Volume 78, Number 23 The University of Chicago Friday, November 21, 1969Defense Cuts Worry AdministratorsMonty FutchSDS MEETING: Students meet in Reynolds club south lounge yesterday in an open forum to discuss cafeteria demands.Boycotters Face Disciplinary ActionsBy Nancy ChismanDisciplinary procedures have begunagainst fourteen students summoned fortheir participation in the November 12 SDSboycott of C-Shop and Hutch Commons.SDS members who were picketing for freemeals for University food service workers,prevented people from entering the cafe¬terias, and some people were allegedly in¬jured in scuffles between the picketers andpersons trying to enter Hutchinson Com¬mons.Thirteen of the fourteen reported to Rosen-wald 101 Monday and Tuesday to makeappointments for preliminary hearings.A committee on the University budgethas recommended a tuition increase of $225for all students next year.The committee also recommended an ad¬ditional increase of $150 each successiveyear until further notice. Tuition is present¬ly $2100 for undergraduates and $2250 forgraduates.In a report submitted to President Ed¬ward Levi November 7, it was also urgedthat the University increase its basic aca¬demic and business budgets by 3 percent.However, in light of possible decline ingovernment grants and contracts, as evi¬denced by a recent bill concerning defensedepartment grants, this recommendationmight be withdrawn, said Sidney Davidson,chairman of the committee and acting deanof the business school. He added that therecommendation on tuition increases wouldprobably not be changed.Davidson asked for more time in which toconsider his recommendations when thepossibility of a decline in grants appeared.The report is presently being considered bythe officers of the University.Continued on iPege Three The fourteenth is a suspended stuldent fromlast year’s ad building sit-in and is not re¬quired to go through the procedure.The three students who reported for ap¬pointments on Monday will go before dis¬ciplinary committee chairman Jo DeshaLucas, Tuesday, November 25. At their pre¬liminary hearings the students facing dis¬ciplinary action will be presented with thestudent bill of rights, shown statements ofevidence against them, and asked if theywant public or private hearings. Studentswho fail to keep the appointment could faceadditional discipline.SDS charged that the University had pur-SIDNEY DAVIDSONtommittM Chairman posely summoned a large number of newSDS members in an attempt to scare themaway from SDS involvement. The organiza¬tion also accused the University of takingaction against some students who hadn’tparticipated in the boycott.Dean of freshmen James Vice, who is¬sued the summonses, said the fourteenpeople were summoned according to theperception and judgment of the Universityauthorities present during the boycott ac¬tion. Vice acknowledged the possibility thati^me students who had been identified as'^i-ticipants in the scuffle were not, butthese would have their cases dropped if thediscipline committee did not find sufficientevidence against them.During the disciplinary hearings, thecommittee will use no records of the ac¬cused students’ previous actions. Only ifstudents are found guilty of the chargesbrought against them will the committeeexamine their records before deciding dis¬cipline.Disciplinary action could be of the samenature as that taken after last year’s adbuilding occupation, ranging from warningsand probation to suspension or possible ex¬pulsion. Because the report of the Wegenercommittee investigating disciplinary proce¬dures will not go before the Council of theUniversity Senate until next week, theCouncil has reaffirmed the legitimacy ofpast disciplinary action. Established proce¬dures will remain in effect until the reportis reviewed by the Council.SDS members said they would use thehearings to publicize their demands for freemeals for food service workers. At a meet¬ing held after the summonses were issued,many of the students facing disciplinary ac¬tion decided to have public hearings. SDSplans to present a political defense at eachhearing, holding that the boycott and dis¬ruption of University processes were justi¬fied because those processes were racist.SDS claims that any acceptance of dis¬cipline dealt out by the committee would bean admission that the boycott was wrong.While SDS has no plans to continue theboycott, the organization has been trying toContinued oi? Page FiveBudget Committee SeesNeed for Tuition Raises President Nixon will sign a bill this weekthat may have widespread repercussions inthe funding of many University programssponsored by the Defense Department.The bill states “None of the funds author¬ized to be appropriated by this Act may beused to carry out any research project orstudy unless such project or study has adirect and apparent relationship to a specif¬ic military function or operation.”Last year the University recieved over $3million from the Defense Department, how¬ever, none of this money had any directrelationship to military research, accordingto the Bennett committee report issued thisfall concerning government grants at theUniversity, and funds were not granted un¬der this stipulation. Under this new bill, allnon-military funding from the Defense De¬partment would be eliminated.The Bennett committee report stated“These funds (Defense Department grants)are used for basic research, for trainingand for other academic purposes in no waydifferent from activities supported by gen¬eral University monies, by foundationgrants or by grants from the National Sci¬ence Foundation (NSF) or other civilianagencies. No work at the University of Chi¬cago is directed towards weapon devel¬opment or towards any other direct mili¬tary purpose.”University officials are not yet sure ex¬actly what the bill says or how the govern¬ment will interpret what is classified as re¬search directly related to military func¬tions. John Wilson, provost of the Univer¬sity, said Thursday that the University willhave to wait before it decides whether itwill “elect to accept funds or not.”W»lson a1 so said that it is possible thatPresident Nixon or the Defense Depart¬ment mav come out with a public state¬ment when the bill is signed clarifying theterms of the bill.Wilson said that it is possible that the billcan be interpreted to mean that either anytvoe of research will be considered relatedto government military research or thatvery strict limitations will be put on t^etyne of research that will get Defense De¬partment funding.Wilson cited an example of a Universityprofessor who is currently doing researchon a cure for malaria und°r Defense De¬partment grants. Wilson said that this es-search can obviously have military over¬tones, but the government mav decide thatit is not essential to military functions.The more important consideration, how¬ever, according to Wilson, is not whetherContinued on Page SevenJOHN T WILSONUniversity ProvostA*ft imp miinjj(V♦ »>i ><». >»» 7JAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYPhil LathropMoo? Effete snob hides from the press, especially the Times and Post.Harrington SpeaksMichael Harrington, one of America’sleading radical critics, spoke on “Endingthe war: towards a democratic left” at aThursday meeting scheduled by the YoungPeople’s Socialist League.Chairman of the Socialist Party and theLeague for Industrial Democracy, Harring¬ton analyzed socialism within the context ofa modern capitalist society and a commu¬nist society. He brought into the discussionhis views on poverty, foreign policy, andsocial planning which he had previouslyoutlined in The Other America, AmericanPower in the Twentieth Century, and TheAccidental Century.A University of Chicago graduate, Har¬rington considers democratic socialism as“the only alternative for mankind.” He de¬fined socialism as democratization ofdemccratic and economic power.“Even though American society is richerthan any capitalist society Karl Marx everknew,” said Harrington, “capitalism can¬not satisfy the basic democratic aspirationsof the people. This society is still a classsociety which subverts liberal reform. Tocarry out liberalism, we must go beyondthe liberalism of this society.“Money goes to those who have money.”Harrington pointed out that the US govern¬ment spends more money on insuringmiddle to upper class housing than on pro¬viding low-cost housing for the poor. Middleclass students who attend the majority ofstate universities are supported by the taxdollars of the entire population, he alsosaid.Harrington calls Russian communistsociety “anti-socialistic.” In a societywhere the state owns the means of produc¬tion, he said, “Who owns the state? Ifpeople are not allowed to change the state,then socialism does not exist in thesociety.”Harrington sees the union of the educateddemonstrator and the worker as the for¬mula for the success of democratic social¬ism which calls for a restructuring of hous¬ing, education, and tax regulations so as to“put the power in the hands of the people.”“American society is not yet ready forsocialism,” Harrington said. “A massmovement should not yet challenge thebase of American society or be concerned with who owns the means of production butrather try to carry out slogans for reformand enable a strong left-wing democraticparty to emerge on the political scene.”Hot Dog MenThe mystery of the disappearance of twohot dog vendors remains unsolved.Tuesday, five city policemen in patrolcars gave two summonses to the hot dogvendor at 58th and Ellis. The summonseswere for his not having a vending licenseand for illegal parking. Both he and thevendor at 58th and University (an uncon¬firmed rumor has it that they are brothers)did not appear on campus Thursday. Nei¬ther vendor was available for comment.According to University attorney WalterLeen, the University had nothing to do withthe summonses’ although soliciting is ille¬gal. Sgt. Robert Henry of University secur¬ity said that they had been given orders notto bother the vendor.Besides selling what many students con¬sider the best hot dogs on campus with “ev-erything-especially onions and hot pep¬pers,” the vendors also sell Polish dogs andtamales. Usually a long line forms around noon for the hot dogs which a first yearWoodward Court resident said, “are betterthan anything we get in the Court.” Afourth year student said that the hot dogswere “better than the stuff at the C-Shop.”Student reaction to the police action wasgenerally adverse. One student said, “It’s acrime. We should picket the station.”When told of the incident one girl re¬marked “That hot dog man on 58th andUniversity was my favorite man oncampus. The other day on a date we spentan hour just talking about that man.”Nachtrieb StatementNorman Nachtrieb, professor of chem¬istry and spokesman for the Committee ofthe Council of the University Senate, out¬lined the Council’s decision on a StudentGovernment (SG) request that studentobservers be placed on the Senate in a let¬ter to former SG president Mike Barnett.The Senate voted against the proposal —the actual tally was unclear since attend¬ance at Council meetings varies from weekto week — but suggested several alterna¬tives which SG might consider in seekinggreater “student power.” Among these wasthe recommendation that SG devote its ef¬ forts to placing students upon the manyUniversity subcommittees, such as theWegener committee on Discipline or thecommittee on University women.Barnett has objected to the Senate’s han¬dling of the request, pointing out that nomember of SG was invited to discuss theproposal with anyone from the Committee.Commenting on this complaint, Committeeof the Council member James Redfield,master of the new collegiate division andchairman of the committee on socialthought, said that the Senate is “delightedto have students come' in with complaints”and in fact has legislation providing for stu¬dent groups to air their case before it.SentenceCourtney Esposito, an expelled Univer¬sity of Chicago student was sentenced to 30days in jail for mob action. She was foundguilty of charges resulting from the Octo¬ber 8 Weatherman rampage through down¬town Chicago.The Sun-Times reported that as CircuitCourt Judge Kenneth Wendt told her heconsidered her sentence already served bythe time she had spent in jail waiting forher trial, Miss Esposito’s mother shouted tothe judge: “Keep her in jail! She’ll only goback to the SDS.”Judge Wendt allegedly told the mother,“You and I are old goats and they won’ttalk to us.”Miss Esposito is back in jail waiting trialon a September 24 federal indictmentcharging her with aggravated battery, fel¬onious mob action, resisting arrest and ob¬struction of police.Experimental CollegeThe Chicago Experimental College(CHEC) is compiling its course catalog forthe winter quarter. All members of the Uni¬versity community who have ideas forcourses or programs to be publicizedshould contact Holly Wagenstein, 219xEleanor Club, x3754, by December 1.CHEC offers student run, tuition freeworkshop and seminar type courses.The experimental college tries to takenew approaches to common subjects. Italso treats subjects not covered in the Uni¬versity curriculum.RICHARD LESTER SA FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUMNov. 22, CobbHall, 7:00 & 9:15$1.00LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue Nicky's PizzaAnd Restaurantjij 1208 East 53rd St.Fairfax 4-5340•j; Pizzas, Sandwiches, Chicken, Ribs Free* delivery to UC frats, dorms 5 pm till Sclosing *Open seven days a week - Hours 11 am:j: to 2 am Sundays - 12 noon to 2 am $IIISUBSCRIBETHE CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyes Hall,Chicago, Illinois 60637Maroon issues for the remaining academic year (69-70) can be sent anywhere inthe country for $8.00. For an additional $1.00 we throw in the June 6 YearbookIssue from last year.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, impress yourfriends.NAMEADDRESS ZIP.□ 1 year subscription $8.00□ Yearbook Issue $1.002/Wm Chicago Maroon/November 21^*1969' HNNUIMilUIIHM MR KIMBARK Says!Attend Our Annual THANKSGIVING WINESALE of Imported GERMAN ESTATE BOT¬TLED Rhines and Moselles Ideal for YourHoliday Poultry or Ham Dinner53rd KIMBARK LIQUORS INC.1214 E 53rd Street - 53rd Kimbark PlazaHY-3355 Open Daily Until 1 IKK) PM Sun 9:00 PMSALE ENDS SUN NOV. 30 OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY TILL 7:00 PMRHINE WINESBy Von Simmern "66 VintageELTVILLER SONNENBERG.... '••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••By Graf Matuschka "67 VintageSCLOSS VOLRADS Green Capsule.By Weingut Hessisches '67 VintageJGHANISBERGER KLAUS REISLING CABINETBy Rein hold Senfter '67 VintageNIERSTEINER AUFLANGEN FEINE SPAETLESE...By Valentin Schlotter '67 VintageRUDESHEIMER BERG ROTTLAND CABINETMOSELLE WINESBy Pelzer '66 Vintage NaturPIES PORTER GOLDTROEPFCHENBy Pelzer '66 VintagePIESPORTER GOLDTROEPFCHEN AUSLIESEBy J. J. Prum '67 VintageWEHLENER SONNENUKR SPAETLASL. _ 5th $2.19»•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Me* . 5th $2.29... 5th $2.49.. Sth $2.79. 5th $2 J9. 5th $2.29Sth $3.195th $3.91Quintin SpongeMARLENE DIXON: The former professor at the women's hearings.Students React to Increases Groups SetAt Womens HearingsContinued from Page OneTiie committee noted that total incomefor this year was “barely adequate” tomeet expenses and that “the University’sfiscal year 1970-71 will be one of financialstringency” without the increase.Student reaction was instantaneous andmixed with reactions such as “I ain’t goingto pay”, “It’s full of shit”, and “I don’tknow where I’m going to get the money.”One student with a full tuition scholarshipremarked, “I think it’s an excellent idea.They should have doubled it so the Univer¬sity can provide more services to stu¬dents.”Timothy Scholl, associate director of Col¬lege admissions and chairman on Collegeaid committee, said of the increases, “It’shappening at all other places. I don’t thinkit will have too big an effect on the numberof admissions, though. Our tuition has been one of the lowest for private universities.”Other members of the budget committeewere A Adrian Albert, dean of the physicalsciences division; Ronald F Campbell, deanof the school of education, Dr Leon 0 Ja¬cobson, dean of the biology division and themedicine school; and D Gale Johnson, deanof the social sciences division.It is estimated that, if it is eventuallyrecommended, the proposed 3 percent in¬crease in budgets will raise costs by $1.34million.The tuition increase would net approxi¬mately $1.4 million, deducting an antici¬pated 30% allowance for University finan¬cial aid to students.A release Wednesday compared these fig¬ures with those of other major schools. Theresults are Harvard, $2300; Yale, $2350; Co¬lumbia, $2360; MIT, $2230; Northwestern,$2210; Princeton, $2350; and Cornell, $2415. Five hours of open hearings sponsored bythe Committee on University WomenWednesday and Thursday afternoon, at¬tracted individuals and organizations asvaried as the New University Conference(NUC) and the Students for Violent Non-Action (SVNA) eager to air their viewsboth on the committee itself and the prob¬lems of community women.The committee on women, appointed lastspring by the Committee of the Council ofthe University Senate to investigate the sit¬uation and opportunities “presently enjoyedby women in the University community,”called the hearings to gather recommenda¬tions to supplement its report due Decem¬ber 1.In Wednesday’s first scheduled presenta¬tion, the Women’s Radical Action Project(WRAP) attacked the structure and focusof the committee as biased, and stated thatthe committee was approaching the prob¬lems from the point of view of the individ¬ual woman in a mans world, rather than ofthe class of women as a whole.In a four point proposal also supported bythe NUC womens caucus, WRAP called forchild care facilities, an end to all sexualdivisions of labor, free access to all birth-control and other medical services relatingto child-bearing, and an end to double stan¬dards in educational curricula and empha¬sis.Marlene Dixon, former assistant profes¬sor of sociology and currently professor ofsociology at McGill University, Montreal,Canada, attended the hearings, but did notspeak. The Gray Committee report, whichinvestigated the decision not to rehire Mrs.Dixon, listed among its recommendationsthat a committee be set up to investigatethe problems of women in the University.Elaine Stocker, graduate student in psy¬ chology and representative of the Univer¬sity’s Womens Association, spoke of JudyLong — Laws assistant professor in thebusiness school who was told one year afterbeginning a three-year appointment thather contract was terminal.In other presentations, students, facultyand community members elaborated griev¬ances and proposed solutions.Mrs. Connie Stevens, graduate studentand member of the University’s day carecommittee formed last spring, and of theCampus Committee for Child Care, “agroup of employees and students which hasbeen working since April to establish achild care center at this University,” spokeof the need for child care centers.Formal surveys conducted this summerand fall, she said, showed that among non-academic employees there were at least2000 children under the age of 12 and about1000 under the age of 6; among students,about 1000 under 12 and 500 under 6.Later, Barbara Greenberg, graduate stu¬dent in sociology and member of NUC’swomens caucus, criticized the womenscommittee for distorting the “systematicoppression of women” for excluding themajority of University connected women —the employees and faculty-student wives —from their investigation.The statement of the womens caucus insociology including demands for “femalefaculty whom we will select”; “equal sti¬pend support . . . regardless of sex; withadditional allowances for child support andcertain household expenses; a child carecenter; more courses on the history andsociology of women; and an end to ‘the pa¬tronage system of employment.’ ”SVNA’s Frank Malbranche, also calledfor mens liberation as well as womens lib¬eration at Thursday’s hearings.Memories of a Weekend in Washington DCBy Roger BlackI was standing in line outside the newSmithsonian waiting for one of the publictelephones that didn’t work because thepopulation of Washington had been doubled(it was taking five minutes to get a dialtone; the operators were busy!), annoyedbecause a long-winded kid in front of mewas calling his college radio station with alive report when I heard all these poppingnoises and considered that the Weathermenhad set off some cherry bombs for the funof it, looked up and saw some things flyingthrough the air trailing smoke (Roman can¬dles?), saw them exlpode into a few parts(fireworks?!), saw the parts explode intoclouds of powder. Pepper gas! All of usnow, on the ground gasping, crying, ournoses flowing, hysterical, trying to run, try¬ing to see, trying not to vomit, trying to getthe hell out of there. Perhaps 20,000 of uswere gassed, gratuitously, by the DC cops.They did not want simply to disperse us, orthey might have asked us to leave. Theywanted to hurt us. And while I can’t saythat I sustained any lasting injury otherthan a bad case of chapped lips, I was dis¬oriented for about two hours, trapped nearthe capital unable to get a cap or a ride.Probably all the police were confused.What with Spiro Agnew carrying on, theyprobably suspected that the great crowdwas ready at any moment to tear up thecapital. Thfey didn’t know how manyWeathermen there were, and they weren’tgoing to take any chances. No, it is hard toget too mad at the police. They were asparanoid and confused as anyone else.They acted very well during most of theday; it was when the Weathermen startedthrowing rocks and paint and themselves atthe Justice Department building and thepolice, that they started gassing people.What about the Weathermen, anyway?What do they think they’re doing, anyway,coming in on a peaceful march with theirred flags and Vietcong flags, standing in aclump at the rally, refusing to sit down,rrr f; .— yelling, “Bullshit!,” at all the liberals, HoHo-Ho-Chi-Minhing at anybody who diver¬ged from their line. Where do they get offscheduling a rally at the end of the big ral¬ly, so thousands and thousands of peoplewill be there just because it happens to bein the way, so that if any violence happensand the police freak out and gas everybodythose thousands might be radicalized andadded to the cause? I don’t know. Mostpeople explain it by saying that the Weath¬ermen, all of them, are crazy in the head.Well they might be; (evidently the wordwas out that the crunch was on, and every¬body who could piled into his Volkswagenmicrobus and headed toward New York;the Washington cab drivers, the most para¬noid and lunatic of any in the world, haddecided that this was the revolution and notonly were they not going to pick up anyfreaks, they were going to try to run overas many as possible.)So I wandered around for a while tryingto get my bearings, trying to use thefreaked-out phone. I got Alexandria, Vir¬ginia trying to call Chicago. I set out walk¬ing up Consitution Avenue only to meet an¬other crowd walking toward me, fleeingmore gas. I thought, what have I done todeserve this? Here I have come all the wayfrom Chicago on a school bus (I slept up onthe luggage rack), paying my money to stu¬dent government, bumping along on thoseinfernal turnpikes with those 2 am Formicarest stops and those vending machines fullof combs, key chains, and Wash ’N’ Dries,taking up the Constitution on its guaranteeof the right of assembly and petition, and Iget gassed for my trouble. It is perhaps thefault of the cops. My eyes clearing, I lookat a cop. He is a young one, with a yellowvest on, directing traffic. I go up to him toask how to get to the Hay Adams hotel,where my friend Michael Sorkin who hasoffered me a place to sleep, is supposed tobe. He is a novice cop, still in the policeacademy. He has never heard of the HayAdams. He is confused. It is hard for ipe to THE MARCH: Students hold the banner high in typical UC manner. Steve Aokibe angry at him. The Weathermen are tiredof all the marches and rallies that accom¬plish nothing. They want revolution now.Despairing of attracting very many morekids to their side, they see themselves go¬ing underground, becoming American gue¬rillas. I suppose they would have been hap¬py only if the half million liberal kids hadbrought machine guns with them. Well,what if they had? The army has machineguns, too, and not only machine guns buttanks and helicopters and bombers andheavy artillery. And if they think we’d lastmore than two days before we were allkilled or put permanently into concentra¬tion camps, they are crazy. Change is notgoing to be made in America by revolution,at least not good change. No, we know thatyou can always get the police angry bythrowing stuff through windows of publicbuildings; we’re not going to join the Weathermen’s revolution because the po¬lice used gas last Saturday. We will juststay entirely clear of the Weathermen thenext time.Two hours earlier I decided to walkaround the rally, and maybe go look for acup of coffee. It was very cold and a lot ofpeople were walking around to try to getwarm. The mall toward the Lincoln Me¬morial looked like a two-way parade. Theside streets leading to the mall had beenblocked off by the police and were full ofpeople. The stores and restaurants alongthe streets were jammed with marcherstrying to get warm. The new Smithsonianhad 5,000 extra people in it, sitting in thecorridors, riding the escalators. The Na¬tional Gallery was mobbed, not with sight¬seers, but with marchers who had just sortof overflowed. I got back to the MonumentContinued on Page SevenNpjyJOT*** J9^/Thp. Chicago Maroon/3>7' RXttfJSIVE SHOWINGLIMITED ENGAGEMENTbeyond(he*ge of mocoKC...Mo theege of Awarenessmediumcool►c W Ob% o.»w IK V. (§) \STUDENT RATEFREE PARKING2424 N. Lincoln Avenue M - Th 7:30 - 9:30Chicago, Illinois 60614 Friday 6, 8, 10pfione 528-9126 Sat. & Sun. 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 p.m.DE PAUL UNIVERSITYEXPO '70 ORIENT STUDY TOURJAPAN-TAIWAN-HONGKONG-MACAO-KOREA-H AW All (optional)INCLUSIVE RATE $1930.00ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION VIA JAPAN AIRLINESSEE EXPO '70 - MEET THE PEOPLE OF ASIA - IN DEPTH TOUR OFJAPAN INCLUDING MAJOR CITIES, RURAL AREAS, NATIONALPARKS, FOUR DAYS IN OSAKA FOR EXPO '70 - AC¬COMMODATIONS IN QUAINT INNS - COURSE CREDIT AVAILABLECONTACT: DR. RICHARD HOUKDE PAUL UNIVERSITY25 EAST JACKSON BLVD.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60604PHONE: WE 9-3525 EXT. 380ALSO AVAILABLE: 57-DAY EUROPEAN TOUR $1525.00Communications Antenna SystemsSatellite SystemsYou’ll find a futureat Philco-FordYour future will be as bold and as bright as yourimagination and ambition make it.Your future will be as challenging as your assignments...and you might work on anything from satellites tocommunications systems, to microelectronics, to homeentertainment or appliances. It's your chance to beas good as you want to be. You will build anexperience bank that will prepare you for many opportunities.Your future begins by meeting our representativeswhen they visit your campus. Or, write toCollege Relations. Philco-Ford Corporation,C & Tioga Streets, Philadelphia, Pa. 19134PHILCO-FORD WILL BE HERE ON MON., NOV. 24, 1969PHILCO 422*The Better Idea People In Your FutureAn Equal Opportunity Employer CINEMA THEATRECHICAGO at MICHIGAN Phone 944-5666of beauty, sex and drugs:" 'More' probably contains more footage ofnaked bodies than any other film that has made itpast Plymouth Rock. It's strong stuff. A powerfulmovie about drugs. Mimsy Farmer as Estelle, is oneof the real baddies of all time, a totally amoralperson cavorts in the nude, lies, steals, makes loveto girls, and destroys every man who falls in lovewith her.”—The Sunday New York Times"A very beautiful, veryromantic movie.”—New York Times" 'More' is tough, candidstuff, clearly among thegood ones.”—National ObserverX Adults 18 & overStudents $2.00 with I.D. Cordevery doy but Soturdoy .' f "KFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J Wood, Jr., CIUOne North LaSalie St., Chic. 60602FR 2 2390 — 798 0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by ApptSUN LIFE OF CANADAORIGINAL GRAPHICSandCUSTOM FRAMING9:30 - 6 Mon. • Sat.Sunday by appointment5300 BLACKSTONE - 363-74464/The Chicago Maroon/November 2l, J969, ,VFor Male Freedoms*1 The student project on equal rights formen (SPERM), a branch of students forviolent non-action (SVNA) held a men’sliberation demonstration yesterday after¬noon in Ida Noyes Hall.Frank Malbranche, national chairman ofSVNA, addressed a group composed mainlyof male students, who held white heliumballoons and bore signs with such slogansas “We demand a Committee on UniversityMen’’ and “Equal Time for St Joseph.” Inhis speech to the group, Malbranche said,“We are sick and tired of being oppressedby women. Men have to take responsibilityfor running the world, collecting garbage,running wars, running businesses — Wom¬en have easy jobs; they get to be secretar¬ies and flirt. Worst of all they get that jobcalled “housewife” where they can sit athome and live off their husbands. “SVNAwants women “to start doing some of thework” he explained.“We don’t want to continue to beshackled by a male role which requiresthat men be courageous and not swayed byemotions. This is quite a burden; we wantto rest awhile.” Malbranche was inter¬rupted by cries of “Hard on!” and “Wewant to sit on our ass and sit on it now!”The leader then listed SVNA’s demandsto the University:• Election of a female president to Stu¬dent Government• Resignation of University adminis¬trators, to be replaced by women• End to segregated dormitories• Immediate institution of home econom¬ics for men• Removal of “inhuman” prophylacticsfrom the market, to be “replaced solely bypills.”In response to complaints from the dem¬onstrators that “men always have to pay”he added the demand that “each man re¬ceive $100,000 in reparations.”Malbranche announced that the dancetaking place this Saturday, which is “Men’sLiberation Day” has been designated aMen’s Liberation Dance.” “We will askwomen to start assuming their portion ofrights and responsibilities.”Immediately following the speech, sup¬porters marched to the Ida Noyes Librarywhere the Committee on University Womenwas in session. The marchers waited quiet¬ly while a member of the Woman’s RadicalAction Project (WRAP) read a statementto the committee. Then, at the chairwo¬man’s invitation, Malbranche read hisstatement. The response ranged fromlaughter and applause to angry glancesfrom some WRAP members. One studentsaid “Say it seriously and I’ll applaudyou." Malbranche replied “I am saying itseriously.”He explained “This is on two levels, ob¬viously. One level is humor.” The other lev¬el, he said, is expressed in one sentence ofthe SVNA statement: “We are the victimsof a role-oriented and sex differentiatedsociety.” He agreed with Rosemarie Gil¬lespie’s remark that men and women should unite to fight these problems.In explaining SVNA’s purpose he said“We are the vocal chords of the silent ma¬jority ... Many women who are the mostvocal are the most anti-male. People rejectwomen’s liberation out of hand .. . Men arenot trying to keep women out. They’re heldin by something they don’t understand.”WRAP women at the meeting asserted thatthe women’s liberation movement was con¬cerned with the problems of men.After the meeting there was a symbolicjock-strap burning outside Ida Noyes.SVNA is currently planning the LibertineArt Conference for the last week in Febru¬ary. According to SVNA, all classes will becanceled for this event. Prospective activi¬ties are an erotic novel day, lascivious cos¬tume ball, and a performance by the Fugs. SPERM? SVNA members hold signs at hearings yesterday. Quintin SpongeSG Will Elect New President SundayThe student government (SG) assemblywill meet this Sunday evening in Ida NoyesHall at 8 pm to choose a new chief execu¬tive, to succeed Michael Barnett, who re¬signed on Monday.Acting president Mike Fowler has calledthis meeting in accordance with a con¬stitutional requirement that a new presi¬dent be elected “by the second meeting af¬ter the vacancy occurs.” (Art. II, Sec. F, 2b)Normal election procedure will be follow¬ed at Sunday evening’s meeting. Thisprocedure calls for nominations to be sub¬mitted at the meeting. Short speeches will be delivered by each of the candidates pri¬or to the ballotting.Since nominations will not be made untilSunday, there have been no formal an¬nouncements of candidacy. However, sev¬eral members of both the graduate and un¬dergraduate houses of SG have been urgedto run. Among them are Connie Maravell,graduate business student and chairman ofCORSO; Mike Fowler and David Bensman,an SG representative, seeking the SG Presi¬dency.An election of a different nature was heldWednesday at a meeting of the under¬graduate house of SG. Five students wereEmployee Resigns over PhotosAn employee of the bilogical sciences di¬vision (BSD) photography labs has resign¬ed his job rather than print Universityphotos of students involved in the Hutchin¬son commons demonstration last week. Thetext of his statement appears as a letter tothe editor in today’s Maroon.The employee, Dick Waghorne, a gradu¬ate student in English, said, “It bugs methat the University, instead of trying toopen discussion with students, resorts tospying.”He said that he had no hard feelingsagainst his superior, Joe Kozicki, but that“it’s a question of University policy.”Stuart Kaminsky, of the office of publicrelations, said that the BSD photo labs areopen to any University department. “Wepay them for the service the same as anyother department,” he said.Kaminsky said that the dean of students’office requested the photographs. He didnot know if they would be used as evidencein disciplinary hearing of the students whotook part in the demonstration.Waghorne said that he was asked to print 12 rolls of film, containing some 400 pic¬tures, which were of students during theHutchinson commons demonstration. He isone of five employes involved in photoprint¬ing in the BSD photo labs, which is locatedin the basement of Billings hospital.He began working for the University lastsummer, and has been involved primarilyin public relations movies and medicalprints for publication.His superior, Kozack, refused to com¬ment on Waghorne’s resignation. Waghornesaid Kozicki told him that he didn’t knowwhat the prints were to be used for. elected to serve on dean of undergraduatestudents George Playe’s disciplinary com¬mittee. The selection brought to a close thelengthy process of nominating, hearingfrom, and finally electing five studentsfrom a field of 33 candidates.Those students elected to serve on thedisciplinary committee are Chelsea Baylor,70, Trudy Karlson, 71, Michael Walker,72, Carol Garstki, 72, and Bill Philips, 70.Following the elections the under¬graduate house passed a resolution sub¬mitted by Eugene Goldberg, 71, and Shel¬don Sacks, 71, which recommends “to thestudents appointed to the College dis¬ciplinary committee that they seek the fullimplementation of the joint statement onstudent academic freedom approved by theNational Student Association (NSA) and theAmerican Association of University Profes¬sors (AAUP) regarding faculty-student dis¬ciplinary committees.”At a meeting held Monday in the SG of¬fice, the members of the Committee onRecognized Student Organizations (COR¬SO) discussed the distribution of a $9,000appropriation. Among those groups whowill be receiving part of those funds are$3,000 to the Festival of the Arts (FOTA)and $500 to WHPK.CORSO issued a statement following thatmeeting, in which the members expressedtheir appreciation to Charles O’Connell,dean of students, for having obtained theadditional CORSO funds.Raby Elected to III. Con-ConAlong With Party CandidateBjorling Declines SDS Invitation Independent A1 Raby and Democrat OdasNicholson the 24th state senatorial districtwon places as delegates to the Illinois Con¬stitutional Convention (Con-Con) in theelection held Tuesday.Raby, political action chairman of Oper-Continued from Page Onemake the issue of free meals a student con¬cern. Representatives of the organizationapproached director of personnel FredBjorling, asking him to appear at a publicforum Thursday to discuss the issue. Bjor¬ling declined, saying he was willing to meetwith a committee from SDS, but that theintensive discussion that the issue calledfor could not take place at the forum. SDSthen sent a letter to President EdwardLevi, requesting him to send a representa¬tive of the administration to the forum, butthe stand Bjorling took was reaffirmed in aletter from dean of students CharlesO’Connell, and no representative appeared.At the forum SDS called the University“irresponsible” for refusing to send a rep¬resentative. The University was describedas worried abbit a large number of stu¬ dents fighting for the free meal issue. SDSreported the accusation that the Universitywas racist in its hiring and treatment ofworkers. One SDS speaker told the 50people at the forum that it was “no acci¬dent or coincidence that there was a lot ofracism at the University.”Wednesday, another student organizationconcerned over the free meal issue metwith Bjorling to discuss the structure of theunions, whether or not all University work¬ers were in the same union, and the Univer¬sity’s relation with the union. Bjorling toldInter-House Council Committee members,Bill Wilson, Tim Wicker, John Turner, BobPitcher and Barbara Akin that food serviceworkers belong to Local 1657 of the Ameri¬can Federation of State, County and Munic¬ipal Employees, AFL-CIO, a union whichrepresents 800 University employees in¬cluding hospital and laboratory workers. AL RABYNew Con-Con delegate ation Breadbasket and a former Universitygraduate student, came in second in theSeptember primary to Miss Nicholson, butwon the election with approximately 14,000votes over her 11,800.The other candidates were IndependentMichael Shakman, who had some 11,000votes, and Democratic Atty. Belle McGee,wife of Chicago postmaster and Universitytrustee Frank McGee, with some 9,000.The Constitutional Convention last calledin 1920, will convene in December, with twodelegates from each of Illinois’ 58 sena¬torial districts, to rewrite Illinois’ 100 yearold constitution. The new constitution, ifratified, will provide a new set of rules bywhich all future Illinois’ laws will have tobe written.Raby, whose campaign describes him as“a black man who doesn’t only work for abetter day for blacks, but who also believesthat what’s best for black Americans ishealthy for the whole community too,” sup¬ports a program heavily emphasizing civilrights and civil liberties. He also supportslowering the voting age to 18, judicial re¬form and women’s rights. Raby would alsophii Lathrop like to see tax justice and a streamlinedgovernment.November 21, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5Fi1 Money WorriesYesterday’s announcement that tuition increases have beenrecommended came as somewhat of a relief to us. We have longfelt that such increases were inevitable, and the sword of Damocleshas loomed larger and more precariously suspended as we watchedall the major universities raise their tuition rates, and knew thatours must inevitably follow.Clearly, no one wants a tuition increase, but we think itshould be just as clear why it is unavoidable. No student can failto recognize that universities, already in trouble from drastic cutsin government grants, are hit as hard by inflation as anyone. Nostudent can be ignorant of the fact that what he will pay intuition, even with these increases, will not pay what it costs theUniversity to educate him.Indeed, we were surprised and somewhat distressed that theDeans’ Budget Committee cited as one reason why they were re¬luctant to raise tuition the risk of student protests. We don’t thinkthis is the sort of issue students at this University protest over. Wedon’t think students would engage in protests possibly dangerousto themselves or to the University over actions so obviously un¬avoidable and clearly explained as these tuition increases.What students may not be aware of is the near crisis situa¬tion this and other private universities are approaching. Cuts infunding of the National Science Foundation, President EdwardLevi’s recent “state of the University” address to the Council ofthe Faculty Senate, the soon to be enacted Defense Departmentbill described elsewhere in today’s Maroon — all these explicitlypointed to financial problems that at best are excruciating, at worstcatastrophic.For too long, those within the University community haveignored the problems of the whole to fight for improvements tothe parts. Demands are made from all sides — for scholarships,for more money for research, for day care centers'— and thegroup making each demand either refuses to accept the University’sfinancial paralysis, or assumes that others’ needs can be tabled orsacrificed for theirs, which is always the first priority. This isnot to suggest that people stop working for more scholarships,more research, for a day care center; it is rather to suggest thatsuch “demands” be tempered with the realization that the Uni¬versity has limited money, and it seems to us that it will be gettingmore and more limited in the future. All such “demands” andplanned projects should be made with a full awareness of what theUniversity’s resources for funding are, and what the prospects forfuture resources are.It is time for angry constituencies within the University torealize that they are not having their battles in neutral territory.Contrary to what some believe and insistently proclaim, the Uni¬versity does not work hand in glove with the forces of the “estab¬lishment,” however you care to define that nebulous term. TheUniversity is currently feeling the effects of virulent Congressionalbacklash, in the form of cuts to government funding agencies, andrestrictions upon government grants.We suggest, then, that persons not abandon their plans forprojects and their applications to the University for funds, butthat they also devote some serious attention to the financial prob¬lems of the University in general. Ultimately, their individual pro¬jects will stand or fall on the resources of the whole University,and unless the whole institution is strengthened, all its individualparts will fail. The Maroon would be anxious to print any sugges¬tions or discussions of the financial problems of the Universityeither as letters to the editor, or as guest columns.Finances of the University may appear to be a strange thingfor students to devote serious attention to. Transients, and uncom¬mitted to the ultimate fate of the institution, it is at first unclearjust why they should be concerned. The reason is the same as thereason why they should enter into all phases of the University —although they are transient individuals, they are a permanentcomponent of the University community, and as such they mustbe accorded and must themselves demonstrate the full measure ofresponsibility for a member of such a community.6/The Chicago Maroon/November 21, 1969 « > rh O'In a i Administration Retains PoweHalting Dissent by DiscipliruBy Paul FeltonOnce again the discipline is coming downon SDS for participating in, a “disruptivedemonstration”. The Maroon in its Novem¬ber 14 editorial said it could not condone apicket line that prevented people from en¬tering Hutch and O-Shop.In the past, the left has often beencharged with attacking various kinds of in¬dividual freedoms. When a GE recruiterwas driven off campus, SDS was criticizedfor denying him freedom of speech. I as¬sume the same logic would hold for thehundreds of confrontations with Dow re¬cruiters alfover the country. The campaignof the International Socialists against thePahlavi Center and Stevenson Institute hasbeen criticized on the grounds that peopleshould be allowed to do whatever kind ofresearch they want.Those who look at these issues in termsof individual freedoms make two cruicialerrors. One is that they don’t take into ac¬count the fact that an individual action canaffect large groups of people. A boycott isan attempt to force an employer to grantdemands by denying him an income Thus,a SCAF member who exercises his right toeat at the C-Shop is in fact denying a work¬er his right to eat. Dow, in exercising itsright to make napalm, is denying Vietnam¬ese peasants the right to live. Scholars, ex¬ercising their right to do counter-insur¬gency research are contributing to the con¬tinued enslavement of the third world. Thesecond error in this kind of reasoning isthat it assumes that the University is runnot by power but by something called “ra¬tional discourse”.What exactly does rational discoursemean? It means that after Marlene Dixonwas fired, D Gale Johnson was willing totalk to students about hiring and firingprocedures in general. It means while Dowis making napalm, we can talk to a Dowrecruiter about the use of napalm in Viet¬nam. It means that while the University iskicking thousands of black people out oftheir homes in Woodlawn and Hyde Park,Julian Levi is glad to discuss urban poli¬tics. At a Stevenson Conference on how tohelp US businessmen to control the Peruvi¬an market, we can politely try to persuadeAmerican businessmen not to domi¬nate Peru. While the University adminis¬tration sets the wages and working condi¬tions of its employees for the greatestpossible profit, we can suggest free mealsfor the workers. What the administrationmeans by rational discourse is “let’s youand I talk but I’ll decide”. No Universityrhetoric can hide the fact that decisions aremade on the basis of power and that powerTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editors: Phil Lathrop, Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyCltisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Susan Left, GerardLeval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, EllenSazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, David Steele,John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, Jerry Levy,David Rosenbush, Paul Stelter.Founded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service.vi t j j j « M/)u r*» GADFLYrests in the hands of the administrateWhen students engage in a “disruptidemonstration” the key question to asknot whether they are preventing the “frflow of idea”. Rather it is whether whthey are fighting for is just.The Maroon, though disapproving of tSDS picket line, suggested that it was ndisruptive enough to warrant disciplinaaction. That is not my postion but I feeldoes raise an interesting question: why apeople being disciplined for such a sm<action? It seems to me that the admintration does not object to the fact that sonpeople couldn’t eat at the C-Shop as mu<as the fact that people are taking politicaction against the University. Clearly this why people were disciplined for somthing as minor as the Quad Club disruptslast year. This is why radicals were epelled for the sit-in last year and moderatwere given short suspensions. This is wl"The Hutch and C-Sho\boycott seems to me tbe one of the won-organized campaignof recent years ... BeI do support the fre<meals demand andsupport in principle thuse of force at any appropriate point in th<struggle."workers who were active in last year’s hepital strike and child care center fight weharassed. And this is part of the reasiwhy most of the professors who were actiin the campus radical movement have befired. The administration is trying to itimidate any worker, student, or faculmember who wishes to challenge its poweThe left had better confine itself to tl“free exchange of ideas” or it will not Iallowed to exist.Freedom of speech is one of the ultimaaims of any socialist movement. But it onv has meaning in a classless and democratsociety where the people who now ha'only the right to speak will also have tiright to rule. In other societies it is no momeaningful than “let’s you and I talk aiI’ll decide.” The fact that our society aiour University are neither classless n(democratic does not mean we should figagainst freedom of speech. What we mudo is look for methods of changing societhat go beyond talking to those who ha\power and start to challenge that power.The Hutch and C-Shop boycott seemsme to be one of -the worst-organized carpaigns of recent years. Aside from haviicriticisms of the general way in which SLraised and argued the issue, I think it w;foolish for SDS to shut down Hutch on tlfirst day rather than trying to build suppofirst with a non-militant picket line. Butdo support the free meals demand, andsupport in principle the use of force at iappropriate point in the struggle. To deithis right is to say that SDS can talk artalk but never win. That, of course, is eactly what the administration means — arwhat the discipline is all about.Paul Felton was suspended for two queters last year and is active with the lntenational Socialists (IS).The Maroon prints Gadfly columns <any issue relevant to the University cormunity. The opinions of the guest coluinists are not necessarily endorsed by tiMaroon. Individuals interested in submting columns should contact the editor.... M',.. MPi*t»*t»**»*»f,**<**<**• • < f ««!#*« f « f f f M» M * •« M,f » «,» »#»EAT! The Annual GCJGustatory GuideBy Epicurius GlutamateWhen all of the fascinating combinations of noodles andtuna fish suggested in the “1 Hate to Cook Book” and the“Student Guide to Cookery” have been exhausted, or whenthe battle with the cockroaches has destroyed one’s creat¬ive energy in the gourmet world, it’s sometimes worth itto blow a little cash and get waited on. Although HydePark has no Simpson’s-on-the-Strand to fulfil the ultimatein aristocratic luxury, there are a lot of eateries tuckedaway here and there where you can relax and leave thedishes to them. Some of them even have good food. Hereis a guide to the eating places within walking distance ofcampus.CAMPUSC Shop-Hutchinson Commons: Both located in ReynoldsClub, and both run by Stouffer’s. Hutch is open only forregular meals with fair cafeteria food and simulated Ox¬ford atmosphere. C Shop serves usual grill items andsnacks and you can meet all your rad friends (if there areany left) there at lunchtime.New Dorms Cafeteria (alias Woodward Court): Open to thepublic for lunch with usual cafeteria prices and food. AGCJ staff member came down with scurvy after indulgingin New Dorms food for an extended period of time.International House Cafeteria: At 59th and Dorchester.Better than average selection and quality cafeteria styleat regular prices. International clientelle.Chicago Theological Seminary Cafeteria: Woodlawn northof Robie House (58th), not in CTS buildings on 58th.Slightly more expensive but also somewhat better thanaverage food. Complete dinners from $165 and unusuallycomfortable atmosphere.The Bandersnatch: Open from noon to 2 for lunch thisS ‘ Phil LathropHyde Park Eating — Ala Tom Jones year as well as dinner and after. Larger variety withfrequent innovations by the inspired all student staff. UHigh teeny-boppers, various non-student members of thecommunity, and disgusted New Dorms residents and as¬sorted wierdos provide regular clientelle. Fairly in¬expensive and you’re supporting students instead of HydePark price-gauging capitalists. One of the few juke boxes(folk, rock soul selections) in the area.The Blue Gargoyle: Inside the church at 57th and Univer¬sity, is the cheapest eatery on campus. Peanut butter andjelly for 15 cents! Wide selection of deserts, however, areno longer such a bargain. ’Occasional films, dances, poetryreadings, folk singers, and fires at night.Center for Continuing Education Cafeteria: At Kimbarkand 60th serves food worthy of the University’s dis¬tinguished visitors at slightly higher than average prices.Occasionally closed during large conferences.Billings Hospital Cafeteria: Never closes! Cafeteria atmeal times, and other times the most extensive in¬stallation of one armed bandits in Chicago. Everythingfrom canned soup to nut donuts. Try their Radar Shake.Pierce Tower Snack Bar: Open from 8 pm every nightexcept Sunday when they open at 4 pm. Usual grill itemsserved by the fearsome denizens of Pierce tower. Largeststock of Hostess baked goods in town, and try their superthick atomic shake. Last few weeks of the quarter Piercestudy hall and snack bar are crowded with last minutesearchers after truth, especially young ladies.University Bookstore: Had a thriving business in Koshersandwiches, etc. until its sad demise. Perhaps they willhave frog’s legs in Stagg Field?Social Science Tea, (2nd floor Social Sciences), Nonesuch(4th floor Wieboldt‘ for the humanists, Swift Coffee Shop(basement of Swift4 for the devot, and Mandala (Cobbbasement4 are sweets and drank joints of a similar char¬acter where students hang out before, after, and duringclasses. Donuts, two cookies, etc. for 15 cents. Widest se¬lection at Nonesuch featuring Swedish delicacies.The ubiquitour pushcarts: Ice cream in the fall andspring, Good Humor, little old ladies selling roast beefsandwiches outside Hutch, and the hot dog men — bewaretheir hot peppers! Usual locations are outside OrientalInstitute and Ellis and 58th. And if we all study diligently,perhaps the pretzel wagon will return to Cobb in spring.The Quad Club: Usually seen by students from the wrongside of the apron, students may enter in the company offaculty. Final bastion of the privileged aristocracy. Besure to tip your waiter in qdsh, not on account, or he willnever see it.OFF CAMPUS:Valois: 53rd and Harper. Plentiful portions and low pricesbring every imaginable type of Valois. Cops, bums, littleold ladies and men, and families. A must. Cafeteriastyle.**Chickeneater: 53rd and Harper. Good chicken at moderateprices, Colonel Sanders used to practice here when he v/asa student at UC. *%Court House: Harper Court. One of Hyde Park’s trueclaims to fame, the menu is fairly expensive ($2 to $5 ameal4 until 10pm when the “snack” menu goes into effect.Most of the same items for one third less. Deserts, espe¬cially chocolate mousse, are great after a trip downtown.Dim and intimate atmosphere in the evenings, but casualdress is OK. Respectable wine cellar and mostly continen¬tal food. ***VzChances R: Harper Court. All the peanuts you can eatfree, and throw the shells on the floor to release your pentup frustrations. Great grilled hamburgers and cheesebur¬gers, roastbeef sandwiches, and Michelob on tap. Minorswelcome, but no beer, please. Unfortunately, the most ex¬pensive hamburger in Hyde Park, and recently closed for remodelling **%Smedley’S: Harper at 53rd. Great cheap lunches, but in¬credibly slow. Young ladies are safe enough, but unaccom¬panied gentlemen should know what they want before theygo in. Gayest place in town. *VzEagle: Blackstone south of 53rd. Somewhat higher pricesand ostentatious, UC faculty may be found imbibing here.Baroque: 1510 E. 53rd. No food but pretzels. Live? enter¬tainment some nights *%Jimmy’s: 55th at University. While we’re on bars, the onlyone close to campus left by urban renewal also has thelargest selection of domestic and imported beer, and lotsof UC people. You may even find the spirit of AmosAlonzo Stagg lurking. *VzYMCA Cafeteria: 53rd and Dorchester, Just what you ex¬pect from YMCA. *Kim-Thomas Rexall Drug: 53rd at Blackstone. Anotherhamburger soda fountain. Candy, peanuts, newspapersalso available. *Jane Lee: 53rd and Kenwood. Quietest and least expensiveChinese food around. Good service and food and they de¬liver. phone MI3-3407.**Unique: 53rd and Harper. Closest thing we have to delica-tessan. Herring, lox, bagels, pastrami, and all that otherschmaltzy stuff. Full dinner orders invariably garbled andintermittent service. Real halvah by the pound to take out.Wide price range although the real Jewish delicacies tendto the expensive side. Unlimited supply of best coffee inHyde Park. Always busy. ***Hasty Grill: 53rd at Kenwood. Greaseburgers with soul,cheap. Vt*Ribs N’ Bibs: 53rd at Dorchester. Barbecued ribs, chick-1 v-M . '^Continued on Page Two« t1 *Good Grub ContinuedContinued from Page Oneen, and sandwiches to go and deliver. Phone HY3-040.Good stuff, but fairly expensive. **Pizza Platter: 53rd and Harper. Pizza and sandwichesthere or to go. Usual Hyde Park fare, phone 643-2800. **Wah King Chop Suey: 53rd and Kenwood. Only take out ordelivery Cantonese dishes. Same prices as other local Chi¬nese food. *3ANickey’s: 53rd and Kimbark. In the continuing which-piz-za-is-the-worst war, Nickey’s seems to be winning. A res¬taurant, bar, and soda fountain, serving dubious qualityItalian food also on the premises. If you must, try thesquid and pineapple pizza. They deliver, phone FA4-5340.Fairly expensive dinners. Service?! **La Russo’s: 1645 53rd. A really fine Italian restaurant inquiet second floor parlor. Relaxed atmosphere, excellententrees, medium to expensive prices (dinner from $3).Antipasto and pasta side dishes with meals. One of HydePark’s most enjoyable eateries. ***VzEffendi: 1525 E 53rd. Positively excellent Eastern food.Chicken, wine, etc. in pastry shell, Turkish coffee, andother mouth-watering delicacies. Accomplished waitersand even a view from atop the Hyde Park bank building.Expensive ($4 to $6for dinner). ****Cirals House of Tiki: 1612 E. 53rd. Moderately expensivebar with quasi Polynesian menu and intermitent service.Ask for Card, the greatest waitress in Hyde Park. **House of Eng: 53rd and Hyde Park Blvd. Local branch ofthe near-North Eng. Least interesting and highest pricesChinese in Hyde Park. Best point is the view? from atopthe Del Prado Hotel. **Hyde Park Coffee Shop: 53rd and Hyde Park Blvd. Tradi¬tional Americana served here. *Far East Kitchen: 53rd and Hyde Park Blvd. New, withexpensive Chinese food. Review forthcoming.Enrico’s: 53rd and Dorchester. Fairly high priced Italianspecialties including spaghetti Carusso. All you can eathors d’oeuvres table for $1.35 lunchtime on weekdays andwith more expensive dinners. Beware entertainment sur-5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFur* Cleaned and Glazed — Injured StorageShirts — Laundry — bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:OOPM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRY| Belle,HowellAUTOLOAD STEREOTAPE RECORDERCsHptefei/aufomaScmt-lb-mtlsaduy.,. a gentle cushion of airguides the tape from thefull reel past the headsand onto the take-up reel.Three-way automatic reversingwith continuous forward andback play.Superb 4-track, 4-speed stereosound, solid state circuitry,pause and audible search,sound-with-sound, single knobspeed control. Electronic andaudio specifications meet rigidaudiophile standards.I new world ol soundlor only$199°°• CHARGE or BUDGET PLAN.camera1342 E. 55th Hr 3-9259 TWO WEEKS)OPENING NOVEMBER 26“SPIDER” JOHN KOERNERandWIliE MURPHYALL AGES WELCOME!Shows of 9, 11 and 12:30Wednesday - Sunday nightsNew Location!QUETKMGHT953 West Belmont Ave.(Corner Sheffield! charge on weekends. Also pizza to deliver, phone HY3-530. ***Walgreen’s: 53rd and Lake Park. Grill items plus a storefull of drug and liquor bargains. Low prices. 55th andLake Park store is same. They sell to anyone who is tallenough to get his money up on the counter. Candy, inecream bars, and chocloate covered cherries. *VaWimpy’s: Coop shopping center. The hamburger that de¬feated Napoleon. Also shakes and fries. Fast and clean.More than MacDonald’s but still pretty cheap. *M>Tannenbaum Pharmacy: 55th and Cornell. Fast lunchcounter service of omelettes, OJ, beans and franks, etc.Great collection of skin mags for your midcourse enter¬tainment. Chocolate covered cherries. **Buiko Gas: 55th and Cottage Grove is really an overpricedselection-limited food store, but open until midnight andmaybe later if you smile. Great snacks, cheap gas.Jackson Inn: 1607 E. 55th. About average Hyde Park Chi¬nese. Slightly lower dinner prices, service same. **Morton’s: 56th and Lake Shore. Once the greatest, nowgrowing a bit ragged. Avoid overpriced breakfast at allcosts. Dinner menu is still excellent, but expensive. Dressfor dinner. ***Gordon’s: 57th and Kenwood. Since urban renewal, closestprivate establishment to campus. Sandwiches and burgersfine, but you run a risk with the dinners. Despite some¬what high prices ($1.50-$3) for dinners and intermittentservice, it is usually busy. **Campus Certified Foods: Mostly supermarket, open sevendays a week, it features a deli counter for sandwiches togo at lunch. Chopped liver, corned beef, huge dill picklesand even fresh? baked goods. May be better than Uniqueand is certainly closer. **Sarnat’s Drug: 57th and Blackstone. The soda fountain isgone and so are the Droste chocolate apples. But they dohave all of Steinway’s old shampoo.Medici: 57th east of Blackstone, in back of Green Doorbook store. Worldwide coffees, chocolates, and toppingssubstantial fare. Soups with black bread, omelettes, andfor delicious juicy — pound hamburgers. Occasional moreice cream and pastry desserts. Burgc/s about $1.50, drinksabout 50 cents. Dim light, wooden furniture, expresso at¬mosphere. **y4Ahmad’s: next to Medici. Originally a copy of Medici, ithas everything they do plus some Persian dishes. Lessclaustrophobic (or intimate, depending on your taste), butswarming with “freaky” high school teeny bops.**1^Gold City Inn: 5228 S. Harper. Best Chinese food in HydePark. Menu items are all great and specials available onrequest. Modern decor, fast service. Even a 10 per centstudent discount if you ask. Demers around $3 are wellworth it. (hie of Hyde Park’s best bargains. ***%Tai Sam Yon: 1318 E. 63rd. Best Chinese food on southside, despite its location. Go with some friends, but do go.***Vz O’Neill’s: 61st and Ellis. 'Open all night every night, whichis the only eatery to make that claim now that Buikocloses at 12 and the Hobby House burned down. Coffee,greaseburgers, dinners from $1.50. A nighttime rest stopfor Chicago’s finest. Service like the cazba.—’*VzLeonard’s Delicatessan: 51st and Harper. Small inexpensive sandwich counter with goodies for dessert. *Station JBD: 51st and Harper. Considered by some theethereal height of Hyde Park dining. Excellent beef andfish dishes, and practically everything else as wellSpacious bar and dining room. Park in the A & P lot downthe block. Expensive (dinners from $4, but worth it on asplurge). ****Surf and Surrey: 50th and South Shore. Good food, but oneof the super expensive. Save this one for the expenseaccount. ***Mr. Pizza: 51st and Harper. Take out and delivery, phone493-8282. **Baskin Robbins: Harper Court. New delicious flavors eachmonth, with special ice cream pies, molds etc. available onadvance request. We can remember when somew»>ere inthis country ice cream was a nickel a dip, but alas, nomore. Legend has it that some day someone will get a redstar on their register slip, entitling them to free coneClosed at 10:30 pm. Always jammed.Italian Fiesta Pizza: 1923 E 71st. They deliver, phoneMU4-3662. At least on a par with the rest in Hyde Park. **“GREYCITYj ounjlHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.IU, 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 CathedralEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerTAI-SAM-Y5.NRESTAURANTSERVES GOOD CHINESE FOODDAILY 11 A.M.-9P.M.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS OPEN 12 NOON - 9 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY288-91001318 EAST 63RD STREET 684-10623k 2/Grty CKy Jouraal7Nbv6itabfef tt'TKSRUN AMERICA FROM THE MAROON BUSINESSOFFICE!$1.00A 15-word telegram sent to your governor, statelegislator, senator or congressman. Even thePresident is within your reach. These men getthousands of telegrams and every one is read.Use your opinions to make theirs - simple de¬mocracy. The $1.00 charge lets you save $1.25from regular rates. Western Union forms and alist of all governors and U.S. senators andrepresentatives are available in the MaroonBusiness Office, Ida Noyes Hall, Room 304. Fill itout, we deliver it. Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items PromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd Si.684-6856 StaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxChristopher LyonFrank MalbrancheMyron MeiselThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the fAaroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.SH0RELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailylake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive CompleteSchoolSuppliesThe Card Nook9:30-6 P.M. 1456 E. 53rdMon.-Sat. 955-2510You don't have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.I- 3LtfUK) v> ti.tr 'fjjlif 2U lif e ) JustTM”. . ; *• • t•jiiff li f-iBity >< 5Exclusive GCJ InterviewSybil Leek: A Very Contemporary WitchWHEN THE LADY FROM the Macmillan Company calledto say that Dame Sybil Leek, the famous English witch,would be in Chicago promoting her two new books (TheSybil Leek of Fortune Telling and Numerology: the Magicof Numbers) and would grant The Grey City Journal anexclusive interview, I felt a measure of apprehension aswell as curiosity. While I didn’t exactly envision an oldcockleburred hag bent over a foul-smelling cauldron, Isecretly vowed not to cut my hair or my fingernails whilethis witch was in the vicinity. The lady from Macmillanreaffirmed my trepidation by whispering confidentially.“She’s a fascinating lady, but she’s awfully weird. Theysay that one Halloween her house was surrounded byguards and detectives and she still disappeared for thenight.”Fingernails intact, I arrived at the Palmer Housepunctually at eleven on Sunday morning. I rather nervous¬ly rang her up on the house phone, half-expecting to heara hideous cackle on the other end of the line. Instead, avery soft, cultured, if rather sleepy, British voice an¬swered. She wanted to know what time it was. I found itsomehow odd that a witch would not know what time itwas, but I told her, and she said to give her five minutesand then come up.Five minutes later, I entered the hotel room of a realwitch. Sybil (she shuddered when I called her Mrs. Leek)ushered me into the miniscule room with a stream ofgrumblings about room service and the rotten accom¬modations which she was given. She was fascinating tolook at. From her bare (and bunioned) feet to her curlyred hair she stood about five feet two, and her fleshyfigure was loosely draped in a sorr of silky occult dashikiwhich was covered with stars and astrological signs invivid color. Her face was round and usually smiling, yetthere was something scary about it. Between her pene¬trating green eyes she had a furrow which reached half¬way up her forehead and was met by a perfectly semi¬circular line. (I looked closely: it was a real line, notmakeup). The top of the circle was met by her out¬standing widow’s peak.Sybil immediately stretched out on her divan, proppedup by a huge pile of pillows, and after explaining to mehow to work my tape recorder, proceeded to talk to you,gentle readers, on a variety of subjects.DrugsWhat do you think of the drug cult, of the use of drugs toincrease psychic or spiritual awareness?I think that drugs have a place in the world. Thetrouble is, there’s been a mass movement of people takingdrugs too soon. They take them for the wrong reasons.The idea of taking drugs for spiritual gain or elevation isnot new, but everyone is not the same, you see. In witch¬craft we believe completely in reincarnation, and for thatreason don’t believe in the equality of men. This has noth¬ing to do with color, of course, but of spirit. Not everyoneis at the same stage of spiritual evolution. Unless thereasons for taking drugs are much clearer in the mind ofthe person'taking them, there’s always the chance of themind being blown. Now someone like Huxley ... he al¬ready had a great deal of spiritual evolution behind him,and drugs helped. But not everyone is Aldous Huxley. Onemust be very discriminating in the use of drugs.What about the use of drugs, or at least of herbs, in therituals of witchcraft?There are no drugs used in witchcraft. The idea ofwitches using herbs as hallucinogins probably stems backto the early period when witchcraft was at its height. Atthat time, botony was just coming under study, and flow¬ers, herbs, and shrubs were being catalogued for the firsttime. The witches were the doctors and the psychologistsand the herbists of the area, and how were they to know ifa certain berry was going to be hallucinatory or not untilthey tried it? But there are no drugs used in modern-daywitchcraft. I can get higher than anybody during the rit¬ualistic period because of the preparation leading into it.What kind of preparation?Well, it’s a period of intellectual meditation. One with¬draws from the material things of the world, such aslimiting one’s diet, and sexual relations, things like that,in order to prepare for a purely spiritual experience. InIndia this period often lasts up to seven days. But, yousee, the idea of drugs in religion was never to escape fromthe responsibilities of the world. People these days takethem for all the wrong reasons — escapism, or as a shortcut to instant nirvana. With reincarnation you are workingtowards higher spiritual evolution all the time. You can’thop, skip and jump. The Great Witch HerselfIt’s the greatest underground movement there has everbeen.I thought witchcraft had gone underground because it waspersecuted, not vice-versa.Well, that’s how it happened originally. Until the middleages, you see, the Old Religion (witchcraft) lived sidy byside with the new religion (Christianity). Then the churchgot interested in land and tithes and other non-spiritualmatters, and sought to gain power. To gain power fromone element of society you have got to oppress anotherelement, and witchcraft became the whipping boy. Witch¬es owned quite a bit of land at that time, and the Churchpersecuted them until the word “witchcraft” had aboutthe same connotation as “Communism” has today. Theurge to kill, kill, kill soon comes along ... you must findsomething to put your own social sins on. It’s like thistravesty going on in Chicago now, this Hoffman trial. Thesame thing.Yet isn’t the idea of witchcraft met with a great amountof skepticism today, especially by scientists?Oh, no, you’re quite wrong on that. Oh, there’s outwardskepticism, of course. But you would be surprised — if Icould tell you the names of scientists who are interested inwitchcraft and follow it. I won’t name names, becausesome people in government jobs might be endangered bythe exposure. We don’t have real religious tolerance yet,you know. But most of the people I know who have beeninvolved in the space program for a long time are peoplewith whom I can converse easily about the Old Religionand who understand it very well.(Where was Werner von Braun last Halloween?)Pop WitchcraftWitchcraft isn’t for everybody, of course, and it’s not easyto learn. We go by the old guru system of teaching, theword-of-mouth system. There’s no crash course that Iknow of.What about your book on fortune telling and your book onnumerology...Oh yes, please mention those. The book on fortune tellingis a satire. All those material things that the public de¬mands ... you know, the crystal ball, the tarot cards ...these things are all merely objects to help concentration.Most people demand to see the material symbols beforethey think there’s anything to the fortune. They don’t real¬ize that fortrne telling and prophecy are — should be —purely psychic.What about this new wave of “pop witchcraft?” Peopleseem to be taking the religion quite lightly.Oh, there’s no harm in taking it lightly, providing there’salways a nucleus of people who take it seriously. Witchesare aware that there is a material world, and they enjoyit, but they are also aware that there is an intangibleworld as well. thing of the moment, like a pornographic novel. I don lthink anyone studies a pornographic novel with any greatintensity, and I don’t think it serves as a Bible for living.But anyway, pop occultism is better than the v?all of igno¬rance which has prevailed for hundreds of years.The Age of AquariusIs this new interest in witchcraft mostly among young*people?Oh, yes, I have a tremendous following of young people.Has it always been this way, or do you think it has some¬thing to do with recent social and political movements?Well, it’s accentuated now because we are entering intothe Aquarian Age. Things are popping, bursting. Youth issearching. I think it’s a tragedy when youth searches andturns inward on itself to destruction. This is the only areathat worries me. I don’t worry about youthful mindssearching. I don’t worry that youth does many things thatI didn’t do, because that’s the privilege of youth. Theinterest in pop art, astrology, and occultism helps to standagainst the instruments of destruction.What effect do you think the Age of Aquarius will have onthis searching?Well, we’re tottering on the edge of it right now. In thenext ten years there will be improvements in society.There has to be, because this is what the whole thing is allabout. People won’t be ostriches, with their heads in thesand.You don’t think the radical youth of today will be thebourgeois businessman of tomorrow?No, I don’t. I am very optimistic about the future. Themind today is the Aquarian mind. I am firmly convinced-that if the youth of America had a cause which it wasfirmly convinced was good enough to follow, it would sac¬rifice itself mentally and physically to that cause. Thereare no cowards in American youth movements. The diffi¬culty is that young minds often don’t realize that there aremore ways of doing things than destroying. Destructionwon’t get you anywhere. It’s only another form of destruc¬tion that got my generation into three wars. It got usnowhere. That’s the lesson they’ve got to learn.Witchcraft todayDo you think that witchcraft could be of help in thesematters, if studied seriously by more people?Yes, I do .You see, witchcraft teaches a way of livingwithout the pseudo-ism, without — I have to say it, andI’m not against religion — the false values which otherreligions seek to impose on generation after generation.Witchcraft says: here is a man in a world. He has his ownworld, and he is part of my world. It’s like a segment in anorange. The segment is complete in itself, but it also has aplace within the orange, to become a whole. Witchcraftteaches a harmonious way of life, which relates man tohis place in the universe.Would you call this “white witchcraft?”I don’t like categories. This is witchcraft, as a positivereligion. As opposed to black magic and voodoo, whichhave negative qualities. Witchcraft is an ancient truth,and you can’t detroy an ancient truth. You can put man¬made principles around it, you can vary your viewpoint alittle, but the truth is there, constant.Personally, I am old fashioned about withcraft. Thereare many covens cropping up around the world which arenot so ritualistic as I am.What is the traditional coven structure?Thirteen. Six men and six women, and a high priestesswho, in the religious ceremony, is the cohesive force be¬tween the two sexes. At the moment of the ritual, she isonly a neutral, psychic instrument .1 have heard that inAmerica there are covens of large groups cf witches, but Ithink what they mean by that is that there are large witchmeetings. There is nothing to stop a group of thirty orforty witches meeting — there’s not a law that says youcan’t. Yet.Are there any factions, any splinter groups of witchcraft?Yes, there’s the Gamerian group. Their big thing is thateverything they do is naked. In my group, the Druidgroup, these single, long robes are always worn.Why the nakedness?They have the theory that the electric forces of the bodyContinued on Page FourNovember HS9/Grey City Jouroal/SThe Persecution of WitchesYou know, witchcraft is an ancient occult religion, mucholder than Christianity. People are frightened of it be¬cause for hundreds of years it has been a secret society. So for non-witches, witchcraft is meaningless?Once again, it depends on one’s motivation. Witchcraft canbe studied seriously, like any other religion, or it can be a" TlUTBf“We Bombed” Explodes in ReynoldsPat Billingsley Reacts to Jeanne Wikler’s CoffeeLAST WEEKEND, in honor of the Moritorium, UniversityTheatre presented Joseph Hellers anti-war play WeBombed in New Haven. The play, to be performed againthis week-end, is a Pinter-bitter, Thornton-Wilder harkback to the peace plays of the twenties and thirties. Agroup of soldiers are carrying out a series of pointless mis¬sions, under the command of a Captain and a Major. Noone knows who plans the missions, or for what purpose, butseveral suspect that the orders to bomb Constantinopleone day and Minnesota the next may represent a gley ofthe plan gang. The only mitigating circumstance for themen is that they are all really actors in the play, andal.hough each might wish to get killed later rather thanearlier, still they’ve been killed before and know the bit.This soldier-actor duality furnishes the opportunity for afair measure of double-entendre, as typified by the title ofthe play.Pat Billingsley gives an outstanding performance asCaptain Starkey, questioning the Major as to what it’s allabout, but suppressing his ambivalence as he tells themen that they’ve got a job to do and it has to be done. Hisskillful blending of the military cliche and the literaryallusion should certainly serve as a model for the updatedR.A. officer of the seventies. This style extends to hisrelationship with Ruth, the Red Cross worker, who is pri¬vately his bedmate but openly the foil for some of hismore pointed thrusts (“You’re not supposed to makepeople laugh, you’re supposed to make people coffee.”).Ruth has a soul, and as acted by Jeanne Wilder she reallycomes across. Being “the second prettiest girl on thebase” and the only girl in the game, Miss Wikler has ademanding role to sustain, and I thought she handled par¬ticularly well some rather foolish bridling speeches withwhich she was saddled.To be this Captain Starkey’s superior necessarilypresents a formidable challenge, and Phil Rosenthal asthe Major starts with a considerable handicap in years.He performs well, but the generation gap tells.The enlisted men are all real characters —they areerudite, witty, and quote Shakespeare, A. E. Housman andT. S. Eliot at the drop of a fatigue hat, all except for “twoidiots” who evidently were not fortunate enough to attendcollege. Despite their erudition, or perhaps because of it,BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID would haveitself taken as a rather genial example of the new Holly¬wood; the entertainment flick with enough class to getthrough to the youth crowd. Borrowing just enough fromeverything between Bonnie and Clyde to Hie Graduate(Katherine Ross complete with focus pulls) and then on toBullitt and The Wild Bunch so that it will be “with it*’enough to be stylish and mixed enough to escape styleitself. The slide tempered to the anti-Establishment toneof the sixties (there’s only a year left to go), the exis¬tentialist hero, the violent commentary of America goneThe Witch TalksContinued from Page Threeand the electric forces of nature must combine unim¬peded. But we Druids believe that nothing impedes thesefores. They could go through a brick wall. I certainlythink that loose clothes are important for anyone who isdeveloping psychially, because the pscychic areas are thesolar plexus, the top of the head, and the third eye area.(Sybil pointed to the semicircular wrinkle on her forehead,and I jumped involuntarily)One must keep these areas free. I think it would be ridi¬culous to try and go into a trance wearing a tight girdle.What are you planning to do when your promotion tour isover?I’ll go back to Florida, where I live. I’m not a professionalcrusader, you know. I’m primarily a writer and a teacher.I write books about witchcraft not to “sell” the religion,but rather to explain what I know and believe so thatpeople will have a clearer and more intelligent view of it.And I have a select group of students to whom I teachwitchcraft.How would you advise a student to gc about the seriousstudy of witchcraft?Well, the only way, really, is to directly learn it from awitch. Unfortunately, those most qualified to teach witch¬craft are usually unacceptable to the American education¬al standards ... no degrees, you know. What I would liketo do is to have a chair in parapsychology at a University.But I haven’t a PhD. I only went to school for three yearsin my whole life. Yet I think I’m qualified to teach witch¬craft as a subject. They do it in Europe.I’ll write a letter to the Administration recommendingyour appointment.4/Grey City Jounaal/November 21, 1M9i— these men are easily fitted to the military habit underStarkey’s eagle eye, with the exception of one SergeantHenderson. This role is played by Steve Mencher, and heis beautiful both inside and out. As the only enlisted manwho is willing to voice his doubts in the face of adminis¬trative double-talk, and actively counter the estab¬lishment, Mr. Mencher cuts a familiar figure for ourtimes, and I really liked him.Corporal Bailey, bucking for the Sergeant’s job, andwild. Butch Cassidy even lets Hollywood pay its longstanding debt to Robert Redford and make him a star.And if all this is not enough there is Burt Bacharachsonically present with a neo-Swingle Singers score andConrad Hall shooting color film like no cinematographerunder sixty is supposed to know how.The trouble is that Butch Cassidy is not a genial filmand to take it that way is an affront to any audience’sintelligence not to mention sensibility. Underlying this filmis a contempt for its audience that is frightening in itssudden rapid reoccurance.In Butch Cassidy an absolute virtue is made of deceit.When Katherine Ross is introduced we first discover Rob¬ert Redford, gun ready and soon drawn, hidden in herbedroom. As audience we are forced to participate in the“rape” of Ross only to discover at the last move (liter¬ally) that it was all a game between two lovers. Not muchlater Paul Newman is in bed with a whore and seems tobe complainnig to her when in fact (as we discover as thecamera pulls back) he is talking to Redford who is in theroom with them. At the first point that Newman and Red¬ford seem totally trapped by lawmen we simply cut badeto them entering Ross’ homestead. No one bothers to ex¬plain the escape from the trap. It doesn’t matter, becauseafter all we as audience aren’t supposed to demand logicor explanations.Worse still, this cavalier attitude continues on to theconsequences of far more serious actions by the charac¬ters. Running off to Bolivia (on funds unspecified andunknown) the three commit a series of robbery-murdersto the most tuneful music of the film. Hie vision we haveof Katherine Ross’ face sa she pulls a trigger is so aban-donly ecstatic that it must horrify, but not apparently themakers of this film who find joyful killing nothing to feelqueasy about. Take a bunch of killers and put themagainst enough cops or soldiers and you’re anti-Estab-lishment and safe. Bullshit. The film is about as anti-Establishment as Coca-Cola.American films from “Enoch Arden” to El Dorado(not to mention Bonnie and Clyde or The Wild Bunch) arepredsely about those moral problems which Butch Cas¬sidy refuses to confront. In abdicating any discussion oftheme or taking a responsible position towards its au¬dience Butch Cassidy emerges as something far worsethan the slick film. It is the film which is sick, dying, inGodard’s terms, of gangrene, poisining its own self withits outward contempt.Hie director is George Roy Hill, the writer is WilliamGolding, and the run is continuous at the Chicago Theatre.i . \ i v TC Fox Corporal Sinclair, who doesn’t want to die in the first act,are portrayed competently and enjoyably by John del Pes-chio and Krin Gabbard. Marshall Alexander and AlanMinskoff are likeable in the smaller roles of Private Fish¬er and Pfc Joe Carson. And the portrayal of the TwoIdiots by Alan Richmond and Zeus Preckwinkle is quiteneat.Important contrast is furnished by two summer sol¬diers, the Golfer and the Hunter, acted with believablemindlessness by Bob Hopkins and Richard Kilberg. Andlast, but by no means least, mention goes to Charles Cus¬ter and Chris Lyon as Fisher’s Kid Brother and Starkey’sSon. It is with the appearance of these two, the younger-younger generation, willing to participate if it makes anysense at all and still believing that their elders have some¬thing for them if they could only make out what it is, thatthe real impact of the drama comes home. Here the wholeincongruity and tragedy of the scene where the over-agedmake wars for the under-aged to fight is wrapped up andplaced squarely in front of us, as Fisher’s Kid Brotherreports, “they said it would disrupt my life less if I gotkilled sooner,” and Starkey’s Son turns out to be everyrecruit on a list of three hundred, one of whom Starkeymust select for death. The wrap-up, where Starkey as¬sures us he would behave differently if he didn’t know itwas all a play, is a haunting parody of official posturing.Following on this, the final curtain line I heard was acutesy incongruity, which no one will miss if it should beforgotten in subsequent performances.The play is paced unevenly, and some of the gim¬micks still needed polishing on opening night. It must begranted that a script which is loaded with blanks for theplayers to explain themselves (“Im an actor —no, I’m aprofessor at this University”) is difficult to mold into acoherent whole, and director James O’Reilly has suc¬ceeded (hi the whole in bringing it off. The technical as¬pects, sets and lighting, are handled weii in the face of thelimited resources of the Reynolds Club Theater, and theadvantage of having a cast of enlisted men who know theyare in a play, and hence can be ordered to move setpieces around, is fully exploited.The real judgement of this play, opening as it did onthe November Moratorium weekend, should not be interms of a critical recitation in which everyone and every¬thing is singled out for due credit, but in terms of thefeelings people get from watching it. Since that’s whereit’s at, I can serve my readership no better than by sayingthat the experience I shared with this company was mean¬ingful and worthwhile for me.Robert AshenhurstContributorsRobert Ashenhurst is a Professor in the Graduate Schoolof Business, Associate Director of the Computation Center,and the Marshal of the University.Robert Baron is a second year student in Social Sciences.Charles Flynn is a third year student in the College. He ischairman of Doc Films and served on this year’s ChicagoFilm Festival jury.Fred Wellisch is a graduate student in the Committee onGeneral Studies in the Humanities. He is currently teach¬ing English and Drama in the Chicago Public School sys¬tem.. ,( , ft|> ''<•}' VFILM—Butch Cassidy Rides Again* » t V. 4 fFillThe Young and Ambitious Chicago Film Festival“NOBODY TAKES US SERIOUSLY,” complains one ofthe ytjng revolutionaries in Zelimir Zilnik’s Early Works,the Yugoslav film that opened the Chicago Film Festivalthis year. The Festival has been around for five years nowand has been growing steadily (14 features in 1967, 15 in1968. 20 in 1969) — hopefully this will be the year thateveryone takes seriously the efforts of the youngest Amer¬ican film festival.Early Works was a brilliant fiim to open the festival.Winner of the first prize at the Berlin Festival this year, itis the first feature by Zilnik, a 27-year old documentaryfilmmaker. Heavily dependent on Godard (especially LesCarabiniere, Bande a Part and La Chinoise), the movie isabout four self-styled revolutionaries (three men, onewoman) who decide to travel around Yugoslavia, revolu¬tionizing the peasants by reading to them from Marx andEngels. The giveaway is at the beginning: a title declaresthe film a comedy, which, of course, it is. Zilnik’s charac¬ters, like Godard’s, are ultimately too childish and inept,too caught up in their own masochistic fantasies, toachieve much of anything. Comic, too, is the film’s style,which compliments the activities of the characters: justas they’re unable to effect their political ends, Zilnik’sfilm style is hardly the vehicle to promote the Revolution.Zilnik, of course, is aware of this, and the film’s ironicawareness of the vast distance between what we want andwhat we can attain gives it its charm. Zilnik’s direction isgenerally sure and imaginative, and one feels that givenless hopelessly fragmented material, he could make areally good film.Albert and David Maysles’ Salesman opened the Festi¬val’s ‘‘New Director Series,” composed of four Americanfilms. Salesman is the best cinema-verite documentary Ihave ever seen (the only other one that comes close to itis Chris Marker’s Le Joli Mai). The Maysles brothersspent six weeks filming the activities of four men who sellBibles door-to-door. The film is distinguished by its greattechnical fluidity (there are few jump cuts and even fewerzooms — perhaps more amazingly, what zooms there areare in focus!) and by its treatment of the subject. Sales¬man ultimately moves from its concern with the hideousvulgarity of the $50 Bibles the men sell and the high-pressure techniques used to sell them, to become a studyof the barriers people set up between themselves. The foursalesmen cut themselves off from their customers, theirfamilies, and each other.Graeme Ferguson’s The Virgin President was also en¬tered in the New Directors Series. The filip consists main-CULTURE VULTURETHIS BEING THE last GCJ for the quarter, it meansthat this is your last chance this quarter to savor thechoice tidbits that the benevolent scavenger, the CultureVulture throws in your face. You’ll have to go the culturalscene alone friends. CV is going into hibernation until nextquarter, wintering at the famed renort of Secaucus, NewJersey.CAMPUSFilmFriday night Doc Films presents Charles Chaplin’sModern Times, in which Charlie plays Saint George andthe Dragon where the dragon is none other than a chomp¬ing, tooth-grinding machine. The film, an indictment ofmodern industrial society will be shown at Cobb for $1 at7.15 and 9:30.Tomorrow night, Pierce Tower Cinema presents Rich¬ard Lester’s A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to theForum, with none other than Zero Mostel. A hilarioushlend of Roman farce, vaudeville, and burlesque show ,itis being shown in Cobb at 7 and 9:15 for $1.Sunday the good Doctor Films returns with StanleyDonen’s Bedazzled! (more fairly called Peter Cook andDudley Moore’s Bedazzled! since they seem to have ahand in doing everything.) Any movie in which you cansee Peter Cook as the devil (with long cape and redseeks), Dudley Moore starting as a cook at Wimpy’s andat some point becoming a nun and Raquel Welch as thepersonification of Lust must have something going for it.Cobb at 7:15 and 9:30. $1.Tuesday Doc Films is showing Billy Wilder’s DoubleIndemnity written by Raymond Chandler which deals withan insurance investigator and a woman who plans to mur¬der her husband (for the insurance no doubt). Don’t missyour opportunity to see Fred McMurray in his pre-WaltDisney days, Barbara Stanwyck in her pre-television days,and Edward G. Robinson in his pre-Nescafe days.Wednesday night is the last of the Nicholas Ray filmsin ^ Doc Films series, Run for Cover. This is a western(or in the jargon of Variety, an oater) in which the scalesof justice are shown to be very wobbly when Jimmy Cag¬ney faces a lypch mob twicq — 9nce as a sheriff and onceas the lynchift* Cobb for 75 cfehfcr At8.;; Yugoslavia’s Early Works at Chicago Film Festivally of photographed skits by Severn Darden, Paul Benedict,Conrad Yama and other Second City people, circa 1965-66(when the film was shot). The comic timing is frequentlyway off, the photography is grainy (the film was shot in16mm and blown up to 35), and the material makes use ofthe rather shopworn targets (the CIA, the Defense Depart¬ment) that Terry Southern and Mad magazine have beenusing for years. Most of the jokes are tame to the point ofsilliness, but Darden is so brilliant that he makes themovie hilarious anyway.Harry Kurmel’s Monsieur Hawarden was probably theThursday night, Black Colony Productions presentsJohn Ford’s Tobacco Road. Long running as a play (theynever thought it would close) this examination of ruralSouthern poverty and its hopelessness becomes muchmore penetrating and less of a stage vehicle. In Cobb at 8for $1.Next Friday (that does seem a long way away) is CarlDreyer’s The Passion of Joan of Arc a 1928 silent, burning(if you’ll excuse the pun) with significance about fear,betrayal, and suffering. Remember even the trial scene issilent. It’s only 75 cents in Cobb at 7:15 and 9:30.December 6, CEF is showing Alfie, the Cockney Loth¬ario (of course with male chavinist overtones). MichaelCaine proves that a Don Juan can wear glasses. An effec¬tive and also hilariously leering picture. Cobb for $1 at 7and 9:30.Word has it that Contemporary European Films (phi¬lanthropists that they are) are going to show a free show¬ing of Orson Welles’ The Magnificent Ambersons. By someconsidered to be one of the best pictures (everybody hasto admit it’s better than that schmaltzy, melodramatic c*vin the night, “Rosebud!”). Drop everything (even study¬ing for that Organic Chemistry test) and go see it.TheatreThis is the second and last week-end of Joseph Hel¬ler’s We Bombed in New Haven. Since the film of Catch 22isn’t out yet, this is your only chance to see Heller’s blackhumor in the flesh (blackface?). Under James O’Reilly’sdirection, it stars Pat Billingsly, otherwise known as astar of the Mat!) department and Jeanne Wilker (whoholds her own against the all male cast.) Sunday is Soldout but go Friday or Saturday at 8:30.MusicCollegium Musicum, that renounced and distinguishedgroup which performs Renaissance Medieval music willbe in Bond Chapel tonight at 8:30. Their program includes16th century German and Italian music.The University Symphony (consisting of UC IsaacSterns, Pablo Casals, etc.) will give its concert for thequarter Saturday night at 8:30 in Mandel Hall. They willperform Hayden’s Symphony No. 82, Webergn’s Six PiecesContinued on Page Six most perfectly controlled film of the festival. Dedicated toJosef von Sternberg, the Belgian-Dutch film often createsa Sternbergian ambiance in its treatment of an 18th Cen¬tury lady who dresses and lives as a nobleman. There is adelicate sexual ambiguity in many of its scenes whichreminds one of the moment in Von Sternberg’s Moroccowhen Marlene Dietrich kisses a young girl.For the first half of Andrei Blaier’s Then Came TheLegend, it is impossible to figure out what’s going on.Slowly, the movie begins to come together. Set in Ro¬mania, it follows the foreman of a railroad constructioncrew, who is in charge of extending the railroad to a damsite. The crew passes through a town which is to beflooded and destroyed when the dam is opened; the resi¬dents of the town will have to be moved. The theme isdisplacement: both the railroad and the town are moving,shifting in space. The foreman has an affair with a wom¬an in the town, and the film is most successful in gettinginto the man’s consciousness and in its deadpan, oftensurrealistic, humor. Blaier’s style depends too much onzooms, but his ability to communicate his main charac¬ter’s point of view is impressive.Without a doubt, the finest film at the Festival wasJan Troell’s Ole Dole Doff (an untranslatable title, heretitled Eeny Meeuy Miny Moe). Per Oscarsson gives amagnificent performance as a schoolteacher in a smallSwedish town. He is pathetically incapable of dealing withhis students; in fact, he realizes that he must ultimatelyside with the students against himself. His marriage, too,is a failure. He is able to achieve only one moment ofhappiness, on a picnic with his students, away from theschool and the city. The film evokes both time past andtime passed — the countless rainy afternoons spent,vaguely bored, in the classroom. Troell’s visuals (whichwere so messy in his earlier Here is Your Life) are nowquite precise: the scenes in the school are tense andharsh, full of shouting children and slamming desks.Troell uses images of birds on the pavement outside theschool to subtly suggest that the teacher is an outcastfrom the community. Troell also photographed and editedthe film, which is an outstanding achievement in all areas.Of the other films, Stig Bjorkman’s I Love, You Lovequalified as the most blatant imitation of Godard: a seriesof word-games and love-games a la A Woman is a Wom¬an. The movie does, however, have a couple of good per¬formances. Also from Sweden came what was potentiallythe most interesting film of the Festival: Per Ahlin andTage Danielsson’s Out of an Old Man’s Head, which usesanimation to portray the thoughts and fantasies of a manin an old folk’s home. Despite traces of the influence ofsuch animators as Jay Ward and Richard Williams, thefilm is done in an offhand, artsy-craftsy sort of animationthat makes it look like a UNICEF Christmas card. Thefilm’s rather dull live-action sequences wind up lookingmore interesting than the animated ones, which is reallyunfortunate. Boro Draskovic’s Horoscope, from Yugos¬lavia, is an occasionally striking, Pinter-like parable abouta group of young men who hang around a country railroadstation.George Pal screened excerpts from several of hisfilms (Destination Moon, The Time Machine, Conquest ofSpace, The War of the Worlds) and spoke to the Festivalaudience for over an hour. Although Pal is a producer whohas not directed most of the films he has produced, he iscertainly an auter of sorts. Besides his concern with gad¬gets and special effects, one finds strong elements of Ger¬man Expressionism and odd religious symbolism in hisfilms.Chicago is the only US Festival to have separate cate¬gories for student films, TV films and shorts. Of the stu¬dent films, Carlos Pasini’s Metamorphosis, a 20-minutefilm based on Kafka’s story, was the most impressive.Pasini’s photography uses strong blacks and whites in astyle reminiscent of 40’s Welles, Lang and Preminger — astyle meaningful in itself and a welcome relief from thegrainy greys of most of the other student (and feature!)films. Flip Jansen’s Kristal, from the Netherlands filmschool, and Frederick Sternkopf’s I Am Curious (F. O.)were both quite funny, a pleasing contrast to most studentfilms, which tend to take themselves far too seriously.Any overall evaluation of the festival’s merit mustnecessarily be subjective. A Festival that shows films asgood as Salesman, Early Works, Monsieur Hawarden, OleDole Doff and Then Came the Legend, and that bringsdirectors like Zilnik, Maysles, Ferguson and Draskovic toChicago to discuss their work is clearly a worthwhile andimportant cultural event. On the other hand, I am surethat most festivalgoers would welcome films like Lester’sThe Bed-Sitting Room, Chabrol’s La Femme Infidele, orVarda’s Lion’s Love; all of which have opened in NewYork but not in Chicago, and would benefit from festivalexposure in Chicago. It should be mentioned, however,that the Chicago Festival did attempt to obtain AbePolonsky’s Tell Them Willie Boy is Here, but, like theNew York Festival, was unable to get it. This, of course,should only whet our appetites for a film that promises tobe more exciting.Charles FlynnNovember 21, 1969/Grey City Journal/*< t \ s f * • * »This Quarter’s Last Word*• N •»cmmi mmiAnd With a Few Departing Squawks, Fall EndsContinued from Page Fivefor Orchestra opus 6, and Prokofiev’s Suite No. 1 fromRomeo and Juliet.One thing that CV has missed mentioning are the12:30 concerts at Rockefeller Chapel. On Tuesdays andThursdays, Edward Mondello performs a 20 minute organconcert. On Wednesday Robert Lodine gives a carillonconcert. You hardly have to stir from your hole to hearthem.Hyde Park’s annual Gilbert and Sullivan presentationis a strange combination of the much-performed HMSPinafore and the rarely-performed Cox and Box. Whatachance for G and S fanatics and mere appreciators. Theperformances start this Monday through Saturday at 8:30with a special matinee on Saturday at 1:30. All are inMandel Hall.This year the annual Handel’s Messiah will bepresented next Friday, December 5 at Rockefeller Chapelat 8:30. No Christmas season would be complete withoutsuch a performance and the Hallelujah chorus is a greatway to end the quarter.ELSEWHEREFilmOh! What a Lovely War is the first directoral effort byRichard Attenborough and he managed to make too beau¬tiful what Joan Littlewood originally made tawdry andsatiric. You choose to see which worked best. At the Car¬negie.Marlowe is Paul Bogart’s version of Raymond Chan¬dler’s The Little Sister. James Garners plays the title roleand Gail Honnicutt plays Orphay Quest. At the Roosevelt.Best of the Festival means the Cnu,ago InternationalFilm Festival at the Village. Don’t miss your chance.What’s New Pussycat? is playing Wednesday only atthe Clark. The critics will never agree about this picture,some hate, some like. It is written by Woody Allen andstars him and Peter Sellers.Alice’s Restaurant stars none other than Arlo Guthrieand documents on film his various adventures in Stock-bridge, Mass, as told in his epic song. It’s at the Woods.Easy Rider, Dennis Hopper’s and Peter Fonda’smuch-applauded violent journey through this country has20% Discount for Universityaffiliates, Tuesday nightMay I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not? Yourhost, MuratSomay, withsucculent foodsand memorablewines. DiscoverEfendi. Tonight. 1525 E. 53rd St.Atop theHyd* Pori Bank Bldg.EfepdiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE955-5151For Reservation*Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWN[ M. BERG CLEANERSIFree Pickup & DeliveryCovered by InsuranceIIIIJ Unclaimed used furs, $25 to $100. Settle for! charges, values up to $1000. Also fabulous minkj coats and stoles. Tremendous values. We alsoI clean suede coats and knitted goods.IIIJ leie last 55th Street 493-9413•/Grey City Jearaal/November 21, Iff? been considered by some to be one of the most contempo¬rary statements on American life to be released by a bigmovie company. At the Esquire.I am CURIOUS (Yellow) had a controversial historybefore it even opened with all the court suits over whetherit was obscene or not. There is a great deal more to itthan merely its nude scenes — it deals with politics, com¬mitment and modern Sweden. At the Playboy.Last but certainly not least is the Chicago Film Festi¬val. Continuing tonight through next Thursday, it is anunmissable chance to see small non-commercial picturesfrom new directors. There are films from Sweden, Yugos¬lavia, Hungary, England, Czechoslovakia, the US and oth¬ers. It is at the Village Theatre, 1548 North Clark. Don’tmiss it.TheatreSoldiers is the first production of the professional com¬pany of the Goodman Theatre. Written by Rolf Hochcuth(the author of The Deputy) this play is a sharp con¬demnation of Winston Churchill and his tactics duringWorld War n. Tuesday through Thursday and Sunday at7:30, Friday and Saturday at 8:30, Thursday at 2.The Great White Hope is Howard Sackler’s slight fic-tionalization of the story of the black boxer Jack Johnson.It stars Brock Peters in the powerful title role. Mondaythrough Saturday at 8:30, Wednesday and Saturday at 2.At the McVickers Theatre.Bang! is a trio of one act plays by Leonard Melfi.Previews begin tonight and the plays will continue runningFriday and Saturday nights at 8 and Sunday at 7:30. Atthe Los Angeles Colesium, 1653 N. Wells.Down From the Hill is an original drama by Chica¬goan Zan Skolnick. Friday and Saturday at 8:30. At theHull House Playwrights Center, 222 W. North.Ovid’s Metamorphasis is the first example of “Storytheatre” a new invention of that theatre magician, PaulSills. The play combines music and song. Tuesday throughThursday at; Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and 10:30 atthe Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln.The Madness of Lady Bright and Chicago is two one-act plays by Lanford Wilson and Sam Shepard (respec¬tively). Friday and Sunday at 8:30 and Saturday at 8:30and 11. At the Los Angeles Coliseum, 1653 N. Wells.We Close in 16 Minutes, Crawling Arnold and theUnexpurgated Memoirs of Bernard Mergendieler consistNEELY’SSTANDARDSERVICETo Our CustomersI have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we cancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and better service.Please join us at our new location.6600 So Stony IslandPhone BL 8-9645Thank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard Service EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbork Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-837224th AnnualLATKI - HAMANTASH SYMPOSIUMLATICE ORTHODOXYVS.HAMANTASH REVISIONISMA CONFRONTATION OF TWOREVOLUTIONARY IDEOLOGIESParticipants.- Profs. Howard Aronson, Nor-man Melfand, The Rev. Andrew Greeley,Donald Levine, Judith WeintraubToes., Nov. 25th Ida Noyes 7:00 P.M.Study Abroad...in Scenic Monterey, California130 Miles South of San FranciscoMonterey Institute of Foreign StudiesSmall Classes — Individual AttentionIntensive Tutorial-Type InstructionUppec Division Graduate StudyEnrollment open to limited number of qualified sophomores.Languages and Area Studies—Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese,Portuguese, Russian, Spanish—History, International Economics, Political Science—Department of Education, Department of Translation (i Interpretation.%A private liberal arts college Accreditedby the Western Association of Schoolsand Colleges. V.A. Approved.V SPRING SEMESTERFebruary 9, 1970May 30, 1970For Information Write toDEAN OF ADMISSIONSP.O. BOX 1978MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA of a new drama by Marshall Sands and two older comedi¬es by Jules Feiffer. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 (to No¬vember 15). Cafe TOPA, 904W Belmont.The Monster and No Use Cryin’ are new works byblack playwrights Ronald Milner and Bill Harris. Friday,Saturday and ^unday at 8:30. Louis Theatre 35th Streetand Michigan.The Serpent is the Chicago premiere of not only a newplay by Jean-Claude van Itallie but also a new theatrecompany. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at 9. KingstonMines Theatre Company, 2356 N. Lincoln.The Seven Deadly Sins and The Exception and theRule both plays by Bertolt Brecht (the former not veryoften performed and with music by Kurt Weill). Saturdayat 8 and Sunday at 2:30 at the Chicago Circle Players,Eleventh Street Theatre, 72 W. 11th Street.MUSICLeinsdorf at Chicago?GUEST CONDUCTOR ERICH LEINSDORF directed theChicago Symphony Orchestra in a positively inspiring con¬cert this week at Orchestra Hall. Maestro Leinsdorf is adelight to watch. Small and spry, he is able to convey bymeans of varied facial expressions emotions ranging fromwhimsy to awe and dread. And while his conducting doesnot lack generous hand and arm motions, it is most assu¬redly his face which has the final say. What is more, histechnique works and powerfully, as was evidenced fromthe magnificent sounds he managed to evoke from theorchestra.The highpoint of the evening was a performance ofexcerpts from Prokofieff’s ballet Romeo and Juliet. Thisexciting and diversified work, generally acknowledged asthe turning-point in the composer’s musical development,gives an orchestra ample chance to show what it can do,and the symphony took full advantage of this situation.Particularly noteworthy were “Romeo’s Dance of Love,”a passionate section with many lush string passages, andthe colorful and percussive “Finale to Act II,” in whichthe entire orchestra simulates a massive organ, wasdeafeningly impressive. This positive note brings to theContinued on Page SevenCohn & StemGfoum Sc (HamptiHShopIN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings > 1'by Zero KingOur luxurious fake black dyed beaver coatis not only for the man who has everything(or appears to). It is also a surprisinglylightweight—and very warm coat. Practicalbenefits aside, it makes you feel very pros¬perous indeed, for only 75 clams.pseudo fur findPOTPOURRI' *****.***;*.*.*.*„''**.*?•*.* *,** •'_*'»<«*•»»;****«* « 4*4*#•#«*-*>* +~» ** Wa’/ o V' t4 V y &*4 i* 0 i« §» v. f 4 r.* '•4-‘ i v. / •*_ itWashington: Mobe, Mobs, Malbranche and a Bagel• l*1 l> SITTING IN MY ROOM in Washington, I attempted todiscern whose side God was on. I immediately realizedthat he certainly wasn’t on our side; it was just too cold.But I found solace in the fact that he wasn’t on Nixon’sside either, or else he wouldn’t have hit Apollo 12 withlightning. So realizing that God was straddling the philo¬sophical fence, I decided to look around and see whatmortals were in town.Now Washington is a captial city, built in a time whenbattles were fought by siege, which is what the marcherswere attempting. It is built as a series of circles, with thestreets coming out like spokes. This set up makes it fairlyeasy to defend. It didn’t work too well during the war of1812, but the British were somewhat better drilled andbetter armed than the protesters.There were other problems in the march. Most of thepeople didn’t have the slightest idea of what they would doonce they arrived. And then there was the problem thatfor some reason, the leaders of the march decided toapproach the embassy from the down-wind side.iii#r>*r So the march began with nebulous goals, poor or non¬existent leadership, tense participants, with the outlay ofthe city and the wind against them, and God sitting it out.The result was not unexpected. A few blocks from theembassy, the front line of protesters met with a cordon ofhelmeted, gas-masked, club-carrying cops, who stoodshoulder to shoulder across the entire street. The marchstopped. The cops moved forward. The protesters brokeand ran.A Viet Cong flag appeared and regrouped the forcesagain, so that the first line of marchers was face to facewith the cops. An order was given to disperse, which pos¬sibly 1 percent of the crowd heard. Then, giving themarchers all of ten seconds (the time it takes to load andaim a tear gas launcher) to disperse, the crowd wasgassed. Again they broke and ran, this time with muchmore fervor.This began an evening of Chinese checkers, with thecops giving you the choice of getting gassed at Dupontcircle, or along the road to the embassy. It became adangerous situation, wi'.h most of the danger coming fromthe possibility of being trampled to death by retreatingmarchers while being blinded by gas.As time went on, the cops strategy became clear.They would let a crowd gather, wait for some provoca¬tion, and then gas the area. The leaders strategy alsobecame clear. They would slip into a qrowd wearing hel¬mets and gasmasks, throw bricks and bottles at the cops,and then run, leaving their unprotected brothers to facethe gas alone.By this time, the revolutionary spirit had driven someof the protestors to breaking store windows, and lifting thecontents. On one block had all but one window broken.The owner of the untouched store, a men’s wear shop, wasprobably quite insulted the next morning.This adversity, however, produced a great feeling ofbrotherhood, which soon reached ridiculous proportions.Someone broke the window of a stereo component store,and ripped off a whole unit and started running down thestreet. A girl who had been coming the other way reachedinto the window, pulled out some ear phones, and thenchased the guy down the street yelling “You forgot yourearphones.”% The Viet Cong flag appeared again, this time urgingthe people on to one final all-out assault on the embassy.Having seen the last three or four final all-out assaults onthe embassy from the gassed side of the lines, I decided toiiiitA Passionate “Romeo”Continued from Page Sixfore a negative criticism of the symphony: while it isquite apparent that the orchestra can reach awesome for¬tissimos, it is definitely deficient on the other end of thespectrum. I have rarely if ever heard the Ciiicago Sym¬phony play an acceptable pianissimo, and this of coursegives it little room in which to build. Consequently, itsfortissimos are not nearly as impressive as they could be.The soloist for the evening was a young Argentinepianist, Bruno Leonardo Gelber, who chose as his vehicleBeethoven’s Empercr. Mr. Gelber’s performance was as awhole disappointing. Although he displayed the necessarydynamism and enthusiasm to match Leinsdorf’s forcefulreading, he lacked considerable refinement, and as a re¬sult his interpretation suffered. This was especially notice¬able in the Rondo, where rushed playing and technicalflaws added to the already mediocre rendition. The con¬cert began with the overture to the opera Der Freischutzby Carl Maria von Weber, a favorite as far as concret-openers go. Maestro Leinsdorf and the orchestra were intop form and gave the lovely overture a warm and solidreading. The slightly less than dear intonation of thehorns did not detract from the-overall favorable presenta¬tion given f t Wejjisch •® i *5^1Washington Before the Gas Steve Aokiwatch it from the other side this time. I made a big circlearound the unfamiliar streets, made a left turn onto whatlooked to be a nice quiet avenue, and found myselfdirectly in front of the Holy Grail, with the street lined byhundreds of cops. Attempting to look as much like aninterested tourist as possible, I stopped to chat with one ofthe officers. He said that he thought it would be a goodidea if I left the street with all haste. I agreed, andwalked the gauntlet to the opposite side, suffering noth¬ing worse than having a peace sign flashed at me by oneof the cops.By this time, the final all-out assaut had ended, andpeople were making their way back to the circle. Thecops, probably out of tear gas, this time let them stay inthe park. The first day of marches was over.The next day was the big march. There were a lot ofpeople there, the figure being somewhere between the esti¬mate of the cops of 125,000, and the figure a few Mobemarshalls flashed to us of V/z million. It was a polyglotcrowd, the kind you draw when you choose as your statedgoals the least common denominator. Everyone therewanted the war over. They differed as to the how andwhy, and portions of the Crowd considered the Mobe mar¬shalls as Nixon’s agents. Old standby chants were used.Cops and marshalls lined the route. (I counted six copsnamed S.B. Thompson).Those in the march differed as to what they thought itwould accomplish. Some thought it would scare Nixon,who, according to White House sources, was watching acollege football game at the time. Some thought it wouldconvince some of the hidden majority that the bandwagonwas headed in the direction of immediate withdrawal. Oth¬ers thought it would serve as a base on which a strongerleft would be built.The unity of the group was not terribly obvious as themarchers reached the Washington monument. First thepeople surged to the area where the sound was comingfrom, and were disappointed to find loudspeakers and notpeople. They stayed around a while, listening to thingsthey already had heard, and either agreed with or dis¬agreed with. The singing was nice, but if you couldn’t seethe performers, what good was it.So while people were still coming, others were leav¬ing. They surged into cafeterias, trying to beat everyoneelse to a seat. Restaurants and liquor stores within thesurrounding areas were wiped out.Next on the agenda was the Yippie march on theJustice Department. The newly refreshed revolutionariescrowded around the building breaking windows, knockingon the giant iron doors, and raising Viet Cong flags. Thepolice responded by filling the area with red smoke, prob¬ably in an attempt to separate the leaders from the follow¬ers. When this did not work, they used tear gas again.This proved somewhat more effective than the smoke,which proved Abbie Hoffman’s contention that every Yip¬pie is a Yippie leader.For the rest of the evening, there were minor skir¬mishes between the protestors and gas, and there werefew dry eyes in downtown Washington. Later that night, afew hundred of the remaining forces regrouped, and at¬tempted to have a peaceful rally at Dupont circle. Theyall joined hands and sang “All we are asking is give peacea chance.” Then about five or six more militant typesholding a Viet Cong flag, marched around those singing,calling for one last final all-out assault on the South Viet¬namese Embassy. After walking around the singers a fewtimes, they started for the embassy. Finding themselvesonly two people larger, they turned back and marchedaround for a while again. After five or six aborted march¬es, they finally had themselves about a dozen people.There then began a spirited debate between the mili¬tants and the Mobe Marshalls, who were telling the crowdto get back into the crowd if they wanted peace, and tofollow “Custer” if they wanted gas. The militants tiirnedto emotional appeal, calling the Mobe'Marshalls “Libs” (which did not seem to bother the marshalls too much,except for one who said they damn well better not insulthis mother) and calling the crowd a bunch of chickenshitcowards. The debate was broken up by the appearance ofabout fifty gas masked cops.The Mobe Marshalls informed the cops that those in¬side the circle wanted to hold a peaceful rally, those out¬side they did not care about. The cops nodded. The prob¬lem, however, was that everyone wanted to get a look atthe cops, so they surged to the outside of the circle. Thecops saw this, they made an announcement that if thepeople got back into the circle, they would be left alone.No one could hear what he was saying, so they all left thecircle to get closer. Meanwhile, the people who had startedthe march on the embassy re-appeared in the crowd, bait¬ing the cops, and throwing things. The cops, however,realized what was going on, sending such profound mes¬sages over the radio as “Our presence here seems to haveirritated the crowd.” Finally, as the marshalls pushedeveryone back into the circle, the cops filed back intotheir cars, leaving to the sound of smashing bottles, fall¬ing rocks, and taunts, all thrown by the instigators of theattempted march. The crowd let out a scream of victory,because it was good to have it end peacefully, and to havethe cops have to leave carrying as much gas as they camewith.But it was not over. The militants picked up the flagand began walking around the circle in the street. A carfull of Virginia greasers pulled up behind them, andhonked for them to get out of the way. They did not. So thecar pulled right up to them and nudged them. One of theflag carriers turned around and kicked in the cars fender,and the greasers spilled out, and a semi-large fighterupted. Within a few minutes, the cops were back. Theyhad let us stay, they said, because we promised to bepeaceful. But it was evident that we didn’t want peace,because as soon as they left, fighting broke out. Ergo, allmust at once disperse. All left (ie, all caught) would bearrested. After waiting a few minutes, the cops moveddown the street into the park, arresting a few people, andfiring one gas cannister which landed on top of a storeroof. Having taken the circle, they split up and beganadvancing down the spokes. Following all rules of goodsense, this reporter slowly walked away from the scene,and waited on the corner for the light to turn green. Asquad car pulled up, and was pelted by bottles, whichcame flying from over my head. I decided not to wait forthe light to turn green and starting Walking down thestreet. The cop jumped out of the car, and thinking I wasnot dispersing fast enough, grabbed me by the collar anddragged me back across the street. I immediately threwmy hands above my head (the radical symbol for surren¬der) and shouted Bao Chi, Bao Chi (Vietnamese forFrench press, French press). He looked at the Mobe PressPass hanging from my jacket, and said “Press, huh.” Inodded, my hands still in the air. He then frisked me andconfiscated my only weapon, a stale bagle, which I keptfor its sentimental value since the convention. “You betterrun like hell, boy” he said. I trotted off at a brisk pace.So it was all over. A lot of people had shown whatthey felt, a lot of people had been gassed, President Vice-President Nixon had seen his football game, Mobe said itwas peaceful, Atty. Gen. Mitchell said it was violent,Hnaoi thanked us, the war went on, the city cleaners hada lot of work to do, and the air was a little more polluted.Besides that, it was hard to estimate if there had beenany effect.Driving home, we stopped at a Howard Johnsons toget some food, and freshen up. The entire placed wasfilled with young people, most with long hair. There weredebates going on all over the place, fights amongst them asto whether it had been violent enough, or peaceful enough.Factions were everywhere. I looked around. We’ll be takingover the world soon, I thought. And I honestly didn’t knowwhat I thought about the idea. i t, ■ 1 t'i £ i j- “ -JUT T "V t *ftnk Malbrgncbe , •tW. <Xi rf&a-'M-r yi tNovember 21, 1969/Grey City Journal/7-*y COLUMBIA POPA TRIP WORTH TAKINGI GOT DEM OLK07M1P BUI??AGAIN MAMA!JAIWffJOPlWincluding JOHNNY CASH ATSAN QUENTINincluding:A Boy Named Sue Wanted Man I Walk The LineStarkville City Jail San Quentintry/maybe;one good manTO LOVE SOMEBODY WORK ME. I O.C.SMITHAT HOMEFeaturingDaddy's Little Man / Friend,Lover,WaincludingColor Him Father/ Didn't We/My CherwCan't Take My Eyes OH You/The Learn Ftete SeegerYoung vs. Oldincluding:Bring Them HomePoisoning The Students MindsCumberland Mountain Bear ChaseMaryowana All My Children Of The SunJOHNNY WINTinctodbXFDatesGood MomJogSchoolMoanMistreat*BackdoorFriendIK Drown InMy Tears Barbra StreisandWhatAboutToday?includingAlfie/GoodmghtLittleTin SoldierWith A LittleHelp FromMy FriendsHoney PieLEONARD COHENSONGS FROM A ROOMINCLUDING:BIRD ON THE WIREA BUNCH OF LONESOME HEROSYOU KNOW WHO I AM LADY MIDNIGHTSEEMS SO LONG AGO. NANCYINCLUDINGEVIL WAYS/ JINGOYOU JUST DON T CAREPERSUASION/WAITING 6.98 - NOW - 4.84MFG. LIST 5.98 - NOW - 4.094.98-NOW-3.19KCS - CS - GP - KGP - ONLYLOWESHYDE PARK SHOPPING PLAZAMU 4-1505VM L L< \ V |\ntS/Grey City Journal/November 21, 19694%4 mUniversity To Face Decision onOne possibility is that in the future, fundsContinued from Page Onefunds will b< cut off but whether the Uni¬versity will be willing to accept money thatis earmarked for military research and notbasic research. “The strings attached tothe money is the problem” Wilson said.“The University will have to decide wheth¬er or not to take funds directly for militaryresearch.”“Our motivation for accepting DefenseDepartment funds in the past has not beena military one”, Wilson said. Although theUniversity would not necessarily say thatthey were accepting money for this purposeunder the new bill, others could interpretthe University’s actions to mean just that,he added.Continued from Page Threeand go1 up on a trash can and started coun¬ting. First I used as a measure the bigmarch to Grant Park two years ago, whenthere were supposed to be 50,000 people. Igot 300,000. Then I counted off a section inthe middle of a hundred people, and withmy eyes multiplied that to a section of a1000 people. Then I counted thousands, andI got 278 thousand — not counting thepeople I couldn’t see under the trees, on themall behind me, or behind the speakersstand or on the mall to the Lincoln Me¬morial, or in the Smithsonian and the othermuseums along the mall, or on the sidestreets, or in the department stores andrestaurants, or off someplace in Washing¬ton looking for a place to go to the bath¬room or for a friend they were supposed tomeet, or on the New Jersey turnpike inbuses and cars trying to get to Washington.Half a million, I would say, and it mighthave been more.The thought that was in the minds ofmost of that half million was, “Well, this is The semantic issues, exactly what the billwill classify as direct military research,will not be solved until either the bill itselfis seen or a public address is made. Untilthat time, according to Wilson, there islittle the University can do.Wilson so far talked with the deans of thedivisions which now receive Defense De¬partment funds as to what the new prob¬lems are, and he assumes that these deansare speaking to those faculty members whoget grants to find out what their sentimentsare.The bill is due for signature by PresidentNixon some time this week. Washington ex¬perts have said that he will sign the billwith no hesitation.all impressive, all these people listening toGene McCarthy, David Dellinger, LillianHeilman, and Arlo Guthrie, Leonard Bern¬stein, Dick Gregory (“Spiro Agnew is sodumb he can’t walk and chew gum at thesame time.”), and Coretta King. This is allvery groovy and everything, but what doesit mean and where do we go from here?”Richard Nixon waves his 52,000 telegramsand says he has a silent majority. We hadten times that in Washington, who didn’tsimply spend a dollar on a telegram, buttook out a weekend and climbed on a god¬damn bus and came to Washington. This,man, is the movement. It is still, to themilitants’ rage, in the process of beingbuilt. By next election time, there will beseven million more college-educated voters,and many of them have the political com¬mitment of the Washington marchers,which goes beyond the media visions of aWoodstockian love fest. They are going tovote Mr Nixon right out of the White House.The question is how many will die in Viet¬nam before then, and how can we stop the not used by the Defense Department can beappropriated to other agencies, Includingthe National Science Foundation, who couldthen supply the money, without the stringsattached, to private universities. However,Wilson said, it does not seem possible thatfunds already appropriated to the DefenseDepartment for this year could be moved toanother government agency.William Cannon, University vice-presi¬dent for programs and projects, who usedto work in the federal department of thebudget, is not in Chicago this week andcould not discuss this appropriations issue.The bill also states “the American peopleare also entitled to know why some re¬war. The answer was in Washington; keepbuilding the fire under Nixon, keep buildingthe pressure.The columnists and commentators all saidWashington was the biggest and the lastmarch. Well, it was the biggest, but itwasn’t the last. There will be more andthey will get bigger and bigger until it be¬comes oppressively clear to Mr. Nixon thathis “silent majority” is not only silent butimaginary. And if the war does not endthen, and if this country does not getaround to the business of saving itself, thenthat majority will be ready to go into thestreets. Nixon has been trying to slow thatmovement with token gestures, half mea¬sures and empty speeches, by lowering thedraft call, and unleashing Spiro. But thatwon’t stop it, and repression won’t stop it,they will only make it bigger. The only wayto stop the anti-war movement is to stopthe war. Nixon has only a limited amountof time, much less time than he thinks.Roger Black is the Maroon’s senioreditor. search and development contracts andgrants are being given to schools and uni¬versities for defense purposes when at thesame time there appears to be an effort onthe part of administrators of some of theseschools to deny to the Department of De¬fense and individual Service Departmentsreasonable cooperation in related defenseprograms.” Some members of the Univer¬sity have said that this section of the billmight have been prompted by backlashagainst “liberal institutions” that have dis¬agreed with policy set by the national ad¬ministration.The bill also says that the House of Rep¬resentatives is distressed that only a verysmall number of schools get the large ma¬jority of government funds and suggeststhat more colleges ami universities begranted money in the future at the expenseof the few now being funded. This section ofthe bill, according to Wilson, is not a newfeeling in Washington. During the Johnsonadministration this same thought was writ¬ten in to a Defense Department appropria¬tions bill, but the Defense Department nev¬er carried out the request. Wilson said thatMendel Rivers, Democratic representativesfrom Arkansas, had this section added tothe new bill to reacquaint the Defense De¬partment with the House’s desires.Besides Rivers, Senate Democrats MikeMansfield (Mont ) and J.W. Fulbright(Ark.) have backed and supported this bill.Many around Washington have commentedon this unusual combination, but the Sena¬tors seem to have varying motivations forsupporting the bill. Mansfield, it is be¬lieved, would like to see the NSF pick upthe funding now handled by the DefenseDepartment while Fulbright seems to feelthat this action will limit the strength anddominance of the Defense Department inuniversities.Thousands Crowd Washington MarchMr. G’s1226 East 53rd St.Kimbark PlazaRaggedy AnnCranberrySauceCountry's DelightEgg Nog——j■*«**■•»*» MLJ1 m mm mm mu m1, ' ■>10*' > \■> . ,;\7 . 'mm a . | Country's DelightGrade A Turkey19 lbs. and upS&plto* * \ i x.s iS ^ mm mm mm m mi atl Mt M ■■ JRed, Grape, OrangeHawaiianPunchBig RollKleenexTowelsRaggedy AnnBrown-N-Serve 46 oz. 274 $125*12pkg. ,Sweet! Potatoes 10* "lb.1 KraftMiracle 49Whip PhiladelphiaChreamCheese 8 02. OQ<Pkg. Ms #Gift tin offruitcake 2 lb.tin 79*lFor your convenience, open until 9 p.m., Wednesday nightAll prices quoted above effective only through WednesdayNovember 21, 19<§9/The Chicago ilbiwi/7*v»v,8/Th* Chicago Maroon/November 21, 1969 AN AMAZINGLY LOW PRICEDHAIR REPLACEMENTBY THE MAKERS OF AMERICA'SFINEST MIRACLE MEMBRANEHAIR REPLACEMENTSLOOKSFEELSAND ISBETTERTHAN MUCH.MUCH, MOREEXPENSIVECoRVtRfitNlH«ir ReplacementsplacementendNow mCOMPLETE CUSTOMFITTED, CUSTOM BLENDED l STYLEDFor several years Hairline Creations hasdesigned and manufactured the finest hair re¬men money can buy. These pieces have sold for $675through advanced production and money saving methods we areable to offer a truly fine hair replacement incorporating many ofthese a*pensive custom features at a price most men can afford.The "Instant Heir" replacement is not a conventionalrag-type hairpiece, toupee or weaving method. It hasa sltin tened base 100% European Human hair, all handtied and custom blended. The heir is permanently rooted in the direction itnaturally grows. It can be worn for weeks, shampooed, worn inswimiaq, combed, slept in, styled like muck more expensivepieces. "Instant Hair" hair replacement will male you look younger, re¬stores self-confidence and self-assurance. You need no longer be baldbecause you cannot afford a fine quality, proper fitting, expensive Hair-piece. You can have one. Now! Take advantage of this unbelievable offer. . - and you must be satisfied or your money back. Sd sore ore WCthot you will be pleased that we offer a 90-day trial. Satis¬faction guaranteed!SONDED CONSULTANTSFor Further Information at Absolutely No Obligation.................. ca|| 725-1503 or Mail Coupon --------■ CHICK DISHED INFORMATIONJ Q Fvrtlur information and Irockuro• NAME AGE, address; CITY STATE• RHONE ZIPCHICAGO. III.. MSN HAIRLINE CREATIONS[am MIDWEST MODUCTION CENTS*U 5850 W. MONTROSEfHONE (Hi) 7H MlWe're out to get you home for theholidays. Fast.Which is something that your parentswill probably enjoy too-Something else they'll enjoy is ourfares for students. (Students, that is, whoare between the ages of 12 and 21.) On astandby basis, you'll get 40% off regularcoach fares.Which doesn't mean you'll be flyingsecond class oranything like that. You still get all the great food andTWA features like movies and stereomusic? But it won't cost you like it doeseveryone else.And TWA flies to nearly all the majorcities in the U.S., plus we have a specialyouth fare to Hawaii.With all that going for you, there'sonly one excuse for not going home forthe holidays.Getting your hair cut.By Inflight Motion Pictures Inc.on transcontinental non-stops.I- VAmAkW* 11. i, i i, * i i’i i ill-, if. Adud.CAMPlSREPRESENTATIVES.4 girls needed$4 7 SO p*-f hourliocumc j ilcmonsir.itor ofpc r son j I jiul home curel^oduciv I vci'. ono needs'tliem.so win no! sell them 1flexible limits to !i! jioiiikI\our class schedule Work inloin own aiea All trainingfurnished.CINEMATIC EXPLORATIONS , HASTINGS ASSOC I \TESr \ ST ATI SI( III! \(.<). II I isoisfor interview, call 2sb OT2416 NEW EXPERIMENTAL FILMSTHURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY FINNEGANAUDITORIUM-LOYOLA UNIV.7:00 & 9:30 EACH NIGHT rsnSaSTj* 1645 E.55»h STREET ** CHICAGO, IU. 60615 *2 Phone: FA 4-1651 ? GOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM-2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM-9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) TREAT YOUR FAMILY TOTHANKSGIVING DINNER ATHvcie Pjrk’s After the theatreRESTAURANT AND LOUNGEPolynesian American dinners and snacksK itchen oi»en tit 3 A IVJ1612 East 53rd Street MU 4-1221TWA put a price on your headthat even your parentsmight agree to pay. Life of young people In toclolltf societies:USSR, North Vietnam, Cabo, and In the two GermanysXEW WOULD REVIEWSPECIAL ISSUE OK YOUTHRennie Davis on lile tn North Vietnam trrday US antiwar activity Student Powerin the USSR South Vietnam student leader on what s happening there Ho*young Soviet factory workers get eduiated. Cuba The new Moncada assaultGDR Talk with youth USSR Student construction teams Marxism, morals andsex education Pete Seeger song for yourh The Western student movementthrough Soviet eyes Facts FiguresThlt Issue $1.00 or free with one-year subscriptiontfonr Issnes. $3,501. Use this blankQ Enclosed $1.00 for NWR, 4th quarter 1969 (you.n issue)0 Enclosed $3.50 for I-year sub starting 1st quarter 1970(youth issue sent free of charge)NAME STREETCITY STATE ZIPNEW WORLD REVIEW. 156 Fifth Ate.. Naw York. N Y. IOOIOi^^77",V«»#«**»*♦«4f*f‘ 7*1 mmH ' v hn rm w/»letters to the editors of the maroonI Quit!An open letter to Mr. Joseph Kozicki,director BSD Photographic LabDown in the dank recesses of BillingsHospital next door to the morgue, only afew feet from the cafeteria there is a smallbut very well equipped photographic labo¬ratory which until recently has been en¬gaged exclusively in producing large quan¬tities of excellent photographic prints fordoctors doing research work for publica¬tion. This innocuous laboratory is currentlyunder new management and is rapidly ex¬panding its supply of capital equipment. Inorder to enlarge its coffers to meet thestrain of the capital equipment indentation,it now offers a new line of service — photo¬graphic service for any occasion, photo¬graphic service with a reassuring shield ofsilence, photographic service of the manyfor the few, the new University of Chicagosecret photographic silent roving spy.Having been engaged, as most students,in a few political activities, I had heardfantastic tales of secret police organiza¬tions who sent photographers to demonstra¬tions to photograph the crowd for their se¬cret files. I had dismissed such rumors asleftist rhetoric, paranoid illusions touchedlightly with a sprig of insanity. It never occured to me that someday I would findmyself printing literally hundreds of 8 by 10glossy photographs of twenty-five kids whowere guilty of little more than blocking thedoorway of a cafeteria which serves hide¬ous food at exorbitant prices to already em-poverished students.I do not pretend to be a radical politicoon such a prestige ridden campus. Nor do Ipretend to be an exciting intellectual. Butfrom where I stand, it does indeed lookstrange to see rational members of a uni¬versity supporting an administration andindeed an educational system which iscrass enough to be bullied by impudent po¬litical freaks to the point of actually in¬itiating a surreptitious system of vision.Officially, of course, no such thing hasever happened. My boss when directlyquestioned about the use of these two hun¬dred pictures claimed to have no knowl¬edge about their ultimate destination. Theimplication was that “the department” wasdoing it for the money. Indeed this I canbelieve.Were the SDS students who blocked thedoorway to the cafeteria actually revolu¬tionaries engaged in a conspiracy to de¬stroy this University, I might see it usingits photographers to inspect its cancer. I donot congratulate SDS on its fine tactics; itstactics were shoddy going beyond the prin¬ ciples they hold to be self evident, i.e., thecafeteria is private property open to thepublic and no one has the right to use forceto close it down.The University did not use force to clearout the building and did not attempt directnegotiation. Instead it used what is rapidlybecoming its normal plan for such demon¬strations — saturation photography printedin an underground lab for the eyes of cer¬tain citizens who could not or would not forone reason or another want to attend inperson. When impersonal and secret photo¬graphic documentations are swept away bythe financial, when silence becomes thehallmark of fame, then I know I can nolonger support such a system and will workfor this University no more.W. Richard WaghorneIS RallyThere were several inaccuracies in theMaroon’s story on the November 14 demon¬stration against the Stevenson Institute andPahlavi Palace.Most important, the demonstration wasco-sponsored by International Socialists(IS) and the New University Conference(NUC). The story mentioned only IS.Second, IS in not “a faction of SDS.” IS isa socialist organization with members ac¬tive in many arenas. Many student mem¬ bers IS SDS chapkThird, I didn’t contrast scholars whowant to help the third world with those whoserve imperialism. My point was that ifthey do not reject capitalism those whowant to help third world countries are help¬ing imperialism because capitalism causesthird world underdevelopment.Chris HoksonInternational ScocialistsResistanceI would like to correct two mis-impressions caused by your editing of myarticle on the four University draft resis¬ters which you so graciously printed inyour November 14 issue.Mike Presser found it curious that I knewnothing of his whereabouts, since we hadbeen in touch just a few days before. Infact, the only reason I did not write abouthim was that we didn’t have time to talkabout the article. He is living and organ¬izing in Chicago’s Southwest side workingclass community.My version of the article didn’t refer toJohn Welch’s “legal ordeal”, but rather tothe “legal shit” he’s been going through.John will be as offended as I am by thesuggestion that there’s a better phrase thanlegal shit to describe the legal shit.Continued on Page Ten iComedy tonight!(and Sunday night, too!)MODERN TIMESBEDAZZLED! Finals are closer than you think! Doc Films presents what may beyour last chance for laughs this quarter: tonight, at 7:15 and 9:30in Cobb Hall, we present Charlie Chaplin's MODERN TIMES. Thisis one of Chaplin's best and funniest films - a comic treatment ofcapitalism and technology! Then, on Sunday (same times, sameplace), comedy in a "mod" vein. Peter Cook and Dudley Moore (of"Beyond the Fringe" fame) co-star with Eleanor Bron (remember herfrom HELP!?) and Raquel Welch in BEDAZZLED! - a hilarious take¬off on the Faust legend. Filmed in color by Stanley Donen, the brilliantdirector of SINGIN' IN THE RAIN and TWO FOR THE RO\DWhy not see both? As one of our competitors says, "Don't deny yourselfthis small luxury. " Enough said.MUSICRAFT SPECIAL“By all means listento this $95 speaker...This is not justanother box!” hi n/sur* Rm A.D.C. Model 303A SPEAKERThe Brentwood ll11The ADC 303A has been widely acclaimed in audio technical reportsby high fidelity authorities. For example, here’s what Julian Hirschof Hirsch-Houck Laboratories had to say in Hi Fi/Stereo Review.“After the lab measurements had been made, and I had achance to analyze the data, I began to appreciate howunusual this speaker system really is.’’“For one thing, my tests confirmed the manufacturer’s claimed frequen¬cy response of 35 to, 20,0QP cps - 3 db measured in an average listen¬ing room.’’”... the Brentwood has a true, effective response down to at least 33cps, with lower distortion than I have measured on many larger and morecostly speaker systems, under similar conditions.’’ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR - 363-4555M E. Oak St.-OE 7-4150 2035 W. 95tn SI.--779-6500I LeRoi Jones'DutchmanMonday Nov. 248:00-Cobb Hall -$1Black ColonyRevitalization PresentsRick ChapmanJourney Beyond Trips--Insrde the American Resolutionin ConsciousnessSocial Science 122 7:30- 10:00Friday November 21stNovember 21, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/t1\ VH.1 VVtVXVl>l» U » tWUAHWW *.»%%. l» ottw*. auuxarwt^m-a • *«*« t » * • MaNMRi» * «•»»» • *• » * • 4 «♦♦»♦♦♦«<♦ «u>»'»4 4 iu»«%« «.« «* t , vContinued from Page NineOne more thing to add. Anyone interestedin talking about resistance or work in com¬munities (the latter was discussed in somelength at Monday’s New! Improved! Leftteach-in on white radicals in Chicago)should call me evenings at 343-5987 and ar¬range a time when you can come out fordinner.Rob SkeistKKK and Us?Oh Maroon editor, where were you whenthey needed you most? A few years ago anda few hundred miles south, people tried,just as the SDS does now, to protect certainrights of people working in restaurants bykeeping certain other people out. But alas,the members of the Ku Klux Klan and itssympathizers were not generally very liter¬ate and djd not present their case very ef¬fectively, and the government finally putan end to their defense of the restauran-teurs’ rights.But if you, oh editor, had been there tolend your pen and erudition to the cause ofexclusion, you just might have preventedthe passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act,and the Klan might still have been barringrestaurant doors, just as the SDS does now.I mourn with you for this lost opportun¬ity.Roy TindelNon-Violence?Much of the reaction to the SDS militantboycott of the cafeterias so far seems to beoutrage at the principle of using force. (Iknow there have been allegations that vio¬lence was used, but I want to address my¬self here to the case for a militant picketline.)Many people felt that it was an in¬fringement of their rights (to say nothing ofthe inconvenience) to be barred from eat¬ing in Hutch and the C-shop — it may be an annoyance to be asked not to go in, but it isan affront to be told not to go in.I believe that the seriousness of the issuemore than justifies the use of force to forcethe issue. Had the demonstration been apassive picket line, little notice would havebeen taken of it.Non-violent force was the tactic used inthe civil rights sit-ins in the early ’60’s,when the sitters-in made it impossible forpeople to patronize certain segregated res¬taurants. Few people here would criticizethat use of force — it was recognized thatblacks had to do something dramaticenough to get attention, and at the sametime make it unprofitable for the owner.The principle is the same here — perhapsthe demonstration of it was just too imme¬diate for comfort.Karen Nussbaum 72SDS and NUC?The University of Chicago chapter of theNew University Conference supports thedemand for free meals for all cafeteriaworkers put forward by SDS on thiscampus, and opposes any attempt by theUniversity administration to discipline stu¬dents involved in actions around this de¬mand.On the face of it, it is somewhat strangefor a University administration as ex¬perienced in coercion as this one is (Wood-lawn policy, firing of radical faculty, dis¬crimination against women, the purge ofstudent protesters) and which supports gov¬ernment policies of social control here andabroad, to raise the spectre of interferencewith the “rights of others” as justificationfor discipline. The strangeness evaporates,however, when you realize that the “rights’turn out to be the right to exploit Universityworkers, the right to ignore demands to thecontrary, and the right of students to ac-quiese to such policies; and the “others”turn out to be that very administration it¬self and the supporters of its exploitativepractices. The rights of the rest of us to livein a non-racist, non-exploitative society areMeet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.But the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRAEugene Narmour, conductorFall ConcertSATURDAY, NOV. 228:30 PM, MANDEL HALLADMISSION FREEHAYDNWEBERNPROKOFIEVThe Carpet BarnA <6viwon at Corriond CarpetW« haw an enormous selectionof new and used wall-to-wallcarpetings, staircase runners,remnants and area rugs (a largeselection of genuine and Amer¬ican orientals). Antique furnituretoo.We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONIY from 9 - 4.1111W. Kinxie (at Racine)NU4-IM9 70-7271 ClarkTHEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines70% Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks & Hardcovers1540 E. 55thSt.-MI3.7511 enjoy ourspecial studentrate£ at alltimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officedifferent double featuredailyopen 7 30 a.m.-lateshow midnight# Sunday film guild# every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 75‘little gal lery for galsonlya dark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.# *.rite for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-2843110/Th. Chic.,. Maroon/November Jl, 1*9 somehow lost in the tally as the Universitycynically exhorts the silent majority to sali¬vate at the sound of the liberty bell. Whoseliberty?Of course this is all part of the famous“Chicago Plan.” This University was theproving ground and is now the showcase fora new method of social control designed tosmash the student arm of this country’santi-imperialist, anti-racist movement andlighten the hearts of concerned trustees andadministrators everywhere.Last year the Chicago Plan resulted inthe expulsion of more than 40 people whowere fighting the University’s racist, anti¬woman, anti-left policies. Students support of the cafeteria workers and the Univer¬sity’s pending disciplinary action againstthem is yet another example. The ChicagoPlan is not an isolated policy — whetherdisciplinary committees or cops are used,whether it results in expulsions, firings, orjail, it is part of the same general patternof repression of radical movements in thiscountry. The technique of the quiet purgewill be tried again and again as long as theUniversity can get away with it. And theonly way they can get away with it is if welet them.Ne expulsions! No firings!The New UniversityConferenceBULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, November 21COLLEGIUM MUSICUM, CHOIR MOTET: Howard M.Brown, director, 16th century Italian and German mu¬sic. Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: Division of the Biological Sciences, MerleMizelle, associate Professor, Department of Biology,Tulane University, "The Locke Tumor Story and Gen¬omic Depression," Rickets 1, 4 pm.DOC FILMS: Modern Times, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30pm.RECRUITING VISIT: U.S. Food and Drug Adminis¬tration, Chicago, Illinois, Laboratory positions forchemists, biochemists, and microbiologists at the B.S.and M.S. levels. Inspector positions for students whohave had at least 30 semester hours in biological andphysical sciences. Ext 3284 for appointments.RECRUITING VISIT: Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory,New Mexico. Positions for mathematicians and physi¬cists at all degree levels. Will interview students inthese departments tor summer employment who willreceive the Bachelor's degree in June 1970 or are atany level of graduate study. Ext. 3284 for appoint¬ments.RECRUITING VISIT: Imperial Chemical Industries,England. Interviewing students who are citizens of theBritish Commonwealth, at the M.S., PH.D., and post¬doctoral levels in the biological sciences, chemistry,mathematics, physics, or Statistics. Ext. 3284 for ap¬pointments.SEMINAR SERIES: Frank T. Manheim, U.S. GeologicalSurvey at Woodshole Oceangraphic Institute,'Geochemistry and Joioes," Henry Hinds Lab 101, 4pm. Tea will be served at 3:30 pm. Room 176.TRYOUTS: For winter quarter production of Don Car¬los, Reynolds Club Theater, 4 pm.CHICAGO ARTS FORUM: Poetry Reading, East Aisleat Blue Gargoyle, 6-8 pm.DISCUSSION GROUP: "Crisis in Northern Ireland", in¬ternational Discussion Group led by Father EdwardCassidy, Crossroads Student Center, 5621 Blackstone, 8pm.FREE CONCERT: Black Cat Bane Blues Band,Blue Gargoyle, 8:30 pm.TWELFTH ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM ON DIABETESMELLITUS: Sponsored by the Diabetes Association ofGreater Chicago "Clincila Applications of Newer Knowledge in Diabetes Symposium on the Eye", opento public. Ext. 3186.Saturday, November 22UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Gene Namour, conductor, Haydn, Symphony No. 82; Webern SixPieces for the Orchestra, Op. 6; Prokofiev, Suite No. 1from Romeo and Juliet, Op. 64; Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.DRESS REHEARSAL: University Symphony Orchestra,Mandel Hall, 11 am - 1 pm.FILM: "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to theForum," Pierce Cinema, Cobh Hall, 7 and 9:15 pm.METTING: World Federation of Methodist Women, Re¬gional meeting limited to membership, Ext. 3188.Sunday, November 23COLLEGIUM MUSICUM, MOTET CHOIR: Bond Chapel.8:30 pm.INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes. Clois¬ter Club, 7:30 pm.DOC FILMS: Bedazzled, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.COMMUNAL DINNER: Bring food to share, 6:30 pm,followed by "Mr. Miracle and the Missionaries", BlueGargoyle.CHEC: Second Annual Bake-in, Hitchcok Kitchen, all arewelcome, 2 pm.CHEC: Calligraphy Study Group, Robert Williams apartment, 5449 S. Woodlawn Ave., 7 pm.ISRAELI CAFE: 3rd floor Ida Noyes, Presented by Stu¬dents for Israel, 7:30 pm.CADRE POTLUCK: Unitarian Church, 57th and Wood-lawn, 6 pm.DINNER AND DISCUSSION: Bonhoeffer House, 5554Woodlawn, "The Crisis in the Middle East,1' 6 pm.Monday, November 24FILM: Le Rol Jones' Dutchman, Cobb Hall, $1, BlackColony, 8 pm.NEW UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE: Library Blue Gargoyle, 9 pm.CHICAGO ARTS THEATER: Rehearsal. 2nd floor BlueGargoyle, 8 pm.SQUARE DANCING: Ida Noyes Theater, 8 pm.CERAMICSBy RICKAT FORMNOVEMBERONLY Sunday Sew Yttrk Times8:30 IM (daily too)* BOB’S INK* SSTAM)■* 51st and Lake Park•X Huge stocks of Current Mafia- *^ lines, Paperbacks, Assorted +^ Pornography. Come & meet ^my dog “Michael.”Where’s the 3 largestwedding ring selection?119 N Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOODEVERGREEN PLAZAI /Uslthm^kfWfiftS »09 59 tIF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. Amr UMKAUY TOAfffCTRO ARIASmad frraii avtl That's right, It's afur lady Shktl WhMa, gray,^ ..,l|L ait ay Luttr—■fawn or wrki mill a i uunoviPLUSFASHIONSFor Men and Women5225 S. Harper324-6800«■ .«•,*.•*>.» .V« .W-'V.*. Vv i-(Maroon Classified Ads) • . . • f. v'»*i<v«■* . v ».*«•* n . 4’v»’i v«> rr «r* . r* »r-r*• v-rv (> v ** t »'v*•«•***'•’»' v» «t i *'.*•*•NOTHING FOR A DIRTY MAN BUT SOAP IN HIS BATHTUBSCENESmodern danceDEMONSTRATIONNovember 25 7:00 PMAt- Ida Noyes Dance RoomEverybody Free!!Overthrow the capitalists with atenant union.Last chance tor laughs before finalsthis weekend: Chaplin's MODERNTIMES at 7:15 and 9:30 in Quantrelltonight; Peter Cook & DudleyMoore in Stanley Donen's BE¬DAZZLED! Sunday, same times,same place. Doc Films. Homesick James Williamson &Houndog Taylor at Ida Noyes Sat8:30 Adm $1.75, Stu-$1.50Make peace, not war. See UT's"We Bombed in New Haven" thisweekend in Reynolds Club.Battle of Bottlenecks Sat 8:30 IdaNoyes 1.75, Students 1.50MODERN DANCE CLUB PRESEN¬TATION Technique, Improvisation,Choreography, Tuesday Nov 25, 7:00PM Ida Noyes Hall Dance Room.PARTYNov 22 Boucher 915 E 53rd WA¬TERMELON BAND LIGHT SHOW.S Margaret's Church — The Episco¬pal Church of South Shore — 2555E 73rd St. (corner Coles)7:30 am Holy Communion9:00 am Family Eucharist 8>Church School11:00 am Choral Eucharist LUTHERAN WORSHIPCelebration at 10:00 AM this Sun¬day at Graham Taylor Chapel (Uni¬versity 8, 58th), A Public Service ofSt. Gregory's Parish.Conference: WHAT'S HAPPENINGTO THE DRAFT? Nixon's Draft Re¬forms. Draft Repeal Movement. AllWelcome. Sat 11/12: 1-5. RooseveltU., Altgeld Hall (2 fl). Sponsor: AMFriends Service Committee Tel 427-5024.Richard Lester, Zero Mostel, PMISilvers, 400 Pretty Girls, 183 FunnyJokes: A Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum. This Sat. atCobb Hall, 7 and 9:15.SENSITIVITY GROUP (T-GROUP)AT UC: group experience with profgroup leader (NTL 8r Esalentrained.) Group rates. Call Rich(955-4572) or Jim (924-9838).Cafe Mapitom returns Sun. Nov. 237:30-11 34d floor Ida Noyes $1.50Come see internationally acclaimedHabonim Singers and dancers. Fela-fel too. Students tor Israel. SKI VAIL AT XMASSKI CLUB WINTER TRIP — ONFWEEK VAIL, COLORADO BY AIRLeave Dec. 13 — Return Dec. 20.Reasonable cost! — Marty 324-8930SUPER EVENTLester's Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum. Replete withSex, pretty girls, and Zero Mostel.See! Behold! Deluxe whorehouse,horsesweat love potions, MS Bed¬ford! S>t. Nov. 22 at 7:00 and 9:15at Quantrell Auditorium.PEOPLE WANTEDWanted: Kinetic Babysitter. Hu¬mane Inventive Person for 2 Boys,2 or 3 Weekdays Afternoons $2/Hr.52nd 8t Kimbark. 684-8141.Poetry readings on Nov. 21 at 6p.m. at the Gargoyle.Don't let the Howdy Doodles of newpolitics get away wit hit — send atelegram from the Maroon Office. WANTED: Paid medical examinersfor insurance exams. Resident typedoctors preferred. Full professionalfees paid by nationally known in¬surance firm. Ralph J. Wood. FR2-2390. and poor building conditions. Ifyou are interested in forming atenant union in your building, TU§Pcan provide legal assistance, organ¬izing skill, and advice. Call StudentGovernment between 1 and 5, ext.3274 or Frank Day, 493-4148.ROOMMATES WANTED4th Fern wanted to share apt. 47 &Dorch own Room. Tel 684-6883.Fern Student for Apt. 1400 E 57.Own room, $65 mo incs utilts. Avail¬able Jan. 1 493-8845.3rd Fern Grad to Share Large Apt54 8, Kimbark Own Room $57. 50Mo 355-7682 After 6:00.Fern Grad Student or Prof Womanto Share Lg. Lovely Apt -By Dec1. $90/Mo. FA 4-5986 eves.FOR RENTSnell Single Rm Contracts StartingNow Kitchen No Board After 9PM Ext 260 Rm 23 or 53.Private room available in lovelyKenwood home call 548-4748.Apt Avail Dec 15 7R Ervc Bk^orchPantry 2V2 Bths 55 & Hyde Par*$200. 643-2032 After 4:30.3 Brm Urvfurn Apt in South Shr.w/encl porch, gar. $160 Avail. Dec1. Grad Students. 768-5417.ROOMS — Available for WinterQuarter or Immediately Board Con¬tract Included. 5555 S. Woodlawn.PL 2-9704Pvt. Room in Bur-Judson Grad atfor Win-Spr Eves. 667-2904.BUSINESS STUDENTSATTENTIONWant to Meet and Discuss YourIdeas with the leading businessmenof Chicago? Fund-raising for FOTAwill give you the opportunity Call324-5617 Now!BANDERSNATCH DANCENov. 21 9:00JEFF CARP BAND$1.00Ida Noyes HallCompletely Improvised Shows, Gui-tarsits, Folksingers — Harper The¬ater Coffee House, Fri. and Sat. 9and 1). $1.00 Improv. WorkshopsSat., 2:00.Delicious food. Beautiful atmos¬phere. Plus minus 20 per cent. OnTuesday nights. Effendi nine fivefive five one five one.Become a power behind the throne— a Maroon Telly puts you atyour ruler's ear.B.ue Snobs Jeff Carp 8. his band,Ida Noyes Nov. 21, $1.00.Fulfill your historical role with atenant union.Nov 25th, 7:00 PM LATKE-HAMAN-TASH FACULTY SYMPOSIUM. IdaNoyes.SLIDE-TALK: PROF. Daniel Jan-zen "Culture Vs Ecology," Tues.,Nov 25, 5600 S Woodlawn, 8 pmLEARN OF THE FOULING OFEARTH.Four American student groups planto settle in Israel in Kibbutz orurban collective between 1970 and1973. Open joint seminar in Chica¬go area Jan 2-4 1970 For moreinfo, call Barbara Tel 274-1011."Crisis in Northern Ireland" To¬night 8 PM Crossroads 5621 Black-stoneAd your voice to those in Washing¬ton on the 15th, send a Maroontelegram to your rep., sen., orprez. $1.00Jeff Carp's band plays the blues,Friday, 8:30 in Ida Noyes.Don't be lumpen-join a tenant un-jon.MODERN DANCE CLASSES4 PM t 5:30 PMMonday - SaturdayBallot $ Jazz oho taught.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. StottStuvwn BuddingRoam 1902332-9923 Part Time Person wanted Approx.10-15 hours week-afternoons $2.25 hr.UC Charter Flight Program X3598,3272.Fight Abortion Law, Court-LegisVolunteers Needed. Also Money Call667-4943 (Day) BU 8-2007 (Eve)FOTA Needs Several People ToWork on our Fund-Raising Com¬mittee. Meet the High Society ofChicago. In this worthwhile contribu¬tion to FOTA '70. Call Doug Kissell324-5617.Wanted: Theater Manager for HydePark Theater. Experience not neces¬sary. Call 726-9293Calligrapher Wanted to Write 60Invitations. 348-7833.WANTED: Live Script for Black-friars musical CASH reward dialMID-ALPS.Lithe and Charming Blonde FOTADrama Coordinator Needs An As¬sistant. Must Have a Minimumof Theatre Knowhow and a Maxi¬mum of Guts. Call Deborah Davisonat New Dorms. Rm 1318.Gen Offc & Lite Bkping. GoodSalary & Free Hospitalization. SouthShore Location. 288-6343.RECEPTIONISTWANTEDFull time, Good Typing skills req'd,Hrs. of work Mon.-Fri 8:30 AM -4:15 PM $400.00 per monlh. ContactD. Perser, American JudicatureSociety, 1155 E. 60th St. Chicago,Illinois Tel. NO 7-2727.PEOPLE FOR SALE"May We Do Your Typing?" 363-1104.GRADUATE STUDENTS-LOCATING TEACHINGJOBSRevolutionary approach. Directoriesof Positions to Candidates, Candi¬dates to schools. Inexpensive Dead¬line Dec. 1, '69. Applications write:Intercept, Box 317, Harvard Sq. P.O.Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138TENANT UNIONSTUDENT PROJECTFeel oppressed? Tenant unions canoverthrow bad leases, high rents. DANCEWATERMELON BAND Nov 22 Sat9-1 Lower Level Boucher 915 E53rd.LOST AND FOUNDFemale Dog Found Near Coop.Call 493-8044.Lost! 4 Mo Old Gray Female CatCall 363-5298 668-5305—REWARD.Dog Found 58th & Kenwood. SmallWhite Male Terrier. 298-6592.FOR SALE'66 VW Good Bargain. ExcellentCondition. New Tires, Battery, Tune-Up. Available After Nov. 27 x6206 or363-5748 Beth.65 VW Good Condition $695 or bestoffer. 493-7618. After 6 pm.Two Tickets for "Don Giovanni"at the Lyric Nov. 29 for Sale orTrade Call 955-2887.Furniture Din Rm Gp-$6, chairs-$10, lamps, drapes. 955-7818.For CHRISTMAS or HA'NNUKAH-Buy Your Loved One a Jug or aMug a Pot or a Bowl by RICKFORM.New Europe for the Proletarist.Summer, Charter Flights with AirCanada and El Al From $189.X3598.South Shore at its best — 3-bed¬room, l’/2 bath, Georgian brick. Fullbasement, attached garage, largefenced yard, fireplace. 324-1728 eve¬nings.WANT POT? Go to FORM and Askfor RICK'S. November Only.KITTENS — LITTER TRAINEDFREE! 978-1243 Lovable Study part¬ners.BEEN MUGGED LATELY? GetYours at FORM. Get a GenuineOriginal by RICK. Only one morewei k.NEEDED. SINCERE student acti¬vists. Discontented youth driven byideas, not boredom. Practical vi¬sionaries with plans to rebuild whatthey destroy. Will enough step for¬ward before the alienation becomestoo complete to be productive?MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637dates to run,name, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL AOS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free. Prof. John W. Aldridge analyzesthe dilemma—and YOUR role init—in The Country of the Young,in this month's HARPER'S MAGA¬ZINE. On sale now.VW '66 Low mileage. Very good con¬dition New Tires 955-66072 arm chairs, bureau, round endtable, desk and chair, twin-size mat¬tress, box spring, and bed frame.All items in excellent condition. Call684-2084 after 6 PM ask for Sue.Xerox Copies 9c, 7c, 5c & 7c, 5c, 3c$10 runs. 10 percent Discount on9r7r^ir rafoMODERN IMPRESSIONS103! West Polk at UICCPhone: 829-0248STERBO COMPONENTS AT LOW¬EST PRICES AR, KLH, DUAL,GARRARD, DYNA. ALL AT MUSI-CRAFT. CAMPUS REP BOB TA¬BOR 363-4555.Set of Great Books Exc. Cond. Mustsee to appreciate $275. 955-6389Lambretta Scooter 175 CC NewBattery $200 Call Eve 768-6180. Ride needed for 3 or less peopleto NY on Weds Nov 26 and backfrom NY Nov 30. Call after 6:00PM 643-9834.PUBLIC APOLOGYI publicly apologize for strikingand doing physical harm to SarahGlazer. I have not done this asyet but after reading that garbageshe calls a review (Fantasticks),I may not be able to control myselfif I ever meet her.UNPUBLISHED?Chicago Literary Review is seek¬ing manuscript—fiction, poetry, etc.HAPPY BIRTHDAYPAIN AAAKES MAN THINKTHINKING MAKES MAN WISEWISDOM MAKES LIFE ENDUR¬ABLEPERSONAL Renowned theologian (and hisdaughter) says: 'Come to CafeMop i tom."Peter Ratner—The Green Phantom.All the World's a Stage, And FOTADrama Upstages the World. TheScene's at New Dorms, 1318.Where is Victoria's World?Where? Ask Albert.JEFF CARP straight from a bitwith Fathers and Sons in Ida Noyes,Nov. 21 Blues.Is the Theatre Really Dead? FOTADoubts it—Help Us Prove Notso!Join the Drama Staff Call DeborahDavison, New Dorms Rm 1318.Local Blues Empressario trans¬lates the Bandersnatch into hot tunaon Friday night for a buck.Come to Cafe Mapitom — It'sCUTE.FOTA Fosters Frustrated PrimaDonnas—If You Fit In Phone BU8-6610, Deborah Davison.The New Stones Album Should Bem Today. Even if it Isn't YouCan Reserve a Copy at $3:99. Stu¬dent Coop.WANTEDWanted Motorcycles: Wrecked,Dead, Degenerate, Unloved 643-8210.RIDESRiders Wanted: Philly to Chicago.December 24-25. Call 225-7583.Thanksgiving Ride Needed for 2to Antioch or Vicinity (Ohio); Ex¬penses shared; Call 288-6610 Room1308 or 3304.Ride Offered to Cleveland Wed.Nov. 26 Help Drive Call 667-3531.THANKSGIVING Ride Needed for 2to St. Louis; Share expenses CallEnio 752-2454 Revolt the bourgeois with a tenantunion.HOW CAN YOU HAVE AN ORGYWITHOUT GRAPES?FOTA DRAMA FOTA DRAMAFOTA DRAMAYes, Victoria, there is a World.Victoria wears ivory staves.FREE KITTENS 6 WEEKS OLD:NICE PLAYMATES CALL 363-5644People wanting to form coop housemeet Nov 25 7 PM at 3rd floorfoyer in Ida Noyes.Deceit, image-making, publicity —pass judgment with a Maroon tele¬gram.Some Sound Advice! MUSICRAFTCares Enough to have a CampusRep, Lowest Prices — Free Deliv.on all stereo components. Call BobTabor 363-4555 for price quotes. LATKE ORTHODOXY vs HAMAN-TASH REVISIONISM: A Confronta¬tion of Two Revolutionary Ideolo¬gies. Tues 11/25. Admission Open.The truth is free.Make the bourgeois revolutionarywith a tenant union.Relieve the oppressed masses witha tenant union.Chicago Literary Review needsmanuscript — fiction, poetry, re¬views. Ida Noyes.Advise the people who rule youof the power you represent — Ma¬roon Telegram, $1.00.Spiro Agnew is so stupid he can'tchew gum and walk at the sametime.Groupies, Blues snobs, local trashJeff Carps Band providesthe backdrop for U. of C. dancing,Friday 8:30. Ida Noyes, $1.00Achieve class consciousness with atenant union.Become the ruling class with atenant union.The reviewers loved it and so willyou. See "We Bombed in NewHaven" at Reynolds Club as soonas you can.Homesick, Houndog equals liveblues Sat, Ida Noyes 1.75, students1.50See the greatest performance of thequarter! Jeanne Wikler is great(no chauvanism evident) as Ruth.See "We Bombed in New Haven."Ride Offered Florida Dec 11 Re-turn Dec 28 955-7823. 9-10 PM. WRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL2-8377).SEND A TELEGRAM TOWASHINGTON AT THEMAROON OFFICEIDA NOYES1212 i. 59th St.rm 304...ROLLING STONESLET IT BLEEDshould arrive today99price:(as are all 5.98 albums)STUDENT COOPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENTNovember 21 HOMEWARDBOUNDOn your way homefor Thanksgiving,don't forget topick up yourvery own copyof the NewEFFETESNOBCOLORINGBOOKat your favoritelocal head shop.Don't forget!CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998aHos what you need from a $10Yused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants^♦4 Mill returns at a fraction of the^original cost.^Decorotion Colors and Qualities. ▼▼Additional 10% Discount with this ▼|Ad. I! FREE DELIVERY i■1969/The Chicago Maroon/II6</>(A• ■a<?V)oE(Ao<DUJJa>> <DCD ttlc —— cn O2-g-* "S<£■5i§^ •«—X o^ cc <DX o2= scs 8Sure, timesare changing.That's what we'd like to talk about.Our representative will be on campus:(INSERT DAY, MONTHAND DATE OF INTERVIEW)Please contact the placementoffice for an appointment.THE Feq UITABLEThe Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United StatesNew York. N Y.An Equal Opportunity Employer. M/F UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAEugene Narmour, ConductorFALL CONCERTHAYDN: Symphony No. 82 (L'Ours)WEBERN: Six Pieces, Op 6PROKOFIEV: Suite No. 1, Remeo and JulietSATURDAY, NOV 22 8:30 PM, MANDEL HALLADMISSION FREEO'HARE CHRISTMAS BUS SERVICEPICK UP AT YOUR DOOR IN HYDE PARK!Operating daily December 10-11-12-13Our buses will pick you up at your door in time forarrival at O'Hare Airport at8:00 AM 2:30 PM 4:30 PM 6:30 PMONE LOW FARE OF $3.50Tickets on sale at MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICE in the ADMINISTRATIONBUILDING LOBBY STARTING MONDAY NOV. 24.Buy Now - Tickets Must Be Purchased No Later Than 12 Noon On The DayPRiOR To Departure.Fully insured, radio-dispatched buses provided by WETZEL TRANS¬PORTATION CO.VSTiEvtmPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd 643-2800WE DELIVER YOUNG MANOur money'son youIF...- you're between 21 and25.- you're man enough todrive safely.- you're fed up paying highpremiums on car in¬surance just becauseyou're young.To find out what Sentry'sauto insurance can do foryou, call your Sentry man.NAMEADDRESSPHONEJim Crane*38-0971SENTRY TfINSURANCEELIZABETH CORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St. BL-8-2900£1909•JQ CM0l(Cj ©12/Hw Chicago Maroon/Novombor 21, 1969 Non-Profit Org.U.S. POSTAGEPAID- Chicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931