THE MAROONFriday, May 23, 1969FOOTBALL RETURNS!MAROON TEAM IN 1892= Acting captain and right half back, director of physical culture and athletics AmosAlonzo Stagg holds the football.0% (flfriragolanft ffitnmr FINALFOOTBALL BACK AT UC!Discover Real Site of Eden Was in Midwest PULVERIZE PURDUE!Wjt gaflp jflatoon [jjjALUMNI FLOCK TO HOMECOMINGShagmen Set To Trounce BoilermakersFOOTBALL FEVER: 1934 homecomingissue. PROPHETIC GAG: Headline of 1951 jokeissue comes true.BIG BERTHA: World's largestdrum now belongs to Texas. After 30 Years of SilenceUC Will ReverberateFrom Monsters of MidwayBy Steve CookNews that football is returning to the University af¬ter 30 years has reached space.Jack Lousma, spacecraft communicator for theApollo 10 mission, read the news to the three Apolloastronauts Wednesday.“Oh, yes. I was looking at it (Chicago) yesterday,”said Eugene Ceman, lunar module pilot. “I saw themout there practicing.”Coach Walter Hass has announced that varsity let¬ters will be issued to Maroon football players at the endof the 1969 season. Not since the sport was abolished in1939, after several very bad seasons, has football hadvarsity status at UC.In 1956, Coach Hass started up a “football class” atthe suggestion of students who were interested in learn¬ing the sport. In 1960 the class became a club. Sincethen, the club has held annual scrimmages with suchschools as Lake Forest College, Marquette, North Cen¬tral, and George Williams.All the players got out of the effort was a pat on theback from Hass and the satisfaction of playing the game.In years past, the Maroons were among the mostfeared teams of the Big Ten conference. Under the lateAmos Stagg, one of football’s greatest college coaches,the footballers regularly defeated such schools as Mich¬igan, Northwestern, and Illinois. During his 41 years atUC, Stagg’s teams compiled a 254 wins, 104 losses, 24ties record.Staff left here in 1933 in a storm of controversy. Hewas forced to retire from UC at the age of 71 by theadministration. Many students and alumni felt he shouldbe kept because of his fine record. From Chicago, Staggwent to the College of the Pacific in California. In 1951,he and his son Alonzo left California for Susquehannacollege in Pennsylvania. There he coached until 1953when he returned to California for semi-retirement. Hedied in 1965 at the age of 102.In the old days of UC football, the Maroons sportedsuch greats as Jay Berwanger, Clark Shaughnessy, Har¬ry Thomas, and Ellmore Patterson. Stagg, known as the“grand old man of football,” coached his teams with aniron hand. Shaughnessy followed in his mold in 1934.Shaughnessy left UC in 1940 for Stanford after the sportwas dropped.Next year the football team will play Lake ForestCollege, Marquette, and three junior varsity teams. Hasssaid he hopes to add Oberlin to the schedule by 1972.“The problem,” he explained, “is that most teamshave made their schedules three or four years in ad¬vance.”Oberlin was the last team that the Maroons beat. In1939 they fell to UC by a score of 25-0.! 1 FOOTBALL CLASS: circa 1968. OLD STAGG FIELD: Maroons in action 1 JflSchool Strike Keeps Children Hungry15,000 Miss LunchesAt 523 Public SchoolsWhile Strike ContinuesClasses for some 1.600 pupils at the Uni¬versity’s laboratory schools are undis¬turbed by a teachers’ strike which hascrippled public schools.But more than 15,000 economically de¬prived public school pupils, many of whomdepend on free school lunches for nour¬ishment were to go into their second daywithout the subsidized food.Some 80,000 of the city’s 572.230 pupilsreceive a nutritionally-balanced meal eachday, said Robert Ohlzen, assistant directorof lunchrooms for the school system. Morethan 15,000 of these get the lunch for free.The meal provides one third to one half ofa child’s minimum daily nutritional re¬quirements, he said. Many other pupils buynon-balanced meals.Classes at Chicago’s 523 public schoolswere called off for Thursday and Fridayafter Mayor Richard J. Daley failed in at¬tempts to get agreement between the Boardof Education and the Chicago TeachersUnion (CTU). Negotiations to end the city’sfirst teachers strike in history were tocontinue.Ohlzen said, “I imagine if childrenshowed up today we would feed them.”He indicated that it might be possible for children to come to the schools for lunches.Board officials were unavailable to confirmOhlzen’s statement.Operation Breadbasket official HaroldCharles said people are going to have to bealerted to the fact that school cafeteriaswill be open.Charles, also a teacher at predominantly-black Farragut High School, said lunch¬room workers are not striking. Delivery offood, however, may be a problem. Breadwas not delivered to his school today as itis normally.At Hyde Park High School on Stony Is¬land Avenue, 52 of 108 teachers reported forwork Thursday. School officials said thenormal absentee rate is about six teachers.Fewer than 20 of the school’s 1,400 pupilsentered the building. Children had been toldby the Board of Education to stay home,but teachers were ordered to work.Twenty-two CTU pickets marched infront of the school in the morning. Three ofthe pickets and a majority of the teacherswho showed up for work were black.Earl Aldrich, the black CTU representa¬tive on the picket line, said he wants to getthe strike over with so that racial ani¬mosity will not split the teachers. He said arepetition of the feelings which came out ofNew York City’s Ocean Hill-Brownsville-based teachers strike is possible here.Operation Breadbasket has asked blackteachers to keep the schools open. 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Hyde Park Blvd. Notice!The former Mad Hatter Res¬taurant will be re-opening asTHE FAREASTKITCHENin 2 - 3 weeksFeaturing Cantonese & Americanfood, cocktails, carry-out servicetoo. '53rd A Hyde Park Blvd. EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372LTAhSAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to taka out318 East 63rd MU4-10622/The Chicago Maroon/May 23, 1969Five Liberal i •"* h x •?'to LouncilJOSEPH JARMAN: Heading For Europe. Seventeen DelegatesTo Senate CouncilSelected by FacultyBy Bruce NortonLiberal faculty groups on campus suc¬ceeded in getting five of their candidateselected to the council of the faculty senatein recently completed balloting.The five were elected along with 12 otherfaculty, out of a field of 91 candidates, tothe 51-member council.Ballots were turned in by 666 out of about1000 eligible faculty members.All those elected have tenure except Law¬rence and Radinsky, who are assistant pro¬fessors.Coburn, Prewitt, and Radinsky werenominated and promoted by groups con¬cerned about discipline resulting from thesit-in. Lewontin and Wool were nominatedby a north campus group concerned aboutdiscipline among other issues, and seekingto “liven up the council,” according toLewontin.Goodbye, Joseph Jarman!iBy Rob CooleyJoseph Jarman is leaving Hyde Park.A while back I went to my first Jarmanconcert, at the insistence of a friend, notknowing what to expect. Found myselfstripped of consciousness, subsiding intoand reaching toward whatever was leftbeyond it; going with the music, then,found agony and peace, fierce lostness andjoy. And walked out unable to string wordstogether into sentences, in touch againwith life in myself, beyond myself.“There is a kind of ancient philosophythat generates us.“All people are involved in being.”Now. just one last song; Saturday eve¬ning at the Blue Gargoyle. Then Jarmanand the Art Ensemble quartet will pile in¬struments, selves, music, spirit into a VWbus and head for France via New Yorkfor a few months or years.“Lester Bowie said we are leaving thecountry because we have to take themusic everywhere; the AACM (Associationfor the Advancement of Creative Music)has to go all over the world. Some of ushave to be like messengers and speak, sothat people won’t be so afraid and soon. . . .”The quotes are from a recent interviewwith Jarman.The real surprise — even more than themusic —was meeting him. A frantic callfrom a friend one afternoon: Jarman wassupposed to play at her house that eveningand couldn’t find a car to move his in¬struments. So I drove off to his “cave” ina Woodlawn basement and we moved in¬struments for an hour, and he spent an¬other hour setting them up — carefully,gently, dusting or polishing each one alittle. (It’s a ritual,” he said then with thatshy grin. “I have to let each one know Ilove it and ask it to do its best to co¬operate with the music. It makes a differ¬ence. When I don’t polish this saxo¬phone . . He shook his head.)Slightly built and quiet,' the incredibleenergy of the thin frame hidden except inrare moments of quick-moving hands, in¬tensity of thought: the man’s impact wasexactly the same as that of his music:peace won from turmoil, love from hatredand fear, a combination of rootedness inlife and freedom of spirit dipped up outof lostness.“People often want to treat us as ifour music is one thing and we are another.”But some things you can’t write about,just have to listen with:“One day we were just playing ‘Out ofNowhere’ and we just started playing itdifferently; and it was right, and we justkept playing it differently. And that wassort of the start of the new vision.”'Though, Jarman hastened to add, several other musicians had laid the groundworkfor the directions the AACM players tookfrom that new vision.)“We started realizing things about our¬selves, too; about our worth; not anythingin the world — our worth eternally.”“The'philosophy is really the key. Peoplekind of want to ignore that, to talk aboutjust the history of the music, etc.“We’re very interested in Eastern philos¬ophy because it seems more real for prac¬tical living; in its view of society andwhat men are about and how they oughtto be with each other.“I try to vibrate the teachings of theBuddha. At the same time I am just thecommon man; I go through all the changesthat the other people go through.“We have to answer for everything, butto ourselves; not to the society, not to thegovernment, not to the people. A man is hisown thing; but in order to be that, he hasto allow everybody to do his own thing too.... We can’t compromise ourselves; that’sa thing we’ve sort of overcome, the capac¬ity for compromising.“I see love as a concrete spiritual possi¬bility; as a force you can not only see butfeel and touch, in others as in things.“The music is like ‘breath,’ and I oftenthink of becoming air — not Joseph, justthe music .. . The music is like that plantover there, or any object; in the practicingof it, we see other things.“After I play sometimes there is so muchenergy in this body that I just have to dosomething else. I used to get drunk after¬wards to try to kill the energy.“The music is nothing more than the lifethat’s in it, the force in it. We try to be avehicle. That’s why we sometimes wear themasks, so that there’s no ‘me.’“Before we play, we make ourselves qui¬et, listen to the air, and the people arouncus . . .How the people feel often determinesthe quality and the length of the music —whether they are just sympathetic, or real¬ly listening.“I try to allow the art, the music, to flowthrough me because it comes from a sourceother than, what i call me or I. If i mustthink of it as having meaning it means thatthe love and beauty of being is the thingthat I must sing about.”Lack of financial support, constant has¬sles with promoters (including FOTA thisyear), concert hall managers (includingMandel Hall), tiredness with coping withthe grey, often hollow spirit of Hyde Park.:“I’ve lived here for quite a little while andit’s time to leave; otherwise we wouldn’t begoing.”We will all be poorer without you; fare¬well, Joseph. Radinsky, a member of the New Univer¬sity Conference and the AAUP petitiongroup, commented, “The fact that I, anoutspoken radical and a junior faculty.member, was elected indicates the deepsense of dissatisfaction on the part of facul¬ty with the way things were handled lastquarter.”Prewitt, an associate professor, stated"It appears that between a third and afourth of the new councilors were electedby groups especially organized to reexam¬ine the entire issue of student involvementin disciplinary process.”There are already four or five faculty onthe council who disgareed with decisionsabout discipline last quarter.The new council will consist of 40 full professors, nine associate professors, andtwo assistant professors. This year’s coun¬cil contained 44 full professors, sixassociate professors, and two assistantprofessors.The new council will elect a new com¬mittee of the council later this spring.Elected were:George E. Block, surgeryRobert C. Coburn, philosphyAlbert V. Crewe, physicsAllison Dunham, lawLloyd A. Fallers, anthropologyArthur Heiserman, EnglishAnn Lawrence, medicineRichard Lewontin, biologyDan C. Lortie, educationSee “Council," Page FiveBarnett Chosen SG PresMichael Barnett, graduate student inphysics, was elected president of studentgovernment (SG) Tuesday night, over twoother opponents.In a well-attended meeting of the newly-elected SG in Business East 103 MichaelFowler, 71, was elected vice-president.Both Barnett and Fowler are in the Partyof Change (PC), a liberal-to-radical group.Barnett’s election marked an end to thetwo-year rule of SG by the radical StudentPolitical Action Committee (SPAC) whichdid not field candidates this year.The SG meeting was marked by severalirregularities, observers noted, mostly vio¬lations of rules of SG’s constitution. SG’sconstitution was suspended several tmes,whereas only Roberts’ rules can be sus¬pended.In addition several votes requiring two-thirds majority to elect a person to a post,did not gather the necessary votes, butwere accepted as legal anyway.It is not known if such irregularities willbe brought up at the next meeting Tuesdaynight. President Mike Barnett could not bereached for comment.Rosemarie Gillespie, graduate student insocial sciences, was elected treasurer with¬out opposition. Jeffrey Schnitzer, graduatestudent in humanities, was re-elected aschairman of CORSO (committee on recog¬nized student organizations), and CheakYee, 70, was named chairman of the elec¬tion and rules committee (E & R).In a speech before the 80 members as¬sembled, Barnett expressed a desire toplace students as observers on such groupsas the council of the faculty senate and dis¬cipline committee. He spoke of his work onthe Independent Action Coalition (IAC) ondiscipline, and his desire for a con¬stitutional convention for the Universitywhich would consist of 20 students, 20 facul¬ ty, and 20 administrators and trustees tostudy the set-up of University with no pre¬judgments.This idea, recently proposed by formerchancellor Robert Hutchins, has already re¬ceived some support from the faculty,Barnett said. He expressed hope SG couldbecome a working organization whichwould be truly representative of studentopinion.In the election for president, Barnett ranagainst PC members Dennis Devlin, grad-uzte student in history, and David Bens-man, 70. With graduate members giventwo votes and undergraduates one, Barnettpolled 65 votes, 50 of them graduate; Dev¬lin, 37; and Bensman, 27.The race for vice-president was alongparty lines with Mike Fowler of the PC out-polling Cheak Yee of the RA 69-49. Fowleroutpolled Yee among both graduates andundergraduates.Membership on CORSO requires two-thirds of the members present to vote for acandidate. On the first vote, only ConnieMaravell, graduate student in behavorialscience, Palmer Blakely, 71, James Ker-win, business student, and Jeffrey Schnit¬zer, present chairman, obtained the neces¬sary votes.Two runoff votes were held before PetsDouglass, 70, was chosen to the final seat.Schnitzer, after an emotional defenseagainst charges in a Maroon letter of hisefficiency as chairman of CORSO and theChicago Literary Review, was chosen tohead CORSO for another year.Five people were nominated for as manypositions on E&R: Cheak Yee, later namedchairman; Jonathan Dean, present chair¬man; Juan Jewell, 72, Peter True, 72, andBill Griffeth, graduate student in math¬ematics.See “SG," Page FiveAMERICAN 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% discount to studonts with ID cardsauthorized BMC service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, illinois 60615foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.MUSHROOMS PAYf Large demand. Easy to grow. A space 3 x 3 yard <is sufficient, They grow in cellar or stable, or youcan utilise old boxes, pots and barrel*. One canmake good wages working spare times and theinitial expense is very small. Learn this profit¬able industry and add to your income. Freebooklet and full Information on requestU. S. MUSHROOM CO.. Prpt.. S. - • ST. LOWS. MO Gift IdeasfromModel CameraCRAIG 212TAPE RECORDERtop-rated by consumers ev¬erywhere. Sale priced at34’5BAUER MINIS Super 8Movie Camera f 1.8 Schnie-der lens, fully automatic ex¬posure control lists at 6995SALE 3995Most complete photo shipon the South SideHY 3-9259 1342 E. 55thMsu 03 1QAO /Tito Chirann Marnon/3EDITORIALSThanks to FOTAActivities F(r)ee?At Tuesday’s student government meeting, a losing candidatefor CORSO (committee on recognized student organizations) pro¬posed in his ten second speech, an interesting and intriguing ideafor a revitalization (no pun intended) of student activities. Thecandidate, who for his apt thought should have been elected, sug¬gested that a student activities fee be charged to all registeredstudents to increase the budget of CORSO and thereby improve thebudgets and effectiveness of all student organizations. He did notgive any specifics for his plan, probably because of his time limit,but just the basic idea is so exciting that some thought should begiven to possible implementation of the fee.SG’s constitution under the powers of the assembly states inArticle II, Section E, number 3 “It (the assembly) shall providefor its own financing and determine its budget.” The first partof the quotation suggests a possible way to create the activities fee.If SG, of which CORSO is merely an arm, can provide for its ownfinancing, it should also be able to do so in any way it sees fit. Apossibility would be for SG to have a referendum for all studentsin the University to see if they would be willing to pay a set fee atthe beginning of the fall quarter for all activities. The specifics ofthe provisions of the referendum could be worked out by the SGassembly but a possibility would be to have all students pay $15in the fall which would give CORSO an operating budget of over$100,000. With that money, activities here might be worthwhile.Naturally, a referendum of this kind would have to be approvedby a large section of the student body if it were to become law.However, is there a student here who really isn’t willing to pay$15 to improve the quality of his own life so much that living heremight be a pleasure rather than a necessary evil?The office of the dean of students would have to be informedof the procedings in SG and the activities would have to be cor¬related to get the best possible results for the referendum. Wewould hope that the administration would see the obvious benefitsof this plan and not offer opposition to it. SG, however, will haveto start work immediately if the plan can be formulated for nextyear. SG get going! ... ...- ■ ■■■■•— :LETTERS TO THE EDITORSFOTA FansWe would like you to keep up FOTA fornext year. The things that 1 liked most wasthe moog synthesizer and the fireworks.The fireworks must have costed $2,000.Amy de Camp, '82I like the music very, very much and thefireworks best of all. And I wish we couldsee it again and that the University wouldgive money to see it again.Douglas Kaplan, '82I enjoyed the music very much. And Iwould like FOTA to continue next year.Therefore I would like the University togive money to FOTA so they can give agood show like they gave this year.Lisa Furkas, '82I hope FOTA people become tycoons soonbecause your programs are good. I hope we can see your program again. I liked thefirecrackers the best and the music wasgood.Peter Fozzard, '82(The writers are third-grade students inthe lab school.)Foley EmergesSomeone has used my name to attackJeff Schnitzer in last Friday’s Maroon. Toany that are in doubt, I do exist, but I didnot write the letter.John Foley(Mr. Foley personally brought this letterto the Maroon office and identified himself.The Maroon regrets that it failed to checkthe authorship of the original letter signedin Mr. Foley’s name.)Strike Continued from Page TwoBlack Teachers Deny Support78th and Prairie, 93 per cent of the teachersat Englewood High School showed for work,and some 100 pupils had classes at Farri-gut High School at 2325 S. Christiana. Theseschools, plus Hyde Park High and others,were to be open today for classes.The union is asking for a $150-a-monthpay raise, guarantees against layoffs, andno cutbacks in the educational program.The Board is linking prevention of layoffsto a reduction in programs and pleadingpoverty. Also at issue are smaller classesand the status of the system’s 7,300 full¬time substitute teachers, of whom some 5,-500 are black. Teachers want the subs kepton and certification — with its fringe ben¬efits — given after two years of satisfac¬tory service.Some non-striking black teachers say theunion will sell out on the demands for subteachers to get the money demands.Manj' black teachers are not supportingthe CTU strike because, they charge, theunion has never been interested in theghetto child. Linking the union with whatthey call the racist Chicago school system,they say the bas' ; policies of the two arethe same.There are 23,009 teachers in the Chicagoschool system. There are four black teach-THE 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 Gleckner, 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: FTill Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert, Mark IsraelSenior Editor: Jeff KufaContributing Editors: Michael Serkin, JessicaSiegel, John RechtSunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerPounded in 1893. 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, 1213 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free of Wtarge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitposiage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. er groups: the black teachers’ caucus inthe CTU, the teachers division of OperationBreakbasket, the United Educational Em¬ployes, and the Teachers’ Committee forQuality Education.FSACCSL LikesOmbudsman JobA report endorsing the desirability of theoffice of ombudsman has been unanimouslyapproved by the student life committee(FSACCSL).The report also expressed the hope thatin the future ombudsmen will keep the of¬fice “strictly apolitical” and neutral — astance which, the committee remarked, hasnot always been maintained in the pastyear.FSACCSL passed the report, prepared bya sub-committee, on Wednesday after dis¬puting minor changes for about 45 minutes.Another section of the report, suggestingways of implementing student opinion inthe selection of ombudsman, was tabled un¬til next Wednesday for lack of time.The sub-committee, composed of CassieSchwartz, ’70, Tim McGree, ’70, Rob Cool¬ey, graduate student in social sciences, andWilliam Meyer, professor of mathematics,met with John Moscow, present studentombudsman to discuss the problems inher¬ent in the office and those that arose thisyear. They decided the office was worthkeeping.The report says, “there are several posi¬tive functions that the ombudsman has ful¬filled this year and that his successor cancontinue to fulfill next year. One of themore valuable jobs for students (and facul¬ty) is to intervene, on their behalf in theUniversity bureaucracy. Often he is able tocut through some of the red tape that stu¬dents themselves cannot.“Although he deals primarily with the lit-tler things that trouble students, he can bevery helpful in investigating scholarshipproblems and registration difficulties. Inaddition, he can represent a student inter¬est (such as reinstituting varsity football)to the administration, and advise the stu¬dent group as to the proper channels to fol¬low to have their interest acted upon,” thereport says.However, the report adds “The com¬mittee feels that the ombudsman should beapolitical, and that his office will commandrespect only as long as it remains political¬ly neutral.”In other action at the FSACCSL meeting,Cassie Schwartz was given two votes atThursday night’s Neugarten committee se¬lection committee meeting.4/The Chicago Maroon/May 23, 1969Blue Gargoyle Damaged By ArsonJarman Concert StillAs Scheduled, Despite$40,000 Damage'Two fires caused $40,000 damage to theBlue Gargoyle coffeehouse early Thursday.Police are holding an arson suspect inconnection with the blaze.The coffeehouse is in the UniversityChurch of the Disciples of Christ at 58thand University. Most of the damage re¬sulted from smoke from burning furniture.Charles Bayer, minister at the church,said that he was awakened at 6 am by aphone call. “Is the church burning down?”asked the caller. Bayer told him no, and togo back to sleep. Bayer then checked thechurch, noticed the fire, and called in thealarm.One of the fires began in the church li¬brary and the other in the counter area ofthe dining room.The arsonist apparently had a key to thebuilding or had hidden in the church whenit was locked Wednesday night, said Bayer.“When you are working with a very vol¬atile community, you have to be preparedfor the results,” said Bayer. “We have towork all the harder now.”Some 30 students and neighborhoodyouths volunteered to help clean up thechurch Thursday afternoon.Despite the damage, the Gargoyle plansto go ahead with the Joseph Jarman con-Council Continued from Page ThreeNew DelegatesEdwin McClellan, far eastern languagesand literaturePaul Meier, statisticsKenneth Prewitt, political scienceLeonard Radinsky, anatomyHarry V. Roberts, graduate schoolof businessRoger W. Weiss, social sciencesIra Wool, physiologyAlton Linford. Social Science Adminis¬tration cert scheduled for Saturday night at 8 pm.After that, the Gargoyle will be closed, per¬haps for the rest of the school year. Thereis a possibility that the coffeeshop will beclosed permanently, Bayer said. That deci¬sion is up to the congregation of the church.Thursday evening, students were circu¬lating a petition requesting the congrega¬tion to continue the Gargoyle. The Gargoyle, since it was founded thewinter of 1968, has been a popular meetingplace for University and high school stu¬dents. From time to time, however, it hasbeen disrupted by fights and furious argu¬ments. Last month a candelabra and somechoir robes were stolen, and the east aisleof the church which had been used by Gar¬goyle coffee drinkers was closed for two weeks. A $300 stereo system was stolen lastyear.Every room in the church was damagedby smoke. The walls of the library wereblackened and several windows wereknocked out. In the dining room, the firedestroyed the counter and damaged theeast wall. The sanctuary suffered somesmoke damage.SG Continued From Page ThreeSammy Dawg Denied Seat By SGDavid Bensman was elected chairman ofthe new internal affairs committee whichwill study discipline defeating SheldonSachs, 70, Phil Musich, graduate student inbiology, and Diana Burg, 71.Bill Phillips, 70, Sheldon Sachs andFrank Day, 70, were the only candidatesfor chairman of student services, externalaffairs and housing committees respective¬ly. Mike Buckner, graduate student in phi¬losophy, was elected chairman of the spe¬cial projects committee, and Jonathan Dean, law student, of the constitution of theUniversity committee, Jesse Turner, 71, tothe community relations committee.One item on the agenda, breaking ties forseats, was decided after a long parlia¬mentary tie-up by voting to send back tothe various constituencies the candidateswho had tied for the remaining posts. Sam¬my Dawg, Tufts’ representative, was notseated because he was not a registered stu¬dent, not because he was a dog, explainedE&R chairman Jonathan Dean.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, May 23MEETING: A meeting will be held for UC students whohave appointments for government interns in Washing¬ton this summer. Plans for summer seminars will bediscussed. Reynolds Club, 3 pm. Interns who are ableto attend this meeting should call ext. 3282.LECTURE: "The Aesthetics of Serialism and Krenek'sSestina", Ernst Krenek. Breasted Hall, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: "Stimulus Response Theory of Finite Auto¬mata", Patrick Suppes, Stanford. Rl 480, 4 pm.LECTURE: "The problem of Wave Generation by Wind,of: Is the Ocean a Maser?", MS Longutt-Higgins, de¬partment of oceanography, Oregon State University.Ryerson 25}, 4 pm.FILM: "A Man and a Woman". Cobb Hall, 7 and 9 pmSYMPOSIUM: "The Palestine Revolution". Participants:Ibrahim Abu-Lugt>od, Randa Fattal, Iqbal Ahmad, Pe¬ter Buch, Rita Freed, Ilyas Shoufani, Moderator: Har¬old Rogers, Black Students Alliance. Ida Noyes. 7 pm.CONCERT: Contemporary Chamber Players of the UC.Ralph Shapey, conductor. Free tickets at music de¬partment. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.THEATER: "The Duchess of Malfi", by John Webster,directed by J. Roger Dodd. Reynolds Club Theater,8:30 pm.Saturday, May 24TRACK: Stagg Memorial Relay, Stagg Field, 10 am.BENEFIT: Biharre Bahaar Benefit for Rosner Student Gallery. Art, food, fun, games, flea market, music,auctions, at Ontario & St. Clair. 1 pm until dark.FILM: "What's New Pussycat?", Cobb Hall, 7:1.5 and9:30 pm.THEATER: "The Duchess of Malfi", Reynolds ClubTheater, 8:30 pm.CONCERT: University Symphony Orchestra, Gene Nar-mour, conductor. Bach, Berlioz, Mozart, Concerto in Dminor, K 466, Poulenc, Gloria. Mandel Hall, 8:30.Sunday, May 25EVENT: Simultaneous Tandem Chess Exhibition. Twomembers of the UC championship team, will makealternate moves without consultation against all thatwill play. International House, 6 pm.FILM: "To be a Crook", Cobb Hall, 7 pm. "BananaPeel", 9 pm.THEATER: "The Duchess of Malfi", Reynolds ClubTheater, 8:30 pm.WESTERN CIV: The special comprehensive examinationin the History of Western Civilization (History 131-2-3)for graduating seniors only will be given on Thursday,May 29. Admission tickets and other material will bemailed. Students intending to take the exam who havenot received this material by Monday, should apply toGates-Blake 206.LECTURE: "Early Islamic Contacts with Inner Asiaand Eastern Europe", CE Bosworth, Near EasternCenter, UCLA. Cobb 201, 4 pm.LECTURE: "Probabilistic Grammar for Children'sSpeech", Patrick Suppes, Stanford. Rl 480, 4 pm. Following the five hour joint session thebody split into its two houses to gleet speak¬ers, secretaries and chairmen of the re¬spective academic affairs committees.Brian Cartwright, graduate student inphysics, was elected speaker of the gradu¬ate house, William Griffeth, graduate stu¬dent in mathematics, secretary, which isan executive board position, and MarkBuckner was chosen chairman of the aca¬demic affairs committee.In the undergraduate house, David Bens¬man, 70, was elected speaker, Karl Men-ninger, 72, secretary, and Gerard Leval,72, Richard Davis, 72, and Jean Larossa,71 will be on the academic affairs com¬mittee; no chairman was chosen because ofthe closeness of the vote.ideasYOU'LL FIND INTERESTINGAND VALUABLE!• Money-Back Lite Insurance• Income Protection• Payment of Mortgage• Retirement Funds• Education of Children• Conserving a Business Interest jLet me show you how you can benefit.Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2 2390 — 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE OF CANADAFOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY-WEEKLY—MONTHLYVWSAUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVYAS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYPLUS 9*/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW's encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanics havejoined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & oil change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393Vouanct"TheSysTentdeterments, physicals, con¬scientious objection, rejec¬tion. appeals, alternativeservice, counseling, legalaid. prison, foreign travel,emigration, filling outforms.The most accurate andcomplete book available!GUIDETO THE DRAFTby Arlo Tatum andJoseph S. Tuchinsky$5.95; paper, $1.95At your bookstore,from draft counselingservices, or direct from:"PdacM Hess25 Beacon StreetBoston, Massachusetts 02108 have in computer databanks?INFORMATIONSCIENCESSEMINARSERIES ONCOMPUTERSAND SOCIETYComputersData BanksPrivacyConfidentialityRound TableDiscussionRoom 480ResearchInstitutesWednesday,May 28,1 p.m.May 23, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5(The Maroon Classified Ads)PRESENTING THE NEW CHAIRMAN OF CORSO: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 AO: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Halt, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3268.JOSEPH JARMANand The Art Ensemble, with LesterBowie, Malachi Favors, & RoscoeMitchell. The outstanding talents ofChicago jazz as reviewed by Down-beat. Their last U.S. concert Satur¬day, May 24, 8 P.M. at the BlueGargoyle 5655 S University. $1.25.SHAKESPEARE FAIRETonight and tomorrow night, Juddquad, Shakespeare Faire featuringShakespeare's smash hit, THETEMPEST and wandering poets,troubedors, Elizabethan box sup¬pers. Bring something to barter anda few shillings. It all starts at 6:30and THE TEMPEST begins at 8.Info — X2526.CAMPING EQUIPMENTCamping equipment FOR RENT:Tents, Sleeping bags, stoves, lan¬terns, etc. Contact HICKORY atExt. 2381 or 324-1499.THE DUCHESS OF MALFIMay 22 23 24 25 Reynolds ClubTheatre.FOR SALESpecial on hardshell guitar cases forclassical guitars. $25. The Fret ShopHarper Court.SACRIFICE: Chinese red leatherladies' coat (very warmly lined)trimmed in black fur. Size 7. Fulllength $75. MU 4-7838.ROVER — 2000-TC-67 World's safestauto. Zircon blue tan leather-reclin¬ing seats-headrests safety belts —exc. cond. Sac. $2,350 eves 842-3494.E ICO 3070 amp, Knight AM-FMtuner, ESP6, Pro 4a headphones,solophone, best offers, 229bBJ.Sony 4 track stereo tape deck, 2Roberts microphones, headphones,Call 324-1426 eves.1961 Merc. 6 cyl. clean new tires BU8-9106 after 7:00.WRANGLER JEANS $4.98, bell-bot¬toms, tennis sneakers, sandals andsummer wear all reduced. JohnsMens Wear, 1459 E. 53rd62 VW, '69 rebuilt eng. exc. cond.Best offer 734-6364 eves.STEREO amp-preamp, changerw cartridge, 2 speakers. $100 or of¬fer FA 4-9895 days, 667-1644 eves.Good used TVs reconditioned. $24.958< up. American Radio, 1300 E. 53rd,53 Kimbark Plaza.Double-bed, single bed, and otherassorted furnishings, 667-5726.Super 8mm projector 1 year old —perfect $35 or offer MU 4-78387’/2 amp, 8000 BTU air conditionerUsed 2 months $110 324-6706.BMW 250cc drive shaft. Needs work.Could be great. DO 3-2518.NEW! Model 26 KLH phonograph249.95. The Fret Shop — 5210 S. Har¬per.'55 Dodge $60 324-3289.FIAT '64, 1100D, It. blue, 4 dr. snotires AM-FM $425, 493-8631.VW bug '66 ex cond. $950 or best;after 5 P.M. 721-6638.Furn: 2 dres, 2 s. beds, 2 arm chrs,1 Ig desk, 1 Ig. wall mirror, 2lamps, 2 wood stools, 1 iron bd, rug,typwrtr 731-0680 P.M. RIDERS WANTEDDriving to N. Y. May 27 or 28. Ri¬ders wanted. Call Sat eve or after.288-3728.LOSTLost: a sword was taken from thecostume room of University Theatrethis weekend Will anyone knowingof its whereabouts please inform usimmediately. This prop was REN¬TED and is needed for a productionthis weekend.Erown Suede Coat at Beaux Arts.Have your pea jacket. Amy Hilsman,’<3754 leave message.HELP — lost film cartridge — iffound call 2889268, John in 409, today—incredible reward.FOUNDValuable cat found ext. 8245.Jacket, windbreaker type. CollegeDean's Office. Gates Blake 132,sometime during fall quarter. Ext.2821.CONVOCATION TICKETSTicket(s) wanted for 6-14 com¬mencement Will pay. HY 3-9426.Senior needs extra tickets for June14 Convocation. Will pay. Please callJerry 268-7682.J"Rehearsals for My Retirement,"$3.29, as are all $4.98 records,including the new Joni Mitchellalbum, at the Student Coop.Extra tickets for June 14th con-vocation needed.2-3543. Reward. Please call PLSenior would like extra tickets forJune 14 convoca*ion. Please call Jer-ry at 268-7682.Tickets for June 13 convocationneeded. Call 477-7675.Senior needs tickets for 6-14 con-vocaf on. Will pay. 536-0084.WANTED TO RENTRental of a car for 2 or 3 weeks thissummer Call FA 4-1355 between 9 &10 P.M.V/t rooms, near lake, $75-595, June15th-Aug. 31st. In Chicago call 734-5243 eves or write D. Fuchs 171 W.79th St., NYC 10024.Prof needs 3-4 bdrm apt Sept-June,furnished if possible Write: R. Tan-nehill, 3 Mason Ct., Delaware, O.43015.PEOPLE WANTEDFaculty family wanted girl to live inhouse starting summer quarter orsooner. Room and board in ex¬change. . . 548-2397.3 rms Kenwood Kitchen privilegesexchange for babysitting some payfor right applicant(s) June or fall.373-0454.Teachers and students are neededfor co-op school in South Shore thisfall. Call 768-5983.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.ATTENTION ALLADVERTISERS:The Deadline for our special year - end issue (June 6)is Tuesday, June 3. This applies to both display andclassified ads. Sec'y, now until Sept 1; 10-15 hrswk; call X4725 Mon, Tues, Fri 10:00-12:00.Babysitter wanted for 2 days a week9-4, for two children ages IVj and2Vi. Call 324-8642.STUDENTSINSTRUCTORSDo You Have SomeOffice Skill and Experience?WORK PART OR ALL SUMMERFor TOP RATES and BONUS—Desirable TEMPORARY Assign¬ments.Become an"Osborne Associate"welcomed in every office.For Appointment Please CallFi 6-3915OSBORNE ASSOCIATES6 E. Monroe Suite 1308The small GOOD temporary serviceTYPIST needed immediately 165 p.easy label typing 643-6039.Wanted — PIANO PLAYER to play1 or 2 nights per week with BanjoBand at the Red Garter night club.Call Chuck Hillstrom afternoons 944-2630.PEOPLE FOR SALEMinnette's Custom Salon. Dressmak¬ing, alterations, sleeve shortening.493-9713 1711'/j E. 55th St.Typing 45c pg. 568-3056 eves.May I do your typing. 363-1104.SUMMER SUBLET4 bedroom apt. 5345 Wood lawn June15-Sept. 15. $147.50 mth. Call 493-7038or BU 8-6610 X1425.3Vi rm So. Shore furn. on campusbus rte nr. 1C., stores, etc. Jn 9thru Sept. 768-4336.3 room furnished apt.. 5532 Ken¬wood; for July-Sept. 15. Call Debbieor Rochelle at BU 8-6610 X1321.House — 56th 8> Maryland — ownroom, plenty of space, terms negot.Call Al, FA 4-9500 X 1610.Large furn. 6 rm apt June-Sept. 60th8, Kimbark $150 667-4054.Rm for 2 girls air cond apt Poss ofstaying next yr 684-6883.Share commodious 4 rm apt with 1other person. 54tn PI 8, Ellis, $50mo. Call 752-1456 morn or eves.Ellis — 54th 6 rm furn. darkroom.June 15-Aug. 20 . 555-5542.July 1-Sept. 1 beautiful 4 roomapartment, 1 bedroom, front porch,$125 mth, 5407 S. University, 1st fir.752-1335.Smr rooms for male students, $12-wk, 5747 Univ., kitchen, lounge, TV,pvt parking; PL 2-9718.4'/2 large furnshd rms $125 mo 5& Kimbark call 752-7415.1 bdr apt. turn., available June 14-Aug. 30, off street parking, $124 permonth. Contact: Ziegler 955-1719.NEAT SUMMER PAD 850 E. 57th 3bdrm. furn. $150 mo. Call 752-4229after 6.PUBL IC NOTICEBROWN S SUZUKICHIC \(.GLANDS LAKf.i SiSUZUKI 1)1 AL! KANNOUNC I S ITS ANNUALSPRINCi SALE1969 50CC S2491969 20(K'C $4501969 5U0CC S795MANY USI DCYCLI S I ROM$95.00COMPLETE PARTS &SERVICEFACILITIESMON I Rl 9 9SA I & SUN 9 6RO 1 64546454 N. WESTERNbonus icx;;STUDENT DISCOUNTON PARTS & CYCLESWITH YOUR STUDENT I D.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.003-7644 8 room furn (June 20-Sept. 20) 3bedrm, 2 bath, porch 56th 8, DorChester 684-2086 or ext. 2711.Sum. apt., 3 bedrm. turn., 2 blkscampus; cut 95-mo. 643-8210.Sub-let. June 15-Sept. 15. 4Vj roomsSpacious. Furnished $121 53rd 8Greenwood 324-3289.Sublet 21 June 20 Sept. 2Vj rms 98mo. 324-4390.Female rcommate(s) wanted to sublet our air-conditioned, furnishedapt. this summer. Convenient location, $52-month, utilities included643-6197. Apt. available now. 4 rm $ l'/j rmeft. Call Bill Stoll DO 3-6200; SteveFA 4-0342. Summer sublet w-option f0r~VMr- l3 & Kenwood. Own |arq'room. Over 20 8. Female. 324-7672 9Furnished rm. 493-3328.6900 South Crandon Ave. Deluxehighrise 1 bdrm apts. From $125;parquet floor. See Mrs. Haley MU4-7964. ^nfei h^L00? 5 r00m ,urnishedapt. 1 block from camp. Juiv-ortw-one other 50-mo. 752-8256Fern., own rm., air cond., tv SP«,ing mach. 52 & Dorch. 6-8 - o*Rent negot. 684-5388.1 bdrm apt., $132.50-mo. 72nd Coles.Avail. June-July. Call evens. 721-7823.Fall Sublet. 2'/* rooms w terraceand yard modern apt. in Hyde Park.955-3595. Big bedroom in good, close, 8-roomapt with fire, TV, stereo, porchspace, furniture, and 2 nice people'5724 Drexel. 955-1824. $«o.SUMMER IN CHICAGO? 56th 8.Drexel. Room enough for 3-5. 8rooms (was the Riveria like this?)$40-month. Call 363-2235 or 363-3380. 5 rm apt available. Can take lease.955-0177. Need male roommate for summer inkosher apartment. Own room $45Call 752-5207. 5455’/j rooms, $130 a month, 5341 Kim¬bark, 324 4043. Beautiful 12 rm apt (4 bdrms, 3baths, 2 sunporches, etc.). Furnitureoptional. $240-mo. June 1st occupan¬cy. Females preferred. Near 52nd onKenwood. Call 363-7961. Large BR in shared apt 54th & d<Chester. $46-mo. 643 4821.rm apt. June 15-Sept 15 in mod¬ern, elevator bldg close to campus.Nominal rent of $135 includes turn.,dishes, wall-to-wall carpeting, allutilities. 955-9687 or 643-3088.Large furn. 7 rm apt. 5600 blk ofDroxel Mid June to Mid Sept. 2 sun-porches, backyard 324-0467.Sublet 5511 University 6 rm. $145-mo. June 15-Sept. 15 (Time 81 Flex¬ible) Call: 493-2491. THE DUCHESS OF MALFIl'/j rm turn eft btwn 55th 8, 56th onKenwood Mid-June — Sept. $80-mo.752-2176 keep trying. FINAL THREE PERFORMANCESFri Sat Sun 8:30 P.M.Reynolds Club Theatre.ROOMMATES WANTEDFurn. TV util. $125 was $156! 363-4300 Ext. 610 60th 8. Stony.Apart. 6V2 rms 58 81 Kenwood subletJun 15-Sept call 689-6689.Lovely apt. for summer. Air-cond.,turn., 4 bedrms., TV 57th 8> Dorch.643-3348.FOR RENTMove to Park Forest. 5'/j roomtownhouse. Easy commuting. Per¬fect for children. $110-mo. Call OP747-8813. Female roomate for south shore fur¬nished apartment. June and July.$80 mo. or best offer. Call 721-4845or SU 7-0977, Ext. 37.Fall sublet. 643-7178. Male student wanted 3 roommatesto share 8 room apt. for summer.6825 Paxton. Each to have ownroom. $45 mo. 955-7177.CLASSIFIED ADSPECIAL!* vilify your friends* evaluate your profs* send an ungratefulmessage to Mom* vent your spleen* eat your liverONLY 30* PER LINE!CONDITIONS: This offer applies only to Per¬sonals, not to announcements of events. Offergood only until end of quarter. Subject to Ma¬roon Business Office monster discretion.PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVER STUDENTSSUMMER JOBHIRING THIS WEEK ONLYRequirements:Must have neat appearance,18 years of age or elder. PublicrelationsCall: 892-6961 Aurora Own rm Ig apt w porch 6 15 - 8-15 nrcampus $50 324-7417.Room — private bath $10 nearcampus. DO 3-2521. Need roomate to share large 6apt for sum S50-mo Greenwood47th 624-1282 Or X8307.Lg. 3 rm. apt. in East Hyde Pk. 130a mo. 667-7590 aft. 5 & weekends. 2 girls, summer, own room, 56 &University. X3757, Deb or Jan2 bdrm apt, avail June 15 thru nextyear. 53rd 8, Kenwood. 288-7249 after6:00 P.M. Fern roomate wanted for summerfor 6 rm apt., 57th & Drexel $45 permo. 643-6632.Female to share apartment lor two55th 8< University. 268-3576Fern wanted for summer and/ornext year. 6-rm apt. w porch Ownbedroom. DO 3-7682 or X8777.2 roommates needed for the sum¬mer. $54 56th & University. 324-57042 need male grad for 3 bdrm apt 1block west of campus for sum &next yr. $55-mo. Hum-Soc Sci stupref. 684-7466.Fern, roomate wanted June - Sept.$44 month. Own furnished room,close to campus. Entire apt. avail¬able next yr. 684-8165. Own bdrm in 7Vj rm. apt. Summersublet w-option for next year Washer 8, dryer, dishwasher, 2 phonenos., 2 garage spaces, opt to buy rmair cond cheap. 7650 Chappel (1 blkE of Jeffrey) S55-mo Call Dave, 4938863.May I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EMRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake Park_Uof C 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.CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998!yHas what you need from a S10used 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Remnoris& Mill returns at a fraction of the▲original cost.▼n^Decoration Colors and Qualities'Additional 10% Discount with thisI Ad.FREE DELIVERY 16/The Chicago Maroon/May 23, 1969•f .. •••■ i h- . \ i * * * ' h v> nWHAT A POMPOUS FOOL!PERSONALSWhat does Moscow REALLY thinkabout students' role at U.C.?What does possible Ombudsman-to-be Tim Lovain think?Find out where Michael Krauss tellsthem both to go. SHAKESPEAREAN FESTIVAL,Stratford, Canada. July 11-13 (Fri.night-Sun. night), by chartered bus.MEASURE FOR MEASURE, Sha¬kespeare; TARTUFFE, Moliere orSATYR ICON (opera); Mozart con¬cert. Tickets $3.50-6.50. Bus fare,$21.00; two night's lodging, $8.00. In¬ternational House Association, 1414E. 59 St. FA 4-8200, Mon-Thus eve¬nings. Open to public. Shapiro rental pictures due June 2-6.Student Activities Office 209 IdaNoyes Hall.Watch Milton Friedman beaten athis own game in THE JOURNAL. NIAGARA FALLS by chartered bus.June 27-29, Fri. night-Sun. night.Fare and night's lodging, $30.00. In¬ternational House Association, 1414E. 59th St. FA 4-8200, Mon.-Thus,evenings. Open to public.Hate your father? Buy him a super¬wide tie at Insanity South, 51st nearHarper. This weekend: John Webster's THEDUCHESS OF MALFI 8:30 P.M.Raynolds Club Theatre.Pick up THE JOURNAL — free atG B 428, Info. Center Ad Bldg. Rey¬nold's Club desk, History office Soc.Sci, Bldg, or Cobb coffee shop. Tek: you are may sunshine; but Iwant to see the stars. Dusty. Buddha. Perhaps not in my life. Ialways see you alone. How strange.HB anyhow. VMLodestoneLodestoneLodestonelLodes-tone Lodestone Come to a Symposium: "The Pales¬tine Revolution" Ida Noyes, Friday,May 23 at 7:00 P.M. (See display adin this issue)"Your darkest actions will come tolight" THE DUCHESS OF MALFITHIS WEEKEND. "Misery acquaints a man withStrange bedfellows" Tonite — 6:30.Young kid wanted to get appre¬ciated. Call 667-7394, leave message,Paul. Travel edifies the mind and body.Marco Polo 326-4422. Make it over to Ahmad's for somevery fine food (try butt steak).Good ole country music in Cobb Halla week from today. Ralph Stanleyand the Clinch Mountain Boys.Grad student will buy your car inEurope for you this summer at hugesavings, CTE program, shippingind. Call 643-4413. ...‘SOME SOUND ADVICE****ADC 303A speakers again for only$77.77 Scott, Kenwood, Dyna, AR,save 15% to 25%MUSICRAFT, campus rep Bob Ta¬bor, 324-3005. Travel edifies the mind and body.Marco Polo 326-4422. Young kid wants to get educated.Call 667-7394, leave message, Paul.Young kid wanted to get cultured.Call 667-7394, leave message, Paul. Why clip coupons, wait for sale, orjoin record clubs? The Student Coopis still cheaper?The return of laughter. June 6 —the funniest movie ever! Doc Films. "I am THE DUCHESS OF MALFIstill." 15 years to 1984But time is accelerating.Would you believe 5 years to 1984? Big Brother isn't just watching; he'sstoring everything in his Big DataBank.If you think the draft is bad today,find out what it was like during theCivil War. Get THE JOURNAL -free!!!!!! Become accustomed to Europe viaBardou — International Village. 50cdorm accom., $2 dbl room. Frenchand German lessons. Inform: Klaus,Bardou, Mons La Trivalle, Herault,France. Writers' Workshop PL 2-8377.Shapiro's due June 6. DANCE TO THE BLUES! LODES¬TONE BLUES BAND Sat M^y 31stIda Noyes $1.and more in THE JOURNAL."Whether we fall by ambition,blood, or lust, like diamonds we arecut with our own dust.'' THEDUCHESS OF MALFI. P e o p I e-oriented girl 21-35T-group alumnus 643-7)78. call Love your father? Buy him a super¬wide tie at Insanity South 51st nearHarper. Tomorrow afternoon the Red Soxare going to give the white sox theworst licking of their lives. Joinwith other Bostonians at this joyousevent. 324 9173 or 493-4359.The new JOAN Baez album, FORDAVID, only $3.99, as are all $5.98albums at the Student Coop.Big Brother never forgetsNot your mistakesNor rumors, nor gossip, nor lies. If you have a motorcycle and wantto go on something of a jount callBob 536-2489 and maybe a bunch ofus can figure out something enter¬taining to do. "I am THE DUCHESS OF MALFIstill." Thomas Busch AnnetteFern Gerald Fisher Donald Swan-ton THE DUCHESS OF MALFI.The scarab knowsware. mortals, be- LAST DAYS FOR CLASSIFIED ADSPECIAL. 30c per line. This appliesonly to very personal personals. Noannouncements of events. Smartenup and do it!Adam wasstrong. a clod H.W. Arm- Anthony Braxton, Leo Smith, andLeroy Jenkins are leaving for Parissoon after Jarman. Their farewellconcert will be Wed. 5-28, 8:00, atIda Noyes — Two Exercises inSpace."What's past is prologue.""Where the bee sucks there such I'Shakespeare Faire 5-24, 25.Next-to-the-last Contemporary MusicSoc. concert: Anthony Braxton Trioplays Two Exercises in Space, Wed.,5-28."Bluegrass is to country and west¬ern what Chicago blues is to R 8.B." (Anon.) Next week Ralph Stan¬ley and the Clinch Mountain Boysplay bluegrass. Fine stuff. DEAR MARY-SUE: Haven't youtalked to anybody else on the CLRin the past month or so? THEY allsay that the Maroon should carrythe CLR and let bygones be bygonesbecause Jeff Schnitzer is no longerwith them. If he didn't mismanage,then how come there are such heavychanges going on? Come on, Mary-Sue, you've been great all year untilnow. Don't mismanage your loyal¬ties.Get me some too.Young kid wants to get loved. Call667-7394, leave message, Paul. fear itself, songs: NEAL GLADS¬TONE, CHRISTINE KUCHLER. sto¬ries: DALE WHITNEY, ARTHURHEISERMAN Sunday WHPK 5:00p.m.1969 — 1984-15John Thomas, caThomas Donaldson. 955-0177tTHE JOURNAL — free — at G.B.428, Info. Center Ad Bldg., ReynoldsClub desk, History Office in Soc.Sci. Bldg., or Cobb coffee shop. Is country music due for a come¬back? I doubt it, but then I neverthought them college kids would belistening to B.B., Albert, Freddie,and those fine musicians namedOtis. So maybe they'll come to hearone of the greatest musicians ofcountry music next Friday in CobbHall.All kinds of insane fathers day giftsfor sale at Insanity South 51st nearHarper. CLASSIFIED AD SPECIAL. Only 3more papers left to immortalizeyour neurosis at 30c per line. Per¬sonals only.Group of students have organized ahorseback riding group. We need afaculty advisor. If interested pleasecontact Madeline Muetze 643-6524. Anthony Braxton, Leo Smith, LeroyJenkins play: Two Exercises inSpace, Wed. 5-28, Ida Noyes.LIFE UNDER NASTY COMMUNIST RULE DEPT, (cover photoon the magazine ''Czechoslovak Youth 1969"NEWMOODS.,01110 select I roin ournow collection of mootsettin<: incense amincense burners. Manyexcitin': fragrances.Aromatic, long-lastingand effluvienl.imported from Africa.Mexico and India.Incense fromBurners from$2.49.4 new international arts utui craft* centerJEWELRY • HANDICRAFTS • SCI LITIIREHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 521-7266Convenient hours: Noon to 8 p.m. daily; Noon to 5 p.m. Sunday A plan for world peace? Racialharmony? Women's rights? The re¬newal of spirit? These are a few ofthe teachings for this age from theBaha'i writings.The power to transform society?Something you won't just read aboutbut experience and feel within theBaha'i Faith.The UC Baha'i Fellowship leavesIda Noyes for I IT at 7:00, MondayMay 26. Join us. The above quote, and the belowquotes, are from the REVOLUTION¬ARY QUOTATIONS FROM THETHOUGHTS OF UNCLE SAM, a farout collection of surprising gems. Atthe Bookstore.We think that anybody who talksabout black capitalism or black con¬trol or black communities in a sys¬tem of international imperialism isinsane.Phil Hutchings, 1968Memorial Day Eve Dance with THEMOH. 9 to 1, Thursday, May 29 atthe Blue Gargoyle.FREE KITTENS. 955-6470.Dear Ann, Having kids is like fillinga room with air. Rich.Things are in the saddleAnd ride mankindRalph Waldo 1847 ... no Slave should die a naturaldeath. There is a point where cau¬tion ends and cowardice begins.Give me a bullet through the brainfrom the beleagured oppressor onthe night of seige. Why is theredancing and singing in the SlaveQuarter? A slave who dies of natu¬ral causes cannot balance two flieson the Scales of Eternity. Such aone deserves rather to be pitiedthan mourned.Eldridge Cleaver, 1968Choose one Caption:(1) Warmest best wishes to Joseph Jarman(2) Give this man a job - call 3266(3)$25REWARDFORA NameFOR A SNAZZYNEW MONTHLYMAGAZINEPublished in Chicago By and ForFolks Who Don't Live on The GoldCoast and Wouldn't If Tnev Could.ApplyThe Name is the GameThe Maroon1212 East 59th StreetChicago, Illinois 60637For Information ('.all Ml 3-OHOOExtension 3269. The Winner ’W illBe Announced in the June 6th Issueof the Maroon.May 23, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7f1 ;Simca 1204The New Bock - Door Runabout From The Crysler People.41 cubic feet of luggage space (back seat folded)(About the same price as a VW Beatle)When you need the advantages of a station wagon for carrying things sedans normally $;$ can't (like 11,000 copies of the Maroon, 30 cases of beer, camping equipment for a5 20-student tent-in, or 2,429 Pieken Inner-Glow candles), just flip the rear seats down, jjSJ5 open the back door and load, and load.The engine: regular gas -- economical as only a 1204 cc 4 - cylinder engine can be. |$ Transverse - mounted (that means crosswise in plain English), right on top of the frontwheel drive so you can drive places most cars can't - - through mud, sleet, and snow on $;6 Chicago streets, or deep into the woods in Jackson Park. :£K Other good features, all standard: vinyl - covered, reclining buckets seats (nice on dates Jj:or long trips), full bar suspension at all 4 wheels, radial ply tires, and individual map $;£ pockets on the doors for stashing old copies of Playboy or summonses from the :|jiv University... §Not only that, you rate a body welded into one solid, rattle - free unit, and disc brakes $;X up front.£ And doors! You can get either 3 or 5, depending on how fast you want to unload your5,000,000 sugar cubes... $All this for around $2000. :jjj:;:XXXXXX:X:X:X:X:XX<X:X:X:X:*X-X-X-X-X-X-X-X'X*X-X”-X-X-X'X-X*X\VX-X-X%VX*X-X-X-X*X-XVXV:-’:1 HYDE PARK AUTO IMPORTS 16900 S. Cottage GroveAuthorized Sales & Servicevx-x-x-x-x*x-x-x*x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x*x-x-x<rxx-x-x-x-x-x-x-x%*x-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-xwx#wx-:S BLACK IS when you’d rather face the Viet Congthan the friendly cop in your own neighborhoodA book eiptoring In drawing* and funny/trightonlng cotton* tho roalltto* ofracial rotation* in th* U.S. today.Black Is BY TURNER BROWN, JR.ILLUS. BY ANN WEISMAN$1.25. A Black Cat Paperback. Now at your bookstore, or order directly fromGROVE PRESS 319 Hudson St., New York 10013. (Please enclose payment394 postage)CALL• YOU 'NIGGER erder. Incled*HANDCRAFTED GOLD& CUSTOM SILVERJEWELRY5210 HARPER CT.667-8040CAN'T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGANLi909 HIZZ-THpjooau fBOtpoTJadJSJ-BJqTT Non • Profit Org.U. S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IlUnoi*Permit No. 7931THE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number 23 May 23, 1969z..msA Thrilling Contest!!Cleaning Up The Mess On 57th St.ArtLOOKING AT THE EXISTING LANDSCAPE is a way ofbeing revolutionary, Roberty Venturi once said. Excitingif not revolutionary ideas are needed in Hyde Park tomake the existing landscape more hospitable, especiallyto students.57th Street in particular needs attention, quickly, be¬fore more of the same kind of dull, drab, face-lifting isdone to the area. It’s the last stand of the famous urbanrenewal plan that brought you 55th St Shopping Center,Kimbark Plaza, vacant lots, and other suburban ame¬nities that a city needs less of. Will the Board of Educa¬tion put up a chain link fence? Will the University bringin a Chinese restaurant? Will the Department of UrbanRenewal sell the vacant land to the lowest bidder withthe lowest plans? Maybe, maybe not. The College Fo¬rum, with Louis Natenshon, Chicago architect; BennettGreenwald, city planner; Leo Goldsmith, city plannerand consultant on 53rd Street, and Margo Jones, a sec¬ond year student in the college will be looking at theexisting landscape of 57th Street before something lessdesirable appears. They’ll have plans, ideas, and maybeeven some answers.What’s your plan? One more week for the plan-your-own-57th-Street contest. The prizes will be fantastic, ex¬citing and bizarre. Hurry, hurry, hurry!The ArtsyUC CampusTHERE’S BEEN A LOT OF ART on the campuslately; during FOTA weeks there could be found no lessthan seven separate exhibits. The number alone mightlead one to believe some kind of creative activity isgoing on; the quality suggests that The Situation, asStencil called it, is not quite that good.It’s already too late to see the FOTA exhibit itself,and to see some fine photographs by Ben Gold and Ste¬ven Fite inconveniently displayed at inconvenient Mid¬way Studios. Fite showed documentary style pictures ofthe recent Madison difficulties and some nude-in-the-woods shots that were lush if a bit awkward. Gold’spictures were more spectacular; black and white andblack on colored paper solarizations making some verydramatic compositions from almost unrecognizable fig¬ures and faces. Midway is having a show a week duringthe last month of school, so wander down thereoccasionally.Those painted poles on the lawn are by Paul Simonis,an Art Institute student. They’re a nice idea which wouldhave been better had they been a little less sloppilydone, and then been displayed in a smaller outdoorspace, or if there had been ten times as many polesfilling the entire lawn area between those big gray build¬ings. It’s hard to get a forest in one part of the space.They approach it better with more poles. But it’s verynice to have all that color out there. Perhaps we can getthe buildings painted like that, or at least every class¬room a different color (try to have institution think inthat kind of environment).On the new plaza of Billings Hospital, behind thebookstore is another outdoor display — three largealuminum pieces by John Henry. They’re not quite largeenough to hold their own in such a huge space butthey’re excellent pieces, beautifully and solidly con¬structed, and they make pleasing sounds when rung. Themost successful relating to the large space is done by thelong aluminum bar that suddenly kicks up in the air —Continued on Page Five cudkK- l\34,56APT. | 3 7_&k^blacbtone-“ \*V< vBIXLER.s»A63rn 0 RAY I(LI 5CH001I is Rv dorchester \\NVi(5HAI>£0INDICATE ^RESIDENCE^). ^9.1/6 ken Wood f1INSTRUCTIONS:1. FILL IN THE VACANT LOTAlh.j IE ^2■ AJ)<jlGN THE 6L)5/NE55e5'fbOW'ANT It) EACF( NUMBER(ADC* and subtract too.) KimbarkjIr, 'inter Now! BwzL J_ GARGOYLE VifoodlawnVvV VS*3s*n QUADRANGLE CLUB'turn university.fCAMfV) JSubmit your completed entry today to the GCJ staff, Ida Noyes 303Peter Sellers • Peter O’Toole • Woody All, WmT°§ c£NEW, PUSSPYCgFr?4 coibb 75<tJEAN-LOUIS TRINTIGNANT ANOUK AIMEEinCLAUDE LeLOUCH’SU A MANANDA WOMAN”FRIDAY, MAY 23, COBB, $1,CEF AT &.00,8c00, & 10:00FREE DOUBLE FEATURE - JUNE 5 - “CITIZEN KANE” & “THE AFRICAN QUEEN”AMERICAN FILM INSTITUTECENTER FORADVANCED FILM STUDIESAPPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR SEPTEMBER 1969For professionals in the early stages of their careers and the most promising graduates of universityfilm programs, the center will provide an unique opportunity for individual development based ontutorial relationships with leading film makers.Each year up to fifteen candidates will be accepted as Fellows of the Center for a two-year program;Ten Fellows to concentrate on direction and writing, two on cinematography and three on historyand criticism. A flimmaking or research program will be designed for each Fellow. This will involveextensive screenings and study of classic and temporary films, and the production of a series ofexperiments, exercises and original film projects. For admission information, please w rite to:AMERICAN FILM INSTITUTECENTER FOR ADVANCED FILM STUDIES501 DOHENYROADBEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA 90210ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVALAugust 1st through 3rd, 1969in a field in Ann Aroor, Michigan4 MAJOR CONCERTSFri. niteJimmy "Fast Fingers"DawkinsB.B. KingFred McDowell"St. Louis" Jimmy OdenJunior WellsSat. niteLuther AllisonClifton ChenierSleepy John EstesRoosevelt SykesMuddy WatersHowlin' Wolf Sun. afternoonArthur "Big Boy"CrudupJohn Lee Hooker"St. Louis" Jimmy OdenRoosevelt SykesBig Mama ThorntonSun. niteJames CottonLightnin' HopkinsSon HouseCharley Musselwhiteand Freddie RouletteMagic SamT-Bone Walkerplus more name acts, workshops, & seminarsVisitors' accommodations are available.Series tickets $14, individual concert tickets $5.All programs subject to change.For full information and ticket order formswrite and include your summer address:Ann Arbor Blues FestivalMichigan Union, Dept. BAnn Arbor, Michigan 48104 HYDE PARK THEATRESTARTS FRIDAY MAY 23rd2 BLOCKBUSTERS ON ONI PROGRAMDpawn logeiher by an overwhelming love...THEY CROSSED THE 80UKOARY BETWEEN BUCKMO WHITE 10 BEACH EACH OTHER'S ARMS"ONE OF THE YEAR’S TEN BEST!” Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FORUNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTH-FIFTH & WOODLAWNSTARTS TODAY-1 W. ONLYBlack and WhMaa. Together.Fighting for what thay wantAnd, thay want thetra NOW!Produced in Chicnfu by Thu Film Group, Inc.ONTERFYPOPBY O.A. PENNEBAKERFILMED AT THE MONTEREY INTERNATIONAL POP FESTIVALSTUDENT RATETHREEPENNYCINEMA also: Miolard Lampell s"THE INHERITANCE"STARTS NEXT WEEK2424 N. Lincoln AvenueChicago, Illinois 60614phone 528-9126“WILL PROBABLY BE THEBIGGEST MOVIE ON COLLEGECAMPUSES SINCE ‘THEGRADUATE !" «“LET IT SUFFICE TO SAY THATlf_IS A MASTERPIECE,reason enough to rank Andersonamong cinema’s major artists.’’ -h“SUPERIOR! A MASTERFULFILM! Ataut,gripping movie thatgathers force and builds into ashattering, surprising andfrightening ending!’’ t *.< ,4 v“ANGRY, TOUGH AND FULLOF STING!”»V. FkPARAMOUNT PICTURESA MEMORIAL ENTFRPRISES FILLit..« hit h xitlr h ill > on Im* on?MALCOLM McDOWtLL CHRISTINE NOONAN RICHARD MRWICK DAVIO WOOD* '•*rP,4» s* ‘-none Ob *00**0 D»ROBERT SWANN OAVIO SHERWIN IINDSAV ANDERSON MICHAEL MEDWIN,mm/cRUSH fit OAK free MIDWEST PREMIERECOFFEELOUNGE^ 944 2966 MAY 28thWEDNESDAY2/Grey City Journal/May 23, 1969ITheaterDuchess In A BlackTHE DUCHESS OF MALFI, A MAGNIFICENT WIDOW,secretly woos and marries her steward, which for im¬propriety is something like marrying the butler; theyretreat from court life, and she has his children and ishappy. But her brothers, the Cardinal and the Duke —one cold, the other raving with a jealous passion for hissister, and both ruthless — have her hounded, impris¬oned, and tortured, and then have her and all hut one ofher children murdered.After the murder the Duke runs mad, believing that heis a wolf, and the Cardinal plots the steward’s death. Buttheir hired spy and killer, Bosola, who supervised thedegradation and death of the Duchess, avenges her bykilling them both. In the final melee he accidentally killsthe steward, and the mad Duke kills him. At the end,with all the principals murdered, the only one left to pickup the pieces is the Duchess’ remaining son, who ap¬pears on stage in utter incomprehension of what horrorshave passed and, in such a court, what horrors maycome, small and mute.A sketch of the macabre action of John Webster’sDuchess of Malfi at the Reynolds Club theater is perhapsthe worst advertisement for this grand play, because itserves mainly to point to a lack of tragic focus andinevitability, and fails, as it must, to point to a vigor oflanguage and gesture that lifts the play above melo-I ultiire te¬rnNPlatonic Vulture1 DON'T KNOW how they ever convinced us to wasteour time on this nonsense Thursday of Eighth Week. Theargument that the editor is responsible for somethingjust doesn’t carry much weight with us. What is theeditor responsible for for chrissake? What is anybodyresponsible for? Huh? You know damn well its all some¬body elses doing or not doing. And speaking of whatsomebody else may or may not be doing we suggest thefollowing:FilmWhat’s New Pussycat on Saturday. Doc Films in¬sists its a funny movie. So is Danny Kaye. Howcome younever see Danny Kaye movies at Doc Films. Up tightlittle snots. And speaking of uptight little snots — Con¬fident :al to TC in Chicago — We find that you haveshown a complete and fundamental inability to grasp thefact of a distinction between illusion and reality. As youknow this dichotomy is one of the bases of art. The artistis not responsible for the exact and graphic representa¬tion of concrete reality — it is of no concern to him.Thus the criticisms you offer are not only irrelephant,but internally inconsistent. We suggest that you reviewProust and John Dewey before writing another in¬stallment or making another movie. Oh, by the way, theClark is also still on Clark Street.TheaterDuchess of Malfi, the last production of the year forUniversity Theater, will appear this week-end. It will beone of the best productions of the current season if notthe bloodiest. Tom Busch, Annette Fern, Gerry Fisher,Don Swanton, Jane Batt, Caroline Heck, Jessica Siegeland the rest of that crew are all in it. Roger Doddsdirects, (see review elsewhere in this issue). Rosen-crantz and Guildenstern Are Dead at the Shubert, Stair¬case (about queers like everything else) is at theIvanhoe, and Entertaining Mr. Sloane is at Hull Houseand features murder, lust, and “dark doings”. Terrific.For you musical comedy buffs (I admit it) Guys andDolls is at the Harper Theater.MusicThe Contemporary Chamber Players are giving a pro¬gram of specially commissioned works in Mandel Halltonight. Ernst Krenek and Ralph Shapey will conductand Neva Pilgrim will be soloist. Featured will be pre¬viously unheard music of Krenek, Shapey, Levine, andSchaefer — all commissioned by the Fromm MusicFoundation. This is the best music to be heard oncampus.Special TreatsUniversity High School is having (wonderful) a Shakes¬pearean Faire, featuring a production of the Tempest, aswell as a recreation of some genuine 16th Century Eng¬lish atmosphere. To wit — merchants and vendors sell¬ing their wares, Medievil games, food and drink, periodmusic, and the barter system (bring something barter-able). It takes place in the center of the education qua¬drangle Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow, 6:30 to 10:30,with the play at about eight. Fun. Fun. Fun. All sorts ofthings to do.Last item, thank God. Rosner Gallery, Chicago’s ownstudent gallary, is having a BIZARRE BAZAAR (cute,huh) at Ontario and St. Clair Saturday from One tilBark. All the beautiful people will be there. Mass nudityis featured. WonderlandAnnette Fern and Tom Busch in UT’s production of “The Duchess of Malfi”drama to the level of lucid, stylish nightmare. The playis in fact no more tragic than Hamlet or Othello wouldbe with Ophelia or Desdemona as their central charac¬ters. At its center is a Duchess magnificent not by virtueof any tragically overreaching ambition or passion butsimply because of a direct, almost bourgeoise desire tolive in peace with the husband and kids. She is sur¬rounded by madness and nightmare, and her dignity,which is not exactly heroic, is in her stoic knowledge ofexactly who she is, what she is, and where she is. She isan Alice reviled and finally murdered in a darker Won¬derland, with all of Alice’s clear and unblinking normal¬cy in the face of monstrosity.The problem of staging the play is enormous. It isrelentlessly talky, its action meanders for four acts up tothe murder of the Duchess and then for another act pastit downhill to the final bloodbath, its villains are virtual¬ly motiveless, its romantic lead the Steward is card¬board. It is true that the Duchess herself, if a goodactress is on hand, is easy enough, and a lazy directorcan focus on her, elevate her and try to make a strainedtragedv of pathos out of her intermittent ^appearances.The hard part is the madness and nightmare, the sus¬tained creation not of a superb Alice but of the densethreatening atmosphere of Wonderland. Without this at¬mosphere the play falls apart, since it has no movementto speak of and outside of the Duchess not much behav¬ior. With it, what a play, and what a director.All of this is preface to remarks about Roger Dodds’current University Theater production of Webster’sDuchess. Dodds has his superb Duchess in Annette Fern,who gets perfectly the humane mingling of Coquetry,dignity, and compassion in the character, and gets itintelligently and without hysteria. His Duke is the fineactor Gerald Fisher, who convincingly modulates fromthe great lord we first see through the prim, fierce,murderous brat of the heart of the play to the lunatic ofthe finale. His icy Cardinal, Donald Swanton, is solid inan unrewarding role, and. he gets a fine performancePop ■* mmmmPolit ics andAnother OchsFOLK-MUSIC HAS PROGRESSED in many ways fromthe period of its great popularity in the early 60’s. Thesingers of that time who are still popular today havemoved on to what is called art-music — identifiable with“Suzanne”, Dylan, Donovan, and “Both Sides Now.” Thestyle of the early sixties — hand-clappin’, toe stompin’rhythm to words which were simple enough to sing onthe chorus which came around very, very often — hasalmost completely died out. The theme was usually top¬ical — racial strife, war, and poverty. Because of this,folk-singers were often called protest singers. When JudyCollins, Joan Baez, Tom Paxton, Tim Hardin, and EricAnderson moved on to art-music, they left the protestfield barren. However, Phil Ochs is still writing and sing¬ing about the ills of society, and doing it' as well as theothers did six and seven years ago.Ochs’ music is peculiar to him. You don’t pick up aBaez or Collins album and see them doing his songs.This is understandable when you hear his compositions.Only Phil Ochs can do Phil Ochs’ swigs. They are, forthe most part, so typical and so suited to his voice (whatthere is of it) that no one else is willing (or is it stupid enough?) to attempt to do them. So Phil Ochs is onlyknown to a small percentage of folk music fans whohave his albums or know someone else who does. This isunfortunate because Phil Ochs has a lot to offer theconcerned listener. VThe problems with a Phil Ochs concert, like the one inMandel Hall Monday night, is that if you aren’t writingdown the names of the songs and what they are allabout, you quickly forget everything but their message.Too many of the songs sound like all of the others. Theyall point out problems in American society, in manycases the war, but the words are easily forgotten and thetunes, though intricate and pretty, vanish after onenights sleep. An exception is “The War is Over”, a greatsong. Ochs’ fans will say that this is not so, but let themask anyone who saw him for the first time Monday, andthey will learn the unfortunage truth. Perhaps this isOchs scheme — the message above all — but this policymakes his songs not as moving as they should be.Monday night Ochs was in good voice, even better thenhe sounds on many of his records. And the dialoguebetween the songs was as much a part of the concert asthe songs themselves. Ochs got his digs in on Nixon, thewar, Chicago and the plainsclothesmen in the audiencebefore he was through, to the delight of his captivecrowd. His protest songs were very well received and hewas called back for two encores. Unfortunately, he for¬got the words to the second encore song but the audiencereally didn’t mind. They still cheered when he left. Andthen they left, with Phil Ochs’ messages firmly im¬bedded in their minds.Mitch BobldnMay 23, 1969/Grey City Journal/3from Jane Batt as the Cardinal’s mistress, an unimagin¬ably easy lay and born loser. Thomas Busch is an inter¬esting bleek Bosola, cringing with disgust for himselfand all he sees, padding silently (but sometimes, Ithought, too inwardly) across the stage like a priest ofdeath. A1 Charlens is a small jewel as a foppish Count,and David Pichette appealing as Delio, the Steward’sconfidant. All in all, Dodds has a fine cast, and an im¬pressive set and costumes by Raymond Jean Keeslarand Lonnie McAllister as well.But the nightmare isn’t really sustained. It comes infits, and the fits — a troop of lunatics out of Marat-Sadebrought in to torment the Duchess; the rope stran¬gulation of the Duchess and her waiting woman, onegoing in dignified gruesome silence, the other kickingand screaming; the final carnage of the villains — areall brought off with great style. But between fits the playfails as nightmare, and the time drags and drags.What would it take to make this play work on stage?For a start, vigorous cutting (to my reckoning Doddscut only one brief scene and a few lines), and after thata directorial interpretation which began not with insightsinto character and behavior, or with strategies for ex¬ploiting the play’s occasional moments of high spectacle,but rather with a sense of the whole play. Such an inter¬pretation would try to deal with the dips of the play aswell as its rises, in fact it would try to see the play as awhole tissue rather than a series of dips and rises. Thewhole tissue of The Duchess of Malfi is nightmare, andwe should know, every minute, that we are in Wonder¬land.Let me put this another way. The Reynolds Club The¬ater is no Wonderland, and Roger Dodds’ Duchess ofMalfi is as fine a piece of University Theater as hascome around the bend in the last couple of years. It is aserious, intelligent effort, inevitably only a partial suc¬cess, to stage a brilliant but impossible play.John TaylorIlmmityThninr Pitsaasrjeht) IVehftnid^ess 4 <®ALpidiivcted by Roger DoddsREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE.May 22 through25 8:50 PMTickets: $2.00 er$ 1.50 available atj | The Reynolds Club D&k or' byphone, University Orchestrawith University ChorusGene Narmour, Conductor3 pieces from "Damnation of Faust" BerliozJan Herlinger, Guest ConductorConcerto in d minor MozartSandra Acker, PianistBrandenburg Concerto#6 BachGloria for Soprano, Chorus, & Orchestra PoulencBarbara Pearson, Soprano, with University ChorusMay 24,1969, Mandel Hall,8:30 P.M. Admission FreeSuccubus is THE sensual experience of nineteeitsixty ninsuccubus Clark Ienjoy ourspecial studentrateTRC ?,a"f Y timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officeRur'cu'buH -IIN*', u. Ml., fr 1. rruha *trum|*tfr nurcnhan t. lie under • A demon a**umiii|r femaleform to have xexual intereoiirxe with men in their sleepb A demon or fiend r A la*ei\iou> person Persons under 18Not Admitted• SUCCUBUS's-.''"i JANINEREVNAUO- JACK TAYLOR ou, ADRIAN WOVEN t>-..-m t>, JESS FRANCOiPitti* C4MNNI toS'M • •O.IN CWO- P-OOuftO" O' »*. »QU * ' t V | V( BWIlSI S WRlIN » TRANS »M1 RlCAM II MS HI . t »' I .In COLORNOW Me VICKERS THEATREMadison near State St.Continuous Showing from 8:45 AMDEPARTMENT OF MUSIC andpresent COUNCIL ON THE ARTSCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAIRW IN HOFFMAN •ConductorSoloists: Donald Peck, flute; Victor Aitay, violinWorks by: Bach. Beethoven, Kilar, StravinskyTUESDAYJUNE 3, 1969 MANDELHALL8:30 P.M.Admission: $2.50 and $ 1.50 (5(P discount to students) All seats reservedTickets at Concert Office, 5835 University;MI 3-0800 ext. 2612.Sunday, May 257:30 P.M.OPERA HOUSE$6.50 $5.50 $4.50 $3.50On Sale At Box Office 0* IN PERSONcTatar. uauland dJlarytax OfficeEXCLUSIVELY I 20 N. Worker NOW THRU JUNE 1!FunkyFolk-Country-WesternMR. I MRS. GARVEY(Pat & Victoria)3 shows nightlySpecial 8 P.M. showsFri. - Sat.Open to all agesQUIET KNIGHT1311 N. Wells944-87554/Grey City Journal/May 23, 1969♦ , V* V 4 4 » • different double featuredaily• open 7:30 a.m.— lateshow 3 a.m.• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day—all gals 50clittle gal lery for galsonly• dark parking—1 door»uth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly program..u PIER A CAV'^NFC A bicycle puts you closeto nature - Thus spakeZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh, Robin Hood, falcon,Peugeot, Gitane, Vlercier,Radius and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. Used bi¬cycles spasmodically.Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 - 8:30; S&S 10 - 8The carpetbagger* from Old Town Held over 4th MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDA bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CLIFF ROBERTSONCLAIRE BLOOMn CHARLY n. . _ . Student rate every\1 SR day BUT Saturdaywith I D. CardIMAGE THEATRE150 N. Clark St.EXCLUSIVE * * FIRSTCHICAGO SHOWINGStarts Fri. May 23“SHOULD BE SEENAT LEAST TWICE!”-N. V. TimasA FILM BY PIER PAOLO PASOLINISTARRINGTERENCE STAMP SILVANA MANGANOctua r r ( jjj“The PalestineRevolution"A SYMPOSIUMPa rticipants: _Frof. Ibrahim Abu Lughod, African StudiesProgram, Northwestern U.Mrs. Randa Fallal, Editor, THE ARAB WORLD,New YorkProf. Igbal Ahmad, Fellow of the Adlai StevensonInstitutePeter Buch, Socialist Workers PartyMrs. Rita Freed, Committee to Aid Middle EastLiberation, New YorkProf. Ilyas Shoufani, Georgetown UniversityModerator:Harold Rogers, Black Students Organization U of CSponsors:Black Students OrganizationPan-African Students UnionOrganization of Arab StudentsPakistani Students OrganizationMuslim Students AssociationIda Noyes HallFriday, May 23 at 7:00 P.M.ALL ARE WELCOME.i*sv„\vunf< -ia v-vo tux % b »5o o Q^ 5, »i Z rnr ” -T-» ±>§■ tAV.V'Combing The Art SceneContinued from Page Onethough it’s a bit gestural against 4 stores of gray. Itwould be great near a one-story building, and Billings istoo overwhelming.The best piece is the one closest to the bookstore —the three canted slabs. It’s the best because it doesn’tgesture, it just sits, and because it interacts with itssurroundings on the ground plane without trying to com¬pete in height. It literally pushes into the ground. Hen¬ry’s work, like that of so many artists who have beengiven the Minimal label, must be seen to understandwhat it's about; even a photograph doesn’t give a clue.You remember the Renaissance Society — thoselittle rooms in Goodspeed that last year gave us ComicStrip Art, Art Nouveau, and 18th Century Chinese ExportArt, three greats in a row? This year they’ve come upwith bummer after bummer. Their current show is thebest of the year, but that’s not saying much.The Renaissance Gallery has two awkwardly justa-pased shows at .once — “Ligature ’68,” a suite of poemsillustrated by local artists and expensively printed inmud. and a group of 19th century French political car¬toons borrowed from the Epstein archieves. I couldn'timagine at first why these two exhibits were together, es¬pecially when the Ligature had been displayed only acouple of months ago in Harper library. Then I realizedthey both involve the combination of words and pictures,in two different centuries and two different ways—art atthe service of social comment, and visual art trying tocoexist with verbal art. That's a clever idea for a show—unfortunately it only works as an idea, becaue it’s solelya cerebral link and it looks awful on the walls.The cartoons come off the best in the comparison, Ithink because Poetry with a capital P and Art with acapital A is too rich a combination. Demands are madefor a response in two visual ways at once: reading andlooking and it’s simply too hard to do both at once andArtCome To TheBizarre BazaarIF YOU WERE A STUDENT ARTIST, where could youshow your works? Soon the answer might be “no place"Most galleries refuse to display student art. The RosnerGallery, the only professional gallery created for the stu¬dent is las all worthwhile organizations) badly in need offunds. It has been unable to be self-supporting and itsappeals to foundations have failed so far (in favor offinancing studies on the sex life of horseflies).The gallery was founded nearly a year ago by Mrs.Phyliss Rosner and her daughter Judi a recent graduateof the University of California at Berkley. The gallerywas launched (the gallery is located near the lake) Mrs.Rosner says, “because students are the artists of tomor¬row and they should have an opportunity to have a show¬case for their work in a centrally located, art-orientedarea of a great city.” That’s how they chose to set upshop at 235 East Ontario, next door to the Museum ofContemporary Art.The gallery, by giving a student exposure, helps himto see himself as an artist and to learn about the artmarket rat race.The gallery achieved some notoriety last fall when amassive outdoor sculpture, called “Mother and Child”,offended several of the gallery’s neighbors and led to aseries of obscene phone calls. The sculpture, which dep¬icts a nude mother kneeling over her child, was laterchipped by an ax-welding critic late one night and thegallery then moved the work to another site.Despite the problems, the Rosners have brought a pro¬fessional expertise to the student showings, and havebuilt an audience for the shows. A number of studentsfrom UC and other Chicago schools have exhibited there.The gallery will celebrate its «irst anniversary with aBizarre Bazaar a fund-raising benefit, to be held tomor¬row, May 24 from 1 until dark at the corner parking lotat Ontario and St. Clair Streets. The Bazaar will featurean outdoor carnival, a puppet show, a Mideastern fleamarket, a fortune teller, five rock bands, a Baroque Bak-ery, an outdoor and indoor art auction, fun, games, andsurprises (all you television fans). The flea market willsell old records, books, costumes, rugs, fur coats andother exotic junk (or should we say junque). There willbe a booth selling student drawings, prints, ceramics,and photographs all for under $10. The Baroque Bakerywill have all kinds of ethnic delicacies and tasty delightsto titillate the taste buds.The money raised at the Bizarre Bazaar hopefullywill be enough to keep the gallery open for some monthslonger during which time they will continue to scout outa grant. Fine Toothdo a successful job of responding on either level — theyinterfere with each other. Perhaps a dial-a-poem ap¬proach would be better for a picture-poem combination:earphones for the viewer so he can hear the poem asmany times as he likes while looking at the picture aslong as he likes. It’s easy to listen and look but hard toread and look. Then again, the lack of success of “Liga¬ture ‘68“ might be because the pictures are pretty dull.There’s a nice poem about Eisenhower visiting Francothough.The political cartoons are more successful becausethey have no such Aesthetic Pretensions. The picture issubordinate, a vehicle for the content, and if it’s morethan that it interferes with the message. So there’s noquestion who’s boss, and some unpretentious but com¬petent picturemaking can result. The artwork is solid butpictorially unadventurous, because its aim is instant rec¬ognition of everything in the picture, which means thevisual vocabulary must be a well-established one. Otherpictorial virtues are the bonus of craftsmen who care.The French cartoon style was a carryover of 18thcentury Rococo Satirical Sketchbook Style of such artistsas Rowlandson, Hogarth, and Greuzes (and peripherallyGoya) unaffected by the highfalutin tomfollery of theNeoclassicists. It was a well-established manner, ofwhich Daumier was the master. Most of the cartoonslook like second-rate Daumiers, not so much because theother artists imitated him, but because he did best whatthey were all doing. Daumier in his cartoons was not aninnovator — he stands out because he had such a person¬al command of established conventions, in much thesame way that Chaucer is a great poet although most ofhis work was nothing but translation — the translationsended up being better than their sources. There is, ofcourse, not a single Daumier in the show, though quite abit of Grandville and Anonymous can be seen.Anonymous is better.If the Renaissance Gallery has not been bringing usgood shows this year, Bergman Gallery has, most notab¬ly the photography exhibition “Just before the War,” and“American Baroque” which was a gas. They are show¬ing, through May 24 (so if you RUN you can still makeit) paintings bv Philip G. Reich and ceramics by HardySchlick. Schlick is a good potter whose pieces seem tohave been made by the forces of nature rather thananybody’s ego. I especially like the white flattened speres with slits across the top, which look like stoneballoons with a 2000-year lifespan that have just beenpopped, and could we but live long enough we wouldgradually see them collapse. There’s also some fineRaku-ware. Of the Philip G. Reich Memorial Six-Pack, Iwill simply say that it’s utterly fantastic, incredible, outof sight and you must see it.The FOTA Art Exhibit is a nice idea, although it is apaltry substitute for an adequate art program (studentdemand for studio art courses is so high that every classhas a waiting list and some are pre-registered as muchas three quarters in advance) yet the expansion of studiofacilities, for which funds have already been privatelydonated, has not been approved because somebody can’tdecide whether we really need more studio space. So onecan’t criticize the show too harshly because most of thework would be better if the students had a chance todevelop their interests with professional assistance with¬in the curriculum, and the opportunity isn’t available toUC students, though the instructors try.What’s nice is that anybody in the University mayenter the FOTA show and have one work shown, more ifthere is room (there was). In addition to the lack ofjury, prizes are awarded by vote of the exhibitors them¬selves, which is also a nice idea. The result was anexample of pure democracy in an art exhibit, and prob¬ably the perfect way to run a student show. The prizes,unfortunately, exhibited one of the drawbacks of de¬mocracy, which is that if everybody votes you can getRichard Nixon for president. Except the photography,which was far and away the best part of the show.The show neatly split itself into two classes: the artmajors (yes Virginia, the UC does have art majors),hereafter referred to as the Pros, whose work was dull;and the students who do art primarily as an outlet or ahobby (hereafter referred to as Ams), whose work wasdull. The difference was that the Pros have more techni¬cal competence, which one would expect them to have.The Ams were in the majority, so Ams won the majorityof prizes. I disagree with just about all the awards, ex¬cept the photography. So I wish to award Bendito’sBrownie Point Consolation Gold Stars to the followingpersons for the most successful solutions to the mostambitious undertakings: Painting, Richard Sessions for“Faucet; Graphics, “1969 Progress Parade” by DonaldCarr; Sculpture, Ray Keeslar’s Clamshelled bellhous-ings. I agree with the photography choices, but will sendgold stars to Marc J. Pokempner, David Travis, andC.D. Munson, anyway.Philip G. Reich“Philip G. Reich” is the stage name of Bendito Bur-buja de Jabon, a New Mexican New Artist completinghis second year as Visiting Student in Residence at theUniversity of Chicago.Art«Film BonanzaIn QuantrellBECAUSE COMMERCIAL PICTURE DISTRIBUTION isgeared entirely to the release of feature-length films,anyone who makes a short movie — other than thosethat promote the virtues of Tide or Pillsbury must beeither subsidized by the government, committed to thearts, or simply mad.In an attempt to rectify this situation by creating apaying audience for short films, Brant Sloan, an Ameri¬can movie entrepreneur who has the backing of MCA,Inc. has collected 26 shorts from around the world underthe title “The Kinetic Art”.The first 11 of the collection were shown last Sundaynight in Quantrell. Another seven were exhibited Thurs¬day night at seven-thirty and nine-thirty. The remainingeight will be presented a week from Saturday, May 31,at those times.An entire program devoted to short films really doesrun the risk of growing tiresome after the first half-hour.But Mr. Sloan has taken pains to get the most from thejuxtaposition of contrasting films.For example, in Phenomena, San Francisco’s Belsonhas composed a short, dazzling montage of colors. Hisfilm is a phantasmagoria of prisms, dots and explosionsof light that are as exhilarating as they are indescrib¬able.In contrast is Cruel Diagonals, by Vlatko Filipovic ofSarajevo, Yugoslavia. It is a stark black-and-white filmabout a small boy trying to survive during the Nazi seigeof a Balkan village in 1943. “La Pomrae is the work of the French artist who didthe drawings and paintings attributed to the artist inFrancois Truffant’s The Bride Wore Black. His film is amoving, black-and white record of the things that catchand hold the eye of an artist in love with life.Drawings of babies, of a couple making love emergefrom still shcts and still shots turn into moving picturesin a random way that is structured simply by the artistscompassion. It is a beautiful movie.Of the several animated films on the program the mostinteresting is the Ravickarna by Jan Svankmajer ofPrague, in which two punch and Judy puppets fight forpossession of a live guinea pig. Svankmajer very adeptlymixes stop motion and live-action photography to makehis point.Among the eight films to be shown next Sunday will beVersailles, by Albert Lamorisse. This is Lamorisse’s firstshort since The Red Balloon. In Marie Et Le Cure, an¬other Sunday offering, Diourka Medveczky, a Hungariansculptor living in Paris, establishes himself as an im¬portant new director, with a mordant tale of eroticismand psychosis in a French village.May 23, 1969/Grey City Journal/5 ,c,V: U - \ 1 < '■ **<’.•IS ANYBODY LISTENINGTO CAMPUS VIEWS?BUSINESSMEN ARE. WThree chief executive officers— TheGoodyear Tire & Rubber Company'sChairman, Russell DeYoung, The DowChemical Company's President,H. D. Doan, and Motorola'sChairman, Robert W. Galvin—areresponding to serious questions andviewpoints posed by students aboutbusiness and its role in our changingsociety . . . and from their perspective as heads of major corporations areexchanging views through means ofa campus /corporate DialogueProgram on specific issues raised byleading student spokesmen.Here, David G. Clark, a Liberal Artsgraduate student at Stanford, isexploring a question with Mr.DeYoung. Administrative activities inGreece and Austria, along withbroadening experience in universityadministration, already have claimedMr. Clark's attention and auger well a career in international affairs.In the course of the entire DialogueProgram, Mark Bookspan, aChemistry major at Ohio State, alsowill exchange viewpoints with Mr.DeYoung; as will David M. Butler, inElectrical Engineering at MichiganState, and Stan Chess, Journalism,Cornell, with Mr. Doan; and similarly,Arthur M. Klebanoff, in Liberal Arts atYale, and Arnold Shelby, LatinAmerican Studies at Tulane,with Mr. Galvin.M, DeYajn°: Can you justifyforeign exploitation?Dear Mr. DeYoung:"it is an extraordinary fact, thatat a time when affluence isbeginning to be the condition, orat least the potential conditionof whole countries and regions,rather than of a few favoriteindividuals, and when scientificfeats are becoming possible,which stagger mankind's wildestdreams of the past, more peoplein the world are suffering fromhunger and want than everbefore. Such a situation is sointolerable and so contrary tothe best interest of all nationsthat it should use the determina¬tion on the part of the advancedand developing countries aliketo bring it to an end."This eloquent statement by theSecretary General of the UnitedNations points up a problem ofwhich any informed citizen mustcertainly be aware. Corporations,also doubtless sense themagnitude of the disparitybetween the rich and the poor,between the thriving and thehungry. As the chief executiveofficer of a giant multi-nationalcorporation, and as an individualwho has had considerableworking experience around theworld, you have seen first-handthe wretched state of mankindreferred to by Mr. Thant.At the same time, as Chairman ofGoodyear, you are the one mostresponsible for the long-runmaximization of stockholders'interests in the company. Tothat end, you have ledGoodyear through a period ofsignificant growth in sales andcapital investment, mostdramatically in areas outsidethe United States.In response to a rapidly growingmarket for rubber goods abroad,more than 50% of Goodyear'scapital expenditures during1963-1967 were for expansion ofinternational operations.Consider the earnings on totalassets at home and abroadfor the same period.Earnings onTotal Assets1963-1967RangeAverage ForeignOperations8.5%-11.5%9.8% DomesticOperations5^3%-6.0%5.6%Had Goodyear International'sreturn for 1967 been at the samepercentage level as the homecompany's, foreign earningswould have been $12.5 millionlower.Whether the countries wherethese operations are located have gained as much as Goodyear hasgained is questionable,especially so in the developingcountries. Exploitation is, afterall, nothing more than takingadvantage of the favorablecircumstances of anothercountry which may lack capitaland/or know-how whilejustifying to ourselves that it isin their best interest. Admittedlysuch undertakings do providejobs, educational facilities,medical care, better clothing andshelter to employees and theirfamilies. But this gives riseto other questions.Are these direct benefits for afew people really enough?Where are the "above normal"foreign earnings going?What right do we as Americansand you as Goodyear have totake resources from anothercountry for our own profit?What is Goodyear doing to helpdeveloping countries becomeeconomically viable andindependent members of theworld community? Is Goodyeardoing anything to help build upindigenously owned businesses?Isn't it possible that several U.S.and other foreign firms operatingin a small, developing countrycould become so centrally linkedto the economic health of thecountry and hence to itsfinancial base as to be able tostrongly influence the composi¬tion and style of its government?Mr. DeYoung, perhaps thefundamental issue in all thesequestions relates to the ever¬growing gap between theprospering and starving nations.Can American firms reallyjustify their position in thedeveloping countries when eventhe most conservative populationbiologists tell us that the worldwill be experiencing severe foodshortages by 1980? Certainlyfirms investing abroad mayexpect a normal return on theirinvestment, but when so manyof the emerging nations are sodesperately in need of resourcesfor development in the broadestsense, are we really justified intaking so much out from thosecountries for our ownmaterial aggrandizement?Sincerely,0 CJLdsJ*David G. ClarkGraduate Studies, Stanford Dear Mr. Clark:Whether measured by economicor social yardsticks, the directresults of most modern multi¬national corporate activities inthe emerging nations is thefostering of progressivedevelopment—not exploitationunder the outdated concepts of19th Century mercantilism.Any casting of accounts revealsthat corporate policies, and theirimplementing operations, arefocused toward growth within acountry. There is also a realisticunderstanding that thoseoperations can be the essentialmotivating force for any viableprogress of the region.Essentially, the "in-put" is fargreater than the outflow,all factors considered.This is clearly revealed from aneconomic perspective by thefiscal policy planning and profitposition of many majorcompanies abroad. As demon¬strated by Goodyear's ownposition, we have repatriatedconsiderably less than half of ourforeign earnings over the pastten years. Conversely, more thanhalf of our earnings have beenre-invested abroad. This hasbeen buttressed further byadditional capital investment—both equity capital and long-termloans—in the emerging nations.Even with this continuinginfusion of additional capital,coupled with re-investment, forthe past three years, returns oncapital investment in these areasstill does not equal—let aloneexceed—returns on domesticoperations.This disparity is broadenedfurther by the tax factor. Takinginto account an overall tax rateabroad of some 40 per cent, ascompared to the U.S. corporatetax rate of 52.8 per cent, foreigninvestment returns still aremarkedly less than in ourdomestic operations, notwith¬standing the more favorable rate.Implicit to this picture is theposture of the major corporationabroad both in terms of itsrelationship to the hostingforeign government, and theeffects of its operations oneconomic and social growth.Essentially operations aredesigned to establish a basefor growth while meetingimmediate local needs,disciplined by the realities ofthe profit-motivated freeenterprise system. All of these Dialogues will appear inthis publication, and other campusnewspapers across the country,throughout this academic year.Campus comments are invited, andshould be forwarded to Mr.DeYoung, Goodyear, Akron, Ohio;Mr. Doan, Dow Chemical, Midland,Michigan; or Mr. Galvin, Motorola,Franklin Park, Illinois, as appropriateIn direct consequence thehost-country's GNP is increased,tax revenues swelled, localmanufacturing stimulated, localemployment is expandedbroadly with a wide range ofnew jobs, and local consumerneeds satisfied—which is ofcrucial importance in conserving"hard-money"reserves or foreignexchange credits.Equally, the impact of theseoperations upon local livingstandards cannot be dismissedcasually. For many it has meantthe incredible step forward from"bare-survival"existence to aviable way of life. To aninordinate number this can be asbasic as obtaining an adequatesupply of potable water,treatment of diseases we'veforgotten about in this country,sufficient food, and at leastliteracy level education.The dimensions of this pictureare broadened further by the factthat an investment climate isgenerated that begins to attractother major enterprises to thearea resulting in broaderdiversification.The simple truth is, Mr. Clark,that the modern multi-nationalcorporation, disciplined by theprofit and loss risk, is the onlymechanism capable of creating,implementing and managingchange. Accordingly it is throughits operations that rapid socialand economic development willoccur in the emerging nations.Don't you agree that its positionis justified?Sincerely,Russell DeYoung, ChairmanThe Goodyear Tire 8iRubber Company6/Grey City Journal/May 23, 1969Theater . VGUYS AND DOLLS is the old warhorse of musicalcomedy, and maybe it’s too much to expect anamateur production to live up to kitsch splendour. TheHyde Park Music Theatre makes a valiant effort, buttheir production (perhaps inevitably?) renders the mate¬rial about as well as a follow-the-dots drawing rendersthe “Mona Lisa”. This is not to say that the stuff of avery good show isn’t there; it is: decent actors, someyummy voices, and a technical job sufficient to make auniversity theater participant quivery with jealousy. Butthe whole thing comes off strangely anemic. Part of theproblem is the staging of the musical numbers. Thereare a few exceptions (“Marry the Man Today,” “SueMe”), but for the most part one gets the distinct impres¬sion that the actors have been instructed to sing at theExit signs, or anywhere but to each other and/or theaudience. There is virtually no interaction in the openingnumber or in “Guys and Dolls”; in “I’ve Never Been inA Dash ofMissing on IsTHE GREY CITYJOURNALHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorMichael SorkinManaging EditorJessica SiegelStaff ExtraordinairePeter RabinowitzT. C. FoxPimple Face StanleyThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation ard contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.Witzie J 3/ower Shop“ELOU ERS FOR ALL OCCASION"1308 EAST 53rd STREET The music, under the direction of Arthur Roberts, wasalways well-done; in fact, the best thing about the pro¬duction was the way it sounded. Technically, the showseemed smooth as glass. There was only one momentwhich worried me: Sky was singing about his time ofday, the dawn and all, when suddenly there was a loudhappy click!, after which the stage was virtually ablazewith Dawn. It’s possible that that’s actually the way thesun comes up over Broadway, of course.The production had other things going for it. I liked theidea of placing clacks in the audience for the Hotboxnumbers, and the street scenes were clever and well-managed. The sets were spiffy and right (the Hotboxmaybe a little too spiffy — sort of like the lobby of theWaldorf); the fifties costumes, also. The dance numbers(credit here to Steffi Wallace, whose husband Norm dida nice bit as the Drunk) were interesting and smoothlydone. In fact the production had almost everything goingfor it. What it didn’t have was the kind of hard-sellpizazz (chutzpah? soul?) that makes musical comedy asbrassy and bright as it should be.Ann AshcraftSEMMARYCOOPERATIVE BOOKSTORE5747 University (basement)SALE20% off on all booksSelected titles at costprice (33% -40% off)Other titles at ft priceor $1.00, whichever islessFRIDAY, MAY 23 through THURSDAY, MAY29, ONLYTerms: cash and no rebateSALE HOURS: 11:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. Love Before,” Sky (Robert Guy) turns his back on Sarahand ambles to the other side of the stage with his handsin his pockets. This is passion? In some of the othernumbers, this refusal to relate to anyone engenders astatic quality reminiscent of those juke boexs which flashstills of the singers while the song is being played. Withsuch a passle of sellable songs, its a pity that all of themweren’t punched with the same verve and conviction as“Sit Down, You’re Rockin’ the Boat” and “Take BackYour Mink” — two really successful numbers.Another major problem centered around the actors:there was a uniform lack of energy, conviction, and tim¬ing. Static, rooted-to-the-spot staging, and gestures whichseemed to be pasted onto the actors’ bodies, seemed toaffect their energy onstage (or maybe it was the castparty — this was a Sunday performance). As for con¬viction, musical comedy demands just as much imagina¬tive projection into a character and situation as any oth¬er kind of theatre. Which is to say, the lines sound betterif the actor talks like he means them. The comedyemerges from the character, not vice versa. Finally, theactors here blandly slid over some great bits becausethey treated the gags as simply funny lines rather thanas kickers to whole, separate beats of the comicsituations.Of the leads, only Kathleen Ruhl as Sarah was con¬sistently lively and involving. She looked like she be¬lieved it, a technique which is just as useful for AbeBurrows’ lines as it is for Chekhov. Bobbe Wurmstich’sbrassy-as-hell voice and Kaye Ballard expressionsworked nicely for Adelaide, and Richard Roberts’ Nath¬an successfully matched her. Mr. Roberts managed toinject a good deal of Runyonland flavor into the playwhen he was onstage, in spite of the fact that he happensto look like an “Esquire” model. He sings nice, too.Robert Guy’s Sky seemed to be more Ohio Nice Guythan tainted city-slicker, but his silky voice made up forit. Here, as in the rest of the performances, all the ele¬ments were there, but a little more spirit was needed toignite them. Some of the minor characters seized theirmoments beautifully: Bob Hughes was a swell, manacingBig Jule (“I came here to shoot crap. Let’s shootcrap.”), Patrick Billingsley made an endearing ArvideAbernathy, and Mark Friedman, in particular, was im¬pressive in the slender role of Harry the Horse. Friedmanhit the perfect small part balance: he did everythingright while remaining unobtrusive.^TITirrMiiiiiTiiiiiiiTmiuiiiiiimiiiniiiiiiiiTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiS:\ SUNDAY, MAY 25, COBB HALL, $1,CEF =“One of the essential booksof our time.”*CONSCIENCEIN AMERICAA Documentary History ofConscientious Objection inAmerica, 1757-1967Edited by Lillian Schlissel* “Anyone interested in that awesome question of theright of conscience vs. responsibility to the state . . .must face up to the issues raised in this excellent col¬lection.’—Warren I. Susman, Dept, of History,Rutgers University.Cloth $6.50, paper D 210 $2.75 ^duttonAT 7:00CLAUDE LeLOUCH’S“TO BEA CROOK” AT 9:00MARCEL OPHULS’& 66 BANANAPEEL 99-IN CINEMASCOPE- E(PLUS “HAPPY ANNIVERSARY” & “BULB - CHANGER”) =: FREE DOUBLE FEATURE - JUNE 5 - “CITIZEN KANE” AND “THE AFRICAN QUEEN” ZfinnmiimnimminnmmnmmnmM|||||||||||||||||||||||limmimmmmmimimim*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 THE DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC THE FROMM MUSIC FOUNDATIONTHE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSRALPH SHAPEY • ConductorErnst Krenek • Guest ConductorNeva Pilgrim • SopranoWorks by Krenek • Shapey • Levine • SchaferFRIDAY • MAY 23, 1969* 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission free with ticket.Free tickets at Music Dept.Concert Office, 5835 University Ave.May 23, 1969/Grey City Journal/7George Russell featuring Don Ellis& Eric Dotphy Byrd Man;Charlie Byrd RS-3044at theirgreatestonMongo Sou): Mongo Santamana RS 304!"6 cylinder Deluxe"May we invite you for a test drive?VOLVO SALES & SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1-3800We specialize in European delivery — call us Allegheny Air SystemWe have a lot more going for youNow there is an addition in the Volvo family.We think you should see it... our new And saves you up to 33 Vb %.If you’re between 12 and 22,what are you waiting for?Stop by any Allegheny ticketcounter and purchase yourYoung Adult Card.Only $10 for all of 1969.Allegheny Airlineshelps you beatthe waiting game...Allegheny's Young Adult Card lets you flywhenever you want to (even holidays)and still get advance reservations.SALK Ol Ai m l\\PKKBACKSHundreds of lilies, new titlesarriving daily 50% l)is< ‘Oil lit .|{<‘pr«*>«*ntalm‘ l it— S<U*<t«*<l al RandomM rilOK , IIII 1 1 In | PKK L Mil; I'KICKHivkin 1 friai iV- the W esl I .05 1.00( .artrr Independence for 1Jricn 1.75 .851 ippmann 1 he (,ood Society i. t :> .75< il 111 p Im* 11 1 ,oren .05 .50>ol/hrnil-> n Iran Denisovich or, .50Srhw art/ The Red Phoenix 2.25 1.15The Pursuit of justice ..">0 .25■'ThuriMT The Ouj in the iltie 1.15 .85f1 roiKtrtl Kremlin Since Stalin 2.0.-, 1.50fVrmi Elementary Particles 1.25 .65mmMiifihfs In Hazard 1.50 . i 5\\I) M \M. M \M MONKTHE BOOK STORK58th & FlitsKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.ME 4-6856 JESSELSON'SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPI 2*2870, PI 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd8/Grey City Journal/May 23, 1969it i it iJ t* *■ # »*A Special SectionFriday, May 23, 1969Women and the Universitymm*.■T'W .A4 ?By Caroline HeckIn the midst of trying to assemble this issue — contacting people to writearticles, interviewing women, thinking up retorts to the male Maroon editor and staffmembers who suggested that the women’s supplement should center on campusfashions, favorite student recipes for upside-down cake, and the most popularpatterns of silverware — I arrived home after a weary a day to open my mailbox andfind the following letter:“WHY COLLEGE WOMEN NEED SECRETARIAL SKILLS?As an executive secretary, you have the opportunity to use your initiative andinnovative power to study your chosen business from the executives point ofview.HOW CAN I MEET THE CHALLENGE FOR AN EXCITING CAREER?With secretarial skills, you will be equipped for the competitive business world.”I thought it was pretty funny. I wasn’t upset. I, like any other woman my age, havereceived many similar communications — invitations to secretarial schools, to finishingschools that offer to teach me the graces I need to be a “lady,” advertising fromcosmetic firms that tell me that no man will look at me unless I spend so many dollarson their beautifying preparations, teachers who congratulate me for being soarticulate — for a woman. The patent dismissal of women as silly, twittery creatures,either content in their position or to be indulgently tolerated in their shrill protests, isso widespread, so persuasive throughout our lives that we accept it as inevitable, or elsewe don’t even see it.This last is particularly problematic. So many men I have spoken to don’t believeor understand that women are treated unfairly in our society. To these men, I addressthe following questions:What would you think of someone who told you that what you should do for the restof your life is clean a house, change diapers, and serve on committees in the locallibrary? You’d probably think he was crazy.What would you think of someone who then told you that if you didn’t want to spendyour life doing this, then you must be unnatural, perverted, heartless, and incapable oftruly loving your spouse and offspring? You’d think he was crazy.What would you think of this person if he then told you that if you absolutely refusedin pursuing this, your natural destiny, then you might be allowed to pursue yourambitions by typing someone else’s letters, adding up his bocks, teaching his children upto age of around 16, nursing — but not doctoring — him, or if you were very, very lucky,modeling his clothes? You’d think he was crazy.Of course you’d think he was crazy. And if he should tell you that this was howeveryone in the society should think, and if he then should live his life in a way thattried to force you to go along with his ideas, you’d think that he was a dangerousmaniac who needed to be removed from any position of power.This “crazy man,” this “dangerous maniac” represents the prevalent opinion thatdictates the lives of over one half of the population. Those who think that University issomehow a haven from this suppression ought to talk to some women around here.Attending a University does not absolve one from the prejudices of society, and society’soppression of women is evident in the lives of all women, within the University andwithout.Walk into a classroom here. You see a certain number of women. Then shut youreyes and listen. The women disappear. It’s difficult, you see, to go against years andyears of early training that tell you ladies don’t argue, women should be quiet, nicegirls don’t talk back.Do some girl watching. Or watch some man do some girl watching. Girls who taketen minutes to get dressed in the morning — wash their faces, tie back their hair, puton a pair of old jeans, — are bitterly criticized: they’re “messy,” “slobs,” “typicalunfeminine female intellectuals.” To be an attractive person, a woman not only has tobe pleasant and kind, she has to spend astronomical amounts of money and time onclothes and cosmetics. Ask a friend to name an outstanding man, and he’ll answer, “ohso-and-so is just brilliant.” Ask the same about a woman, the answer is “oh so-and-sois just gorgeous.”Talk to some recent alumnae. The men are in grad school, or working as executives,or making some progress in pursuing their careers. The women are in grad school(though less than the men), working as secretaries (yes, most women with BA’s havetrouble getting anything other than glorified secretarial jobs), or using their expensiveeducation, their philosophy or chemistry majors, to help them solve the problems ofironing shirts, waxing floors, and blowing four year olds’ noses.For many women on campus, some sort of revelation came during last winter’ssit-in. The constant emphasis on the issue of women’s rights, and the fact that for thefirst time women found themselves being treated as equals to men — in disciplinarycommittee hearings, where they had at least to attempt to articulate some statementof what they were doing with their lives — helped to make women examine theirexistences.For women to come to some collective realization of their situation is no simplematter. We women have been taught since childhood to dislike and distrust each other,as competitors for the only people who count in this society — men. The prejudicesagainst women are by no means entirely external. Taught by our own mothers sinceearly childhood, the idea that the “woman’s place is in the home” is indelibly ingrainedin the characters of many women who are either content to be housewives, or who feelguilty and deviant if they are not content.The realization that women are entitled to more than they now get is somethingthat will come only with further education. In the hopes of furthering such education,the Maroon publishes its first women’s supplement. We hope that it will be read by bothmen and women, and that it contributes toward destroying the prejudices that nowoppress the lives of women and that make our society a poorer place.Caroline Heck, 71, is news editor and editor-elect of the Maroon. She edited thisspecial supplement.Liberation“Throughout the history of this country womenhave received less pay than men, often for thesame work.”By Linda Seese, Nancy Stokley and Chris HalfarThe women’s liberation movement arose as a reaction to the oppression ofwomen within the new letc and civil rights organizations of the early 1960’s. Womenwho had fought militantly for the vote for blacks against the war in Vietnam, and fordemocratization of the universities, began to realize that the rhetoric about equalityfor all, and a new humane world, was not meant to apply to women. Women werealways found pounding typewriters, passing out leaflets, and answering telephones.Drawn into the movement for the same humanitarian and political reasons as men,women were exploited as “shit workers” and sex objects by the male leadership.The earliest objectors to the double standard for women were in the StudentNonviolent Coordinating committee (SNCC). Ruby Doris Smith Robinson, one of thefounders of SNCC, wrote a paper on the position of women in SNCC in 1964, to whichthe only response was Stokely Carmichael’s comment, “the only position for women inSNCC is prone.” The issue cropped up more and more often after this. Women beganto draw apart and to think, write and speak with other women. They begandeveloping women’s ideology and a program for women’s liberation. Most of us areradicals and socialists. We feel that it is impossible to attain individual liberation.Although many men and some women within the new left still consider women’s issues“reformist,” or “middle class,” we think this usually reflects their chauvinismmore than it reflects our movement. Let us look at women’s issues from a radicalperspective:Throughout the history of this country women have received less pay than men.often for the same work. Women have never been permitted to learn skills, exceptskills for trades which became defined as “women’s work:” secretaries, nurses, etc.Almost all women’s jobs are grossly underpaid, so much so that white women whowork full time earn less than black men who work full time, and of course blackwomen earn the least.Although some labor leaders see women’s demands for equal pay as “taking thebread from the wage earners,” in reality male workers do not gain materialadvantages from women’s lower wages. It is the employers only who gain largerprofits. Women’s lower wages hold down men’s wages, for women are used as areserve labor pool to keep wages for all down, and as strikebreakers. On the otherhand, it is clear that men do gain material advantages by suppressing women, andhaving a free housekeeper, cook, baby sitter, laundress, prostitute, secretary andpsychiatrist at their beck and call for the simple price of a marriage ceremony. Thusthe struggle for women’s liberation will be primarily one against institutionalizedmale supremacy, but in the process, men who refuse to give up their privileges overwomen will have to be dealt with.Women workers must be organized into unions as a beginning is the long strugglefor women’s liberation. We must have equal job opportunities, and equal pay. But wedon’t want economic equality with men, for we know how alienating their jobs are. Wewant a redefinition of jobs, so that the unjust hierarchy we live in is destroyed, andmen and women control the products they create.Day care facilities:At the same time that women work, they are forced to bear the cost of day carefacilities for their children. Most women who work have two jobs — the nine to fiveone and then the cooking, cleaning, washing and ironing once she gets home. A demandfor day care is also a demand to restructure the family. Why should the women alonebear the responsibility for the children of two parents? Who says that children need“smother love” for 24 hours a day, seven days a week, for 20 years? We see in themirror each morning the neurotic products of such overprotective care, and know thatour mothers would have been happier if they had not sacrificed their identity for ours.Even more important than the sharing of the responsibility for children betweenthe parents, is the concept that the responsibility lies with the institutions which employus. When a company profits from the use of a person for its ends forty hours a weekfor years and years, it owes that person more than a weekly wage. It should provideday care facilities, just as it provides sick leave, paid vacations, old age pensions andhospitalization benefits. Day care centers should be free to all employees, and it seemsonly logical that such facilities should be controlled by the people whose children usethem.Abortion reform:Our society places upon women the onus of unwanted pregnancy. It insists onenforcing the double standard for extra-marital sex by making birth control pillsdifficult and expensive to obtain. This means that women suffer an estimated 100,000unwanted pregnancies per year in the US alone. In most states, any abortion is illegal,and in the others, they are expensive and difficult or impossible to get. Radicalwomen feel that free medical care is a right of every citizen, and emphasize that theneed for such medical care is especially great for pregnant women. Poor and blackwomen cannot afford to stay in the hospital, and risk death from inexperiencedmidwives. It is estimated that between 8,000 and 10,000 women die in the US everyyear from illegal abortions. We demand and are fighting for free abortions that willbe the choice of any woman on demand, as well as free medical care and free birthcontrolIn nearly every major city in the US and Canada the women’s liberation movementhas mobilized hundreds of women in the few years of its existence. Its explosive growthis an indication of the latent consciousness of millions more women, and of the healthycharacter of the movement. It is overwhelmingly a radical movement, and in touch withthe real needs of women.Linda Seese, Nancy Stokley, suspended ’69, and Chris Halfar, a graduate studentin education, are all members of Women’s Radical Action Project.The Faculty“The women’s liberation movement, while notunderstood by all female faculty, is a genuineconcern of most women faculty.”By Sylvia PiechoclcaContrary to what might be expected, female faculty members at Chicago donot feel discriminated against, although, for the most part, they see their cases asatypical.2/Women and the University/May 23, 1969 “We’re at an advantage as far as women in universities go,” says Helen Perlman,professor at the school of Social Service Administration (SSA).SSA harbors the greatest concentration of women faculty on campus. Well over athird of the 92 teaching females, and seven of the ten full professors, hold posts there.The three other full professors are in law, near eastern studies and human developmentUnexpectedly, medicine is a close second with 21 women, seven of whom teachpsychiatry. Eight women teach biology, seven teach physical education, and six teachlanguages. Human development and social sciences together total seven.The school of education seats three women while English library sciences andNear Eastern studies each have two. There is a single female faculty member inbusiness, law, music, art and psychology.Social service is predominantly a woman’s field, which may explain theconcentration of females in SSA. “We’re a significantly underpaid profession, however.’explains one SSA woman. “We’re to the professions as secretaries are to business.When men came into our field some ten years ago, the salary improved considerably.A phenomenon not peculiar to SSA is the fact that men advance more rapidly toadministrative positions and earn proportionally better salaries. “All things equal, aman is likely to get advantages over women,” states one professor.In medicine there is discrimination at the level of getting into medical schoolWomen must have higher averages and only a handful are accepted, according toone physician. Once in, however, most women are ranked proportionally to merit.The women’s liberation movement, while not understood by all female faculty, isa genuine concern of most woman faculty.It is a legitimate phase of the radical movement. No one talked about women’sproblems. It was as though it were tabboo or uncouth to discuss one’s existence untilyoung women on campuses began stinking up a storm,” said one woman who wishedto remain anonymous.“It’s a many-faceted movement,” says Susanne Rudolph, associate professor ofpolitical science and chairman of Indian civilization. “I’m favorably inclined towardthe new consciousness in women with respect to their situation.”She added, however, that one must remember the implications of such a movementShe hopes that the roles of women are expanded to non-traditional ones but not at theexpense of the traditional.Mrs. Perlman added, too, that “any kind of utopia contains some new socialproblems.”The problem of this movement as seen by Margaret Rosenheim, professor of SSA,is that it puts emphasis on the intellectual woman who already has options.“Theones who need liberating most are the women without husbands and whose husbandsearn low incomes.”Perhaps the major single problem facing working women today is the problem ofadequate child care. “Women are actually penalized for working,” points out Dr.Joan Woods, assistant professor of psychiatry. “Medical women cannot tax deductexpenses which go towards paying help to take care of children.”Other issues facing women concern the revocation of the spinster label forunmarried working women, especially professionals.“I’m happy to be a woman but I’m a human being too,” emphasizes FrumaGottschalk, associate professor in the department of Slavic languages and literatureand chairman of the College Russian staff. “An intelligent woman’s responsiblities areno different from those of a man.”On the question of nepotism, a University ruling that states a husband and wifeor two other members of the same family cannot work in the same department, thewomen were divided.Comments in favor of the ruling stated that opinions could be cut off when onehas two people speaking as one and that some competitive rivalry might effect therelationship beyond the jobs.A librarian of 35 years standing felt she had a lot in common with WRAP(Women’s Radical Action Project) although she often disagreed with the phraseologyAnother professor pointed to the low number of full professors.In addition to the ten full professors there are 17 associate professors, 52 assistantprofessors, and 13 instructors, 55 of these 92 women are married.A surprising number of women — about one third of those interviewed — refusedto comment on questions of women liberation or requested that their names be withhelcThe reason for this as stated by one member of the faculty is, “The situationfor women is problematic. Comments like these can have so many ramifications; somany opportunities for misunderstanding.”Sylvia Piechocka, 72, is a member of the Maroon staff.Gynecology“Several students who have been to studeugynie services have complained of receivingmoral lectures from both doctors and nurses.'By Wendy GlocknerThat facet of student health which seems to be most criticized by students is thegynecology service. Likewise, the same service is the one which is “on top of thepriority list” for director of University health services, Dr. Richard Moy. Complaintsconcerning the student gynecology service are various and many; yet, in the eyes ofboth female students and Dr. Moy, all complaints point to the major problem withwhich student health is now confronted: inadequacy of facilities.Six years ago, student health received gynecology services from Chicago Lying —In Hospital (CLT) as a gift, for two half-days per week. The University of Chicago wasfirst in the country to offer the service. Despite the widespread criticism fromuniversities all over the country which Dr. Moy received when the service was initiated,he maintained that gynecology services “were part of the practice of medicine” andshould hold a place in student health. Now, six years later, student health receives over1000 gynecological visits per year.During the past few years, the service has increased to three half-days per weekTwo gynecologists from CLI are provided. About 80 per cent of the visits regardobtaining birth control pills.One young woman who went to student health last fall to receive “gynie” servicescommented that she “had to wait six weeks.” When she went for her appointment “thedoctor was brief, cold and abrupt. He was very impersonal — there isn’t a goodrelationship between the doctor and student, but I guess they’re busy.”According to Dr. Moy, the student touched on the major problem which the gynieservice faces. Because of lack of doctors, lack of enough days in the week, andthe large number of gynie visits received each year, student health gynecologists aremtnbteiT«»r i he•w clfiI 50USMJo; fuoi ^noA purlISOtll'' > o11e is a certainof womaninitials:1 bags inlepoint.his woman,i is a certainof store:4 Peck.mot ww i^ jkij.w Ars oj Ar.w«uy un |oqiuXs v 'ponijjaj juj s.x>S» ‘tptH sv |»ui!A'jiu-'jis pue vucniui xjj CENSOREDBY OUR PRINTERS «<CENSOREDA good wife knows now to beexpensive mistress.V'~"^Ai* you so busy being devoted/"■" « « to your husband you never makereckless demands?liHH That's a m-ta^Try ecling$ i ii?|j Mink should fill the bill ad--,r mHow will your husband feel( s5»l-' about suddenly having an ex-||Iri nere is a eert^H\ kind of womanswhod love a ^- iionth of sun daysor this woman,■re is a certainiof store:■bPeck.n>Wuuw 'G96I 'SIU'fO | *, Iiaquiaoaa m Ps»a up ‘tdvnl/Touedrmo siqnop 'uosiW jadXvp ,od giliuojj•TURIN 0 «S«q L. 'toieuier teg 08l SI -aiuoyj )v aje|d jI W jo puIH rnOA kI II <>jb a« 3DB|d y■ II. J® PLUM sqj s.jegjW M j osne.ooq Auoioo1 Wj OMI JB UMOp JiBij|i isg s»8| agg m3■ i SujouBp v |ji8 SIU .j* •03JpuB(|0Sy 'U!8 4Ju j bps pup uns b s.aqg \|R^N!8 )0 pufx jnoliJIOAiiotr**-*/) full inche0 my Bustlin ',$ weekso the incredibleden Developer*> H swamped. While waiting six weeks for an appointment is not normal, waiting two orthree weeks is. Dr. Moy maintains, however, that if a girl appears extremely distressedwhen she comes to make her appointment, she is usually able to see a doctor at CLIsooner, at the expense of student health. Apparently, however, the suggestion which onestudent made, is not yet possible: “I think when freshmen come, student health shouldstaff doctors overtime, because it’s such a risk to wait.” Nevertheless, Dr. Moy ishopeful: “We have a problem; it has got to be solved, and it will be solved.”According to Dr. Frederick Zuspan, chairman of department of gynecology andchief of service at CLI, a “family-life clinic” will be opened, next week, in order tolighten the load at student health. Headed by Dr. James Burks, the clinic will dealwith students who have contraceptive problems or desire premar'tal counseling orexams. Students must be referred by student health.Student health gynecologists are appointed by Dr. Zuspan.Several students who have been to student health gynie services have complainedof receiving moral lectures from both the doctors and the nurses. One studentmaintains that the doctor who examined her questioned her about her religion and herrelationship with her boyfriend. Nevertheless, Dr. Moy is “distressed at moralizers”and stresses that such lecturing is “not done with wisdom and experience.”He maintains, however, that he feels a medical obligation to question a studentwho comes in early in her freshman year or soon after she has turned 18, because ofthe medical risks associated with oral contraceptives. Dr. Moy feels that questions aresometimes asked about the student’s relationship with her boyfriend because the riskof pills is too great if the student doesn’t need them desperately.Doctors are legally prevented from distributing oral contraceptives to girls under18, without the parents’ permission. Thus many students under 18, and also severalstudents who are legally allowed to obtain pills, go to doctors in the Hyde Park area.“Lots of kids go to other doctors because Billings is such a hassle” said one student.Despite the “hassle” and dhe “long wait” which students must face at the healthservice, and which Dr. Moy is trying to prevent, most students are satisfied with theservice which student health provides. Doctors are willing to answer any questionsstudents have and as one girl said “most of my friends at other schools can’t get pillsat all.” Students usually accept Billings somewhat gratefully: “Billings has somethingI want; if they want to give me a hard time when I get it, I’ll put up with it.”Wendy Glockner, 72, is the Maroon’s chief feature writer.Child Care“The University’s response to the demand for achild care center has been far from that whichwas desired.”After this article had been completed some new developments took place. A meetingwas held by those who had participated in the May 15 rally. The result of this meetingwas the decision to participate on Mr. Walker’s committee only after the Universityagrees to finance the child care center. A further stipulation was that the money to payfor this center is not to come out of the paychecks of employees, either by cuttingpresent salaries or denying future raises in pay. An open letter presenting this positionis to be drafted to President Levi and to the Walker committee. The meeting reaf¬firmed the principle of client control, and therefore repudiated Mr. Walker’s assertionthat the committee members be selected by him according to his formulation of techni¬cal “expertise.” Those present at the meeting agreed to formulate a program for thecommittee, consisting of an agenda of points to be studied, some of which may haveotherwise have been overlooked, and a timetable of deadlines for reporting on thefindings. There will be a meeting Thursday, May 29, at 7:30 in Ida Noyes Hall todiscuss the response to this action.By Debbie Hirtz and Courtney EspositoHelmer: Before all else you are a wife and mother.Nora: That I no longer believe. I believe that before all else I am a human being,just as much as you are — or at least that I should try to become one.Henrick Ibsen, “A Doll’s House,” 1879Students and workers at the University have joined forces to issue a demand toPresident Levi. The demand is that a child care center be established for the use ofthe members of the University community. The child care center proposed by thesegroups would be free of charge, client-controlled, open 24 hours a day, and Universityfinanced.The groups working toward the establishment of such a center (includingmembers of the Women’s Radical Action Project, an employees’ Child Care CenterCommittee, employees from Billings Hospital, and members of the Hyde Park women’sgroup) support their demand with the argument that the need is obvious — womenhave children, women also work and go to school (in 1964, mothers with children under18 comprised 35 per cent of the female labor population). They claim that theUniversity perpetuates economic and social discrimination against women, and thatit is the University’s obligation to provide, if not maixmum opportunity, at leastsomething more than the present minimum of opportunity.Some of the evidence supporting the claim of women’s oppression in our societyis as follows: In terms of the economic exploitation of women, in 1965 there were 44million unpaid domestic workers in the United States: married women keeping house.In 1964 the earnings of women working full-time averaged only about 60 per cent ofthose of men working full-time, the median income of these women being $3690, andof the men $6195. Equally striking differences between total money income of womenand men are revealed when the percentages are compared at various income levels.For example, in 1964, 40 per cent of the women, but only 14 per cent of the men, hadan income below $1000; and 59 per cent of the women, but only 25 per cent of the men,had less than $2000. At the upper end of the income scale, only 10 per cent of thewomen, but 47 per cent of the men, had an income of $5000 or more. In addition, theearning gap between men and women has widened, not narrowed, between the years1956 and 1964. Due to the early adoption of the woman’s traditionally assigned role ofwife and mother, women are often disadvantaged educationally. Less than half of allwomen 25 years of age and over are high school graduates. There are almost fourmillion adult women with less than five years of schooling; 11.5 million women havenot completed high school; only one in three of the bachelor’s and master’s degreesconferred by universities and colleges go to women, and only one in ten of the Ph.D’s.These last figures represent a setback, since in the 1930’s two out of five bachelor’sand master’s degrees and one out of seven Ph.D’s were earned by women.The University perpetuates these basic constricting and unjust attitudes towardthe female sex in its relegation of women to typically “female” employment roles(seven out of ten clerical workers in the US are women), its lower pay scales forwomen in these and other positions, and its low percentage of tenured women facultymembers. It is in the University’s interests to exploit women, for this provides theUniversity with a ready pool of cheap labor. It is practical to hire fewer womenMay 23, 1969/Women and the University/3n andWITCH“The history of women has been severely dis¬torted. An excellent example of this is our under¬standing of witchcraft in Europe and America.”One of the most bizarre phenomena ever to hit Manhattan was the invasion lastHallowe’en of Wall Street by a band of witches. They appeared in full regalia, hexedthe stock exchange, and the market dropped. Since then, witches (or, if you prefer,WITCH — Women’s International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell) have appeared incovens around the country, including our own University of Chicago. The use of witchesas figures of resistance is not original to our time, however. For those of you whohaven’t thought about it much since fairy tale days or since you saw “Rosemary'sBaby” last year, a little information on just who the witches really areBy Nancy Stokley and Sally SteinLike other oppressed groups, women have not been allowed to develop aconsciousness of their own history. When we try to think of great women of history, wethink of George and Martha, and who the hell was Martha anyway? We demand tolearn about the history of women in the same way that we demand that history be thehistory of the people, not of the elites.The history of women has been severely distorted. An excellent example of thisis our understanding of witchcraft in Europe and America. We think of witches asmalevolent old women, conspiring the death of their neighbors, and the debauchery ofthe civilized Christian world, leading us all to hell with the aid of Satan. Or else we donot take them seriously at all, but believe that witches never existed and that thetrial and purges were isolated incidents particular to a few small societies.In fact, witchcraft was the pagan religion of all of Europe for centuries priorto the rise of Christianity, and the religion of the peasantry for hundreds of yearsafter Catholicism prevailed among the ruling classes of western society. Thewitchcraft purges were the political suppression of an alternative culture, and socialand economic structure.Before the middle ages, the people of Europe lived in societies which were smallagricultural and pastoral groupings. They were a diminutive race which was driveninto the hills and continued to live in small communal societies while the invaderstook over the lowlands Their small size has become even smaller in our legends, for thestories of inch high fairies and 'the little" people are really distorted tales of this race.These societies were matriarchal, had no private property, and noinstitution of marriage. Their god was a Woman — Tana, the moon goddess. Tana sdaughter, Aradia, had been sent to earth as a messiah to teach witchcraft. Aradiataught that Tana was the first being in the world and represented darkness. When shedivided herself into two parts, the second part became masculine and representedlight, or the Sun. Tana is queen of heaven, the moon, and is a fertility goddessof rain and magic. Witch rituals were basically circular dances at night whichworshipped the moon and the change of seasons.Unlike their counterparts in Christian culture, women were highly respected inwitch societies; they were integral in the church hierarchy which also served thegovernmental needs of the people. Since there was no private property or marriage,women were not sold as chattle to their prospective husbands, as they have beenthroughout western culture. Thus, during their forced conversion to Christianity,women fought, to retain their rights as well as for a religion which recognized womenas an important part of theology.The Catholics had tried slow conversion of the witches for many centuries andthere is evidence that there was a mixing of beliefs going on increasingly, The cultof the Virgin Mary was emphasized by the popular demand of new converts whohad been accustomed to worshipping a woman as the Supreme Deity; But numerousfactors combined to make the continued existence of pagan rituals and beliefsintolerable; primarily, the black plague. -Death swept Europe in the 13th Century, killing 25 per cent of the population. ;A religious explanation of this was needed to calm the fears of the people. Theplague was defined as the punishment of God to a people that tolerated heresay. But pwho was to define the heresy? The witches would blame the plague on the - -.Christians, who had deserted the old gods, and the Catholics blamed the witches. CThe stronger prevailed. The Christians were hierarchically organized, controlledthe upper classes, the military and the state governments throughout Europe. The-witches were the peasants and lower classes, the hill tribes, and women. Thescapegoat for the Plague naturally became the local witch As peasant revoltsdeveloped, “witchcraft” became a cry for the rest of the population to arm itself.The purges clearly assumed the nature of a class war.However, the trial signalled more than an attempt to keep the people “in line.”Women found themselves in a uniquely oppressive condition resulting from thecultural views implicit in Catholicism. The chief document used to suppress witchcraft.Kramer and Sprenger’s Malleus Malleficarum, commissioned by the Pope in 1486,discusses the evil nature of women at length.The main reason for woman’s frequent alliance with evil is that “she is more carnalthan a man, as is clear from her many carnal abominations . . . there was a defect inthe formation of the first woman, since she was formed from a bent rib . . . Andsince through this defect she is an imperfect animal, she always deceives . . . Toconclude. All witchcraft comes from carnal lust, which is in women insatiable.”Accordingly, the witch religion, known for its fertility rites, and the freedom ofwomen, could not be tolerated il women were to be chaste and subservient to men intheology and in the home '.Even as the relig on of witchcraft became suppressed, women fought, hard toretain their former freedom. The church understood that if its control was to beeffective, the purge miM be extensive and brutal. The insurgents were not easilv- smashed..-Several, authorities- have - estimated that from the 15th to the 18th century,nine million witehe^ wen executed for their alleged beliefs and crimes.■Thus, the witch was chosen-as a revolutionary image for women because they didfight hard and in their fight they refused to accept the level of struggle which societydeemed acceptable for their sex. Finally, they were the center of motion both asagitators and as targets, as women today must assume positions of leadership ifradical politics are to relate to the real oppression of people, and, mutually, ifwomen are to gain true equality in a revolutionary movement. WkNancy Stokley, suspended '69, and Sally Stein, expelled ’71, are both membersof Women's Radical Action Project.4/Women and the University/May 23, 1969 WITCHThey told meI smile prettier with my mouth closed.They saidbetter cut your hair —long, it’s all frizzy,looks Jewish.They hushed me in restaurantslooking around themwhile the mirrors above the tablejeered infinite reflectionsof a raw square face.They questioned mewhen I sang in the street.They stood taller at tea,smoothly explaining,my eyes on the saucerstrying to hide the hand grenadein my pants pocketor crouched behind the piano.They mocked me with magazinesfull of breasts and lace,published their triumphwhen the doctor’s oldest sonmarried a nice sweet girl.They told me tweed suit storiesof various careers of ladiesI woke up at nightafraid of dying. They built screens and room dividersto hide unsightly desiresixteen years oldraw and hopelessthey buttoned me into dressescovered with pink flowers.They waited for me to finishthen continued the conversation.I have been invisible,weird and supernatural.I want my black dressI want my haircurling around meI want my broomstickfrom the closet where I hid it—Tonight I meet my sistersin the graveyard.Around midnightIf you stop at a red lightin the wet city traffic,watch for us against the moonWe are screamingwe are flyinglaughing and won’t stop.— Jean Tepperman(Reprinted by permission of “Motive,”March-April 19631 TChild Care Continuedthan men for top administrative and faculty positions: they marry, tend to getpregnant, and have to be replaced. It is also discrimination according to sex, whichis illegal. This discrimination can be subtle (as when identical jobs are given differenttitles so that women can be paid less for performing the same functions), or it canbe blatant (as in the case of women at Billings who are reprimanded and docked inpay when they call in late because of babysitter problems). Some of the women xjworkers at Billings take home as little as $42 a week, and yet they must often usea large fraction of their salaries to pay for babysitters.The proposed child care center would not eliminate these injustices, but it wouldbe a step in the right direction. It would allow freedom to mothers to work or #study, or to enjoy well-earned free time after a full day’s work. It would also allowthe women who must spend their salaries on babysitters to use their full salaries fortheir and their families’ most basic needs. The center would also be client-controlled, ,to prevent the exploitation of children for experimental purposes, and to allow parentsto decide exactly how their children should be occupied and cared for in their absenceThe University’s response to the demand for a child care center has been farfrom that which was desired. Its first response was the announcement of a day carecenter to be established by the Social Service Administration. But this center would ^not be open to the members of the University community: the center has space foronly 150 children of Woodlawn residents who are already using the facilities of theSocial Service Administration. There will be a weekly fee, and the center will not beclient-controlled. This center will undoubtedly be useful to these who qualify for andare able to afford its facilities. The members of the University community, however,are still left with no child care facilities.The University’s latest response to the demand for a child care center was madeat a rally May 15. Students and mothers with their children gathered on the steps of ,the administration building in support of the demand. Since President Levi wasconveniently out of town and unable to accept the petitions collected by the group, Mr.Walter Walker, head of the University’s newly-established committee for child care,spoke to the crowd and answered questions. He refused to agree automatically toaccept those delegates to this committee nominated by the groups who had organizedthe rally. Instead, he reserved the right to appoint the delegates himself, stipulatingthat he would choose those who were “technically qualified” to serve on the committee.He described his committee as one established for the purpose of research, andadmitted hat i would have advisory powers only. He also refused to give an estimateof when the committee would present its report. Only if and when the committeemakes a report favorable to the economic feasibility of such a center would the 5University investigate the raising and allocation of funds.The University’s response to this demand by forming another powerlesscommittee with appointed rather than elected representatives is characteristic of itsdealings with all such grievances. The groups working for the establishment of thechild care center, although aware that the pressure they have already brought tobear created at least some form of a response by the University, are far fromsatisfied. They are well aware that the University does not want to take immediateaction, particularly along the lines proposed, but they have vowed to continue the fightfor their demand, so vital and immediately necessary is it to the lives of the childrenas well as of the mothers involved.Debbie Hirtz and Courtney Esposito are both fourth year students in the College,and are both members of Women’s Radical Action Project. The statistics in theirarticle come from the “Handbook on Women” published by the Women’s Bureau inthe Department of Labor, an article by Marlene Dixon, “The Restless Eagles:Women’s Liberation” that appeared in the March-April issue of Motive, and an articleby Esther Peterson, “Working Women,” that appeared in “The Woman in America.”