Steve A ok IBENEDICTION: Reverand Frank Malbranche gives speech prior to SVNA's one minute sit-in at ad building.Anti-hunger Drive Gathers FoodA campus drive running through Febru¬ary 2 to collect breakfast food for hungrypeople was kicked off Sunday, as part ofthe nationwide anti-hunger drive led by Op¬eration Breadbasket, the economic arm ofthe Southern Christian Leadership Confer¬ence (SCLC). Students and faculty arebeing asked to donate non-perishablebreakfast foods in one of the boxes locatedin most campus buildings and dorms. Joanne Gabbin, a graduate student inEnglish who is coordinating the drive here,said the purpose is “to dramatize thepresent scourge of hunger that exists in theUS, and to allow those concerned people theopportunity to contribute support to thiscause.” Food collected here will go to themain Operation Breadbasket center in Chi¬cago, and then be distributed to the fivebreakfast feeding cells in the city visited by hundreds of hungry Chicagoans daily. Bothblacks and whites will be fed.Operation Breadbasket has declared Feb¬ruary “hunger month,” and is conductingthe anti-hunger drives in seven major citiesthroughout the country, hoping to bring at¬tention to the plight of hunger by havingthe cities declared national disaster areas,and thereby urge people and congressmento create better programs to deal with theproblem. Senator George McGovern (D-SD) kicked off the drive in Chicago Satur¬day, and said he is proposing a “humansecurity bill,” in Congress, which will pro¬vide a guaranteed minimum income andjobs for all able-bodied workers.Mrs Gabbin, who hopes to collect “athousand pounds of food,” on this campus,said boxes will be located in all dorms andmarried-student housing buildings as wellas major campus buildings. People canalso mail checks and money orders to Hun¬ger Breakfast Feeding Program, 366 E 47St, Chicago.The Rev. Jesse Jackson, national directorof Operation Breadbasket, said that nation¬al priorities must be reversed, in speakingon campus last October. He pointed outthat 70 percent of the US economy is spenton armaments, while less than 12 percent isused to alleviate hunger, and other healthproblems. The hunger drive will attempt toget those priorities reversed.Rev Jackson saw as a deeper cause ofhunger the distribution of wealth in thiscountry, the top one percent of the nationowning nearly 30 percent of the wealth,while the bottom 20 percent owns less than5 percent. In an appeal for support, RevJackson stated “America over-producesand under-consumes. We live in a land ofsurplus at one end, and starvation at theother end. The great problem is the corrup¬tion at the level of distribution which rein¬forces the gap between die over-fed and theunder-fed, between the greedy and theneedy.”Volume 78, Number 34 The University of Chicago Tuesday, February 3, 1970SVNA Remembers Ad Building Sit-inBy Sarah GlazerStudents for Violent Non-Action (SVNA)staged a one minute sit-in in the adminis¬tration building Monday morning followinga memorial rally commemoraiting lastyear’s sit-in.The service, held on the steps of the ad¬ministration building, opened with a fieryspeech by SVNA’s religious advisor, theReverend Frank Malbranche of the Primi¬tive Sub-Clavenist Church, who remindedhis audience of last year’s demands anddeclared, “Truly the life of the con-scienciable mind is dead.” The ministeralso recited a prayer warning the faithfulto beware of traitors.The Reverend was followed by a memberof Women’s Hedonistic Orgiastic Revolu¬tionary Experiment (WHORE), who deliv¬ered a tirade against the inmates of theadministration building. “Who are thesepeople?” she demanded. “They are mostlywomen, who spend their time copyingcopies of copies and eating lunch! Theminds they copy are weak.” She criticizedtypists for continuing to perpetrate suchterms as “rational discourse” and “the lifeof the mind.” and urged them to “type theone valid word on your typewriter — bull¬shit.” Francesca Malbranche closed withthe exhortation to “open up to the life of thebody.”About 150 people, lured by flyers postedlast week — (“The life of the mind is dead,long live the life of the mind.”) — and byother attachments to SVNA, remainedcheerfully enthusiastic throughout. They re¬sponded to each speech with lusty cheers.Frank Malbranche, distinguished fromSVNA’s many other national officers by hiscowboy hat, spoke on the “continuing op¬pression of men by women” and pointed to“the faculty’s attempt to wipe out rationaldiscourse, by refusing to allow students toparticipate equally with faculty.” Wavingat the six floor monolith behind him he que¬ried, “What goes on in here?” Malbrancheexpressed indignation at the summonseswhich unidentified persons were handing“to us — an integral part of the com¬munity.” The summonses, identical tothose employed in last year’s sit-in, weresigned F. Malbranche.At the close of the rally the crowdtrooped into the lobby of the administrationbuilding, although guards inside attemptedto lock the doors against them. The Rever¬end led the seated demonstrators in a rous-Continued on Pago SixStave AofciSUMMONS: Students receiving noticesfrom SVNA thanking them for being ina disruptive action.pRobie House Possesses Long HistoryINTERIOR: The lounges in Robie House.Students Seek Plan For CoopA group of students met with WalterWalker, vice president for planning, lastweek to discuss the possibility of setting upa student coop.The students are presently looking for le¬gal counsel to see about the feasibility ofsuch a coop.Walker noted that the students wouldhave to present more concrete proposalsabout location, feasibility and price, beforethe University could act on establishingone.He added that the committee $till hadmuch to present, especially the financialaspects, before the University could consid¬er one. If they gave a good financial pros¬pectus and a reasonable location, Walkercommented, the University would probablygo along with them.Such a coop would have to be ultimatelydecided on by Charles O’Connell, dean ofstudents.A student coop has not existed on campus for many years, and many students feelthat Ida Noyes Hall, the center for studentactivities, is inadequate.UC To Nominate3 To InternshipsThe University plans to nominate threestudents for the Washington Summer InternProgram, to be held this summer in Wash¬ington DC. The program includes workingin federal agencies, and participating inspecially arranged seminar groups whichwill discuss government problems.Interested students can pick up appli¬cation forms in the office of career coun¬seling and placement (Reynolds club 200).Applicants must be second, third or fourth-year undergraduates, and must have agrade point average of 3.5 or more. Appli¬cations must be in by February 15.BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, February 3ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello, University Organ¬ist, Rockefeller Chapel, 12:30 pm.MEETING: FOTA, Reynolds Club, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: International House, 50 cents, 8:0010:30 pm.DOC FILMS: Foolish Wives, Cobb Hall, 8:00 pm.MEETING: Outing Club, Ida Noyes, 8 pm. to discusstrips.Wednesday, February 4DOC FILMS: To Be or Not to Be, 8 pm; Ninotchka, 9:30pm; Quantrell.SPEAKER:Vincent McCullough, student body president,North Carolina A 8. T, Quantrell, 3 pm.VICTORIANA: Lecture by Jane Stedman, "VictorianPopular Satire: the Whip that Tickles," SS 122, 4 pm.Thursday, February 5PARTY: Israeli folk dancing, Hlllel. 7:30-11 pm, free. MEETING: CHEC, Radical Education, 7 pm, EleanorClub Lounge.VICTORIANA: Film-"Dr Jeckyll and Mr Hyde" (silent^,Quantrell, 7 pm.SALE: Pots, candles, jewelry, etc made by Hyde Park¬ers, 11 am to 5:30 pm, Reynolds Club South.GO CLUB: The playing and instruction of Go, INH,7 pm.Friday, February 6SALE: Pots, candles, jewelry, etc made by Hyde Park¬ers, 11 am to 5:30 pm, Reynolds Club South.MEETING: Student history group committee is solicitingstudent opinion concerning William Sewell, instructorin history in the College. 2:30 to 4:30 pm, Cobb 302. Allinterested students welcome.FILM PREMIERE: Sympathy with the Devil, with theRolling Stones, directed by Godard, Quantrell, 7:15 and9:15 pm.VICTORIANA: Concert, Sir John Stainer's "The Cru¬cifixion," Unitarian Church, 8 pm.FILM: "Venceremos" and discussion of Mozambique-Portuguese war, led by Mr and Mrs Bill Minter, for¬mer teachers at the Mozambique Institute, Crossroads,5621 Blackstone, 8 pm.2/The Chicago Maroon/February 3, 1970' \', . lY' • By Gordon KatzRobie House, Frank Lloyd Wright’s inter¬nationally known masterpiece on campus,is something of an irony in contrast to theGothic towers and gargoyles that surroundit. Located on the northeast corner ofWoodlawn and 58th St., the house whichCarl Sandburg has called “a poem” pos¬sesses a history that dates back furtherthan the blueprints of most traditional Uni¬versity buildings.Long suffering from a lack of purposeand frequently unoccupied, Robie Houseseemingly assumed a permanent functionin July, 1966, when it became the home ofthe Adlai Stevenson Institute of Inter¬national Affairs. The Institute, a memorialto the late ambassador to the United Na¬tions and former governor of Illinois, “pro¬vides a center in which the world’s mostdistinguished statesmen, scholars, govern¬mental officials, and practical men of af¬fairs meet - to study problems affectingworld peace, according to its director, Wil¬liam Polk.Among the topics on which the Institutesponsored conferences during their firstyear were political violence and socialchange, “the lessons and mislessons ofVietnam;” development proposals for thethird world; and education in a modernsociety. In addition, the Institute promoteda study group on black power whichbrought a host of prominent figures underthe chairmanship of Charles V. Hamilton,then chairman of the political science de¬partment of Roosevelt University.Highlighting the organization’s secondyear was the Consortium of Colleges andUniversities program in which fellows ofthe Institute lectured at various academicinstitutions in the country. As a result ofthis program’s success, it is hoped that itwill be extended to universities in Africaand Latin America in the near future.One notable aspect of Robie House is itsinfluence on contemporary residential ar¬chitecture. According to the late Mies vander Rohe, the architectural concepts ofRobie House “saved us 20 years.” The“Prairie House” construction — its horizon¬tal lines, wide eaves, cantilevered construc¬tion, and low ceilinged, spacious rooms —foreshadowed the modern ranchhouse. “Al¬most every house built in America today,”said one Chicago architect, “owes some ofits ideas to Robie House.”It all began in 1906 when 27 year oldFrederick Robie, a Chicago bicycle manu¬facturer, asked his friend, Frank LloydWright, to design a house for a newly ac¬quired plot of land which he had purchasedfor $14,000.Robie demanded certain elements in thehouse, including natural lighting, a chil¬dren’s playroom at the ground level, a plan without a large hall to avoid its “wastespace and drafts,” the ability to look out athis neighbors without their intruding on hisprivacy, sunlight in the living room in theearly morning, bedrooms separate from thenursery, and a brick wall to keep the chil¬dren from wandering in the streets.Construction was supervised by a youngcontractor named Harrison Barnard whowas later to become head of a major Chi¬cago construction firm and a trustee of theUniversity of Chicago. In conformance withhis principle of designing a structure as anorganic whole, Wright also designed muchof the furniture, some of which was built in,and a $10,000 hand-woven rug that was im¬ported from Austria.Robie moved in towards the end of 1908.Three years later, however, he sold thehouse to W Taylor, who resided in thehouse a mere four months and sub¬sequently sold the real estate to MarshallWilbur. Wilbur stayed at Robie House for15 years, until 1926, when he sold the prop¬erty to the Chicago Theological Seminaryas a site for that institution’s future ex¬pansion.The Chicago Theological Seminary (CTS)used Robie House variously as a classroombuilding, a dining hall, a temporary dor¬mitory, and a conference center. For rea¬sons, some obvious and others unknown,Robie House was alternately designatedduring this period as Boat House, Confer¬ence House, Wilbur House, and WoodlawnHouse.In 1957 CTS announced that, in view ofnecessary structural and building code re¬pairs estimated to cost from $75,000 to$100,000, the house could not be preservedand would be razed to provide part of a sitefor a married students’ residence. The an¬nouncement brought a flurry of protest,and a movement to raise funds to save thestructure was organized. Among the move¬ment’s members were the American In¬stitute of Architects, the Commission onChicago Architectural Landmarks, 250 Yalestudents, Mayor Daley, and architect Miesvan der Rohe.Although the movement was unsuccess¬ful, CTS succeeded in acquiring other prop¬erty large enough to accommodate the newhousing. In turn, Robie House was sold for$102,000 to Webb & Knapp National Corpo¬ration which used the building briefly as atemporary construction headquarters forthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Urban Re-Devel¬opment Project.Willing to offer the house to any agencythat would undertake its preservation,Webb & Knapp deeded the house to the Uni¬versity on February 2, 1963, thus temporar¬ily dispelling any fear of demolition. OnApril 1, 1964, Secretary of the InteriorStuart Udall declared Robie House a Na¬tional Historic Landmark.* l * i g. i i'. ■’■ > > V -: ''■ ■■kj w* '.. v * £, ' ^ •*« i?a To Spea^The'NewV^POLLUTION: Looking south from the top of the Prudential building. —Conspiracy Trial Turns Right To Courtesytho nthpr grouDs Dresent in theSteve Aoki By Sarah GlazerJohn Rossen, self-proclaimed “notoriousradical”, owner of the 3-Penny Cinema,and landlord of National SDS, will speak atthe opening session of Hyde Park CornerThursday night. Hyde Park Corner is “partof the Blue Gargoyle’s continuing effort toget people to talk to one another,” accord¬ing to the Gargoyle’s University liaisonDave Hakken. The Thursday night serieswill be modelled on Hyde Park, England,famous for its soap box speakers and dis-Deans SuggestAgainst ActionNo further action will be taken againstthe three members of International Social¬ists (IS) who were summoned last quarterto appear before a disciplinary committeefor harassing Maynard Krueger, professorof economics.According to James Vice, assistant deanof students, the committee of the councilrecently referred the students to their re¬spective academic deans instead of to a dis¬ciplinary committee. The deans recom¬mended that no further action be taken.The three students are David Brown, agraduate student; Charles Gans, ’72; andRobin Sandow, ’72. The group which theyare a part of reportedly were concernedwith the study of Marx in Krueger’s class,last quarter, when they distributed leafletscriticizing the Social Science IH readinglist. cussions. Hakken explained that the in¬tention is not to provide “a set of activi¬ties”, but rather to “bring together peoplewho know about a specific area of in¬terest to UC students.” The discussionswill be informal, so that people with con¬flicting views can exchange opinions. ThisThursday, for instance, Hakken hopes thatpeople from SDS, IS and other groups willbe present when Rossen talks about theradical movement in this country and apolitical group he has founded called “thenew patriotism.”“The new patriotism”, says Rossen, wants“to eliminate injustice and take patriotismaway from the reactionaries.” Rossen istrying to promote patriotism as “love of thecountry and the people, not of money andprivilege for the few.” Through the new pa¬triotism, Rossen wants to structure an or¬ganization based on “American revolution¬ary tradition and heritage.”Rossen’s activism goes back to the Span¬ish Civil War; he is a veteran of the Abra¬ham Lincoln Brigade. He is a former mem¬ber of the Communist Party and SDS, aformer chairman of “Fair Play for Cuba”in Chicago, and the publisher of The LittleRed, White and Blue Book: Quotationsfrom Great Americans. Besides the 3-Pen¬ny Cinema, Rossen owns a chain of Spanishmovie theaters and buildings housing thenational office of the SDS Weatherman fac¬tion and the Women’s Liberation Union.Rossen is no longer a member of SDS.Speaking about the present factions, hesaid, “The Weathermen are paranoids, PLis a group of neanderthals and RYM IIwants a replay of what happened yearsago.”By Diane Applebaum“We do you the courtesy of letting you inhere; now you do us the courtesy of keep¬ing quiet.” These words were spoken by acourt marshall to the spectator section atthe Conspiracy 7 Trial. Provocation: a fewgiggles during the testimony of one of thewitnesses for the defense.If the normal privilege of attending apublic trial as a spectator has become a“courtesy,” the general atmospherecreated by the marshalls’ conduct is any¬thing but courteous. Outside the FederalBuilding, the cold and the hopeful assureeach other that “the first 35 in line alwaysget in.” Upstairs in the waiting room, threelong-hairs have been sitting (quietly) forfour hours; before that, they waited threehours outside. Two middle-aged, tight-lip¬ped women in the waiting room divide theirattention between the kids and the mar¬shalls. One woman approaches a (white)marshall, and whispers, loudly, “Hey, can’tyou let us in?” The marshall raises his eye¬brows and shows the palms of his hands inan “I wish I could but I can’t” gesture.Then the woman whispers something in hisear, and he says, audibly, pointing at thewaiting spectators, “them’s the ones whoare gonna run tha country!”At least one can’t accuse the marshall ofdiscriminatory practices. Turning to meand two girls representing a campus radiostation (not ours), he said, “Girls, there’sjust no more room in the press section.”Then, after examining the credentials ofanother young woman, he called to a fellowmarshall down the hall, “Hey, do we have namics of the other groups present in thecourtroom, and the atmosphere created bythem, cannot be ignored.The lively “family” of defendants sharesthe right side of the courtroom with thepress. Wives, girlfriends, and friends of thedefendants and their lawyers are unusuallyalert to the mood of the court, and manybecome vocally expressive even at the riskof being ejected from the court. For ex¬ample, when Rennie Davis was being cross-examined, he mentioned that he had madea certain speech during the Conventionweek while standing right next to FredHampton, “who was murdered by the Chi¬cago police ...”“Objection ”“Sustained. This trial has nothing to dowith the Hampton case.”The hissing and groans from the familywere quickly stopped by the marshalls.The official press section is on the front,right side of the courtroom, facing the jury.Some of the press overflows into the familysection, however, (especially artists whowant different perspectives of the action).Therefore, it is not entirely clear when themarshalls say “there is no more room” ifthey mean for family, or for press. Or foranybody.I had made it into this section, as well asthe campus radio-station girls. One of thempromptly fell asleep. The other, said “ohwow” when Mailer was brought in, and “doyou think I’ll be able to get his autograph?”Somehow, I don’t think she was representa¬tive of press, and certainly not of family.The left, rear section of the courtroomhouses the spectators — for the most part’ — "♦omina tn Wait flWCANTMB.storthemarshall down the hall, “Hey, do we nave houses me speuiaivio — w — -3 section for lady lawyers?” The “over- young people who have the stamina to waitflow” lino nf nrocc anH lawvprs he directed ip the cold to get in. One exception, how-• -A 1 o<4\r \i7 Vi aIWl JLUUJ Yt jr V* W • —flow” line of press and lawyers he directedUS to slowly diminished throughout themorning, but “ladies’ turn” never came.That afternoon I was luckier. Not onlywas Norman Mailer to be a witness for thedefense, but there was room in the court¬room. Not only was there room in thecourtroom, but an entire row was empty,and remained unfilled all afternoon.Although the only truly (legitimately?)active participants in the trial are the wit¬nesses, the judge and the lawyers, the dy- tuiu IU gv, ....ever, is a small, robust, elderly lady, whoclaims she has missed only three days ofthe trial, and swears she would “give herlife for those boys.” During a recess, shetold me, “You young people have to becareful; you must live. I have to be carefultoo. People think it strange for an old ladyto believe in the young.”The spectator section is usually not near¬ly as openly expressive as the family sec-Continued on Page Six 28 E JftfltMN 497.7777CHICAGO ni 1115Cohmatv 3. 1070/The Chicago Merwo/l.EDITORIALS LETTERS TO THE EDITORSThe Pollution BattleLast week we briefly mentioned in this column an issue thatdeserves more careful attention, and some of the misunderstandingsthat arose from that cursory discussion call for a more detailedexamination now. The issue is pollution.The misconception that apparently arose is that some peoplefelt that we were saying that pollution is not a problem. Nothingcould be farther from the truth; we are as aware as anyone of thestatistics that predict our collective death in thirty years, and ofthe filth that physically confronts us every time we take a deepbreath or look out of a third story window.Our wariness about pollution stems rather from the way thatpoliticians are making hay out of it, gleefully seizing the opportunityto ally with students on a basically non-ideological issue. Senatorssponsor teach-ins and conferences and solemnly agree with stu¬dents whom they last year condemned. They are relieved at thechange in the mood of the country that has suddenly made “ideal¬ism” a pretty and harmless ideal of clean streams and air.We are not trying to mock those who work for the cause of abetter environment, nor do we think they are selling out their idealsif they join with politicians in this cause. What we resent are thesententious comments of slick magazines and slicker senators andstate of the union messages that announce that environment is thenew cause of the seventies, that the youth of America have comehome to the fold. We are distressed that students are falling forthis.We very much fear a student alliance with Nixon; he is thesame wheeler-dealer he has always been, and his effort to get thesympathy of students (who will just be old enough to vote in 1972)through his emphasis on pollution control strikes us as a shabbytrick. Of course our waters need to be cleaned up; of course weneed $10 billion at least for that cause. But what about the hun¬dreds of billions we need for our cities, for health, education andwelfare?This country definitely needs a disaffected group, people whowill dissent and challenge the men who run things. You don’t haveto be a radical yourself to understand the vital functions radicalsperform. If radicals hadn’t protested the war — and won thesympathy of most students — would there now be such widespreaddisapproval of our actions in Vietnam? We need radicals, and weneed a probing, constant, serious questioning of the system thatruns this country. The fight against pollution does not offer sucha challenge to the system.We like clean air and we like clean water. So does everybody.The basic agreement on this issue is the reason why the fightagainst pollution can never become a way of getting at the reallysick aspects of society. This is no reason to abandon the cause, butit is a warning to those who enter into it to recognize the issue forwhat it is, and not to expect from it what it cannot yield.Fighting HungerMost of us know, not from experience, but from some senseof right, that hunger is a hideous and intolerable situation. Werecognize it as intolerable, and all the more so for existing in aplace where there is so much abundance for some, while othersstarve.We are now being given a chance to do something about it,right on campus. It is one of the most direct responses possible:giving food. Operation Breadbasket this month is sponsoring ahunger breakfast feeding program, to dramatize the problem ofhunger, and has set up hunger boxes on campus for donations ofnon-perishable food.We are sure that very few people on campus would see thisas any but an important and useful campaign. If only half thepeople who sympathize with the cause will take the trouble toremember and actually do something about it, we feel that ourcampus can contribute a substantial amount to Operation Bread¬basket’s campaign on this campus.The Chicago Maroon/February 3, 1970 Phony Invovlement?We were alarmed at the final paragraphof last Friday’s Maroon editorial, whichechoed the sentiments of the WHPK edito¬rial on page 5, to the effect that in¬volvement in the fight against environmen¬tal decay is a “phony involvement.” Theargument of these editorials centered onthree basic points:• What constitutes an issue most worthy ofstudent involvement? For the Maroon, it isevidently one which involves an “ideologic¬al clash.” An ideological issue assumes aWe and a They — Good Guys and BadGuys. The point of such an issue is thatthere is a target for dissatisfaction “whenthings don’t work out to your liking,”namely the Bad Guys: it is fundamentallya political issue (where would the Crusadeshave been without a Jerusalem to marchon?). The pollution issue is not appealingprecisely because it is of such concern toeveryone that it does not admit of ideologic¬al polarization. Those who indiscriminatelyseek polarization need it to convince them¬selves that they are scoring revolutionarypoints against the Establishment. Do thesepeople need an ideological reason for flush¬ing their toilets?• This apparent lack of ideology con¬vinces the Maroon that the battle againstenvironmental problems is “a way of chan¬nelling student anger into relatively harm¬less areas.” “Harmless” here presumablymeans that the issue will not involve directconfrontation with the Power Structure,that it will not lead to a revolutionary stu¬dent movement. The pollution issue, how¬ever, is not harmless in any sense.The Powers That Be owe their power tothe successful promulgation of one articleof faith: that unbounded economic prolifer¬ation, technological advance, and two-cars-in-every-garagedom are an unquali¬fied good and the mark of a successfulsociety. Entrepeneurship based on this ar¬ticle of faith has resulted in the inequitiesnow present in our society. A tenet of theanti-pollution movement is that the doctrineof unbounded growth is not necessary — itis fatal. The only thing worse than an un¬derdeveloped country is an overdevelopedcountry.Rather than dissipating the force of arevolutionary student movement, a broad-based campaign which is grounded on theseconsiderations can do nothing else than ac¬celerate the awareness among students ofthe necessity for sweeping social change. Infact, the change in attitude described aboveis nothing short of revolutionary. That isnot harmless.It is completely ridiculous to assume thatEditor: 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 Froulo (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff; Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glaser, PateGaodsell, Stan Goumas, Gordon Rats, SusanGerard Level, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Ellen Sassman, 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 RoomsIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th303 and 304 InSt., Chicago, 111. 40437. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3243. 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. the anti-pollution campaign will “channelstudent anger into relatively harmlessareas.” Those students who have beenangry enough to take political action upto now will certainly not stop their activi¬ties to fight pollution; and those whohaven’t been angry enough in the past maydamn well get angry enough because ofthis. That is not harmless.• It is characteristic of the attitude, ex¬emplified in these editorials that the issueis seen as one of “the little guy against thebig bad industrialist.” This is naive: whatwe are engaged in is not another con¬frontation-tactics Movement-versus-Estab-lishment skirmish. It is a last-ditch attemptto halt a world-wide lemming-march tooblivion. Are we to sit on the sidelines be¬cause of a paranoid fear of being “co-op¬ted?”David Barnard 70Mary Barnard 71David Luban 70Goumas AttackedI consider it remarkable that with such awell informed, up to date, unsheepish infor¬mant at hand the Maroon had any need tosend anyone, let alone Stan Goumas, to in¬terview Len Radinsky. After all, Radinskyhad merely been to Cuba, an unimagina¬tive, plebian, and sheepish effort.Obviously Radinsky was not up to snuff.It needed only a little goumassian pencil¬ling in the Incredible Cuban Repression(ICR) frothed forth from Radinsky viaGoumas’ typewriter. Fine thing, freedom ofthe press!I feel terribly apologetic entering thisparticular fray. I too have sheepishly spedon two separate occasions to Habana Libreinstead of The Reader’s Digest in search ofTruth. I too have tightened my belt, volun¬tarily and manually labored. I too grew en¬thused about cane harvests and mecha¬nized rice production — mea culpa. Why,oh, why did I not trip and fall over all thespies (“informers”) in my path or back ofit? Why didn’t I feel the need of gun? Whydid I get taken in by singing and laughingand chalking up of harvest figures? Whydidn’t they look starved to me? And allthose books I carried in . . . why weren’tthey confiscated?There is an empiricist devil gnawing atmy vitals that makes me go to places andactually look and ask and see, that hasdriven me to this unhappy pass, jammedme in this most sticky of wickets, but ...never again.Goumas Knoweth All. Interviewer (thehell with mere me) interview thyself!Miami before Michaelmas! Bay of Pigs notof Sheep! Better crooks than books! Ra¬tional Discourse Forever.Maldita Sea GoumesRosario Morales LevinsDepartment of AnthropologyRadinsky Replies; . ..-»el-rift*v tSo CHS*'*©*' ^The three letters on Cuba in Friday’s Ma¬roon require reply. To take the last (Vol¬sky’s) first: my impressions on voluntarylabor in Cuba were based on examinationof factory records and discussion withworkers and students in August, 1969. Itseems unlikely that in a country with a la¬bor shortage workers would be fired for notdoing extra work.Chris Hobson, in his letter, relies heavilyon Huberman and Sweezy’s interpretationof the Escalante affair and their evaluationof morale in Cuba. Other radicals have dif¬ferent interpretations and impressions ofthose matters and one would hope that ifHobson were a “serious revolutionary” hewould engage in critical discussion withthem instead of indulging himself with let¬ters to the Maroon.Stan Goumas can personally interpret myremarks on Cuba any way he wishes, butwhen he interviews me for the Maroon andascribes to me words I never said, he is atbest being a bad reporter. He is again in¬accurate in Friday’s Maroon when hewrites I claimed socialism has workedContinued on Page Sixi»*>»* * ..., ,.vv / ,,$/ -iV'V*. * « V V * ?* * — ^ B • I __is Women s Lib Becoming a Bandwagon?By Helen Schary"May 1 please have the extension ofKatherine Bailey?""What department is she in? Is she asecretary?""No, an assistant professor in Humani¬ties."Before my conscious awakening to the is¬sue of women’s liberation, I do not think Iwould have been sensitive to the operator’sassumption that a woman in the Universitywas probably a secretary. After my initialindignant reaction, though, I rememberedthat only six percent of the University fac¬ulty is female, so the operator was more orless on safe ground in assuming that awoman at the end of any extension was ei¬ther a student, a secretary or a facultywife.The women who surrounded me as I grewup were as liberated — or as enslaved — astheir husbands. The position of partners inthe marriage was as determined by person¬ality as it was by sex. I saw as many casesof domination by the woman as vice versa.Perhaps the phenomenon of female subser¬vience as a general rule was absent from my parents’ milieu: middle to uppermiddle class businessmen or professionals?But observing student couples in the Uni¬versity a pattern again refuses to be estab¬lished. It is true that men and women doassume standard societal roles in that thewomen cook more, and in general play amore aesthetic and leisurely role. But howmany times do husband and wife visit theCoop together on a Saturday afternoon —there are so many couples pushing super¬market carts together and standing on linesthat it seems like a folk event.And babies in Hyde Park are just as of¬ten seen slung over their father’s back In-dian-style as on their mother’s. Men I knowlove children: it is their promise of immor¬tality and fulfillment as it is to their wives.They would not be ashamed to caress theirchild, to wash, dress, or feed him. After all,the child is the product of a love union —not a symbol of the woman as a mechanicalproduction device nor a sex “object.” Forher a child is a confirmation of her human¬ness, her humanity, and her love, not asymbol of her bondage.I see a contemporary American paradoxwhich I find frighteningly revealing. On theone hand sociologists decry “Momism” —Nightclub To Close At 2 AMThe Nightclub, Saturday evening musicand food center in Ida Noyes Hall’s CloisterClub, will be open from 9 pm to 2 am.According to Michael Buckner, club man¬ager and chairman of the Bandersnatchcommittee, the expanded hours will betteraccommodate the club’s late night clien¬tele.The dimly lit club, with a capacity of 150,offers live modern-jazz music by a fourman house group. “We guarantee good-music every night,” Buckner said. There istable service for any food served at the5‘ WEEKEND XEROXCOPY SERVICEStudent Govt. Outer Office217 Ida Noyes Hall (Bring materials inmon. - fri. 1-5 p.m pickupfollowing mon.)WE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITHAS ANOrdained MinisterWITH A RANK OFDoctorof DivinityWe are a fast growing faith, actively seeking new mem¬bers who believe as we do that all men should seek the♦ruth in their own way, by any means they deem right. Asa minister of the faith you can:t. Set up your own church and apply tor exemption fromproperty and othor taxes.*• Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiastic powers.3. Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries. Wecan ted you how.Get sizeable cash grants for doing missionary work for us.5- Some transportation companies, hotels, theaters, etc., giveministers reduced rates.get the whole PACKAGE FOR $20.00Your ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere inmis country. Your money back without question if thispacket isn't everything you expect it to be. Print yourname the way you wish it to appear on your DOCTOR OFDIVINITY and ORDINATION CERTIFICATE.SEND $20.00 TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHP.O. Box 1393, Dept. G-4Evanston, Illinois 60204 Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.But the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.•mm2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550Bandersnatch next door, plus egg rolls andimported cheese. There is no cover chargeand a 15 cents minimum.In addition to the musicians, the club em¬ploys five waitresses, two food workers,and a maitre d’.The young club, now in its fourth week,grew out of the Bandersnatch’s free jazznights this summer. However, Bucknersaid, the club is trying to create a separateidentity from the Bandersnatch.Future plans for the club include ex¬pansion to Friday nights and offering fulldinners. the overpowering woman-as-vulture — andwe hear the hate cries of Alexander Port¬noys. And what are the voices of womencrying out but invectives against the maleworld, a kind of phallic envy par ex¬cellence. I doubt if women are even sayingthese things as a response or a defense.Rather, it seems that the American move¬ment towards non-communication hasreached its epitome here, where man andwife trade reciprocal curses. It is a tragedyof negation, a nihilism of humanness. Thecomplaint should not be that his wifespends the whole paycheck on a fun-fur northat her husband expects her to always getup for the 4 am feeding. Instead we shouldraise a common lament at our deafness,our blindness, and above all, at our self¬ishness.A distressing sidelight to Women’s Liber¬ation is that it seems to be becoming abandwagon with everyone from the boredto the neurotic hopping on. Most disgustingis the current issue of Mademoiselle, whichis supposedly devoted to women’s liberation(“Women: the new sex”). Amidst the liter¬ally hundreds of pages of ads catering toevery physical need (and every artificialneed) of a young American female are adozen articles about women’s identity. Thearticles themselves are not offensive; someare intelligent and interesting. It was thebrilliant perception of the promoters of themagazine that what is now needed to sellMademoiselle—symbol of woman’s sheep¬like acceptance of inanity. — is preciselywomen’s liberation rhetoric cleverly in¬serted between the advertisements. In 1970 this blatent cynicism does not even sur¬prise, but it still outrages.The Women’s Liberation Movement isneither superfluous nor unnecessary. In¬stitutionalized prejudice is undeniable andcan be effectively fought through organiza¬tion and publicity. Job discrimination,abortion laws, day care centers — theseare legitimate worthwhile issues. Also posi¬tive are women’s discussions and mutualexploration of identity: her sexuality, herrelations to men and to other women, tofamily and to society. It is time women andmen asked themselves who they were in¬stead of swallowing whole a prefabricatednon-identity.I do not think, however, even the partici¬pation of millions of women in a movementwould end the leers and naked stares ofmen at a law school cocktail party, a busi¬ness convention, or an airport. A man’sgaze can be flattering or filthy; it is up tothe individual, and no amount of women’srap is going to change that.Last night I attended a WRAP session ina student coffee shop. As I listened to afervent discussion on the destructiveness ofthe nuclear family I could not help but per¬ceive the irony that their boyfriends haddriven these girls to the meeting and woulddutifully pick them up and escort themhome in safety after their bitterness wasspent.Helen Schary is a fourth year studentin the College.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevant to the University com¬munity. The opinions of the guest colum¬nists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit¬ting columns should contact the editor.j PIZZAPLATTER, Pizza, Fried ChickenI Italian FoodsI Compare the Price!11460 E. 53rd 643-2800I WE DELIVERL SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9 00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveGRAND OPENING MONDAY, JAN. 19lhFREE GIFT WITH EVERY PURCHASE.BOOKSFORBLACK STUDIESSOCIAL STUDIES BIOGRAPHIESHISTORY (AMERICAN) HISTORY (AFRICAN)ESSAYS ARTSNOVELS POSTERSBUCK GREETING CARDSBESIBLACK EDUCATIONAL SERVICES INC.1900 E. 71st ST. 667-5200 * Corned DLriit ** 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *Rhone: FA 4-!65? 2THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEMPrograms for American students-1970-71(Some Scholarships and Fellowships Available)I ONE YEAR PROGRAM- for college sophomores and 1juniors.I GRAOUATE STUDIES toward Master s andDoctoral degrees.I REGULAR STUOIES toward R.A and B.S. degreesI FRESHMAN/PREPARATORY YEAR for high schoolgraduates.I SUMMER COURSES - given in English iFor applications and information:OFFICE OF ACADEMIC AFFAIRS / AMERICAN.FRIENDS OF THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY11 EAST 69 STREET, NEW YORK, N Y. 10021 / 212 988 8400 UC DRIVERSSentry tries to ease the highcost of auto insurance foryoung drivers with thefollowing reductions:GOOD STUDENTDISCOUNTYOUNG DRIVERDISCOUNTIf you are a good student21-25 with a good drivingattitude, you've got itmade. Even if you don'tthink so, give me a call.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY MINSURANCEFebruary 3, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5rit MMIHMIHoffman RivallingDefenses TacticsContinued from Page Threetion. Perhaps those who have to stand inline from 5:00 in the morning have toomuch at stake to risk getting thrown out.In sharp contrast to the spectators arethe two rows of clean-cut “spectator law¬yers,” who sit directly in front of them.The jury sits in the left-front section ofthe courtroom. They remained motionlessand expressionless during most of the after¬noon, although on one occasion a few ofthem showed smiles: Norman Mailer wastestifying that he had begun to feel the im-SVNA Attempts2nd OccupationContinued from Page Oneing count to 60. As demonstrators left thebuilding they were handed notices reading:“Thank you for heeding our notificationthat you were participating in a disruptiveaction, and for deciding to vacate the ad¬ministration building. Your compliance hasaided the growth of the mission of the Uni¬versity. Don’t come back.”Although an attempt was made at a sec¬ond sit-in and some proposed that otherbuildings be taken alphabetically, mostparticipants heeded O’Connell’s notice post¬ed on the front door.Earlier in the morning SVNA had placeda member on every floor of the adminis¬tration building to hand out summonses andvacate notices to secretaries within. SVNAofficers said that Levi’s office was lockedshortly before the rally.In keeping with tradition, SVNA held anemergency meeting in Kent 107 Sundaynight to plan today’s rally and sit-in. pact of what was happening during con¬vention week when he heard Allen Ginsbergspeaking in a broken voice. He said that MrGinsberg usually had a superb speakingvoice, and to hear him faltering made adeep impression on him (Mailer).Judge Hoffman made a comment to theeffect that the court was aware of the na¬ture of Mr Ginsberg’s voice, as they had allheard him speak. This comment promptedchuckles from some press members,spectators and jury members. In this case,the marshalls evidently did not regardlaughter as a sign of “discourtesy” and oneof them even broke his habitual scowl andstarted to smile himself.Abbie and Jerry wore ties that day withtheir sweatshirts. The defendants playedmusical chairs around a long table to theright of the courtroom, just in front of theirfamily section. Whether they were madlyscribbling notes, or making faces at eachother, or dancing out from time to time tousher in a witness, the defendants were sel¬dom motionless. One cannot help but con¬trast their presence with that of the jury.The appearance and manner of the jurymembers represent drastically differentlife-styles from those of the defendants, al¬though their unexpressive faces betraylittle except perhaps their fatigue due tothe long sequestering.Judge Hoffman, on the other hand, seemsto be trying to rival the defendants inunorthodox, and sometimes outrageouscourtroom conduct. His consistently curtand sarcastic treatment of the defense law¬yers, and his refusal to allow some wit¬nesses to testify as to the intent of the de¬fendants in a trial where intent is thecharge, are outrageous in a way that AbbieHoffman’s blowing kisses to the jury couldnever be.INDONESIAN FOOD-DRINKSTHE VOLSTEAD ACT2238 N. LINCOLN348-7228Truth is, it would be comparatively easy.But we want somebody with more than a pat answer for everything.We need electrical engineers, physicists, mathematicians and systemsanalysts who can think creatively and speak their minds.People who can think logically about solving communications, radaror information systems problems for the defense of the free world. Ortechnical men who can think creatively about solving problems in air trafficcontrol or urban mass transportation systems.You won’t find any yes men coming up with . . ,the answers to these complex problems. |yj I I W HGet in touch with us. h.uj.i.hii.iiA robot couldn't do the |Ob we have in mind.Interviews will be conducted on campus February 17. 1970Sign up now at the placement office Or write for more information:Mr. F.O. Brown, The MITRE Corporation, 4000 Middlesex Tpkc.. Bedford, Mass. 01730If we want a robot who answers"yes”all the time,well build one.6/The Chicago Maroon/February 3, 1970 5 » '••* * c » ■ > timu i s »tr »• mirwgti i i • iLETTERS TO THE EDITORSContinued from Page Four“economic miracles” in Cuba. It would bea miracle to overcome 50 years of US-en¬forced economic underdevelopment in 11years, especially with the overt and covertUS-sponsored attacks and the continuingembargo. What the Revolution has accom¬plished so far is adequate diet for all Cu¬bans, adequate housing for all, free medic¬al care available to all, education free andavailable to all, full employment. Theireconomy is more diverse and healthier nowthan before 1959, and they produce and ex¬port a lot more than just sugar, as Goumasclaims ... for a recent review, see Huber-man and Sweezy, 1969, Socialism in Cuba.There are so many inaccuracies and dis¬tortions in Goumas’ article, one wonderswho mistitled it, “Facts on Cuba.” Skilledworkers, professionals and draft-age menare allowed to leave, the latter after com¬pleting their 2 years service. Forced laboris not practiced, apparently not even inprison camps ... a Cuban emigre whoserved a five year sentence for counter¬revolutionary activity recently wrote in aU.S. magazine he had a choice of agricul¬tural work, education or inactivity. Food isnot rationed in “measly amounts”; the freecafeteria meals we sampled in universitiesand work places were quite ample.We talked with several Cubans who werewaiting to emigrate and the main reasonsthey gave for wanting to leave were mate¬rial ones (expecting higher living standardsin the US). The fact that no other LatinAmerican countries are socialist surely hasmore to do with US Marines in the Domini¬can Republic, US Green Berets and CIA inBolivia, etc., than the peoples of thosecountries rejecting socialism, as Goumaswrites.My Cuba talks have been open to all, andthere has been open discussion after them.If Goumas or anyone else felt they were“one-sided,” they could have come and de¬bated me. I never demanded, as he wrote,that the Maroon report any of my lectures,sheepishly or otherwise. Finally, Goumas’suggestion that generous students donatetheir textbooks to poor Americans is path¬etic; what poor people in the US need is notcharity but a revolution.Leonard Radinsky Resident MastersBill Phillips’ conjectures about a “Ger-man-Harvardian tradition” of resident“masters” in last Friday’s Gadfly columnto the College no more good than his lameattempt to discredit it as an instrument of“social control.”Mr Phillips’ tactful use of New Left rhet¬oric is forgiveable — for Chicago, but none¬theless simplistic. And because sim¬plistic, and because dorm residents do haveundeniable complaints about living condi¬tions — incendiary. His nicely controlled,cynical gut-reaction serves no one.Perhaps he has a responsibility to a con¬stituency to air their grievances. He mighthave done so without taking up the tiredcampaign for purity of motives, and with¬out raising the drooping spectre of an in¬sidious “academic establishment”. Thetitle “master” will repel only those forwhom words themselves rather than ideasor prejudices trigger antagonism.Neither Harvard nor Yale have yet beenable to produce “surrogate fathers” withtheir “large endowments”, nar have theybeen able to “eliminate any distinction be¬tween academic and dormitory life” withtheir respective systems of resident tutors.The social conditions at Harvard to differconsiderably from conditions here, but thedifference in itself could hardly prevent thesuccess of Resident Masters and their fami¬lies in our large dormitory units.Mr Phillips experiences difficulty envis¬ioning “300 Chicago students eagerly ab¬sorbing the wisdom of some senior profes¬sor.” Mr Phillips is not alone. Others, how¬ever. not so naive or not so embattled, willcontent themselves to wait and see whathappens. In the Oxbridge-Harvard-Yaletradition “masters” have been and still areministers without portfolio. One takes themas one finds them. They have a lot to giveand. equally, a lot to receive. They wield nohostile “structure”. They mold to no im¬age. They live al fresco, and they learn andearn the right to survive.Let Mr Phillips restrict the grounds forhis objection to the institution of ResidentMasters to considerations with which he isfamiliar: cafeteria food, thin walls, andovercrowded doubles.Kevin LewisDivinity SchoolAnd then not alone. In fifty poems wandering inand out of fifty complementary photographs,twenty-year-old Mary Lee, with her long hair,naivete, and moody loneliness, captures the feel¬ings of loneliness so prevalent at her age, then thebeginning of love, its storms of awakeningexperience, withdrawal, and finally hope. This isthe tender, honest, open statement of love in anew and troubling time as one girl and boy meet it."The rains will play our song,my words, your tunes,and now we journey on."The moving photographsof this book are by theworld-famous team of *Alice and Peter Gowfand.“Little girl grownpaining like a woman.Free but alone.”TenderBougFifty poem*by MARY LEEWith photographsby ALICE ANDPETER GOWLAND/$3.95 cloth, $1.95 p«peNow at your bookstore KINGINTERVIEWFEB. 18,1970King Broadcasting Company,a growing, diversifiedcommunications complycentered in the PacificNorthwest, would like to meetwith graduating seniors andgraduate students interested incareers within thecommunications industry.The company owns andjperates TV - AM - FMbroadcast stations in Seattle,Portland and Spokane, amonthly magazine; a film-production division, a com¬munity antenna (CATV) divi¬sion, and a properties and realestate division.Entry-level positions occur inradio, television and film prod¬uction: writing, announcing,news reporting, sales, promo¬tion, merchandising and photo¬graphy.Preference is given thosewith broad liberal-artseducational backgrounds at theundergraduate level.For further information, youmay consult our careerspamphlet and the companypolicy manual at your campusplacement office, where aninterview with ourrepresentative also may bescheduled.King is an equal opportunityemployer.broadcasting company]lUitcviiiHJi > m i < - i t(Maroon Ad*)YOUR EYES ARE OPEN, I SEE THEM CLEARLYSCENES________ruv and browse at the CRAFTr^np Sale of batik, candles,Ukrainian belts Thurs and Fri. Feb5 and 6, 11:00-5:30 Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge.DeMiHe^-CLEOPATRA is comingto Quantrell Feb 14 7:15410.John Rossen will speak at the BlueC^rgoyle. "Hyde Park Coroner"Thurs, 8PM.Will there really be an aphrodisiacin the Punch at the Lascivious Cos¬tume Ball?Want to settle in Israel but notsore where, how, or with whom?Come meet others like yourselftomorrow 5112 S Kimbark 7:30 con¬versational Hebrew (all levels wel¬come) 8:30 Chavurat aliyah (disc,about settlement) Coffee, cookies,friendly people More info or a rideCall Reena 752-5416 or 752-6120."King Broadcasting Company inter¬views Feb 18, 1970, for news re¬porters, writers, filmmakers, etc.See our ad on page — Bring Guitars and other Instru¬ments to the Blue Gargoyle, 8:00Wednesdays Play and Sing. BlueGargoyle.Madness, Intrigue, Passion! AngelStreet, Feb 11, 12, 13, 14, 8:30PM,Bergman Gallery.See Claudette Colbert make an aspout of herself.Luncheon concert of Victorian or¬gan music, Feb 10, RockefellerChapel, 12:30PM.ALEXANDER NEVSKYOne of the masterpieces of moderncinema (music by Prokofiev) COBBHALL Sunday Feb 8, 749:15.Are you aware of the LibertineArts Conference? It's aware of you.See Bella driven to the brink ofinsanity! Angel Street..."VENCEREMOS": film and Dis¬cussion on MOZAMBIQUE Feb 6,8PM at Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone.ClueTicTacToeChessBLUE GARGOYLEBB KING AT MANDEL MondayFeb 9 8:00 $3.00, $2.50, $2.00. WhatMore Could you Ask?Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)THE KING Is Coming Feb. 9. See Julius seize her.SPEND AN EVENING AT THEGARGOYLE.Entertainers: Do your Thing atStorage, New International HouseCoffee Shop. Contact Maroon, Box 33.The Lascivious Costume Ball —Feb 20 — Do You Have A costumeto Ball in?Sperm Devotees: Student Project onEqual Rights for Men is Sponsor¬ing the Mr. U of C Contest to BeHeld at the Lascivious CostumeBall, Feb 20. All Entries Accepted,Regardless of Political Beliefs, Sex,Number of Arms, or Height. Toenter yourself or a friend Call An¬drew Gurian 752-0739."Lamaze Birth Method" Film andDiscussion. Blue Gargoyle. Friday8:OOPM.TENANT UNION PROJECT. CallStudent Government, MI3-0800, ext3274, between 1 and 5, or 493-4148.CRAFT COOPSale of pots, jewelry, candles, etc.made by Hyde Pk people. Thursand Fri. Feb 5 and 6, 11-5:30, Rey¬nolds Club South Lounge. If youmake things that you would liketo sell at the sale sign up at Stu¬dent Activities 2nd fl. Ida Noyes(it only oosts $1 to enter an ex¬hibit). Meeting for exhibitors WedFeb 4, 4:00 East Lounge, 2nd fl.Ida Noyes. For more informationcall 667-3667 or 288-1141.PLATCOy’S ALL-NIGHT SHOWnmnuHtis nioo i »i|»oo icoowing 101 iiguui luiuit fFeb 6 Feb 7Clint Eastwood UMu . John CassavettesFISTFUL Of DOLLAkS FACESFeb. 13 Feb. 14Richard BurtonElizabeth TaylorTHE NIGHT Of THI IGUANA PARANOIAFeb. 20 Feb. 21Fellini's Sandy Dannie8h THAT COLD DAY IN TNE PARKFeb. 27 Feb. 28Pwl Miwimi Rkkerd Barton, Peter O'TooleHMD BECKETTMarch 6 March 7RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY ^ FOUR HORSEMEN OFTHE APOCALYPSE FOR SALETICKETS SI.SOPLAYBOYtheater a./04 H R*40*«l *44 J4J4WHOLE EARTHCATALOGUECIRCLE BOOK STORE1049 W. Taylor733-4495(ri|kt Mar U. of III.off tko Doa Kyis)10% Dbcooit With This *4 Til Fob 28 For Sale or Trade 48 CadillacHearse Transmission Needs WorkCall Bob at 2840709.VW 64 Sunroof R-H $400 955-7430.3D-Chess Rules $2. Club $3/yr.3-D Chess Boards $10, $20401 Resort Hampton, Va23364.63 Renault new tires new battery$175 or best offer 643-6000 ask forJohn 3rd fir. Vincent.African traditional sculpture fornew or veteran collectors. Greatwith modem art 4 furnishings.Smart investment. Call 747-8499Park Forest.Fern Rmmate Wtd—Cheap, Friend¬ly — 54 Greenwood Evenings:28833562 Winter Coats: Woman's Size 12Cashmere with Mink Collar BlckNever Worn $70; Men's Sheep skin,Tan Size 42 1 Year Old New $125Asking $65. Call 5400933 Evenings.GROOVY black fur cape. Pricedfor quick sale, $25. FA4-2832.FREEBeatles, Quicksilver and otherPOSTERS free while they last ofthe Student Coop Records to gowith the posters cheap.GO CLUBUC Go Club meets Thur Feb 5 inIda Noyes. If you have a GO SET,bring it. Beginners welcome.CHEC PARACHUTISTSRevised Schedule: Tues 3PM, Wed1PM, Thurs 7PM. Pierce TowerLibrary. No Meeting Sun, Feb 8as previously announced.LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA-TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALL236-1423 9-5.LOST AND FOUNDFound — small tan dog, femalechoker chain. 752-3896.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNname, address, phone.CHARGE:HEADING: 50c 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!There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free. Lost: Wirehaired Fox Terrier."George" Phone 373-1572. Reward.No Collar.PIPE, Inscribed: Cellini Original.Gift of a Friend Now Dead. Re¬ward. 667-0740.SPACEFern Roommate Grad. Stud, orwork. Share 1 bdrm apt. E. HydePark. $95. 324-8000, x310, 9-5PM.Female graduate student needsroommate to share 2-bedroom aptwith fireplace on Cornell $100.00each. Call Jean 955-3913.6Rm. apt to sublet. So. Sh., 2baths, children welcome. AvailableApril 1. Rent $173. Call ES5-8207After 6:30PM.Room 4 Board arrangement withfamily for female student. HY3-7973.Fern Roommate wtd. Grad Studentor working girl. 2 girl apt. Nearcampus, 1C. Avail Mar 1. 493-4213or 528-4636. Leave message.Male grad needs m or Fern Rmmteto share apt with own room. 61stand Ellis. Furnished. $52.50 363-6915.6900 So. Crandon Ave. Deluxe High-rise 1 Bdrm. Apts. From $125;Parquet Floors. See Mrs. Haley.MU4-7964.Beautiful spacious 5 and 6 rmapts at 71st 4 Jeffery for informa¬tion call - Albert H. Johnson RealtyCo., 732 East 75th Street - HU 3-1470.COACH HOUSE S. Shore. ExcapeUC housing Apr. 1. 4 rms. Campusbus, 1C. $130/$150/ga rage. 731-2561.Nearby unfum apt. 3 rm. pvt. prch,$99.50. Free utils. 955-9209.VARSITY APTS4 4 5 room apts for Students Only— 6104 Ellis Ave. Call Mr. JonesHY3-1838.PEOPLE FOR SALEFlute and recorder teacher. Privatelessons — Small Classes. JanetBlair 667-0988."May we do your typing? . . ."363-1104.Fast, Accurate ad Complete Re¬searching. 525-2848.Expert typing 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm's 4 weekends.PEOPLE WANTEDMARTHA'S VINEYARD Summer1970 Student EMPLOYMENT OP¬PORTUNITIES. Hundreds of jobs!Detailed descriptions including res¬taurants, hotels, shops. SEND $2.00.APPLIED RESEARCH Associates,Dept. 8, P.O. Box 3903, New Haven,Conn. 06525.Personable Young Men Wanted toassist at Land Investment Dinners.Evening work only. Access to carnecessary. Straight salary or com¬mission. Horizon Corporation, Mr.Rodgers, 728-5200.Psychometrician Wanted for Re¬search Project. Salary Negotiable.Call 663-5627, days; 667-8380 Eve¬nings.IBM Selectric Typist, Expert 4Experienced. Days, Evenings, orWeekends. 2 Blocks from Adminis¬tration Building. 955-1795.Group Leaders for lst-6th Graders.Need Skills in Art, Science, Fenc¬ing, Cooking, Photography, News¬paper and/or Recreation. CaH Mr.Williams RE 1-6969 — JCC — 9101S. Jeffrey Ave.TENANT UNION PROJECT. CallStudent Government. Ml3-0800, ext3274, between 1 and 5, or 493-4148.PERSONALSTo J.S., I'll be there to get thegum today. Thanks. J.A.To M.D.L. Let your mind be bog¬gled, I may accept that bid. J.L.A.What Strange Parallels with todaycan be found by studying the His¬tory of Rome, or Decadent Eng-land? Examine them (nteJIeduallyat LAC lectures, experience themdirectly at LAC events.Eisenstein's Music by ProkofievALEXANDER NEVSKYCobb Hall Sunday, Feb. 8 7:00 & 9:15 Our thanks to Art Reingold. Switch¬boards open until 12AM.Sick of meaningless radical protest?Join Children of the Silent Majority.Just think — in Israel now they'replanting trees — come to Studentsfor Israel activities Wed at 5112S Kimbark.Actually the LAC is half serious.Abbie Hoffman will be there. (NoKidding)Cleopatra is not floating down theChicago River in a scow.We don't go along with phrase¬mongering radicals. (Lenin)The LAC Film Festival is Coming,Featuring Underground, ExpertMental, and Pornographic Flicks.Find out what the Age of Victoriawas Really Like. The 25th annualLibertine Arts Conference Discussesthose Aspects of History whichMake Community Scholars Blush.Dear Jane; why did you stop pay¬ment on your check to me? Signed,Joel.CLEOPATRA in Quantrell — Sat.Feb 14, 7:15 4 10.Girls: Enter the Mr. UC Contest.Unlike other Special InterestGroups, Sperm Does Not Discrimi¬nate in Favor of Its Own Members.We are not Elitist, all women andhermaphrodites welcome.The STUDENT COOP will specialorder any record not in stock atour regular low price. Most albumsarrive in 2-4 days.TENANT UNION PROJECT. TallStudent Government, MI3-0800, ext3274, between 1 and 5, or 493-4148. See Antony act Brutish while Cas¬sius marks his words.Do You Have any Choice FilmsAny mm. to enter in LAC's Porno¬graphic Film Contest? ContactVance Archer BU8-9019 Best En¬tries Shown at LAC Film Festival,Feb 21.'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 P.M.MOVING SALEHiFi's, TV's, Components, PricesSubject to Negotiation:AR Turntables $45.00Scott Turntables $35.00Craig Recorders $30.00Sony Recorders $40.00$150,000,000 inventory Slashed ToMove. SCHWARTZ BROS. HI-FI.8533 S. Cottage Grove. TR4-4131.Man Wants Fern Roommate CallBetween 9 and 12 Eves. 783-1092.Nominate Miss U of C Now! Ifyour organization has not receivedNomination forms call Ingrid John¬son x3773.We say "Stand up and Be CountedNow or Freedom is Dead andBrother Fred has Died in Vain."--Children of theSilent Majority.I hear one of them thar soupe deluxala de peachy keen cornbelt andprairie black dirt blues jam-bo-reesbeen seen around these here partscome latelySend a LoveBundlefor Valentines Week.Why squeeze a lot of Love into justone day?Order a LoveBundle to arrive early.It's a unique arrangement designedto stretch Valentine's Day into a week.Because the flowers will last.A special Valentine. Only at FTDflorists. At a special price.Usually available at S'! 7less thanAsk for it.•As an independent businessman, each FTD Member Florist sets hisown prices.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 HOUSE FOR SALEBrick duplex, 7 rooms, 4 bed¬rooms, 2 baths, garage, near1C and library. South Shore,$11,000; call 721-0111.The Student History Group wishesto invite both current and formerstudents of Mr. Sewell, Instructorof History in the College, to ex¬press their opinions concerning histeaching, with reference to hisreappointment. Friday Feb. 6,2:30-4:30 PM, Cobb 302.\vWHAT IS THIS MAN DOING? nFebruary 3, 1970/Tha Chicago Maroon/7wSome office jobsare more interestingthan others.In the old days if a man wanted to be an executiveand craved adventure too, he could skipper aclipper ship.Today .. the clippers are gonebut the supersonics are here Andswashbuckling executives still gettheir charted.That's maybe a mlWion bucksworth of plane And whenfly it the responsibility's all yours.If you’d like to mullthat over everytime you bank or roll at 1,400+ mph, try for Officer TrainingSchool after you graduate from college. Also, remember the nice idea of yourself, an Air Force pilot,captain of all you command, getting to visit foreignports like the clipper captain of yore.An Air Force officer's life is a great life!Why just be skipper of a desk?UNITED STATES AIR FORCEBo* A. Dept '■(.% >:•Randolph A:- Foue Base. Texas 781-18I UUDLWSTAND Ini Ml IS NO OBI IGA1|ONUNITED STATES AIR FORCE11 22N0 CENTURY PRESENTS!GRIND FUNKRAILROADFEBRUARY 7 • 8 30 pmOPERA HOUSEDELANEY, BONNIE& FRIENDSWITH ERIC CLAPTONFEBRUARY 14 • 7 00 8 10 30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRETHE DOORS| FEBRUARY 15 • 7 00 8 10 30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRECOLO BLOODREHAISSAHCEMARCH 1 • 7 30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATREIROH BUTTERFLYMARCH 21 • 7 PM 8 10 30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATREJOE COCAERMARCH 22 • 7 30 pmAUDITORIUM THEATRETHREE 000 RIGHTAPRIL 5 • 3:30 8 7:30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRESMOKEY ROBINSOH(THE MIRACLESAPRIL 17 • 8 30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRETicket Prices: $6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50Tickets now available at the AuditoriumTheatre box office, ail Chicagoland Mar¬shall Field and Montgomery Wards Stores.Paralunes at 2659 North Clark Street, FlipSide Records at 3314 West Foster Avenueand other Ticketron outlets.Mail orders to 22nd Century, 70 W. Hub¬bard, Chicago, Illinois 60610. Enclose aself addressed stamped envelope.LISTEN TO WCFl FOR LATEST22ND CENTURY CONCERT INFORMATIONNOW IN PAPERBACK!“The best printedcounsel availableon everythingfrom sneezes toorgasms.” - playboyIf EUGENE SCHOENFELBt MJB.ADVICE YOUR FAMILYDOCTOR NEVER CAVE YOU950 paperbound • GROVE PRESS 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 jarafe near home or school.1970 MBA GRADUATES:XEROXIS COMINGTO CAMPUSFRIDAY FEB. 20See your Placement Director today to ar¬range an appointment with the Xeroxrepresentative.Discover what Xerox is doing in colorxerography, 3-D imaging, laser applica¬tions, and systems that mate xerographyand computers. Learn, too, of the contin¬uous refinements being developed forand incorporated in our line of office cop¬iers and duplicators.During the question and answer ses¬sion, you’ll also get a better idea for someof the reasons behind our growth. Fromapproximately 3,000 people in 1960 toover 30,000 currently.Ask him, too, about the Xerox philoso¬phy. How we’ve always operated on thepremise that you can make meaningfulcontributions to society that contributequite gainfully to yourself. And us.This investment of your time could bethe start of a rewarding future at our sub¬urban Rochester, New York facilities inengineering, manufacturing, systemsanalysis, accounting, finance or market¬ing/sales.XEROXAn Equal Opportunity Employer (m/f)xtno* IS * RCCISTCXCU TRADCMAHK Ol XCRJX CO»i-ORATl„n.