshould complete and bring to their advisersbefore June 11 in order to informally dis¬cuss plans for the following year.In this way, Dean Playe said, registrationin September for 2500-2700 College studentswon't be quite as hectic.Smiths and Sachs of the University canrejoice — registration begins with the S’snext fall.Ethiopia ExpeditionMan-like teeth and jaws found by an an¬thropological team in Ethiopa led by F.Clark Howell, chairman of the anthropolo¬gy department, have doubled the knownhistory of man’s presence in East Africa tonearly 4.000,000 years.The expedition, including other scientistsfrom Berkeley and the University Ghenthas found nearly 40 such fossils in a seriesof old swamp and deltaic deposits in thebasin of the lower Omo River in the easternRift Valley of Lake Rudolph, Ethiopia. An¬other group from the National Museum ofNational History in Paris is also workiingin the area.“At least two different species of man¬like creatures are represented,” Howellsaid. “One, known from the two lower jawsfound by our team and from teeth found byboth our team and the Paris group, is sub-,stantially more robust and massive in toothand jaw structure than the other.“Most of the teeth found by both contin¬gents, as well as two incomplete lower jawsrecovered by the Paris group, seem to rep¬resent another pre-human species. We don’t “PRESIDENT" FISCH AND FRIENDSOn the receiving linehave enough fossil material to identify itprecisely, but what we have suggests thatthis species is probably allied in some waywith the primitive and small form of aus-tralopith (man-ape) from South Africa. Ifthis is the case, we have been able to deter¬mine its age more accurately than ever be-for,” he added.Howell’s expedition has also found an ex¬ceptional number of mammal fossils andother vertebrates in the area. “These largecollections of fossils promise to throw muchnew light on the origins and evolutions ofthe distinctive African fauna,” Howell said.The expedition has tripled the total num¬ber of known mammals in the Omo Riverbed area. Howell said that most of the newmammals are extinct species.DedicationA midwest center for solid state scienceresearch at the Argonne National Labora¬tory will be dedicated Monday, by Dr.Glenn T. Seaborg, chairman of the AtomicEnergy Commission.Dedication of the $4 million structure willtake place at 1:45 p.m. during the first dayof a two-day meeting at Argonne of the Na¬tional Academy of Science-National Re¬search Council Solid State Sciences Panel(huh!)Thirty-eight experimental laboratpriesfor solid state physics and materials sci¬ence research are housed in the new build¬ing. One hundred twenty-five scientists,technicians and visiting university profes¬sors and scientists will occupy the newbuilding.^ hat’s good forI urin Bicycle Coopis good forthe IJ.S.A.Cheapest prices for Carlton,Haleigh, Robin Hood, Falcon,Peugeot, Gitane, \lercier,Radius and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. Used bi¬cycles spasmodically.Hy-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 - 8:30; S&S 10 - 8Henry l ord rides a bicycle Jimmy’s#and the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FORUNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTH-FIFTH & WOODLAWNTHEBOOKNOOK FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY—WEEKLY—MONTHLYVWSAUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY IIAS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYPLUS 9*/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715Special OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discountl54°-5»W%ST,»rMI3-7SH« Wilzie i Slower Shop"ELOH ERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS’, r ,. .,, 149#JEASTS3rdSTREET Hurricane FilmsThe first moving pictures of hurricanes— time lapse films shot last summer froma satellite over the Gulf of Mexico taken byTetsuya Fujita, professor of geophysicalsciences — will be seen on Chicago tele¬vision Monday.The films will be broadcast on “Per¬spectives” on WLS-TV at 6:30 a.m. Mondayand 1 a.m. Tuesday. Also on the Mondayshow, David Atlas, professor of geophysicalsciences, will present the first radar pic¬tures of a hurricane. Atlas photographedthe hurricane for the US Navy more than 20years ago.DeathRaleigh Webster Stone, 79, professoremeritus of industrial relations in the grad¬uate school of business, died Tuesday night.He had served on The University of Chi¬cago faculty for 30 years, retiring in 1955.He was for many years a consultant onpersonnel and industrial management prob¬lems to business and labor organizations. Adistinguished authority in industrial rela¬tions and labor markets, he was highly re¬garded by the business community in Chi¬cago.Services will be private. In lieu of flowersthe family asks that gifts be made to TheUniversity of Chicago. FLOWERS ON THE QUADS“Tiptoe through the tulips"Geophysics MoveThe department of geophyscial sci¬ences, which celebrated the com¬pletion of their new building yester¬day, has not yet officially moved inas reported in Tuesday’s Maroon.The department will officially openthe building October 14, when anopen house will be held.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.NEW LOCATION!UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREis now at 1150 E. 63rd(Betw. Woodlwn & Univ.)Complete Selection ofSweatshirts, rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear,jackets, camping equip¬ment, wash pants, sportshirts, pajamas, hikingshoes, sweat pants, etc.,etc., etc.UNIVERSALArmy Dept. StoreHY 3-1187 PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 - 1 GOLD CITY INN**** Maroon"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10%STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559( Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT OrdersTouring Europe in ’69?RememberCZECHOSLOVAKIA!It’s easy to go there!Meet the young people of Prague. See thehistoric landmarks: Hradcany Castle,Wenceslaus Square, the little Golden Streetwhere Kafka lived, the oldest university InCentral Europe. And gorge yourself ona feast of all the arts ... Mediaevalto multi-media, Baroque andRennaissance, Dvorak and rock,frescoes and films.Not more than ninety minutes from thefarthest point in Europe ... Prague isone of the most exciting capitals inthe world today and Bratislava, theromantic capital of Slovakia on theDanube is just an hour's drivefrom Vienna.Group tours from $57 per personfor 7 days, all incl.Vitas issued within 48 houra.Contact your travel agent or writetor information:CEDOK CZECHOSLOVAK TRAVEL BUREAU10 East 40th Street, New York, N Y. 10016City.May 2, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/9iutm i »*-*■ t f t >(Maroon Classified Ads)STOMP A WEIRDO FOR JESUSRATES: 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, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMA¬TION: phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3266.RECORD CLUBJoin the NSA Record Club. Appli¬cation in this Maroon.LOSTA black leather notebook. L. JansenInternational House, FA 4-8200, Rm411.WANTED TO BUYMotorcycle helmet 684-5722.FOR SALE'57 FORD, 312 C.I., Quad Std.Trans., Reverb, $125 Area Code815-838-1209VW exc. cond. '69 engine $800 734-6364, 6:30-7:30 M,W,Th,F,S.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.SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1969IDA NOYES CLOISTER CLUB9 to 12 p.m.$1 at the doorFor information288-8247TRIUMPH 68 TR 250. AM FM,alarm, undercoat, wire wheels, radi-als, tonneau, etc. $2,700 or offer.X3266 or 324-9358 eves.Air conditioner 6,000 BTUs West-inghouse. Perf. Cond. $100 or offer.684-7838.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. Good used TVs reconditioned. $24.95& up. American Radio, 1300 E. 53rd,53 Kimbark Plaza.'62 Chevy: auto trans; steering; $300548-1535, or 538-5599.USED VOLKSWAGENS'61 Bug'64 Bug'66 Fastback very clean'67 Bug very cleanReasonable but haggelable. LeslyImports, 2235 S. Michigan 326-2550.1961 Merc. 6 cyl. clean new tiresCall BU 8-9106 after 7.Sony TC-200 stereo tapecorder, $100.4-mo-old $180 electric guitar 8< case,$85. FA 4-9500, rm 1802.Must sell now — bed, crib, rug,cart, 2 tables, drapes & rods, chair,lamp, typewr. 363-8049.3Vi rooms of furn., carpeting 8<drapes like new for sale. With orwithout apartment. Ideal for mar¬ried couple. Crandon & South ShoreDr. Tel No. 288-4275.'61 VW Bus, sunroof, good cond.$350. 324-4704 or 684-4770.SUZUKI 50cc excellent cond. only590 miles $200.00 324-4180, 236-5365ask for John.REMINGTON RAND Typewriter,16" carriage, elite type. Manual office model, good condtion. $35.Juliann Bamberg X3774 eves.Super strobe It. 684-5110 (PM).PEOPLE FOR SALEAUTHENTIC CHINESE COOKINGtaught in lovely Chinese home. Tui¬tion and materials $30. Begin May19 Limited enrollment, 7 per class.324-8070.May I do your typing? 363-1104.Typing? Call Ruth 363-5609 (eve).Typing 45c pg. — 568-3056 eves.PEOPLE WANTEDWANTED: Piano accompanist formale voice student. Part-time, on-campus work. Opera and oratorio.659-2398 (AC-219).TEACHERS WANTED: Entire West,Southwest, and Alaska. FREE REG¬ISTRATION. Southwest TeachersAgency, 1303 Central Ave. NE. Albu¬querque, N.M. 87106.Fun-loving girl for camping trip inWestern U.S. in July or Aug. CallBruce 955-17/6.WHORESFREE — one or two whores in THEWHORE CAMILLE, fresh improvtheatre fresh from 14 week north-side engagement. "Fantastic" —Sun-Times; "Shocking" — Trib.Watch for it Tuesday, in RCTheatre. FREE FROM FOTA.HOUSE FOR SALE8211 CRANDONIdeal home for university familyCustom Built Georgian, 8 rooms, 3large bedrooms, V/i baths, full com¬pleted basement, gas heat, 2 carbrick garage. Reduced to $29,000 byowner. Essex 5-6938. WANTED TO RENTWanted to rent for next year 3-4bdrm apt. near campus call BU8-6610 ex2107 or 2106.Wt 2 rms in apt Kathy/Amy x3755.HELP! need purple/green aptjune/sept erika 1319x 288-6610.FOR RENTLooking for a groovy apt for thesummer? IV2 rm apt. available June15 to Sept 15. Comes complete withcat. 643-3088.Furnished rm. 493-3328.Apts, available now and May 1. 4rm 8, IV2 rm eff. Call Bill Stoll DO3-6200; Steve FA 4-0342.IV2 rm apt., 5303 Kimbark, $89.From now or June 1 till Sept. '69 orSept. '70. Call 667-3410.ROOMMATES WANTEDFemale grad student to share apt.near campus. Own room, $50 mo.Call 324-7095.Female roommates wanted 6 rmapt. air. cond. summer sublet 57th 8,Dorchester. Call 493-3284.Share 6 rm apt. nr. Harper Ct. with2 men. June to Oct. with opt. fornext yr. 324-1768.SUMMER SUBLETSummer sublet with opt. for next yr.Washer 8, dryer, dishwasher 7650Chappel (1 block East of Jeffrey)$55 mo. Dave, 493-8863.Fern to share apt w 2 fern gradstudents May-Sept 288-3694.Share 6 rm, 2 bath apt. near 53rd Stwith 3 men. Spacious, cheap. 643-4821.Female roommate wanted Inspacious apartment 55th 8. Univer¬sity. From May 1. Prefer grad,stud, or working girl. $58 per mo.493-3896.2 female roommates for summerand after in roomy So. Sh. aptcheap rent. Grad stud or workinggirl pref. Margaret 731-0339.Wanted one roomate to share groovyapt. with two other girls for sum¬mer. Phone evenings 752-6274.Female wanted as 4th roommatesummer term, next year too if youwish. Air-cond. apt. four blocks fromcampus. ($65 mo.) Call 684-2452 af¬ter 6 P.M.Summer sublet; own room; 6V2 rm.furn. apt. air cond., $65 month;57th 8. Dorch. 667-5124.Sublet 6/10-9/1 South Shore. 5rooms, one air-conditioned. Fullyfurnished with piano, books, paint¬ings. Beautiful courtyard. Nearcampus bus and 1C. $160 month.Cali X2408 8:30-5:00 ; 493-9276 after 6.SUM SUBLT 5’/2 rm hge Ivrm, Fpl,sunrm, study (or xtr bdrm) stereo,TV $160 493-6507 FAB PAD.Women wanted to sublet June-Sept,6 rrr, air cond, 57th 8. Dorchstr. 667-6357. ,NEW ORLEANS, summer sublet, 2bedrm, furnished spt. in FrenchQuarter, balcony, $70 month — Lar¬ry 955-3575.Summer sublet — 4 bedrms. 55th 8,Cornell. $150 mo. 363-8211.Summer. One bedroom, partly fur¬nished. Close to campus. $100 permo. Call Doug 538-1027.Summer sublet: 4 rm apt. 53rd 8<Kenwood, furnished Call 288-6483.IVi rooms, $96, Blackstone 8. 57th,lease or sublet May 15th or June 1stto Oct. 1st 752-3922 eve-wkends, 944-7552 ext. 652 days.4Vi rm apt. 5417 Dorchester 6/10-9/1, year's option. $110 mo., furnfor sale 752-2162.Summer sublet June 15 end Sept. 7rms. 324-7417.Summer sublet: Ig. 2 bath, 2 bdrmcorner apt. 51st & Blackstone. Fur¬nished. 955-9256.Jnn-Sept. sublet furn 3 room apt. 24hrs desk service 10 min walkcampus, 1 min to I.C. $136 month363-4300, ext 610.JANIS JOPLIN POSTERSThis out-of-sight picture of Mother Earth can be yours for $1.50. Printedwith silver metallic and black ink. Available now while the supply lasts atMaroon Business Office, 304 INH. (size 23"x 19")-H- Summer (fall) sublet or share wS rms. 324-1632. , , ,10/The Chicago Maroon/May 2, 1969 June 10-Aug. 28 LOVELY 4 roomcottage, furnished, garden, So. Shore$110 p.month 8< util. 324-5742.Sblt 6/14-9/30 3 room modernMadison Park $100? 373-6271.Summer sublet, IVi rooms furnishedJuly and August. East Hyde Park,call 782-8906 until 5:00, 285-3090 after9 P.M. One bedroom Hyde Park apt. forsublet to QUIET person Junethrough mid-September. Dickeringfor rent including utilities at 70 permonth. Call 493-2757.Sexy rooms — $115 to $170 for thewhole summer — kitchen facilities— 2 blocks from the Quads — CallPL 2-9407, or come see for yourselfat 5555 S. Woodlawn — preferably6:30 — 7:30 weekday evenings. The film makers who brought voi,the Doc Film production "The College" and "Home for Life" about’the Drexel Home for the Aged brinoyou "THUMBS DOWN" at h ESunday night, 7:30. 61FOTA IS HERESummer sublet: furn apt. for 4 air-cond opt. for fall 493-2205.6V2 rm 3-4 bdrm sum sublt Wdlwnnr 53rd furn. porch $160 643-6669.Summer sublet: split $200 mo. 6ways in hge townshouse. Call Steve684-0560. Summer Sublet May thru Sept, furnif desired 3 rm for info call Barry752-9891.3Vi rm furn; 56th nr Mryld; avbl.June. 684-5110 or XM43.POISSON UBER ALLES FOTA Chalk-in. May 12th Only.SOME SOUND ADVICEStereo Components at MUSICRAFTScott 2505 compact was $450, only$339.95. VAR Amplifier only $189 9520% discount on AR speakersCampus rep. Bob Tabor 324-3005June thru Sept; nice 3 room apt.$105; call 548-1535 or 538-5599. Join the NSA Record Club—33% to 79% discounts—select from all labels3mcdlcu’sSummer sublet, 7 rms, IVi bath plusporch, June — Aug., 56th and Black¬stone, call 684-1557.Sublet: 6 rm. nicely furn. apt., closeto campus; 3 bdrm., terrace; aircond. TV; 6/15-9/1, $180 mo. 643-7473. —never any obligationLifetime membership fee $2.00 Ap¬plication forms at dorms, bulletinboards, etc. uc/nsa.You can't feed a baby on the prin¬ciples of simple mechanics, Leo. SeeTolstoy NOW.steakburgersSchlitz on TapFree PeanutsServing the Extra LargePitchers of Beer pizzaSMEDLEY'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 May I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EfendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkUofC Tuesday Night Special20% reduction. The Efendiinvites students, faculty andstaff for memorable entrees($3.50-5.75) This ad entitlesbearer to 20% reduction ofdinner cost, includingcocktails and wines.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 1-3000THE PROPER ANSWER: LEAD SOME OTHER STYLE OF LIFErit heeo! Daunce to the "hard-lis¬tenin' " sounds of WMOH! SAT!!!!! |PHIL OCHS — May 19.READ YOUR OWN WORDS, JOHNM "l would think that there arepeople who are so unured to whatthey are doing that they do not seethat it has evil consequences — soimmersed in daily work that theycannot see the long-term effects."CHUCK BERRY — May 6.FOTA IS HEREMAY 19 — PHIL CCHS Concert.Prof Marvin Mirsky will speak onTHE USES OF BIBLICAL MATE-RIALS IN MODERN LITER¬ATURE" at Hillel tonight. 8:30.Follow the foxes to Ahmad's.Why are Tolstoy's children calledthe cucumber kids. See TolstoyNOW.The one & only CHUCK BERRY inconcert Tues, May 6 at Mandel Hall.Tickets 3, $2.50, $2.FOTA IS HEREIt is reasonable to say that the ma¬jor religious messengers of the past(Moses, Buddha, Jesus, Muhammad..) achieved radical transforma¬tions not oniy in society but also inthe hearts of men. Can you trulysay that church reform or partisanpolitical activity alone can effect so¬lutions to our present global Ills?Baha'i's the world over acceptBaha'u'lla's statement that "So pow¬erful is unity's light that it can illu¬mine the whole earth." Join us Mon¬days, 7:30-10:00, in Judson Lounge,Burton-Judson Court, to discuss, ar¬gue, question, or just listen.Johnny, be good and get me 2 tick¬ets for the May 6 CHUCK BERRYconcert at Mandel Hall.Folk dance in the quads by the ten¬ths courts. Sunday May 11. 1-6 P.M.Dunav Tamburitza orch. In case ofrain dance will be at Ida Noyes.Brickbats fly on May 4.Gerald Temaner and Gordon Quinn,Hyde Park Filmmakers, present an¬other film about Life in Chicago."THUMBS DOWN". 7:30 Sunday,Hillel House.May 6 — CHUCK BERRY Concert. Tolstoy considered literary critics asmost ass-stute. See Tolstoy NOW.AMERICAN PREMIERE — MI¬CHAEL HASTINGS LEE HARVEYOSWALD — at the Play House, 2515W. 69th St. Tickets at Maroon Busi¬ness Office.CHUCK BERRY in concert Tues.,May 6. Tickets at $3, $2.50, $2, onsale in Mandel Box Office daily.HARPER THEATRE COFFEEHOUSE, 5238 S. Harper, reopensApril 25. Shows Friday and Saturday9 and 11. No charge. Donations.FOTA IS HEREU.S. Animal says: Got my MOH-JAMS woikin', might be dey woik onyou? Ida Noyes, Sat. 9-12 P.M.Trip out with Marco Polo, the trav-ellingest agent in town, 326 4422.Get tickets now at Mandel Box Of¬fice for CHUCK BERRY CONCERT— Tues, May 6, 8:30 P.M. at MandelHall — $3, $2.50, $2.Will Camille strip? Tuesday.Beaux Arts Ball tickets NOW ONSALE $2.50 each Mandel Hall BoxOffice 11-5 daily. This dance in Bart¬lett Gym features PAUL BUT¬TERFIELD BLUES BAND, MAGICSAM BLUES BAND, and an unbelie¬vable LIGHT SHOW. Everybody willbe there. You? NO TICKETS ATTHE DOOR.Hey, you!, I'm talking to ya.Out of his gourd, I tell you.Stick with me for KOSMICTROOTHS.Q. — You live here all your life?A. — Not yet.Supper at Hillel Sunday night. 6:00$1.00.FOTA IS HEREFOTA — Film Program, May 6.Holden AusTs "In the Divine Plan.""If the academic style of life is ir¬relevant — as it is to so manypeople the proper answer is tolead some other style of life." IFYOU DON'T LIKE IT HERE, WHYDON'T YOU GO TO RUSSIA,WHERE YOU BELONG John Mos¬cow doesn't think that there is athird alternative — that of reform¬ing academic life to make it rele¬vant. LIKE I SAID, JOHN, BACKTO LOGIC CLASS. PUBLIC NOTICLBROWN S SUZUKICHIC A(.OLANI)S LARCI SI, SUZUKI Dl ALI KANNOUNCES ITS ANNUALSPRING SALt19b9 5OCT S2491969 20IXT $4501969 501KT $795MANY US1 1) CYULl S I ROM$95.00COMPLLIL PARTS&SLRVK LFACILITIESMON I Rl 9 9SA L & SUN 9 6RO 1 64546454 N. WESTERNBONUS 10f/<STUDENT DISCOUNTON PARTS & CYCLESWITH YOUR STUDENT I D.Learn the truthKrery man and woman, particu¬larly those- entered upon matri¬mony, should possess a copy of thenew and valuable book,SexologyBy wutjIaw h. Walling, a. M., M. D.which sensibly treats of the sexologicalrelations of both sexes, and as well .nowand when to advise son or daughter.Unequaled endorsement of the press,ministry, legal and medical professions,i s lr •%#!«* that the main causeuoyounnowo( unhappiness, Ul-i health, sickly children, and divorce is admittedby physicians and shown by court records to be Ig¬norance of the laws of self and sex V Rent post¬ed on receipt of price. Fliwi.G0. ( loth-bound, $1.00. WriteOpinions" and “ Table of Contents,” also our loo-pagepaid on receipt of price. Fine Morocco binding,$1.50. Cloth-bound, $1.00. Write for “ Other Peopledns” and “ Table of Contents," also onr 100-page illus¬trated catalogue of books of merit—FREE.PURITAN PUBL18HXJIO CO.JJ>e£L_gO!J^U«delph^_50% SALEOn all Humanities & Social Sciences Hardbound BooksCONTINUES atSTUDENT CO-OPHours: 9-10 daily Reynolds Club Bsmt.CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998 ikHas what you need from a $10[used 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom Arear pet. Specializing in Remnants Yf& Mill returns at a fraction of theiriginal cost.[Decoration Colors and Qualities. (I Additional 10% Discount with thisFREEDEUVERY i Memphis — Chuck Berry.NAT'L STUDENT ASSN. RECORDCLUB All-label record savingsprices as low as 99c with no min¬imum purchase obligations. No auto¬matic shipments. NSA Record Clubgives you unlimited choice of everyavailable LP at rock-bottom prices— discounts to 79%.FOTA IS HEREGuffaw freely at Mandel this week¬end. (after all, it's Blackfriars). SeeTolstoy NOW.CHGO'S OWN SWINGERS CLUGSend $1 for 52 page illust. magazine.100s of personals. MKS, Box 3806,CHGO 60654.FRIDAY, 8 P.M., Blue Gargoyle:Newsreel Films (Panthers, Haight-Ashbury), free.WRITERS' WORKSHOP PL 2-8377.Sweet Little SixteenMaybelleneRoll Over BeethovenSchool DaysNo Particular Place to GoYou Can't Catch MeRock 'n Roll MusicWhat really goes on in the forest.Tolstoy knows. Do you? See TolstoyNOW.THUMBS DOWN. A film by GordonQuinn and Gerald Temander chro¬nicles the attempt of a teenage par¬ish group on the conservative North¬west side of Chicago to "bringChrist to the neighborhood" by hold¬ing an anti-war Mass. At Hillel, Sun¬day, 7:30 P.M. 75c.FOTA IS HERE They're all CHUCK BERRY, the"king 8, high priest of rock & rollmusic."Johnny, be good and get me 2 tick¬ets for the CHUCK BERRY CON¬CERT next Tuesday.Stephen saw visions, will Ron Kenings? What's that, a rescreening of TC's? FOTA IS HEREWhat's MOH? Ida No, what's MOHwid you? Knock, Knock, Sat.It takes 8 minutes to complete aRE-CON questionnaire.Tickets for PHIL OCHS at MandelBox Office today.posterspipesincensescarvespapersmod tiesjewelrybuttons51st near Harper955-3614 open daily at noonCOLLEGE STUDENTSPart-time Employment2 to 10 P.M. Shift Only395 PER HOUR4 day min. per weekCALL 263-0618 Chicago The Chicago Repertory Company atthe Play House is Chicago's newestd inner theatre, specializing insteaks, and providing theatre thatcan not be seen elsewhere in Chi¬cago. Tickets for LEE HARVEY OS¬WALD now available at MaroonBusiness Office, 304 Ida Noyes. Stud,discount.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.Tues. — Chuck Berry.FOTA IS HEREThe funniest movie ever made iscoming, June 6. Doc Films.Student discounts on renting andbuying cars in Europe. Call LarryGoldbert 493-8863. See Tolstoy NOW. Blackfriars'CHARGE OF THE NUMIDIANCAVALRY, an original musical(yes, the one the Maroon finallymentioned) based on the life of Tol¬stoy. Fri. & Sat. Mandel Hall.Stud fac price $2.00, 1.50. Ticketinfo No. 3567.You should't complain, Blackfriars,cause if you wanted the Grey CityJournal to cover your play, youshould have had the smarts to getMike Sorkin and Jessica Seigel toplay the leads. That's the way it'sdone, you know.BELL BOTTOMS, WRANGLERJEANS, $4.98, converse gym shoes$5.98. Limited supply. John's MensWear. 1459 E. 53rd.Smyrd cometh again 5/10 for 69.Saturday at the Gargoyle: JAZZwith the COSMICS, 8:30, $1. May 6 — CHUCK BERRY.Send in your RE-CON form today.RAMSEY LEWIS BENEFIT FORHEADSTART. Tuesday, May 6, 8:30.Prudential Bldg. Auditorium. Stu¬dent Discount tickets $2.00 (US-people only). Call 643-0770 or at thedoor.Classes for dev. Body Consciousness.T. Th 1:30 Ida Noyes 3rd fl.FOTA IS HERE.The first conference is to be heldMay 25-30 and is entitled "Recruit¬ment and Retention of Police Per¬sonnel." (This certainly sounds in¬nocent enough; take the example ofthe Oakland Police Dept. They usethe most modern, computerized psy¬chological and sociological testingmethods to duplicate exactly the ra¬cist pigs they now have. Oaklandthen retains them with the highestwage scale and fringe benefits inthe country — even better than Chi¬cago). That's real progress: askOakland panthers Huey Newton,Bobby Hutton or Eldridge Cleaver."when anyone informs me that hehas a cold, I ascertain the kind ofunderwear he uses. If woolen, nomatter in what climate or in whatseason of the year, my answer isinvariably the same: "I do not won¬der.""Woolen underwear is the cause ofcolds, pneumonia, • pleurisy, some-times rheumatism, and quitefrequently, smallpox, the latterbeing a filth disease. Woolen under¬wear and cleanliness are not sy¬nonymous. Wool cannot be thorough¬ly cleaned by washing. "As for my¬self, I derive pleasure and comfortin wearing the Dr. Deimel Under¬wear of Linen-Mesh. As a teacher ofPhysical Education and all that per¬tains thereto, with an experience of35 years, I am convinced that Linenis the ideal underwear, but it shouldbe meshed. The medical men of to¬day, the up-to-date medical men,are abandoning the woolen under¬wear theory in favor of porousLinen as represented by Dr. DeimelUnderwear."—Edward B. Warman, A.M., Author"Hints on Health," Spalding AthleticLibrary.FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS 1969Schedule of EventsDATE PLACE EVENT TIMEThursday , May 1 toSaturday, May 17 Bergman Gallery, Cobb Hall5811-27 S. Ellis Ave. Student Art andPhotography Exhibit Regular HoursThursday, May 1 toSaturday, May 17 Quadrangles Outdoors Sculpture exhibit byVirginio Ferrari and John Henry All the timeFriday, May 2 Hutchinson Court Outdoor Luncheon Concert:Brass Chamber Ensemble 12:00 a.m.Friday, May 2 Social Science Research Bldg.,Room 122, 1126 E. 59th Evening of Indian Poetry andMusic—A.K. Ramanujan et al 7:30 p.m.Saturday, May 3 Quantrell Auditorium Jazz Workshop, featuringlecture by Joe Segal,avant-garde jazz afficionado 1 to 5 p.m.Saturday, May 3 Cobb Hall 101 Meeting of RimWorkshop Group 2:30 p.m.Saturday, May 3 Hutchinson Court Outdoor Concert:Mouthwatering Assortment Band 8:30 p.m.Sunday, May 4 Quantrell Auditorium Jazz Workshop 1 to 5 p.m.Sunday, May 4 Mandel Hall Student-Faculty Music Recital 8:30 p.m.Sunday, May 4 Social Science Research Bldg.,Room 122 Movie: Dutchman by LeRoi Jones(Price $1.25) 7:30 and 9 p.m.Monday, May 5 Hutchinson Court Movie: Stereopticon(No admission charge) 7:30 and 9 p.m.Tuesday, May 6 Mandel Hall Crayon-In AfternoonPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVER ; SAUK TRAILDAY CAMP(or boys ond girls 4-13 yoorsof age spaciousPool on our grounds oilsports—oris—music—language small groupsCamp site635 East Sauk Trail RdCamp DirectorGeorge Feld, M.A., Univ of ChicogoFor informationcall 721-4562 or write to Souk Trail DayComp, 9126 South Euclid Avenue, Chgo.600617 (oldest established comp in this o m)■ i fill' — TAhSAM-YMtCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out318 East 63rd MU 4-1062, 'i 8 t| to i*!C ;i I t— UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644'! v ; . . f : < : . . : 1May 2, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11t , V V' >V", •' l V" r V* f'»(II>.[ * [BLOODSWEAT©TEARSTHE ILLINOISSPEED PHESSIINCLUDING:HARD LUCK STORY/ HERE TODAYPAY THE PRICE/FREE RIDE/GET IN THE \mon an d^arfunkd' W-^kh>stmanfancf Jhymr MONGO SANTAMARIASTONE SOULINCLUDING:STONED SOUL PICNIC / LITTLE GREEN APPLESSEE SAW / CLOUD NINE / LOVE CHILDHomeward BotoxThe Oangtmg Conversatkx59th St Bridge Song ifeetin Groov)and more/^SWEATS^ You've Made Me So Very Happy^VVariations On A Theme By Erik SatieAnd When I Die/God Bless The ChildUNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO iJirduvis /LEONARD COHENSONGS FROM A ROOMINCLUDING:BIRD ON THE WIREA BUNCH OF LONESOME HEROSYOU KNOW WHO I AM LADY MIDNIGHTSEEMS SO LONG AGO. NANCY MIKEBLOOMFIELDalKOOPERSTEVE STILLSSUPERSESSIONINCLUDINGALBERT S SHUEFLE/HIS HOLY MODAL MAJESTYOU DON T LOVE ME/SEASON Of JUcUtSlu JOHNNY WINTER„, including J/KmMHHftkColumbiaAnd Lowesare GrossGET AN EXTRA 50< OFFWITH THIS AD. AT LOWES1538 E. 55th MU 4-1505GOOD THRU MAY 10,1969 CHICAGOINCLUDINGI'M A MAN/SOMEDAY/BEGINNINGSLISTEN/LIBERATIONy The -ChicagoTransitAuthoritygmiffimmA Am YAL«v« 'CHILD IS FATHER TO THE MANINCLUDINGI LOVE YOU MORE THAN YOU'LL EVER KNOWI CAN'T QUIT HER SOMETHIN GOIN ONHOUSE IN THE COUNTRYM HARDINSUITE FOR SUSANMOORE AND DAMION-WE ARE-ONEONE, ALL IN ONEincludingQuestion Of BirthOnce-TouchedBy FlameEverything Good]Becomes More TrueOne, One, ThePerfect SumLast Sweet Moment: INCLUDING.IT'S A BEAUTIFULDAY TODAYHOOCHIEOOH MAMAOOHSEEINGBETWEEN THELINES SKYLINENASHVILLEBOB DYLANincluding:I Threw ItAll AwayNashvilleSkyline RagGirl From theNorth CountryLay LadyLayTonight I’llBe SlayingHere With (You'KtrrrrrfrrrffmtrrftrfnrmtrNtffirfrrtrtiGREY CITYJOURNAL Number 20The Talent OfSidney DelevanteAvantI do not paint with yellow or mauveI do not paint with greenI will not paint an apple or nudeor anything I’ve seenI do not paint with gouache or oilI do not paint “caisein,”I will not use a white or grayumber or ultramarineTiJcTlSVHJ J ' Jr' rI will not paint a man or mouse .I will not paint a treeI shall not paint a nine by twelveor a ten by thirty threeI’ll paint a painting big as a wallflat as a mat and black as a pallas tough as nails and as bitter as gallor I won’t paint anything at all. WHO IS SIDNEY DELEVANTE? He is a little white-haired New York artist who writes peotry too. He hastaught at Cooper Union, Columbia, Pratt Institute, theArt Students League and a number of other schools. Hispoems come to him in the strangest places — he oncewas taking a bath, had an inspiration, and wrote it in themoisture collected on the wall. Unfortunately, by thetime he came back to write it down, it was gone. Thefollowing are some of his poems and drawings:Eggs Squarethe sky was greyand I was greyit was a moment flightywallabies flewand danced and drewon clouds of lignum vitaethe earth had changedand I had changedthe hour was surrealisticsnakes had legsand cows laid eggssquare, violet and sadistic.the dream was realand i was realmy body was warm with iceAll shees were sheall hees were meand everything happened twice. TremoloI tried and tried last night to sleepI counted sixty dozen sheepthe sheep changed colors in my headthe white ones changed to cadmium redand I, I topsy turved in bedthe cadmium sheep, they changed to greenthe fat ones, pronto changed to leanthe lean, they changed from green to whitethey changed and changed thoughout the nightI worked real hard to separate themthen dropped to sleep and dreamed I ate themI woke at noon, my body creakedmy bones were stiff, my stomach shriekedI ached and ached from head to toemy insides doing remoloapart from this, I natch felt blahI opened my mouth and out came “BAH.” DreamarooLast night I dreamed a dreamarooI dreamed I zoomed through the letter “Q,”landed square on a block of “D’s,”made a glitter from zitmus treesI gathered the D’s the glitter, the “Q,”poured all three in a bottle of dewmounted my lusty lavender lion,flew to Faloo by way of Orionplayed pink polo with polar bearschanged ten circles to sixteen squarestook the circles, the squares and a “G,”asked myself, “Is this me, Is this me?”no answer came for a year and a daysudden I turned and an angel said “hey!I’ll show you the land of L’s and Z’s,”then natch, I awoke as easy as peas.13Coloramathe number three was warm with lovethe question mark wore one green glovelean letters- leaped like tiny toadsthen mr. mu. spoke fifteen odespink winds played tender luuabieswhite trees sang songs to twenty skiesred rocks ran thirty miles or morethen forty elephants waxed the floor. sirOskar Werner- JuSe Christie *Truffaut’s FAHRENHEIT 451TONIGHT! COBB HALL 7:15 and 9:30 75£ IN COLOR DOC FILMSCHARGE OF THE NUMIBIAN CAVALRYA MUSICAL DRAMA BASED ON TOLSTOYS LIFEI IS'30TSl-°°A $2.50 ▼2-3 I PM STUS^tAC. I E 57 ANDi IdXSOOUNT SOOiS UNIVERSITYRESERVATI0NS MI 3 0S00, X3667 ]LcfsO l JorJeSL,DUTCHMAN5-fnPRitv 6sS'K»r(cv' Kmcht ftl r«UN 04 y Wa y y7:30 i 9:00p.ro.vSoc. Sc». 13aPricc f 1.^5 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856 WHAT CHICAGO RADIO STATIONDOES REALLY STRANGE THINGSFRIDAYS 10 P.M. TO MIDNIGHTAND SUNDAYS MIDNIGHT TO2:30 A.M.?]/>•whpk fm 883THE DEPARTMENT OF MUSICTHE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSpresentJOHN COBBpianistSonata B-flat Maj SchubertFirst Sonata IvesMONDAY 8:30 P.M.MAY 5, 1969 MANDEL HALLAdmission is free * The public is invitedHeld over 4th MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDA bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CLIFF ROBERTSONCLAIRE BLOOM11 uCHARLY^. _ A Student rate every\| Hi) day BUT Saturdaywith I.D. 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Toto. the sad-eyed Keatonesqueclown, is beautiful.”— Arthur Knight, Saturday Review ft1 AND THE e/LrZAilh(UCCKUACCI C UCC8U.IN!)* <o.™,PIER PAOLO PASOLINISI..Ir.-l the TQTONINETTO DAVOlt AND THE WORLO S ONi V TALKING CROW-t.d c, ALT REDO BINI O liMt, BRANDON FILMS. INC AW AMOSTOTOTHREEPENNYCINEMA 2424 N. Lincoln AvenueChicago, Illinois 60614phone 528-91262/Grey City Journal/May 2, 1st CHICAGO CONCERTAUDITORIUMFRIDAY, MAY 16*8:30 P.M.ONE PERFORMANCE ONLYTICKETS$6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50on sale at box officeMAILORDERSchecks payable toAuditorium Theatre75 E. 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May 2Fellini sJULIETTE OF THE SPIRITSWfeAWiVMay 3Burton Taylor MiLe Nichol sWHO'S AFRAID OFVIRGINIA WOOLF?May 9Alan Bates He Broca sKING OF HEARTSMay 10Lester sTHE KNACKTHE BEST QUALITIES of Thomas Dekker’s The Shoe¬maker’s Holiday are theatrical rather than literary. Un¬like his contemporaries Shakespeare and Webster, Dek-ker is not preoccupied with ideas, and his charactersembody no philosophies; consequently, the comic geniusin this chronicle of the doings of “a crew of good fel¬lows” is fully evident only in performance. The Renais¬sance Players, directed by Thomas Busch, gave ampledemonstration of Dekker’s clear and spirited comic vi- 'sion in their admirable production of this rarely-per¬formed play.Because Dekker is not an “intellectual” writer, be¬cause his observation of character has little to do witheither the ability of character to change or with mentalprocesses, his plays demand a style of acting differentfrom that best suited to the plays of Shakespeare. Dek¬ker’s characters are not self-conscious, and thus he doesnot use soliloquies to reveal doubt, change of attitude,indecision, or complex motivation — instead, he simplyuses soliloquies as vehicles for direct and forthrightstatements about what characters are going to do. Theseaspects of Dekker’s dramatic technique make severalspecific demands upon actors, the most important ofwhich is that actors must appear to be unself-conscious.Shakespeare’s characters often draw attention to theirstatus as artistic figments, but Dekker’s characters arenot aware of themselves as characters; consequently,they must never appear to be thinking unless the linescall for them to “think.”Generally speaking, the best acting is that whichseems artless — that in which the pose of the actor is itsown camouflage. It is this paradox which leads directorslike Pontecorvo and Pasolini to select non-professionalactors for the roles of “ordinary” people. But as O’Caseyonce observed, when amateurs are plunked on the stageto play “real” people; the results are often disastrous:the artificiality of theatrical conventions drains the aver¬age person of his vividness. The Renaissance Playersare, for the most part,,not afflicted with this problemcommon in productions of old plays: they are a mostaccomplished ensemble of actors. Outstanding amongthem are Gerald Fisher, as Simon Eyre, the “madcap”shoemaker who becomes Lord Mayor of London, andDavid Pichette, as irrepressible Firk, Eyre’s journey¬man. Both demonstrated an outstanding ability to com¬municate character In a manner both full and lively.Eyre is a bifurcated character — at once bombasticand benevolent, madcap and dignified — and Fisher re¬vealed both sides of his character truly. Dekker does notsatirize Eyre — who is, after all, the archetype of thesuccessful capitalist — and Fisher kept close to his roleand was careful never to mock the absurdities of thecharacter as he was acting them out. Firk, too, is spon¬taneous, forthright, utterly spirited and charming — andPichette, too, was so completely absorbed in his role thatone had no sense that one was watching an actor —which is what one must feel if Dekker’s comic effectsare to be fully realized. Like Shakespeare, Dekker was aman of the theatre, but for Dekker, a play is merely aplay, not (as for Shakespeare) a metaphor for life, but aliteral depiction of life. Thus Eyre and Firk reflect allTheater BBBSHHHHHHBMiBlackfriars: As InOriginal MusicalJUST WHAT IS BLACKFRIARS? An old demonic under¬ground religion which performs who knows what kind ofrites through the use of Black Magic? A big manufac¬turing company which produces “homemade” monks’bread and black current wine? No, Blackfriars is a stu¬dent-run group which annually produces orginal musi¬cals.Blackfriars was born midst hairy but co-ordinatedlegs in 1904 (true to the Elizabethan tradition, all thewomen’s parts were played by men). Wonder if theChicago Vice Squad knew about this?Believe it or not during the ’20’s and ’30’s, openingnights were the highlight of the Hyde Park cultural sea¬son. Tuxedo-clothed theatre-goers shelled out $10 a ticketfor the privilege of walking on a red carpet that wasopened down Mandel’s aisle. Though it sounds likestraight out of the 1940’s Hollywood movie musical,Blackfriars was considered^ during that period, the prizeover which the fraternities fought. Whoever won controlof Blackfriars was considered to weld the real campuspower. Campus politics ain’t what it used to be.This year Blackfriars is presenting The Charge ofthe Numidian Cavalry based on the life of Tolsoty writ¬ten by two third-year students — Marlene Ellin andRima Shore. It stars T. Edward Hearne as Tolsoty, JaneBatt as his wife, Ann Ashcraft and others. Directed bySusan Spector and Steven Urkowitz, it will be presentedFriday and Saturday in Mandel Hall at 8:30 p.m. Shoemaker”Hits The Nailtheir own individual quirks while at the same time theyrepresent more general characteristics of the life of thetime.The play also affirms values most relevant to our owntime. Youth and love emerge victorious over the forcesof age and war: Lacy and Rose successfully thwart theefforts of Otley and the Earl of Lincoln to keep themfrom marrying. Lacy, an Elizabethan draft-dodger,avoids the fate of maimed Ralph, escapes the clutches ofthe authorities, gets his girl, and is pardoned — evenknighted — by the King himself. The values of youth winout over those of the Establishment — the King must, inthe end, sanction “treason.” As Lacy, Christopher Lyonexpressed the very essence of youthful optimism andaffirmation of life in the face of the draft and a demand¬ing uncle. Though the modulation of his voice could havebeen more varied, he delivered his lines well — particu¬larly those in which he spoke in the accent of a Dutch¬man, for he communicated no feeling that he was “counterfeiting” — thus, like Fisher and Pichette, avoid¬ing the temptation to distinguish between actor and char¬acter, or between the character and the disguise headopts. Michael Sorkin, as Otley, devised a superlativelydetailed portrayal of the senile and ridiculous “heavyfather”: every bit of business, every gesture and reac¬tion had been carefully thought out and contributed tohis formidable characterization. Similarly, Robert Swan,as the Earl of Lincoln, masterfully suggested the bank¬ruptcy of the values of an aristocratic establishment con¬fronted with demands of youth to which it cannot ade¬quately respond. Swan’s characterization was both un¬derstated and evocative. Good performances were alsoturned in by Robert Forman as Hodge and Armin Barn¬ett as Ralph, who serves to remind us of the scarringpower of war.Jeanne Wikler was appropriately scatterbrained anddroll as Margery, Simon Eyre’s wife, though at timesshe spoke too rapidly. The other female personages inthe play are less thoroughly characterized than Marge¬ry: Sybil, played by Enid Rieser, was portrayed as alively and pert maid, though Mrs. Rieser’s gestures ten¬ded to be repetitious and her voice was not always proj¬ected enough to be heard very clearly. Caroline Heckgave Rose a sympathetic portrayal, though here again,problems with voice modulation and expression were evi¬dent. Although “blubbered Jane” differs from the otherfemale characters in that her role is primarily serious,Annalee Letchinger gave Jane a tragic dimension whichwas out of keeping with the tone of the play. Miss Letch¬inger played Jane like a Shakespearean character:thoughtful, meditative, with pauses in her speeches; butJane is really a much simpler character — quiet, gentle,firm, and not intellectual. The scenes between Jane andthe unfortunate Hammon (well-played by Richard Lymn)become almost grotesque, rather than merely ludicrous,if Jane is given a “Shakespearean” or quasi-tragic die-mension. The production itself was well-directed, briskly¬paced, and authentic, even to the use of Dekker’s songs;Lonnie McAllister’s costumes also deserve praise.“L^ts be merry whiles we are young,” urges SimonEyre, and indeed, Dekker’s Capitalist espouses all thebest values of youth which the play affirms. He is joinedby Dame Margery, who reminds us that “all flesh isgrass.” But the possibility of perpetual failure in life andlove which Hammon represents, and the inevitable fail¬ure of life in death, are, as Dekker reminds us, far fromthe holiday atmosphere of the play. The program revealsthat the lighting was designed by one Carl Sunshine — afitting fellow to be associated with a production as full oflight and life and good cheer as this.Juliet McGrathCulture VultureThe Outrageous VultureIs Outrageously OutragedTHE CULTURE VULTURE, shook out of his moth-eatenfeathers in honor of May Day and got high on the thoughtof all the culchural events which the University’s cultur¬al arm — FOTA is presenting. “Vulch” being his usuallazy self, suggest you look at their schedule and use theChinese restaurant system.FILMSFriday night is Farenheit 451 is based on the RayBradbury book of the same name is about a 1984ishsociety (it’s only 15 years away).Saturday brings The Ipcress File in Judd Hall. Gojust to see what the letters IPCRESS stand for.The Elusive Corporal is offered on Tuesday, the Re¬noir Night and (in a very Chaplinesque plot) concerns aningenious prisoner tyring to escape a German POWcamp.On Wednesday Doc Films presents its experimentals.This week is among others Dali and Bunuels famous UnChien Aodalou with probably one of the most disgustingscenes ever filmed.Thursday is Jerry Lewis in The Nutty Professor.That’s one evening yours truly is going to spend down¬town.THEATERThe Theatre this week includes the second and lastweek of performances of the Charge of the NumidearCavalry (otherwise known as Life With Leo — Tolstoythat is). The title can only be explained by the charge ofarmies of people who have assaulted any suspiciouspeople they thought were involved with last week’s Cul¬ture Vulture column for what they called suppression ofnews. The Vulture is incensed at that charge — howmany vultures have you seen who could play shoemakersanyway?CABARETThe New Old-Fashioned Baroque Compass Playersreturn again to Harper theater Coffee house every Fri¬day and Saturday night with a hodge-podge of entertain¬ment. Mosey over there.May 2, lWf/Grey City Joarnal/3Theater mm—mmmm—mmCHARGE!!! HereComes Blackf riarsBLACKFRIARS’ FIFTY-SECOND ANNUAL PRODUC¬TION, Charge of the Numidian Cavalry, opened to asmall but appreciative audience last Friday evening atMandel Hall. This company, for those who still may notknow, is entirely student-run and has been presenting amusical written and directed by students every yearover the last half-century. This alone is worthy of admi¬ration, for musicals are among the most expensive formsof entertainment to produce, short of opera, and themost difficult to perform successfully. And since Black-friars makes a point of presenting every year a brand-new musical, one which may well represent the authors’first steps in the field, watching for originality andstructural ingenuity in this, someone’s first major work,can be a fascinating experience. And so it is withCharge: approached in this fashion it retains the interestwhich one must withhold from the total work. Certainlyanyone who is concerned for such fostering of creativeeffort will not want to miss it.Charge bills itself as a musical drama based on thelife of Tolstoy, but don’t you believe it — it would bemore accurate to describe it as an old-fashioned musicalwith book trouble. Essentially the problem is that oneTolstoy, whom the writers of the book and lyrics, Mar¬lene Ellin and Rima Shore, wish to present to us—thecreative artist and god-obsessed man—is not really con¬sistent with the other Tolstoy, the boisterous family man,on which level the musical operates most effectively.This was perhaps unavoidable: the structure of thegenre requiries great simplification in the charactersand the picture of Tolstoy which tends to predominate isthe stereotype: but with this jovial old bear the authorof The Kreuzer Sonata has no more to do than my AuntHildegarde. Thus the book’s schizophrenic quality: it isplainly uncomfortable with the darker side of Tolstoy,but it is forced to retain this material for fear of losingthe character altogether. Certainly this duality is beyondthe compass the score written for this piece by DavidZverow and Lois Gunsberg. There is quite a lot of Rus¬sian folk song melody thrown in for local color and thetitle song, “Charge of the Numidian Cavalry,” has anappropriate swash to it. Notable is the finale to the firstact, where an unaccompanied lullaby for soprano bringsdown the curtain following the high spirits of the titlesong — quite a lovely Conception, this. But musical in¬sight into the characters, where the book calls for it, isunconvincing.But the evening’s high points are not to be sneezedat: they include a wryly amusing speech about the dis-comforture of a frog who suddenly finds he has becomea handsome prince; a dream sequence-ballet which hasan odd charm — the idea is hardly original. The numberwhich opens the final act, “The Toy Train” makes itsmelancholy little point very nicely; and, as mentioned,the march tunes have an ingratiating jauntiness to them.One can sometimes regret that the authors’ ideas werenot complemented by a skill in putting them together inpurely theatrical terms — the opening of the piece, forinstance, seemed much too abrupt; but ideas there arein plenty, and often they are good ones.The performance is quite a good one, barring a fewincidents along the way which may have been due toopening night nervousness (we saw last Friday’s per¬formance). The Tolstoy, T. Edward Hearne, has thevoice and presence required to dominate the stage,which he does a fair amount of the time. He presents uswith a gruff, likable old fellow and is at his best in themore energetic moments of his role. He fails to suggestU . ' ' ' .7=11THE GREY CITYJOURNAL much more than this, but then the book isn’t much helphere. Jane Batt as his wife, Sonya, is a good foil forHearne’s Tolstoy, suggesting a woman appalled as wellas attracted by her husband’s unconventional behavior.Her singing is satisfactory in full voice, but she seemedincapable of singing softly yet easily on Friday evening.Ann Ashcraft contributes an outstanding character bit asTanya Behrs, Tolstoy’s sister-in-law — no tricks here,just a well thought out and consistent characterization.The supporting members of the cast were less distinctivethan this, but they worked well together. The same canbe said for the musicians, although a little more in¬cisiveness, even vulgarity, on the march numbers wouldnot hurt.The scenic end of the production is held up quitewell. The numerous scenes demand quick transitions andthis is provided by a virtual absence of set, except forTolstoy’s study on the right wing of the stage. Props arecarried on and set up as needed, thus avoiding thebreaks that would further weaken the piece. Real coloris supplied by the costumes, handsomely designed andexecuted under the direction of Catherine Moritz. Direc¬tion and choreography are sufficient.Charge of the Numidian Cavalry will be given twomore times this weekend. It isn’t great but it’s moder¬ately worth seeing anyway.William Murnane ft Festival of’&eI*1 cArtsv.otfcPP Beal TrouM.TUESDAY, MAY 6, 7:30 SOC. SCI. 122suer, coloky productio’.’oeyesfor thenow sound1, a womanwith ESSY PERSSON^tfjr of "Therese and Isabelle" Lusdm 97.9 ImThe ToraJ Female Animal! smack dab in the middle of your fm dialReleased through AUOUl•ON FILMS mHYDE PARK STARTS FRIDAY MAY 2ndNO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTEDClark NOTHING AS GREAT SINCE•THE 400 BLOWS" AND"DAVID AND LISA”...Here 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 Cathedral enjoy ourspecial studentrate: 751EditorMichael 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. at alltimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officedifferent double featuredailyopen 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 programClark & madison fr 2-28431 “A STUNNING MOVIE!”H V Times“AN UNFORGETTABLEEXPERIENCE!”Judith Crist NEW YORK“A WONDERFUL MOVIE!”The New Yorker“RAW, REAL,TURBULENTEMOTIONALDYNAMITE!” cue“A CELEBRATION OFHUMANRELATEDNESS!”N Y Post“A PROFOUND,POWERFUL MOVIE!” timeWarrendaleAAROYARKStudent Rote Sunday thru Thursday4/Grey City Jovual/May z, INI Michael CainemThe IpcressFile. Sat., May 31 $1Judd Hall 7:30 & 9:30 pierce tower cinemaThe RESUME of DISTINCTIONYour •Trai neesPersonalized • Vlid. VlngtRESUMFEx u esWritten By Specialiatacomposed, written, edited, printed.Bodelson & Asso., Inc.221 Y. 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