Rubin Says Conspiracy Is a 'Spiritual Thing'The jury is expected to go out to reach a verdict thisweek in one of the most controversial trials in recenttimes. The defendants: seven (formerly eight) mencharged with conspiring to cross state lines with intent toincite a riot. The prosecution: the United States govern¬ment.The funny thing about the Conspiracy is that if thegovernment, the FBI, the military, THEM in other words,reallv knew about what is happening in the radical move¬ment. they would know that the 7 or 8 people in the Con¬spiracy would never have been able to get together toplan, no less act on anything. Even Yippie! seems to havefactions. Abbie Hoffman says that being a defendant atthe trial is like being in the movie, On the Beach andwaiting for the inevitable doom. Fellow Yippie! Jerry Ru¬bin is more optimistic. The following is an interview withJerry done just before the forced conclusion of the de¬fense’s case. The interviewer is Abe Peck of The Seed.Are you guilty?Yes!Of what?Of having bad thoughts. The law says you’re guilty ifyou have bad thoughts. We are accused of conspiracy tohave intent. We aren’t accused of any actions.I want to confess. I confess to being guilty of wanting to DEFENDANT JERRY RUBIN"We are not guilty of the specific charges . . "see the government overthrown. The judge said today thatthe crucial factors are attitudes, and our attitudes havemade us guilty. Remember when the judge looked out andsaid: ‘‘Look at the expression on the defendant Hoffman’sface.” It’s the expression on our faces that make us guil¬ ty. Because we look at the judge with total contempt ofeverything he stands for, we are guilty.I think also that we are talking in the sense that wewanted a major confrontation and polarization. We are notguilty of the specific charges of the government producedagainst us. They don’t know what the real conspiracy isbecause the real conspiracy is a spiritual thing, and howcan you put someone in jail for a spiritual crime.Jeannie Plamundon of the White Panther Party spoke inDetroit at a Free John Sinclair Benefit on January 25th.She read a letter from her husband Pun, who is currentlyunderground.Pm said that he would come back and answer the threepot charges against him. He said that he would come backto answer a charge that he, Sinclair, and two other guysblew up a CIA office. But he said that he would nevercome back to answer a conspiracy charge, because thewhole idea of “conspiracy ” is a ruse and is just a tactic topick people off in the 1984 terms that Deputy AttorneyGeneral Kleindienst meant when he spoke of “our modemideological criminal.”Well, I guess that the reason he wants to do it that wayis that it is almost impossible to beat a conspiracy in¬dictment, because what is a conspiracy? Even though IContinued on Page ThreeTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 36 The University of Chicago Tuesday, February 10, 1970SVNA DemonstratesIn Favor of Pollutionr.K.m. Quinton SpongeFIND THE PRESIDENT: Mr Nixon's limousine at the Field Museum after thePresident entered to confer with governors on pollution.SMC Planning April Offensive ActionBy John GowerThe student mobilization committee(SMC) will hold a national conference inCleveland this weekend to plan coordinatedaction for an April 15 offensive against thewar. Two other groups, the new mobiliza¬tion committee and the Vietnam morato-Goldberg Fine;Still in BillingsMichael Goldberg, the University studentwho jumped from a third floor windowthree weeks ago, is still in Billings Hospi-a ’ an(t says he expects to be there forabout six more weeks.Goldberg was charged with disorderlyconduct at the time of the accident, and isscheduled to appear in court March 31. Po-!C0 ^ave dropped charges of disorderlyconduct against Thomas Blanford andana Brooks, two other students involvedlnj incident. Deborah Hiatt, a former' udent who was charged with possession ofnarcotics, has since gone home to Mas¬sachusetts and could not be reached.Goldberg has already had several oper-a ions for face and knee injuries, and saido was feeing “fine.” His academic statuss that of special student, and he is cur-cntly registered for one course.Dean of students Charles O’Connell de-S ^rnors that the University would dis-PJ* the students involved, and stateda the University would give legal advice10 anyone interested. rium committee, have also called for dem¬onstrations on that day.Student mobe officials are expecting alarge turnout for the conference which is tobe held at Case Western Reserve Univer¬sity. Estimates are now for about 2,000 ormore to attend meetings starting Fridaynight.Major discussion will be about the natureof the April 15 demonstrations and to whatextent the antiwar movement should relateto other issues such as GI organizing, re¬pression of blacks and militants, anduniting with workers. All three nationalorganizations have taken differing standson these issues.The major emphasis of the SMC is onorganizing large mass demonstrations witha demand for immediate withdrawal of UStroops from Vietnam undiluted by other is¬sues. It feels that opposition to the war willattract the most people and keep the move¬ment growing, while adding new demandsmay turn away potential allies.This position is the one held by the YoungSocialist Alliance which is the major orga¬nized group within the SMC. A smaller fac¬tion, the International Socialists, (IS) willbe presenting a proposal which they haveentitled “toward the working class. The ISbelieves that the way to add numbers andstrength to the antiwar movement is bybringing in the working class. In general,the IS would like to see the SMC developmore political positions on a wider spec¬trum of issues.Revolutionary Youth Movement II(RYM II) is also expected to be at the con- Somewhere between five and fifteenmembers of the grateful Americans sup¬porting pollution (GASP) faction of the lo¬cal chapter of students for violent non-ac¬tion (SVNA) greeted President Nixon lastFriday morning outside the Field Museumdemanding an end to “the nonsense aboutcleaning up the environment.”Frank Malbranche, leader of the group,explained that their premise was based onAristotelian syllogism. “Nixon supports bigbusiness, and big business supports pollu¬tion,” Malbranche said. “It follows,” heference. They most likely will attempt tobroaden the stand of the SMC by buildingties to third world groups, like the BlackPanthers, and by involvement in oppositionto political repression.The SMC is the largest campus based an¬tiwar organization in the country, althoughthere is no chapter at the University of Chi¬cago. However, there will be a delegationfrom IS from this campus going to the con¬ference. concluded, “that Nixon supports pollution.”The group waved a banner reading“American air — breathe it or leave it.”Members carried placards reading “theonly good lake is a dead lake” and “pollu¬tion is everybody’s business.”Chanting “all we are saying is give shit achance,” the group maintained that if Nix¬on was to support the Constitution he wouldhave to continue air pollution.One protester was heard saying, “CommEd needs a friend.” Another demonstratorspoke of the integrity of “green air. I don’ttrust air I can’t see,” he said. Malbranchesummed up the feelings of the movementby saying, “you can take the air out of thecountry, but you can’t take the country outof the air.”As part of the protest, some GASP mem¬bers distributed “pollution packs” to pass¬ers-by. The kit, consisting of a lump of softcoal submerged in sulphur, allegedly wouldprovide “normal air,” for areas not affect¬ed by natural pollution, when ignited.The group did not succeed in catching theeye of the President’s entourage. Chicagopolice had removed the demonstration toabout 250 yards from the museum’s en¬trance.! DON'T TRUSTmwms[D AMERICA'S AIR-.BREATHE ITLEAVE ITQuinton SpongeDEMONSTRATION: Members of grateful Americans supporting pollution (GASP)demanding an end to anti-pollution movement.*S jU I ^ S' ■ * 1 3 ‘ ^ m _ ' IRallies Are Scheduled Against Trial, AgnewThursday is going to be radical day inChicago this month.The Chicago Conspiracy trial is expectedto go to the jury Thursday, and the con¬spiracy seven will be celebrating the eventwith a vigil beginning at noon and lasting until the jury reaches a verdict.Kicking off the festivities will be a rallyin front of the federal building at noon. Af¬ter the rally, the people’s jury, will begindeliberating at an as yet undeterminedplace. A lightshow, workshops; and speak¬ ers will accompany the people’s jury,which is a Yippie version of the real thing.Said a conspiracy spokesman, “Just showup at the rally, and you’ll find out wherethe people’s jury will be.”The same day, Vice President Spiro Ag- new will be in Chicago, and various peacegroups will be celebrating his presencewith a “Free Kim Agnew” demonstration.The theme refers to the Vice president’sdaughter who was not allowed to take partin the October anti-war moratorium by herfather.Panthers Call for Radical NewspapersBy Sarah GlazerThree Maroon reporters attended a meet¬ing Saturday morning for “progressive”journalists held by the Black Panthers attheir West Side office. The Panthers hadinvited every college newspaper in Chicagoto send representatives, but besides theUniversity of Chicago, only Malcolm X Col¬lege and Wilson Jr College were represent¬ed at the meeting.The Panthers proposed the establishmentof an “oppressed peoples news service” toprovide news of interest to students and thecommunity from a radical perspective. The news service would be operated by and forcollege and underground newspapers inChicago.One Panther spoke about the need for“journalist power.” He cited the case of ajournalist for the Sun-Times whose articleon the Black Panthers was allegedly sobadly mauled by editors, that he quit hisjob.” Journalists should have a base ofpower,” he said. He further stated that hadthere been support from journaliststhroughout the city, quitting would not havebeen the newsman’s only alternative“Words can be used as shotguns to run the big papers out of town,” the Panther con¬cluded.The Panthers at the meeting urged col¬lege reporters to write about the commu¬nity, to expose the political nature of theuniversity and government policy, and togive pre-publicity to political speakers andevents. The first speaker said, “Don’t justgive information, give guidelines on how tosolve problems ... Newspapers shouldmobilize the school and community for ac¬tion.” The Chicago Peace Council, the NewMobilization Committee to end the War, theYippies, and International Socialists aresupporting the demonstration at 6:30 out¬side the Conrad Hilton, where Agnew willbe staying.Cars for the Agnew demonstration will beleaving Ida Noyes parking lot at 5:30. OneIS spokesman said that probably a thou¬sand people will be involved in the demon¬stration.With everything coming off on Thursday,one Conspiracy spokesman said the mottoof the day is “Dare to struggle, dare togrin.” Volunteer workers are needed to¬day and tomorrow at Conspiracy headquar¬ters, 28 E. Jackson.CADRE Urges Card Turn-InBULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, February 10FILM: "Margaret Mead's New Guinea Diary", SocialScience 112, Swift 106, 11:30 — 1 pm.TALK: Judy Krug on the intellectual freedom committeeof the American Library Association, mezzanine floorof Harper Tower East in the graduate library schoollounge, noon.ORGAN CONCERT: Victorian compositions played byThomas Wikman Rockefeller Chapel, 12:30 — 1 pm.DISCUSSION: Science Fiction Society, Ida Noyes Hall,2:30 pm.SWIMMING: Elgin State, Bartlett Gym, 3:30 pm.COLLOQUIUM: John Magee, professor of chemistry atNotre Dame, Research Institute 430, 4:15 pm.FOTA MEETING: Reynolds Club 7:30 pm.FLICK: Nosferatu, DOC films, 8 pm.RAP SESSION: WRAP, the Blue Gargoyle 8 pm.CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES: Julliard String Quartet,Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.MEETING: SDS, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall Wednesday, February 11LECTURE: Role Differentiation and Power in FamilySystems", Social Science 122, Kent 107, 11:30 am.ILLUSTRATED LECTURE: Victorian Painting, A Pur¬er Vision", Quantrell Auditorium 4 pm.Noyes, 7:30 pm.MEETING: The coalition to stop pollution now, IdaNoyes, 7:30 pm.FLICK: "I'm No Angel", DOC film, Cobb, 7:15 and9:30 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: Angel Street, Bergman Gal¬lery, 8:30 pm. (runs through Saturday)Thursday, February 12LECTURE: Milton Friedmanon on capitalism and free¬dom, Quantrell Auditorium. 1:30 pm.GO CLUB: learn to play Go Ida Noyes, 7 pm.READINGS: "An Evening with MacGonagall," Scot¬land's national bard, Cloister Club, 8:30 pm. Chicago area draft resisters (CADRE) istrying to organize a draft card turn-in inChicago, and is urging all those who opposethe draft to forward their Selective ServiceSystem (SSS) mail to the Senate armedservice committee.CADRE announced its plans in a leafletdistributed on campus last week-end. Theorganization hopes to hold the draft cardturn-in in late February, during Senatearmed service committee hearings to dis¬cuss the possibility of ending the draft. Itclaims that the government is on the pointof realizing that it might be less trouble forthe Vietnam war to be fought by Americanand foreign mercenaries.CADRE lists several reasons why thedraft is in trouble. It points to the growingnumber of draft resistance groups, and to the tendency for draft resistance to becomea way of life rather than a single act. Italso mentions the destruction of draft filesthat have slowed up induction processes inmany major cities.CADRE says that 8000 men a year aregoing to Canada, and that since October1967 there has been an increase of over 737,-000 1-Y classifications. It believes that thisindicates that large numbers of inducteesare trying to flunk their physicals. SomeSupreme Court decisions have also helpedthe draft resistance movement.Finally, CADRE claims that even if thegovernment succeeds in inducting a resis¬ter, there is no guarantee that he will fol¬low orders. It mentions that the number ofAWOLs and desertions totalled 150,000 and50,000 respectively for 1968.THECOFFEE SHOPWIIIOLDT m WANTEDAlive! ★ ☆, artistsdesignercopy writers&laborers POTATO2/The Chicago Maroon/February 10, 1970Rubin Likens Trial to An Acid Trip'Continued from Page Onedidn’t know John Froines, I’m still in a conspiracy withhim because we are both part of the same Movement increating that event. So we become guilty of conspiracy —along with every single young person in America.People say to each other, “1 don’t have to support theConspiracy. The law is bogus, the appeals Court will haveto overturn it.” Other people say, “I’m not going to godown to the trial, I’m not going to organize, I’m not goingto get uptight about it because they just can’t be con¬victed. There’s been no evidence in the case.” What if youare convicted. What changes do you think people will gothrough?I think it would be a revolutionary thing if we’re con¬victed. I don’t care — and this is just before the defenserests — if we’re found innocent or guilty. If we’re foundguilty, that will give us a better organizing position.There’s no trial in history which has become a symbol inwhich the people got off, so if we’re interested in makinghistory, if we’re interested in influencing generations ofyoung kids, probably the most revolutionary thing wouldbe for us to be convicted. Then I think the fight for theappeal bond will be a major issue. I think they’ll be a bigattempt by Hoffman to keep us in jail, but I think there’sa reasonably good chance that we can exert enough pres¬sure to get an appeal bond. Then I think that for the nextfew years there will be a fantastic fight over the issue ofthe conspiracy. The law, the trial, and everything that itrepresents will be discussed everywhere for the next fewyears.On the other hand, if it’s a hung jury — I don’t think anaquittal is possible — thats OK too. But a guilty verdictisn’t the worst thing. I don’t hink we’re going to jail onlybecause I can’t picture myself in jail. If we go to jail,hopefully we’ll get out soon or they’ll be a revolution andthe jails will be overthrown and the people will be freed.I’m for anything that’s going to maximize my ex¬perience and enrichment in life. That’s what a Yippie! is.So maybe being found guilty will be the most fun. Andfun’s what it’s all about anyway.What the government is trying to do is frighten peopleby our trial. But we ain’t frightened. We’re having thetime of our life. I can’t wait to get to court in the morn¬ing.I’m going to miss this trial. What am I going to do whenthis trial’s over? It’s more fun than Chicago was. It’s hardto do this interview because what I say will be heldagainst me. Our words, our fucking words, are on trial.Anything we say now can be brought into the courtroomand held against us even if it is after the event. Like I cansay, “I am truly happy a riot happened in Chicago.”Boom! It can be held against me. I could say “riots arefun; every one should become a rioter; riots are the onlyhonest occupation in America today” — that would beheld against me. This trial has an effect on people’s lan¬guage. We’re not on trial for murder. We’re not on trialfor assault and battery. We’re not on trial for dynamiting.We are on trial for starting a rumor, a rumor about com¬ing to Chicago. We are on trial for having the intent ofstarting a rumor. We are on trial for conspiring to intendto start a rumor. We are on trial for language, for asimple language crime. The crime of saying,“let’s all goto Chicago and have a party!” So dig it. THE DEFENSE: Attorney William Kuntsler, Rennie Davis, Abbie Hoffman, Lee Weiner, David Dellinger, JohnFroines, Jerry Rubin, Tom Hayden, Ottorney Leonard Weinglass.THE JUDGE: Honorable Julius J Hoffman The courtroom itself is bright white because of the flou-rescent lighting. It’s got thick rugs. We’re all in nice swi¬vel chairs. The press sits on one side of the room, the juryon the other, and then there are the defense table and theprosecution table. People look like the side they’re on,they dress like the side they’re on.In a way, it’s very repressive, but its got so many lop-holes. The head marshall, a guy named Ron Dombrowski— sometimes you’ll look at him and he’ll break up laugh¬ing, he’ll put his hand over his mouth and try to break uphis laughter because he’ll remember he’s a federal mar¬shal and he has to play his role.It’s a true theater. There are newsmen-artists drawingpictures of everybody in the room, so naturally peoplethink they’re actors. After the big, black marshal namedPreston — who is 6’6” and weighs about 40 pounds andwas brought in especially to guard Bobby Seale — carriedNancy out of the courtroom for clapping, a TV news artistasked if he could draw him in the pose of picking upNancy. And Preston stood in the hall for a few minutes ina half-crouch and let the artist draw him.Everybody in the courtroom is playing a role. Every¬body’s perfectly suited. Julius, 5 feet tall, 74, squeakypenetrating voice, a brilliant, evil misantrope is the per¬fect Yippie! judge for this trial. Even the jury is weird.One of the juror’s daughters comes, sits in the secondrow, and roots for us! What kind of a crazy trial is thinganyhow? If that mother votes against us, her daughter willnever speak to her again.Everybody has become a symbol. It’s become a classicconfrontation between the basic American symbols. We’reall cartoon characters. I would say that that trial is anacid trip. I don’t know where I can go from here.I want to thank Dick Nixon and Dick Daley and every¬body who made it possible.Q. How many people do you think are in the conspiracy?Rubin: I think that every baby bom is a member of theconspiracy, and I think that is what frightens the govern¬ment so much. I mean they actually hate us. This isunlike any other criminal thing. We sit right next to themand rap to the two prosecuting attorneys and there is liketotal contempt for us because it’s two worlds, two worldsfighting. One is the old America that is dying and theother is the America that is growing up. We don’t respecttheir laws, we don’t respect their courts, and we’re in withour blood and they know that. The thing they get so pissedabout is that we are using their court system againstthem, we’re using the very weapon that they have per¬fected against them.I mean Judge Hoffman has all the authority, but wehave all the power. He’s scared to death of us. We’ve evengone to the Standard Club, his private escape-hatch wherehe goes to get away from the rabble. When we walked inhe had a hurried talk with the manager, like his marshal,you know, like what’s happening, what are THEY doinghere. But we were there with a member, Dave and Abbieand I, so he couldn’t do anything. He changed tablestwice, but so did we, and then he moved so his back wouldbe toward us. He spent the entire meal looking at us intotal amazement, just as if his world was caving in. Heate quickly and then he and his two marshal-bodyguardsmarched off. The beautiful thing is that he will never know if we will come into the Standard Club again.There is no place he can go where he will not be at¬tacked by us. His wife was sick in the hospital and everytime he came to visit her he was nearly attacked bypeople who work in the hospital. He has had to change hisphone three times now.What the government is finding out now is that thereare lots of different ways to infiltrate sociey, and thatJulius Hoffman and the others can never be free from our"One of the juror's daughterscomes, sits in the second row,and roots for us! What kind of acrazy trial is this anyhow? If thatmother votes against us, herdaughter will never speak to heragaininfluence. Schultz and Foran bring their kids to court andwe wave at them and I know that if I had a chance to talkto them I’d have them on our sides in a minute. I wastalking to two kids who are friends of Foran’s family, twosixteen-year-old kids, and they said that in their Catholichigh school a lot of the kids say to them that they shouldbe on our side because we represent youth and they’reyoung. We’re over thirty, but our ideas are young, ourspirit is young. Everybody thinks the defendants are four¬teen years old. Dick Schultz, the number two prosecutor,is younger than I am.You have a new book called Do It! Coming out. I’m notgoing to ask you what you want people to do, but whatwould you like to see people doing. If you go to jail for ayear on contempt, what would you like to see happenduring that year.Well, I have a model of a revolution which is a totalbreakdown of all institutions. Every school breaks down,churches fall apart, the army deserts — it just happens allover. That’s what Do It! implies; that everybody’s waitingfor a leader to come along and that’s really not how it’sgoing to happen at all. Each individual is going to createhis own revolution in his own life.If I’m in jail for that year, I’d like to see every youngkid in America drop out of middle-class society, whateverit means for him. The system thereby falls apart, and wecreate some*hing new. I don’t have a blue-print, nobodyhas a blueprint, but it’s just more anarchy and more ener¬gy, more chaos, more breakdown, more generationalsplits, more pot-smoking more privates taking their gunsand killing their generals and more wars like the war inVietnam, in which the guerrillas defeat the United States.I’d like to see a movie of the 1960s in the 1970s. onlymaybe three times as heavy. But that can only happen ifeverybody does it.February 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3 'EDITORIALConspiracy TrialAnd Repression“Conspiracy,” said Abbie Hoffman at a rally the day the trialof the Conspiracy eight began, “means breathing together. Andif we don’t hang together in there (the courtroom), then we’rereally gonna hang separately.”At the time, Abbie was talking about the defendants in thetrial. Yet in the four months since the trial began, it has acquired asymbolic meaning for the future of the radical movement in Amer¬ica. When the trial began, the movement was growing more andmore factionalized with the splintering of SDS last July, and thegrowing split between black militants who were more interestedin concentrating on racism, and the white radicals who still werebasing action around the Vietnam war.The trial united the left, perhaps for the first time since the1968 convention. The inclusion of Bobby Seale, chairman of theBlack Panther Party, among the defendants did to the movementwhat it hadn’t been able to do itself. The Panthers subsequently"The real verdict of the conspiracydefendants will be decided by thepeople. It will be decided perhapsin the streets of future conventions,perhaps someday at the polls."actively supported the defendants, and around the trial a newunity of fighting against government repression developed.The trial, since that time, has not really been about the validityof the war, or the validity of the “system” as the downtown dailieswould have us believe, or who was responsible for the conventionriots. The conspiracy trial has been about freedom; it is a test ofjust how far the government of this country is going to allow anindividual or a group to dissent actively against national policy.Thursday the jury will probably begin deliberating on averdict. Since the beginning of the trial, the defendants haveprophesied that they will be found guilty of crossing state lines toincite riots during the convention. We will be very surprised ifany other verdict is reached; and even if the jury decides not guilty,Judge Hoffman has been saving contempt citations for all remain¬ing seven defendants, and perhaps attorneys Kunstler and Wein-glass also. In any case, the verdict of the jury will not decide thequestion, nor will Hoffman’s citations.The real verdict of the conspiracy defendants will be decidedby the people. It will be decided perhaps in the streets of futureconventions, perhaps someday at the polls.It will be decided at draft induction centers, in the blackghettos of our cities, in the universities, in workers’ picket lines, infuture demonstrations.The message of the conspiracy trial is that the rightists inthis country are no longer willing silently to watch dissent ontheir living room TV. Nixon is president, and the test of the newleft is surely here. We are entering a period of repression in whichradical dissent in this country will no longer be tolerated by themen who rule.Reform or revolution used to be the question; two years agothe system seemed okay because McCarthy had won in NewHampshire and LBJ was on his way out. But Nixon has changedall that. And now the blatant repression of the Panthers and ofthe trial force the question again. LETTER TO THE EDITORSGay MisquoteThe Maroon misquotes Nancy Garwoodin its articles on Gay liberation. Surely wedon’t downgrade behavior that differs fromthe stereotyped image of homosexual be¬havior. What she said however, is that wedon’t downgrade behavior that FITS thestereotyped image of homosexual behavior.White domination for many years gener¬ated the monstrous notion that a light com¬plexion mitigated the inherent vulgarnessof black people. This racist lie has beenoverthrown by black people, who know thatblack is beautiful, that all shades of blackare equally beautiful.In the same way, straight cultural domi¬nation has taught us that the “masculine”male homosexual and the “feminine” fe¬male homosexual is somehow a cut aboveCommune DiscussionCommune residents, mostly from Chi¬cago, will discuss the experience of urbancommunal living at the Blue GargoyleThursday at 8 pm.Among the speakers will be a member ofReba Place, a group in Evanston in whichfamilies share a communal income andpeople from two south shore communes ofyoung adults. One of these communesrecently dissolved and the representativefrom it will talk about the problems whichled to its failure. The other speakers will befrom a Chicago Area Draft Resistance(CADRE) communal apartment, from aMennonite community on the north sideand from co-op housing on 53 street. Mem¬bers of Zionist and SDS communes in HydePark may also appear.This is the second in a series of Thursdaynight discussions sponsored by Hyde ParkCorner. Next week the topic will be draftlaws and the effects of recent legalchanges.Con Con HearingsThe sixth Illinois Constitutional Con¬vention has invited all students of the Uni¬versity to attend the open hearings beingheld February 12 and 13 at the Conrad Hil¬ton Hotel.Committee hearings on the bill of rights,education, revenue, local government, suf¬frage, general government, and executive,judiciary and legislative branches of thestate government will be going on.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve Aoki, Phil LathropFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondolikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Gor*ca Katz, SusanLeft, Gerard Leval, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Ellen Sazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, DavidSteele, John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, Jerry Levy,David Rosenbush, Paul Stelter.Founded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60437. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. his or her. “lisping frg” or “swaggeringdyke” counterpart. We reject conventionalpatterns of behavior that men and womenare expected to conform to. These restric¬tive patterns oppress all people, but espe¬cially Gay people.When we first organized, we were tempt¬ed to educate people to the fact that not allGay men have limp wrists and that not allGay women drive trucks. We then realized,however, that this would be a trap and acop-out of the worst sort. Like the blackswho know that nearly white is NOT morenearly right; we know that nearly straightis NOT more nearly great.SWAGGERING WOMEN ARE BEAU¬TIFUL! LISPING MEN ARE BEAU¬TIFUL! GAY IS BEAUTIFUL!Stephen MayUC Gay LiberationThe hearings run from 9 am to 12 noon,and from 2 to 5 pm on both days.Questions should be directed to StuartKaminsky, director of the University officeof public information or David Stahl, chair¬man of the public information committee ofCon Con in Springfield.President's SeminarThe president’s seminar, a group of stu¬dents from academic divisions which meetswith Edward Levi throughout the year, hasbeen re-activated, holding its first meetingJanuary 25. The seminar was started lastyear in the winter quarter and discussedvarious questions of the University with thepresident. At meetings this year, the bud¬get of the University has been prominent inthe discussion.Levi asked each of the deans to recom¬mend from the elected student councils intheir area a student to serve as a memberof this advisory group.Serving on the committee from the grad¬uate divisions are Elizabeth Mullenback,biological sciences; Steven Crockett, huma¬nities; James Landwehr, physical sciences,and Harry Block, social sciences.Students from the collegiate divisions areJohn Strausser, biology; Bemabe Feria,humanities; Judy Larson, physical scien¬ces; Anthony Grafton, social sciences andDavid Barnard, NCD.From the professional schools are JamesMorris, business; Michael McCrossin, di¬vinity, Alices Carnes, education, HenryPreston, law; Michael Koenig, library; Eu¬gene Corbett, medicine; and Clay Dix, so¬cial service administration.MacGonagall ReadingA public reading of the works of Sir Wil¬liam Topaz MacGonagall, the Scottish poetof the nineteenth century, will be givenThursday at 8:30 pm.The reading, which will be held in the IdaNoyes Hall Cloister Club, is part of the cur¬rent Victorian Festival. Among thosepoems to be read are such established clas¬sics as “The Tay Bridge Disaster,”“Greenland’s Icy Mountains,” and “A Trib¬ute to Mr Murphy and the Blue RibbonArmy.” Following the reading of the Mac¬Gonagall poems at least six scholarly pa¬pers dealing with various aspects of Mac-Gonagall’s poetry will be presented.Among those who will be participating inthe Thursday evening presentation areKenneth Northco.tt, Robert Streeter, Ed¬ward Rosenheim, Jr., Roy Lawrence, PeterDembswski, Gary Wclfe, Joseph Williams,and Merlin Bowen.In emphasizing the significance of the ef¬fort to bring the works of Sir William Mac¬Gonagall to the attention of the UniversityCommunity, Peter Dembowski, dean ofstudents in the humanities, said, “I fullyrealize the importance of a deep study ofneglected poets.”Admission to the MacGonagall poetryreading is free and refreshments will beserved.ABOUT THE MIDWAY4/The Chicago Maroon/February 10, 1970Twelve southside public officials urgedpresident Richard M Nixon to take an“unequivocal stand” against location of anairport in Lake Michigan during his visit toChicago.In a telegram sent to Nixon’s Chicago ho¬tel the public officials asked the Presidentfor his support in removing the lake onceand for all from all consideration as a pos¬sible site for Chicago’s third major airport.Southside public officials who signed thetelegram are US Rep Abner J Mikva; StateSenator Richard H Newhouse; State Repre¬sentatives Philip W Colllins, Bernard E Ep-ton, Henry M Lenard, Robert E Mann,Samuel C Maragos, James A McLendon;Aldermen Nicholas J Bohling, John J Bu¬chanan, William Cousins, Jr and Leon MDespres.The following is the complete text of thetelegram sent to the President:“We urge that during your visit to Chi¬cago and the midwest to consider problemsof pollution, you take an unequivocal standagainst locating Chicago’s third major air¬port in Lake Michigan.“An airport in the lake would be thecause of countless adverse effects on theChess UndefeatedThe University of Chicago chess clubteam remained undefeated in league playthis season, defeating Loop College “B” 5-0and IIT 3V2-W2. Dave Silars, Robert Kirk,Steve Pollack, Mike Chadwick, and JamesStrittmatter all won against Loop. Kirk,Chadwick, and Strittmatter won, and Pol¬lack drew in the ITT match.Last Thursday the chess club co-spon-sored a high school tournament at the BlueGargoyle. This Saturday, the club will holdits annual intramural tournament at Ida environment. Its proximity to O’Harewould require aircraft approach patternsresulting in substantial increased noise lev¬els over large areas of Chicago and the sub¬urbs. Interference with the natural condi¬tion and flow of water in the lake could dogreat harm to plant and animal life in thelake and ultimately turn it in/to a dead sea.‘‘A lake airport would be a defilement ofLook InterviewsBruno BettelheimBruno Bettelheim, Rowley distinguishedservice professor of education, professor ofpsychology and psychiatry and director ofthe Shankman orthogenic school, is fea¬tured in an issue of Look magazine appear¬ing nationally today.Bettelheim urges in the article, that theUnited States copy the Israeli kibbutzmethod of raising children, predicting thatthe ghetto cycle of poverty could be wipedout within one generation.The orthogenic school, located on 60Street, is a home for 50 children beingraised by Bettelheim according to his theo¬ries. Jane Whitbread, who interviewedBettelheim, noted what he called failings offamily life. Writes Whitbread, “In threehours one morning he was interrupted 20times by phone calls from desperate par¬ents. Their kids had tried suicide; theywere messed up with heroin or speed oracid. They had been busted or had split.The experience was horrifying to me. ToDr Bettelheim, it was routine.”Among Bettelheim’s books are Childrenof the Dream and The Empty Fortress, one of the great natural resources of themidwest and the nation. As public officialsrepresenting the people of Chicago we be¬lieve the lake must now be removed onceand for all from consideration as a possiblesite for Chicago’s next airport.We ask for your support on this vital is¬sue.”Mikva, Mann and Despres all represent the Hyde Park area.The airport in the lake has been sug¬gested as a possible alternative to the con¬gestion at the two Chicago airports. MayorDaley said last week though, that no newairport should be built in the near futureand that Midway airport should be used byairlines more than it is to alleviate presentair traffic congestion.Noyes Hall. which deal with his theories about children. WINTER: When yellow leaves or none or few 60 hang.SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12 OO dailyTwin rooms from $14 00 dailylake ViewRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 • 500. P'ease call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveHOWARD’S GULFSERVICE STATION&PANTRYopen until 12:00open 24 HoursSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGS SAVINGSS<John's Mens Wear1459 E. 53rd.REDEEM THIS COUPONFOR 10% OFF ON ANYSPORT COAT OR SUIT!expires Feb. 17BSE. {SPECIAL OASISMidwest Center for Human Potentialwill hold anOPEN HOUSESunday, February 15th, 3-6 p.m.20 East HarrisonRefreshments and FilmsFreeMeet your friends in the humanpotential movementKINGINTERVIEWFEB. 18, 1970King Broadcasting Company,a growing, diversifiedcommunications companycentered in the PacificNorthwest, would like to meetwith graduating seniors andgraduate students interested incareers within thecommunications industry.The company owns andoperates TV - AM - FMbroadcast stations in Seattle,Portland and Spokane; amonthly magazine; a film-production division, a com¬munity antenna (CATV) divi¬sion, and a properties and realestate division.Entry-level positions occur inradio, television and film prod¬uction: writing, announcing,news reporting, sales, promo¬tion, merchandising and photo¬graphy.Preference is given thosewith broad liberal-artseducational backgrounds at theundergraduate level.For further information, youmay consult our careerspamphlet and the companypolicy manual at your campusplacement office, where aninterview with ourrepresentative also may bescheduled.King is an equal opportunityemployer.Vf KINGBROADCASTING COMPANY INSANITY INTHE COURTSk£>INHARPER COURTCHANCES KOUR SPECIALITYWorld-famous choicest steakburgerdraft beer -*i free peanuts K-rx Open daUy forOjL cocktails, lunch, dinnerand in between5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454Closed Mondays PLAYBOY'S ALL-NIGHT SUCH'PfRK]CMAN<U miDAT 1 iAtUMtCT fOUOWING LAST S1GUIAR FUlUBfFeb. 13Richard Burton Feb. 14Elizabeth Taylor PARANOIATHE NIGHT OF THE IGUANAFeb. 20 Feb. 21Fellini's wONb Sandy DennisTHAT COLD DAY IN THE PARKFeb. 27 Feb. 28**e^^^n mrwmun vOasr Rkberd Bailee, Peter O'Teel*HUD BECKETTMarch 6 March 7RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY FOUR HORSEMEN OFTHE APOCALYPSEMarch 13 March 14THE LIQUIDATOR THE COMEDIANSTICKETS $1.50PLAYBOYTM E ATE FI X1704 •» oiaeeoe* F«0*ll 944 J4J4February 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5Chicago's most complete record store—Every label in our huge inventory always at adiscount—Every Record factory fresh and fully guaranteed—Large selection of importand hard to get records.STUDENTSBRING THIS COUPON TODISCOUNT RECORDS, INC.201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake)GOOD FOR 3 8 Vo OFFLIST LIST5.984.98 NOW3.693.08ON ANYClossical •All labelsincluded:COLUMBIALONDONVERVEFOLKWAYSELEKTRARCAPHILLIPSEPICRIVERSIDETRADITIONKAPP. etc. ONE TIME PURCHASE from our LARGE INVENTORYJazz * Folk Music * Spoken * Show Tunes, Etc.BUY ONE OR A HUNDREDiLiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiimiii!iiiiii!iiiii!iii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii!iiiiiiiiiimiiniiii=i THIS COUPON GOOD FOR |38% OFF LIST PRICE* ON 1Any One Time RecordPurchase Atdiscount records, inc.§ 201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake) |CE 6-2187Good until Feb 28, 1969nllllllllllllltllllllllillllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllll!IIIRT«mi!l!llllllin||ll!llrMONO OR STEREO All lobelsincluded:ANGELDeutsche-GrammaphoneBACH GUILDVERVEVANGUARDPRESTIGEARCHIVEMERCURYATLANTICCAPITOL, etc.JUST BRING THIS COUPON!!Browse our budget binsDiscounts from 50% to 60%labels as VOX • RIVERSIDE • PRESTIGE a SCALAETERNA • MGM CLASSICS • VERVE e URANIAEVEREST • CONCERT DISC a PRESTIGE FOLK MUSICMONITOR • VERVE FOLKWAYS a COUNTERPOINT*Sorry, due to manufacturer’s price policy imported LP’s cannot be allowed in this offer.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.ANCHOR CAMERA1S23 East S3rd St. PI 2-2228FAST QUALITY PROCESSINGASK FOR YOURPROFIT SHARING BONUS CARDSAVE 20%6/The Chicago Maroon/February 10, 1970 Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.Bu t the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 i PIZZA jjPLATTERjI Pizza, Fried Chicken |j Italian Foods jI Compare the Price! II I11460 E. 53rd 643-2800|I WE DELIVER IL. 4 Our thing is your ring —Shllhm*b<'N» iMfun 'O. j. .»»»*119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZAMODERN DANCE CLASSES4.30 to 6.00Mondoy * SoturdoyBoNot, Bock 4 Jon fought.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N Stat.Room 1902332-9923 V J-t . -■ i .M ,“v V"¥iYour father is probably worrying whatyou're up to. Send him a subscription to theMaroon.i" “ ““I NAMEIJ ADDRESS ZIPj □ Rost of tha school year subscription $6.00SCENESMusic. Music. At the GargoyleWednesday at 8. Bring Guitars orwhatever, and people.SKI JACKSON, WYO. March 20-29.$146. Hurry — 10 places. 6845388.Christian man in a secular world.Inter-Varsity Christian FellowshipCenfe-ence. Sat Feb. 14, 9:30 AM.IDA NOYES, $3.00.EAnthropologist Manning Nash lec¬tures Wed, Feb 11 in Soc Sci 122,"What Accounts for Peasant Politi¬cal Participation in Southeast Asia."Don Carlos" is not yer ordineryclassical German play. No Sir. Thishere's play-actin' like you neveri seen before.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)GOD, THE BIBLE ARE ALIVE S.SHORE BIBLE CH. 7159 Cornell11AM 3:30PM."King Broadcasting Company inter¬views Feb 18, 1970, for news re¬porters, writers, filmmakers, etc.See our ad on page-—."Give Durkheim a rest — he needs.it. Come to UT Exp'tl Weekend Febf 13-15. Reynolds Club Theater. Hyde Park a Lonely Place? Inter¬ested in an Urban Commune? Cometalk to people who do it. Thursday,Blue Gargoyle. 8:00 PM.UT EXPERIMENTAL WEEKENDStrindberg's PELICAN, Borchert'sBREAD and RADI, Minskoff's FES¬TIVAL TRUCK. 8:30 Fri, Sat Sun.Feb. 13, 14, IS. Reynolds Club. Alleach night.If its your apartment, why can't youget the building repairs or the kindo' renter's contract you want? Forma tenant union in your building. CallStudent Government Ml 3-0800, ext3272 between 1 and 5 PM or 493-4148.Melodrama at its finest!! AngelStreet, Bergman Gallery, Feb 11, 12,13 14, 8:30 PM Tickets at ReynoldsClub and at door.You can't jail the Revolution. Rapwith Conspiracy witness on Wednes¬day at the Blue Gargoyle.Student Government Assembly meet¬ing Thurs. night 8:30.Been depressed lately? Find outwhy. Reynolds Club Feb 13-15.GO CLUBEVERY THUR, INH, 7PMGRAPE BOYCOTTBOYCOTT GRAPES!! MOVIE &RAP By Bill Chandler, Delano Orga¬nizer, Feb. 13 8 PM, 5621 Blkstone,FREE.LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN-3Y HIGHLY EXP NA-TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALL236-1423 9-5. WASH PROM CONTESTThere Will Be 2(Two) Free Ticketsto the Feb 21 Washington Prome¬nade for the 2 Most Correct Answersto the Following Questions: WhoSaid:My Name is George Washington; AllAnswers Will Be Judged on Original¬ity and Correctness of Answers.3ive Answers in Writing to theCheckroom in Ida Noyes before FriFeb 13. Any Decision is Final, andArbitrary. Winners Will Be in Feb17 Maroon.P.S. New Contest Next Week!!T'AI CHIThe mind leads and the body fol¬lows. Four ounces deflect a thou¬sand pounds. When you act, every¬thing moves, and when you standstill, everything is tranquil. T'aiChi. Cloister Club Ida Noyes Hall,Wed. Feb 11, 7 PM.PEOPLE WANTEDMARTHA'S VINEYARD Summer1970 Student EMPLOYMENT OP¬PORTUNITIES. Hundreds of jobs!Detailed descriptions including res¬taurants, hotels, shops. SEND $2.00.APPLIED RESEARCH ASSOCI¬ATES, Dept. 8, PO BOX 3903, NewHaven, Conn. 06525.Free Room & Board in Exchangefor Child Care & Dinner Dishes. HY3-7973.Babysitter Needed MWF 9:30 - 5:30115. Mo. Boy. 643-4327.STUDENTS, STAFF, Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. $1.50 for an hour's work,plus the chance of a bonus. Oncampus. Call X4710 for an appoint¬ment.cc3 BAREFOOT ANDPREGNANTIN THE KITCHENMAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 6063?DATES TO RUN ;name, address, phoneCHARGE: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 fre^. Free Room tor Student in Exchangefor Babysitting Ooe Child Eveningsand Sat Mom. 684-1369.Need to learn to speak basicFrench. Will pay tutor. Call 643-9553 after 5.Can you repair tape recorders? Weneed you. Will pay well. Call U ofC Counselling Center, x2360.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.The Gargoyle Desperately NeedsPeople to Work Lunch. Apply inPerson. Blue Gargoyle.PEOPLE FOR SALE"May we do your typing?363-1104. . . ."Expert typing 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm's & weekends.Temporary Workers. Day LaborSouth. Call 955-3300 Mon-Fri.4 PM. 6 AM -SPACE4 rm apt to sublet 57th and Cottage$130 Call 643-9834.4th yr Student needs room for restof year. Desperate. 643-9894. Fern to Share Apt Own Rm $45 or$60. 5553 Blackstone. 955-5756.Heart of Hyde Park. 3 rm Deluxeapt. $110. 667-8474 or 675-5878.2 bedroom, 2 bath condominiumIncl. carpeting, drapes, pkg. stall,air conditioning, 75th & Lake. Rent$275. SO 8-0444.UC STAFF cpI would like to rentor sbiet 2-3 bedrm hse or apt. inHyde Pk or So Shore, June 70 toJune 71. 955-932 after 5:30.Rem Rmmate Wtd. —■ Cheap,Friendly — 54 Greenwood Evenings:288-3356.Beautiful spacious 5 and 6 rmapts at 71st & Jeffery for informa¬tion call - Albert H. Johnson RealtyCo, 732 East 75th Street - HU 3-1470.ROOMMATE WANTED: AvailableNOW Share 4 Rms $75/M. 955-2288 Male.Male grad needs m or Fern Rmmteto share apt with own room. 61stand Ellis. Furnished. $52.50 363-6915.FOR SALE1965 Peugeot $495 Call 493-0533, ext366; Eves 493-7689.1960 Lincoln. New Battery andTires, 2 Spares $100 6435781.Peruvian Pre-Columbian Potte¬ry Textiles. Authenticated 324-7418.African tradition sculpture for newor veteran collectors. Great withmodern art & furnishings. Smart in¬vestment. Call 747-8499 Park Forest.Ski Boots Ladies Grenoble Com¬petition Size V/i. $15.Keep Warm in a Fur Coat. Alaskaor Mink Paw. Full Length Size12-14 Beautiful Condition EveningsHY31011.VW '61 $350. 288-5331 After 5PM.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.St. Valentine's DayConcertL. Libin, harpsichordL. Lyons, violinJ. Nelson, sopranoSat., Feb. 14Mandel Hall - 8:30 PMFree HOUSE FOR SALEBrick duplex, 7 rooms, 4 bed¬rooms, 2 baths, garage, near1C and library, South Shore,$11,000; call 721-0111.WANTEDLOU LEMMING, PUBLIC ENEMYNUMBER ONE, WANTED IN SIXSTATES FOR PUTTING JELLY INPEOPLE’S SHOES. NEED NEW HOMESFREE FREE FREE Black andBeautiful box-trained fluffy kittens.Call After 6. PL2-4870.LOST AND FOUNDFound, m. kit. abt 6 mos., orangetabby. Phone 643-7120.Lost: Gold ring; 7 thin bands, 493-8241.Dog, "Gawain" Looks Like YoungShepherd with Floppy Ears. VeryFriendly. Reward 684-5154.PERSONALSWhen Don Carlos Spreads his bat¬like wings, magnificent in red blueblack white and gold, and shouts,"THAT I MUST DIE!" it simplyknocks you out.Ride the Festival Truck Feb 13-15.Reynolds Club Theatre.TO L.G. — Piglet Says Thanks ForA Great Weekend. JANE.Cleopatra is not floating down theChicago River in a scow."Happy Anniversary, Tiger.— Love Toad."Confidential to J.P. —There may be male chauvinists onthe business end, of this rag, but the"inner office" has its head in theright bag.All power to the tenants. Form atenant union in your building. Callthe Tenant Union Project, StudentGovt Office:Ml 3-0800, ext 3273, between 1 and 5PM, or 493-4148 for revolutionaryfervor, advice and organizing skill.DON CARLOS IS COMING!DON CARLOS IS COMING!DON CARLOS IS COMING!DON CARLOS IS COMING!DON CARLOS IS COMING:Borchert visits the living — oneweekend only Feb 13-15 Reynolds.CLEOPATRA in Quantrell — Sat.Feb 14, 7:15 8. 10.Rap with the Young Patriots andConspiracy witnesses on Wednesdaynight, Blue Gargoyle.See the Passion according to Strind¬berg Fri, Sat, Sun. Reynolds.Let the pigs of the power structureknow you want your rights. Form atenant union; join the staff of theTenant Union Project. Call StudentGovt, Ml 3-0800 between 1 and 5PM or 493-4148.In a Hurry for Lunch? Things areSpeeding up at the Gargoyle.See Antony act Brutish while Cas¬sius marks his words.This is domestic life in the 19th cen¬tury. See Angel Street-The musical society proudlypresents L. Libin's first concert ofthe decade: Saturday Feb 14, 8:30PM, FREE Mandel Hall.L. Libin comes to Mandel Hall onValentine's Day, chamber music byMozart and Haydn. 8:30 PM, freeadmission.OVERLAND EXPEDITIONTO INDIAleaves London late June.i ev .. $i85Details EncounterOverland23 Manor House Drive,London, NW6buildsFebruary 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7m MODULARCOMPONENT SYSTEMFULL SIZE 11" TURNTABLEDUST COVER INCLUDED GARRARD AUTOMATICRECORD CHANGERSTEREO CARTRIDGEwith DIAMOND NEEDLEoJT cj Mil price:AC CONVENIENCE OUTLET TAPE/AUXILIARY INPUTSSTEREO INDICATORILLUMINATED SLIDE RULE DIALFIVE PRECISION CONTROLS AM/FM/FM STEREO TUNER/AMPLIFIERTUNING CONTROLSTEREO HEADPHONE JACK(Treble, Bass, Balance,Loudness, Function)A FANTASTIC VALUE! Model 4800 offers a COMPLETE 5 PIECESTEREOPHONIC COMPONENT SYSTEM with AM/FM/FM STEREO/TUNER/AMPLIFIER, 2 SPEAKER ENCLOSURES, GARRARD RECORDCHANGER and DUST COVER. THERE’S OILED WALNUT FINISHCABINETRY, 30 WATTS and a ONE YEAR WARRANTY on LABOR andPARTS! SEE AND HEAR IT NOW!1 8" WOOFER and 1 2" TWEETERin each enclosureSPECIAL OFFERRECEIVE ACOLUMBIA STEREO HEADPHONEModel HP-10 AT NO EXTRA COSTWITH PURCHASE OF M-4800OFFER EXPIRESFEB. 21MASTERWORK @ A Product of * Mfrs SuRCf’t’*<'0 ListCOLUMBIA RECORDS20/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 19698/The Chicago Maroon/February 10, 1970 Checker TaxiHASIMMEDIATE OPENINGS• EXCELLENT EARNINGS•WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS PER WEEK FROM 2to 6 DAYS• DAYS or NIGHTS•Work close to home or schoolMALE or FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY845 W WASHINGTON8:00 AM to 4:30 PM DAILY8:00 AM to 11 00 AM SAT.CALL 421-1314LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueUC DRIVERSSentry tries to ease the highcost of auto insurance foryoung drivers with thefollowing reductions:GOOD STUDENTDISCOUNTYOUNG DRIVERDISCOUNTIf you are a good student21-25 with a good drivingattitude, you've got itmade. Even if you don'tthink so, give me a call.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY kINSURANCEl Corned 3(oriil ** 16451.55th STREET *: CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *[ Rhone: FA 4-1651 jr,DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644EveryoneEATSatGORDON’S1321 E. 57th