Volume 78, Number 27 The University of Chicago Friday, January 9, 1970Police Raid Hi I lei House, Seize FilesTHE GREAT SNOW OF 1966: We may have escaped the snow, but back in '66, did they have a wind chill factor of—43 degrees?Five Students Appeal DecisionsFive of the 13 students suspended fortheir participation in the militant boycott ofHutchinson Commons this fall have ap¬pealed the decisions to dean of studentsCharles O’Connell. According to O’Connell’ssecretary, the dean has “completed work”on one appeal and will act “as ex¬peditiously as possible” on all others. Suspended students living in Collegehouses have been asked to leave their ac¬commodations, according to director of stu¬dent housing Edward Turkington. ‘“All fivewere sent a letter by me during the interimasking them to be out of their rooms byThursday,” said Turkington.Not all of the suspended students in Uni-Julian Bond To AddressStudents In Mandel HallJulian Bond, the young Georgia legislatorwho was denied seating at the 1968 Demo¬cratic national convention, will speak atMandel Hall Sunday at 3 pm on behalf ofCongressional candidate Aid A A SammyRayner.Proceeds from the sale of 1000 $1 tickets,on sale now in Mandel Hall and PierceTower, will help finance Rayner’s cam¬paign for US Congressman from the 1st dis-JULIAN BONDTo Speak in Mandel trict, a predominantly black area surround¬ing Hyde Park.The doors of Mandel will open at 2 pm,and a television will broadcast the con¬clusion of the Super Bowl before Bond’sspeech begins.Bond will be in Chicago Sunday to attenda fund raising bread party for Rayner atthe Colonial House Restaurant, 914 E 79 St,from 4 to 9 pm. Admission to the party willbe a $5 minimum contribution to Rayner’scampaign.Rayner’s opponent in the upcomingDemocratic primary this March is Aid.Ralph Melcalf, a Democratic machine can¬didate who also ran in the 1936 Olympics.At the 1968 Democratic convention, Metcalfvoted with most of the Illinois delegation toseat Georgia governor Lester Maddox’s de¬legation rather than Bond’s.A former coordinator SNCC (StudentN o n-V i o 1 e n t Coordinating Committee),Bond was twice denied seating in theGeorgia state legislature until seated by or¬der of the Supreme Court.Sponsors of Bond’s Mandel Hall appear¬ance, the campus New Democratic Coali¬tion, arranged the program early thisweek.Tickets will be sold Friday in the Mandelcorridor, 11:30 am - 1:30 pm, in the studentgovernment outer office through 6:30 pm,outside the dining lines at Pierce and Wood¬ward at supper, and at the door Sunday ona first come, first served basis. versity housing however, say they have re¬ceived their eviction notices. One sus¬pended student in Woodward Court plansnot only to continue living in her dorm, butto attend classes as well. In her support, aLower Wallace house meeting unanimouslypassed a resolution to write to O’Connellrequesting that she be allowed to keep herroom while her appeal is pending.Of the four other students, only one, inBurton-Judson, had left by Thursday.One of the suspended students, who doesnot plan to appeal, felt that appealing hersuspension amounted to “groveling in frontof Dean O’Connell.” She expressed theopinion that “there are some students theywant to let off and some they don’t.”Today at 1 pm the amnesty committeesponsored by SDS plans to hold a meetingin Reynolds Club south lounge to discussthe suspensions and measures for obtainingamnesty.SDS claims that “these suspensions arepart of the University’s systematic effort toprevent the formation of an alliance ofworkers and students to fight the racist andexploitive policies of the University of Chi¬cago.”Thirteen students were suspended by theLucas disciplinary committee with nine re¬ceiving two-quarter suspensions and two re¬ceiving three-quarter suspensions, all ofwhich begin this quarter. In addition tothese, one student received a seven-quartersuspension and another was given a sus¬pended sentence. The longer suspensioncame as a result of the student’s previousparticipation in other disruptive activities.The disciplinary committee’s report ex¬plained that “two quarters was decidedupon as moderate under the circums¬tances, being somewhere in the middlerange of suspensions of persons chargedwith last year’s obstruction of the Univer¬sity operation.”Members of the disciplinary committeeare law professor Jo Desha Lucas, com¬mittee chairman; physics professor Her¬bert Anderson; and professor of Romancelanguages and literature Bernard Wein¬berg. Rabbi Max Ticktin, director of HillelHouse, the Jewish student center at 5715 SWoodlawn, was arrested in absentia Tues¬day in connection with an alleged inter¬national abortion ring.Hillel House and Ticktin’s home werestormed by Chicago police Tuesday night,and his files were confiscated. The rabbi,now touring Israel, faces charges carryinga maximum four year prison sentence onhis return.Ticktin allegedly referred a pregnantwoman to a Michigan doctor for an illegalabortion. The woman, an undercover Mich¬igan state policewoman, met the rabbi inhis University office last week and was al¬legedly referred to Dr Jesse Ketchum, 52, aDetroit gynecologist and obstetrician, whowould perform the abortion for $500.The policewoman and another officer dis¬guised as her boyfriend allegedly met Ket¬chum for the abortion in a suburban Detroithotel Monday night and arrested him. Ket-chum’s wife and Ticktin were also namedin the arrest warrant, and charged withconspiracy to commit abortion. Ticktin willbe arrested in Chicago and extradited toMichigan for trial when he returns.Oakland County (Mich) prosecutor TomPlunkett said Ketchum has recently beenperforming “as many as four illegal abor¬tions a night, each for $500, in connectionwith a gigantic international abortionring.” Michigan police allegedly found$150,000 from abortion fees in Ketchum’shome in Pleasant Ridge, Michigan. How¬ever, no other arrests have ever been madein connection with the alleged ring, accord¬ing to Bill Schmidt, reporter for the DetroitFree Press.Ticktin’s wife said the charges againsther husband were “ridiculous” when Chi¬cago police forcefully searched her homefor Ticktin Tuesday night. Ticktin could notbe reached in Israel for comment.Ticktin belongs to the Chicago area cler¬gy consultation service on problem preg¬nancies (CCSP), a group of 30 Jewish andProtestant clergymen led by the Rev ESpencer Parsons, dean of Rockefeller chap¬el. The group has been counselling womenin the Chicago area since April. There areabout 20 similar groups in the UnitedStates.Rev Parsons told the Maroon he has “un¬qualified faith in Max Ticktin as a religouscounsellor,” and said he does not know ifthe charges against Ticktin are true.Parsons said the CCSP ministers do notaccept fees for counseling, and added thatContinued on Page ThreeREV E SPENCER PARSONSRockefeller Chapel DeanRosenberg ServesMilton Rosenberg, professor of socialpsychology and a member of the beard ofdirectors of SANE, was among participantsin an “Open Forum on Vietnam” broadcastby television station WTTW January 6. Thediscussion was open to the public and wasattended by several University students.The first part of the program concerned“The Conduct of the War” and featured asThe University child care committee willhold a meeting today at 1 pm at BillingsHospital, Room P-117.The committee, chaired by Walter Walk¬er, vice president for planning, has beenworking since May on the problems thatare faced by employees and students of theAppoint GappTo New PostPaul J Gapp, 41, has been appointed di¬rector of special projects in the office of thevice-president for public affairs.Gapp had been an account executive withthe Chicago public relations firm of DaleO’Brien and Company. Among other as¬signments, he had been in charge of plan¬ning, administering, and implementing thepublic relations-public affairs program forthe John Hancock Center in Chicago.Williams said Gapp “will direct a num¬ber of projects related to the Universitypublic affairs area which includes alumniaffairs, the center for policy study, publicinformation, and radio and television.“One of his first duties will be to serve ascoordinator of the center’s associates pro¬gram which provides grants to allow jour¬nalists to undertake a six-month internshipin urban affairs at the University.” following panelists Robert Komer, a formerWhite House aide and former director ofthe pacification program in Vietnam; Jo¬seph Elder, professor sociology, Universityof Wisconsin, who recently visited NorthVietnam; Ray Coffey, a reporter from theChicago Daily News who has spent time inVietnam; and Rep. Don Frazer (D-Minn), amember of the House Committee on For-University who are not satisfied with theirpresent child care arrangements.To be discussed at the meeting is “thenotion of a client corporation to control andoperate a day care center,” according toWalker. The University is committed tomake available a physical plant and a capi¬tal contribution. A building option has al¬ready been signed. The committee is nowseeking to organize “client-controlled man¬agement.”All possible users of this facility “areurged to attend today’s meeting or meet¬ings on January 12 and January 19, both at4 pm at Billings Hospital, Room P-117. Hos¬pital employees including registered nurs¬es, service personnel and technicians withDeep within the frozen wasteland of HydePark, basketball is alive and well.. .TheMaroon varsity cagers, sporting a 2-3record take on Colorado College Saturday,in their first home appearance of the quar¬ter.The Maroons opened their current seasonrouting Roosevelt University, 66-44, Decem¬ber 2, and finished second in their annualChristmas tournament, grinding past Grin¬ned 51-48 in overtime and being knocked offby Knox 70-60 in the finale.The Maroons faced an Ivy League school eign Affairs. The discussion centered on ageneral indictment of the past adminis¬tration’s Vietnam policies.Panelists included in part II, “The Warat Home,” were Rosenberg; ChristopherLasch, professor at Northwestern and au¬thor of The Agony of the American Left;and Dan O’Connell, Chicago CBS producerof the “At Random” show. Rosenberg tooktheir supervisors to be released from dutiesto attend one of the meetings,” saidWalker.At the conclusion of this series of meet¬ings, a corporation will be formed amongemployees and students who are interestedin „ planning and operating the child carefacilities “that the members of the corpo¬ration are willing to work for.”A staff member of the University com¬mittee will be available to advise this plan¬ning group in structuring the day care cen¬ter and deciding fees, criteria for the staff,and services to be offered.Funds will then be solicited from asmany agencies as possible, including thefederal government.last Friday for the first time in two decadesand were beaten 71-32, by Brown. Foreignsoil offered no haven as the Maroons sailedup to Canada to lose to Windsor, 68-49. In ayear for firsts at the University, a plea for“athletic asylum” would not have gone un¬noticed.Head Coach Joe Stampf was generallypleased with the Maroon quintet. The teamis rather inexperienced (two freshmen havestarted) and has been beset with the fluand cold floors most of the season. up the effects of the war qpon Americanyoung people and joined with Lasch in criti¬cizing the inconsistency of the mass mediain reporting the war. O’Connell, who feltthat “the doves are the new isolationists,”defended the objectivity of television andnewspaper reporting of the war and empha¬sized that the US should rebut Soviet andRed Chinese aggressions such as in Czech¬oslovakia.Afterward/questions were heard fromthe audience and area TV viewers. Ques¬tioners included the chairman of the Chi¬cago Young Republicans, a student teacherwho labled the administration’s policies as“Nazism”, and a World War I veteran whofelt that it was time for the US to stop“sticking our noses in other people’s busi¬ness.University student Jerry Dahlke, ’72, whoattended the talk, said “it seems that Am¬bassador Komer thought that Rosenbergand Lasch were typical academics.”O'Neill's Closes,Snackbar FollowsHyde Park is now a community with¬out a 24 hour restaurant. O’Neill’s,the venerable eating institution at 61st andEllis, closed its doors over the winter vaca¬tion because of a difference of opinion be¬tween Mr. O’Neill and the Internal RevenueService. His doors are now padlocked, andstudents must look elsewhere to curb theirfamine at 4 a.m.At the moment the only place open allnight is the basement in Billings cafeteriawith its machines that dispense sand¬wiches, soda, and candy.• Elsewhere in the world of closings, thePierce tower snack bar went under lastweek, due to financial difficulties. Lastquarter it had been forced to cut back itsservice to serving hot food only on Sundaynights and remaining open as a coffee shopfrom 8:30 to 12:30 wee knights.Child Care Committee Meeting TodayMaroons To Meet ColoradoCEF presents its Winter Schedule.Wed., Jan. 7 ... ULYSSES (6:30, 8:30,10:30)Sat., Jan. 10 ... Monterrey Pop (6:30, 8:30, 10:30)Sun., Jan. 18 ... Loves of a BLONDESun., Jan. 25 ... AMERICA, AMERICASat., Jan. 31 ... Hour of the WolfSun., Feb. 1 ... KWAIDANSun., Feb. 15 ... WHISTLE DOWN THE WINDSun., Feb. 22 ... RACHEL, RACHELSun., Mar. 1 ... TITTICUT FOLLIES& High School (double feature)Sun., Mar. 8 ... Love AffairSat., Mar. 14 ... TOM JONESAll shows at 7:00 & 9:00 P.M. except the first two in Cobb HallAll shows $1 - $5 for the series.2/The Chicago Maroon/January 9, 1970BOOKSTORE REFLECTION: Customers check stacks in Stagg Field lab bookstore.Parsons Affirms FaithContinued from Page Onethe talk about CCSP connection with an in¬ternational abortion ring is “absolutely stu¬pid and false, and a prejudicial statement.”Parsons said he was “greatly angered”by the violent tactics used by the Chicagopolice in the Hillel House search. The offi¬cers broke into the house in the middle ofthe night and confiscated files in Ticktin’soffice. Parsons said this was similar to po¬lice-state actions.The CCSP leader condemned abortion laws as “an unjustifiable and uncon¬stitutional interference with the privacy ofwomen, the right of counseling by min¬isters, and the practice of medicine.”The abortion laws in Illinois are amongthe most rigid in the country, according toParsons. Abortion is allowed only as an af¬firmative defense to save the life of themother.Most women are advised by CCSP to goto other states and countries for abortion,where the laws are less rigid. 25 percent ofProgram To Discuss DisciplineThe College forum, a series of seminarson topics of interest to the University willstart its winter program today at 3:30 inSwift Commons with a study of the Wege¬ner committee report on discipline.Following brief opening remarks the floorwill be opened for discussion by the au¬dience.Opening the discussion will be Steve Or¬man, 71; Peter Novick, associate professorof history, Richard Mintel, assistant profes¬sor of biology, and Edmund Kitch, associ¬ate professor of law.The College forum will hold a seminarJanuary 23 on pollution with panelists in¬cluding Congressman Abner Mikva, and Jo¬seph Karaganis, chairman of the business¬men for the public interest.The College forum was started last year“to provide a discussion of social and in¬tellectual questions of general interest tothe College community,” said Donald Le¬vine, associate professor of sociology andchairman of the organizing committee, andFinancial Aid• Applications for undergraduate fi¬nancial aid for the 1970-71 academicyear are now available in the officeof admissions and aid at 5737 Uni¬versity Ave. The deadline for apply¬ing for aid is February 1. All studentsdesiring a scholarship must apply,as no grants are renewable.• The deadline for the applicationfor Murphy scholarships is January19, and applications can be picked upin the office of admissions and aid.A Murphy scholarship is a quarter¬ly grant to make it possible for stu¬dents to engage in time-consumingactivities by freeing them from termtime work. They are based on need,academic standing, and nature ofthe activity. he hoped that it would “promote commu¬nication and make for a better informedpublic.”Topics that were discussed last year in-„ eluded improving 57th Street, “The Lives ILead,” which will be repeated this year,and sessions on liberal education.The steering committee includes in addi¬tion to Levine, Anquinnette Fusilier, 73;Ranlet Lincoln, dean of the University ex¬tension; James Redfield, master of the newcollegiate division, Joseph Alulis, 71, andLawrence Straus, 71.L/C Wives DineSeveral years ago when some facultymembers’ wives were feeling neglected be¬cause their husbands left them one eveningto go to a big faculty dinner downtown,they decided to stage their own, and in¬clude their outcast fellows, the trustees’wives. Since then the faculty wife dinnerand skit has grown into an annual counteraffair.This year’s skit, written by Mrs WilliamMcNeill and Mrs John Hawthorne was aspoof on student takeovers. A group ofwomen, played by the faculty wives, tookover the University of Chicago, ousting allmales from power.The revolutionary women soon foundmoney matters weighing on their shouldersand began to auction off gargoyles, the cy¬clotron, the carillion and Henry Moore’sstatue on atomic energy to raise funds. Acrisis averted, the women in power sudden¬ly found 'administering a university boringand tiresome and tried to induce the males,to once again assume the job.The men, who were having a vacationrelaxing or writing books, refused and sothe entire school was turned over to theIroquois Tribe, which according to MrsMcNeill represented the student body.ftfrs McNeill acknowledged the skit alsowas directed as a slam on the women’s lib¬eration movement. Hyde Parkers ViewTrends In PopulationA group of citizens in Hyde Park whoare concerned with the upward trendsof the American population have formed alocal chapter of Zero Population Growth,Inc. (ZPG).The ideal of the national organization,headed by Paul Ehrilich, director of gradu¬ate studies in the biological sciences atStanford, grew out of the work of popu¬lation scientists throughout the country andseeks to create a zero increase in popu¬lation by 1980.A zero increase would stabilize the USpopulation, now growing at a rate of 1 per¬cent per year, at a safe level. People inZPG compare the American problem to acontainer which the reproduction of one mi¬crobe completely fills in 100 hours. At the99th hour, the can is only half full. “Amer¬ica is at the 99th hour,” says ZPG.According to the information issued byZPG, population growth has put in realjeopardy the chances for improving the pol¬lution problem, the poverty problem andthe need for maintenance facilities. ZPGmembers state that money from an ex¬panding economy and the end of the warIn Ticktinthose counseled go to London for their abor¬tions.CCSP was formed last April, and consistsof 30 Chicago area clergymen, includingRabbi Ticktin. So far, more than 500 Illinoiswomen have been counselled. Of these, 60percent were married. Parsons stressedthat CCSP is not clandestine, and has apublic answering service (667-6015).Parsons said “we decided it was time tohelp people and not wait for legislative re¬form. While we are convinced that the lawin Illinois must be repealed, between nowand that time, an awful lot of women gothrough all kinds of traurha over problempregnancies, and many have dreadful ex¬periences with back-alley abortionists.” Hecited an average of 4,000 women a yearadmitted to Cook County Hospital fromcomplications resulting from abortion byback-alley butchers.Parsons added “I have absolute faith inRabbi Ticktin’s integrity in whatever he didwith regard to the counseling service.” Hethinks Ticktin’s case may have a signifi¬cant effect on the future of abortion laws inIllinois. will barely be enough to keep up withmiddle class growth. There will be nothingleft for improving the slums.ZPG, though primarily building a grassroots organization at the present time,plans for the day when a national office canbe established in Washington. The organi¬zation has no tax exemption status, so itcan lobby in Congress and support politicalcandidates to aid the campaign for brakeson population growth.ZPG advocates three primary measuresto check population increase. The most con¬troversial of these is their encouragementto American families to have no more thantwo children, exclusive of adoption. This,the organization makes clear, would be thesurest way of stabilizing the American pop¬ulation.ZPG also supports legalized abortion andtax incentives for small families.Mrs Pat Colburn, one of the Hyde Parkorganizers, emphasized that the tax in¬centive plan was not formed to penalize thepoor blacks in the ghettos. ZPG puts theblame of population growth on middle classAmerica, which by its number accounts forthe largest percentage of populationgrowth.Mrs Colburn said the organization hassome support in the Nixon administration.“Nobody in America knows there is apopulation problem,” Mrs Colburn said,“and general education of the Americanpublic is the first step in solving the prob¬lem.”Neugarten StatesDelay In ProgressThe advisory report of the committee onUniversity women, originally due last De¬cember 1, will not be ready this month, ac¬cording to committee chairman BerniceNeugarten, chairman of the committee onhuman development.The committee, created last May by thecommittee of the council of the Universitysenate, was charged with investigating thesituation and opportunities “presently en¬joyed by women in the University commu¬nity.”When asked when the committee’s reportwould be ready, Mrs Neugarten said “Iwish I knew that myself,” and added that itmight be ready by February 1. She saidthat the progress of the report has beendelayed because “the basic data on whichthe report rests is not yet in.”EXCUSE ME1 Readings seem to be hidden for bookstore customers.January 9, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3EDITORIALDiscipline and theWegener ReportThe controversy surrounding recent actions of the Lucas discip¬linary committee piled on top of the bitterness that followed theactions of the Oaks and Shireman committees last year make discip¬linary committee reform a matter of top priority. During the pastfew years, two all-University committees have examined the discip¬linary committee question. We felt, as many students did, that thefirst committee, which issued its report last March, was inadequate.This committee, the Kalven committee, had no student members.A second committee, with student members, was appointed to re¬examine the Kalven committee report and to make new recom¬mendations on discipline. This committee, the Wegener committee,issued its report during tenth week of last quarter and the Councilof the University Senate is currently considering it.The need for reform in the discipline procedure is obvious.Charges of bias brought against the all faculty Oaks and Shiremancommittees last year have yet to be satisfied. There is presently nodefinition of disruptive activities and few rights are available tothe student under disciplinary action. Most importantly, disciplinarycommittees as presently constituted do not have voting studentmembers. Without the student voice, disciplinary committees canbecome dangerously one-sided or biased in their viewpoint. TheLucas committee is a recent example of this problem.The Wegener committee report offers a few improvements inthe disciplinary committee structure. The report suggests that twostudents, four faculty and one law school professor be seated onevery disciplinary committee, that a review board be created to dealwith appeals, that refusal to testify not be used against the student,and that the disciplinary committees only judge on the evidencepresented before them. The report makes other important recom¬mendations concerning the definition of disruptive acts and thesanctions against them.Discussion concerning the report has necessarily centered onthe most controversial recommendation it makes — the seating oftwo students on the committees. Many students and liberal facultymembers feel that it is a token gesture to grant students two seatsout of seven. This accusation is supported by the fact that the reportfurther states that four members plus the chairman constitute aquorum, making it possible for a committee to continue withoutany students on it if the student members should resign, as non-vot¬ing student members of disciplinary hearings have done in the past.We understand and sympathize with such sentiments; we toofeel that students should have more representation on disciplinarycommittees than provided in the Wegener committee recommenda¬tions. What students may not realize or believe, however, is that formany members of the faculty, placing any students at all on discip¬linary committees is a truly radical action. Harold Dems^tz, a mem¬ber of the Wegener committee’ in a minority report, stated thatstudents’ presence on disciplinary committees tends to lightenpenalties and that students should not be seated on them at all.There are many faculty members who feel this way and if theCouncil of the University Senate approves the Wegener committeereport, many faculty will honestly feel that it is a radical stepforward rather than a token gesture to appease students.The Wegener committee report is a step forward, but it is onlyone step forward. There are other reforms necessary concerningdisciplinary procedures. Hopefully, if students prove to the facultythat they can be impartial, vital members of disciplinary committees,then faculty will realize that students have a right to fuller repre¬sentation on disciplinary committees. Also, more clarification isneeded of the sort of crimes which are classified as disruptivetransgressions against the University’s mission, and those whichare dealt with by local disciplinary committees.Students may be bitter at what they feel are token privileges;we think they should be hopeful that these recommendations willopen a period of reconciliation and more meaningful reform be¬tween the University and its disenchanted constituents. LETTERS TO THE EDITORSMy Object Is DivineThat the punishment dealt to the 13 stu¬dents involved in the Hutch disorders maybe excessive is not the best ground of con¬tention. The University of Chicago is a pri¬vate university, not run primarily on gov¬ernment funds. It is neither legally normorally bound by the government’s courts'precedent of “the punishment fitting thecrime.” A contract to study at the Univer¬sity of Chicago is also a contract to acceptits justice. (In fact, such a contract is prob¬ably tacit approval of the University’smethods — its teaching, its cooking, its jus¬tice, etc.)There is, however, a moral principle thathas been violated by the University. Thepurpose of a penal system should be to pro¬vide retribution for the victim; not as itspurpose presently appears to be, to punishthe criminal. The demonstrators at Hutchare, in my opinion, guilty on two accounts.Firstly, they used physical coercion to tryto prevent some people from entering acafeteria, which it was their right to enter(property is an inalienable right; money isproperty; to do what one desires to do withthat money is an inalienable right). Toreimburse the victims for the physicalforce used against them, I would suggestordering (as a condition for staying inschool) the violent demonstrators to serveas slaves-for-a-day to their victims.The physical damage was minimal (Idon’t believe that there were any financialcosts incurred in repairing it); the obliga¬tions of the temporary slaves should bewell limited. A second part of the demon¬strators’ criminal act of coercion is the im¬portant implication of the crime, namely,the attempt to squelch dissent.Preventing, by use of force, all peoplefrom entering Hutch, effectively forced allto support the boycott, a political measuresome might have wished to disassociatethemselves from. Several possible punish¬ments are suggested for this aspect of thecrime. The convicts could be forced to payfor some meals at Hutch for their victims;the convicts could be ordered to pay forFriday, January 9COLLEGE FORUM MEETING: Discussion of the Weg¬ner Report with sherry hour to follow, Swift Com¬mons, 3:30 pm.CASTING CALL: “Next Time I'll Sing to You" pin¬duced by The Last Stage theater group; four menand one woman needed; Harper Theater, 5238 S.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve Aoki, Phil LathropFeature 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, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Gordon Katz, SusanLeft, Gerard Leval, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Ellen Sazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, DavidSteele, 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. 60637. 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. publicity of their victims’ views on the boy¬cott; the convicts could be forced to writeand publicize their own well-devised argu¬ments against the boycott. I’m sure thereare many more possibilities.Appeals will be coming up soon. I hopethat the University will retract the old pun¬ishments and experiment with a better con¬cept of punishment, punishment whose pur¬pose is to serve the victim rather thenharm the criminal. A prime purpose of theUniversity is the development of betterideas, isn’t it?Sophie Cooper, 73Long Laws CaseThe last issue of the Maroon for 1969spoke of the University’s apparent procliv¬ity for announcing news items likely to gen¬erate student controversy, after academicterms have ended and many students havevacated the environs.I am enclosing an article written by W EWalling, a student in the graduate school ofbusiness, which appeared in the weeklybusiness club newsletter December 8, 1969,and which concerns the status of Mrs Jud¬ith Laws — a matter of obvious concern tostudents and to the Maroon.Continuing in the spirit of full disclosureand discussion which the Maroon advo¬cates, may I recommend that Mr Walling’scomments be reproduced in the next issueof the Maroon.Ronald MooreGraduate School of BusinessWalling's article follows:“Laws Not Given Tenure” was the head¬line in the November 25 issue of the Ma¬roon. The article went on to state that herinterest in the study of women’s rightsmight have been the grounds for her notgetting tenure.In the first place, the fact that Mrs Lawswas not given tenure is simply not true.The fact is that her contract was not ex¬tended for another three year term. Thespecific issue of tenure was not raised atall, as the article alleged. In any event, adenial of tenure makes a more in-Continued on Page SixHarper Ave., 8-10 p.m. Technical and set assistanceneeded also.COLLOQUIUM: Nondissonant Harmony, DiophantineEquatians, and the Ultra Well Tempered Maniac III,Prof. Easley Blackwood, Dept, of Music, University ofChicago, Research Institutes, Room C 113, 4 pm.CONFERENCE: Center for Research Libraries, annualmeeting of representatives from subscribing univer¬sities to allocate budget for the coming year. Membersonly. Ext. 3189.CONFERENCE: Management Consulting symposium,sponsored by the Business Club-University of ChicagoSchool of Business. By invitation only. Ext. 3189.PLAY: The Play of Herod: A Mediaeval musical dramafor Epiphany, presented by Allegro Conspirifo. Univer¬sity Church of the Disciples, 5655 S. University, 8:30pm.LECTURE: "Black Nationalism and Jewish Nation¬alism: The Role of Intellectuals (Reflections on TheCrisis of the Negro Intellectuals by Harold Cruse)."Prof. J. David Greenstone (Political Science). HillelHouse, 5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.DISCUSSION GROUP: "Abortion: Some Mr ■'I and Le¬gal Problems," Resource: Dean E. Spi.. , Parsons,University of Chicago Rockefeller Chapel and ChicagoClergy Consultant Service. Crossroads Student Center,5621 Blackstone, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes, 8 pm.MOVIE: Elvira Madigan, Quantrell Auditorium. 6:30,8:30, 10:30 pm.Saturday, January 10MOVIE: Monterey Pop, Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:15 pm.PLAY: Play of Herod, University Church of the Dis¬ciples, 5655 University, 7:30 and 9:30 pm.NIGHTCLUB: jazz trio, singer, guest artists, food ser¬vice, dancing. Cloisters Club, Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.Sunday, January 11 ’ _ .LECTURE: "Eyewitness report of Jewish life in Scandi¬navia, Russia and Prague — Simchat Torah in Mos¬cow." Mr and Mrs Victor Rosenberg. Hillel House7:30 pm.INTERNATIONAL DANCING: 25 cents, Ida Noyes, 7:30pm.HORSEBACK RIDING: UC riding club leaves from 59thSt side of Ida Noyes. Call Laura X3240 or 667-1862.MEETING: SG assembly, Ida Noyes Library, 8 pm.Monday, January 12CONFERENCE: Department of Obstetrics and Gyne¬cology: Children's Bureau Meeting, sponsored by theUniversity of Chicago — Department of Obstetrics andGynecology, ext. 3186.SQUARE DANCING: Theater in Ida Noyes, 8 pm.MEETING: Chess Club to plan intramurals and otheractivities. New officers will be elected. 3rd floor IdaNoyes, 7 pm.MEETING: Science students, interested in confrontingAPS*AAPT Meeting? Reynolds South Lounge, 3 pm.MEETING: University Newcomers Group: Gerald Sut-tles, Dept, of Sociology will talk about Chicago neigh¬borhoods from his experiences in the Addams-HullHouse area. 6818 Euclid, 10 am.LECTURE: "Black Music: The Unknown and KnownPast," Mr Whalum Social Sciences 122, 8 pm.BULLETIN OF EVENTS4/The Chicago Maroon/January 9, 1970• ,’j.t *„« .«.*»# - *j.s,j • ?• .if t . (. r,j ;V’t( . jTifi i rfr/Vr < v ;•.**?*?•** * ?.* ,*.* f f ? t' > f f r M*.‘ r*/? r j'fi'** /#El BET IHITjumt INumber 10 Friday, January 9, 1970Welcome toVictoria’s WorldBy Jeanne WiklerTHE OLD SAW ABOUT cyclical history and the timesmoving like a pendulum will be demonstrated this quarterby an unusual phenomenon on campus. Students and fac¬ulty of the University, unquestionably leaders in the last70 years of anti-Victorian reaction, will be sponsoring andparticipating in plays, lectures, concerts, exhibits, andfilms all dealing with various aspects of one subject: Vic-toriana. At least one professor has already sculptured hisbeard into mutton-chop whiskers, and the major fashiondesigners have complied by bringing back the maxi-coatjust for the occasion. Professor Donald Herring, who alongwith Kenneth Northcott is co-ordinating the eight-weekseries, commented on the revival of interest in the Victo¬rian era:“In the past twenty years there has been an awak¬ening of interest in botfi the ‘serious’ aspects of Victorianculture and in its popular culture. It all started with theappearance of a few excellent books about the Victorianperiod, including G.M. Young’s Victorian English: Por¬trait of an Age and Edmund Wilson’s Dickens: The TwoScrooges. Since then we have seen the republication andeven rediscovery of many Victorian novels and docu¬ments, giving us a new perspective on Victoriana.“Today we have become fascinated by the idea of‘sense’ rather than ‘research.’ This applies to Victorianpopular culture — embracing melodrama, caricature, pop¬ular music, vaudeville — as well as the drama, novels,and other serious works of the times. Many departmentsof the University are contributing to give an over-all viewof Victoriana.”Herring and Northcott conceived the idea of the Victo¬rian Quarter last summer, when they heard that the Gern-sheim Collection of Victorian photographs was availablefrom the University of Texas. They arranged to bring theexhibit to Chicago (it is now being shown at the BergmanGallery in Cobb Hall), and then began speaking to variousdepartment heads about the possibility of sponsoring lec¬tures on the subject. The reaction was unanimously enthu¬siastic, and most departments agreed not only to arrangefor lectures, concerts, and plays but to pay for them.“I think the faculty is eager to bring in outside lectur¬ers with fresh perspectives,” said Herring. “It is betterfor the students to be exposed to new, non-UC ideas, and itis also stimulating for the faculty.” Individuals with par¬ticular interests in Victorian culture have also con¬tributed, and a series of films, both made in the 19thcentury and about the period, is being sponsored by acampus film group.The Victorian Quarter opened with the Gemsheim Col¬lection and tonight a Victorian Parlor Concert will bepresented in the Ida Noyes Library at eight o’clock. Othermusical events will include three concerts of Victorianorgan music in Rockefeller Chapel, an evening of Gilbertand Sullivan musical exerpts, the oratorio The Crucifixion,a 19th century brass band concert, and an evening ofVictorian music plus a poetry reading. (For details onthese and all other Victoriana events, consult your weeklyCulture Vulture in the Grey City Journal.)Dramatic events during Victorian Quarter will includea melodrama entitled Angel Street, an evening of Gilbertand of Sullivan (Gilbert’s Rosencrantz and Guildensteraand Sullivan and Morton’s Cox and Box), songs and read-*ngs about Victorian children, and a genuine, authenticold-time Vaudeville show. All events in this series arefree, with three exceptions: tickets for the Gilbert and Sullivan musical and for Angel Street are two dollars, andadmission to the Vaudeville show is two bits.Lectures on Victoriana will be given by UC facultyand by professors from universities around the country.Some of the titles are “Early Victorian Socialism: or, theOwenites’ Quest for the New Moral World;” “VictorianPopular Satire: The Whip that Tickles;” “On HenryJames;” “The Idea of Poverty and the Poor in VictorianEngland;” and “Melodrama.” The first lecture, to bepresented Monday, is entitled “Barabbas in the Age ofVictoria — Some Observations on Publishing and Author¬ship,” by Royal Gettmann of the University of Illinois atUrbana. Mr. Gettmann will speak in the Homeroom ofInternational House at 8 p.m.Doc Films will be showing free movies on Thursdayevenings, including some rarely-seen classics. David Cop- perfield with (W.C. Fields), Nicholas Nickleby, Enoch Ar¬den, The Bells, Alice in Wonderland (with W.C. Fields andBette Davis), two versions of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,and Far From the Madding Crowd will all be shown inQuantrell Auditorium. There will also be two panel dis¬cussions held.In addition to the Gernsheim Collection, two other ex¬hibits have been scheduled. “Victorian and EdwardianSheet Music” is already on display all over Cobb Hall, andstarting January 20 Harper Library will host a trilogy ofexhibits: “Victorian Embellishment: Design in Excess,”“The Century of Progress,” and “Victorian Amusements.”Detailed coverage of the Victorian Quarter will be giv¬en by the Maroon and The Grey City Journal. Any ques¬tions should be addressed to Mrs. Patricia Prinz at MI3-0600, extension 2824.MUSICThe Creation, the New Year and La BohemeON DECEMBER 12, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra un¬der its Music Director Georg Solti, presented JosefHaydn’s oratorio The Creation in its entirety for the firsttime in seventy-nine years of music-making. Judging bythe high quality performance rendered by both orchestraand the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Chorus, under thedirection of Margaret Hillis, one can only wonder why ithas taken so long for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra toattempt undertaking this work. The soloists for the ora-tori were: Heather Harper, the young Welsh soprano whosang in the Mahler Second Symphony here last year;Stuart Burrows, another Welsh vocalist, who will be mak¬ing his debut as Tamino in Die Zauberfloete at the Metro¬politan Opera next week; and bass Giorgio Tozzi, a nativeof Chicago now retained by the Met.For those people who believe that Haydn wrote onlysymphonies and chamber music The Creation constitutesa valuable aesthetic experience that they are lacking. It istruly a thing of beauty, joy, and excitement, that servesas a clear refutation to the incessant tirades voiced bymany gung-ho romanticists and medievalists that theeighteenth century, falling somewhere between Josquinand Anton Bruckner, represented a nadir in musical activ¬ity and originality.Composed between 1796 and 1798, The Creation is, inessence, a forerunner of the concept of multi-media ex¬pression, combining the brilliant music of Haydn with theepic poetry of John Milton — not to mention the Bible —into a work which does honor in both masters.The Creation represents a wedding of two supremegeniuses and the treatment rendered each by both vocal¬ists and orchestra under Solti did justice to the spokenword, while also bringing out the musical possibilities util¬ized so splendidly by Haydn. The Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra Chorus, as the choir of angels demonstrated onceagain its fine quality and high competence. One can onlySUBSCRIBE look forward with even more anticipation to their comingperformances in the Missa Salemnis in February, and Fi-delio in March.So ends 1969, and 1970 brings with it the two hundredthyear since Ludwig van Beethoven’s birth. Naturally, 1970will see countless performances of Fidelios, Missas, NinthSymphonies and the like. With the scheduled performanceof the Ninth Symphony by the Chicago Symphony Orches¬tra on 16 December, 1970, Beethoven’s actual birthday, theHoly Trinity shall be completed, as far as Chicago is con¬cerned. However, it just so happens that Beethoven wrotemany other works beside the Ninth, the Missa, and Fidelio.These include quartets, which, in many respects, are evengreater testimony to the unique and colossal genius of theman. Chicagoans will be able to hear the complete cycleof the Beethoven quartets performed this year by theJuilliard String Quartet, which will be commuting betweenOrchestra Hall and Mandel Hall over the next threemonths. The dates for the cycle are 20 January at Orches¬tra Hall; 10, 13, and 15 February at Mandel Hall; and 3March at Orchestra Hall.The new year was rung in by a performance of LaBoheme on 2 January at the Metropolitan Opera. As thoseof you with needlesharp memories can recall, the Metro¬politan Opera was closed for over three and one halfmonths owing to failure in contract negotiations betweenmanagement and the performer’s unions. Finally, on 29December, the Met once again swung open its polisheddoors to treat its yell-heeled audience to a hastily-assem¬bled production of Aida.Three days later the Met presented on old faithfulPuccini’s La Boheme. The cast had its share of new facesas well as familiar ones. Nicolai Gedda sang Rodolfo,while Gabriella Tucci coughed her way through Mimi;Giorgio Tozzi provided much pleasure as Colline, whileFernando Corena played the top Alcindoro with character¬ ise aplomb. Among the less familiar luminaries makingtheir appearance, were Mario Sereni, as Marcello, Clar¬ence Carson as Musetta, and Robert Goodloe as Schau-nard. Originally, another Met regular, Fausto Cleva, wasschduled to conduct, but, owing to illness, he was re¬placed by Associate Conductor Jan Behr.Basically speaking, this was a competent, but hardlyspectacular, Boheme. The orchestra was a bit on the weakside — but then, again, Puccini left them precious littlewith which to work — and the singers played their partswith great liveliness and fine voices. Messrs. Gedda andTozzi and Mmmes. Tucci and Carson, all came acrossvery well. However, Mario Sereni’s Marcello seemed tosuffer somewhat from his inability to hold his own vocallyin ensemble with Gedda and Tozzi, on one hand, and MissCarson, on the other. With the proliferation of duets, triosand quartets cropping up throughout La Boheme, thisweakness was difficult to overlook. TTie sets and cosumes,designed by veteran Rolf Gerara were appealing, althoughthe staging and choreography could have been a bit moreimaginative.However, perhaps the mbst striking aspect of this per¬formance was that which had very little to do with theperformance per se, and by this, I mean the unbelieveableboorishness and lack of civility of the audience. Neverbefore have I seen such an abysmal lack of manners andtaste displayed at a performance of grand opera. Cough¬ing was de rigeur, inter-act emigration was the rule, andthe audience, mink boas flapping, jewels flashing, velvettuxedos and all, for a moment appeared no different fromcattle being unloaded at a stockyard. This reminded me atonce of the scene at the end of Orwell’s Animal Farm,where the differences between the men and the pigs be¬come indistinguishable as each group assumes some of thecharacteristics of the other.Peter L. RatnerTHE CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyes Hall,Chicago, IllinoisMaroon issues for the remaining academic year (69-70) can be sent anywhere inthe country for $6.00.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, impress yourfriends.J NAME{ ADDRESS ZIPI □ 1 year subscription $8.00| □ Yearbook Issue $1.00 Jimmy's and the DR. AARON ZIMBUROptometristUniversity Room eye examinationscontact lensesin theDRINK SCHLITZ New Hyde ParkShopping CenterFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWN 1510 E. 55th St.363-7644MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59«h S«.# Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* per line, 40 per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75c perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^. UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARISIproprietorEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.SEMINARY CO-OPBOOKSTORE, Inc.Patronage refunds dividends on shares.'/5757 S. University Ave. (Basement)Course Books in Divinity, Philosophy,Political ScienceAlso books in Social Sciences andrelated fieldsStore Hours: 11 AM -4 PM Mon - FriPhone Hours: S AM - 4 PM Mon - FriPhones: 752-4311lPL2-5757 x32 Reynolds Club Barber ShopWelcomes You BackStart the new year looking rightEvery type of Barber ServiceWith Professional Skill.Beards welcome since 1904Open MONDAY& Tues. & Wed. & Thurs. & Friday 8 to 5with or without appointmentNO TIPPINGAlso Shoe Shine Service Available5706 University x3573"Directly across from Quadrangle Club"2/Grey City Journal/January 9, 1970pmrmiH - ft I l i't I yi t l'.r j yjrryyr/r//sr rrrr»-re rr f f A ’/ ¥Jf,4f f/ie Conspiracy Trial: The People vs Daley“MY NAME IS Richard J. Daley. I’m the Mayor of Chi¬cago.” So began the testimony of the 42nd defense witnessin the trial of the Chicago Conspiracy.When Richard J. Daley was the age of most of thepeople reading this paper, he ran with a “neighborhoodclub” (gang) called the Hamburgs, a group with morethan enough energy to have enjoyed the street-fightingthat went on last August after the city refused to grantpermits to the Yippies and the Mobe. Daley has aged a bitsince those footloose days, but his ego is still big enoughto be gratified by the prospect that the people who causedhim grief stand to spend ten years each in thepenitentiary. It was no accident that former Daley lawpartner Judge Lynch was the man who frowned upon thelast-ditch permit suits filed two weeks before the Con¬vention. It was not synchronicity that a letter sent to Da¬ley the day after the Grand Jury returned its indictmentsin this case was signed “Abe” by Federal Judge AbrahamMarovitz. It was not karma that led the mayor to spendthe previous day’s lunch hour cutting a ribbon at the newlaw office of his son Richard and retiring CorporationCounsel Richard Simon, who, lo and behold, was the firstprosecution witness and who, miracle of miracles wasbeing replaced by one of the Mayor’s nephews.Chicago, like Scout Camp, runs on the buddy system.Daley has been Mayor since 1955. In his 14 year ten¬ure, the longest in Chicago history, some old friends fromthe stockyards and the council chambers have passed onto that great smoke-filled room in the sky. No longer doesAlderman Krsla interrupt liberal speeches in the CityCouncil with the cry, “God bless you, Mayor Daley, fromthe Fifteenth r * ” Some of the hundreds of off-dutysanitation workers who screamed, “We Love Mayor Da¬ley” when the delegate from Wisconsin moved to stop theConvention, have themselves stopped coming around forfavors. Michigan Avenue seems naked without all those“Welcome to Chicago-Mayor Richard J. Daley” placards.The Woodstock nation-generation defense that calledDaley to the stand was interested in some other quotes.Young punks who are busy organizing demonstrations atan age when the Mayor had been hard at work in theprecinct house, they wanted to know whether or not he’dcalled Senator Ribicoff a “Jew motherfucker” at the Con¬vention. They were curious about the exact meaning of“shoot to kill arsonists and shoot to maim looters,” thoseepic words which had brought cheers to the throats of thecity’s honkies after the assassination of Martin LutherKing, Jr. They wondered if the Mayor had been thinkingof a career as a sick humorist back in 1963, when he tolda convention of the NAACP that “there are no ghettos inChicago.” If they neglected to ask about “The police arenot here to create disorder, they are here to preservedisorder,” it was only because they feared a ten-minutediatribe on how trained agitators threatened to kidnap thechildren of delegates, put drugs in the reservoirs, andwalk naked on the waters of Lake Michigan.Daley took the stand to scattered hissing at 11 A M onJanuary 6th, twelve days after his subpoena date. The de¬lay was due to Abbie Hoffman’s Yippie pneumonia and thedefense’s desire to focus attention on the appearance ofthe man who is widely regarded as the real conspiratorbehind the disorders of Convention Week. He sat at thefront of the room, red-faced if not red-necked, his tailoredsuit and working-class accent in sharp contrast to the tie-dye shirts and hip slang of the defense. (Lee Weiner, whoused to work for the Mayor’s Commission on Youth Wel¬fare, swears that the Mayor practices with a tape record¬er to make sure he sounds sufficiently proletarian.) Thedefense had wanted a five-minute recess to serve aPeople’s Indictment on him, but Judge Hoffman, worriedover yet another incident in his sensationalized courtroom,denied their motion.The first explosion was not long in coming. Attemptingto show the network of connections that determined per¬mit policy last year, defense attorney William Kunstlerasked the Mayor if he knew Chief Prosecutor and formerCorporation Counsel Thomas Foran. “I think he’s one ofthe greatest attorneys in the country, and the finest man Iknow in and out of public life,” Daley replied.Hissing became epidemic in the left rear row, popu¬lated by staff members of the Defense Committee. It wasimpossible to listen to praise for Foran, after more thanthree months of watching him trying to put away “DavidT. Dellinger et al,” without expressing some meaningfuldissent.Screams and fists suddenly broke out in the back ofthe room as fifteen marshalls and four of the Mayor’scorp of Praetorian bodyguards followed Judge Hoffman’sinstruction to “take care of the rear row.” Within fifteenminutes, four people had been ousted and two arrested.Frank Joyce, a member of People Against Racism, fromDetroit, and Susan Roberts, an anti-draft worker fromPortland, Oregon, were taken to the lock-up on the floorabove Hoffman’s arena; Judy Gumbo, Conspiracy officemanager, and her sister Miriam, were ushered out of thebuilding. Shortly afterward Sandra Levinson, a 23-year-oldsociology teacher at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute andcontributing writer for Ramparts Magazine, who had been barred from the area, was arrested when she came backto protest her exile. Those arrested were released on theirown recognizance on $200 bond at 3 PM. Booked for as¬saulting a federal marshall, they go to trial on January12.Throughout the melee, a voice could be heard over thedin, repeating the words, “It’s just like the DemocraticConvention all over again.”Daley had been called in to answer the charges that,in the words of a subsequently-submitted Offer of Proof,there was a conspiracy, overt or tacit, betweenMayor Daley and the Democratic Administrationof Lyndon B. Johnson to prevent or crush anysignificant demonstrations against war, poverty,imperialism and racism, and in support of alter¬nate culture at the 1968 Democratic National Con¬vention, and that the members of this conspiracyplanned and executed the use of every means attheir disposal — including calculated official in¬ertia in the processing of necessary permit appli¬cations, the deliberate intimidation of potentialdemonstrators in order to deter their participationaround the Democratic National Convention, thepsychological indoctrination of the public and thepolice with attitudes of hatred, fear and distrust ofthe anticipated demonstrations and their partici¬pants and supporters, the open and blatant encour¬agement of violence toward demonstrators by po¬lice and other military forces, and the employ¬ment of savage, brutal and inhumane tactics tointimidate, deter, or prevent the exercise by thepeople of their constitutional rights in order to pre¬vent or crush such public exhibition of dis¬satisfaction with American domestic and foreignpolicy.Unfortunately, this mouthful was easier to write thanto establish in court. Kunstler asked a long series of ques¬tions designed to show that Daley runs the city, appointseither every key official or the members of their com¬mittees, and that he gave the orders responsible for thepolice smashing of the Peace Rally of April 27, 1968 andthe confrontations during Convention Week. Nearly everyquestion was ruled out of order after Foran repeatedlyobjected on the grounds that Kunstler was “leading” thewitness.Kunstler had a problem. It was important to get re¬marks about the Mayor’s role in permits, decisions, etc.into the record, but it seemed impossible to do this with¬out defining the area of testimony by asking leading ques¬tions. Kunstler moved several times for Judge Hoffman tocertify Daley as a hostile witness, which would haveallowed the asking of such questions; the judge denied themotion because he felt that there had been no ‘element ofsurprise’ in any of the witness’ statements which hadblocked the defense from further questioning. This rulingreflected Hoffman’s previous positions, which have limited testimony to the particulars of the charges and the dozenovert acts alleged in the indictment. At no time has thedefense been able to sustain a counter-attack and show itsown good intentions in contrast to the real behavior of theadministrations’ involved with the Convention — not evenwhen the ‘chief architect’ himself was on the stand.Without the ability to ask probing questions, directexamination was crippled. Kunstler pressed hard — over90 objections to his questions were sustained and the judgeseverely scolded him no less than three different times —but it was almost impossible to get at what might havebeen brought out under freer circumstances.If what Daley said on the stand was true, then JerryRubin’s claim that the Mayor is a covert Yippie must bebelieved. According to Daley, he would “talk occasion-ally’’ with now-deceased Commissioner WilliamMcFetridge about the problems of the Parks District (theagency responsible for rally and sleeping permits) andperiodically instruct “all the fine young men connectedwith the city government ... to co-operate with anyoneand everyone Who wanted permits” and to insure that dem¬onstrators “would be given every courtesy while in thecity of Chicago.” No wonder Kunstler asked the Mayor ifhis definition of “hospitality” included night-sticks, andwhether or not he agreed “with the Violence Commission’sReport that what happened at the Democratic NationalConvention amounted to a police riot.”Kunstler closed his direct examination after present¬ing the fourteen-part Offer of Proof “for the appellaterecord.” After a two-question cross-examination (aboutwhether the mayor ever suggested that permits formarches and parks be denied — “No.”) and a one-ques¬tion redirect (“Did you tell anyone when the Yippies andthe Mobilization filed their suits, ‘now they’ll never getpermits.’?” — “No.”), Daley was dismissed. As he duckedout the side door to a chorus of catcalls, no less then ninealleged press people revealed themselves to be cops of onesort or another (fully accredited reporters had been bar¬red for the first hour of Daley’s testimony by marshallswho proclaimed “there’s no room.”)The effect of Daley’s testimony is unclear. He didn’tsay very much. He didn’t go to his Right and red-bait thedefendants, but the defendants were unable to prove theircharges against him. He was humble in the courtroom,but the defendants piled into the hallway when the mar¬shalls began dragging people out of the room. TTie netimpact was probably bad for the Conspiracy, since thejury had the horny, homesick greyness of their lives (theyare barred from TV, radio, alcohol, grass, all but thelamest books and magazines, uncensored newspapers, andspending time alone with their families) batted around bythe frantic sights and sounds of long-haired people fightingthe Mayor’s men. The scene wasn’t much different fromthat of Convention Week (when longhairs spoke and po¬licemen hit), and nobody’s sure that the jury’s con¬sciousness has been raised to a level where they under¬stand the war, institutional racism, capitalism and theother bummers that brought people here in 1968, muchbetter than most Chicagoans did that August.Greek myth has it that the god Kronos ate his childrenuntil a bunch of them hacked their way out of his bodyand killed him. The eight men indicted by the FederalGovernment are the new Titans, fighting on behalf of astruggling culture and the politics that it needs to survive.The courtroom is only a theatre for this larger struggle; aculture dying can only pretend to be judge, jury and exe¬cutioner for one that is a homing.At the same time that Daley was testifying on the 23rdfloor of the Federal Building, a Grand Jury empaneled tolevy charges against the seven Black Panthers who sur¬vived the State’s Attorney raid in which Fred Hamptonand Mark Clark were murdered, was convening behindlocked doors on the 21st floor. A few floors further down,lawyers for the Chicago Fifteen, who liberated a draftboard and its records last year, were defending theirclients from representatives of the Selective Slavery Sys¬tem. Over at the Criminal Courts Building, young people— students, blacks, freaks, greasers, and Puerto Ricans —were being ejected from the Inquest into the Hampton andGark killings.Just before the afternoon session convened, AbbieHoffman turned to Daley and said, “Why don’t we settle itright here?” Even Daley jdined the press and gallery inlaughing. But what is happening at the Federal Buildingand the Criminal Court Building and in courthouses allover America is not a laughing matter.Don’t take my word for it; check it out yourself. Pickany court; it doesn’t have to be a landmark federal case.Dig the color, clothing and accents of the people put ontrial. You don’t see very many custom-crafted suits stand¬ing before' the bench, except as corporate executives. Youdon’t hear the words, “The People vs. Richard J. Daley”very often.Ten minutes at any courthouse will convince you thatLennie Bruce was right when he said that, “At the Halls ofJustice, the only justice is in the halls.”Abe PeckJanuary 9, 1970/Grey City Journal/3nimiDavid Garrick’s“The Guardian” Minus GarrickTHE GUARDIAN, PRESENTED AT THE unfortunatetime of the last week of fall quarter, is a play whichDavid Garrick wrote, directed, and starred in. In otherwords, it was what is known in modern slang as a “starvehicle.” The 18th century audience went to see it forGarrick and all the action undoubtedly moved around him.Since David Garrick could not be exhumed for this pro¬duction, and since no comparable star was cast to quitetake his place, a more even “balance of power” wascreated between the characters. In the U.C. production,Nick and Diane Rudal as the guardian and his ward. the talents of a number of actors were displayed in thiswitty and sophisticated one-act. (The Guardian of the title has for a ward a prettyyoung girl who returns from school abroad just ripe formarriage. She is pursued by a fop who arrogantly per¬suades the guardian that his love for her is reciprocated.When the girl is asked, she says she is in love but won’ttell with whom. Her secret love for her guardian is finallyrevealed, but not before any number of mix-ups aboutwhom she really loves, including the fop’s elderly uncle.Naturally the lovers are joined happily in the end.Such an inconsequential plot needs good actors tomake the show a success. This production had quite a few.Nick Rudal underplayed the starring role (which Garrickmust have played with much sparkle and humor) and indoing so made the character appear flat. Such a charactermust be played with subtlety, but in his case the au¬dience’s interest in the character was sacrificed.The role of the ward is not a meaty one, and DianeRudal played it with suitable lightness, avoiding any temp¬tation to “pad” the role. But the outstanding performancewas given by Nick Barton as the foppish suitor. His char¬acterization was exquisite from his raised pinky to hissnuff box manipulations and his habit of aristocraticallytalking down his nose. The risers on which the audiencesat were literally rocking with laughter at his perform¬ance.Kenneth Northcott gave a stimulating demonstrationof a silly old man in his characterization as the suitor’suncle. His detatched and externalized acting style, rely¬ing safely on precise and hilarious gestures, provided anAsian touch to the range of acting techniques provided bythe various cast members. 1116 members of the workingclass were represented by Barry Maclvor and Edna Ep¬stein.On the whole, the level of acting in The Guardian wasamong the highest in U.C. productions. One would imaginethat director Donald Shojai had little difficulty with such a Nick Barton as Jack, the foppish suitorvirtuoso cast: together they produced a totally delightfulevening, which was enhanced by short harpsichord recit¬als by Bill Hayashi and Evangeline Cobb, and a fire blaz¬ing (Uve) in the hearth of the Ida Noyes Library.Robin HawkesMadge Mumblecrustbo widerberg’s DOC FILMS/$16.30 8.30 10.30 CobbMORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.PLAyDCrS ALL-NIGHT SHOWWKMMANm '*10AT l SitptOAT '0U0WING IASI IfCUlAR 'UTUttJan 9Richard BenjaminAM MocGrawGOOD-BYE COLUMBUS Jan 10Allan BatesDick BogardeTNI FIXERJan 16Jeanne WoodwardRACm, RACHEL Jan 17KALEIDOSCOPEJan 23Paul NewmanTORN CURTAINJan 30Gregory PeckTO Kill AMOCKINGBIRDFeb 6Clint EastwoodFISTFUL OF DOLLARS Jan 24Burt LancasterTHE SWIMMERJan 31IFFeb 7John CassavettesFACES4/Grey City Journal/January 9, 1979 5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRYCOMINGLIMITED ENGAGEMENTJan 14-27th ONLY!THREEPENNYCINEMA “Iwas spellbound.A beautiful film. I’ve seen SALESMANthree times and each time I’ve beenmore impressed. A cinematic mural offaces, words, motel rooms, parlorsand streets. As strange andexotic a journey as any. Fascinating,comic, poignant, very funny.”2424 N. Lincoln AvenueChicago, Illinois 60614phone 528-9126T*-f U4TVES IWG’MfPS AMOCURRENTLY: LAST 5 DAYS OFMEDIUM COOL ...in colorRoman Polanski's"KNIFE INTHE WATERInternational HouseAssembly HallSunday, Jan. 118:00 PM. Onh nTickets $ 1.00FILM A ATC Wraps Up the Film YearA few preliminary words of explanation: This list is limit¬ed to films which received their first commercial releasein the United States in 1969 and were made within twoyears of their release date. Thus Robert Bresson’s greatUne Femme Douce (Paramount) is not included since ithas only been shoum at non-commercial festivals in thiscountry to date. Likewise, Jean-Luc Godard’s Weekendwhile not seen in Chicago until this past year wcs releasedelsewhere in 1968 and thus belongs to that year and notthis.1. Topaz (Alfred Hitchcock) (Universal) — A masterpiecewhich confirms the suspicion that Torn Curtain was astylistically transitional work. Topaz is like Torn Curtainin that it is emotionally cold, consists of pastel colors,contains little camera motion, and is amazingly dis¬passionate towards its characters. Topaz is, however, afar more successful and fully realized work than its pre-*decessor, dispelling the rumors that Hitchcock had grownsenile. Ostensibly a spy story based around the Cubanmissile crisis of 1964, Topaz is a very domestic work aboutthe dissolution of a man’s life. JBy the end of the film themain character has not only become homeless and lost hiswife and family but disappears from the picture as well,leaving us only the consequences of his actions. OpensJan. 16 at the Chicago Theatre.2. The Damned (Luchino Visconti) (Warner Brothers) —The Damned pretends to be political allegory and on thatcount fails miserably. Happily, it also pretends to begrand opera and while Visconti is better at Verdi (Senso)than at Wagner, the emotional impact of this picture isincalculable. The story is of the triumph of evil — the only(moderately) positive character with any sort of strengthjoins the SS at the end — and by forcing us into voy¬euristic emotional involvement permits us to discover thecapacity for evil within ourselves. Visconti’s use of thezoom lens, an increasingly dominant feature in his work,brings the audience constantly back to a consideration ofthe whole.3. La Femme Infidele (Claude Chabrol) (Allied Artists) —One viewing is clearly insufficient to probe the depths ofthis bourgeois-hating work but clearly it is one of thefinest films of the year. Chabrol has added a loathsomegreen to his repertoire of colors and limited the majorityof his frames to single-planed visions. What this meansabout his particular work and Chabrol’s oeuvre in generalshall probably only become clear with repeated viewings.(? - Eds.)4. Tell Them Willie Boy Was Here (Abraham Polonsky)(Universal) — A vision of the apocalypse. All the peoplein this film are good, yet their actions inevitably lead togenocide or suicide. Polonsky is neither warning us nor ishe explaining Willie Boy is merely description, and assuch it is one of the strangest political films ever made.Polonsky makes great use of iconic positioning and post¬uring (at one point Willie Boy is in a position reminscentof Sitting Bull while Sheriff Cooper stands behind him inthe position of the Minute Man sentinel) but the strangeand nearly unfathomable sexual relationships of the fourprincipals makes it impossible to see these characters asmere symbols.5. The Stalking Moon (Robert Mulligan) (National Gener¬al) — Perhaps no film was more lost in the rush of theyear than this one by a man who may well be the mosttalented filmmaker of his generation in Hollywood. TheStalking Moon is marked by Mulligan’s strange punc-tuational zooms and its even stranger story of in¬comprehensible violence. The Indian who is chased is afigure of such total evil that he is beyond social myth,existing in an allegorical setting all his own. The blood-smeared corpses are full of what is clearly red make-upand the Gregory Peck hero seems to know only that what¬ever has been leaving these things around must be eradi¬cated. Perhaps if this film had been released eight monthslater than it was, at a time when all of the country’snewspapers are freaking out over a senseless neo-ritual-istic series of murders, both critics and audiences wouldhave comprehended Mulligan’s vision. As it is, The Stalk¬ing Moon remains a weird document, the turning of anormally psychological director to a pure moral conflictand discovering that even here it is only the child who cansee.6. Alice’s Restaurant (Arthur Penn) (United Artists) —Penn’s longingly sad story of the failure of community onevery level, from the family to the commune, is now whatanyone expected, but it is so artistically valid that no oneneed complain. Despite the (at times) disturbing confusionof the dramatic structure, Alice’s Restaurant is a brightand honest beacon among the “youth culture” films nowflooding the market. At the Hyde Park.7. Justine (George Cukor) (20th Century-Fox) — We hadall hoped for a masterpiece from Cukor and thus therewas inevitible disappointment when Justine turned out tobe good and not great. At its best, in exposing its narra¬tor’s romantic naivete while fully preserving the romantic¬ism of the object of his love, Cukor seems to triumph overa bad script, an inherited cast, and an awful smell left byJoseph Strick’s foul exteriors. No, Justine is not A Star is “Alice’s Restaurant”Born — but it is still far better than almost anythingaround.8. The Wild Bunch (Sam Peckinpah) (Warner Brothers)— Sam Peckinpah gets his revenge with this extra ordina¬ry saga of men whose only communal experience is thatof killing. A good deal of this film is in close-shot butunlike most television directors turned filmmakers, Peck¬inpah makes the shots both meaningful and com¬prehensible. The Wild Bunch was photographed by LucienBallard whose work, both here and in the vastly inferiorTrue Grit, was one of the greatest joys of 1969.9. Death of a Gunfighter (“Alan Smithee”) (Universal) —Rumor has it that Don Siegel took over this project and,for once, style supports rumor. The combination zoom-pans which have become Siegel’s trademark are well inevidence and even the script seems congenial to Siegel’spresent themes. At times the film falls into cheapness andonly twice (a gun battle begun by the striking of a matchand the initial shooting that causes the whole mess) doesthe film assume any greatness. Nevertheless, in forsakingthe pretentiousness of “end of the old west” for personalneo-classical tragedy it is a refreshing experience indeed.10. I leave this spot blank, in deference to those films bymajor directors which, since they have not had Chicagoopenings to date, I have been unable to see. TC FoxIT IS SOMETHING of a shock to realize that Gilbert andSullivan are not nearly as dated as we suppose. This wasbrought to mind at the end of last quarter by a Hyde Parkdouble bill of G and S’s HMS Pinafore and Cox and BoxObviously, purchase of political office, .class distinctionand military (naval) inefficiency are not things whichhave changed considerably since Gilbert and Sullivan firstproduced the satiric Pinafore. A chain of less effectiveambassadors display those very qualities which broughtSir Joseph Porter (modeled upon a wealthy developer ofrailway newstands) to the First Lordship of the Admiralty(a post now alack subsumed under the Ministry of De¬fence). But we need not explore these parallels any fur¬ther, Pinafore contains some of the best of the G and Swords and music and the company brought us a full mea¬sure of enjoyment. In such a good piece of ensemble workit is always difficult to single out people for especialpraise. Ray Lubway as Sir Joseph Porter, was, of course,his usual good self with the bell-ringing sequence worthyof the best of Savoy. Hugh Crarey as Captain Corcoranhad a lovely voice and good facial expressions to go alongwith it. Josephine brought forth from any British tar theright amorous intention and bravery and we all felt thatCaptain Corcoran was fortunate indeed in achieving histrue station when someone like Nancy Henninger as But¬tercup was waiting for him there. Pearson, Arnett, Hen¬ninger, Carey, all excellent, and Alan Swan must have aspecial word of praise for his Brechtian Dick Deadeye asplendid piece of acting as well as singing.Roland Bailey did an excellent job with the chorus and From top: “Topaz”, “Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here”,“The Wild Bunch.”so did director David Curry with the help of Demi Miller’schoreography (a word about him later). I heard somecomplaints about the costumes, but I thought they hit theright note. In a work which still maintains a topicalitythere seems every reason for taking liberties with sets &costumes and I cannot imagine that G and S would haveobjected at the very lively colors of the women’s clothes(purists, I’m sorry).The evening began with a performance of Cox andBox rarely seen and very enjoyable too, though I felt thatDemi Miller almost overdid his acting and (I promised tosay more of him) he nearly stole that opening scene inPinafore which he should not have been allowed to do(especially in the denouement). He failed but it almostdistracted my attention, and that is unforgivable.Even the orchestra performed with great credit on thefinal evening and the miniature Union Jack in Bob De-war’s bassoon brought a lump into the throat of everytrue-blooded Englishman and bassoon player. Of coursethere are minutiae of directing and acting which could becriticized, there are bound to be, but I prefer to con¬gratulate Roland Bailey, David Curry and Charles Walls,of course, for producing a well-balanced and eminentlyenjoyable evening’s entertainment for this normally cur¬mudgeonly reviewer.Incidentally if you were unfortunate enough to missthem there will be a concert performance of Pinafore anda re-run of Cox and Box later in the quarter in connectionwith the Victorian affairs — don’t miss them.Kenneth J. NorthcottJanuary 9, 1970/Grey City Journal/5G & S in Hyde Park1 fllTIIJ.mmi — . T-rpn-p-7^777T77777T7TTTTTTT7TTTTT7TTTT7TTTTTTTTTTTrrrirrrimi* **«* * #*«*,.«.»« 1 - 'Contracted but Enthusiastic VultureWINTER QUARTER WOULDN’T BE winter quarter with¬out cold winds and ice and The Grey City Journalwouldn’t be The Grey City Journal without the CultureVulture (it would probably be a little better.) Withoutfurther ado (after that uncharacteristically modest re¬mark) so begins the season’s first CV:FilmThe good Doctor Films returns tonight with the famedElvira Madigan by Bo Widerberg which has been calledby a very diversified group of people “the most beautifulfilm ever made” which means it must be more than alittle interesting to see. Cobb Hall for $1 at 6:30, 8:30 and10:30.Contemporary European Films’ first entry for theTHEETSELast Stage A uditionsTHE LAST STAGE is a Hyde Park theatre group whosename has seemed sadly prophetic at the closing of each ofits productions in recent years. At one time a thrivinglittle company nestled in a loft on 51st Street, it fell preyto urban renewal and, homeless for too long, has been ona valiant campaign to re-establish itself in the HarperTheatre, for want of any other suitable location. In thepast couple of years, it has staged memorable productionsof “The Glass Menagerie” and “Slow Dance on the KillingGround,” but due to shortage of funds, staff, and availabletheatre dates, its output has been severely limited.The Last Stage is now casting for a production whichit hopes will launch an established company with a fullrepertory season. Director Sidney Passin has announcedtryouts for “Next Time I’ll Sing to You,” a recent play byEnglish playwright James Saunders. The tryouts are com¬pletely open and from them Passin hopes to glean thebeginnings of a new company. Technical and managementassistants are also needed.The roles to be cast are for four men and one woman:Males: age range 20’s to 40’s, a hermit who is also anactor; a cynical intellectual; a happy-go-lucky what-the-hell character and a playwright, heavier than the others.Female: age range 20’s to early 30’s, dumb blonde typewith lots of soul.Casting will be held at the Harper Theatre in HarperCourt tonight from 8 to 10 pm and tumorrow from 2 to 5pm. The play will be performed four weekends, February13 to March 8. quarter is Monterrey Pop which will be shown tomorrow.Anybody who is anybody in pop music seems to havesomething to do with it: the Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hen¬drix, Mamas and Papas, Big Brother etc. Nothing you canfind at Loewe’s can beat that. Cobb for $1. 3 shows at6:30, 8:30 and 10:30.A new producing firm, International House, ispresenting on Sunday Roman Polanski’s Knife in the Wa¬ter. This is the movie which first presented Polanski toAmericans and tells of three young people involved in atriangle. International House Assembly Hall at 8.Tuesday Doc Films brings in Luchino Visconti’s Koccoand His Brothers, another in the list of massive epicswhich include Senso, The Leopard and most recently, TheDamned. The film documents the lives of a mother andher 5 sons and their mistresses and wives. How manyfilms can boast it is the first film of Claudia Cardinaleand has one of the most brutal rape scenes ever filmed?Cobb for $1 at 8 only.Wednesday night is a night for everyone to drop whatthey are doing and to storm theiir way into Cobb. DuringHorsefeathers the Marxist Revolution comes to the Uni-IdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education forI -A your Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun Life\ f Policy will guarantee theV, mWF needed money for your child’seducation. Why not call meRalph J. Wood, Jr., CIU Ofhce Hour* 9 to 5 Mondays,One North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602 Others by ApptFR 2-2390 - 798 0470SUN LIFE OF CANADA"An ‘A* for T. Stands without poor os a document and thrWar.1“r damn near knocks you out of your seat.”“Vary good kidssd. oaportly entertaining."“★★★★. Don’t miss M. I repeat, don’t miss it.”Chtc*90 Avwge ai Mtchigan IBM will beinterviewingon campusJanuary 22If you're interestedin a career inprogramming or marketing,sign up at yourplacement office.An Equal Opportunity EmployerIBM versity when none other than Groucho is appointed presi¬dent. He immediately puts all the energies of the schoolinto football. Some of the best puns and Groucho’s nihilis¬tic song, “Whatever it is, I’m against it”. In Cobb for 75cents at 7:15 and 9:30.Tile Victorian Quarter seeps into the film world onThursday evening this quarter. This week is NicholasNickleby. It’s FREE in Cobb. At 7.MusicTonight in Ida Noyes Library at 8 will be a VictorianParlor Concert of songs, recitations and music for thepiano forte. To put the University of Chicago stamp onVictorian England, two of the performers to appear ’willbe Mr. and Mrs. James Redfield.Tonight and Saturday, as well as next weekend, al¬legro conspirito presents The Play of Herod a medievalmusical drama described on this page. It will be at theDisciples of Christ Church (known as the Blue Gargoyle toits friends) at 8:30.Sorry that the Vulch looks like he’s dieting today buthe just got back into the cultural swing of things too fast— it’s bad for his health. More next week.Straight Talk:'our diamond is at...MNf 'fwfim »Ot 59 TfAtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINOLKWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA“Hip Off-Broadway HitKnocks The Box& Other American Fetishes”• • you’ll think you never laughed so hard”—Johanna Steinmetz, Chicago Today.. more aching laughter than I have heard onBroadway this year”—Tom Prideaux, Life 12/19/69“Go And SeeGROOVE TUBE”—Clive Barnes, N Y. Times, 10/12/69“Outrageously Funny”—Cue.. zany new show ... refreshing andperceptive”—Will Leonard, Chicago Tribune.. let’s keep it in the locker room, fellas”—Glenna Syse, Chicago Sun-TimesPresented by RICHARD A. KLEINwith the cooperation of The Chicago City PlayersFri & Sat: 8:30, 10:30; Sun: 7:00 & 9:00PRICES: FRI. & SAT., $3.50; SUN. $2.50STUDENTS: FRI. & SAT., $3.00; SUN., $2.00Chicago City Players Theater615 West WellingtonPhone Reservations: 943-5565S/Grey City Journal/January 9, 1979mnmi V t* M *f hf -1 ‘r* A SV A . t Y y- v' ' ,:t ,Y '. wi *_Meetings9 Food, People and EntertainmentFOR THOSE PEOPLE who accidently locked themselvesinto a Woodward Court closet a few years back and arejust reentering the world, the name Blue Gargoyle maynot mean anything. Then again those people might thinkthat it is a description of the emotional state of thosestone-faced fellows who always seem to be hanging aroundon campus. Believe it or not, if that’s your idea you’rewrong. The Blue Gargoyle is a coffee house connected tothe Disciples of Christ Church, 5556 University. But coffeehouse in this case means meeting house, theatre, generalentertainment center and school. It performs the functionsof all the above.Last spring there was a fire there but this fall itopened after a gigantic petition circulated asking that itshould be reopened. It did in October with regular hoursof 12 noon to 12 midnight Monday to Friday with specialhours on Saturday depending on what is happening there.From now on there will be a weekly schedule of events inThe Grey City Journal. Long live the Garg!FridayTonight the Gargoyle makes its official opening of thequarter at 6 pm. At 8:30 is The Play of Herod. After thatAngela Lee, the Garg’s own folk-singer in residence, will play and sing in the east aisle of the church.SaturdayAnother performance of The Play of Herod at 8:30.MondayThere is a planning session for the Free School at 3.This is for high school students and interested Universitystudents. The gargoyle has had a number of activities forhigh school students, a forgotten group in the shadow ofthe quads. People both intersted in taking or teaching aclass should attend the meeting or come around to theGarg. Anytime.A meeting of the Ecumenical Council is at 4 in theLibrary.A New University Conference meeting will take placeat 8 in the Library.TuesdayThere is a meeting of MAT students to discuss class¬room work and experiences from 3-5.At 7:30 there is a meeting of the New University Con¬ference women’s caucus in the Library.At 8 the Association for the Advancement of Contem¬porary Music plays like it does every Tuesday. This is theTBSBTBE-Herod Is ComingONE OF THE BEST presentations of around this time lastyear was Hie Play of Herod performed by a new groupcalled allegro conspirito, formed originally of members ofthe Episcopal Student Choir. The play itself, a medievalliturgical drama, will be performed this year, startingtonight, tomorrow and next week-end. It is focused aroundthe Christmas story but emphasizing the Magi and theirvisit to the court of Herod and later to the Christ Child.Liturgical drama developed during the Middle Agesand appeared in a form similar to The Play of Herodabout 1200. It evolved originally from monastic vesperservices and gradually incorporated dramatization and itsown type of simple plain song chats. Segments of it are inverse and the vernacular. Soon the drama became part ofthe service in the Cathedral proper for the instruction ofthe congregation. ^ * *■ «This production uses the edition by Noah Greenbergused by the New York Pro Musica. The costumesare much more elaborate than last year and the in¬struments more exotic. Some which will be included willbe psalteries, krummhoms, and rauschpfeifes. Don’t missthe experience. The Magi meet and behold the star in “Herod .’BELL SHELLSERVICE5200 S. Lake Park493-5200 #********4MMM*A Sunday New York Timet ^8:30 AM (daily too) 4♦ BOB’S NEWSSTAND *♦ 51st and Lake Park♦ Huge tlockt of Current Maga- ■¥■4 tinet, Paperback*, At tor ted .4Pornography. Come & meet ^my dog ichael. 4\\ Buy Shell From Bellsince 1926 u Ton don't needinsuranceprotectionfor yonr car(if vou liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’llwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971sentryJTINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organi>ation group of jazz musicians (of whom Joseph Jarman was themost famous before he left for Europe) dedicated to anextremely new and exciting sound.WednesdayLen Radinsky will give an “eye witness report onCuba.” He spent the summer there and will show slidesand discuss how socialism works. 8pm.Thursday3-5 is another meeting of the MAT students.A poetry group (or should we say a group of peoplewriting poetry) meets at 9 in the Library.ContributorsKenneth Northcott is Professor and Chairman of theDepartment of Germanic Languages and Literatures andhead of the drama program in the committee on GeneralStudies in the Humanities. Abe Peck writes for The Seedand is currentlv writing a book on the Consoiracv Trial.HITCl T?u UENUHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.lU 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,Prey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxChristopher LyonFrank MalbrancheMyron MeiselThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroTIm Grey City Journal, published weekly In cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All Interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices In Ida Noyes Ha".SH0RELAND HOTELSpecial Hates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed teems from $12.00 dailyTwin teems from $14.00 dailyLake ViewRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10-500. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-1000S454 South Shore Driverate forcollegestudentsThe indispensable referencevolume... Reader’s Digest1970 Almanac and Yearbook!All answers to Who? Which?What? When? Why? How? Where?Yours at the special student rate of only..!Off-red in bookstores for $3.95. Order cardslocated in college bookstore. Send no money now.Mail your card today.It 7#January 9, 1970/Grey City Journal/7They do exciting things. Like mining oil instead of pumping it.Working on air pollution. Making electricity from the atom.Isn’t that the kind of company you’d like to work for?We’re a petroleum and energy company.But we believe that making our world abetter place to live in makes good senseas well as good business. And this kindof thinking demands individuals with ideas and energy. People who can seethe potentials-usual and unusual-which our products have for improvingthe world. People like you. Bring yourideals, and your motivation, where they'll make good things happen. See ourinterviewers on campus. Or send aresume to: Manager ProfessionalRecruitment, 717 Fifth Avenue,New York, N.Y. 10022Our interviewer will be here soon. Talk to him. ARCO Chemical DivisionNuclear Materials and Equipment CorporationAtlantic Richfield Hanford Companythe new AtlanticRIchfieldCompany O An Equ^ Opportunity Employer Money can do fantastic things foryour personality. H you hove a glibtongue or are a master of the "fastbuck and a shady deal" come andhype people into advertising in theMaroon. Generous commissions,good spare time work, cor pre¬ferred but not necessary.Clarkenjoy ourspecial studentrate85 timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredaily• open 7 30 a.m.-lateshow midnight• Sunday film guild• every wed. end fn. isladies day-all gals 75'little gal lery for galsonly• Clark park mg-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5pm• v>.Tite for your freemonthly programClark & madison fr 2 28431PIZZA:PLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!I 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800I WE DELIVERc*****^**gCo^ttD(on>l *_ornell _tlori„1645 E. 55th STREET *CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *Rhone: FA 4-165? m********THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback LinesIQf'A Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks & Hardcovers1540 E. 55th St. - Ml 3-7511l CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998a Has whot you need from a S'Ofused 9 x 12 Rug, to o customTcarpet. Specializing in Remnontsf & Mill returns at a froction of ,r,«^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualitiesf Additional 10% Discount with this*Adi FREEDEUVERY-V it , e - * V * •» • * - - ~ \ - y . « , i. * it ‘ , n H [.trtf J»’ it itf wat&Rtif rPi? *' * ##► m +'st****r? * Vt* ■ **1* <" . j*-,.-t ■ a-8/Grey City Journal/January 9, 1970139 428/29. /)<'///w//rjiHiw imp/nrir “IS Protect-a-Card, Inc.J Data Processing Center J• P.O. Box 2970, Clinton, Iowa 52732 i! □ I am enclosing a $9 check and a list of my ■• credit cards and card numbers. Rush me *J my membership. (Your cancelled check is J■ your receipt.) •J □ charge my □ charge my J• Master Charge BankAmericard ■■ (Note: For family members ba»iog separate cards with dif- *■ ferent card numbers, an additional membership is only $6 ■• Enclose list.) ,• Name—— —— — gI Address—— — Jj City State Zip |J For telephone identification: * ,• Soc. Sec. No Age •I Occupation— i! Signature g; 11—018—11— 1 l|4lslllll!January 9, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5Mhfii j. f// * .t > /Hear it now onDeutsche Grammophon Records are distributed in the USA by Polydpr Incin Canada by Polydor Records Canada Ltd. ---In a recent issue of the Los Angeles Timesthe lead story, "Spiraling Thefts Lead to NewCredit Card Protectiqn Service,” warnedreaders that credit card* theft is soaring. Thatthousands of Americans who never thought itcould happen to them will lose a whopping$50 million this year. And that it can happento you.Fact is you can lose a credit card by care¬lessness or theft and find yourself with bills forthousands of dollars in a matter of days!That's why we started Protect-a-Card. TheCredit Card Protection Service that protectsyou from charges illegally made on your creditcards by sending stop-payment notice to allyour card issuers in minutes. And offers youfirst dollar insurance protection with a $1000no-deductible policy covering all your creditcards.Here's how it works: We record your cardsand card numbers at our Data Center. Then ifthey're lost or stolen you just call us collect.24 hours a day. From anywhere in the conti¬nental U.S. (From overseas you simply cable.)• We’ll immediately wire stop-payment noticeto all your card companies. At no charge toyou. Then we'll send you copies of those wires.So you have time-dated proof of the notificationthat ends your liability.Since you are liable for all charges madewith your cards until you give proper (written)notification to the card issuing company, themost important thing to do when your cardsare missing is get notification to each cardissuer last. Protect-a-Card does this for youelectronically. Infinitely faster than you could End credit card worries today. Mail thecoupon with a $9 check (protects all yourcards for a full year) and a list of yourcredit cards and card numbers. We'll rush youa thief warning membership card and a key¬ring tag inscribed with our 24-hour emergencyphone number. (Like those in the picture.) Alsoyour $1000 no-deductible insurance policy (pro¬tects you from the very first dollar —no $25, $50or $100 deductible).Fill in the coupon today. And let the thievesdo the worrying for a change.do it yourself. And withnone of the worries andheadaches.AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYFree TicketsThe Goodman Theatre, Chicago’s new re-College students for upcoming perform-pertory theater, is offering free tickets toances They can be picked up at the Collegeoffice of admissions and aid, 5737 Univer-iity Ave.First priority will be given to freshmenstudents on scholarship. If any tickets areleft a week before the performance, theycan be had by any College students on afirst-come-first served basis. All shows areon Tuesday and Thursday nights.You Can’t Take It with You” waspresented last night, with all tickets givenout. Future performances are Shakes¬peare’s “The Tempest” February 17 and19, ‘‘The Tea Party” and “The Basement”March 31 and April 2, and “The Man in theGlass Booth” May 12 and 14.The Goodman theater is located behind_the Art Institute at Columbus Drive andJackson Blvd. According to Alice Williamsof the admissions and aid office, ticketswould normally cost $4.40.(Facu/fy HonorsJohn Hope Franklin, Matthews dis¬tinguished professor and chairman of thehistory department, will receive a Doctorof Humane Letters degree from MichiganState University tomorrow for his scholarlybooks on the South and the American Ne¬gro’s struggle for freedom and equalrights.Raven I. McDavid, professor of Englishand one of the nation’s foremost linguists,recently received the David H. Russellaward for distinguished research in theteaching of English from the NationalCouncil of Teachers o£ English. The awardis given annually for a distinguished re¬search study during the last five years Corps program, will talk to students allweek in the office of career counseling andplacement. Appointments should be madethrough the secretary, Anita Sandke.Students who have filled out applicationsto the Peace Corps can take modern lan¬guage tests this Friday on campus.Also, a film entitled “The Foreigners”will be shown in Ida Noyes East LoungeTuesday at 4:30. The film deals with someof the problems facing Peace Corps volun¬teers.-Law CaucusFROM THE AIR: The Midway and Quads in a better season.which has valid implications for the teach¬ing of English. The award is a plaque and$1000. Peace CorasSensitivitySeminars for Group Studies (SGS), a non¬profit organization which promotes encoun¬ter and sensitivity techniques for persons inthe helping professions, will hold its first1970 encounter session at the Center forContinuing Education, this weekend.The weekend session is the first in aseries of workshops for persons interestedin sensitivity training as well as in methodsof work with groups. The session will be ledby the SGS Director, Anne Kopp Hyman,formerly with the University school of so¬cial service and the division of social workof George Williams College.A Warning for peoplewho carry credit cards. Two returned Peace Corps volunteerswill be on campus next week to interviewPeace Corps applicants and to provide in¬terested students with information aboutthe program.Judy Elmer and John P. McCormack,both of whom spent two years in the PeaceDedicated toChe Guevera!The premierethat never happened.Students in the law school’s women’scaucus will sponsor a course this quarteron women’s legal rights and status.Law student Karen Kaplowitz said thatalthough participants will discuss such le¬gal aspects of women’s life as prostitution,abortion, and employment discrimination,the course welcomes additional related top¬ics and will be open to anyone in the com¬munity.“Our end objective,” she said, “is to geta course on women for credit in the lawschool.”The course will use articles and lawcases, but will probably not require any“big books to read.” The organizationalmeeting will be held Tuesday at 7:30 pm inthe law school lounge.The law school women’s caucus hasabout 30 active members, including severalmen. About 75 of the school’s 460 studentsthis year are women.HANS WERNER HENZE"THE RAFT OF THE FRIGATE ‘MEDUSA’.”iti)itIII«*!?Itt\!tItl\:|»t!f1ii\i\ii\*itfli;|\t!iii ti*f ji■I I1 III ON THE AIR: WHPK DJ adjusts a machine in the studio.by Steve CookTucked away above the womens’ john onthe second floor of Mitchell tower sits thestudio of the radio voice of the Universityof Chicago. Decorated in nausea green andrecord posters, the three-room studiohouses WHPK-FM, which will open its win¬ter quarter broadcasting today at 4 pm on88.3 FM.The station is offering several new shows.Three programs from the University’s of¬fice of radio and television highlight thequarter’s new shows. “From the Midway,”a series of lectures and discussions by pro¬fessors and visiting notables, will be airedat an undetermined time in the evening.The series will feature the raw material forthe same program broadcast on other sta¬tions.“Critics at Large” opens Wednesday,January 14, at 8 pm. The program is broad¬cast live; the first half hour featuring ger-manics professor Kenneth Northcott andvarious professors discussing Broadwayshows and new movies. The second halfhour stars Charles Flynn, 71, and a panelof students discussing the professors.The third show, “Conversations at Chi¬cago,” is the same program currently re¬leased to other stations.Other special programs include; “Jazzportraits” with Peter Kountz, graduate stu¬dent in history of culture, Mondays from 10pm until midnight, the CalypSo show onSundays, a Country and Western programon Mondays at midnight, and the “areaspecial” on Wednesday evenings at 9 whichlooks into a musical style in depth.Returning from last quarter is the “The¬ater of Phynance”, a series of radio playswritten and produced especially for WHPKwhich goes on the air Thursday at 8:15 pm.“We don’t get much feedback,” notedTOM HARRISIn The News RoomNightclub OpensSaturday EveningThe bleakness of winter will be a littleless stark this quarter, as the Bandersnatchexpands to a nightclub in the neighboringCloister Club in Ida Noyes Hall. The grandopening is Saturday, January 10 at 8 pm.The club will feature a jazz trio, singersand hopefully guest artists every week inaddition to the regulars.There will be an “intimate club atmos¬phere with waitress service and ampletable space” said Michael Buckner, chair¬man of the Bandersnatch committee. Thefood will include quality foods from eggrolls to sirloin steaks, and a wide variety ofdesserts from ice cream, and pies and pas¬tries to cheeses.Buckner emphasized that the club, whichwill be open until 1 am, will have no en¬trance, no cover charge, and no minimum.This experiment was preceded by a pilotprogram last summer of “Jazz Alive” con¬certs on Saturday nights in the Band¬ersnatch, which were well received by theusually packed house.6/The Chicago Maroon/January 9, 1970 program director Mark Joseph, graduatestudent in education, “We don’t know if wehave any listeners or .not.” The station isattempting to achieve better programmingbalance with the new specials.Also this quarter, the station brings backsports with live broadcasts of the mar¬velous Maroons’ home basketball gamesSaturdays, the first beginning tomorrow at7:45 pm.The standard fare of the station tends to¬ward rock, blues, folk, and classical music.The emphasis on music may cause someproblems with the Federal CommunicationsCommission (FCC). “Because our FCC li¬cense is up for review this year, we willhave to defend ourselves as being an educa¬tional station,” said Joseph. WHPK is li¬censed as a non-commerical educationalstation.“We are guilty until proven innocent inthe eyes of the FCC,” Joseph said.WHPK operates entirely on money grant¬ed by the Committee On Registered StudentOrganizations (CORSO) and any additionalfunds that can be wheedled out of dean ofstudents Charles O’Connell. The funds for anew engineering board came with the goodwishes of the dean.Anyone who is interested may get in¬volved with the station. “We’ve tried to putanyone who wants to be, on the air, afterproper training,” said Joseph.“Thirty to 40 percent of the people we getprefer to do rock shows, some in the freeform ‘Flea Market’, some in the morningshows. We try to get people to be creative,to play less frequently played stuff. Wewant to challenge the intellect of the listen¬er and to entertain.”The most problematic, and most unpopu¬lar among the station staff, are the .newsprograms. WHPK writes it~ news fromnewspaper and radio sources, and tapescampus events.Continued from Page Fourflammatory headline than the denial of anextension of contract. The author’s unfortu¬nate choice of words can only make thereader wonder whether the ultimate pur¬pose of the article was to inflame ratherthan inform. Is the University ready for an¬other administration building take over?After all, we are getting close to that timeof year.Now, to the substantive part of the ar¬ticle. Miss Loth, the author of the piece,implies that Mrs Laws’ research project,concerning the study of women is not con¬sidered to be of serious scholarly interest.Informed sources indicate that Mrs Lawswas hired at the GSB on the basis of herinterest in organizational theory, not in herstudy of women. Thus, one could argue thatthere were just simply no positions avail¬able at the GSB for her kind of interest^This says nothing about the relative meritsof her research projects themselves. In anyevent, one might ask the question, in viewof her new found interest, would she not bebetter off in another department of the Uni¬versity?Finally, one more comment seems in or¬der. The most crucial issue seems to bewhether the denial of a contract renewalwas unfair. The article alleges that MrsLaws said that she “ ... did not know whythey decided to evaluate me this fall.” Yet,since the issue was whether or not to ex¬tend the contract, she must have known atthe time that she signed her initial onewhen it was due to expire.What were the grounds for her eval¬uation, and were they the same ones ap¬plied in every case? Unfortunately, we shallnever know, since our only informationcomes frqm Mrs Laws and the dean of fac¬ulty is not apt to divulge what went on inthe meetings which surrounded the issue.Yet, cases such as this raise importantquestions which should be of interest to allstudents. If handled improperly, the prob¬lem becomes potentially explosive. Arethere not some ways to defuse the problem?W E Walling “We have no censorship,” declared Jo¬seph, “and we are too poor to afford a wireservice. We try to get the important sto¬ries.” The stations news staff became local¬ly renowned for its thorough coverage oflast winter’s sit-in. During the October mo¬ratorium, the station hooked into a nationalPoetic DisciplineI offer the following poem by Lewis Car-roll as my observation regarding the LucasCommittee and its adjudications:Fury said to a mouse that he met in thehouse“Let us both go to law: I will prosecuteyou.—Come, I’ll take no denial. We must have atrial;For really this morning I’ve nothing todo.”“Such a trial, dear sir, with no jury orjudge,would be wasting our breath.”“I’ll be the judge, I’ll be the jury,” saidcunning old Fury;“I’ll try the whole cause and condemnyou to death.”I hope our cunning old Fury is satisfiedwith just a few mice.Eugene Goldberg, 71UWA CorrectionThe “correction” appearing on the frontpage of the January 6 news issue of theMaroon is itself incorrect. The Committeeon University Women (COUW) was askedby the University Women’s Association(UWA), during COUW’s public hearings ofNovember 19-20, to consider the UWA re¬port regarding Judith Long Laws’ reap¬pointment in the business school. That re¬port raised two questions: 1) that theprocedures governing consideration of herreappointment were irregular and in them¬selves discriminatory against women; 2)that the two-year reappointment being rec¬ommended for Mrs Laws in the businessschool constitutes a case of discriminationagainst a woman.Because facts concerning the first ques¬tion, the procedures followed in Mrs Laws’case, were the type of facts into whichCOUW was inquiring in all part of the Uni¬versity, COUW double-checked its facts moratorium network during the day.Other officers of the station are managerTom Harris, production manager KevinAvurch, business manager Phil Hess, andchief engineer Tim Wickland. “However,”pointed out Joseph, “we run things demo¬cratically.”with respect to the procedures followed bythe Business School in this instance. We aresatisfied that the business school did notdepart from its normal procedures in thisinstance, and that these procedures are notthemselves discriminatory.On the second point raised by UWA,whether or not there was particular dis¬crimination against Mrs Laws, COUW hasmade no determination one way or the oth¬er. COUW has defined its role to be that ofinquiring into the policies and proceduresfollowed by departments, schools, and col¬legiate divisions, looking at the departmentas the unit. We do not believe it is part ofour task to act as a hearing committee,either in Mrs Laws’ case or any other.Bernice Neugarten, ChairmanCommittee on University WomenFaculty WivesNews article from the Hyde Park Herald,1-7-70:“The annual Trustee’s Dinner for the fac¬ulty was held downtown while the facultyand trustee wives enjoyed dinner at theQuadrangle Club.”It would seem from this news article,which is almost certainly a product of thepublic relations office, that no dinner facil¬ities were available for faculty husbands.Since we cannot imagine this illustriousUniversity leaving out anyone, the infer¬ence is that the faculty comprise maleswith “faculty wives” and unmarried fe¬males.Carrying this a step further, this wouldseem to indicate that marriage constitutesa form of moral turpitude for a woman andtherefore disbars her from faculty statusthereafter. However, if she is fortunateenough to have married a faculty member(by definition, male), she has the pleasureof dining with the trustee’s wives.Something, as usual, is rotten.' Susan Hoch, 70Jerold SchwaberMathematical BiologyLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROON(THE MAROON CLASSIHED ADS)GREY REALITIES EXPOSE a LIZARD'S TONGUESCENES"On the Wegener Report," spon¬sored by the College Forum, FriJan 9, Swift Commons, 3:30PM.Redfield 4 "Horatius at theBridge?" Ida Noyes Library, Jan9, 8PM.Culture at a premium! Joffrey Bal¬let tickets for Auditorium perform¬ances on sale at Maroon 50% off.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)The NIGHTCLUB. Sat. — 8PM-1AMHonor the last of UC's great lecher-intellectuals: W.F. Smyrd. TheSmyrd Ball: Saturday, Jan 17, 8:30PM. Ida Noyes Gym. Food, danc¬ing, intellectual rapport.Prof J David Greenstone (Pol Sci)will speak on BLACK NATIONAL¬ISM AND JEWISH NATIONALISM:THE ROLE OF INTELLECTUALS(Reflections on The Crisis of theNegro Intellectuals by HaroldCruse). At Hillel House tonight at8:30.Have you always had a secret de¬sire to sing in Beethoven's Ninth?Call Gene Narmour, 285-5164, orJames Kidd, 643-5446, for informa¬tion.SUNDAYS. Margaret's Church — The Episco¬pal Church of South Shore — 2555E. 73rd St. (corner Coles)7:30 am Holy Communion9:00 am Family Eucharist &Church School11:00 am Choral EucharistRUSTIC CONTINENTALSTUDIOPRESENTSDESIGN NNA BOUTIQUEFeaturing Exclusive ImportsDirect From IndiaCARVEDWOOD,POU5HEDBRASS,SILKSunusual items, many one of akind1375-75'/4 E. 53rd St.288-7080 Make 1970 the Year of the PeoDie'Told if,W fDe7’05ratic Coalition winnerBg. ln*»ruction begin-lr>,®rmediate. Ida Noyes PoolMonday night 7-8 PM.Astoplightcanbearevelation.Medtatior^TechnologyBondChapelWedJanl412noon.BLUE BLUE BLUE BLUE BLUEGAR GOYLE GOYLE GOYLFGOV^ BEAUTiFUL BLUE GAR9 Cor^ Se°ePenS 6 PM Friday JanaTC illustrated %K?nS! 9REPORT OF JEWISH LIFE IN SCAN-'DINAVIA, RUSSIA AND PRAGUECOW TCift J0RAH 'N MOSat 7-30* H H°USe ,his SundaVMa6 i^J.?HTCL.UB °Pens Sat 8PM nIda Noyes — Music, Song, Food"!Free admission; No cover.ThLrl111?1 classes resume this week,inere is a new group beginninais ~ ™The writings of the Baha^T~Faithto th?* e.art, and mind dedicatedo the spiritual and material oro-gress of all nations and people Willyou allow yourself to investigateits possibilities? Mon., Jan 12, IdaNoyes, 7:30 PM.SaM0TCLUB RCal N'GHTCLUBchicksaJLtVH^ „,rusfra,ed' skinnychicks that didn't make It in danceclass. . . . sublimate at the Joffrpv,Ba,'f„50% off box o?fice price onall tickets. Available at Maroon.iiaZii»ifnx imProvisation will makeHaM fnn TcT /yVcKlrHeY a* Mandel£t help? rl' Jan 9' 8:30PM-JoffreTbaueT-50% off box office price on all28K '°r ««- • * tIwS!Thurs. Eve 1 29Moves, Pas Des Deese,u, An*mus' Vlva VivaldiWed Eve. 2/4Konservatoriet, Three- . Cornared Hat, AsfarteSat. Mat. l/3iViva Vilaldi AnimusThe ClownsThurs. Eve. 2/5Three Cornered Hat, Pastil »?***.?' The Green TableTickets Available MatS^pla^oTherodEnin/h^,eval musical drama for^ pr*?en,ed by allegro con-sjMnto at Disciples Church S4«sDiindn*^ A pan°PiY Of Medievalsplendor & mysticism, with anapu■ionsleS< llJrl,lian, costumes, proces'-nfai«LPSK f?ry' krummhorns, rausch-b1ells' and breathtaking me¬dieval stagecraft. Jan. 9, 10 4 laa 8:30; Jan. 17 at 7:30 4 9 30Tickets are $2.00, $1.50 4 $i oo‘Write 5655 S. University, call ext'3392, or buy them at the door.breaiTparty^Julian Bond asks that you loinat^VLm Arlad ,?arfy JanuarV 11A;A- (Samrny) Rayner,Candidate for Congress, needsbraad- Call Ml 3-0800 ext 3275 fortickets. UC/NDC.PEOPLE~WANTED~Need Babysitter for 3Vi yr. old girl.Thurs. Mornings from 8:45 to 11:30.Call 624-8363 Eves. Research Subjects Wanted Femaleswith color-blind fathers wanted forcolor vision testing. (We will alsoneed to test the father for onehour.) $1.75 per hour with mini¬mum of 12 hrs work. Call x6039.Part time help at hospital in area— 2'/j to 3 hrs a day, 4 days/week.TV attendant, no TV knowledge nec.call Mr Eastman, 676-2226.Babysitter wanted for 4-month oldBoy Wed, Thurs aft and othertimes to be Arr. 2 blks from cam¬pus. Call 667-7512.Singers wanted for Beethoven'sNinth, Particularly Tenors. The Uni¬versity Symphony, joined by theCollegium Musicum and UniversityChorus, will give 2 performances,March 7 and 8, under the directionof Gene Narmour. For information,call Gene Narmour, 285-5164, orJames Kidd, 643-5446.WANTED: Paid medical examinersfor insurance exams. Resident typedoctors prefered. Full professionalfees paid by nationally known in¬surance firm. Ralph J. Wood. FR 2-2390.Desk clerk, no experience neces¬sary, pref. man staying thru sum¬mer, 3 nights a week, 12 midnight-8 AM or 4 PM - 12 midnight, ap¬ply in person. Quadrangle Club.HELP NEEDED in alleviatingAmerica's hunger problem. Amplyavailable; however, not forthcom¬ing. Pulitzer Prize winner NickKotz examines food industry andgovernment reluctance in supply¬ing low-cost fortified foods for thepoor, while supply same to foreignunderdeveloped countries. In thismonth's HARPER'S MAGAZINE,America's First Monthly. On salenow.DISSATISFIED WITH COMPUTERDATING?Help participate in an experimentto develop something better.NON-ProfitOnly cost to you is postage stamps;our secretaries take care of therest.Box 3022 929-221024 hrs. answering service"Wine, Women, 4 Cuckoos, Ltd."A division of B-P GuildSupport GroupHELP NEEDED in alleviatingAmerica's hunger problem. Amplyavailable; however, not forthcom¬ing. Pulitzer Prize winner NickKotz examines food industries andgovernment reluctance in supplyinglow-cost fortified foods for the poor,while supplying same to foreignunderdeveloped countries. In thismonth's HARPER'S MAGAZINE,America's First Monthly. On salenow.Kenwood Family Offers Free toStudent Excellent Private RoomBath in Exchange for OccasionalBabysitting Two School Age Boys373-3099.Easy Money Flexible Hours! CallRalph or Doug at PL2-9874.Part-time sec'y wanted, 4 hrs a day,can choose hours, from 9-5, must beable to type accurately with somefiling experience preferred. Call642-6460.Laboromnia Vincinta not for profit — FREE — pro¬fessional employment guidance ser¬vice. Your cost is postage and tele¬phone. Summer jobs our specialty.(We're really serious)Bob 3022 929-2210A division of B-P GuildSupport GroupROOMMATES WANTEDMale, to share Apt. 61st 4 EllisOwn Room. $50/mo 955-3575.Male Roommate WantedOwn Room Large Apt57 4 Kenwood667-0771/*** V ^ _v\** * % k r i ’ y * t •/,-'*>Eagle: Blackstone south of 53rd. Somewhat higher pricesand ostantatious, UC faculty may be found imbibing here.Maroon Restaurant Reviewif you’ve got it, flaunt it!THE EAGLEcocktails luncheon dinner late snacks5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933 Fern. Roommate Wtd. Grad Studentor working girl. 4 rm apt. Ownroom, Near Campus 4 1C. AvailMarch 1st. 493-4213.3 need 4th fern for lovely 7 rmapt own bedrm, o "«hr. Air cond.$55/mo. 684-5690 aft a.Fern Rmmate to St.r Apt Own Rm65 mo 51st 4 Blkstn 924-4691.3rd fern roommate to share fur¬nished apartment with own room1 Blk from campus $66/month Gradstudent pref 493-3018.Need girl to share attractive apart¬ment w/small family, 51st nearcampus. Own room, $45. 667-6866Roommate wntd Win 4 Spr $50/monGreenwood nr 54th 955-1450 Roomfurnished."If You Don'tKnow Who HeIs, How CanYou Fight Him?"Rmmte Wanted. $46. 288-4303.Fern Rmate to Share Huge HP AptOwn Rm 4 Bath $65 643-8148Desperately Needed: Fern Rmmtefor spacious Warm HP Apt. 55th 4Univ. Own Room. 493-3896 After 5.HOUSE FOR RENT10 room house Hyde Park Jan 1-Aug 1, 6 br, 3 bath, laundry, $320+ ht + utilities, 538-7353.FOR RENTApartment In GREENWOOD Avail,for Student outside Housing System.Call Bill 955-2889.To sublet or share 5 rm apt.$110/mo to responsible female pre¬fer over 21; vie. of Co-op CallJoan day 475-3703.For Rent 3 Bdr Apt Near Campuswith Garage, 190/mo Avail. Feb. 1,Call 684-6361.Furnished Rm. 493-3328.FOR SALEFOR SALE: Ampeg Gemini Amp 4Gibson FI Electric Guitar Call 288-8406 Best Price.AM Clock Radio only $15. Call AMAkel FA4-8200.House. 3 bdr brick, 2 car garage,basement, convenient. So. Shorelocation '/z blk from 1C. Phone 374-4687 after 6PM.Upholstered 4 reclining chairs, desk,book cases, 9x12 rug, worktable,752-0180 eves.AR, DYNA, DUAL At Discounts atMUSICRAFT. Campus Rep 363-4555.5tf Xerox Copying Service. It's halfthe price but you have to wait overthe weekend to get your copy back.Great for books and papers whereeach page is copied only once. SGOuter Office — the only place youcan do it for 5c a page.'59 VW Sedan, high mileage butrecent engine overhaul, new brakesand drums, and new clutch andclutch assembly, clean interior,runs perfect, radio, no-rot, body ingood shape, everything works, per¬fect student transportation . . .promises many years of life . . .made when Volkswagens were stillas Hitler designed them. $425. Joelat ext. 3263 or 944-4798 between 6 49 PM.| jCa CjrenouHRestaurant Francias ’I Your host: Qaude Renie I(Open 11 am to 11 pmClosed Monday A. 1435 E. Hyde Park Blvd. .| Phone 684-4050 |^ for reservations ^ Elec Guitar, Gibson, 1 pickup, $85— 955-2993.Send back your advance JoffreyBallet tickets and buy tickets fortwo shows at the Maroon. 50% offbox office prices on all seats. Bet¬ter than T.V., more exciting thanthe weather, outlasts the New YorkTimes. Makes you feel you're offthe farm at last.WANTED: POWER ... for thevoter. Sen. George McGovern pinsthe Chicago Debacle on "manipu¬lated primaries" and rigged dele¬gate selection." Read his plans forsaving the Democratic Party byreturning it to the people in "TheLessons of 1968." In this month'sHARPER'S MAGAZINE, America'sFirst Monthly. On Sale Now.2 Studded Snow Tires for Volvo,Low Mi, $40, Call 955-5586.WARM MUSKRAT FUR COAT, $40or best offer. 643-2516 eves.IMPORTSI can get it for you wholesale, 97nation imports. If you can buy anequal quality item in the samequantity less expensively keep whatwe sold you 4 we'll give you a 50%refund. 3 piece woolen suit, jacket-shell — skirt, double knit, fullyfashioned with embroidery on jack¬et, 100% lambs wool 4 angora$30.00. Only one of myriad items.Jewelry, furniture, you name it,we'll get it.Box 2022 929-2210Division of B-P GuildSupport GroupCHARTERSFly anyplace, anytime, anywhere$1.35 per mile, sexy stewardess in¬cluded. Like: $230 approx, round-trip to Purdue Univ.,* 24 people.L'ENVOIA division of B-P GuildSupport GroupBox 259A 929-2210CHARTER FLIGHTSSeats N.Y./London N.Y. $179 Dec.17-Jan 5 288-1238PROSPECTIVESECONDARYSCHOOL TEACHERSFor M.A.'s, M.A.T's, Ed.M.'s, M.S.'sor above. Revolutionary approachto job-hunting. Nationwide director¬ies of positions: Public, independent.Deadline: Jan. 15. Inexpensive. Ap¬plications write: INTERCEPT, Box317, Harvard Square P.O., Cam¬bridge, Mass. 02138.SKIINGTHE GREAT SKI DOWN at Jack-son, Wyo. Spring Vac. $145. Detailsat SKI CLUB meeting Wed., Jan14, 7:30PM, Ida Noyes. Film ofJackson 4 day trip plans.LOST AND FOUNDFound: Black 4 tan shepherd-typedog (female) w/red harness. Found1/5/70. 324-1426.FOUND: Frustration, betrayal, phy¬sical exhaustion — on BERNA¬DETTE DEVLIN'S U.S. fundraisingcampaign. Read Sara Davidson's re¬vealing diary of the Irish Revolu¬tionary's 13-day American educa¬tion. In this month's HARPER'SMAGAZINE, America's First Month¬ly. On sale now.PEOPLE FOR SALEExpert typing 15 page minimum.955-4649 pm's 4 weekends."May we do your typing? . . ."363-1104.WAKE UP SERVICE24hrs—reas.—Petunia—751-2858.WANTEDInexpensive VW Any Condition.955-7809.PERSONALSSympathetic ear. 643-7178.SYRD is having a ball. Will you?Saturday, the 17th.Blue GARGOYLE Opens TODAY.Karate — Descendent of the Exer¬cises 4 Meditations of the Shao-LinTemple Monks.Fiery-eyed radicals lacking a cause:Attack yourselves (peripherally) tothe forthcoming Smyrd Ball — Andride to glory on its coattails.Wegener Report discussion, SwiftCommons, Jan 9, 3:30PM Refresh¬ments served after.Royal Gettmann on Victorian pub¬lishing, International House, Jan. 12,8:00PM.Tree are for leaves. Poster distri¬butors, eschew temptation!B-P PIPE DREAMTobaccos blended to your taste.Guaranteed! If dissatisfied returnhalf portion for refund towardsnext order. Imported pipes •Box 5510 or 929-2210A division of B-P Guild SupportGroup. Help wish Ludwig a Happy 200th.Sing in Beethoven's Ninth, to beperformed March 7 and 8. CallGene Narmour, 285-5164, or JamesKidd, 643-5446, for information.Julian Bond at Sammy Rayner'sbread party. Colonial House restaurant Jan 11 4 PM Call Ml 3-0800ext 3275 for tickets.'59 Volkswagen, clean, radio, ex¬cellent running condition, completenew clutch assembly and motoroverhaul . . . needs new home . . .$450.PEACE FLAG DECALSPeace dove superimposed overAmerican flag or flag in black 4white hands. For window or bump¬er. The Peace Flag Decal Co, 3 EOntario, Room 24, Chicago, III. 50ceach.If you want to do something aboutall the shit floating around inthe air contact Citizens RevoltAgainst Pollution (CRAP) at anew number 463-0308.Karate-Sport 4 Self-Defense, M 4 F,6:30, INH, Beg Mon Jan 12.WHAT YOU CAN DO TO AID THEAMERICAN INDIAN: Send lettersof support to the American IndianCenter, 3189 16th Street, San Fran¬cisco. Send checks or money or¬ders to the American Indian CenterBldg Fund or Alcatraz Relief Fund.Bank address for funds is Bank ofCalifornia, Mission Branch, 306016th street, San Francisco.POLLUTION IS KILLING YOU.ACT NOW.For Complaints on pollution call793-2562. And help WMAQ-TV amassletters and petitions about pollutionto send the attorney general bywriting WMAQ-TV, MerchandiseMart, Chicago.SOME SOUND ADVICE! StereoComponents at Savings. MUSI¬CRAFT. CAMPUS REP BOB TA¬BOR 363-4555.St Xerox Copying Service. Its halfthe price but you have to waitover the weekend to get your copyback. Great for thick books andpapers you have to make a copyof each page of and there's no rush.The politics of participation live!Quality Music — Jazz 4 Song atthe NIGHTCLUB Sat Ida Noyes8PM-1."Feet don't fail me now!" JoffreyAgnew hates jazz improvisation.Do you? Mandel tonight!WANTED: POWER ... for themiddle-class. "Professional Radical"Saul Alinsky explains how the hung¬up majority must be empowered torelieve its own frustrations beforeit can proceed to relieve the suffer¬ings of the poor; and describesmethods of organizing for action,via graduated sales tax, stock prox¬ies, chewing gum. In this month'sHARPER'S MAGAZINE, America'sFirst Monthly. On sale now.Julian Bond at Mandel Hall Sunday8PM.PERSONAL: "Confessions of aWhite Racist." Texas-born LarryL. King recounts his tortured at¬tempts to dispel half a lifetime ofinbred hatred; discovering that theblack birthright of petty humiliationhas caused more hatred and vio¬lence than the lack of social oreconomic opportunity. In thismonth's HARPER'S MAGAZINE,America's First Monthly. On salenow.Release Your Pent-up Aggressionswith Karate — M4F, 6:30, INH."Theinnerexperience"?ltcanhappenattheUofC-Meditation-TechnologyBondChapelWed.,Janl4,12noon.WANTED: POWER ... for theblack revolution. Veteran blackleader Bayard Rustin contends thatviolence, separtism and ultimatumsdo not a revolution make; that truerevolutionary reform will come onlythrough trade unions, coalitionpolitics and the Democratic Party.In this month's HARPER'S MAGA¬ZINE, America's First Monthly. Onsale now.Discussion Tonite on "Abortion"Led by Rev E. S. Parsons, Cross¬roads. 5621 Blackstone 8PM.Julian Bond 3PM Sunday at MandelHall $1.00 There will be a T.V.Karate-Fusion of Mind 4 Body.M 4 F, 6:30, Ida Noyes. Beg Mon.The Maroon eats at the Eagle,when you've had it flaunt itJanuary 9, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7A A'THEBOOKSTORE ISOPEN!(NEW LOCATION - BEHIND THE WALL -NORTHEAST CORNER - ELLIS & 57th)ALL REQUIRED & RECOMMENDED BOOKS &SUPPLIESOPEN TOMORROW, SAT., JAN. 10th - 9:00 -3:00THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE1020 EAST 57th STREETIf you were bornafter 1948,you’re in luck.If you’re under 22, you can jointhe TWA Youth Club.Which means that everytime youfly with us in the continental U.S.,you’ll get 40% off regular coach fares,on a standby basis.If we don’t'fly where you want togo (and we fly to 42 cities around thecountry), just take another airline. Youcan still use our Youth Club Card.You can also use your card fordiscounts at the Hilton and Sheraton Hotels.*All of which means our YouthClub Card can save you loads ofmoney. Which isn’t bad for a $3.00card.Just mail in your application withall the correct information, and don’tworry about it.Your application won’t be rejected.TWATWA YOUTH CLUBIDENTIFICATION CARD APPLICATIONFOR AGES 12 thru 21City Stott Zip Cod*3. Male □ Female □ 4. Hair Color 5. Eye Color-6 Date of BirthMonth Day Year7 Fee enclosed $3 00 Chech □ $3 00 Money Order OMake checks payable to: TWA(Not refundable — DO NOT MAIL CASH)>. SijnetwreMail ta: Traas World Airlines rM. Mi 2992Clinton, laws 92732"in continental U.S. only. TRAVEL RESTRICTED ON CERTAIN HOLIDAY PfRlQOS THE JEWISH COMMUNITYCENTERS OF CHICAGOOffer Summer Employment Opportunity inSoool Wort OritnM Country CompCAMP CHI - locotod 30 mifet North ofMod non and th. Univonrty of WbcominPositions:Count.ton - Mol.femoJ. (mutt bo Sophmor. or ovor)Suporvitory StaffSpodaKitt-Waferfront;tailing, canoeing, water tidingCom pc raftartt & CraftiSCHOLARSHIPS FORGRADUATE EDUCATIONStutfentt racoiving tboir Bachelor't Cfegro. inJuno who or. inHrtNd in advomad itudyfeoding to a Matter't Cfegr*. in Social GroupWori wilt b. int.rvi.wmJ for ScholarthipAwordt of $2-3,000 00 par yor for Mch oftho two yMrt of ttudy.Infervfewi will be Iwtd on WmJrwtdoy,January 31, at th. Hilfel Foundation. S71S SWoodtown. Pfeat. tign up at th. Hilfel Foun¬dation. For furtfwr information call FI 6-6700Ext. S13.A BETTERLIFE THROUGHBUDDHISMA10 Week Lecture-SeminarSeries Conducted by theVen. G. NL KuboseWed. Eve's 7:30 - 9 PMJan. 7 thru Mar. 11Fees: Series $15, $25 percouple. Single tickets $2.(Consideration given toStudents)BUDDHISTEDUCATIONAL CENTER1151W. Leland Avt.For Information & RegistrationColl 334-4661 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.)NEELY’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 BU 8-9645Thank YouSam M. NealyNeelys Standard Service Th* Corpat BornA diwwon of Corhood C»'PdW« how on anormousof now and uiad wall *o wdcarpatings. jtoircose runndtramnonta ond orao rug» (o”">lolaction of gonuint ond Ant*icon oriantols). Antique fornitutoo.Wa opan our worthouie topublic for rutoi! sabi on Wurdays ONLY from 9 - 4.122R W. Kin** («»****.NU4-1M9 ia7PNon-Profit Org.t.s. postacePAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 79318/The Chicago Maroon/January 9, 1970