1 ■THE MAROONTuesday, May 13, 1969Is SG Really Going to theResident Head's Dog Elected to SG Post as SRUSlate Gains Narrow Margin Over RA Slate.Phil LathropCHALK IN: Students decorated Hutch Commons Monday afternoon with pictures,sayings and epitaphs in FOTA chalk-in.Flacks Improving SlowlyRichard Flacks, who was attacked in hisoffice a week ago Monday, with resultantskull fractures and a badly cut right wrist,is steadily improving in Billings hospital,but recuperation will take at least a month,his wife told a Maroon reporter Monday.Police Sergeant Wesley Dillard said thatthe police definitely have suspects, al¬though he would not go into details.Police detective Robert Strahlman saidhe is hopeful a composite photograph canbe made of Flacks’ assailant next week. Healso said Flacks has told the police nothingnew regarding the assault since last weekand that the situation is “still under in¬vestigation.”Dillard said that people who were in thevicinity of Harper Library, the location ofFlacks’ office, had been questioned.Sgt. Dillard said that the University re¬fused to give the police the names of ex¬pelled students to question, but did not denythat police attempted to question all ex¬pellees. He asked a Maroon editor if theMaroon could provide the police with sucha list.Mrs. Flacks said that her husband willhave no use of his left leg for some time,and his right hand, the tendons and nervesof which were badly severed in the attack,will probably be disabled for six months.Only the Flacks family and the policemay visit the assistant professor of sociolo¬gy, although he has been in a private roomsince Thursday.Mrs. Flacks also said she understandsthat the University will pay a good deal ofthe medical expenses incurred, and thatFlacks has major medical insurance to cov¬er the cost of the operations. The decision on Richard Flacks’ tenurewill not be made for at least two weeks,dean of the social sciences D. Gale Johnsonindicated yesterday.Johnson said that after the recommenda¬tions of the two faculty tenure committeesreach the dean, “a week to ten days” pas¬ses before the decision is announced.It was rumored Monday that the collegecommittee reviewing Flacks’ applicationfor tenure had reached a decision. Thegraduate sociology committee apparentlyhas not made a decision yet.The final announcement will be made bydean of the faculties John T. Wilson.See "Flacks" Page Three By Mitch BobkinStudents for a Restructured University(SRU) took a narrow lead in the StudentGovernment (SG) elections last week. Atentative slate of four candidates for the 14SG offices has also been prepared by theorganizers of SRU (formerly known as“The Party of Change.”)In the undergraduate house of the res¬tructured SG, SRU elected 26 candidates,The Reform Alliance (RA) elected 17, fourindependents were elected and one seat isundecided.In the graduate house, SRU holds 25seats, RA holds 23, three representativesare unaffiliated and two seats areundecided.In the National Student Association(NSA) elections, also held last week, theNSA reform party (NSARP) took six of theten seats, SRU took three and one indepen¬dent was elected.Although SRU seems to hold a substantiallead in the undergraduate house, in jointsessions of the new SG, such as those toelect the officers, all graduate students gettwo votes to every vote of the under¬graduate representatives, cutting the SRUlead.The organizers of SRU, including JohnSiefert, Mike Barnett, and members of theIndependent Action Coalition (IAC), metand selected a tentative slate of candidateswith Mike Barnett as president, Mike Fow¬ler as vice-president, David Bensman asspeaker of the undergraduate house andPaul Brinich as speaker of the graduatehouse.Siefert made it clear that this slate wasnot the official slate of the party, but only atrial slate that could be changed dependingupon student opinion. He also said that itwas possible for another slate to come outof SRU. “We will have to judge the situ¬ation as it appears,” he said.Siefert said consensus opinion for hisslate would be judged by slates from otherparties. Maroon and WHPK editorials,campus leafletting and general reaction.Cheak Yee, newly* elected RA under¬graduate representative, although not anofficial representative of RA, said he wasdisappointed that SRU had proposed a slateof candidates. “RA had hoped to run acompromise slate of candidates for SG of¬fices, but SRU has already slated,” he said.Yee added that SRU had campaignedsaying they would not run a partisan SG,and he called the slating of candidates par¬tisan politics.“Now RA will try to run a slate,” he said.“We aren’t interested in a partisan electionand are still willing to discuss a com¬promise slate.“RA has an uphill fight instead of adownhill one. It is clear that the graduateNinety One Faculty Nominated to FillSeventeen Faculty Senate PositionsNinety-one faculty members — twice asmany as last year — have been nominatedfor positions on the council of the facultysenate in unusually intensive campaign ac¬tivity this year. Seventeen positions areopen in the annual spring election, whichwill be completed on May 20.At least three groups have nominatedmoderate-to-radical candidates and orga¬nized to elect faculty they consider lessconservative than most of the 51-membercouncil.The group of AAUP guidelines petitionsigners nominated assistant professor ofanatomy Leonard Radinsky and assistantprofessor of mathematics Paul J. Sally.Both men appeared before the council amonth ago to urge that discipline against participants in the sit-in be rescinded untilstudents are represented on committees torehear the cases.Two other cross-departmental liberalnominating groups draw their respectivemembership from the south campus, socialscience and humanities divisions, and thenorth campus science and mathematicsdivisions.Divisions of the University ordinarilycaucus to decide who to vote for or thedean of a dvision selects people so thateach division insures a few representativeson the council. This election is the firsttime in recent years that young liberal fac¬ulty have organized to elect representativesregardless of disciplines. house holds the key to the elections,” Yeesaid.The first meeting of the new SG will beheld on Monday, May 19. The first order ofbusiness at that meeting will be to breakthe three ties in the election. SG will alsohave to replace elected candidate SammyDawg, declared the official winner in TuftsHouse until the election committee learnedSammy is the dog of Tuft’s resident head.The winning candidate in theSG and NSAelection are:Undergraduate HouseBlackstone Nancy Datagiri-RADiana Burg-SRU Upper FlintMarilyn Richmond-SRU Leslie Recht-RAEleanor Club Diane Trewin-RAPeggy Greenfield-SRU ChamberlainHollie Wagenstein-RA Edwin Wiley-RAHitchcock MeadPeter True-SRU Jesse Turner-lnd.Stan Becker-RA VincentBoucher Dick Davis-lnd.Robert Blythe-RA SalisburyMarshall Aeeder-RA Ric Shattuc-SRUGreenwood DoddEd Comer-SRU Nathan Hawley-lnd.Steve Cook-SRU FraternitiesSnell Stephen Riess-RAPalmer Blakely-RA Cheak Yee-RA1400 E. 57th Karl Menninger^RAPat McQuilkin-SRU Other CollegeHenderson Norman Alhadeff-SRUGerard Leval-RA Frank Day-SRUThompson Leen Tsao-SRUA. Michael Mahern-SRU David Bensman-SRUShorey Steve Orman-SRULawrence Ebert-RA Sheldon Sachs-SRUTufts John Siefert-SRUTie of 9 Bob Luchs-SRULower Flint Sarah Glazer-SRUBill Philipps-RA Juan Jewell-SRURickert Mike Fowler SRUKaren Wishner-SRU Joanthon Livv-SRUCarol Garstki-lnd. Marilyn Richmond-SRUUpper Wallace Jerry Dahlke-SRULeslie Strauss-SRU Bob Nankin-SRUNancy Lawroski-RA Pete Douglas-RALower WallaceGraduate HousePhysical Sciences Sara Paretsky-SRUR. Michael Barnett-SRU Steve Zarit-SRUWilliam Griffelh-SRU Roger Beck,Brian Cartwright-SRU Garry Gillum,Martha Smith-SRU David Levy,Larry Lambert-SRU Paul Saenger tiedBarry Sisiking-SRU Biological SciencesSocial Sciences Phillip R. Musich-SRUDiane Baer-SRU Sheila Schiferl-SRUStephen Atkins-SRU Jane A Pererson-SRURosemarie Gillespie-SRU HumanitiesMary Johns-SRU Hannah Hardgrave-RAPaul Brinich-SRU Charles Pasley-RAMichael Fischer-SRU Jeff Schnitzer-SRURandine Parry-SRU Mike Buckner-RAPaul Antze-SRU Harvey Epstein-RAJohn Foley-SRU Richard Gold-RABernie Grofman-RA Thomas Super-RADennis Devlin-SRUGraduate SchoolsBusiness Bruce AndikKenneth Cutler-RA Harlan AlperinJames Kerwin-RA Kathy BoneseWilliam Demco-RA Paul MarquisConstance Maravell-RA Marty SpencerClare Zempel-RA Bill DockerDivinity Sue SaboroffHarvey Huntley-RA Tom ItoJans Irmer-RA Norm Poston, tiedJohn W Payton-RA Social ServiceDonald Towle-RA Wilbur Weder-RALaw Lenny Jansen-lndJonathan Dean-SRU David Bilik-indJean Powers-SRU Morrie Camens-indKimbal J Corson-SRU EducationPaul Berch-SRU Lucy Anich-SRUMedical Joseph 0. Hopkins-SRUPaul Nausieda-RA LibraryLouis Constan-RA Howard Pasternack-RAPhilip GelberNational Student Association DelegationDelegates AlternatesMike Fowler-SRU Bernie Grofman-NSARPBill Phillips-NSARP Jonathon Dean-SRUJohn Moscow-NSARP Ogeksea Baylor-indSandy Rockowitz-SRU Cheak Yee-NSARPSteve Cope-NSARP Judy Boggs-NSARPWHY IS THIS DOG FROWNING? SammyDawg, recently elected SG representa¬tive from Tufts ponders his politicalfuture.FOTA Plans LiberalA four day liberal arts miniconferenceentitled “Scholarship as Expression” isscheduled for Wednesday through Saturdayunder the sponsorship of the College andFestival of the Arts (FOTA).The series of panel discussions, seminars,and informal faculty-student meetings anddinners will focus on creative expression inthe arts and sciences.The miniconference replaces the nowdefunct Liberal Arts Conference (LAC),which for the past three years was a five-day period in spring quarter devoted to the exploration of topics pertaining to the Uni¬versity and the nature of knowledge.Classes were suspended during this period.Dean of the College Wayne C. Booth, whoinitiated the idea of the first LAC fouryears ago, decided to cancel the conferencelast fall because of what he judged in¬sufficient student participation.At the opening forum Wednesday at 2:30pm in Quantrell auditorium, biology profes¬sor Richard Lewontin, history professorWilliam H. McNeill, mathematics professorFelix Browder, and Germanics professor Arts MiniconferenceKenneth Northcott will discuss “The Mediaof Creative Self-Expression.”Student-faculty discussions Thursday inSwift Commons on “The Inventions of Dis¬covery” at 1:30 pm and “The Critic asCreator” at 3:30 pm will emphasize crea¬tivity in the sciences and the arts, respec¬tively.“The Personal Dimension” will be dis¬cussed at a FOTA College Forum meetingFriday at 4 pm in Quantrell. Participants will include Masao Abe, Gooding lectureron Zen Buddhism in the Divinity school;Saunders MacLane, Mason distinguishedservice professor of mathematics, and Wil¬liam Zachariasen, Burton distinguished ser¬vice professor of physics.The conference’s closing session is to beheld Saturday at 1 pm in Quantrell.Convivia will begin at 4 pm each afternoon of the conference in the Cobb Hall cof¬fee shop.Harvard Building Alternate HousingSDS Leaders ArrestedFive leaders of national Students for aDemocratic Society were arrested oncharges of aggravated battery in their na¬tional headquarters in Chicago Sundaynight.Sunday morning, Mike Klonsky, nationalsecretary of SDS, announced on nationaltelevision that SDS had heard through re¬liable sources that there would be a seriesof arrests organized by the FBI and theJustice Department intended to break upnational SDS by jailing national leaders ondifferent charges.That night, several police cars and one fire truck drove up to the national office at1608 West Madison. Several policemen withone fireman demanded to be let into thebuilding because a fire had been reportedthere. The SDS people said there was nofire in their building, and tried to keep thepolice outside.In a pushing and shoving match whichfollowed, police forced their way into thebuilding and arrested five people, includingKlonsky on the charge of aggravated bat¬tery. “It could be described as SDS gettingarrested for trying to keep police from put¬ting out a fire that wasn’t there,” one SDSmember said.I•x$1S1::::1 GOOD GRIEF - THE BOOKSTORE ISHAVING ANOTHER BIGSALE3000 QUALITY PAPERBACKSAT DISCOUNTS AVERAGING50%(Some Copies Slightly Damaged)HURRYSale Starts TODAY™E BOOKSTOREELLIS at 58th •SFast DependableServiceT.V. - Radio - Tape Re¬corder - Phonograph*0SalesCornell EUctrosics ServiceI635.E. S5th-St. PUr?730i authorized BMC service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, Illinois 60615- -toreign-coT hospital & clinic, inc* * '2/The Chicago Maroon/May 13, 1969 Harvard University announced last Tues¬day a plan to begin construction on 1,100housing units in Boston for families dis¬placed by Harvard expansion.The New York Times carried the story onthe first page of Wednesday’s edition.“No housing will be displaced,” Harvardsaid,” until housing at comparable rents isavailable for those living in buildings to berazed for new Harvard expansion.” Har¬vard will “work closely with the appro¬priate public and private agencies to assureprompt action.”Flacks Continued From Page One The 1,100 units will be built in Bostonnear the Harvard medical school. Plans forsimilar development in Cambridge will beannounced soon.The University of Chicago apparentlyplans no similar action. Eddie Williams,vice-president of development, said Mon¬day that he “is not aware of anything"planned by the University similar to Har¬vard’s plans. “Nothing is being done,” hesaid. “I haven’t seen the article (in theTimes).”Flacks Tenure Decision Is PendingOn Monday several sociology students is¬sued the results of a survey of all sociologyand social psychology graduate students, towhich about 50 responded, regardingFlacks and his tenure, saying that, by a 37-1 margin, that Flacks should be given ten¬ure.On other questions, students who werepolled gave good-to-excellent ratings toFlack’s teaching, his written work, contactwith students, and participation in extra¬curricular lectures and panel discussions.All responses were received before Flacks’attack on May 5. Richard FlacksCENTER FOR URBAN STUDIESThe University of Chicago1969 Lecture SeriesCENTRALIZATIONVS.DECENTRALIZATIONRemaining LectureMAY 15 FLOYD HYDEASS'T. SECRETARY, DEPT. HOUSING & UR¬BAN DEVELOPMENTPLACE: BREASTED HALL, ORIENTAL INSTITUTE1155 E. 58TH STREET (S. E. CORNER 58TH & UNIVERSITY)TIME: 8:OOP.M.ADMISSION FREE OF CHARGEExtravaganza Will Blow Your MindThe world’s second largest carillon, a 20-minute fireworks display, the Moog elec¬tronic music synthesizer, and a small can¬non will be combined in an aural and visualextravaganza Friday at 8:30 p.m. at Rock¬efeller Memorial Chapel.The audience will be outside, on thelawns of the chapel and the Midway Plai-sance, while the music is performed insidethe 207-foot tower of the Chapel, the concert, which is expected to last justover an hour.Bach’s “Second Violin Concerto in E Ma¬jor” will be performed by the carillon anda tape realized on the Moog Synthesizer, anelectronic music device, by Hans Wurman of Sonart Productions, Inc., of Chicago.The waltz from Tchaikovsky’s “EugeneOnegin” will be performed by the carillon,a harpsichord played by Wurman, and anelectronic calliope played by RobertReeves, a faculty member at Northern Il¬ linois University, DeKalb.The concert is being co-sponsored by theFestival of the Arts and the Sears RoebuckFoundation.In case of rain, it will be performed theevening of May 18.Against UCDuffels Serves $1,200,000 SuitDuring one selection of the concert —George Frederick Handel’s “Music for theRoyal Fireworks” — fireworks will burstover the chapel tower and a small cannonwill be fired.The event, part of the Festival of theArts, will be directed by Daniel RobinsUniversity carillonneur.Robins will perform at the carillon duringTuesday, May 13TRACK: Wabash and Valparaiso Colleges. Stagg Field, 4pm.LECTURE: "Circuits for Sight-seeing on Mars", WarrenS McCulloch, MIT. Research Institutes C-117, 4 pm.LECTURE: "African Literature: A Dialogue of TwoSelves", Ezekiel Mpbahlele, South Africa. BreastedHall, 4 pm.EXPERIMENTAL FILMS: Breasted Hall, 7:30.RADIO PIECE: John Cage Radio Piece, Bergman Gal¬lery, 7:30.FILM: "The Silence", Quantrell Hall, 7:30.CONCERT: Azie Mortimer and jazz ensemble, Hutchin¬son Commons, 8 pm.MEETING: Bridge Club. C-shop, 8 pm.FILM: "Boudu Saved from Drowning" and "The LittleMatchgirl", Cobb Hall, 8 pm.DANCING: folk and square dancing, InternationalHouse, 8 pm.FOLK SONG WORKSHOP: Hillel House, 8 pm.PERSIAN POETRY AND MUSIC: D A Shojai and oth¬ers. SS Research Building, room 122, 8:30.Wednesday, May 14LIBERAL ARTS CONFERENCE 1W9: "The Media ofCreative Self-Expression", Quantrell Hall, 2:30.LECTURE: "Vitamin B12 Biosynthesis: Enzyme Studieson the Formation of the Alpha Glycosidic NucleotidePrecursor", Abbott 101, 3:30.LECTURE: "Four Phases in Modern Turkish Liter¬ature", Fahir Iz. Cobb 201, 3:30.L E C T U R E-DEMONSTRATION: Easley Blackwood,Wuorinen's "Theme and Variations", Quantrell, Hall, 4pm. The University has thirty days to file anappearance in the suit against them filedby Henry Duffels for $1,200,000 for damagessuffered while he was an employee of theUniversity.The suit, served against the University at12:30 p.m. yesterday to the Office of thelegal counsel of the University, will beturned over to a downtown law firm, al-LECTURE: "Genes, Hormones, and Metamorphosis",Carroll M Williams, Harvard. Billings P-117, 5 pm.FILMS: Experimentals made by UC students. CobbHall, 7:15 and 9:30.FOLK DANCE: British and Scandanavian dances, IdaNoyes, 8 pm.LECTURE: "What is a Painting?", Michael Polanyi,Oxford. Kent 107, 8 pm.OUTDOOR FOLK CONCERT: Lake Country StringBand, Hutchingson Court, 8:30.Thursday, May 15CONCERT: Bach Brandenburg Concerti No. 3, 4, 5. Hut¬chingson Court, noon.FILM: "The Seventh Seal" and student film, "Country",Law School Auditorium, 2:30.LIBERAL ARTS CONFERENCE: Student-Faculty opendiscussions on the inventions of discovery, the critic ascreator, science and personality, scholarship as per¬sonal expression, theory as art. Cobb Hall, 2:30.LECTURE: "Fiction and the Figures of Life", WilliamGass, Purdue. Ida Noyes Library, 4:30.LECTURE: "Penning Ionization Electron Spectroscopy",V Cermak, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences. Eck-hart, 133, 4:30.FOLK DANCIN:G Israeli Folk Dancing, teaching andrequests. Hillel House, 7:30.LECTURE: "The Narrative Style of Ingmar Bergamn",Birgitta Steene, Temple University. Quantrell Audito¬rium, 7:30.FILM: "Hail the Conquering Hero", Cobb Hall, 8 pm.LECTURE: Centralization vs Decentralization. FloydHude, Assistant secretary for the Model Cities.Breasted Hall, 8 pm.MEETING: The Society of the Sigma Xi. Eckhart Hall133, 8:15. though no specific firm had been chosen asof Monday.Walter Leen, legal counsel for the Uni¬versity said he is studying the suit.Julian Sinson of Jurco, Damisch, and Sin-son, attorneys for Duffles, said he wouldnot discuss details of the case. He said it isimproper to discuss the details of any lawcase before it comes to court.Duffels has claimed that he contactedberylliosis, a lung disease, while workingon the Manhattan project which perfectedthe atomic bomb.“The charges are very serious and if ourallegations are true, they too are veryserious,” Sinson said.The specifics of the $1,200,000 Sinson did the other $1,000,000 are for punitive dam¬ages. Sinson said that although this figureis high, if the “alleged improprieties” bythe University were improper, as only thejury can decide, then the $1 million figureis reasonable.Duffels is not giving public statementsand Sinson said “He knows almost nothingabout the allegations in the brief because Ihave found out most of the facts myself bylooking into the files on a previous casewith similar circumstances.” Sinson wouldnot give the specifics of the other case andsaid that he would leave that responsibilityup to the University.Eddie Williams, vice-president for publicaffairs in the University, said that the Uni¬versity does not have any statement aboutComing soon!!BULLETIN OF EVENTSrEZZZj5&ZSSSZ5Z- q^c.NewPROCOL HARUMalbumSALTY DOGOnly $3.29as are all $4.98 recordsat the Student Co-OpReynolds Club Basement'V yOyjyj/n X\■AI RKK WEDDING CATALOGI OR THE BRIDE TO BEEvery thing for the wedding and re¬ception. 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Maroon/3r • • • • ■ M !•**■•( *9- t%-v**4 • •• *■i EDITORIALSBustThe police bust on SDS headquarters in Chicago Monday atbest reconfirms the observation that in Chicago blatant political-racial bias combined with stupidity and/or subtle malevolence onthe part of cops and courts makes the violation of black and leftistindividual freedoms a daily matter.At worst, it looks like a frame-up which perhaps signals anescalation in overt suppression of the left.Somebody, in placing two clearly false and anonymous phonecalls to the police and fire departments, apparently hoped that whatdid happen would. And who would have more to gain by placingthose calls than our own friendly cops — whose habits of plantingmarijuana cigarettes at parties are well known in Hyde Park. Atthe least, they could disrupt SDS a bit, and would, of course, givethe Red Squad a chance to look over files without going throughthe annoying formalities of getting a search warrant.Even if the cops didn’t plant those anonymous calls and feltthey were duty-bound to check out the information, they certainlytook their chance fast enough without prompting: force your wayin to practically any student apartment, start a “mill in” of firemenand cops, and you can pretty well predict enough reaction to makea few arrests on some pretext or other. One would hardly expectChicago cops to pass up their chance by sending in a three-mandelegation to make a quick and orderly search for fire and murderand nothing else.Especially when they know the courts will be on their side.The only control over police, aside from the DA’s office whichseldom works against the cops who serve it, is the quality oflocal courts.Well, here in Chicago magistrate Joseph C. Mooney not onlyaccepted the charges apparently without question — charges whichsound like the Civic Center march business of arresting peoplesolely on the charge of “resisting arrest” — but refused to releasethe five SDS’ers on their own recognizance “considering the serious-" ness of the charges and the backgrounds” of the five. ((The SDSmembers said only one of them has ever been convicted of any¬thing — and that was “disorderly conduct” during the convention.)It all seems a little too easy here in this great American city:the road to fascism paved neatly with legal stepping stones; orquasi-legal ones at least.Professor FlacksWhile Richard Flacks lies in Billings, his future at UC isbeing decided by two faculty tenure committees.This decision is the first test of the so-called reforms in thedivisions and departments of the University resulting from theFebruary sit-in. If these reforms mean anything, if 123 studentsdid not get kicked out in vain, then Flacks will be tenured by bothsocial sciences and sociology.As you may remember, one of the demands of the sit-in wasfor equal student-faculty participation on hiring and firing de¬cisions; Needless to say, neither the college tenure committeepicked by social sciences master Arcadius Kahan or the graduatesociology committee composed of tenured faculty and chaired byMorris Janowitz contain students. However, as a result of the sit-in,advisory committees were set up in both social sciences and soci¬ology made up at least partly of students.These student committees have surveyed Flacks’ graduateand undergraduate students and have submitted the results withtheir recommendations to the faculty committees.Most probably, they recommended that Flacks be tenured.Hopefully, they will be listened to by the faculty. If they are ignoredand Flacks is not tenured in either sociology or the college, theunsolved questions of the Dixon will pop up again. The nightmarishprospect of disruptive protest will most likely become a reality.We can only hope that this alternative can be avoided. Maybesomeday students at UC can have more than an advisory capacityin such decisions. Maybe someday the Maroon will not have to cry“sit-in” to keep such a fine professor. After all, it’s our Universitytoo.TfTnTTT"4/The Chicago Maroon/May 13, 1969fc^l I lOSM i r__ ^ £, Daly in WashingtonCharles Daly, former vice president fordevelopment and public affairs until June,is in Washington setting up the Children’sFoundation, a well-funded national founda¬tion that will sponsor programs to help chil¬dren in cities. Jon Kleinbard, Daly’s assis¬tant who has gone to Washington with him,says details of the new foundation will bereleased when the first programs are an¬nounced . . .Art GiftMrs. Katherine Kuh, art editor of the Sat¬urday Review, has given the Universityfour works of art from her private collec¬tion.The works will be displayed in the Davidand Alfred Smart Gallery on the northwestcorner of East 56th St. and So. GreenwoodAve. when it is completed.The four works are:• “Seated Figure,” ink drawing by Leon¬ard Baskin;•Watercolor scroll by Claire Falken-stein;• Abstraction on a Mayan theme, gou-and pastel by Carlos Merida; and• Untitled oil painting by Joan Mitchell.The Smart Gallery and the Cochrane-Woods Art Center, which will be made pos¬sible by gifts from the Woods CharitableTrusts, Inc., and the Smart family founda¬tion, will be part of a new Center for theArts at the University. The center willeventually include a new music buildingand the Corinne Frada Pick Theater. . .SpartacusFive graduate statistics students havewritten a reply to the Committee of 500newsletter, Spartacus, which presented anempirical analysis of the disciplinary com¬mittee decisions. “We have examined the statistical andmethodological problems of the Spartacusstudy”, said the report. “Whether thecharges made in that study are true on oth¬er grounds is a separate issue. ln con¬clusion, we find poor and misleading re¬porting, dubious collection of data, per-vasive neglect of im|X)rtant underlyingvariables, and improper inferences.“In spite of all this, the data taken atface value imply that delay of response wasstrongly related to degree of punishmentand that students classified as “radical"typically responded late: the criteria forpunishment stated in the Oaks committeereport are not contradicted.”The graduae students stated that Spar¬tacus contained “serious errors,” includingbiased data, errors in interpretation, andconclusions which did not follow from thedata.The study, titled “A Closer Look at Spar¬tacus II” will be distributed on campus lat¬er this week. Contributions to help pay forprinting costs can be sent to Myron Straf,department of statistics.The students who wrote the reply areStraf, Henry Davis, James Lenwehr, Jona¬than Still, and Michael Waller.AldermenAldermen William Singer and Fred Hub¬bard will participate in discussions on“New Sources of Political Power in Chi¬cago” Tuesday and Thursday, respectively,at 7:30 pm in the Blue Gargoyle.The discussions, sponsored by Studentsfor an Open Chicago (SOC), will centeraround the positions of Singer and Hubbardas Aldermen since both oppose Mayor Da¬ley’s machine. Singer, closely associatedwith the Kennedys, won a closely contestedelection in the 44th ward. Hubbard defeateda machine candidate in his race for the al-dermanic seat in the 2nd ward . ..LETTER TO THE EDITORSFreeloadersChuck Berry, who played at Mandel Halllast Tuesday, performed for a full house.The Buddy Guy-Junior Wells concert (April5) also drew over 1000 people. Yet a largepart of the audience attended without buy¬ing a ticket.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor; David TravisCopy Editor; Sue LothAssistant Editor: Mitch Bobkin We in Revitalization are amazed at thearrogance of the free-loading audience. Ourushers have been physically attacked whentrying to prevent these people from entering and letting others in. This audience, itseems, feels no qualms about getting infree to a concert when others buy ticketsBoth of these concerts were big draws yetvery low in ticket sales. It has reached apoint where people will not buy a ticketbecause they feel they can see the concertfor free.Revitalization is not a money-making organization; we are a student service, tryingto provide big name entertainment at thelowest possible ticket prices. Since MandelHall seats only 1000, it is often impossibleto collect enough money to meet cost Ourticket prices are arranged so that with asell-out we barely meet expenses — wepass the advantage on to the audience.Production 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, 304, and 305 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service.TlR The recent trend in the audience, thoughhas led to unusually low ticket sales — wchave lost money on every event we havesponsored. This has caused us to miss oulon several good entertainers; at the presentrate it may be impossible to produce an)concerts next year.In the past we have relied on the honest)of the public not to enter the hall without:ticket, but lately this has not helped. W<placed greater demands on our ushers buto no avail. Revitalization has decidedtherefore, that the only way it can continuito function is to increase security in MandeHall by adding extra guards and to becom*much stricter in enforcing rules. This was;difficult decision to make, but to continuipresenting concerts it is the only possiblicourse of action. We hope those who attewfuture Revitalization events will not be inconvenienced by this measure,i I , The Memberf ^of Revitalizatioi-’*—•**- -- ■>* --. — -kThey makeVolkswagens,but they buyRenaults.Last year only 15,807 VrW’s were Germans are famous for demand-sold in France. in# quality and dependability aboveYet, during the same period, all else.Renault sold 88,114 cars in West Does that seem to tell you any-Germany. thing?RENAULT*jdesltf imports, «J«c.2235 SO. MICHIGAN AVE.. CHICAGO. ILL. 60615TEL 326-2550IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER S LICENSE,DRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.PLANTS ALIVE!HARPER COURTliving rocks split rocksExpert Shoe & Leather Repair1 day serviceTHE TOWN COBBLERWe carry quality leather goods1458 E. 53rd St. 9 - 6 DailyBell Bottom SaleJohns Mens Wear, 1459 E. 53rd. — ——a distinguished group of3 DIFFERENT PROGRAMSOF CREATIVE CINEMAAn International Seriesof 26 Short FilmsThe works of leading film makers from9 countries including prize-winnersfrom European film festivals. Filmsrange from the experimental to docu¬mentary, from pop to abstract andkinetic, from animated to dramatic...VERSAILLES by Albert Lamorisse, Par/s/ELEGIA by Jan Huszarik, Budapesf/TONIGHT LETSALL MAKE LOVE IN LONDON by Peter Whitehead, London/PHENOMENA by Jordan Belson,San Franc/sco/LA VITA—Life in a Tin by Bruno Bozzetto, Mi/an/MIRACLE by Istvan Ventilla,Budapesf/PARIS MAI 1968 Produced by the Film Cooperative of Paris. Anonymous/TWOGRILLED FISH by Yoji Kuri, Tokyo/LA POMME by Charles Matton, Paris/THE LAST TRICKOF MR. EDGAR by Jan Svankmajer, Prague/GAVOTTE by Walerian Borowczyk, Paris/WHATDO YOU THINK? by Yoji Kuri, Tofcyo/MARIE ET LE CURE by Diourka Medveczky, Par/a/SAMADHI by Jordan Belson, San Francisco... AND MANY OTHERS.From the Preview:"Anyone interested in the possibilities of movies should not miss the show. The Kinetic Artrepresents... the most interesting things being done... things that cannot be duplicated inany other art form.”Vincent Canby, THE NEW YORK TIMES“...a three-day minifestival... from Innovative film makers around the world... a brilliantassemblage of short creative films.”Louise Sweeney, THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR"The show was extraordinary... delightful, exhilarating, deeply moving. Congratulations,gratitudes, huzzas, three cheers and a tiger.”Benjamin Forgey, THE SUNDAY STAR, Washington, D.C.PROGRAM ONE PROGRAM TWO PROGRAM THREE5* • - ' ' H ' :. iMay 18 May 22 May 31Presented by the Bergman GalleryQUANTRELLAUDITORIUM$2, $1 at doorFOTA presents“One of the Great American Movies—you cannot afford to miss it” -- New YorkHerald TribuneDouble Prize Winner -- Venice Film FestivalStarring Ivan Dixon and A bbey LincolnTuesday May 13Oriental Institute 7:30 & 9:15FREE A Black Colony Production O o ”2E £3 Z m> m o° K =5® ^S 5 i-siS_ MUZno:>iMay 13, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5f MAY BE NUTS, BUT A SPEEDFREAKIAIN'T <il\RATES: 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. '61 Hillman (car) exc. run. condit.$180 538-1027.You mean there are people outthere who don't know that a Hill¬man is a car?'68 Bridgestone 350cc very fast 2cycle/6 speed call Richard Keat¬ing Fi 6-6161 (days), 664-1433(eves).1961 Merc. 6 cyl. clean new tirescall BU 8-9106 after 7.Two JBL D53 S12 speakers. Su¬perb Sound. $290, but will discuss.FA 4-8200 Rm 643.SONY 4 track stereo tape deck, 2Roberts microphones, headphones.Call 324-1426 eves.RIDE WANTED Mercury 61 28,000 miles in fineshape. $400 Call 477-6457.TO TORONTO. Please take someof my possessions to Toronto withyou between now and mid-June.For cash. Call Ken 3266 days or324-9348 eves, and wkends. PIANO, upright, beautiful cond.Call 667-8413.E n t i r e apartment furnishingsavailable for immediate sale. Verycheap. Call 667-5726.AND MORE NEW MUSIC CHEVY 11—1963 Chevy Nova Sta.wg. $350. 721-5302 after 5:30 P.M.Maurice McIntyre Quartet, Wed.14, 8:30, Ida Noyes 67 Mustang GT390 $1850 955-1028.LOSTOpal & gold antique ring. Reward.H69 or S14. Leave message. VW bug 68 exc. cond. low mil.half year old. $1650 call FA 4-8200apt. 386.CAMPING EQUIPMENTBriefcase lost April 22. Olive,pebbled, contains imp. notes.Rew., no questions. 324-2875.PEOPLE WANTED Camping equipment FOR RENT:tents, sleeping bags, stoves, lan¬terns, ect. Contact HICKORY atExt. 2381 or 324-1499.Woman student with two childrenneeds someone to live in for sum¬mer. Own room 8. board in ex¬change for babysitting. Childrenare 4V* to 2. Call 667-1719 if inter¬ested. ROOMMATES WANTEDTwo male grad students want 2others to share large South Shoreapartment. Summer and/or nextyear. 48.75 mo. 324-2671.If you're not interested, don't call. 1 or 2 to share apt w/2 fern gradstudents Summer 752-2331.Composer seeks lyricist — smart,appealing popular lyrics — 877-6403. 3 male grad stds to share 8 rmapt. near 51st $45 mo. sum-nxt. yr.3247431 or 3244677 aft 7 P.M.POOFREADER Opening in Uni¬versity Office. Daily, M-F, 1-5P.M. Just the thing for a studentwife or housewife. Call PersonnelMi 3-0800- Ex. 4444. The Universityis an equal opportunity employer. Fern to share 52 8< Dorch. Apt.mid Jul-Dec. $65. 684-4377.Mle rmt immed. occ. East HPAlso next year. Dick or Dave 493-6399.High-paying soft job for humanwith car. For summer or forever.Max Evers at 329-0430. Fern roomate(s) wanted. June-Oct.own rm. 752-7669 after 6.Hebrew Teachers WantedGood salary, pension and fringebenefits for full-time personnel.Par t-time positions available.Openings for one-day-a weekschools. Placement Service, Boardof Jewish Education, 72 E. 11th St.HA 7-5570. Female roomate to share with 2others Apt. at 55th 8. Univ. $58mo. Available May on. 493-3896.Roomate wanted for fall, nearcampus, own room, darkroom, call288-3862 evenings.PEOPLE FOR SALE Fern private room in huge HydePk apt, starting June, option onfall lease. Call 493-0911.Authentic Chinese Cooking taughtin lovely Chinese home. Tuitionand materials $30. Limited enroll¬ment, 7 per class. 324-8070. Male Grad Sdt to room with 2 oth¬ers in large 7-rm apt on 53rd nearthe lake. $60 per mo. Oct. 363-35462males for June-Sept. $45 mo.One block from campus. 288-4631May I do your typing? 363-1104.Available for summer house sit¬ting: responsible graduate student,references, 288-6483. Male roomate for summer—ownlarge room. 53 & Kenwood, $55mo. Available June 7. 684-3744.FOR SALE FOR RENT1968 Suzuki 1 2 0 c c 3800miles excellent condition, $275.00955 3539. Apt. to sublet 6 blocks fromcampus. Everything negotiablecall Carol, 643-8548. Maybe option.64 Chevelle, 6 cyl, AM-FM radio,lots of love. $800 negotiable CallIN 8-6170. 4 rm. bsmt. apt. at 57th 8.Blkstne. $95 mo. Available June 1Call 643-2925.Apts, available now. 4 rm IV* rmWHAT CHICAGO RADIOSTATION SOCKS SOLID SOUNDSOF SOUTH SIDE SOUL WEEKDAYAFTERNOONS THREE TO SIX ?-oo^-whpk fm 883 . eff. Call Bill Stoll DO 3-6200; SteveFA 4-0342.Avail. 7/1 Ig. 3 rm. apt. in EastHyde Park $130 mo. Call 667-7590.3bdrm, Twnhse, Hyde Park,$180/mo. Avail. June/July 538-1027.Furnished Apartment. Sublet 7/1w option to renew. 3 rooms;$130 mo. inc. utilities. 5330 Black-stone; call 684-7508 after 10:30P.M.21/* rm apt Excellent cond. $124convenient shopping pleasant viewmost popular married stdnt apt5316 S. Dorchester 684-5378.55th and Cornell — near lake, 1C,bus, and Co-op. 4V* rooms. Avail¬able June 1 or earlier. Sublet,may renew lease. $140. 493-9623.SUMMER SUBLETBedroom, plus kitchen, living rm.all facilities, 6/15 to 9/15 $40 permonth, at 50th 8.Dorchester. Call285-5189.Summer save $60. 1 br. turn. apt.363-4300 ext. 610 $136.Lovely turn fully, 3 rm apt —ideal for married couple or 2 stu¬dents; convenient Hyde Park loca¬tion. HY 3-9426 Pref. 5-8.Do you have to show your li¬cense?June 15-Sept 1 (approx) large, 5rms, Maryland near 57th, cool,airy, fully furnished, reasonablerent, 667-7443.Summer sublet — 3 room apart¬ment, close to campus, rent rea¬sonable, but will negotiate — call955-7014.6 rooms 3 bedrooms sunporch 53 8.Wood lawn $170 955-4682.6 rooms, 3 bedroom apt., 53rd &Hyde Park, June 1 through Sep¬tember. Option for next year. Call753-1356 evenings.One bedrm apt. partly furnishedHyde Park, $100 mo. 538-1027.Drxl-57th: 4 rm $115 684-7411Room for 2 or 3 in good, close, 7rm. apt. for summer. TV, stereo,porch, fire, furn. 5724 Drexel $50.955-1824 dig it.June-Sept. 4 bdrm air-conditionedapt. for 4 or 5 57 and Dorchester684-6846.8 rm apt., urn., nr. beach, rentnegotiable, 375-4897.MORE SUMMER SUBLETS 2’/j rm apt., 1 block from Co-op 8,Harper Ct. Furnished, storagespace. $116 mo. Call 492-8032 orwrite Dave Kroot, 5345 S. Harper,Chicago 60615. investigate His claims and teach¬ings, accepting or rejecting them ontheir merits alone. Socialism lives in Israel!SUBLET 6/20-9/25 3 rm. apt. furn.$100 . 5708 S. Maryland 3rd fl. Really poor? 50c for two poor flicks.At the Blue Gargoyle, WednesdayMay 14. 8 P.M.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.Call X2408 8:30-5:00; 493-9276 after6.Sexy rooms — $115 to $170 for thewhole summer — kitchen facilities— 2 blocks from the Quads — callPL 2-9704, or come see for yourselfat 5555 S. Woodlawn — preferably6:30 to 7:30 weekday evenings.7-rm (4 bed) apartment, 55th & Ev¬erett, air conditioned. 6/22/69-9/16/69. X2845 or 643-6607. Nigger hearts are good for you! Join the NSA Record Club—33% to 79+ discounts—select from all labels—never any obligationLifetime membership fee $2.00Application forms at dorms, bulletinBoards, etc. uc(nsaLarge, IV* rooms, mid-June — Sept.57th 8. Blackstone. 493-2107.Sum. Sublet, 4 rms, furnished, Jne15-Sept. 15, Hy. Pk. Blvd. 8. 55th,cool, insured, $85 mo, 493-6648. Students for Israel presents Mr.Moshe Schwartz speaking on "So¬cialism in Israel today" Tues. May20th 8:00 Hillel. Marco Poll — travel services for theUniversity — 326-4422. e4bdrms, 2 baths, sunporch, furn,$185. 363-0140. Hail the conquering hero Thursdaynight. Afterward, hail the CourtHouse. See shit at the Gargoyle. 50c. Unde *in "One spy too Many" p|us "ThpMole People" May 14.Sunporch, 3 bdrms., 2 baths furn.225-1424 or 363-0140.Univ. Apts., one-bedroom $130 288-3867. Persona I : Classes Body Con¬sciousness & dance, Ida Noyes 3rdfl. 1:30 T 8, Th. Death and diseases through thewhole land spread." THE DUCKEDOF MALFI. cwApt. available — summer sblt. June20-Sept. 30. 8 rm. porch, $190 permo. 5412 S. Ingleside 955-5594.2Va rms sum sublt; furn., with Tv.51st & Knwd. 324-8339 even.Looks odd to me.4 rms., 2 bedrms, 53 Kenwood, June15-Sep 24; 135 mo but WILL NEGO¬TIATE. Call 288-9623 rm 524.PERSONALSAnyone interested in marching inthe Israeli Indep. day parade Sun.May 18th with a group from U of Ccall 752-5207. Rally too.BUTTERFIELD — MAGIC SAMMay 17Tickets $2.50 Now on sale in MandelHall Corridor.NO TICKETS SOLD AT DOORNO TICKETS SOLD AT DOOR Slowly, a permanent village is beingbuilt: The Laughing Coyote Moun¬tain Collabria. Each will have hisprivate stone and timber home; toraise his family; create his ownLife. Each isolated from the other inthis wilderness peak. A doctor inresidence: free medical treatmentfor the Collabria; outside patientscoming in for body repair and soulbreathing. A lawyer to solve prob¬lems of students making the transi¬tion from the dying society to theliving one; suffering abrasions fromexisting law. A therapy sensitivityclinic to heal emotional injuriespreparatory to entering the school.And the Survival School, successful¬ly in operation since 1957; teachingNature-Way natural consciousnessexpansion and Urban-Way guerrillaskills. All adults are teachers. Thecommon work is teachings. Beau¬tiful knowledge, disciplined andgood, as it should be taught: leisure¬ly; lovingly. Maurice McIntyre has played evervthing from blues to Wells St. organrock to Jarman. He plays his ownmusic here tomorrow night, 8 30Ida Noyes.When will you learn, Mr. MOSCOW— Henry Adams.Thank you for the flowers.death marches on, claiming all thatlive in life, but, still, life is with usAs yet we are frozen in the grey-black-white of the life we lead. Astill life-quiet except perhaps to usbut it is still life.STILL LIFE, a film conceived byPaul Ausick, produced by MitchKahn, filmed by David Travis, withBarbara Mirecki and Rochelle Dio¬genes.Join the NSA Record Club.After Renoir tonight, make it to theCourt House for a beer.Besides, when was the last time youheard either version of "Light MyFire" in those 57th St. joints?Bramblesnatch. Stereo Components at SavingsAcoustic Research 15-20% offScott Rcvrs 8, compacts 15-25% offDynaco Amplifiers 8< Tuner 15% offMUSICRAFT campus rep Bob Tabor324-3005. HERE’S YOUR CHANCE!Today thru Friday from 3:30-5:30P.M., WHPK is holding an openhouse for students who wish to apply for membership for next fall.Second Floor Mitchell Tower.NAT'L STUDENT ASSN RECORDCLUBAll-label record savings . . . pricesas low as 99c with no minimum pur¬chase obligations. No automaticshipments. NSA Record Club givesyou unlimited choice of every avail¬able LP at rock-bottom prices —discounts to 79%. The movie is free at the B-snatch.Wed. at 8:30 — "Pack Up YoreTroubles" with Laurel 8. Hardy."Those whose faces do belie theirhearts are witches 'ere they arriveat 20 years. Ay, and give the Devilsuck." THE DUCKESS OF MALFI."The marriage night is the entranceinto some prison." THE DUCHESSOF MALFI. FREE — beautiful, lovable six weekold^uppies — call 955-5035. We pay our tax tithe to Caesar, butwe are not of Caesar. We work atteaching other people's children asour income-producing crop profes¬sion. But also we are evolving folkhandicrafts for sale: fresh milk andbutter and eggs. Honey bees. Sawedtimber.Sheep spinning weaving sewingHand-set printing press of superiorbooks. In time, a nursery to seedand birth Homo Novus. And moun-taintop pyre to let the wind re-sowthe good ashes of a well lived Lifeback unto the flowers.Maurice McIntyre smokes — tomor¬row night, 8:30, Ida Noyes. Of course it's not really free (tan-staafl) — but the charge is so in¬direct you won't feel it. Laurel 8.Hardy, two reels. Wed. 8:30, Band-erberry.Tony bee wrote: ". . . early in thesecond century of the Christian Erathe Christian Church loomed nolarger .. . than the Baha'i's ... in aWesternizing World midway throughthe Twentieth Century. The areas ofrapid growth are all continents ofthe globe except the industrial West.Baha'u'llah asked only that people WRITERS2-8377. WORKSHOP — PLSAMBUTTERFIELD — MAGICMay 17Tickets $2.50 Now on sale in MandelHall CorridorNO TICKETS SOLD AT DOORNO TICKETS SOLD AT DOOR "Sunday Brain Seminars, open to thepublic, so we can meet more spiritu¬al soulmates. Saturday night camp¬fire party sings. Vernal Equinox allnight rituals in anticipation of greet¬ing the dawning of new Life cycle.Folk festivals. The Good Life Thetruly Good Life.Do we need to meet you?T.D. Lingo, Director, AdventureTrails Research and DevelopmentLaboratories, Inc. Laughing CoyoteMountain, Black Hawk, Colorado< rvosmimmm mm?$ <mmsEsxsfii SMO’NUFf!eWABOOV, LOV/CS>WllD*AMSAM’S PUR E/^7, NttiOCRJ HEARTS!AUTHE KIDSape crazy ’eouf000 01*FLAVOR!Sublet Ig 7 rm apt June-Sept 58th 8.Kenwd 324-7417.June-Oct. 2 bedrms., 2 baths, Prefercouple or Fern. grad, students. 752-9669 after 6.Air-conditioned 3 rm apt furn inclvibratid nr campus. Pref. cpI.or rad stud. Sublet 6/15-abt. 9/5.Ml 3-0945 eves, or wknd.TONIGHT Renoir's THE LITTLE MATCHGIRL and 'BOUDU SAVED FROM DROWNING 8 PM KENT 107WED: U of C Experimen6/The Chicago Maroon/May 13, 1969^ It J t » c l I ■ >'« « • I 4 *1 £ RS: HAIL THE CON GHEROf YH rf1■■ —- - -- ■. • »'***ajMMMAl■*************Special!Style Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BlVD.DO 3-0727-8*************STUDENTSSUMMER JOB Are you agood student?Are you acareful driver?If you are tired ofpaying a high premiumfor your car insurance itwill pay you toinvestigate Sentry'sgood student discountThis is in addition toSentry's discount fordriver education. Callyour Sentry man for fastfacts.HIRING THIS WEEK ONLYRequirements:Must have neat appearance,18 yean of age or older. Publicrelations Jim Crane238-0971Call: 892-6961 Aurora130 MPH TIREFor people who don’t do over 70, but want a ridiculousmargin of safety.A Pirelli Cinturato can do 130 mph. For 24 hoursStraight.It can cut corners at speeds your car can’t muster.It’ll stop your car faster than any other tire made.It’s less prone to skid than any other tire on theroad. Wet or dry.How do you make a tire as safe as this? Easy.You build a tire for American cars to Ferrari GTtolerances.Other radial plies use tubes. We’re tubeless.Other radials use two plies at the sidewall. Weuse three.By the time we’re finished laboring over aCinturato, it’s tough enough to withstand three timesmore road impact than an ordinary tire.Someday, every car will come equipped with atire as safe as the Cinturato. But until that dayyou can get it from us.■ IRELLIm*.FRONT ENDSERVICEBRAKE & MUFFLERSERVICE9200 STONY ISLAND AVE.CALL 374-1500Same Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSCustom Quality Cleaning1363 E. 53rd 10% Student Discount 752-6933DiscountArt Materials• school, office,•filing' supplied ' *'• drafting materials• mounting • matting• framingDuncan's<305 E 53rd hV3-4I lVi1! UCOti i HIIMIHIHiHIM * Jim * ?• i v £ I.-*" i-jFESTIVAL OF THE ARTS 1969Schedule of EventsDATE PLACE EVENT TIMEMAY 13 Breasted HallQuantrell Aud.Sec. Sci. 122Ida Noyes LibraryHutchinson CourtMAY 14 Movie: Nothing But a ManExperimental filmsMovies: Bergman's Smilesof a Summer Night and stu¬dent film GarbageEvening of Persian feetrvand Music: 0. A. Shojai at a)Student Poetry ReadingLos Conquistodores LatinBand 7:30 P.M.7:30and 9:457:307:00 P.M.Quantrell AuditoriumSENTRY tTINSURANCE! Cobb Coffee ShopQuantrell Aud.Hutchinson Court LIBERAL ARTS CON¬FERENCE 1969 The Con-ference on Scholarship osExpression THE ENTRANCEOF THE GODS INTO VAL¬HALLA 1. Opening Forum:The Media of Creativeself-Expression. Spiers.:Nerthcott, McNeill, U-wontin, BrowderConvivium: Free re¬freshmentsLecture-Demonstration:Easley Blackwood: Wuori-nen's Theme and Vari¬ations^3r 8:30 P.M.2:30 P.M.5:00 P.M.4:00 P.M.MAY 15 Hutchinson CourtLaw School Aud.(Rain: Quantrell) Swift CommonsCobb Coffee ShopMAY 15 Faculty HomesLaw School Audit. Outdoor Folk Concert: LakeCountry String BandLuncheon Chamber MusicConcert Brandenburg Con-certi No. 3,4,5Movie: Bergman's SeventhSeal student film CountryL.A.C. Cont. Student - Fac¬ulty Open Discussions: I.The Inventions of DiscoveryII. The Critic as Creator III.Science and Personality IV.Scholarship as Personal Ex¬pression V. Theory as ArtConvivium: Free re¬freshmentsInformal Dinner DiscussionsCall Ext. 4207 for DetailsMovie: Bergman's Personnafollowed by Mrs. BrigitteSteene, Guest Lecturer fromTemple Univ. THE NAR¬RATIVE STYLE OF INGMARBERGMAN. 8:30 P.M.Noon2:30 and4:45 P.M.1:30 P.M.3:30 P.M.5:00 P.M.evenings7:30 P.M.NOTE: STUDENT FACULTY DINNER CHANGED TO NEXT THURSDAY MAY 22.MAY 16 Quantrell Aud.Cobb Coffee ShopFaculty HomesThe Midway, in L.A.C. Cont. GOT-TERDAMMERUNG The Per-sonol Dimension Spkrs.: M.Abo, S. MacLane, W.H.ZachariesenRefreshmentsInformal Dinner DiscussionsCall Ext. 4207 for Details 4:00 P.M.5:00 P.M.eveningFront of RockefellerRAIN: Sunday May 18/ Bond Chapel F O T A : GALA PER¬FORMANCE Handel: Musicfor Royal FireworksBach: Concerto in E Major,as realized for Carillon, andMoog Synthesizer One oth¬er selection to bo an¬nounced Largo FireworksDisplay. Cannon ReportsBalloonsFinals: Florence JaneAdams Peotry ReadingContest 8:30 P.M.3 - 5 P.M.SHORELAND HOTELOffice space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveYou won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until to¬morrow if you call ustoday.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 | PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53/d. Ml 3-2800• * WE DELIVER DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644; 6NITES ONLY!May 13- 18Lovely ScotlithSong$lre»»JEANREDPATH3 Shows Nightly9:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m.12:30 a.m.QUIET KNIGHT1311 N.*TFells5f. a** o7«Old To#n> * ' 0May 13, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7I1* i* ■?.*• ;*1 t!)u. Festival of the ArtspresentsMind-Blowing Event IIBEAUX ARTSMASQUERADE BALLfeaturingPaul ButterfieldBlues BandandMagic SamwithLight Show ExtraordinairebyNew Vista LightsBartlett GymnasiumMasquerade optional Tickets on sale NowAdmission $2.50 person Mandel Hall Box OfficeNo Tickets sold at DoorSaturday, May 17 8:30 P.M.- 1:30 A.M. FOTApresentsMIND-BLOWING EVENT IA GALAPERFORMANCEbyDaniel Robins,University CarillonneurHANDEL’S ROYALFIREWORK MUSICCarillonCannonlarge Fireworks DisplayBACH CONCERTOIN E MAJORCarillonYloog SynthesizerTCHAIKOVSKY’S WALTZFROM EUGENE ONEGINCarillonCalliopeHarpsichordFRIDAY, MAY 16 8:30P.M.THE MIDWA Y IN FRONT OFROCKEFELLER CHAPELOur special thanks to Sears-Roehuck, Inc., Co-SponsorIN CASE OF RAIN: Sunday May 18 DavidTravis