Gay Lib ProtestsTalk by DetectiveTHE MAROON of the continuing legal education committeeof the WBA of Illinois, and M Lois Dier-stein, president of the WBA of IllinoisIf the WBA declines to rescind its in¬vitation to Officer Manley to speak Febru¬ary 25, the gay liberation front will protestthe allegedly anti-homosexual decisions ofthe Chicago Police Department by leaflet¬ting in gay bars and on campus, and stag¬ing a demonstration outside the Chicagobar association office at 29 S. La Salle St,February 25 between 11:30-12:30.The gay liberation front was formed oncampus three weeks ago with the hope ofbringing about the personal liberation ofpeople from what they have been told abouthomosexuality and liberalizing the societythey live in to accept gay people.The 15 to 20 “hard core” members of theorganization see hostile attitudes againstgayness and bisexuality as a form of op¬pression against a minority group. They listone of their greatest problems as con¬vincing gay people that they actually areoppressed. Nancy Garwood, 72, 9 memberof gay lib, pointing out that the organiza¬tion was equally composed of men andwomen, said, “We are trying to rid ster¬eotype images of male and female homo¬sexuality. We don’t downgrade behaviorthat differs from the stereotype. We don’tmake value judgements. People are afraidto type themselves as homosexuals be¬cause many are genuinely bisexual.”Gayness is viewed as a right by mem¬bers, and a part of personality that shouldbe as meaningful as any other. HenryWeimhoff, another member of gay lib saidthat gay people find it hard to show theirnature socially, fearing ridicule and ostra¬cism. He emphasized the importance oferadicating this fear, letting the gay personfeel a sense of release by being natural.“The gay person has to be given a sense ofcommunity.”Part of gay lib’s education program isreaching society in concrete ways, helpingit adjust to the presence of homosexuals.Members of the organization used an Elea¬nor Club dance, January 23 to initiate theirdrive to get people accustomed to them.One of the members who attended said theymeasured their success at the dance by thenumber of people who stopped staring andpointing. Though the attitude of otherpeople at the dance was confused oramused, little hostility was shown.A member of Gay Lib pointed out thatalthough Illinois is one of two states whereit is legal for consenting adults to performhomosexual acts, gay people are picked upon other charges. As an example he said inIllinois two men dancing together in publiccould be charged with public indecency asa way of getting around the law.Continued on Page FiveDavid RcsenbushMike Brant By Nancy ChismanGay liberation front, a registered studentactivity group, has drafted a letter of pro¬test to the women’s bar association (WBA)of Illinois over the appearance of PoliceEatective John Manley at a forthcomingmeeting. The Gay Liberation organization,part of a national, and in some areas mili¬tant, movement to educate society to theaspects of gayness, gives evidence thatManley has long persecuted Chicago homo¬sexuals.The letter to the WBA urges them to con¬cern themselves with the “socially degrad¬ing attitudes toward homosexuals ratherthan honoring Manley.” The letter reads inpart that gay people should be able “to livein full acceptance by society, not in har-rassment by the police.”Copies of the letter are being sent to Ral-la Klepak, attorney at law, and chairmanVolume 78, Number 35 The University of Chicago Friday, February 6, 1970Coalition Forms, Fights Com-EdRepresentatives of student government,the new democratic coalition, the univer¬sity chapter of the citizen’s revolt againstpollution (CRAP) and the university chap¬ter of the young people’s socialist league(YPSL), plus other interested citizens, fac¬ulty, and students, formed a coalition tofight pollution last week.This coalition will attempt to coordinateanti-pollution organizations in order to forma broadly based organization. The first lineof action will be directed against the pollu¬tion caused by Commonwealth Edison. Sup*porters of the coalition to stop pollution now( C S P N ) are filtering throughout thecampus to obtain signatures for their peti¬tion. The petition is calling on the Univer¬sity not to assign its proxies of some 33,000shares to the company’s management atthe April 27 stockholders’ meeting. Insteadthey are to be assigned to the coalition atthe meeting in April. A second demandasks endorsers to pledge non-payment ofelectric bills until Com-Ed endorses an “ef¬fective anti-pollution program.”Among the initial signers of the petition were Alderman Leon Despres, Con-Condelegate A1 Raby, Gubernatorial candidateDon Peterson of Wisconsin, Alderman A ARayner and state legislative candidatesSaul Mendelson and Leon Chestang. Withina few days other organizations also en¬dorsed the coalition’s action, including anad-hoc committee in the business schooland a committee of concerned students inthe physical sciences. Arthur Schwartz,graduate student in physcis commented af¬ter endorsing the petition, “As an educa¬tional institution, the University probablymust remain neutral in political issues, butthis is not a political issue. As an education¬al institute it is the duty of the UniversityThere has been an increasing number ofnarcotics arrests involving University stu¬dents since the beginning of the quarter.Reports set the number as high as 21 stu¬dents involved in arrests since December 4. to sponsor such programs as necessary toeducate the public as to how bad the prob¬lem can get unless positive action is taken.By withholding the payment of its electricbill, the University as one of the biggestconsumers of electricity in the city, wouldhit Com-Ed where American business hasalways been sensitive, ‘the pocketbook’.”Another student, Steve Froikin, 73, com¬mented upon the effects of successfulenactment of the demands, saying, “It willset a precedent if the University decided toagree to the two demands stated in the peti¬tion and will probably inspire other pollu¬tion groups to get stock proxies of electricalcompanies.”Many of these students were simplypresent when an apartment was raided,and were not named on search warrants.Several students were allegedly arrestedfor innocuous pills which were kept in un¬marked bottles in their medicine chest.According to a campus security officer:“Word has gone out from 11th and State(Chicago police headquarters) that toomany narcotics are floating around theUniversity of Chicago, and that somethingneeded to be done.”One student, who was arrested in hisapartment December 4, has been freed af¬ter a pre-trial hearing determined that thepolice did not have a search warrant.The security officer offered advice onhow to stay out of jail:“Don’t trust anybody who’s shown up oncampus and looks like a student. Hair iseasy to grow, and there are quite a fewyoung detectives in Chicago ... studentsshould get rid of unlabeled drugs on theshelves of their medicine cabinets, sinceyou can get hung with a pretty fair rap fora few borrowed dex or darvon.”It is not known whether narcotic agentsare responsible for the increased arrestson campus, but as of September therehave been agents infiltrating the campusunder the auspices of the state narcoticcontrol board headed by Mitchell Ware.Students who have had arrests previouslyare especially warned to be careful asare students who have had medical treat¬ment for drug problems. These have beenthe types of students whc have been mostcommonly arrested recently. Also, thenames of these students are more readilyobtainable than are others.City Sewage Attracts NixonLooking for something to do this weekend? Tired of the sameold stuff every day? Want to get out of Hyde Park and see thecultural attractions of Chicago?Today at 10 am there will be a gathering of the clan in frontof the Field museum to honor the presence of our President inChicago. Mr Nixon is going to be interred with Theodore Roosevelt’spanda bear at the stroke of noon, the Chicago Peace Council issponsoring the gala event. The Field Museum is at Roosevelt roadand the Outer Drive.As a public service, we are printing the President’s scheduleof his tour in the city of the Big Shoulders.FRIDAY9 am Nixon tours the Hanover sewage facility to learn about waterpollution.9:40 am Nixon leaves the sewage plant for Schaumburg airport.9:50 am Nixon leaves for Meigs field.10:00 am The Chicago Peace Council festivities begin.10:15 am Nixon arrives at Meigs field.10:30 am The President joins the Peace Council at the Fieldmuseum.1.45 Nixon and his court leave for Meigs field.2 pm Nixon leaves for O’Hare to return to Washington.Police Increase ArrestsMidway Studios Works on Wood lawn ProjectPublic housing and the inner city will bethe subject of a conference at the school ofsocial service administration (SSA) Fridayand Saturday.The conference, sponsored by SSA andthe University’s center for urban studies,will examine such topics as high rise dwell¬ings, federal housing policy and programs,tenant organizing and citizen participation,tenant-landlord relations, the black commu¬nity, model cities, and future prospects ofthe city.The conference will open with a lectureFriday at 7:30 pm by Jeanne Lowe, con¬sultant for the national urban coalition andthe New York urban coalition on “housingJoin C.P.A.Concerned People of AmericaHelp Fight PollutionHelp Secure EqualRights for OthersFor Informationcall Michael Litow769-1717 TNOault LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue] CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998»Hoi what you need from a $10▼used 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in RemnantsMill returns at a fraction of the^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼ Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad.\ FREE DELIVERY 1the fine arts department. Many will be¬come professional painters, print makerspotters and sculptors. Haydon said thatthese students are selected on scholasticability as well as talent. “There have beenno drop outs on account of academics.”One of the major concerns of fine arts gradstudents is the foreign language require¬ment of French and German. Some feelthat Spanish or Italian would be of morepractical value.There are only about 20 to 25 under¬graduate fine arts majors. They face theproblem that many graduate art schoolsonly accept applicants with two years ofart. Art majors here have basically threeyears of general studies and one year of artexperience. Plans for scholarship aid to un¬dergrads for another year of work arebeing studied, Haydon said. Undergrad ma¬jors have changed their final exam. Insteadof “paper and pencil tests” they prepare amajor project and exhibit it. They receivecriticism from the eight masters in the de¬partment.More applicants try for places in the elec¬tive classes than can be accepted, Haydonsaid. Elementary design and figure draw¬ing are always open to non-majors. Waitinglists are especially bad during autumn anda large classroom is desperately needed, headded. The Bergmann Gallery in Cobb Hallholds two class sessions a quarter. Haydonhimself lacks an office. $110,000 has beenraised for renovation and addition to thepresent building, but the cost keeps goingup and Haydon said he does not know whenwork will start.The study of art at the University has along history. An art education program wastransformed into BA and MA degrees in1955. The BA was changed to a major in1969 on the grounds that one year was notenough for graduate study.In 1966, the building, former home andstudio of sculptor Lorado Taft, was namedone of five nationally registered landmarksin Chicago. (Three others are located oncampus.) In 1906 Taft moved from hishome in the crowded Loop to the studio Hewas a University lecturer and he and hisassociates were sculptors in residence,making many of the works, like the bust ofSilas Cobb, found in Cobb and Swift Halls.Haydon said, “The studio is one of thefinest in the continent because it was builtby artists for artists.”Steve AokiAT WORK: Student works on projectwith hammer.STORAGE: Jars and pots hold art material at studio. Steve Aoki By Audrey ShalinskyThe Midway Studios are a historic but notvery well known part of the University onsouth campus at 61sit and Ingleside.Seemingly isolated from the main campus,Harold Haydon, assistant professor and di¬rector of the studios said, “the studio isstrongly tied to the rest of the Universityand is constantly working to increase itsconnection.”Nine pieces of sculpture, including threeclassical figures, four modern pieces and alarge silver rectangle with red and bluetransparent pieces in the middle line theentrance hallway. The main room seemsalmost barnlike with its high vaulted ceil¬ing and white brick and cement floor. Ab¬stract paintings cover the walls and a satel¬lite or metallic globe sitting on a whitestructure is the focal point of the room. Theadjacent painting room is filled with unfin¬ished works and the ceramic room is clut¬tered with pieces of pottery.The latest development in the depart¬ment, according to Hayden, is its work withthe Woodlawn community. Work has begunon a twenty foot abstract sculpture totransform a vacant lot into a playlot. Thesite of the playlot is land the Universityowns in South campus, but the hope is thatthe sculpture can be moved eventually toWoodlawn proper. The city must be per¬suaded first, Hayden said. There are plansto do one or two similar large scale proj¬ects per year.Some sculptors are now working with thecomputers. One student who was interestedin biological form study is now allowed touse the hospital electron microscopes. Onespecialist in facial prosthetics (buildingnew features to replace damaged ones)made an inquiry to the fine arts depart¬ment with the idea that his students shouldgain a sculptor’s knowledge of the face.This exchange program has not been start¬ed yet.There are about 20 graduate students inLaw Student Named Rhodes Scholarselected this year from all over the UnitedStates. He was recommended for the honorlast year while at Bowdoin.While attending Bowdoin, Dennis was edi¬tor-in-chief of the weekly student news¬paper and was one of four student com¬mencement speakers. He was graduatedsumma cum laude and Phi Beta Kappawith highest honors in government and le¬gal studies last June.The Rhodes Scholarships were estab¬lished in 1902 by the British statesman, Ce¬cil Rhodes. The first Rhodes Scholars werechosen in 1903, and the first AmericanRhodes Scholars went into residence at Ox¬ford in 1904. The program is multi-nationaland selection is based on “intellectual at¬tainment, character, leadership, and physi¬cal vigor.”Since the Program was started, 17 Uni¬versity of Chicago students have been ap¬pointed Rhodes Scholars. Hutchinson iscredited to Bowdoin College, where he wasenrolled when nominated.The last Rhodes scholar who was nom¬inated at the University was David Satter,’68 who began work at Oxford in Septem¬ber, 1968. Satter had been editor of theMaroon during his junior year and gradu¬ated from the University with honors.Since 1968, while there have been candi¬dates for the Rhodes scholarships, nonehave proven to be successful.A former Colorado newsman, now a stu¬dent in the Law School, has been named aRhodes Scholar.Dennis Hutchinson, 23, a first-year stu¬dent in the law school, will begin his studiesat England’s Oxford University next Octo¬ber.After reading law at Oxford for two yearsand hopefully receiving a British BA de¬gree, Hutchinson may stay on at Oxford fora third year to obtain a BCL (Bachelor of Civil Law) degree. He then plans to returnto The University to obtain a JD degree.All of which is a long way from reportingsports and city news for the Boulder, Colo¬rado, Daily Camera (circulation 15,598),which Hutchinson did for two years while astudent at the University of Colorado.“Actually,” he said, “several of myfriends have attended Oxford, so I know alittle bit about it from heresay.”Hutchinson is one of 32 Rhodes ScholarsSSA and Center To SponsorDiscussions on Public Housingand urban change; where does social workfit?” Miss Lowe is the author of Cities in aRace With Time.A panel discussion on the subject of MissLowe’s lecture will begin the Saturday pro¬gram at 9:30 am. Brian Berry, professor ofgeography and chairman of the center forurban studies training committee, will bemoderator. Members of the panel will in¬clude Miss Lowe; Richard Wade, professorof American history; and J S Fuerst, lec¬turer in the institute for urban studies atLoyola University.Workshops will be held from 10:30 am tonoon, and after an hour’s break for lunchthey will resume at 1 pm.NEELY’SSTANDARDSERVICETo Our CustomersI have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we cancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and belter service.Please join us at our new location.6600 So Stony IslandPhone BU 8-9645Thank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard Service2/The Chicago Maroon/February 6, 1970*> * *-t *#«•> . ..r , ,»; \- .1 ■ «* JUWA Starts CounselFor Student WomenMonty Futch The University Women’s Association(UWA) has launched a counseling serviceto provide undergraduate women with “alittle bit of special encouragement” ineducational and career planning. UWAmembers representing the physical, social,and biological sciences are awaiting tele¬phone calls from undergraduate women inneed of facts or moral support. The groupplans as well to hold open meetings per¬taining to the several academic fields.UWA, a confederation of graduate wom¬en’s caucuses that was organized in Octo¬ber of 1969, hopes through the counselingprogram to involve more undergraduates inits activities. These include biweekly lunch¬eons with prominent professional women,the publication of a newsletter, and thestudy of University tenure proceedings andcourse offerings as they relate to women.Especially in the sciences, the new coun¬selors emphasized, “you feel a strong isola¬tion from women in general. The higher upyou go, the more you feel it. It’s very, verycomforting to have other women around”to talk with.Varsity Team Loses While JV Wins 2“We’re not really displeased with ourseason,” says assistant basketball coachJohn Angelus, “it’s just that our team is allfreshmen and sophomores, due to illnessand injury.”Recoiling from a 66-56 loss to Oberlin,the Maroons are bracing for a busy weekunder the nets as Principia College andLake Forest come to the fieldhouse nextSaturday and Wednesday respectively.Not all has gone bad for the Chicago ca-gers, however. In junior varsity com¬petition, Amundsen College and Niles Ju¬nior College were virtually demolished bythe decisive scores of 70-57 and 49-40.Swimming their way to a 4-2 record oversuch formidable opposition as the GreatLakes Naval Training Academy and WrightJunior College, Coach William Moyle re¬ports that team members Dean Wilkiningand Kurt Bruens are showing exceptionalpotential.Bruens, a first-year student from Mil¬waukee, has broken eight varsity and poolrecords and excels in the long distances.Protests PlannedAgainst TrialPlans have begun for demonstrationsnext week in connection with the Conspiracy7 trial and the Mobe’s week against repres¬sion, February 14-21.The protests will be aimed at the Ameri¬can legal system said Sandy Rockowitz, aformer University student now on the Comspiracy 7 staff. “(Judge Julius) Hoffman’scourt is every court in a very real sense,”he said.The Conspiracy staff plans a continuousdemonstration outside the Federal Buildingwhen the Jury adjourns to reach a verdict.The staff also plans to maintain a demon¬stration center in downtown Chicago forresting protesters. Ongoing activities at thecenter will include speakers, rallies, work¬shops and films.“The vibes we’re getting are that a lot ofpeople are coming in from out of town,”Rockowitz said.The week of repression, sponsored by theMobilization Committee to End the War inVietnam (MOBE), will begin on Black Pan¬ther Huey Newton’s birthday, February 14,and conclude February 21 with “Con¬spiracy Day” and a city-wide rally.Actions in Washington, DC will include arally at the Department of Justice buildingand a march to the local courts, accordingto Rockowitz.The groups also hope to organize actionsat law schools to fight against “justice onlyfor those who can afford it,” he said. Wilkining, says Moyle, “is one of the bestbackstrokers and individual medlayfreestylers that we’ve had in some time.”Saturday the tankmen will be swimming atthe University of Wisconsin at Whitewater.Despite a Wednesday night loss to LewisCollege, the wrestling team, according tothe secretary at the main office of Bartlett Gym, “has been doing very well.” Last Sat¬urday the grapplers really came to gripswith the situation and brought home fourtrophies from the 5-team Aurora college in¬vitational meet. Stealing the show wereJim Casper, Dave Goins, John Wrobel, andTom Whelan. In initiating the counseling service, Mar¬tha Smith (324-5404) was prompted both byher own experiences in the physical sciencedivision and by distressing reports from un¬dergraduates. “Women are not getting thekind of information they need about goinginto professions,” she declared. She feelsthat women students receive inadequateacademic advice precisely because theyare women.“Women are not urged to work up totheir potential,” agrees Susan Hafner,UWA counselor in the social sciences (684-0948). Academics, she states, make thesame assumptions about women that otherpeople make. “Of course you’ll stop workonce you have children,” one student wastold, “You’ll have to.” Miss Hafner saidthat academic advisers frequently take itfor granted that a woman will value herhusband’s career above her own, and thatmany who reach graduate school find thatno one bothered to recommend to them theundergraduate programs that are essentialto further study.Hannah Ribolow (752-1158, who will coun¬sel in biological sciences, stresses that her“outlook is different from that of peoplewho are already entrenched in the academ¬ic hierarchy.” With her undergraduate ex¬perience still fresh in her mind, she re¬members how “so many women feel thatthey are discouraged from going to gradu¬ate school, or from going beyond a mas¬ter’s degree.” She believes that her obser¬vations on the “highly political” workingsof the academic world can benefit other„ women.Audience To Participate in Victorian ConcertEvents in the fifth week of “Victoria’sWorld,” will include an oratorio concert inwhich the audience will be asked to partici¬pate.I >elieved this singalong concert, Fri¬day 30 pm, is the first in which a re¬cent American audience has participated inthis oratorio.The oratorio, “The Crucifixion,” by SirJohn Stainer, was one of the three mostpopular such works in England for 30 yearsafter it was written in 1887. Stainer wasknighted for the work.The concert will be held in the First Uni¬tarian Church of Chicago 5650 South Wood-lawn Avenue. John Klaus will direct thechorus. Admission will be without ticketand without charge.Another musical event, to be held Sundayat 3 pm in Ida Noyes Hall, will be a bandconcert featuring three works by GustavHolst, the late 19th and early 20th centuryBritish composer.The band will play Holst’s First and Sec¬ond Suites for Military Band and “Ham¬mersmith.” Also on the program are bandarrangements for Gilbert and Sullivan’smusic from “The Mikado” and music from“The Pirates of Penzance,” and the playingof “God Save the Queen” with the audiencesinging. Admission will be without ticketand without charge.“Victoria’s World” is an eight-weekseries of cultural events concerning lifeduring the reign of Great Britain’s QueenVictoria from 1837 to 1901. It will continuethrough March 2. Paul Donald Herring, as¬sistant professor of English and huma¬nities, is chairman of the committee coordi¬nating the series.Events to come in the ongoing festivalinclude the following lectures:• Februaiy 11: “Victorian Painting: APure Vision,” an illustrated lecture byFrederick Cummings, director of the Det¬roit Institute of Art. 4 pm. Quantrell Audito¬rium. Sponsored by the art department.• February 16: “On Henry James” byElmer W. Borklund, associate professor ofEnglish at Pennsylvania State University. 8pm. Ida Noyes library. Sponsored by thenew collegiate division.• February 18: “The Nature of the Victo¬ rian Reader” by Richard D. Altick, regentsprofessor of English at Ohio State Univer¬sity; author of The Scholar Adventurersand The English Common Reader, 1800-1900. 4 pm, Social Science 122. Sponsored bythe English department.• February 20: “The Idea of Poverty andthe Poor in Victorian England” by Ger¬trude Himmelfarb, professor of history atBrooklyn College. 4 pm, Quantrell Audito¬rium. Sponsored by the college dean’s of¬fice., • February 24: “Melodrama” by Mi¬chael Booth, director of drama at the Uni¬versity of Gulph, Ontario; author of Eng¬lish Melodrama. 4 pm, Quantrell Audito¬rium. Sponsored by the committee on gen¬eral studies in the humanities.• February 26: “The logic of VictorianMedicine,” by Dr Lester S. King, profes¬sorial lecturer in the history of medicine inthe Prirzker School, author of The Medical World of the 18th Century and The Growthof Medical Thought. Ida Noyes library, 4pm.• March 2: A poetry reading by JohnBetjeman, critic and poet. Law school audi¬torium, 8 pm. A Moody lecture.The only film remaining is the filmseries, co-sponsored by Doc films is on Feb¬ruary 19: “Far from the Madding Crowd”starring Julie Christie. 8 pm. QuantrellAud.The extravaganza in the dramatic de¬partment yet to come is the vaudevilleshow to be presented on February 28 in theReynolds Club theater. The show, directedby Jeanne Wikler and Barbara BernstePwill feature authentic vaudeville routineand skits performed by University stidents. The show, cosponsored by Contem;rary European Films also feature a replicof a Victorian backdrop with advertising oi.it.Steve aokiFebruary 6, 1970/The Chicago Marocn/3Senate Drug LawBy Steve CookLast week, the Senate passed a packagenarcotics law. Like most such pieces of leg¬islation, it was a compromise; the end re¬sult being unlike any original proposal, andalso lacking any consistent philosophy.This bill, which passed 82-0 and now goesto the House, is designed to crack down onnarcotics use in America; its major partsare:• Reduction of the penalty for firstoffense for possession of marijuana fromfive years to one year in prison, and in¬crease of the fine up to $45,000.PrioritiesIn your Tuesday editorial you remarkthat the government should spend addition¬al hundreds of billions of dollars on press¬ing social needs.Considering what urban renewal has ac¬complished with, by your standards, a verylimited budget, a hundred billion dollarswould probably be enough to make severalmillion people homeless, replacing theirslums with forty thousand dollar town-houses.The agriculture department, with ameasly five or ten billion a year, has sub¬stantially raised the price of food, via par¬ity, soil banks, etc. With a hundred billionthey could probably get hamburger up to adollar fifty a pound.Of those hundreds of billions, doubtlessten or twenty will be spent in Illinois. Justthink what that money will do for Illinoispolitics, funneled through the Daley ma¬chine, or perhaps Governor Ogilvie’s brandnew imitation thereof.Are you sure that what this country needsis to have even more hundreds of billions ofdollars taken from the people and spent asthe government, in its infinite wisdom,thinks wise — or politic?Laissez FaireDavid FriedmanTo Abort . . .Some of us who believe in abortion alsobelieve in children (let’s leave God out of itfor the moment). While he is in the womb,a child is a part of his mother. When heleaves her body, he is himself, and he has aright to know that he was created to behimself, not an extension of his parents, ora fragment of divine purpose, or an acci¬dent of rape or a careless evening. It’s hardto be people, and at some point every childasks his parents why they let him be born,since it is apparently so difficult to be alive.Every child must, if he is to exist as ahuman being in the world as we know it, besure that he was born to share in an ex¬perience that his parents felt was worthhaving — life. Some people are so full ofthe joy of life that they can have as manychildren as they wish, when they come, andassure each of them a place in the schemeof things. Some are not, and to those —unmarried, with too many children al¬ready, insecure in their relationships,young, whatever the reasons — a childcomes as an object of hate and despair. Achild hated by his mother, even if he growsup to discover a cure for cancer, is a tragichuman being, and any solution, even mur¬der, is justified in preventing such a life.Annette Fern... or NotIt is good to see Fary’s letter on abortionattacked by Hilda Smith; may I add mytwo cents worth by saying that womenshould be allowed to end a pregnancy aseasily and no more expensively (free tothose who cannot pay?) than having one’swisdom teeth pulled! An abortion is asimple operation with no risk if done prop¬erly. It has to be done in the very earlymonths and can anyone really regard ablob under 3 months a child who is beingmurdered? Far more ‘murders’ are causedby quack ‘doctors’ in shady deals, and des- • Freeing federal agents to break intoprivate homes without notice if they sus¬pect the occupants possess drugs, and ifthey feel that giving notice would alertthose inside to destroy the evidence• Increasing sentence up to five yearsand fines up to $50,000 if the defendent wasindulging in a “continuing criminal enter¬prise”There really is no obvious philosophicalattitude toward drug control in this bill. Atonce the penalties are stiffened for “crimi¬nal enterprise” and lightened for first of¬fenders. And the now infamous “no-knock”perate women trying to do their own jobwith hangers, soap, etc.; far more murdersstemming from serious neglect fall to chil¬dren who were unwanted, not to mentionthose who are dreadfully mistreated.Raising children is an enormous task, avery important one, but difficult enough todo properly even when undertaken willing¬ly; surely it should not be left to anyonewho does not want to do it. And with arunaway population on our hands is it notobvious that we can start by weeding outthe unwan teds? If it were left up to women(as it should be as they are the ones who domost of the work with children) the laws onabortion would probably be changed in notime. Lets hope at least that they arechanged sometime, the sooner the better.Janet GoodallLast WordThe controversy sparked by ProfessorRadinsky’s fiery outspoken tongue in cheekhas reached a level of comedy which wouldlead one to suspect the whole affair is afabrication of the Maroon or possibly eventhe notorious Malbranche gang, but thatthe former has manifested a prudent objec¬tivity all year which makes it ratherdubious that it should begin now to launchsuch tortuous adventures in entertainment,and the latter, by recently demonstratinghow malodorous is its despicable pusila-nimity, make it hardly credible that itshould attain such vehemence in a verbaldebate — vehemence, I hasten to add, byUniversity of Chicago standards, not bymine. What is funny, however, is the man¬ner in which all these people, these letterwriters and armchair social thinkers, theseneostalinists as well as these criptobur-keans, these tartuffes and these privilegedcrocodiles, these clowns of the suprastruc-ture, these marionnettes of capital-fascism,these peddlers of lies and diversionarypseudoideology, these, in short, these con-stipatory hybrids of the parasitic classes,take themselves seriously over three mat¬ters over which they not only have no con¬trol (admittedly, for them, that is withoutsignificance), but about which they in fact,by their own indirect confession, have notrue understanding, which is the least im¬portant factor in the forming of arguments,but which they pretend to give weight to,since we have been seeing them argueabout such minor factual points as the exis¬tence of political prisoners in that place,the amount of food people have, and othertrifles.I cannot resist having my little word, be¬cause this is the obvious opportunity tomake a scene. Everybody is so cold in thewinter. Nobody wants to do anything exceptthink about warmer climates, go there, orstart insulting matches: which, like badsmells, warm people up. They chose,apparently, a subject with a good com¬bination. Anyhow, it’s the old style, self def¬inition through interpretation. The bigblahblahblah; but you can’t trick them,etc: unless you can: well, I won’t fall for it,because Cuba doesn’t exist to serve pettyfights among the yanquis.So, to get to what is really interesting inthis thing, I consider the professor impoliteto attack the IS man and reproach himabout writing letters to the paper. I consid¬er the others rather irrelevant to drag in ANALYSISprovision is a part of the bill that may notstand up in the Supreme court; in any caseit is an infringement of basic liberty.Perhaps the bill is best understood as atypical Nixon style piece of legislation, withemphasis on the cops, not on the people.new facts, and the last, we need more likethat. Especially since he keeps writing let¬ters to the paper. On the other hand the ISman was sort of academic, pedantic. Still,the IS man was a good man, with a subtletone: support this because more of that butnot that because more of this, but alwaysoppose the third thing: the IS man is goingto be in opposition or in jail wherever hegoes, and the professor is going to be used.As for me, I am a compulsive bombasticand I will throw a bomb at the first onewho claims this letter wasn’t necessarilyirrelevant.Viva Fidel!Viva el azucar y elcafe! ole!Roger Kaplan"What Gives?"Hey Maroon! What gives? Since our ar¬rival at this institution of higher learning,we have never seen so much junk accu¬mulated in your pages. What is the prob¬lem? What does give? What pulls? Areyou all asleep, or don’t you care that lifeis happening all around you? Where is thenews of all that our student leaders aredoing for us? Don’t you realize that weall are waiting, with bated breath, as itwere, to hear what those few chosen in¬dividuals do both day and night? Andwhere is the news of the student revolu¬tion? and CPS holdover? and all the rest?What’s wrong Maroon? Don’t you knowwhat we want? We’re tired of features,news features and news stories. We wanta few editorials ending in “this is our Uni¬versity too”? Bring back the Maroon thatwe knew and loved. We implore you; webeseech you.Pumpkin Pie, Texand Woe be gone IndianTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve Aoki, Phil LethropFeature 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. 59ttiSt., Chicago, III. <0637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 32<3. 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. There is an easily understood explanationfor the lightening of first-offense penalties.In the last few weeks, there have beenseveral juicy news stories about the chil¬dren of public figures involved in the drugarrests. sThe son of the governor of New JerseyJohn Cahill, was arrested for possession ofmarijuana recently. Young Cahill wasstopped and searched by police in southPhiladelphia. He allegedly was in posses¬sion of one joint.Howard Samuels Jr, the son of a NewYork gubernatorial candidate, was arrestedin Greenwich Village in November. Histrial was last week. Samuels was arrestedfor possession, a misdemeanor in NewYork.Jonathan Freedman, the son of the citymanager of Hartford, Connecticut, wascharged last week with selling LSD.The “liberalism” of the new drug law hasonly to do with marijuana offenders, andfirst offenders. Public figures are gettingworried about their own kids turning onand getting busted.However “liberal” the new law is, youcan bet your life that was not even consid¬ered before pot became cool for the hipmiddle-class whites.When pot was “reefer” and drugs wereassociated with the black ghetto and jazzmusicians, when was the penalty reducedfor first offense? That was the time of thepassage of the harshest narcotics laws, forthere was a lower class nature to drugs.Since the turn-on of the middle-classwhite college students and other segmentsof the “hip” white community, there hasbeen extensive investigation for the firsttime into the side-effects of pot, and mostintelligent people realize that a distinctionshould be made between marijuana and he¬roin.This new drug law tries to make that dis¬tinction. Thus the increase of penalties forthe “criminal enterprise.”What has often baffled me is the moraldistinction made between the drug user andthe drug seller. Each is dependent upon theother, and each sanctions the others’ activi¬ties. Quite obviously this is a capitalisticsociety, and a lot of people are makingmoney from drug trade. Yet isn’t that thefulfillment of the American business ethic— find a demand and then supply it?The “no-knock” provision itself is anoth¬er very Nixonish aspect of this bill. In theongoing war between the heads and thecops, the “no-knock” provision is an impor¬tant weapon in the hands of the police.Barging into a home unannounced willprobably yield more convictions and theconservation of more evidence than everbefore. That the provision is also a veryfrightening and dangerous surrender of in¬dividual privacy will probably go unno¬ticed. Perhaps “no-knock” is part of ourgovernment’s solution to “crime in thestreets?”The law-makers in Washington are tryingto do all they can to end drug use in thiscountry, yet at the same time avoid screw¬ing their kids. The paradox is quite amus¬ing to watch, yet the results are mostfrightening. Is it “no-knock” today, ‘‘nowarrant” tomorrow? Let the kids get ataste of the clink, then they’ll smarten up?Are the pushers the problem; put themaway and there’s nothing to worry about?Too few people realize that it is the policestate that is the real problem; and that theobsession with law enforcement to the de¬struction of individual rights is happeningright here and now.CorrectionsIn the Tuesday Maroon story onthe Washington Intern program, itwas reported that only undergradu¬ates were eligible. In fact, all grad¬uate students are eligible. All inter¬ested students should contact theirdean of students.In Tuesdays Hunger Campaignstory, the deadline for contributionswas said to be February 2. Theactual deadline in February 20.LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROON4/The Chicago Maroon/February 6, 1970Target: Dow Chemical and The Draft BoardBy Jessica SiegelTODAY IN INDIANAPOLIS, another eight people are hav-ing their preliminary hearing on conspiracy charges, aswell as three other counts. The hearing is to see if there isenough evidence to try the eight, part of the Beaver 55,for the destruction, on October 31, of all the 1-A and 1-Adelinquent draft files and ledger books for 44 draft boardsin Indianapolis metropolitan area. On February 18, thesame eight will have another preliminary hearing, thistime on the charge of conspiracy to break and enter, inthe destruction, on November 7, of magnetic tapes andprocessing cards at the international office of the in¬famous Dow Chemical Company.The extent of the destruction in Indianapolis can bemeasured by the fact that they haven’t begun to draftanyone from the area covered by the board. The draftboard situated at 63rd and Western which was attacked bythe Chicago 15 last May has only new begun draftingpeople.As for Dow, the tapes and cards which were de¬stroyed, stored and processed scientific research in such“valuable” areas as nerve gases, napalm, defoliant andother secret chemical weaponry. Technical marketing in¬formation for such subjects was also destroyed.On November 15, in Washington during the Monto-rium, the eight — Michael Donner, Jane Kennedy, PaulMack, Connie Grubbs McNamara, Marty McNamara, JoAnn Mulert, Tom Trost and David Williams — got togeth¬er at a news conference to announce their acts and whythey did them. They said:We have done this because toe are not blinded by thelies that corporations attempt to pawn off on us. A grow¬ing number of us understand clearly how American for¬eign policy is used to make possible the rape of humanlife and natural resources in developing countries. Miw-tary intervention is readily resorted to whenever financialinterests are threatened by people struggling to free them¬selves from political and financial domination. In Viet¬nam, it is clear how many people our government is will¬ing to kill and napalm to protect corporate profits.The draft is needed to fight these and other wars andmaintain the largest standing army in the world. The USgovernment uses the draft against the most powerless seg¬ment if society — the youth — and the most expendableof that segment — the blacks, browns, and poor whites —- turning them into machines of murder and to die them¬selves in vain. All this to maintain for the rest of Americaan illusion of innocence and righteousness.We have done this because we will no longer toleratethis madness. We will no longer tolerate any form of con¬scription to kill. We will no longer tolerate the Christians’“just war;” the liberals’ cry for “honorable peace.” Weput our hope in life, and our lives in hope and will contin¬ue to actively resist any system which obstructs thosegoals.The Beaver 55 announced their acts and the politicsbehind them, because like other recent groups who havecommitted similar acts, they feel it is in the interest ofthe government and Dow Chemical to hush up such gue¬rilla actions since it shows the level of outrage in thiscountry. It’s bad public relations and one knows how im¬portant that is to both the government and to industry —especially a war industry.The Beaver 55 is just one of a number of groups whofor the past few years have publically taken actions, par¬tially symbolic and partially effective to attack the Selec¬tive Service System or the corporations. Such miltiant tac¬tics seem to have gotten their start in the recent past inthe action of the Big Lake 1 in Minneapolis in 1966. A manand his family collected their feces for a few days anddeposited it in the files of the draft board. Since thatprodigeous start there has been the Baltimore 4, for ex¬ample, where blood was poured on files and the Catons-ville 9, who made napalm from a recipe in an army regu¬lation book and burned the files in it. Other incidents havetaken place in Milwaukee; Los Angeles; Silver Springs,Maryland; and New York City. The actions of the Beaver55 are ones in a long series of militant destructive actions.Why the name Beaver 55? The name is quite whimsi¬cal since they took the name because on the day of one ofthe incidents the landlady of one of the participants no¬ticed him painting his bathroom and said he was as busyas a beaver. It also is ambiguous if there are actually 55people involved in the two actions. They seem to be doingwhat the Conspiracy did when they tot* their name —suggesting that the “conspiracy” in both cases involvesmore than just the people on trial but involves a largenumber of people throughout the country.Who are the Beaver 55? The eight people on trial comefrom all over the midwest. Some work, some are students or former students. Their ages range from late teens tothe 40’s.Jane Kennedy at 44 is the oldest. She is assistantdirector of nursing for research and studies at BillingsHospital. She is well known to left people in the healthprofessions. She is National Vice-Chairman of the MedicalCommittee for Human Eights.A question that draft resisters have recently been ask¬ing themselves which seems relevant to the Beaver 55 iswhether they lose their effectiveness by taking a moralstand and then sitting in jail for ten years plus (the Mid¬land action has a penalty of up to ten years). Jane Kenne¬dy answers in this way: “Sometimes it is more effectivegoing to jail. All the people who are around me at Bil¬lings, for example, will understand why I’m in jail. It canraise a lot of issues with people who haven’t thought aboutthem before. I consider a symbolic action one that othersmight use to help them decide what is their own thing.And after all, I’ve been out of jail for 44 years and I knowthere are limits to what one can do out. If the actionspeaks in a somewhat big way to five or ten people then, Ithink it will be well worth while.” 'And yet jail, if it comes, will not be the end of theevents. Though her job was held while she was servingabout 18 days in jail in Midland Michigan and a few daysmore in Cook County jail, there is some question whethera convicted felon can retain a post in the University ofChicago. Furthermore, the American Nurses Associationhas a rule that no nurse can retain her license after beingconvicted of a felony. Miss Kennedy points to this rule inthe ANA as an effective way to quash dissent since anurse’s livelihood is taken away as an added punishment.Perhaps there is no better way to end than to quoteagain from the Beaver 55:We are saddened by Nixon’s purposeful mis¬representation of the real course of our involvement inVietnam. We are saddened, but not fooled by his lyingpolitics.To him and to the corporation executives we say:Beware, your brutality has been recognized and we won’tbe stopped. Stop producing weapons. Stop polluting, stopexploiting the poor here and abroad. Understand that onehuman life is more important than all your deadly profit.These actions must continue; the spirit of the peoplewill not be overcome.The Rolling StonesmeetThe Black Panthersin .jean-Luc Godard’snew film in color ■Sympathy for the DevilExclusive presented byChicago Doc Films at thePremiere! University of Chicago1 I 1 ■ IIV^I m Friday Feb. 6 and Saturday Feb. 77:15 and 9:30 pm; j-fuq ■ •L .. 1 all seats s2c-nrr > ’••"v‘" • Mandel Hall57th Street at University Ave.PLATDOr’S ALL-NIGHT $HCMWOWMNOi «I0*T t MtytO.T fOliOWIHG l.SI »(GUUH HVUtlFeb 6 Feb 7Clint Eastwood John CassavottosRSTFUl Of DOlLAkS FACESFeb. 13 Feb. 14Richard Burton „ ,Bixaboth Taylor "TNI NIGHT Of THE IGUANA PARANOIAFeb. 20 Feb. 21Fellini's T ~w Sandy Dennis8 Vi THAT COLD DAY IN THE PARKFeb. 27 Feb. 28PbelNsw—i wWBW* Rkberd Hertea, Peter O'TeeleHUD BECKETTMarch 6 March 7RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY FOUR HORSEMEN OFTHE APOCALYPSEnnriTt 41 sa Bertolucci'sBEFORE THEREVOLUTIONSUNDAY, FEB. 8INTERNATIONALHOUSE AUDITORIUM - 8 P.M.$1Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHUTZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWN RICHIE HAVENSIN CONCERTWednesday, February 117:30 P.M.Auditorium TheatreTickets at the box office & all Ticketronoutlets. Dial * T-l-C-K-E-T-S for ticket in¬formation.2/Grey City Journal/February 6, 1970tiui tsnj\arw (wm WHAT ELSE IS LIFT TO SHOW?Aim'LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337*2113Vo '»’♦» » Ve'e VTBE1TE&!The Greeks Have a Word for ItI FIND IT HARD to be objective about Teiry Fox. Afterreading some of his film criticism I have often wonderedif his judgment hasn’t been warped by radiation frommovie screens or too much time spent in the dark. So Imust admit that I went to see his adaptation of Hippolytuslast weekend with the bias of a rider on a Fox hunt.There was plenty to shoot at, but the Fox did lead afairly exciting chase. The production received a big boostfrom the script, for which Euripides deserves the highestpraise. This interpretation, however, was not classical, butbilled as a “blues adaptation.” What this seemed to meanwas a classical script spiced by heavy doses of music andsex. The music, composed by Clyde Stats and performedby Snakeskin and the Pit Vipers, was excellent, althoughthe lyrics were an inane and unfounded addition to thescript. The sex was mediocre.Sex is a major concern of the classical Hippolytus andshould certainly be played up in a modem production, butnot to the point of a static, one-sided interpretation. Aph¬rodite, slinked out by Laura Seligman, performs a toler¬able strip tease in a kind of “Whatever Lola Wants LolaGets” song-and-dance sequence. Maybe audience interestcan be bumped and grinded out this way, but in this caseI did not feel that the addition (especially of the lyrics)was valid. On the other hand, some of the more subtlesexual aspects of certain characters were not developedenough. The fascinatingly prudish side of Hippolytus(played by Christopher Lyon) seemed to be totally neg¬lected in a rather uncertain personification of virtue. Mr.Lyon’s performance as the virgin youth was energetic butin need of evenness, especially in the scene of his death(which evoked smirks instead of pity and fear), but it isadmittedly tough to die onstage. Lynn Sonberg, in the roleof the incestuous step-mother, had it a little easier, beingallowed to die offstage. However, she seemed to die all toosoon, leaving behind only a glossy and one-dimensionalportrait of Phaedre, whose bitchier qualities seemedstifled by an attempt at presenting only nobility and beau¬ty-This kind of one-sided character interpretation was, infact, the play’s major flaw. But the director should begiven credit for its choices in casting. All of the per¬formers looked their parts, with the exception of the Mes¬senger. who reminded me so much of a depressed W. C.Fields that it was difficult to listen to his importantspeech, although it would have been hard to make out hiswords anyway. *Nevertheless, all the players and crew can be com¬mended for the energy that they so obviously put into theproduction. Some of the minor characters were especially competent. The Chorus, gossipped by Sue Lemer andAnne Gyory, created the most enlightened interpretationsin the drama. Alan Minskoff’s Theseus was capable andsatisfying, and Janet Kravetz’ Nurse, although a little toostrong (at one point she clutches Phaedre in a half-nel¬son), was interesting. Artemis, played coolly by Leiza Za-del, was adequate, but the addition of a musical epilogueTBEITBB-Airy Spirits with Feet of LeadTHE SWAN OF AVON foundered last night, and plungedto the polluted depths of Lake Michigan. By the end of thefifth act, he was lying full fathom five, poor chap.it seems a pity to be obliged to criticize a productionput on at one of the few places in this barren city that cancall itself a theatre. But the verstion of Tlie Tempestwhich has just opened at the Goodman is a brilliant ex¬ample of how not to produce Shakespeare. It is well worthseeing, if only for this reason.One sympathizes naturally enough with the phoneticproblems that the (mainly non-English) cast had tograpple with. However, phonetics, in a theatrical produc¬tion, is an all or nothing business. It is very hard for anactor, unless he has an impressive gift of mimicry, toshout convincingly in a foreign accent. When he is obligedto do so, the result is nearly always unaesthetic, or justplain garbled. Thus, Caliban (Clayton Corbin), Sebastian'Leonard Cimino) and even Prospero (Douglas Cambell —an English actor!) were often incomprehensible, in¬audible, or both.The roles of Alonso, Antonio and Gonzalo were handledindifferently, and the only exception in an otherwise un¬sparkling cast was Fionnuala Flanagan’s Miranda. She ateast was not guilty of throwing away her lines, as nearlyan the other members of the cast did most of the time,he lyrical quality of the play was lost because of thisendency; the songs were mumbled as if the cast wereembarrassed by them; and it seemed that the point of theproduction was to sacrifice everything to the visual im¬pression the producer was aiming at.Unfortunately even this misfired. Why on earth nine-eenth century costumes were chosen for the King, An-^ni°, Sebastian, etc., is beyond me. The set looked like across between baroque a la Walgreen and leftovers fromSh tC°n0my Perf°nnance of Gilbert and Sullivan. In mostokespeare productions, the choice of modern dress nor-d y goes hand in hand with a “modern” interpretationout06 ^ay' ^ G00^111311 production was trying to bring,som® new nineteenth century meaning in The Tem-^Th S s^nificance eluded me.he comic scenes in the play were not very funny, andt ,f hardly differentiated from the serious ones, which were not very serious. Indeed, the latter were often unin¬tentionally comic. Juno & Co. came charging on in theirscene, singing as mellifluously as a pair of Chicago policecar sirens. That jscene, far from being “such stuff asdreams are made on,” was played woodenly under anabominable cardboard arch decorated with silly littlelights that flashed inanely on and off, reminiscent of pre-Christmas shopping nights downtown.The dramatist’s ironic piece of stage business, con¬sisting of Miranda and Ferdinand’s chess game, was in¬explicably cut, with consequent damage to.the play’s neatmechanism of internal reflections.Regrettably, therefore, the result of all this was to turnThe Tempest into a tale of sound and fury that signifiednothing.Bad Shakespeare is a disservice to everyone. It annoysthe connoissuer and can so easily discourage the potentialenthusiast completely. If one can’t manage an Englishaccent without swallowing one’s tongue and gobbling one’sglottis, why make things unnecessarily incomprehensiblefor an American audience by trying? It would seem that,short of an all-English cast or actors good at mimicry, itwould be better to stick to a good old Middle Westerntwang. Indeed, one of the best Shakespeare performancesI have seen in England was Paul Robeson’s Othello atStratford on Avon. Robeson’s sonorous voice was ideal forthe part and he kept his American accent; had he tried toape an Oxford one, the effect would have been ridiculous.Similarly, in this production, Caliban would have been farbetter had he spoken naturally — it would even have beenmore appropriate for the part.Oddly enough in the Goodman Tempest, one felt thatthere was an attempt in the choreography and in thesemi-African style of one or two of Ariel’s costumes, togive the play something of a local flavor. But the troubleprecisely was that there was just a hint of this and theproducer did not go the whole hog. Wallgreen baroque andSears Roebuck tribal costumes just do not go together.The moral is that a Shakespeare producer should not mixhis drinks.Michael Issacharoff (something along the lines of “I Got Rhythm, Too, EvenThough I’m Chaste”) was ridiculous.But while the performers looked their parts, most of thecostumes did not. Modern dress is one thing, consistencyin modernization another. Maybe a modern Theseus canget away with a sailor suit (even if it looks more like theFifties than the Seventies), but he would certainly neverallow his son to be dressed in surplus army fatigues. Buteven a few inconsistencies could be tolerated if there weresome semblance of elegance in the whole. This, however,was sadly lacking, especially in the stage setting.Now that I’ve taken a few shots, I think it might be bestto let the Fox keep on running until he gets a little fatter.He put on a fair show and might even manage to stayahead in the future if he follows a less obvious path andkeeps up with the pace set by his talented fellow beasts,Snakeskin and the Pit Vipers.Aristotle S. Onassis(1STClITi 0UBH1LHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T S. EUotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxC. F. Z. HitchcockFrank MalbrancheThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroThe Gray 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 Hall.February C, 1979/Grey City Journal/3THEATREThe Body Politic, Story Theatre, and Paul SillsYES VIRGINIA, there is an off-Broadway in Chicago. It’slocated in the former home of the U.S. Slicing MachineCompany, 2259 N. Lincoln, and it’s called the Body Politic.Paul Sills is the mind behind this theater company,whose presentations the Yale Drama School calls “storytheater.” Sills, who believes that the popular theater mustgo back to the story, began experimenting with story the¬ater in the summer of 1968. Story theater is simply thetheatricalization of literature on a bare, intimate stage. Itcalls for smooth transitions from dialogue to narration tomime by the actors.The company’s two productions thus far consist of sixadaptations of racy stories from Ovid's “Metamorphoses”and from Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm’s fairy tales. Sills’translations and adaptations dramatize the stories withoutdistorting them. His even-handed direction and the smoothinteraction of the cast achieve a unified, flowing set ofworks. If there is some feeling of repetition, it is due tothe production of six stories by the same author.The cast goes far in transcending humans and theirwords. One of their memorable feats is the metamorphosisfrom human to animal forms and back again. The mimingand the sound effects, made only with the human voice,are mesmerizing.Chuck Bartlett is a bull, then a horse, then a masterthief; his stage presence and versatility are striking.Then there’s Gerritt Graham, who previously was theman in the bathtub in “Chicago,” which had a short runat the now-defunct Los Angeles Coliseum on Wells Street.He is a superb Cocky Locky in the story of Henny Penny.Every animal movement and expression of his win anenthusiastic response from the audience. But he cannot“play” at looking interested in Grimm’s story, “The Sal¬ad.” He is new to the company, bland, and rather in¬effective as a supporting player, but as a donkey — wow!Tom Towles is a young, not-so-tender ham, who inevi¬tably adds a dash of “we’re really alive,” through his *Ovid’s Metamorphoses’ad-libbing. He is a natural as a villain in the “RobberBridegroom,” as an old man in the “Golden Goose,” andas the slick Foxey Woxey in “Henny Penny.”The sureness and seriousness of the cast creates andsustains an aura of illusion and intensity which is en¬hanced by folk-rock music from the Beatles, Dylan, JoeMcDonald, and other. John Guth, an unassuming, verytalented artist sings the songs and accompanies himself onthe guitar.THEATREA Victorian MelodramaTHE BERGMAN GALLERY is proving itself to be asversatile as its director. Next week, this high-class maisond’art will be host to an unusual group effort by some ofthe University Theatre elite (James O’Reilly, PaulineBrailsford, and others) to present Angel Street, a Victo¬rian melodrama in the finest cloak-and-dagger tradition.20% STUDENT DISCOUNTLAST THREE WEEKS!May I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EffeiMJSRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake Park^UofC Tuesday Night Special20% reduction. The Efendiinvites students, faculty andstaff for memorable entrees($3.50-5.75) This ad entitlesbearer to 20% reduction ofdinner cost, includingcocktails and wines. BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMENT STOREPL 2-47441150 E. 63rd St. Part of the Victorian Festival (netchurally), this produc¬tion is one of the two events to charge admission ($2 ahead). But it’s worth it.Angel Street (on which the movie Gaslight is based),is the story of a man who tries to drive his wife crazy.Pat Prinz, who plays the female substitute for a butler,describes the characters as follows: “There is an evilvillain, a gentle cringing heroine, a ratty cockney maid,a motherly domestic type, and the famous detective, In¬spector Rough.” Well said.This show, directed by O’Reilly, will be shownWednesday through Friday at 8:30. But it is the mind of Paul Sills which permeates allaspects of the Body Politic. He has done more than aconventional director does in creating and choreographingthe flowing visual images which bring these classical talesto life.A native of Chicago, Sills attended the University ofChicago, where he founded a drama group called “Tonightat 8:30” which evolved into The Playwrights, the CompassPlayers, and, ten years ago, into The Second City.And now there’s story theater. This inexpensive treatis yours for $1.00 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 8:30and Sundays at 3 p.m. if you’re a child and-or a student.If you’re a bit more prosperous, on Friday and Saturdayat 8:30 and 10:30, tickets are $2.50 and $3.00. On Thurs¬days Ovid is performed; the other days are Grimm.Paula Meinetz ShapiroContributorsDan Chaffee is a fourth year student in the Collegemajoring in English.Injun played Tonto for 15 years on The Lone RangerMichael Issacharoff is an Assistant professor in thedepartment of romance languages and literatures.Aristotle S. Onassis was last seen on his yacht in thebeautiful blue Adriatic.Eisenstein's Music by ProkofievALEXANDER NEVSKYCobb Hall Sunday, Feb. 8 7:00 & 9:15Clarkenjoy ourspecial studentrateC ( attimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredaily• open 7 30 a.m.-lateshow midnight• Sunday film guildD every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 75little gallery for galsonly• dark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• y.vite for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-28434/Grey Ctty Jouraal/February 6, ltfO "WHAT IS THIS MAN DOING?The Folk Festival: “An Exhausting Joy”COME WINTER QUARTER, I’m always too lazy to goafter good seats for the UC Folk Festival and that’s a painbecause I do go and end up in some dark hollow of Man-del Hall where sound refuses to shine. Clarity is one pointfor records and it’s true that Mandel has the acoustics ofa glorified barn, nonetheless, there is something about liveperformances of folk music that can’t be reproduced. Themusic is not more fragile than rock nor really a separatething, but claw-hammer picking, fiddle-and-foot, old bluesare not as easily split-out, as rock is, from a really re¬sponsive audience.For that reason perhaps the high points of the festivalwere the free workshops in Ida Noyes. Audiences are small¬er, the performers get a chance to talk about themselvesand their music and to play in some of the old styles theyno longer use in concert. We get moments like the beau¬tiful version of “Corinna, Corinna” that Carl Martin andTed Bogan played at the Fiddle Workshop and RoscoeHolcomb’s “Single Girl” at the Banjo Workshop that justdon’t happen without good feelings and informal¬ity.This year’s festival stressed the scope of traditions inAmerican folk music. Jean Carignan of Quebec, who mustbe “one of the great fiddlers of all-time” himself, playedtunes from the French-Canadian and Irish tradition ofEastern Canada and Northern New England. There wasAmerican Indian music and dance, a Mexican band, Cajunmusic, and a small history of the blues in Carl Martin andTed Bogan through Bukka White to the popular Chicagosound of Luther Allison. Bill Monroe, the granddaddy ofbluegrass, was back again looking a little older but sound¬ing as slick and smooth as ever. And not to forget herethe nine times around New Lost City Ramblers who werebetter this year than I’ve ever heard them.Such a diverse program might have been exciting onlyto knowledgeable folklorists had the performers not beenso consistently outstanding. Over the whole distance fromLuther Allison’s blues guitar to Kilby Snow’s autoharp themusic was great. Try as I might to let myself go only tothe banjo and fiddle music, I couldn’t back out on any ofthe performers. The weekend was an exhausting joy.Dan Chaffee FILMGOLD 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 Food Ebert PukesWHAT DOES FUTZ MEAN? It’s everything I’ve been try¬ing to say all my life. I could hardly wait to get homeand beat off. I’m gonna get stoned and see it again. Theyhad every perversion except three crocodiles eating out acoffee table. A real high class film, take your girl to seeit. It’s happiness on a stick. Brutal savage intensely hon¬est destructive entertaining. Roger Ebert threw up. Makes2001: A Space Odyssey look like a puppet show. Thethe sweeping-room floor. The best buttscrew ever filmedand the com cob was simply superb. Free showing atValois. Beats Putney Swope by about twenty minutes. Ithink three people laughed, I think three people died. Mycar wouldn’t start afterwards.InjunTHE EAGLEcocktails . , . luncheon . . . dinner . , . late snacks , , ,1*31, BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HV 3-1933February 6, 1970/Grey City Joumal/5trttli ,<f xxoi. '»4!«•#*« <• «r* + !*4 * * • ??? fff f ftPrff • - - *# rBSa£V«assf*•• * .*«here’syourticketlNow TICKETRON Electronic Box Offi¬ces (over 50 locations) offer reservedseat, computer-printed tickets forevery major theatre, hall and arena inthe Chicago area!Enjoy the convenience of selectingactual reserved seat tickets for the toptheatre, concert, motion picture, sportsand special events ... all from a TICK¬ETRON outlet near your home or work.TICKETRON’S multi-million dollarcomputer network automatically lo¬cates the best seats available for theevent you want, on the date you want,at the price you choose . . . and youractual tickets are computer-printedright on the spot.Let TICKETRON add a new dimen¬sion of convenience to your favoriteentertainment.Over $2,000,000 Worth of TicketsSold Since Our May, 1969 Opening! pop/rockGRAND FUNK RAILROADCivic Opeia HouseSaturday. February 7RICHIE HAVENSIN CONCERTAuditorium TheatreWednesday. February 11AN EVENING WITHLAINIE KAZANAuditorium TheatreFriday. February 13DELANEY. BONNIE& FRIENDSwith ERIC CLAPTONAuditorium TheatreSaturday. February 14THE DOORSAuditorium TheatreSunday. February IS.THE FOUR SEASONSCivic Opera HouseFri. & Sun , Feb 20 & 22OLIVERFive StagesSaturday. February 21LAURA NYROCivic Opera HouseSaturday, February 21SLY & THE FAMILY STONEAuditorium TheatreSaturday, February 21THE FIFTH DIMENSIONCivic Opera HouseFri. & Sat. Mar. 20 & 21IRON BUTTERFLYAuditorium TheatreSaturday, March 21JOE COCKERAuditorium TheatreSunday, March 22COMING SOONROCK & ROLL REVIVAL• Chuck Berry • Bill Haley ft TheComets • Bo Oiddley • The Orifters• The Shirelles • The CoastersTHE LETTERMENAuditorium TheatreFriday, April 3THREE DOG NIGHTAuditorium TheatreSunday, April 5SMOKEY ROBINSON& THE MIRACLESAuditorium TheatreFriday. April 17PRESERVATION HALLJAZZ BANDAuditorium TheatreSaturday, April 18FERRANTE & TEICHERAuditorium TheatreFriday. April 24THE TEMPTATIONSAuditorium TheatreFri., Sat. & Sun., May 1.2 & 3THE ASSOCIATIONAuditorium TheatreFri. & Sat., May 8 & 9 classicalCITY CENTERJOFFREY BALLETAuditorium TheatreWed . Jan 28 thruSun.. Feb 8“ALVIN AILEYAMERICAN DANCETHEATREAuditorium TheatreFriday. February 27LES DANSEURSAFRICAINSAuditorium TheatreSaturday, February 28AMERICAN BALLETTHEATREAuditorium TheatreThursday. March‘*> theatre****************SHUBERT THF4TRI *"hair" :**************** BLACKS TONE THEATRE ** “FORTY CARATS’ *Starring *A BARBARA RUSH A***************STUDE8AKER THEATREStratford Festival ol Canada"THE MERCHANT OF VENICE"& "THE SCHOOLFOR SCANDAL"Feb. 17 thru Mar 14On Sale Soon motionpicturesMICHAEL TODO THEATRE"GOODBYE. MR. CHIPS*Peter O'Toole 4 Petula ClarkCINEMA 1S0"PAINT YOUR WAGON"lee Mar»mClint Eastwood lean SebergCINESTAGE"MAROONED"Giegory PecL Richard CrennaDavid lanssen TAKCAM-YMifCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out MODERN DAttCE CLASSES4.30*0 6,00Monday • Saturdaytod A Jan taught.Allison Theater Dance Center! PIZZA ipLATTERiCARLOS MONTOYAOrchestra HallFriday. March 13ARTURO BENEDETTIMICHELANGELIAuditorium TheatreFriday. March 20ST. MATTHEW'S PASSIONRockefeller ChapelSunday, March 22ISRAEL IN EGYPTRockefeller ChapelSunday, April 26JOAN SUTHERLANDaccompanied byRICHARD BONYNGEAuditorium TheatreMonday, May 4country &westernWJJD SHOWER OF STARSMedinah TempleSunday, April 12 THE HAPPY MEDIUM■JACQUES BRELIS ALIVE AND WELLAND LIVING IN PARIS"Thru Sunday. Feb. 8"REVELATIONS II"Opening Thursday. March 5Previews Feb 26 thru Mar. 4THE SECOND CITYImprovisational TheatreGOODMAN THEATRE“THE TEMPEST”Feb. 1 thru Feb. 22CIVIC THEATREJules Feilter'*"LITTLE MURDERS"Opens Tuesday, January 27PHEASANT RUN PLAYHOUSE"BOEING BOEING"StarringROBERT FULLERThrough Sunday, Feb. 8"DOST DRINK THE WATER"Starring JERRY LESTERFeb. 10 thru Mar. 1IVANHOE THEATRE"CAT ON A HOTTIN ROOF"Through Saturday, Feb. 14CANDLELIGHT PLAYHOUSE"DON’T DRINKTHE WATER"MILL RUN PLAYHOUSEWatch lor Opening SoonTHE CHICAGO WORLDFLOWER andGARDEN SHOWInternational AmphitheatreMarch 7 thru March 15PICK OUT THECHICAGOMontgomery Ward A Co.140 Sooth State Street618 West Chicago AvenueMarshall Field A Co111 North Stete StreetTicket CentralManna CityMet Music Stores328 E 58th Street8225 S Cottage GroveCrawford Dept Stores2509 W. Devon Avenue4020 W North AvenueThe Flip Side3314 W Foster AvenueHouse of Lewis1538 N Wells StreetParalunes2659 N Clark Street•Paul B1003 N Rush Street TlDriETnON LOCATION NEAR YOU OR DIAL•Rodman Shoppe1341 W. Morse Avenue•Toad Hall1444 57th StreetUnited Audio Center6181 N. Lincoln AvenueWolke & Kotler Dept. Store4809 11 Milwaukee Ave.American National BankContinental Illinois NationalBank and Trust CompanyHartford Plaza BankMerchandise Nat. BankNational Boulevard BankUpper Avenue Nat. BankNORTH SUBURBANDEERFIELDUnited Audio CenterEVANSTONMarshall Field A Co. GOLF MILL PLAZAUnited Audio CenterHIGHLAND PARKFirst National Bank ofHighland ParkMOUNT PROSPECTMontgomery Ward & Co.ROLLING MEADOWSCrawlord Dept. StoreSKOKIEMarshall Field & Co.Montgomery Ward & Co.House of Lewis. NorthWAUKEGANMontgomery Ward & Co.WILMETTEToad HallWEST SUBURBAN BERWYNTroy StoresELGINFirst Nat Bank of ElginLA GRANGEMontgomery Ward & Co.LOMBARDMontgomery Ward & Co.OAKBROOKMarshall Field A Co.OAK PARKMarshall Field & Co.Montgomery Ward & Co.WINSTON PARKTroy StoresSOUTH SUBURBANEVERGREEN PARKMontgomery Ward A Co.HARVEYMontgomery Wa.d A Co.•Computer terminals being installed. JOLIETMontgomery Ward A Co.PARK FORESTMarshall Field A CoRIVER OAKSMarshall Field A CoINDIANAEAST CHICAGO•Lewm’sGARYMontgomery Ward A Co.MUNSTERMontgomery Ward A CoSOUTH BENDRobertson's Dept. StoreWISCONSINKENOSHAMontgomery Ward A Co.WAUWATOSAMarshall Field A Co.e service charge| jCa Cjrenouu' Restaurant Francias| Your hosts: Gaud & Renie IOpen 11 am to 11 pm .I Gosed Monday I1435 E. Hyde Park Blvd. .| Phone 684-4050 |^ for reservations ^ Straight Talk:Your diamond is at...Jfwftcts »Of 59 YfAPS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOODSTATION JBD HAS MOVEDFROM 1435 E. HYDE PARKTO THE FLAMINGO HOTEL^smrK sSTATIONn&uncuuj..THE BESTFOOD AND DRINKSIN TOWN5500 So. Shore DriveOur telephone remains thesame: BU 8-9241 or PL 2-3800 EVERGREEN PLAZAS/Grey City Journal/February 6, 1970CULTURE VULTUREThe Vulch Gives You Culcha QuizWELL GANG did you catch the mistake (intentional ofcourse) in last week’s Vulch? Who did write Dr. Jecklyand Mr. Hyde? — Dickens? Terry Southern? Aristotle?Wrong of course — F. Scott Fitzgerald — didn’t you learnanything in the Victorian Literature course? Since you hadso much fun with that try this example of Vulture quizzesto follow: Who wrote Alice in Wonderland? A. CarolLewis B. Arlo Guthrie C. J. Edgar Hoover D. All of theAbove E. None of the above F. A couple of the above.Enough of this foolishness, now to get down to someserious business:CAMPUSFilmTonight’s the night that this good ole university getssome class. Hyde Park is putting on its trimmings tobecome the second Cannes with the showing of the AMER¬ICAN PREMIERE of Jean-Luc Godard’s Sympathy Withthe Devil. Any film which combines the talents of theRolling Stones and the Panthers has quite a lot going forit. (Expect to find an FBI man sitting next to you in orderto take down any relevant information on the Panthers.)Anyway it will be shown both tonight and tomorrow at7:15 and 9:30 in Mandel for 2 buckeroos.Saturday, International House presents Jean Genet’sThe Balcony. The film starring Shelly Winters and PeterFalk is an allegory which takes place in a whore house.It’s at 8.Sunday brings Sergei Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky— an undeniable cinematic classic. About a great Russianfreedom fighter who frees the Russians from the Germansafter a memorable fight on the inevitable Russian ice. InCobb for $1 at 7 and 9:15.Tuesday, Doc Films presents Nosferatu by F. W. Mur-nau. This is the original of the film versions of the Dra-cula stories. (All of us Bela Lugosi fans will be dis¬appointed.) The problem is that you may not have enoughnerve to go back to your dark apartment. But what thehell — Dr. Films is playing John D. Rockefeller — it’sFREE. In Cobb at 8.Wednesday brings I’m No Angel by Wesley Rugglesbut starring none other than Mae West. If you can’t waitfor Myra Breckenridge, see this instead. It has what must*be one of the dirtiest of Mae’s lines which she says toCary Grant: “Are you packing a rod, or are you just gladto see me?” In Cobb at 7:05 and 9:30 for 75 cents.The last of the Victorian Quarter FREE films is Farfrom the Madding Crowd. So you think Julie Christiehasn’t done anything good since Darling. So you neverliked Terance Stamp. Well you can go see it for LaurenceCarter. Strain hard so you don’t miss him. He may beplaying a second lead or a tree or a broom. In Cobb at 7.TheatreThe Victorian Age seems to be really with us. This week is Patrick Hamilton’s Angel Street. It’s a real roughtough melodrammer in which a husband is trying to drivehis wife crazy. Of course there is a detective who solvesthe whole mystery. Directed by James O’Reilly it starsPauline Brailsford, O’Reilly, George Tountas, Louise Er¬lich, and Pat Prinz. It plays Wednesday, Thursday, Fridayand Saturday in the Bergman Gallery at 8:30.MusicTonight is a performance of Sir John Stainer’s TheCrucifiction. Performed by members of the UniversityChorus and the Collegium Musicum (directed by JohnKlaus), it will be presented at the First Unitarian Church,5650 Woodlawn at 8:30.The Juilliard String Quartet are presenting an allBeethoven program Tuesday Friday and Saturday at 8:30in Mandel. Don’t miss your chance to hear this famousgroup especially since this is the Beethoven year.FridayAt 7:30 is a benefit for the Venceremos Brigade. Therewill be slides of Cuba. Len Radinsky and others will talk.Donations solicited.The Chicago Lamaze Association will present a filmon the Lamaze method of natural childbirth. A discussionwill follow. At 8Monday' NUC meeting at 8Peoples School Improvisational Drama Group at 8:30TuesdayGay Liberation Rap Session at noon.Crafts Workshop from 3:30-5WRAP meeting at 8WednesdayFolksinging and playing at 8.ThursdayGay Liberation rap session at noon.Crafts Workshop from 3:30-5.Hyde Park Corner on Urban Communal Living at 8.Poetry for poets and listeners at 9.ELSEWHEREFilmThe Damned, Luchinio Lisconti’s massive portrayal ofthe rise of Nazi Germany is documented through the his¬tory of one family. And what a family! With Dirk Bo¬garde, Ingrid Thulin and Hermut Berger. At the Carnegie,Rush st. at Oak.' ■ ■,The Battle of Algiers gives an overwhelmingly vividaccount of Algeria’s struggle for independence. It is di¬rected by Gillo Pontecorvo but resembles a documentary.At the Festival 3912 N. Sheridan.Andy Warhol’s Lonesome Cowboys started last weekhere in Chicago. Its publicity describes it as a Zane Grey idea, written by Aristophanes, and performed by DeSade’sstocfc company from Charenton. It’s at the Aardvark, 1608N. Wells, in Piper’s Allery.Z is a film of political suspense and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicaland contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, Chicago and Michigan.Topaz is a movie for people who like Hitchcock butalso like taking showers. John Forsythe hasn’t been sogood since his Bachelor Father days. At the ChicagoTheatre, Randolph near State.Futz directed by Tom O’Horgan and written by RochelleOwens and starring the Cafe La Mama Troupe can besummarized very easily: It’s about this guy who loves hispig and the neighbors can’t stand it. At the ImageTheatre, Clark and Chicago.Putney Swope is a mad attack on Madison Avenue,white liberals and other such imaginary phenomena and issupposed to be pretty hilarious. At the Threepenny, 2424N. Lincoln.Gaily, Gaily is about a young innocent who comes toChicago during the rowdy 20’s — and then Chicago doessomething to him. At the Esquire, 53 E. Oak Street.TheatreEnd '^me a play by none other than the Nobel Prizewin*- amuel Beckett. It’s in a new theatre with a coffeeshop iched. Chicago reperatory Company, 315 W.North iday, Saturday, and Sunday at 8:30.The Assault on Charles Sumner by Robert Hivnor hasits premiere engagement here. It’s a Civil War comedy(judge by the title). Kingston Mines Theatre, 2356 Lincoln.Friday and Saturday at 8:30, Sunday at 7:30.The Master Thief and Oother Stories is another exampleof Paul Sills’ “story theatre” this time taken from theGrimm Brothers. The Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln. Tues¬day through Thursday at 8:30, Friday and Saturday at8:30 and 10:30.The Nest Generation is the newest of the famous SecondCity revues. Second City 1616 N. Wells, Tuesdays throughThursday and Sunday, Friday at 8:30 and 11, Saturday at8:30, 11 and 1.A Game and Two in a Cave are two new plays byRose Borgia and Joe Flair, respectively. It’s at the CafeTOPA, 904 W. Belmont. Friday and Saturday at 8.30 andSunday at 7:30. It’s free but coffee is $2.Eddie in the Doorway is an original drama of son-fatherconflict. At the Hull House Playwright’s Theatre, 222 W.North. Friday and Saturday at 8:30. Students $1.50.ArtThere is a retrospective show of Roy Lichtenstein’sworks at the Museum of Contemporary Art starting to¬morrow. One of the poppa’s of pop, the show includespaintings, drawings, banners, and ceramics. The Museumis at 237 E. Ontario St.B B KINGIN CONCERTAT MANDELMon., Feb. 9, - 8:00 PMTickets: $3.00, $2.50 reserved$2.00 balcony unreservedNOW ON SALE AT MANDEL BOX OFFICEa Revitalization ProductionFebruary 6, 1970/Grey City JournaI/7r „ i ts r • .»! » •■f A ,U ^ iul* J * nA»* w *<•' ♦ * vw f » » » » » f *•••«••••ANCHOR CAMERA1523 East 53rd St. PL 2-2228FAST QUALITY PROCESSINGASK FOR YOURPROFIT SHARING BONUS CARDSAVE 20%You don't have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip” DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist•ye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644* Cornett Dtorhttl 645 E. 55th STREET *CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *P^neM 4|65^ ^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 & LAUNDRYJESSElSON’Sj|&752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 - 1340 E. 53rd SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Bates farStudents and EelativesSingle reams from $9.00 dailyDouble bed reams from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 doilyLake ViewRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. P'ease call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveThe Carpet BarnA 6w«i ot Cortto»4 Corps*We have an enormous selectionof new and used wall-to-wallcarpetings, staircase runners,remnants and area rugs (a largeselection of genuine and Amer¬ican orientals). Antique furnituretoe.We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 • 4.1228 W. Kin tie (at leone)E84-I8M MS-2271 THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines!(//! Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks <£ Hardcovers1540 E.55tb$t.-Ml 3-7511aiuarehouse30% OFF SALEOUTERWEAR, SPORT-JACKETS, MAXI-COATS,SHIRTS, BELL BOTTOMSHOURS: Monday thru Friday - 12 to 10Saturdoy - 11 to 9Sunday - 12 to 62837 N. BROADWAY CHICAGO. 60657 DO ITFLUENT!(with Bell & Howell)English, speech, foreignlanguage or music study, aBell & Howell cassetteplayer/recorder is the keyto improvement.Take the 294K, a completekit with push-button con¬venience and can't-missAutomatic recording levelcontrol. It's a complete kit,with microphone, carry-case, earphone, patch cord;AC and DC converters forhouse or car-power, a blankcassette and a telephonepick-up coil.Save ever $10 by buying Hmcomplete bit - only* 59.95• CHARGE er BUDGET PUN1342 E. 55th St.HY3-9259 BOWERS DODGE7300 S. WESTERNPHONE 476-4400THE ALL NEW FOR 1970 CHALLENGERChallenger 2-Door Hardtop1966 Buick Skylark2 Dr. H.T. V-8, A.T.,P.S., R, H.WSWTurq/Black Int.$1295.00 1965 Olds 442Sports Coup4-Spood, R, H, WSW,Rod. w/Black Int.$895.001965 Chevy SS327,Bucket Seats Auto.Trans., Console, R,H, WSW, Whitew/Black leather Int.$995.00 1964 PontiacTempest 4 Dr. Sed.Auto. Trans., P.S., R,H, WSW, Blackw/bluo Int.$595.00LET US KNOW THAT YOU ARE A STUDENTAND YOU WILL RECEIVE THE BEST DEAL IN TOWNON A NEW DODGE OR USED CARMORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.BELL SHELLSERVICE5200 S. Lake Park493-5200"Buy Shell From Bellsince 1926 //Alhambrahast)ions to make yonled as beautiful as yon IIlook I'incly tailoredoriginals of dottiestnand imported fabricsMod. Edwardian,conventional andcasual styles pinsdressv thinys fromSI2.9V'to SI00.00 inmost si:es. Stop inand hro wsc a while ) onare welcome'Hours:Mon.-Wed10 00 to 7:30Thurs.-Sat10:00 to 9 30h 1453 East Hyde Park.I/Grey City Jouraal/February I, 197$AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYBrazier ResignsThe Reverend Arthur Brazier, a founderand long-time president of The WoodlawnOrganization (TWO) resigned earlier thisweek.Rev Brazier’s resignation became effec¬tive Monday, when he formally left thepresidency. He has been succeeded as pres¬ident by the former executive vice presi¬dent E. Duke McNeil.All TWO statements are being channeledthrough staff director and director of eco-tnomci development Leon Finney.Rev. Brazier was not available for com¬ment.New ChairA new chair, the Marshall Field IV pro¬fessor of urban education, has been createdby the department of education under com¬bined grants from the Ford Foundation andthe Field Foundation of Illinois. Edgar GEpps has been appointed professor of thechair. He has served as the assistant direc¬tor of the McCarver Foundation in the divi¬sion of behavioral sciences of the TuskegeeInstitute.The chair is part of the department’s pro¬gram to expand studies in urban education.The training and placement program, fund¬ed by another grant from the ford founda¬tion, has already begun placing teams offrom ten to twelve teachers who have re¬ceived special training in coping with prob¬lems unique in urban schools in South Sideschools. The master of arts of teaching(MAT) and MST programs have in the pastthree years been giving special attention toinner-city schools.The department also helped to draft theinitial proposal for the Woodlawn Projectand has since been gradually withdrawingfrom it to permit greater community con¬trol.HildebrandRoger Hildebrand, dean of the College,has been invited to testify before the com¬ mittee of suffrage of the Illinois Con¬stitutional convention to give his “opinionsand suggestions in the area of suffrage andelections.”Hildebrand will express the opinion thatthe voting age in Illinois should be loweredto 18.The dean would like to know if the votingreal concern to the students and faculty ofthe College and welcomes “any indicationof this concern — particularly short writtenstatements.”SVNA and NixonFive to fifteen Students for Violent Non-Action (SVNA) left Hutch Commons thismorning at 9 for the vicinity of the FieldMuseum where they will stage a pro¬pollution demonstration as President Nix¬on’s cavalcade passes by. The mission ofthe task force is to distribute baggies fullof soft coal among the bystanders so they can start their own pollution fires.A hardy spokesman for the group, FrankMalbranche, estimated there would be a20 percent risk of arrest and asked theMaroon to post bail if necessary.The brave polluters hope to return to thesanctity of campus by 12 noon, missionaccomplished.Nixon is in Chicago to speak on the evilsof pollution and to outline the administra¬tion’s plans for alleviating them.SG ProjectStudent government (SG) is attemptingto raise $10,000 to contribute to an in¬novative educational community project inWoodlawn. The money will be divided be¬tween present educational programs and aplanned Community Education Centersponsored by the First PresbyterianChurch in Woodlawn.Gay Lib Confronts Social OppressionContinued from Page OneMembers of gay lib have expressed theirviews in a taped discussion broadcast byWHPK two weeks ago, and will speak againFebruary 19 at 10 am on Studs Turkel’sWFMT program. In an effort to reach Uni¬versity community people, gay lib holdsmeetings at the Blue Gargoyle at noonThursdays and Mondays and operates atelephone information number at 955-7433.Though the University gay lib front wasjust organized, other gay movements existin New York, San Francisco, Minnesotaand Wisconsin. According to Alice Leiner,‘72, By next month gay liberation frontswill be springing up on campuses all overthe country.”BULLETINFriday, February 6:op0*s' candl®s« jewelry, etc., made by Hyde Park-LPrn.o^n0lds Club South Lounge 11-5:30 pm.,,a , E: Dr Iraj Dehghan lecturer in Persian on,i,°'aman and Absal: a Critical Review of Jami's' Breas,ed Hall, 3:30 pm.pILM PREMIERE: Godard's "SymphathyRiJ?eDDevi1 (0ne Plus °ne)" with the Rolling Stones,LErTimfLan,hers- D0C- Mandel, $2, 7:15, 9:30."Housing and Urban Change' Where Doesa?c.'?! Work Fit", Jeanne R. Lowe, Consultant, Nation-Citioc • n»C2.ali,ion and New York Coalition author ofLEctndcA Race wi,h Time- SSA- 7:30 pm.Pr°"*sor J David Greenstone on "BlackintonD8.15? and Jewish Nationalism — the Role of—intellectuals" Hillel House, 8:30 pm.^turday, February 7SupdId E^CE: Conference on Housing, SSA, 9 am.Ann.ti :cS?a9hetti t0 benefit "Beaver 55", St. ThomasAP°rSi o Scho°b 5467 Woodlawn, $3 adults, SI childrenAMC 8 pm-thpRnCA-,|l fi*"** PREMERE: Godard's "Sympathy fori0ne plus °ne)" wi,b the Rolling Stones,Night £a.n.,«ers- D0C' Handel, S2, 7:15, 9:30.Cinic*« Music' Pood, and gay people Ida Noyesiloister Club, 9 pm to 2 am.Sunday, February 8° Kh!"cERT: University Concert Band, birec;ed by~JohnFLi1,^, Cloisters Club, Free, 3 pm.FL r£l:«,Alelander Nevsky" Cobb, $1, 7 and 9:15 pm.cusVin.,- ®5!»" FiekJs", students free, other SI. Dis-Fur Jc.T YWdish follows film, Hillel House, 7:30 om.tern^«I:i Ber,° Lucci's "Before the Revolution", In-nmonal House auditorium, SI, 8 pm. The University front aims at trying to re¬late to the wide community which theyfeel is the source of the oppression prob¬lem: the police department, the schools,the churches, and the home. On campus,gay lib is concerned with the resident hallsituation and how to help students who are“coming out,” or becoming aware of theirgayness and accepting it. The front is alsoinvestigating University compliance withagencies that discriminate against homo¬sexuals in employment. The State depart¬ment was listed as one agency that doesn’thire homosexuals, for security reasons,even if they are open about their gayness.One member of gay lib said if a recruitercame to campus he would be “dealt withmilitantly.”Gay lib, in order to apply for funds fromthe committee on recognized student orga¬nizations (CORSO), must be an educationalorganization relating to the communityrather than a special interest group. In or¬der to further their education of the com¬munity, the organization is talking aboutestablishing a gay commune with a library,a place for meetings and discussions besidebeing a place where gay people can feel alessening of feeling of oppression. Memberssay if society is oppressive, the whole com¬munity is involved, therefore they are justi¬fied in asking CORSO for support.One member said a very conservative es¬timate of the number of homosexuals oncampus was five percent or 400 people. Hecited the Kinsey report as evidenec.In speaking of the difficulty of gay liber¬ation in reaching society, Henry Weimhoff,said “People are desensitized. There are somany problems facing Americans that theydon’t want to be bothered with any of them.They try to cover them up in their mindsand in the process, create a hell of amess.” Stephen May, 71, and also a member,commented, “One of the hardest things wehave to fight is the way we are forced un¬derground by social stigmas. You can’tfight your oppression if you remain anony¬mous.” The projected education center will offerfree day-care and educational programs de¬signed to meet the needs of ghetto children,including a consultant in “play therapy”,hot meals, and a free educational atmos¬phere for the first three years of gradeschool. It will serve 150 children from agesone to eight.More than $3000 has already been raisedin response to letters sent out to faculty,selected alumni, doctors, and businessmenin the area.Graphics AwardThe graphic arts department of the indus¬trial relations center has been recognizedfor lithographic excellence in the recentfifth annual national competition, in-plantdivision, sponsored by the printing productsdivision of the Minnesota Mining Company.The industrial relations center, located inthe Mott Building on 60 St, prints about 80percent of the posters shown on campus forstudent activities.The department won awards for five en¬tries in the poster, systems printing andpromotional categories. Joe Sefcik, direc¬tor, said of the activities posters, “the chal¬lenge they provide has been instrumentalfor two out of the five awards.”Criteria of the judges were printing defi¬nition, ink coverage, intensity of solids, reg¬ister, dot structure, layout, art and suit¬ability of paper stock.SPLATTERED COBB: Silas Cobb a la hot chocolate. David RosentoushFebruary 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOOFFICE OF STUDENT HOUSINGTHE UNIVERSITY HOUSE SYSTEMANNOUNCESThe acceptance of applications for positions in the UniversityHouses for the 1970-71 academic year.QUALIFICATIONS Appointments to the Housing Staff as ResidentHeads and Assistant Resident Heads are open to members ofthe faculties and to students working for advanced degrees inthe University. Undergraduates who are twenty years of agewill be considered for Assistant Resident Head positions.Applicants for Resident Head may be single or married.Assistants must be single.RESPONSIBILITIES Members of the Housing Staff serve as informaladvisors and work with students to develop cultural, social,and athletic activities in the Houses.REMUNERATION Resident Heads receive furnished apartments,meals, stipends and expenses. Assistants receive single roomsand board. Some Assistants also receive stipends.APPLICATIONS All persons interested in applying for positions onthe Housing Staff may obtain further information from theOffice of Student Housing, Administration 201. Applicationsshould be made by March 15.Edward TurkingtonDirector of Student Housing6/The Chicago Maroon/February 6, 1970(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)We have the most VICIOUS BUNS IN TOWNOTHER SCENESAfter the Slones - the Pit VipersOf course.prof j David Greenstone's talk on"RLACK nationalism and jew-isBH NATIONALISM: THE ROLEnF INTELLECTUALS (Reflectionson the Crisis of the Negro Intellec-tuals by Harold Crose) has been re¬scheduled for tonight at HillelHouse, 5715 Woodlawnat 6:30.GREEN FIELDS. Yiddish film atHillel Sunday night, 7:30. Studentstree others SI .00. Discussion mYiddish follows for all interested.SEE Biologist PAUL EHRLICH(THE POPULATION BOM8) on TV—Johnny Carson, Mon nite, Feb 9—10:30PM.See Bella driven to the brink of in¬sanity! Angel Street.GOD, THE BIBLE ARE ALIVE S.SHORE BIBLE CH. 7159 Cornell11AM 3:30PM.Sperm Devotees: Student Project onEqual Rights for Men is Sponsor¬ing the Mr. U of C Contest to BeHeld at the Lascivious Costume3all, 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."VENCEREMOS": film and Dis¬cussion on MOZAMBIQUE Feb 6,8PM at Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone.THE KING Is Coming Feb. 9.Turn On ANewExperiencePeruvian CuisineIn A QuaintAtmospherePIQUEOKESTAURANT5427 N. ClarkChicagocall for reservations769-0455 ClueTicTacToeChessBLUE GARGOYLEBB KING AT MANDEL MondayFeb 9 8:00 $3.00, $2.50, $2.00. WhatMore Could you Ask?Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-6377)ALEXANDER NEVSKYOne of the masterpieces of moderncinema (music by Prokofiev) COBBHALL Sunday Feb 8, 749:15.Sympathize with the Oevil? Groktwith the Pit Vipers. Friday afterthe Stones."King Broadcasting Company inter¬views Feb 18, 1970, for news re¬porters, writers, filmmakers, etc.See our ad on page—/'Madness, Intrigue, Passion! AngelStreet, Feb 11, 12, 13, 14, 8:30PM,Bergman Gallery.SUNDAYS. Margaret's Church — The Episco¬pal Church of South Shore — 25S5E. 73rd St. (corner Coles)7:30 am Holy Communion9:00 am Family Eucherist &Church SchoolHeavy Rip OFF — Extra Coins —How? Fighting Water Pollution,Come Sun 2/8/70 3PM 8151 S. Mich.T'ai Chi: Cloister Club; beg. WedFeb 11, 7PM, $2/session, twice aFriday. Blue Gargoyle. VinceremosBenefit. Movies, Slides. Len Radin¬sky. 8:00.THE KING at Mandel Feb 9 Tick¬ets Now On Sale at Mandel.Embrace a tiger and return tomountain. T'ai Chi.Sale of pots, jewelry, candles, etc.made by Hyde Park people. To¬day Feb 6 11-5:30. Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge. Starting after the enemy but arriv¬ing before he does. T'ai Chi.Bring Guitars, other instrumentsand people to the Gargoyle Wednes¬days at 8. Folk Music.The "supreme ultimate" exercisefor mindbody. T'ai Chi.The Baha'i Faith Offers practicalsolutions to feelings of personal iso¬lation and helplessness. Investigateit Mondays, Ida Noyes, 7:30PM.Direct from Texas: Snakeskin andthe Pit Vipers. Friday.T'ai Chi: Cloister Club; be. Wed,Feb 11, 7PM, $2/session, twice aweek.BB King — Another RevitlizationHits! DONT MISS IT!Lamaze Birth Method Fitm. BlueGargoyle. Friday at 8.B B KING IN CONCERTMonday, Feb 9 at Mandel 8:00Tickets $3, 2.50, 2.00 on Sale.CRAFT COOPBuy and browse at the CRAFTCOOP. Sale of batik, candles,Ukrainian belts. Today Fri. Feb 6.11:00-5:30. Reynolds Club Lounge.SKIINGTHE GREAT SKI DOWN at Jack-son, Wyo. Mar 20-29. $146 . 684-5388.PEOPLE WANTEDPollution's A Bummer"Help Fight It!"Clean Your Pads & FratHouses with Jet-Away ForSupersonic CleaningBio-Degradable DetergentsFor Sample BottleContact:Michael Litow769-1717You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until to¬morrow if you call us to¬dayPETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.(formerly 1011 E. 55th)646-4411 Hyde Park Family Offers FreeRoom and Board to Student in Ex¬change for Mother's Helper andBaby Sitting Services. 955-0224.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.WANTED: Paid medical examinersfor insurance exams. Resident typedoctors preferred. Full professionalfees paid by nationally known in¬surance firm. Ralph J. Wood. FR 2-2390.Can you repair tape recorders? Weneed you. Will pay well. Call U ofC Counselling Center, x2360.The Gargoyle Needs People to WorkLunch. Apply rrv Person.Part-Time Secretary Wanted in En¬rico Fermi Institute, About 15-20hours per Week. Qualifications: In¬telligence, Sense of Responsibility,Sense of Humor, Ability to Copewith IBM Electric Typewriter. 667-4700 ext 8621, Sandra.EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372WHOLE EARTHCATALOGUECIRCLE BOOK STORE1049 W. Taylor733-4495(right Mar U. of III.off tha Dai Ryaa)lOfl Discont With This Ad Til Fab 28MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUN ;name, ADDRESS, PHONE iCHARGE:HEADING: 50* per line, 40< per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75‘ perline, 60c 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 fred. Free Room for Student in Exchangefor Baoysifting One Child Eveningsand Sat Morrv. 664-1369.Need to leam to speak basicFrench. Will pay tutor. Call 643-9553 after 5.Full Time Worker for StudentHealth Org. Some Office Work andSome Movement Organizing. CarFurnished. Good Salary. Call BertKing 6671808 Late at Night. If noAnswer Try 493-2741 or x5480 duringday.Illustrators needed for Children'sbooks. Payment in Royalties. Box100. Maroon.PEOPLE FOR SALEIBM Selectric Typist, Expert 8<Experienced. Days, Evenings, orWeekends. 2 Blocks from Adminis¬tration Building. 955-1795.Flute and recorder teacher. Privatelessons — Small Classes. JanetBlair 667-0988."May we do your typing? . .363-1104.Expert typing 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm's 8. weekends.Day Labor South has a targe supplyof Temporary Workers. Call Mon-Fri 6AM-4PM. 955-3300.NEED NEW HOMESFREE FREE FREE Black andBeautiful box-trained fluffy kittens.Call After 6. PL2-4870.Save Cat From Certain Death atthe Hands of Animal Welfare —Please — Must Go 'Cause of LousyLandlord — FREE! Call: 493-0143.FOR SALEStainless Steel Pots, Pans, Bed¬spreads, Oriental Rug and otherHousehold Items. Call S06-0029.3D-Chess Rules $2. Club $3/yr.3-D Chess Boards $10, $20401 Resort Hamp'rsn, Va23364.63 Renault new tires new battery$175 or best offer 643-6000 ask forJohn 3rd fir. Vincent.VW '61 $350. 288-5331 After 5PM.Wig Sale!BUY DIRECT’"™ IMPORTER100% HUMAN HAIR WIGSMachine Made Wigs <t a qaReg Retail $29.50 to 59.50 I liVUHand Made Wigs qaReg Retail $85.00 to 200.00 0*teUUFashionable Falls oc onReg Retail $49.50 to 79.50 CDmTULovely Wiglets q onReg Retail $15.00 to 25.00 DaDUBeautiful Cascades 11 cnReg Retail $20.00 to 35.00 I I .DUEyelashes 4Reg Retail $2.50 to 5.00 I >411Stretch Wigs * a qaReg Retail $24.95 to 29.95 I 4n/USynthetic. Tapered, Straight or CurlyDon Kaye ImportsSTEVENS BUILDING17 N. STATE - SUITE 1716Phone- 641-21999:30 to 5:30 MONDAY THRU SAT .ADDITIONAL 10% OFF TOSTUDENTS & FACULTYWITH I.D.SEATS ON THE $185 EL ALJUNE FLIGHT ARE MORETHAN HALF SOLD. CharterFlights 3598,3672 Keep Warm in a Fur Coat. Alaskaor Mink Paw. Full Length Size12-14 Beautiful Condition EveningsHY31011.SPACEROOMMATE WANTED: AvailableNOW Share 4 Rms $75/M. 955-2288 Male.Very Large Steeping Rm/No cook¬ing — $55/M. Call 752-8213 nights.6Rm. apt to sublet. So. Sh„ 2baths, children welcome. AvailableApril 1. Rent $173. Call ES5-8207After 6:30 PM.Room & Board arrangement withfamily for female student. HY3-7973.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 it 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/ganage. 731-2561.Rem Rmmate Wtd. — Cheap,Friendly — 54 Greenwood Evenings:288-3356.Need Fem. Roommate. Own room.New furnished apartment. 1400 E57. Balcony $65/mo w/utilities. Call363-5609 evenings.UC STAFF cpI would like to rentor sblet 2-3 bedrm hse or apt. inHyde Pk or So Shore, June 70 toJune 71. 955-932 after 5:30.Fem Rmmate (pref) Wtnd. 4 BdrmApt (own rm) cooking facilties, 2bath rms partially furnished. $28/month. Call 493-3938 (Pat).Small studio apt to sublet. $70.Call 324-1140 after 5. RIDESIf you're planning to escape HydePark and are passing by Madison,Wise, or Ann Arbor this weekend,or the next or the next . . . don'tleave me here. Share driving andexpenses to UW or UM. Diana, ext.3776.PERSONALSTHIS SUMMERStudy and Travel in ISRAEL.ILLINOIS STATE UNIVERSITYSUMMER INSTITUTE IN ISRAEL.Study at the Hebrew University ofJerusalem and the University Col¬lege of Haifa.Seminar on "The Modern MiddleEast" carries six semester hoursof graduate or undergraduate credit.Tours to all major geographicalareas and points of interest.Total cost of $960.00 includingtransportation, lodging, meals, tours,special lectures and tuition.For information and applicationswrite:Kenneth C. Kennerd, Chairman De¬partment of Philosophy Director,Summer Institute in Israel.Illinois State UniversityNormal, Illinois 61761LOST AND FOUNDDog, "Gawain" Looks Like YoungShepherd with Floppy Ears. VeryFriendly. Reward 684-5154.HOUSE FOR SALEBrick duplex, 7 rooms, 4 bed¬rooms, 2 baths, garage, near1C and library, South Shore,$11,000; call 721-0111. Hear the Pit Vipers perform theworld premier of Frank Mal-branche's Folk Opera, "Requiemfor Satan Manson." Friday afterthe Stones."To M.M. I can get off on you.The Mad Ashtray Kicker.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 94^-4798 between 6 &9 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.The LAC Film Festival is Coming,Featuring Underground, ExpertMental, and Pornographic Flicks.FOTA drama offers 2 $75 prizes fororiginal, yet unproduced plays writ¬ten by students of the college.Prize plays to be produced duringFOTA. Entry deadline: Feb 11,1970. Submit plays to Deborah Davi¬son Woodward Ct. Rm 1918r BUB-6610.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.FOTA pays for your play.Find out what the Age of Victoriawas Really Like. The 29th annualLibertine Arts Conference Discussesthose Aspects of History whichMake Community Scholars Blush.IsSnakeskin really the Zodiac? DoptMiss the Fabulous Pit Vipers intheir 1st Public Appearance since1956.Actually the LAC is half serious.Abbie Hoffman will be there. (NoKidding)The life of your mind doe sot haveto be its own reward. FOTA drama.Girts: 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 Pit Vipers: George Spiggott'sHouse Band. Friday Only.Whole Earth Catalog at the BookCenter in Harper Court.SIMON & GARFUNKEL’Snew albumBRIDGE OVER TROUBLED WATERSonly *3.99as are ALL 5.98 albumsSTUDENT COOPREYNOLDS CLUB POOL HALLANNEXAttention - Men Under 25Save $$ On Auto Insurance.$25,000 8.1. and P.D. $1,000 Madical Payand Unmurad Motoritti ProtectionPer YearSingle Mai*Agt}l-15 $27®°°Married Mai*Age 21-25 Al o—*15300 Per YearWITH GOOD STUDENT &YOUNG DRIVER DISCOUNTSENTRY. TIINSURANCE Jim Crane238-0971February 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7Economicslesson:A Mini-Brute Buick's1970 Opel Kadett2-door SedanThe money yousave may be yourownGM's lowest Ed Murphypriced car $ 1955 Buick-Opel8600 CommercialRE 4-1411HOLLY DOES TURN IT ONNow services ofCOPS CEDIER .available to students, staff 1and faculty. — f|They accept 102 ,,personal chycks(with ID's) and '• 'bookstore charge 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. WE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITHAS ANOrdained MinisterWITH A RANK OFDoctor«f DivinityWe are a fast growing faith, actively seeking new mem¬bers who believe as we do that all men should seek thetruth in their own way, by any means they deem right. Asa minister of the faith you can:1. Set up your own church and apply for exemption fromproperty and other taxes.2. Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiastic powers.3. Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries. Wecan tell you how.4. 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 inthis 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 TQ MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHP.O. Box 1393, Dept. G-5Evanston, Illinois 60204rtiHold upyour local gasr. Ill,It you’ve yot a hit of larceny inyour heart,you’ll love theRenault 10.You see, it yets 15 miles to theyallon.And as far as yas stations areconcerned, that’s hiyhway robbery.So don’t he tix> harsh when thei hoys ar your local yas station actI a little yrumpy.In fact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suyycst they yet one tor. themselves.After all, they miyht have a hitot larceny in|rheir heartstix>.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 ideasFOR YOUR CHILDREN S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashtor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalie St., Chic. 60602FR 2 2390 — 798 0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by ApptSUN LIFE OF CANADA Hyde Park's OldestArt Supply StoreDUNCAN’SSchool Supplies( Student Discount)1305 E. 53rd St. HY 3-4111 S S^ This Saturday Evening and Most Every Saturday:1 THE NIGHT CLUB |in the Cloisters Club, Ida Noyes 8:30 P.M. • 2 A.M. |FEATURING: IREGIE WILLIS, BASS| VAUGHN CLEMMENS, VOCALSAFTER THE FUCKS, or INSTEAD OF THE CELLULOID STRIPS ILIVE MUSIC & SONG, FOOD & DRINK XNO ENTRANCE; NO COVER; MINIMUM: 1 order per (.15) 0I/The Chicago Maroon/February 6, 1970 ColumbiaIT'S HERESIMON AND GARFUNKEL"Bridge Over Troubled Water"- AVAILABLE AT -$ 1.00 off with this adLisbon's in the Loop175 W. WashingtonChicago, IllinoisFor All Your Music Needs