Exclusive Interview: Kunstler Talks of TrialAfter his speech in the Blue GargoyleWednesday evening, a tired William Kunst¬ler retired to the small pastor’s office ad¬joining the sanctuary.There the Maroon was able to get thefollowing exclusive interview with the de¬fense counsel in the Conspiracy. The inter¬viewer is Steve Cook, associate news editorof the Maroon. During the interview, con¬spiracy workers and press jammed thesmall room.As he spoke, Kunstler munched on apiece of chicken brought by his wife.Mr. Kunstler, what are the chances ofgetting off on the appeals of the contemptcharges against the seven defendants andthe two defense attorneys?I think it all depends on a lot of factors. Itdepends on what kind of a public bench weget. it depends on the composition of theSupreme Court; I think there is a reason¬able chance, but it is by no means certain.Now that the trial is over, what areyou going to do now, until you must startserving your contempt sentence in May? Well, I have to try Rap Brown’s case inMaryland, and in Louisiana. I’ve a few oth¬er cases pending around the country. AndI’d like to stay out of jail. At least I have abunch of lawyers doing that for all of us.And then I’ll just go about by business.This case did not bring the civil rightsact of 1968 clause before the SupremeCourt. Do you think that it will be chal¬lenged soon before the Supreme Court?This case will bring the act before theSupreme Court. Now that they’re con¬victed, we will first go to the intermediateappellate court, and then to the SupremeCourt. One of our main claims is that thisclause is unconstitutional, even though it ispart of the civil rights act of 1968.Do you have any predictions about that?I think they’ll overrule the statute. I don’tknow what a Carswell will do, or a Burgerwill do. But I’m figuring that if a precedentis followed, they will overrule the statute.Continued on Page TwoTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 39 The University of Chicago Friday, February 20, 19701200 FillGargoyle to Hear Kunstler SpeakSteve AokiGARGOYLE SPEECH: Kunstler, at left, addresses the crowd in the church Wednesday, as hundreds leave who couldn't get in.Concern Grows Over Drug RaidsIn response to growing campus concernover recent drug busts, Maroon in¬vestigators have learned that over 25 stu¬dents have been arrested on narcoticscharges this quarter, an unusually highnumber. In addition some twenty othershave had their apartments searched butwere not arrested.Many students raided maintain that theyare not drug users at all, and allegedly nopushers or sellers have been busted so far.The general pattern of raids does not seemto indicate any coordinated attack againstany particular drug ring. Several partiesfelt they had been raided because theirapartments had a reputation for housingdrug users in past years. Others had noidea why police singled them out.In four or five buildings, a majority ofstudent apartments have been searched.Two students think they saw police copyingnames off mailboxes in buildings whichwere subsequently raided, i i . In only two cases unearthed so far didpolice enter without a search warrant. Toobtain a warrant, police must present amagistrate with evidence indicating drugoffenses in the apartment. Several studentswho have seen the affidavits on which theirwarrants were based, claim the alleged of¬fenses reported by “reliable police inform¬ers” could not possibly be true.Whole apartments are usually searchedon the basis of warrants naming only one ofthe residents. The legality of searchingrooms where people other than thosenamed in the warrant live has been ques¬tioned by a lawyer at National Legal Aid inChicago. If warrants or searches are notproper, cases may be thrown out of courteven if illicit drugs are found.Once the officers are in, they usuallymake a fairly quick search of the apart¬ment for drugs in obvious places. Repeatedrequests to see badges or other identi¬fication were denied in several raids. If they find illicit drugs, the intensity oftheir subsequent search often drops. Other¬wise they may go back and search verythoroughly, emptying drawers, closets,boxes, looking in books, dissasembling lightfixtures, plumbing, prying out floor boardsand tiles, and even searching through kittylitter boxes.When obviously illegal drugs are notfound, police may seize any pills they find,both in unlabeled or properly labeled pre¬scription bottles. Pipes, pipe tobacco, andmany other allegedly harmless items havebeen seized as the basis for arrests.In almost all cases where an arrest ismade, everyone in the apartment, includingany visitors that may be present are takendown to 21st precinct headquarters at 29thand California. Two to six officers, usuallyplainclothesmen, from this station’s viceunit usually participate in raids. Usualcharges are possession of narcotics, posses-Continued on Page Four By Con Hitchcock and Steve Cook“For God’s sake stand and fight and tellthis country of ours that they will go thisfar and no further, so help us.”Thus did William Kunstler, chief attorneyfor the Chicago 7, speak to the overflowaudience of 1200 students at the Blue Gar¬goyle Wednesday night, who gave him astanding, cheering ovation before and afterhis talk.The lean Kunstler appeared weary afterthe five month trial in which five of theseven were convicted of crossing state linesto incite a riot; he told the audience, “Ev¬ery trial must be a conspiracy 7 trial,’.’ add¬ing “The government has to know thatthey’ll get every political conviction at theprice of filling the streets with people andmaybe their jails.Kunstler spoke of Bobby Seale, chairmanof the Black Panther party and the eighthdefendent in the case who was removed forcontempt in November. Seale is the defend¬ant in a different case which will be triedthis spring in New Haven, Connecticut, atrial which Kunstler said must “get thesame kind of publicity this one did.” Sealeis charged with conspiring to murder AlexRackley, alleged informer on the New YorkBlack Panthers, when Seale was in NewHaven on a speaking engagement. He ispresently in jail in California, awaiting ex¬tradition to Connecticut.Kunstler spoke with disdain of police in¬formers, the “red squad”, as “the dirtiestkind of person” and said, “They’re abso¬lutely insidious because they can testify ifthey have access to a meeting. They cantestify to conversations and you can denythem all you want, but it makes little dif¬ference to a middle class jury selected asthis one was.”“That’s the terrible role the informerplays. He never sees acts, nothing hap¬pened in Chicago that they claim these de¬pendents did ... And he says ‘I heard him-say it’ — it sounds very realistic. He’ll say‘I didn’t say it’ and then you leave that upto a jury to determine: a jury predisposedto taking the word of people associated withthe FBI and the police.”He called the conspiracy trial the modelfor future political trials. “The rules of evi¬dence were made for automobile acci¬dents”, he noted, “The defendants turnedthat trial into an enforced battlefield.”Continued on Page Threewere faced with a maze of rules and proce¬dures more appropriate for “a rear-end col¬lision case.” In the process, Walz said, theentire legal system had been damaged. Hecriticized Hoffman’s strict application ofrules of evidence, his sympathy for prose¬cution motions, and his generally rigidstance, whereby laughing became a federalcrime. He concluded that this was the onlyfree speech case he had ever attended inwhich one of the defendants was gagged.Next, Geoffrey Hazard of the law schoolhere questioned the lumping of all eight de¬fendants into one “megatrial” into which soinvested that the judge could not have de¬clared a mistrial, he said, in order to retrythe case properly. He also questioned Hoff¬man’s suitability for the trial, citing hissensitivity where he was “shooting all thetime.” Hazard also criticized the defensecouncil for not sufficiently controlling theirclients.Mike BrantLAW PROFESSORS: From left, Walz, Kalven and Hazard at seminar. A panel of three professors of law fromNorthwestern and the University of Chi¬cago offered their views on the conspiracytrial Tuesday at the law school and foundthemselves in agreement on two points.First, they agreed, the courtroom is not theappropriate place to handle political mat¬ters, and, second, they felt Judge Hoffmanwas the wrong judge to have handled thetrial.Speaking first, John Walz of the North¬western Law School categorized the trial as“the most bizarre and grotesque in the his¬tory of the country.” The defendants, hesaid, had been accused of essentially politi¬cal acts, and then denied the opportunity topresent a political defense. Instead, theyw Professors CiteErrors in Trial SetupKunstler Considers Trial's AftermathContinued from Page OneDo you think that you will have to goto the Supreme Court with the Conspira¬cy contempt charges to get them re¬versed?No. The Court of Appeals could sendthem back for a jury trial before a differentjudge.What do you predict Judge Hoffmanwill give the five defendants for crossingstate lines with intent to incite riot?I think the judge will give them the max¬imum. He’ll give them five years and he’llgive them the maximum fine. Well, I think it’s the first political trial inmy experience where the defendants havetaken the courtroom and used it so beau¬tifully for their own purposes. It’s the waythey used HU AC (House UnAmerican Ac¬tivities Committee) a few years ago. It’s amethod of taking over and commanding thecourtroom, being the dominating force inthe courtroom, The struggle was whetherthe judge would do that or the defendants.And I think the defendants won that fight.The judge overreacted, and then went anddid horrendous things to Bobby Seale, to,Dave Dellinger, and to many other aspectsof the law and the defendants sensibilities.They in a sense forced that, they ended upby dominating the courtroom.How do you think the trial has affect¬ed the political situation and your placein it? Then this is a sort of change in theway political trials will be run from nowon; they told people how to do it.Student Bail Service InitiatedA group of students met with assistantdean of students Janes Vice Tuesday aboutthe possibility of establishing a bail fundfor students arrested by city police. Theproposal is still being considered by theUniversity.However, a new service is being set up,immediately, in which a core of volunteerswill be on call to bail other students out ofjail. Volunteers should have cars and bewilling to drive downtown in the middle ofthe night to bail people out of jail. The names of volunteers will be kept private.Only Vice and director of student housingEdward Turkington will have the list ofparticipants. If a student is arrested, heshould call Vice, who will contact one of thepeople on the list. Anyone interested in vol¬unteering their services should contactVice.Maximum bail for a first drug offense isusually $1000 of which the arrestee mustpay $100. Bail may be set lower if arrestedpersons wait to go before bond court. That’s the real importance I think. Thisis the prototype of how a political trialcould be run.Kunstler does not think that the sentenc¬ing of the five defendants for the “crossingstate lines” count will be for some time.Today, Judge Hoffman will rule on thedefense charge that government wiretap¬ping influenced the outcome of the trial. Finally Harry Kalven of the law schoolhere expressed the view that regardless ofthe jury’s verdict, the defense had won, interms of what they had been trying to showabout the legal system, that it was rigidand archaic. “It certainly looked thatway,” Kalven said. He continued, though,that he thought that everybody had therebylost.March TomorrowSo you thought the Conspiracy wasover? Actually, its just moving out ofJulie’s courtroom and out into thestreets!At noon Saturday, there will be asuper rally in front of the notoriusFederal building. Speaking will beBlack Panther Party leader BobbyRush, Conspiracy lawyer WilliamKunstler, folksinger Phil Ochs, andNancy Rubin (Jerry’s wife).Cars and drivers are desperatelyneeded for a motorcade after therally to Cook County jail. The motor¬cade will leave Soldiers Field around3 pm, and the demonstration at thejail, to “free all political prisoners,”will begin at 3:30.So instead of writing that civpaper or doing your laundry, poundthe pavement! See you then.Find the right direction JRfor your lifeand help others find the right direction for theirs.We're looking for hard-core human beings, to serve as priests,■^ministers and rabbis. Call the Interfaith Committee forReligious Careers. 22 West Monroe Street, Chicago 726-3717.2/Th« Chicago Maroon/February 20, 1070Tuition Jump CausesNUC Forum TonightEarlier this week, the committee reaf¬firmed its earlier recommendation.The New University Conference (NUC) isholding a meeting tonight to discuss the tui¬tion rise. This meeting, announced lastweek, will discuss “what’s Ed Levi doingwith all our bread?” It will take place at 8pm tonight in the Blue Gargoyle.Gilbert Lee, University vice-president forbusiness and finance said “The increaserecommended by the deans’ budget com¬mittee is necessary to meet the rising oper¬ating costs of the University. Although a1970-71 budget has not yet been adopted, itis clear that additional income from allsources, including tuition, will be requiredsimply to meet existing commitments.”During the past five years the percentageof the academic budget supported by netincome from student fees (gross tuition in¬come less student aid), according to Uni¬versity sources, has decreased slightlyfrom 25.6 percent in 1965-66 to 24.8 percentin 1969-70.In 1970-71, even with the increase, it isanticipated by the University that the per¬centage will not increase past 24.6 percent.In the current academic year, accordingto the University, gross income from tuitionand fees falls some 5 million dollars shortof the total compensation for faculty at allin the University.Tuition for the 1970-71 academic yearranks at other major universities are: Har-vard-$2600; Princeton-$2600; Columbia-$2560; Yale-$2550; Stanford-$2400; andPennsylvania-$2550.The deans’ budget committee are stillconsidering other aspects of the total bud¬get, particularly the possible need to recom¬mend increase in room and board chargesfor undergraduates and rental fees forgraduate housing.Kunstler Describes Freedom ImpactContinued from Page OneKunstler related his feelings when he wassentenced to over four years for contempt.He said he was psychologically prepared,yet when judge Julius Hoffman gave him astay of execution until May 4, Kunstlersighed, “a great feeling of relief came overme, even though I was prepared, thisenormous really sweet feeling of not havingto go in that day. And I suddenly realizedhow precious it is to be free. No matter howprepared you are to be unfree.”"I realized that that’s what it was allabout — that this sweet feeling of not hav¬ing to be confined, not having to be regi¬mented ... To have even the minimalfreedom which is available outside was soprecious to me I was almost ashamed ofmyself that I would feel this terrible rush ofrelief when my brothers had been takenfrom the table and were in Cook Countyjail. I knew how they must feel, when they cannot have this freedom, and it was im¬portant for me to learn this lesson.”Also speaking was Sidney Lens, a mem¬ber of the New Mobilization Committee,Mrs. John Froines, and Sharon Avery, afriend of Lee Weiner. Lens said that thereal message of the trial is that “the gov¬ernment is giving us a message: ‘Too manyare protesting. The voice of these peoplemust be stilled.’ And that’s what fivepeople were convicted on.”He added, “This is what conspiracystands for for us. It tells us that this isprecisely the struggle.” Like Kunstler, hedid not consider the verdict a compromise,as some have claimed. “They convict fivemen and call it compromise,” Lens said.“Bullshit,” cried one member of the au¬dience.“That’s another word for it,” shot backLens, to applause from the floor.Mrs Froines and Miss Avery spoke brief¬ly as collections were taken up throughout the church to gather money for the con¬spiracy. Said Mrs Froines, “When the lawis tyranny, the only order is insurrection.”Miss Avery derided the charge that Weinerand Froines planned to blow up the GrantPark garage.Kunstler spoke briefly with the Maroonafter the meeting and expressed some op¬timism about getting the defendants offwhen the case is appealed. He expected theconspiracy clause of the 1968 civil rightsact, under which the seven were tried, butnot convicted, to be declared uncon¬stitutional, and he believes Hoffman willsentence the five to the maximum sentenceof five years in prison.Kunstler noted that Phil C Neal, dean ofthe law school, was one of several lawyersand professors, who signed an amicuscuriae (friend of the court) brief con¬cerning bond for the seven, now in jail oncontempt charges. Neal could not bereached for comment Thursday.BILL KUNSTLER: The conspiracy lawyer during his speech. Tuition for all University students will goup $75 per quarter for the 1970-71 academicyear.This increase will bring the total yearlytuition cost for undergraduates to $2325 andto $2475 for graduate students.The deans’ budget committee, chaired bySidney Davidson, graduate business schooldean, recommended this increase in No¬vember, 1969. At that time, they wereasked by President Edward Levi to reas¬sess the recommendation taking into ac¬count the developments affecting the fund¬ing of federally sponsored programs as wellas endowment income and private dona¬tions.University Community Declares Trial UnfairBy Christine FroulaThe great majority of student and facultyopinion here on the verdict of the Con¬spiracy 7 trial showed explicit or implicitsupport for the defendants in varying de¬grees. Virtually every person interviewedsaid that the law under which the defend¬ants were tried is unfair, or that the trialmay have been (probably was, definitelywas) a misapplication of the law.“I think the law under which the peoplewere tried is unwise in the sense that thefederal government has no obligation to en¬force anti-riot laws,” said Joel Goldstem,graduate student in political science. “May¬or Daley and the Democratic machine areto be condemned for not giving permits todemonstrate. Regarding the contempt sen¬tences: many of the cases Hoffman citeddid not seem contemptuous; others didseem so, and it is right that sanctions beapplied to maintain the sanctity of thejudiciary. Without an independentjudiciary, the right to dissent means noth¬ing. The courts have always been defendersof liberty and free speech. Were we to relyon masses of people to defend liberty, wewould be in bad shape.”Other students saw the verdict from dif¬ferent viewpoints, all of which agreed thatthe law is unjust. “Anything short of com¬plete acquittal points up the horrifyingmockery of justice, and is indicative of theincreasing totalitarian atmosphere in thiscountry, and particularly in Chicago,” saidDavid Forbes, ’71. Anne Moses, ’72, feltreally sorry that they didn’Lget convictedof conspiracy, because the appeal will have*ess weight now.”Law professors interviewed here agreedthat the law making it a crime to conspireto cross state lines with intent to incite anot is probably “constitutional on its face.”The law does not talk on terms ofspeeches; it talks in terms of riots. Theproblems arise on the question of how toapply it,” said Harry Kalven, professor in the law school here. Non-law professorsseemed to feel that the law is “dangerous,”“unconstitutional,” or “unjust.” “I hopevery much that, if the case reaches the Su¬preme Court, the law will be declared un¬constitutional,” said Marc Galanter, associ¬ate professor in the social sciences.Philip Kurland, professor in the lawschool, said, “It was unfortunate to bringthe prosecution in the first place. The con¬ducting of the trial was also unfortunate,through the faults of both the judge and thedefense. The actions of the defendants werenot worth the cost of this trial to the coun¬try, the money being only a part of it.”Kurland added that he was not shocked bythe verdict, although he had “expected ahung jury.”Robert Burt, associate professor in thelaw school, was in Washington at the timethe conspiracy statute was passed. “What people had in mind at that time was animproper and irrational fear of ghetto riots.That those riots actually were incited byprecursors of the Black Panthers — StokelyCarmichael and so on — was hardly be¬lieved by the people who shouted about it.If such activities did exist, however, thereis no reason why the law should not coverit.“However, problems arise in applyingthe law in a situation like this where thereis a heavy political overlay. The impressionof political repression cannot be escaped.The possibility of the defendants’ desire tocause a riot struck me as ambiguous inlight of the hysterical reaction of the au¬thorities during convention week. If the evi¬dence included letters written by the de¬fendants to each other saying ‘Let’s have ariot,’ the case would be easily decided, aslong as a riot actually did occur that they were involved in. But when the only evi¬dence is speeches made by the defendants,then it seems to me that there are seriousproblems with whether it interferes withthe first Amendment. I think that the stat¬ute is not unconstitutional on its face, butmay well have been applied uncon¬stitutionally in this case, although I cannotknow without studying the court record.”Kalven stressed that the “trial as a wholewas a real disaster for the legal system. Allthe people involved contributed to that di¬saster like a chemical mixture, and made areal damn mess.” He added, “Bringing thecase in the first place was a colossal blun¬der by the prosecution, and the trial madethe legal system look much worse than itreally is. It appears now that there wasn’tmuch to the prosecution’s case for con¬spiracy, since the jury was not convinced.Continued on Page NineFebruary 20, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3tM\ A* ,V/:’HARRY KALVINLaw Professor LEN RADINSKYAnatomy Professor PHILIP KURLANDLaw ProfessorStudent Group Plans Co-op Housing ProjectBy Paul BernsteinA group of university students is workingon a plan to set up student cooperativehousing in what is now a fraternity houseon the north-east corner of 56 St and Wood-lawn Ave.According to Frank Day, chairman of thestudent government (SG) housing com¬mittee, which has supported the proposal,interest in starting a student cooperativefocused on the building when it was learnedthat the fraternity was losing money andwould be forced to sell it. Day claims thatthe building is “not well suited to Univer¬sity interests,” because of the reconstruc¬tion that would be necessary, but that itcould house as many as 30 students.The University has been consideringturning the house into a dormitory for grad¬uate women. There have also been reportsthat another fraternity is interested In mov¬ing into the building. Day argues that set¬ting up a student cooperative is more im¬portant, because it could be “the pilot proj¬ect of an eventually much broader studenthousing cooperative which would ownenough property to house hundreds of stu¬dents.”Day said that his group has received le¬gal aid through funds from the office of thedean of students. He has also met with Wal¬ter Walker, vice president for planning, andhopes to submit a concrete plan to Walkerby the first week of spring quarter.The most important problem is that offinancing the project, since students do nothave the money to buy and refurnish thehouse. Day named several alternative pos¬sibilities: the University could lend the co¬operative the necessary initial capital, al¬though difficulties might arise if the inter¬est rate were too high; the University couldalso help to purchase federally insured, 100percent, 40 year mortgages; or it could pro¬vide legal assistance in obtaining fundsfrom the department of housing and urbandevelopment (HUD), if HUD was allowedto subsidize such a project.Day said that the success of the projectalso depended on how a cooperative wouldfit into the city building code, and onwhether cohabitation was permitted underIllinois state law.A student cooperative would be owned bythe students living in the building, each onepurchasing a share in it. The cooperativewould set up its own bylaws, and thuswould operate outside the supervision of theUniversity housing system.HISTORY & CULTURE COURSETRAVELING THROUGH EUROPEJULY 2-AUG. 22, 1970CONTACT: Mrs. E. HOROWITZ3211 HUMANITIES, UNIV. of WISCONSINMADISON, WISC. 608-256-3024 Day claims that a program of coopera¬tively owned housing is badly needed, be¬cause higher rents are forcing students outof Hyde Park, and because landlords havebecome increasingly hesitant to rent to stu¬dents. He also says that the recent intereston campus in communal living makes theconcept an appealing one.Day mentioned that the Jaffe report onstudent housing, submitted two years agoby three students working with the Centerfor Urban Studies, included a section favor¬able to the idea of student cooperatives.The report says that “a student cooperativestresses both social and economic consid¬erations. Socially, it can create a feeling ofbelonging and create common interests . . .Economically, it can be more inexpensiveto maintain and manage . . . The membersof the cooperative are the residents of thebuilding, which is not run for profit. If anyprofits are made, all are returned to thecooperative to reduce living costs or im¬prove the community living facilities ... Ifstudent interest is great, and complete Uni¬versity cooperation is assured, student co¬operatives are financially and sociallyfeasible.”Six student cooperatives existed at theUniversity during World War II, and lastedabout ten years. More recently, coopera¬tives have been tried at Michigan, Berke¬ley, MIT. Texas, Wisconsin, Toronto, andOberlin.Day said that meetings to discuss theproject will be held in the very near future,and that all interested students should at¬tend. M'ke BrantFRAT HOUSE: Building at 56 and Woodlawn that is being considered for co-op.Students Powerless To Stop BustsContinued from Page Onesion of dangerous drugs, and keeping a dis¬orderly house, all of which have maximumbail of $1000. Arrested persons have mugshots and fingerprints taken, and usuallywait in a cell for from one to six hourswhile their bail is being set. They areallowed at least one call during this period.Persons may be released by paying 10percent of the maximum $1000 bail, or maywait to appear in bond court to try and gettheir bond set lower. If they can produce acharacter witness, they may even be re-*************t Sunday New York 1 ime* ^8:30 AM (daily loo) w* BOB’S NEWSSTAND* 51st and Lake Park* Huge Mock* of Current Maga-^ *ines, Paperback*, A**orted +. Pornography. Come & meet ^my dog'''Michael.” - ^************ leased on personal recognizance (free).Bond payments are accepted only in cashor certain brands of travellers’ checks.Arrested women may be taken to thewomen’s jail at 11th and State. Infrequentlyarrested persons are intimately searched.Many students remembered deep feelingsof fear and depression during their in¬carceration. “You realize how totally help¬less you are,” said one.Students may not be quite totally help¬less. One immediate defense for raidedpeople should be a careful check of war¬rants to see that names and addresses areexactly correct. Police may only enter witha legal warrant, investigating a complaint(noise, murder, etc), or with your knowingpermission. Once in, courteous, evenfriendly response may save you a trip downto jail. A straight looking place and neatappearance may also stay arrest in the opinion of many students. Of course, keep¬ing your place clean, and making sure alllegal medications are in proper bottles withprescriptions on hand is advisable, butapparently not sufficient.Long term defense includes think carefuldeliberation if moving into a place with areputation for drug abuse. Try to makesure you know exactly what the police aretaking as evidence and have witnesses. Inseveral cases, evidence has appeared thatallegedly was not in the apartment whenpolice arrived. Know your rights and thinkabout what you’ll do if you get busted.“You never believe it’s going to happen toyou. When you least expect it, it’s there,'commented one student.Any students not yet contacted by theMaroon are urged to make raids known tous so we may continue more complete cov¬erage.SPANISH IMPORTS WARNINGBEFORE BUYING A GUITAR ORAMPLIFIER, COME TO THE WORLD'SLARGEST GUITAR STORE.CHICAGO GUITAR GALLERY216 SO. WABASH AVE. (DOWNTOWN)WE BUY, REPAIR, TRADE', & SELLHA 7-8434 HA 7-0423 JESSELSON’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186-1340 E. 53rdCHUCK'S PRESS LOVES WORKServices ofCOPy CEOTER nowavailable to students, staffand faculty. ,They accept cash, / .102 forms, book- BRy-'store charge cards.and personalchecks (with ID's) IFor Informition:Dial 4222 T WHAT DOES LEVI DOWITH ALL OUR BREAD?(hear Rev. John Fry, Al Raby, S.G.)Come to panel/discussion/dance to...DISCUSSRESISTCELEBRATEKNEADSMASHTHE TUITION RISE(WHO ASKED US ANYHOW?)FRIDAY, Feb. 20 - 8 PM - Blue Gargoyle(dance to the WATERMELON) N.U.C., ?0, J970 GLASSWARE SALEMR. KIMBARK SAYS! WE HAVE A LIM¬ITED QUANTITY OF THE FOLLOWINGGLASSWARE FOR SALE, SO BUY NOWWHILE THE SUPPLY LASTS53rd KIMBARK LIQUORS1214 E. 53rd ST.-53 KIMBARK PLAZA HY 3-3355OPEN DAILY TILL 11 P.M. SUN. TILL 9 P.M.IHIMtltllilllttlllHIGH BALL GLASSES -12 oz.HEAVY BOTTOM SHAM GLASSESReg. 20* ea. SALE 15C EACH1 .69 Doz.ROLY POLY GLASSES, 11 oz. ALL PURPOSEOR ON THE ROCKS GLASSReg. 25* Now 20* ea.2.25 Doz.CHAMPAGNE OR SHERBET GLASSESTRULY A GREAT VALUEReg. 55c ea. 29C 6for/1.65FRI., SAT., SUN.SPECIALBLATZ BEER6 - 12 oz. Pop TopCANS 95c „ MONDAY ONLY SPECIALFEB. 28th KING SIZEBUDWEISER BEER6- 16 oz. , Pop TopCANS $1 .29■HjflMISS UC CANDIDATES: From left, Irene Mane Rhodes, Pamela Reichi, and Mary Ann Wright, in their officialFebruary 20, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5Candidates See Advantages in CrownWe Won't GoThe moratorium committee at the Uni¬versity is resuming activities.Starting Monday the moratorium will askdraft eligable men to sign a "we won’t go”statement pledging them to refuse in¬duction as long as the Vietnam war contin¬ues.The text of the statement says, "If or¬dered for induction, we the undersignedwill refuse. We will not serve in the mili¬tary as long as the war in Vietnam contin¬ues.”Individuals are then asked to sign theirname and their draft lottery number.The names will be run in a full-page ad inthe last winter quarter issue of the Maroon.They will also be forwarded to Washington,DC where they will be presented to SenatorMark Hatfield’s Senate subcommittee hold¬ing hearings on the draft.The campaign parallels a similar "WeWon't Go” campaign last year headed byMoratorium organizer David Hawk. In thatcampaign, the names of more than 400 stu¬dent body presidents and college news¬paper editors who pledged to refuse in¬duction were run in a full-page ad in theNew York Times.The Vietnam moratorium, is working incooperation with Chicago Area Draft Resis¬ters (CADRE) on the "we won’t go” cam¬paign.Gregory BenefitDick Gregory will perform in two ben¬efits tomorrow at Sauer’s Brauhaus to raisemoney for the Headstart program of theAncona Montessori school, 4770 South Dor¬chester.Being a finalist for Miss University ofChicago does have its advantages, assertedthe four candidates who will appear at Sat¬urday’s 75th annual Washington Prome¬nade (Wash Prom).Dresses, dancing, and the excitement ofbeing "different” seemed to make up forjibes and teasing, they felt.The winner will be selected by a campus¬wide vote, and crowned at the prom mid¬night. Contending for the crown now wornby Ingrid Johnson ’71, are Irene Dymkar73, Pamela Reichi ’72, Diane Rhodes ’71,and graduate student Mary Anne Wright.Dark-haired Miss Dymkar, youngest ofthe candidates, was flattered to be nomi¬nated by a men’s house. "I think it’s nice,”she said. "I’ve met a lot of kids and profes¬sors I didn’t know before.“It’s one of the few straight things donearound here and it’s nice to get dressed upin a long formal sometimes.”Most reaction to Miss Dymkar’s nomi¬nation has been favorable. She doesn’t feelshe has been degraded or exploited by“male chauvinists”, either. "I’m having agood time,” she said. GENERATION GAP? The typical confrontation, only who's on which side ofthe age barrier?The shows, at 7 and 10:30 pm will alsofeature the Judy Roberts Trio, now playingat the London House. Supper will be servedbefore each performance.The Ancona School’s academic programis individualized and designed to emphasizestudents’ self-motivation and curiosity. Theschool has pre-school classes for childrentwo to six and ungraded elementary classesfor those six to nine years old.Regular tickets are $10 per person; spon¬sor’s tickets admit two and are $35. Spon¬sors of the program will be treated to achampagne breakfast at the home of Mrand Mrs Henry Field, often cited as a Ken¬wood historical landmark. The home builtin 1906 by George Maher, is often describedas a prairie house with art nouveau motif. Craft StoreThe craft coop, a store run by HydeParkers engaged in the ‘crafts, will openMonday, February 23 on the third floor ofthe Blue Gargoyle.The coop will be open Monday throughFriday from 1 to 10 pm and will featurecandles, batik, rag dolls, jewelry, etc.A preliminary sale held in the Reynoldsclub February 5 and 6 featured over 20 ex¬hibits.The craft coop hopes to soon start a pro¬gram of workshops at the Gargoyle in thetechniques involved in creating the objectssold.Anyone interested in selling work shouldcontact members of the coop at the Gar¬goyle. Kenan LectureAmos Kenan, journalist for the IsraeliDaily Yediot and Achronot, will speak onthe "new left in Israel” Friday at 8:30 pmat Hillel House, 5715 S Woodlawn.Kenan, who served in the Israeli army inthe June 1967 war against the Arabs, is aleftist who believes Israel is being unjustlydenied a right to exist by the Arabs. In anarticle written shortly after the war, Kenanpraised the character of the Israeli armyfor not punishing him when he refused tocarry out an order.Guilini ReceptionCarlo Maria Giulini, the principal guestconductor of the Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra, will pay his first visit to the Uni¬versity campus Monday morning as a guestof the festival of the arts (FOTA) Com¬mittee.To greet Signor Giulini, there will be aninformal reception held in the ReynoldsClub South Lounge, starting at 10 am, last¬ing until noon. The reception is open to thepublic, and informality will be the keynote.Signor Giulini, recently named to be prin¬cipal guest conductor, has been regardedas one of the greatest operatic conductorsof our time. He has been both permanentdirector of La Scala and principal cornductor of the Rome Opera, and has directedall the leading orchestras throughout theworld, including the Boston Symphony Or¬chestra, the New York Philharmonic, theNew Philharmonia of London, and the Ber¬lin Philharmonic, in addition to his partici¬pation in almost all the major music festi¬vals on both continents.Miss Dymkar, who thinks the prom tra-diditon "should go on and on”, is a pre-medstudent, active in Student Teacher Ele¬mentary project (STEP) and president ofUpper Flint House.Miss Rhodes was delighted to become acandidate. "The fact that a lot of peoplethink it’s a joke doesn’t keep me from en¬joying it,” she said."Some people ask why I want to be MissU of C. I guess there’s really no answer....I like red roses.” She dismissed women’sliberation charges of exploitation. “I don’tfeel I’m being emphasized a§ the subordi¬nate sex,” she said."Wash Prom and Miss U of C should con¬tinue,” Miss Rhodes added. "They’re theonly thing of their type on campus.”Miss Rhodes, president of Quadranglers,is an English major and a member of thesteering committee of the English Club.Miss Reichi felt winning the Miss U of Ctitle was secondary. "I’ll have a lot of funat the dance because I like to dance,” shesaid.Some asked her if she didn’t care whatpeople would say about her candidacy. "No, I don’t,” she said. “I’m taking it witha grain of salt.”Miss Reichi, too, saw no great conflictbetween the contest and the women’s liber¬ation movement. "The girls who take wom¬en’s lib seriously are too intense about itall,” she said. "Everyone should go to theWash Prom and have a good time.” MissReichi, an English major planning to gointo publishing, is the nominee of Contem¬porary European Films. "I’m their headticket taker which means I’m on the firstfloor,” she said. "I used to be on the balco¬ny.”Miss Wright, eldest of the ladies, viewedher candidacy most soberly. Although thecontest is an excuse for a new dress, “It’ssort of silly,” she said. "I’m not reallythinking about it because my master’sexams are coming up.” But her motherthought it was beautiful, she added.Of "liberated women” Miss Wright said,"Organized women’s liberation is a bunchof scared, little girls trying to find theirway to becoming women. I don’t think anycontest can hurt women’s liberation morethan themselves. "I don’t know what’s wrong with them; Ican get my rights.”Perhaps the Wash Prom should be contin¬ued, Miss Wright added, “unless there’smore interest on campus.” The graduate inlibrary sciences and business adminis¬tration felt the prom might have more suc¬cess if advertising was directed more tograd students.President of the Women’s Athletic Associ¬ation (WAA), Miss Wright was nominatedby the WAA.The finalists were chosen from ten nomi¬nees who attended a faculty tea at Inter¬national House. Each girl was interviewedindividually for ten minutes by six facultymembers and asked for spontaneous an¬swers to such questions as: How would youchange the curriculum? or what do youthink could be done to make freshmen feelmore at home?Miss Dymkar admits that there’s no realcompetition or cut-throat tactics involved."Being Miss U of Chi is nothing like beingMiss Vassar. Being Miss U of C meansbeing a well-rounded person.”AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYKunstler and theMovement's FutureOne of the time-worn tricks of public speaking is to tell theaudience what they want to hear and then send them home happy.But that’s not what William Kunstler did when he spoke atthe Blue Gargoyle Wednesday night. He painted a picture of acoming repression. He recounted the horrible tales of Nazi Germanyand compared it with his own experiences in the civil rights move¬ment and in the peace movement.“I’m telling you all this and talking this way to scare the hellout of you,” he said. “If the system thinks it is threatened . . .they’re going to react in the most horrendous way.”And the system most certainly feels that it is threatend. That’swhat Nixon and Agnew and Mitchell are all about. That’s what“law and order” and “crime in the streets” is all about. That’swhy every national leader of the Black Panther Party is either injail, in exile, or dead.This thing called the “Movement” started with a handful offreedom riders in Mississippi and a few pacifists who didn’t see anysense to Vietnam. When their numbers grew, especially among theyoung, the repression began.For a long time, if you put on a peace demonstration and gota permit and stayed on the sidewalks like you were told, nothinghappened. It was fun and friendly just like the old Fourth of Julyparades. •*Then came the April, 1968 peace march here where the policelost their cool and for the first time, peaceful marchers were beatenin the Loop. It was only round one, though, of the events of thatsummer — the convention riots which five men were found guiltyof “inciting.”Perhaps the most difficult aspect of Kunstler’s speech is thatthe fight against repression has to take place on the streets as wellas in the courtroom.“You must organize around ever possible trial or persecutionthat can be found,” he said. “You won’t be able to make them all,of course, but the government has to know that you’re ready.”One thing the trial did was destroy the myth of the courtroom.As long as judges were quiet, noble men with white hair, we couldaccept the dictum that we must respect the courts. Now that thecourtroom has been shown to be so contemptible, the comfort ofquiet protests, “through proper channels” is taken away from us.“People who want to breathe free, free spirits, cannot affordif humanly possible to go to jail or to see their brothers go to jail,”Kunstler said. Himself a lawyer, he spoke with pride of the way hisdefendants conducted themselves throughout the unorthodox trial.When decorum and formality become euphemisms for forced silenceand repression, then our freedom is threatened by not challengingthat decorum.It used to be so easy — it seemed to us — to be good. You gotangry when Negroes (remember them?) weren’t allowed to go tostate schools, and you conscientiously informed your congressmanwhen things weren’t being run properly. You would get annoyedat the President, but you never thought he was really evil. You day¬dreamed about how noble you’d be if you lived in Hitler’s Germany,or Stalin’s Russia, or any of those impossible places where politicaltrials take place.And then — suddenly, it seemed — the daydreams get put onthe line. The political trial comes home.All our noble impulses were in tune Wednesday night. Wecheered for the haggard lawyer, we clapped, we wept. And whenSaturday’s rally at the federal building comes, hopefully we’llremember and demonstrate what he told us, that “there are res¬ponsibilities that go to every one of us . . . that has any feelingthat it is good to breathe free.”Sometimes the haraest thing is not to have the courage to dowhat is right, but simply to find out what there is to do. Perhapswe can let our natural reaction to the travesty of this trial be thebeginning of such an education^ );> ^ C6/Th« Chicago Maraon/frbnNKy 20, 1970 *Vi •U'lf P LETTERS TO THE EDITORSWash PromAs chairman of Wash Prom, I was quitedistressed concerning the editorial and thehandling of the Wash Prom-Corso affair. Ido not, at present feel the necessity to dis¬cuss the Corse affair. However, I do feelthat several things concerning the Ma¬roon’s handling of Wash Prom do need tobe brought out.Fact: I was misquoted on the page 1 ar¬ticle of Tuesday’s Maroon. I said, “If theprom is cancelled everyone loses $1000; butif it is held, it may cost a little more, butseveral (hundred) people will be able toparticipate.” Not much difference, but theMaroon’s “quote” is illogical.Fact: last year between 300-325 people at¬tended the prom; and this was half asmuch as the year before, due to the politi¬cal mood of the campus and the first can¬cellation of the Wlash Prom in -the winterquarter.Fact: many people are interested in go¬ing to this year’s Wash Prom; the reasonfor the rumors that Wash Prom was“dead” was due to our inquiring upon theinterest. If we found it lacking, we wouldcancel; but we did not find it lacking, andthe Wash Prom will be held.I decry the irresponsibility of the Maroonin their dealings with Corso, and any othergroup indirectly involved (ie, Wash Prom).I was informed that Wash Prom was not tobe affected by the Maroon’s actions. Judg¬ing from the personal responses I have re¬ceived, this is now untrue. By presentingthe matter as they did, the Maroon willdirectly affect attendance at Wash Prom.Next week, they will feel justified to say,“see there are few people interested,”ignoning themselves as a cause.If the Maroon were worried truly aboutthe money being spent on Wash Prom theywould have postponed lambasting Corso(and indirectly, Wash. Prom) until afterWash Prom was held. Last Monday, Ipointed this out to Miss Heck, and was toldthat there would be no effect on WashProm.Apparently, this affair is merely another(in the series) of the Maroon’s staff person¬ ally and vindictively trying to influence thecampus, regardless of detrimental effectsto any group not directly involved. Surelysuch “newsworthy” business (quoted fromMiss Heck) could have waited anotherweek, so as to prevent a student organiza¬tion from an even greater loss of money.Dear Maroon: Stop managing the news tofulfill your own egotistical hostilities; par¬ticularly when there are other groups in¬directly involved!Sheldon SacksWash Prom ChairmanMarlene AgainRoger Weiss’ letter (February 13) con¬gratulates the University of Chicago on thebasis of, what is at best, a rather dubiousand simplistic interpretation of the eventsof last year.Mrs Dixon’s statements during the sit-inlast year are in no way changed or dis¬proved by her statements in the January 30anniversary supplement of the Maroon. In1969 she was searching for a new approachto sociological research. In 1970 she saysthat “it is not possible to sit in the Univer¬sity and talk learnedly about revolution.”Mrs Dixon has changed her mind in a year.Does that prove that in 1969, when the Uni¬versity decided not to reappoint her, shealready held the beliefs she expresses to¬day? Not at all. Perhaps, then, it indicatesthe remarkable prescience of the Univer¬sity, which has refined the tools of socialscience to the point of being able accurate¬ly to predict the course of the individualhuman mind? But Mr Weiss’ con¬gratulations to “those who had the couragelast year to make this decision” impliesthat such scientific knowledge did not in¬form their decision. Rather, it implies thatshe already was what the January 30 inter¬view indicates only that she has become.Ra'her than interpreting Mrs Dixon’s“withdrawal from university teaching” in1970 as confirmation of her unfitness to beretained as a university teacher in 1969, oneshould interpret her 1970 withdrawal as aresult of her experiences last year. In 1969Continued on Page SevenBULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, February 20LECTURE: "Genetics of Ribonucleases," Abbot Hall,room 101 11:30 am.LECTURE: Gertrude Himmelfarb, "The idea of povertyTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue Loth and the poor in Victorian England", Qusntrell, 4 pm.LECTURE: Jim Douglas, "Numerical Solution of PartialDifferential Equations," Eckhart 133, 4:30 pm.FLICK: "Falstaff," Cobb, 7:15, 9:30 pm.PLAYS: Victorian Festival, "Gilbert Without Sullivan;Sullivan Without Gilbert," "Cox and Box," "Rosen-crantz and Guildenstern," Internation House Audito¬rium, 8 pm.PLAY: "Don Carlos," Reynolds Club Theatre, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: "the 'New Left* in Israel," Mr. Amos Ke¬nan, Hillel House, 8:30 pm.DAY OF CONTEMPT: Constitui.onal, legal and moralissues of the Trial, Micki Leaner, Willard Lassers,Garden Room, Unitarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn 8pm.DISCUSSION: "Tai Chi Chuan," philosophy based onTao Principle and "I Ching:" Crossroads, 5621 Black-stone, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: Advanced, intermediate, Ida Noyesdance room, 8-11 pm.FORUM-DANCE: Tuition rise discussion, with Frye,NUC, Rby, SG, followed by Watermelon Band, BlueGargoyle, 8 pm.Photo Editor: Steve Aoki, Phil LathropFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Frouia (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGood sell, Stan Geumas, Gordon Katz, SusanLeft, Gerard Level, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Ellon 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 Resenbush, Paul SteBer. Saturday, February 21FLICK: "Kabuliwala," Judd Hall, Indian assoc, memSI., others $1.50, 7 pm.TRACK: Wabash vs. U.I.CC, Field House, 12:30 pm.GYMNASTICS: Wheaton and Marquette, Bartlett Gym,1:30 pm, MTRACK: U.C.T.C. vs. Iowa and Northern Illinois, FieldHouse, 2:30 pm. ...PLAYS: "Gilbert without Sullivan; Sullivan Without Gil¬bert," "Cox and Fox," "Rosencrantz and Guilden¬stern," International House Auditorium, 8 pm.DON: "Don Carlos," Reynolds Club, Ida Noyes Hall, 8TEACH-IN: "Crisis in the Middle East", with Adlai Ste¬venson III; Dean O. Miller, Ul; L/C Rylaarsdam, Di¬vinity School; Carl Shier, UAW; Mandle Hall, 1-4 P"1-admission $1. students $ .50. . ,GAY LIB DANCE: Pierce Tower, 8:30-pm-l am, $1- torbail fund.303 and 304St., Chicago 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 tbe summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in RoomsIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th... III. 40637. Phone Midway 3-0808,Ext. 3243. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service.rr ■4~i- Sunday, February 22FLICK: "Rachel, Rachel" Cobb, 7 and 9 pm.FOLK DANCING: Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.MUSIC: Indian music and opportunities for *>udVin9 !in India, US and Chicago, Foster Lounge, 3:*> Pm'Asian Arts Committee.BONHOEFFER HOUSE: "Journalism In the non-age ofAgnew," with Lis Wllle, Chicago Daily News, 5500 s-Wocdiawn, 6 pm, dinner at 7:30 pm, SI.FLICK: "I even Met Happy Gypsies," InternationalHouse, 7:30 pm, free.Monday, February 23LECTURE: "Political Polarization and the Third force,Breasted Hall, 8 pm. .MEETING: UC Baha'i Fellowship, Ida Noyes, 7:* P1"-' ) ,-19'J 97fiU j£(H PC2S9T i*(Vl riiw (O U'W :hKunstler on the Conspiracylinger’s bond was revoked but one good thing came out ofit — at least two Chicago newspapers printed “bullshit”for the first time in their careers.So five defendants are now convicted of the so-calledsubstantive acts of making speeches and all of this wouldhave no meaning, would just be an esoteric lesson in lawor jury compromises and so forth, if we didn’t go forwardfrom these convictions. These convictions can be the fivemost important convictions in American history if we or¬ganize around them. They will if we go forth from everyplace, if we speak every place, if people meet like this, ifwe go forth into the days ahead determined that we shallorganize around these convictions and the government isgoing to wish that it never brought this trial. Because ifthat’s done, if people organize around those convictionsand around what they mean, if everybody says to himself,that he or she has been convicted and that these con¬victions convict us all, everyone of us who dares to openour mouth on any score, then they will have meaning andmerit. I say the convictions are outrageous but that doesnot mean we should lay down now and lick our woundsbecause if you do that you do them the most terribledisservice.The conviction of five men has little meaning. They’rejust five men in the great stream of history. My ownsentence has no meaning whatever, I’m just another manalong the course of history. But if people will go fromthese convictions and go from these sentences, whether itbe from the contempt or other substantive crimes (itmakes little difference), if people will go forward fromthem and determine that they will rally this entire countryor as much of it as has meaning into some sort of protestaction (I won’t spell it out, every man has to be his ownjudge in that respect) then the convictions have realmeaning and importance. Then the defendants, these fivemen, (actually 7 because 2 are on contempt sentences)are still in Cook County Jail and must serve their con¬tempt sentences unless they are released on bond. So sev¬en have been ultimately convicted — the judge couldn’twait.The seven here who were convicted of contempt justbefore the verdict came in were the victims of two as¬pects. They were the victims of a judge who couldn’t waitto punish them before the jury came in and so he wentahead, ten seconds after the jury left the courtroom, hewent ahead and read his two days of contempt citationswhich culminated with Lennie Weinglass’ at the end lateon Sunday. Then he sat and waited for the jury to comein. He must have died a thousand deaths as the daysrolled by with no convictions. Today as I watched him hecould not have been more disappointed when the jury didnot give the whole pound of flesh. He sent the jury outwithout thanking them — now this is unheard of normally.The jury sit for five months incarcerated, they bring insome form of a conviction and the judge said only a fewwords to them. He said, “I cannot find the eloquence tothank you.” And then proceeded not to thank them. Theymust have realized that' they had taken away from himthe power to give 10 years and $20,000 fine. I think he waswaiting for this from the very first day of the trial. Andthey denied him this sublime pleasure of his life. He’llhave to content himself with five years instead of 10. Andthat may not have the significance to you as it has for mebut I know that the failure to give him the whole play isgoing to gnaw his vittles or vitals for a long time.Now the eighth defendant is soon to be sent to Con¬necticut for a monstrous trial. Maybe in many ways it isof more significance than the Conspiracy Trial or at leastit would not be separated from the Conspiracy trial butshould be accentuated at this time for the ultimate poundof flesh is a man’s life and that is what they are seekingwith Bobby Seale. They know they cannot really kill themovement even with the conspiracy verdicts. They canread the tea leaves the way you can and they can seepeople organizing around the trial, around i the contemptcitations and around the verdicts. —WILLIAM M. KUNSTLER has been a lawyer for overtwenty years. He has represented a large number ofcivil rights groups and individuals including Dr. MartinLuther King, Jr., Stokely Carmichael, H. Rap Brown, theBlack Panthers, and'the Baltimore 4. The Conspiracy 7case (formerly known as the Conspiracy 8) in a senseis a climax in his career since it has won him over fouryears in jail on contempt charges. Those four years weremeted out to him for the most part because he, like hisclients, refused to let the jury, the judge, the prosecutors,the paid informers, the Federal Marshals, the Red Squad,the press, and the few spectators who managed to getin, forget what were the political issues and opinions forwhich the Conspiracy 8 were reallying being tried.The following is a speech which Mr. Kunstler gaveon Wednesday evening, the day the jury returned, atthe Blue Gargoyle to an overflow crowd even the DailyNews estimated at 1500.THANK YOU VERY very much, I’m not yet used to tak¬ing this type of applause, so if I appear unmoved, believeme it is not the case. I just haven’t adjusted to it yet.I just came from the Cook County Jail and we had areally great meeting with the seven defendants there.Even the warden came to see me and thank me for the2,000 toothbrushes. We felt that it was important whenWarden Moore asked us to make a plea for 2,000 tooth¬brushes. I had told the clients about this and asked themif they thought I ought to do that for the warden of theCook County Jail. They said, “TTiere are 2600 people inthis jail and if 2,000 of them aren’t brushing their teeth... We would appreciate it if you would make the plea forthe toothbrushes.” So now from a dental point of view, Ithink that the jail is a far better place to be if you have tobe there.They are of course shocked by what happened thisafternoon. I understand that the prosecutor has been tell¬ing people that it is a victory for the defense but it is nota victory because the jury compromised and found fivemen guilty of the substantive acts — the non-conspiracyacts. They found two were innocent of their substantiveacts and, very interestingly, the substantive acts of Wei¬ner and Froines were the only acts that were chargedagainst the conspirators. They were the only physicalacts. They had to do with the teaching and demonstratingof incendiary bombs, molatov cocktails to blow up theunderground Grant Park garage. The other defendantswere convicted of only speeches. There wasn’t a single actcharged to them except making speeches in Grant Park,Lincoln Park, in a church here or a meeting place there.So what has happened in that courtroom is that 5 menhave been convicted of making speeches — which is reallywhat the case is all about. Because that’s what the gov¬ernment was out to get. It was to stop people from speak¬ing and most of all to stop people from speaking the truth.The crazy, Grant Park underground bomb plot whichwas a myth from the beginning, the jury did not buy.Coincidentally enough, the very people who testified aboutthe Grant Park garage incident were the people who alsotestified about the motives of the defendants were the twoinformers — Bock and Frappley. So in a crazy sort ofpatchwork way, the jury thought that Bock and Frappley,two of the government’s main witnesses, were lying on theGrant Park garage. Bock was by the way, the govern¬ment’s chief witness and the undercover agent from thepolice department. By convicting on the other count, thejury thought they were telling the truth about the others.But it just isn’t true one way or the other because whatthe jury did is compromise. After four days in which atleast 3 jurors wanted to acquit the whole group, they werehammered down and finally agreed to what they thoughtwas a reasonable compromise. They sacrificed five on onecount, for the release of those five on another count, andthe complete release of Lee Weiner and John Froines.This is what’s known as a compromise. (Voice from theaudience: “Bullshit!”) Well that’s another name for it.Those two words, by the way» (or for those of you whoare esoteric, one word) were the reason that Dave Del¬ TrialandAfterArthur StayCULTURE VULTURE ^Come Watch the Cops on SaturdayEVERY DAY, now there has been a vigil going on at theFederal Building for the Conspiracy, the celebrated Chi¬cago Police Force has performed S3me of their well-knownfeats. One of their amazing tricks is how many cops youcan squeeze in the floor in the Federal Building. Likemetal filings following a magnet, a big clump of themfollow the demonstrators on the inside whenever they startincircling the building. Another fabulous trick of these fa¬mous performers is “guess the plain-clothesmen’’ (an al¬ternate “guess the Red Squad” is just too simple even toconsider mentioning. The only hint I can suggest is to go“plainclothesman, demonstrator, plainclothesman, demon¬strator . . and more than likely you’ll guess right.)It’s a valuable experience to see the fabulous Chi¬cago’s finest at work. And, oh yes, it might be a goodthing to add you body and your voice to the big finaldemonstration to show your contempt for the verdict.It’s tomorrow at noon and there’ll be a march to theCook County Jail.CAMPUSFilmTonight Doc Films one of the most very recent filmsof the Great One — Orson Welles, Falstaff. A con¬glomeration of a number of Shakesperean plays dealingwith Sir John, it also stars John Gielgud, Jeanne Moreau,Margaret Rutherford, and Ralph Richardson. In Cobb at7:15 and 9:30 for $1.Black Colony presents Joanna, the recent English filmabout a young girl in (to use Madison Ave. terminology)swinging London. She soon becomes involved with a blackand the film follows what happens. Check the posters butit’ll probably be at 7 and 9 or so in Cobb.Sunday is CEF’s Rachel, Rachel directed by PaulNewman and starring Joanne Woodward. (They’re thenewest husband and wife team since Victoria and Albert,George Burns and Gracie Allen, and Mary and PercyShelley.) In any case she plays a 35 year old virginschoolteacher stuck in a boring small town. At 7 and 9 for$1 in Cobb.Monday is a very special film. SVNA (now ex¬panding its activities into the film game) presents in itsChicago premiere, what has been called the most recentradical statement on film, Prologue. It was made duringthe convention by a group of young Canadians. It featuresnone other than Abbie Hoffman (of Cook County Jail fame.) It is a benefit to raise money for the Conspiracy.Len Weinglass soon also to be of Cook County jailfame will probably speak before each showing. Abbie,if he is sprung will be there or if not in spirit andprobably on tape from his plush quarters in the Cross*bars Hotel (to quote a Federal Marshal in the FederalBuilding.) The showings will be at 7:15 and 9:30 inMandel Hall in order that people from the organ concertcan make it. The price will be young people, $1 arid oldpeople, who can afford it. $2.Tuesday brings Doc Films’ Underworld by Joseph vonSternberg. This is a 1927 silent which might Well be thefirst gangster film (but tell me what is a gangster filmwithout Edward G. Robinson in his pre-Nescaffee days?)The film is written by Ben Hecht but it is von Sternberg(minus Marlene Deitrich.) In Cobb and it’s FREE at 8.Wednesday brings The Palm Beach Story by PrestonSturges. Doc Films calls Sturges the American Voltaire(Voltaire in Palm Beach?) I also calls it a farce of sexualentanglements. — sounds pretty good. It stars ClaudetteColbert, Joel McCrea, Mary Astor and none other thanRudy Vallee. At 8 in Cobb for 750.TheatreThe Theatre scene is heavy again this weekend.Tonight and tomorrow night is a double bill of ArthurSullivan’s Cox and Box and W.S. Gilbert’s Rosencrantzand Guilderstern. Both productions go to prove that Gil¬bert without Sullivan and Sullivan without Gilbert werestill very funny. Cox and Box with the Hyde Park Gilbertand Sullivan Society directed by Roland Bailey, is notsurprisingly enough, a comic opera. Rosencrantz andGuilderstern was conceived as (even before Tom Stoppardwas born) as a parody of Hamlet, Ophelia is happily mar¬ried off to one of those two originally unlucky duo andHamlet is exiled to England. With Nick Rudall, KennethNorthcott, Caroline Heck, Pat Prinz, Chris Lyon and PeterJuste. At 8 in the International House Theatre.Also this week-end is an extremely important dramat¬ic event — a wholly modern, up4o date version of Shiller’sDon Carlos. If Shiller could only see it now. Other peoplewho seemed to have had a hand in the production areArtaux, Brecht, Julian Beck and also Werner Kreiglestein,the Czech-born director who adapted and completely re¬worked this play. The play now includes a dancing-girlline, group speaking and movement and a large Superman (as in Clark Kent not Neitzche) looming over the wholeproduction. In Mandel tonight, Saturday and Sunday at8:30.DanceGay Liberation, now about a month old on thiscampus, sponsors its first dance on Saturday. Everyone ofevery inclination is invited. It’s to help raise money for abail fund since there are many indications that police har-rassment is starting (if it hasn’t already). It’s in PierceTower at 8:30.MusicCarlo Maria Giulini, principle guest conductor for theChicago Symphony will be here on campus on Monday tomeet all interested people. He will be in Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge from 10-12 in the morning. Punch and h’ord’oevres will be served.This Week at the GargoyleFridayNUC sponsors a meeting and a dance on the tuitionrise — “You don’t have to be Jewish to hate Levi’s Rise”at 7.MondayGay Liberation Rap Session at noon.NUC meeting at 8.TuesdayCrafts Workshop for all the creatively inclined from3:30-5.The Amazing Original Flash Gordon — a movie at 7for 75c.WRAP meeting at 8.WednesdaySDS meeting at 12:30.Flash Gordon again at 7.NUC presents Sidney Peck speaking on his case andrelated subjects at 8.ThursdayThe Craftsworkshop from 3:30-5.Poetry Reading at 8.Hyde Park comer presents a panel on Abortion in¬cluding some women who have had one. It’s at 8.Continued on Page Five/ftyxofes Cio 6St ubent Activities Offic*bookstoreiojfitts L oratory2/Grey City Jouraad/February 21, M7# ‘NUC Says “DURING THE DECADES in which the University of Chi¬cago was becoming the force for criticism and generalboon to mankind that we know it as today, it developednumerous ways of gently turning back any tendency thatwould deflect it from its meteoric rise to the top of theheap in the truth game. To tenants seeking to remain intheir homes, Julian Levi tirelessly addressed scholarly ar¬ticles describing the wonderful world that would becreated for their grandchildren, if only they would moveso that faculty could live in a “compatible neighborhood”.To students wishing to change the departmental policiestoward women and radical scholars, the University re¬sponded by extending to them the same courtesies extend¬ed to said women and radical scholars. To workers whorequested a living wage, the University patiently pointedout that they were doing fine, considering the sort of folksthey were.All the while, the University needed lots of money inorder to carry out all these programs in addition to itsprimary task of being one of the all-time producers oftruth. It got money from the government, private donors,and student tuitions. But when the government realizedthat the kind of one dimensional ideology and technologyit was paying so much for were the only things most orthe professors knew how to produce anyway, it got. wiseand cut back. And when the private donors realized thatthe ugly buildings they were paying so much to get theirnames on were making them laughing-stocks, they gotwise and cut back.It’s time we got wise.The tuition money that is collected here is the onlysource of funds that the University can count on to haveno strings attached. We can’t even see the finance books.In the old days this was called taxation without represen¬tation. Students who were lured here by scholarshipsTHBITEI — — - W tfw* cr <jp «sr arw tfr wmwDown on the Tuition Rise 99Stop feeding the Life ofthe MindAgitate for a Universitythat Serves the Peoplewhich were cut or terminated after the first year, studentswho are just keeping their heads above water with sum¬mer jobs and part-time earnings, anyone who is in theleast concerned with holding the people-consuming, truthdispensing, leviathan at bay, has a stake in resisting thetuition increase that reliable sources say will be as muchas $900 spread over the next few years.But, some people must be saying, inflation is makingeverything more expensive. Right, but would you acceptthat argument from the Pentagon? The University of Chi¬cago is far from being the fragile ivory tower, cringingbefore the depredations of corrupting society, that some ofits more donnish faculty and students like to believe it tobe. Chicago faculty members advise the Army on its basicresearch programs. Others consult with the State depart¬ment on the uses of the social sciences in “stabilizing” theunderdeveloped countries, maintain relations with the In¬stitute for Defense Analyses, and help Mayor Daley servethe people. Also, inflation has come about because of cer¬tain policies and laws now in existence. When the Univer¬sity didn’t like the policies and* laws concerning urbanrenewal (they didn’t give universities enough lattitude indumping people) they trotted Julian Levi down to Wash¬ington to take care of business, which he did. So the possi¬bility certainly exists for the University to lobby againstthe war, rising corporate profits, and the other causes ofinflation. But no, it’s easier to get it from us.The thing is, we don’t have to let it happen: WE CANWIN THIS ONE! (When was the last time anything waswon on this campus? When was the first time?) At NYUthey sued to have the books opened up, and they won. Andthey found hidden wealth that boggled the imagination.There is no reason why we shouldn’t do as well. With anongoing movement to transform the University our moneycould go for decent things like a childcare center, or sub- NUC anti-tuition rise positionsidies so that poor black and white kids can come into theUniversity and help bring it more in line with the needs ofthe people, rather than for some rinky-dink professor fromthe East Coast with a diamond stickpin.So we’re having a forum tonight of people who havebeen particularly shat on by the University, followed by adance and a discussion of what to do. Screw fatalism.UI Presents a Don Carlos for Today“THIS MAY BE THE START OF SOMETHING BIG.”The tide of some frothy little song or other, but perhapsthe most apt prophecy concerning Werner Krieglstein andhis new theatre, by whom Don Carlos — an adaptation ofthe classical Schiller play — will be presented this week¬end in Mandel Hall.Krieglstein, billed as Guest Director of UniversityTheatre this quarter, has translated into American hisadaptation of Don Carlos, which, as director of the Frank¬furt Neuebuhne (“new theatre”), he produced in Germanyand brought to France and Italy. Presently a doctoralcandidate in Germanic Literature at UC, Krieglstein spentmuch of his first year in the United States translating theadaptation and reworking it to suit an American audience.Thus, the University of Chicago is his trail audience, anddepending on their reactions to Don Carlos, Krieglsteinhopes to produce more of his kind of theatre in Chicago.What is his kind of theatre? “It is a theatre to suit thisDon Carlos — at. Reynolds this weekend time and this place; a theatre which explores all its ownpotentials but does not claim to be anything that it isn’t; atheatre that recognizes the difference between illusion —itself — and truth — the real world.”From this kind of theatre comes Don Carlos. Althoughthe cast is dressed for the most part in blue jeans, dra¬matic costumes here and there (including a vivid batman¬like cape for Don Carlos himself) add to the “theatri¬cality” of the production, as do the make-up, the unusualset (designed and constructed by members of Virgil Burn¬ett’s course in theatre design), and the variety of vig¬nettes, routines, and audio-visual effects provided by theactors themselves. There are parodies of classical theatri¬cal traditions (even of Wagnerian operas) and of worn-outpolitical visions. There are moments of horrifying vio¬lence, when the Chorus (“the anarchistic element”) ma¬chine-guns Jeckle the Fool, thereby killing Harlequin for¬ever; moments of American glitter and cheesecake in theBeauty Pageant and the can-can number; moments ofprimitive rhythmic communication in some of the Chorus’“ecstasies.”True to Krieglstein’s ideas, there is no attempt atrealism (“an attempt to fool the audience into thinkingthat reality is on the stage and not outside on the street”)in Don Carlos. In fac, the “realistic scenes” in this pro-THE UPCOMING WEEK brings to campus a rare happen¬ing — a musical benefit concert to raise money for aproject being aided by UC students, this being the Earlychild Development Fund of the First Presbyterian Church.One of the features of the recital, titled “An Evening orOrgan and Brass,” is Symphonic Movement for Organ,Opus 18 by Easley Blackwood, a member of the Univer¬sity of Chicago faculty.Blackwood was born in 1933 in Indianapolis, Indiana.In 1950 he went to Yale where he became a student ofPaul Hindemith and received a Master’s degree in 1954. In1954 he received a Fulbright for study in Paris, where heremained three years as a student of Nadia Boulanger. In1958 his First Quartet and First Symphony received wideacclaim and won several prizes. Since 1958 he has been onthe faculty where he has continued composing and con¬cert activities.His works include three symphonies; two string quar- duction turn out to be boring, showing that realism on thestage is much less interesting than realism outside thetheatre. Actors play with lines, words, and sounds, ex¬change speeches, try different effects out on the audience.Although the original Schiller text is used as a basis, newways of communicating Schiller’s words and ideas areemployed to give them new — or no — meaning.Many of the actors in Don Carlos are new to Univer¬sity Theatre, although there are several veterans. Every¬one in the cast, however, has undergone rigorous trainingas an ensemble, with a full rehearsal schedule beginningearly last December. In the title role is Steve Chatzky,with Ann Beckerman as the Princess Eboli and Step Mayas the Marquise de Posa. Duke Alva and Cardinal Do¬mingo are played by David Chase and Lee Strucker; Lar¬ry Stout and Linda Gossen are the King and Queen.Jeanne Wikler plays Jeckle the Fool. In the Chorus areBarbara Conley, Marshall Alexander, Gail Hartmann, Ca¬rol McElfresh, Elaine Cohen, Nancy Lukens, EstherGreenfield, and Sally Banes.Don Carlos will be presented in Mandel Hall on Fri¬day, Saturday and Sunday nights at 8:30 p.m. Tickets areon sale at the Reynolds Club Desk at $1.50 for studentsand $2.00 for the General Public. (And for the wealthierfaculty).tets; various chamber works; concertos for oboe, clarinet,and violin. He has received commissions from theFromm, Koussevitzky, Naumburg Foundations; In¬dianapolis, Cincinnati orchestras; and G. Schirmer Com¬pany. More recently, he was commissioned by YehudiMenuhin to write a violin concerto; this has been per¬formed by Mr. Menuhin in England, and on tour in theUnited States.The Symphonic Movement for Organ, Opus 18 wascommissioned by the Rockefeller Memorial Chapel andwritten for the University Organist in April 1966 and firstperformed by Edward Mondello in July, 1969.Tickets for the benefit recital, which features EdwardMondello at the Organ and the well-known trumpeterAdolph Herseth with the Chicago Symphony Brass En¬semble, are available now at Reynolds Club and the SGOffice, as well as numerous book stores in Hyde Park.minMondello Plays BlackwoodFor Children’s BenefitHUTU•T/tr* u‘\ ■ ■ , •") ' • ,, ... . ■ f 'The First FT Experimental WeekendLAST WEEKEND THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE initiated its “first Experimental Weekend” at Reynolds ClubTheatre. The weekend was conceived as “an opportunityto present the works of new, little-performed and avant-garde playwrights.” That’s a good conception, and is whatuniversity theatres should do: experiment, take chances,put on what commercial theatres don’t dare to, be educa¬tional, liberational, if not inspirational, vocational. Ouruniversity is not blessed with decent theatre facilities, nora full-blown speech-and-drama department, so in spite ofthe best conceptions in the world, we get more than ourshare of abortions and still-births along with the few glim¬mers of success.To begin with the failures: Strindberg’s The Pelican.It’s the play’s fault. Strindberg had parent problems,wrote for therapy. The results often make for fascinatingreading and theatre, a gold mine for Freudians and thesymbolist-expressionist tradition in modern theatre. Butthis particular “chamber play,” unless done very care¬fully, is just embarrassing. The dark forces of fate thatemerge here come from The Mother Who Withheld HerBreast From Her Children, who was a Bad Homemakerbecause she ate all the good food and gave her childrenscraps and leftovers and kept the money that was to paythe heating bill. If that weren’t enough, she has a thingwith her son-in-law, who finds his new mother more inter¬esting than his new wife. This breeds Doom The play endsin the house aflame.The director chose to play it straight, the way it wasdone at Strindberg’s Intimate Theater in 1907; and in 1907it might have been a shocker so done. But in 1970 theaudience laughed: high camp. Maybe a surrealistic setand more fiercely melodramatic acting would have struckus with an Artaudian fear; at least it would have beenexperimental. Anyway, my sympathy went out to the ac-WHAT ELSE IS LEFT TO SHOW?“Futz is a shocker...A rude and hard thrustout into the theatre...to touch you in thosesecret places where youlive out your ownprivate morality play...— TIMOTHY LEARYROLLING STONE\A\mwntmmmCommonwealth Unitedpresents4 Guvnor Productionfell 4 PftMiim VLE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337-2113'VGRy tty toifri&foetfruaiy M, 1970 tors, who showed true grit through it all. Their courage inthe face of embarrassment gave the production a touchingdignity: it wasn’t camp to them.The adaptations by Robert Hopkins of Wolfgang Bor-chert’s “Stories of Wartime Germany” were more suc¬cessful, judging by audience response. “The Bread,” amime for two players, depicts an aged couple in simpleand wretched survival in Hitler’s Germany. The Old Wom¬an cuts the bread; the Old Man comes home; they eat;they go to bed; the Old Man steals out to the kitchen,sneaks a piece of extra bread; the Old Woman finds out.Shame. Recognition of wretchedness. A portrait of Hitler,their Messiah, hangs grossly tilted on the wall. Implicitforgiveness of wife to husband. Maudlin to the cynic, butwell done. Leonard Kraft’s mime was perhaps more justthan Enid Rieser’s in that it was understated. Mrs. Riesertried to express too much, perhaps because she wanted toget across the religious implications of cutting bread.Thus she cut the bread very slowly, stylistically. But anold woman with arthritis in her fingers cutting bread onstage is itself a religious image. Trying to make it one issuperfluous.The other “story” concerns, apparently, a German sol¬dier who fell victim to the Russian counter-offensive, andnow lies unburied on soil far from home. Radi, the deadsoldier, is nervous, fearful. He is told by a friend to lookat his bones. They are cool, light, like snow; they smelllike clean dirt. “You can rest now, Radi,” the Young Mantells him, “it’s all the same.” This vignette sounds betterthan it plays. It was interesting, but tid-bits like this onlywhet the appetite. I wasn’t gripped; perhaps others were.Certainly the most promising event of the evening wasthe “original” (it originated here) one-act by Alan Min-skoff, The Festival Truck. The set was particularly inter¬esting, in that it represented a trailer truck, cubist style.That is, one shows a parallelepiped on stage by choppingit up and arranging the pieces at various angles. Theredwhiteblue of the flag lent appropriate color to the ac¬tion. And the action is about a bunch of hippies (pejora¬tive connotation intended) going to the American Festivalof Dionysus, the festival of rock, love, pot, good vibes,and, after Woodstock, big money and bad scenes. The playSullivan and Morton’sCOX AND BOXPerformed by mombors ofTho Gilbert and Sullivan Opera CompanyDirected by Roland BaileyANDWilliam Schwenk Gilbert’sROSENCRANTZ&GUILDENSTERNDirected by Annette Fern gives us one of these bad scenes. The revellers hop into atruck for the ride, although only two of them make them¬selves known to the driver. En route he suspects the truthstops the truck, gets out and investigates, finds the groupstarts throwing them out, but gets cuffed and pummelledinstead. He is submitted to a trial, strong on ritual andweak on justice, and finally left, tied and stranded. TheDriver, played by James Miller (one of the handful ofskillful actors playing„the Hyde Park circuit), is a realprole: a former Special Forces man, a family man whoisn’t above having a night of love in the back of his cabwith a black woman (“Them nigga bitchuz sure can go,”he says), heavy, crude, he is the “pig you see in everycop,” only he’s a truck driver. It’s no secret that fewradical types have little other than contempt for the work¬ing class, and the humiliations to which he is subjectedgive testimony to this. And, if we wished to be grand,could we not see the “pathos of the proletariat” in hisface at the end, abandoned by the effete snobs?I said the event was “promising.” It was. But thestructural high point of the play, the ritual trial, remindedme of the spectacle of Aphrodite doing a song and strip inthe recent campus production of Hippolytus: mere spec¬tacle. In addition, the play ended too soon. Leroi Jones’Dutchman is just this white chick torturing a black guy,and you’re mesmerized by it for a considerably longertime than this play takes. My point is that torture scenesare moments of truth: both oppressor and victim are re¬vealed. Here we got only a glimpse of the truck-driver,and practically nothing came through about the hippiesexcept the group stereotype. Thus the feeling of in¬completeness with the abrupt ending.May I express a personal gripe before closing” Theplaybill quoted Artaud and, after listing the names of theset crew, referred to the rest of the staff as “all otherinsane people.” Please, madness is a privilege granted tofew. Lear, Ophelia, Strindberg, Artaud, or N. O. Brown,these only are the “insane people” capable of that gracewe sometimes perceuve in madness. “Schizophrenics aresuffering from the truth!” utters Brown. Well, not always;but I would use words more carefully, more humbly. Thefirst “Experimental Weekend” was not quite mad, butrather sane. Best wishes for the next time around.John R. HoltJimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHLITZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNB2C0BDSRod StewartA BraveNew StarTHE ROD STEWART ALBUM by Rod Stewart (MercurySR 6137):Rod Stewart used to provide the Jeff Beck Group withvocals and songs. Much of the success of that group be¬longs to Stewart; Jeff Beck’s guitar was usually over¬rated. Stewart, now on his own for awhile (he has recentlyjoined the Small Faces) has produced an album thatshould give him the reputation for creativity that hedeserves.Stewart is brave. Who else do you know who would havethe chutzpah to take the Rolling Stones song, “StreetFighting Man”, rearrange the order and then make itwork? Stewart gives this song more fervor than theStones’ did and lets us hear their imaginative lyrics,something that Jagger, unfortunately, does not seem tocare about. One feels that the Stones would approve. Rodfollows “Street Fighting Man” with a totally differentsong, “Man of Constant Sorrow”, his own composition.This song features some great instrumental work: RonWood is especially noticeable on bottleneck guitar. Butmore importantly, this song shows another side of RodStewart. He is soft here and slow, totally different than wehave ever known him to be from his experience with JeffBeck. And Stewart seems to have as much talent at theslow songs as he has at the uptempo ones. On the first9ide of the album he again proves this in the album’s bestcut, “Handbags & Gladrages,” written by Mike D’Abo(formerly with Manfred Mann.) This song features greatpiano by D’Abo himself and a memorable vocal by RodContributors Your Forever MoreStewart. His throaty voice is perfect here. It evokes tired¬ness and strength at the same time.This entire album is creative, something that seems tobe lacking in most new releases. We have heard morethan enough Led Zeppelin’s, Ten Years After’s and BlindFaith’s. These groups capitalize on a set formula and rakein the money from it. Rod Stewart is risky and, luckily, hesucceeds. Even if he didn’t, I would respect him more fortrying than I would many other artists, who, though suc¬cessful, lack originality.YOURS FOREVER MORE by Forever More (RCA LSP-4272):RCA is really pushing this record, hard. I’ve been toldby friends who listen to WLS-FM that every second com¬mercial is for this record. This is unfortunate. Now, youmust think that I think that this is unfortunate becausethis record is really bad, right? Wrong. I think that this isunfortunate because most people will not give this group achance because they will resent the hype they hear on theradio. And Forever More deserves a chance to be heard.Like many new groups, Forever More has done a lotof testing on their first record, with an end result that thealbum is uneven. The album opens on a strong note withtwo harmonic, non-deafening cuts, “Back in the StatesAgain” and “We Sing.” These songs are highlighted bysome fine bass work and an interesting lead vocal on thefirst song by Alan Gorrie, a member of the group. Hesounds like a mixture of Jethro Tull and Fat Mattress,two of the more interesting new British groups. However,the next song is a joke, unfortunately, a bad one, and theciiTiti mini side ends with an eight minute disaster of boring loudnoises. The second side reflects this unevenness. Some ofthe songs, in the Jethro Tull vein are quite successful, butthe louder, harder ones fail. Hopefully, Forever More willrealize where their talent is and make an entire recordutilizing it.CONSTANT COMPANION by Ruthann Friedman(Reprise 6363):Every new girl singer, it seems, is trying to cash in onthe successes of Joni Mitchell and Judy Collins. But Ruth¬ann Friedman, a new singer in their style, has alreadymade her name with the Association’s version of “Windy”and her first album may in time, became a collectors item.The difference between Joni Mitchell and RuthannFriedman is quite evident. Both write good songs butwhile Joni Mitchell’s abound with images and metaphors,Ruthann Friedman emphasizes ideas and concepts in poet¬ical terms. One fine line in this vein is from her song“Piper’s Call” where she says “Y’know I live all of myfreedom just two steps outside a jail.”Unfortunately, Ruthann is not as good a performer asshe is a songwriter. All her songs sound the same; shedoes not interpret her material. Perhaps others will dothese songs better than she, but no will ever know how theauthor felt about her music. Also, not all of her materialis of the same quality. Some of the songs are terrible and,sandwiched among truly fine ones, they stick out like sorethumbs. Her voice can also get a bit grating.The Great PumpkinJohn Holt is a graduate student in the committee onSocial Thought.New University Conference is an organization of radi¬cal graduate students and faculty members who work in,around and in spite of institutions of higer learning.mnCIT YjouenilHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.IU the wind, iU the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the Cathedral» EditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxC. F. Z. HitchcockFrank MalbrancheThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroGrty city Journal/ publishtd weekly In cooperation with Th#Chicago Maroon, Invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested persons‘f’ould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hell. See Ya, at the Fed BuildingContinued from Page TwoESLEWHEREFilmThe Damned, Luchinio Lisconti’s massive portrayal ofthe rise of Nazi Germany is documented through the his¬tory of one family. Ane 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 Biograph, 2433 N. Lincoln.Andy Warhol’s Lonesome Cowboys started last weekhere in Chicago. Its publicity describes it as a Zand Greyidea, written by Aristophanes, and performed by DeSade’sstock company from Charenton. It’s at the Aardvark, 1608N. Wells, in Piper’s Alley.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 Roch¬elle Owens 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 than Chicago doessomething to him. At the Esquire, 53 E. Oak Street.Accattone! is by Pier Paolo Pasolini of The GospelAccording to St. Matthew fame. This one takes place in the slums of Rome (quite a change from the BiblicalHolyland.) It’s at the Festival, 3912 N. Sheridan.TheatreEndgame a play by none other than the Nobel Prizewinner Samuel Beckett. It’s in a new theatre with a coffeeshop attached. Chicago reperatory Company, 315 W.North, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at 8:30.The Assault on Charles Summer by 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 other Stories is another example ^of 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 Sec¬ond City revues. Second City 1616 N. Wells, Tuesdaysthrough Thursday and Sunday, Friday at 8:30 and 11, Sat¬urday at 8:30,11 and 1.A Game and Two in a Cave are two new plays byRose Borgia and Joe Flair, respectively. It’s at the CafeTOP A, 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-father conflict. At the Hull House Playwright’s Theatre,222 W. North. Friday and Saturday at 8:30. Students $1.50.The Stratford Festival of Canada is playing for abouta week more at the Studebaker Theatre. They are per¬forming The Merchant of Venice tonight, February 22 (at7:30), 24, 25, 28. and The School for Scandal tomorrow (at2:00 and 8:30), 26, and 27. Unless you live in Canada it’san opportunity not to be missed.ArtThere is a retrospective show of Ray 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.February 2t, lfTO/Grey City Jem-ani/i4 * 1“For the drift to the rigContinued from Page OneAll of this they can see but Bobby Seale is a differentmatter. Because the attempt to put a man in the electricchair, the loss of life or the possible loss of life, for a manfor his own belief and his own activities is somethingwhich is sure to have a chilling effect on many people.But Bobby Seale must have the support of everybodyaround this country who has any feeling or sensibility atall. New Haven is going to be a testing ground for themovement and a vital one this spring when that trialstarts. It should not be a trial that is left to be forgottenor ignored. I think you would be doing a great disservice(and when I say you I mean myself as well) to the move¬ment, to the Panthers, to the course of human progress, tothe Conspiracy, if the Seale trial in Connecticut does notget the same kind of attention as the trial of seven whitemen in Chicago.The trial in Chicago had a great deal which drewpress and support. It had an unusual cast of charactersamong the defendants. It had defendants who were his¬trionic and well-known. The trial in Connecticut is a differ¬ent matter because it is a much more deadly business in away than the trial in Chicago. It doesn’t have, with theexception of Bobby, a nationally known cast of characters.There’ll be a whole different scenario. The stakes are somuch higher in human life than they were here. And yetthat trial is intimately associated with the trial in Chi¬cago.The trial in Chicago is intimately associated with oth¬er trials which are going on in this country — the Panther21 in New York among others. There is a wave of repres¬sion that is pending to sweep us all over the side. Themayor of New York, in addressing the bar association lastnight, made it quite clear. Here an establishment figure,the mayor of the largest city in the United States, isstating that he fears a wave of repressions and he waspointing to the Chicago trial as his jumping off place. Hedidn’t mention Bobby Seale in Connecticut and he didn’tmention the 21 in New York. But they, if he had beenhonest, would also have been included because what ishappening now is that the attack is on a major level.When I started in the south, it was always disorderlyconduct, breach of the peace, maximum of a year, some¬where, 60 days, six months. But gradually as the power ofthe people has been felt, north, south, east and west, thestakes grow steadily higher. This law which they wereconvicted under today was enacted just a year and a half,two years ago. It gave high stakes — 5 years $10,000 percount. But there are other laws which did not have to beenacted such as murder, robbery, narcotics and so onwhich are being applied .now in ever increasing numbersand to an ever increasing circle of people. The possessionof two joints can cost a man ten years or, in HoustonTexas with Lee Otis Johnson, 30, John Sinclari, 10.You can go around the country and find these heavyfelony prosecutions directed against primarily, youngpeople and directed against them with one purpose inmind — to kill them politically. To immune the body poli¬tic against them, to emasculate them and if necessary todestroy them as political forces in this country.Every trial must be a Conspiracy 7 trial, every trialmust bring you out. There must be no anonymous defend¬ants — the defendants are all of us. You must organizeSteve Aoki around every possible trial or persecution that can befound. You won’t be able to make them all of course butthe government has to know that you're ready, that you’regoing to be at as many as you can get to, you’re going toutilize your own methods of protest. They’re going to haveto get every conviction at the price of filling their streetswith people and maybe their jails. This is the only answer,writing to your congressman, a thin picket line here andthere, a few dollars to some organization, this won’t buyyou surfeit from pain. You must really put your bodiesand your minds where it is.If you don’t do this, them I’m afraid we're in forhorrendous times. For the drift to the right is now a stam¬pede. It’s apparent everywhere. You have an AttorneyGeneral who has no belief whatsoever in human rights(and that included his wife as well.) You have a DeputyAttorney General who is taking a consistent stand thatpreventive detention is the way to save this country. Thatpeople would be held without bond for certain periods oftime if he says they're dangerous to the community. To betried, essentially, before they are really tried.You have a network of informers everywhere, they'rein this room tonight somewhere. We saw that at the trialwhen the informers came to the stand — an insuranceexecutive from New Jersey who got $10 a meeting andcarfare from the FBI to spy on Tom Hayden. A televisioncamera man from San Diego who made some $3000 ingoing ostensively as a camera man to places where de¬fendants spoke and then report it to the FBI on what theytalked about. A man in New York — Louis Sulzberg whoposed as part of the movement and who even did some ofthe pictures for one of Abbie’s books, who made some$8000 for reporting for the FBI. This is the kind of personthey use to convict in this trial. You had a Chicago police¬man who became a member of Veterans for Peace here inChicago. He became a delegate to the Chicago PeaceCouncil and all the time was a member of the ChicagoPolice Department. You have a police cadet who went toschool here in Chicago and participated in pushing thepresident of his university off the stage in order to gaincredence in the movement and spent the rest of his timespying.This is the dirtiest kind of a person, there is nobodydirtier than a man who gets the price. These BenedictArnolds are among us, they’re everywhere and they’reabsolutely insidious because they can testify if they haveaccess to a meeting. They can testify to conversations andyou can deny them all you want but it makes little differ¬ence to a middle class jury selected as this one was. Oncethey have access they can say whatever the spirit movesthem and there’s no way to prove them wrong. You cansay I didn’t say it or you can have witnesses say youdidn’t say it but you have no absolute proof — it’s impos¬sible and that’s die terrible role that the informer plays.He never sees acts. Nothing happened in Chicago thatthey claim these defendants did. All the great chargesagainst them — the great kidnap plot of SuperintendantRockford by Abbie Hoffman, the great Grant Park under¬ground garage plot. These never happened. These are alltestified to through so-called “conversations.”One informer said, Abbie said, “Let’s get the BigCheese and we’ll march to the ampitheater with him andif they try to stop us they’ll have to kill him too.” Wellthat’s the kind of thing the informer tells about. He says,“I heard him say it.” — it sounds very realistic. He’ll sayI didn’t say it and then you leave that up to a jury todetermine. A jury predisposed to taking the wor dofpeople associated with the FBI and the police. They can’treally believe, even good people on these juries, can be¬lieve that the FBI or the informers would lie. They shouldknow. The point is that the informer is absolutely insidiousand we have to find some way to make ourselves securefrom these informers. I don’t know what the way is butsomehow we have to work it out.The informers are going to be a part of the approach¬ing repression. In the Panther 21 case in New York, in¬formers will take the stand and they will tell the storythat “I heard so and so say we’re going to blow up Macy’snext week”. And that is the type of testimony that youwill get. It’s going to be true in New Haven, we even knowthe names of the informers. A man named George Sandwill come in and say that he heard Bobby say, “Off theinformer” in talking about Rackley, the man whose bodywas found. This is testimony juries buy — governmentknows this, that’s why they use such people. The govern¬ment knows they can’t prove acts — they can only provewhat they hope the jury will buy in conversations.I’m telling you all this and talking this way really toscare the hell out of you. Because only sometimes out offear will people react. That you have to realize what theend stakes are. The end stakes are a totalitarian govern¬ment. That’s what the end of it all is. If the system thinksthat it is threatened and if the system feels that so manymillions of people think it lacks validity, think it needs achange or a complete overhauling or an overthrowing. Ifthe system fears, and when I say system, I mean thosewho really profit, and profit highly from what goes on inthis country, if they feel truly threatened, they’re going toreact in the most horrendous way. They’ll do it all in the name of patriotism, they’ll do it all in the name of somevirtues which they ascribe to their thiricing and they’llturn their heads as people go off to the jails of this coun¬try. They’ll stand aside because their self interest willhave motivated what they did.You can stop this, the German people could havestopped this at one point in time. Even after Hitler be¬came Chancellor of Germany, he had a minority govern¬ment, he had a minority party and in order to make it amajority party he burned down the Reichstag. Theybrought two men to trial because the strongest force inGermany that could have stopped a stampede to the righthappened to be at that time the German Communist par¬ty. The Reichstag burned down one night and two men,Dimitrov and Vanderlubber, were indicted for that crime.Vanderlubber was a sort of half-witted Dutch youth whowas picked up by the Gestapo and charged with thecrime. Dimitrov was a leader of the Communist party, aman from Bulgaria who was then living in Germany. Di¬mitrov stood in court, he insisted on trying his own case.He called Hermann Goering to the stand and cross-exam¬ined him and broke Hermann Goering on the stand. Hebroke him so that he was screaming at Dimitrov, “Peoplelike you should be put away.”The German court acquitted Dimitrov — that was thelast struggle in Germany to prevent the knife from falling.After Dimitrov’s trial the Communist Party fell apart, thetrade unions fell apart and one by one the Nazi regime6/Grey City Journal/February 20, 1970tjht is now a stampede..99Sanford Rockowit/ie gobbled them all up. Just as Niebuhr said, “When they’ll came for the Jews, I did not utter a word because I wasn- not a Jew. Then finally they came for me.” And that’s theill way it went in Germany, piece by piece they destroyedthe forces which could have stopped the rush to fascism.re And they did it starting with the burning of thee- Reichstag — there’s not so much difference between then- burning of the Reichstag and what went on at Michigana and Balbo. They’re very similar because what you need isiy an incident, an incident which shocks the so-called silentin majority — the stupified majority. Such an incidentit shocks them enough so they react in fear and they reactedr- in fear to the burning of the statehouse of the Germann, parliament. Just as they reacted in fear in many quarterse. to what they like to call “violence in the streets.”10 So Michigan and Balbo became the Reichstag for aie time here and out of it grew this trial to utilize that. But ita was not to put the blame of the Nazi government whoi- burned the Reichstag, not to put the blame on Mayore. Daley and the others who were interested in creating ani- incident in Chicago. It was only out of which they couldle build a justification and a unification of the people in thele middle without whose support you cannot turn anythinginto a totalitarian state, small country or large country,ie So Michigan and Balbo became for a time that sort ofg. incident.ie But the defendants, like Dimitrov, fought back. Theyie gave a lesson. And this is the real meaning of the Con-yLL KPlfill ;ff'*5rFi5|I-TO2JE ^it *■m 1 k* *’ m IJ■BSy/uliJl*ijl !Mikt Brant spiracy 8. They gave a lesson in brave proud men whowould not knuckle under. And they did it beautifully. Thepress screamed “antics.” They were obstreperous incourt. They didn’t respect the courtroom. The lawyersshould have controlled them (that’s the biggest laugh ofall — as if the lawyers had control). They should haverespected all the traditions of the court like standing andrising on cue. They should have cut their hair, they shouldhave worn suits. They should have done anything to makethemselves more presentable and more acceptable to thejury and through the jury to the rest of the United States.They chose to do none of those things. They chose to betheir own men in that court. They chose to stand up andsay “If you want to convict us, convict us as we are butwe're going to fight like hell in this courtroom which wedidn’t choose as our battleground and we’re going to fightto the end. If we go down, we go down but we hope peoplelearn and take courage and go forward from what hap¬pens here oji the 23rd floor of the Federal Building.” Thisthey did and they did it well.This is a new type of trial, a new way to approachpolitical trials. Courtrooms are not good for political trialsbecause the rules of evidence are made for automobileaccidents, and robberies of supermarkets, they’re notmade for conflicting political ideologies and their ex¬pression and expounding. They’re made for something elsebut these defendants were determined not to be hamperedby the rules particularly when they thought the rules werethose of a system which was out to destroy them by anymeans necessary. So they fought, and they fought. I think,ih such a way that all I can say, as one of the attorneys,was that I never had such profound respect for humanbeings as I had for those 8 men.When Bobby Seale said, I insist on my right to repre¬sent myself and would not stop talking even when theyhad a gag rammed halfway down his throat, they finallycould stand his calls no longer and they sent him away,they severe him out. I liked to see Abbie Hoffman andJerry Rubin try to bring a birthday cake into the court¬room for him — I thought that was good, I didn’t think itwas an antic at all, I thought it was an expression ofsolidarity and good. I liked it when they brought in anNLF flag and placed it with an American flag on thecounsel table on October 15 — 1 thought that was an ex¬pression of a political viewpoint. I thought they were usingthe enforced battlefield for their own education of the out¬side world. They were not going to sit there like automa-tors, like good Jews and walk to the chambers where thecyclan B gas was stored. They weren’t going to do it andthey didn’t do it and they may be sitting in a county jailtonight for the things done in the courtroom but I’ll tell youthere isn’t a prouder group of men than those 7 today andI’m sure Bobby in San Francisco county jail feels thesame way.But now they’re in jail and it is hard for them tofunction effectively on the outside. It’s passed to you forthe time being and I think you have to do what they can’tdo. There is going to be a demonstration Saturday, youmust be there. There are going to be demonstrations inmany places, you must be at them. It isn’t enough to say Ihave classes, I have this, I have that. You must be there,that’s the obligation. If you’ve accepted them into yourheart, you must take their responsibilities as well. Theyare responsibilities that go to every one of us and to ev¬eryone else here and abroad that has any feeling that it isgood to breathe free — which of course is the real mean¬ing of conspiracy — to breathe free together. You cannotlet them down, you simply cannot because if you do all ofthis has been for naught. We’ve all given up 5 or 6 months ofour lives for nothing. Then maybe the government is right— it was all a vaudeville show, full of sound and furysignifying nothing. It only has meaning, believe me, if youregard yourself as a defendant and if you regard the de¬fense of them as a defense of you. If you do that, if youparticipate with them and carry on for them, even afterthey get out, (and that is by no means certain) then it willhave all meant something. Then this case will have a ringof truth about it. Then the government will have truly lostthe case in every sense of the word. If the case spursother people to identify with it and with its ideals andgoals from the defendants’ point of view. Then it will havemeaning way beyond anything you can imagine becausenothing can stop the people if the people refuse to bestopped. And that’s what this case holds.I just have a few personal words before I close. I’vehad now three or four days to contemplate my own sen¬tence and the sentence of my co-counsel for contempt ofcourt. I remember on last Saturday night, after four of thedefendants had been sentenced for fairly long terms forcontempt that the judge said he would get to the rest of uson Sunday. I went home to the northside here and when Icame to court on Sunday I had a toothbrush and a tubeof toothpaste — I had heard about the shortage in CookCounty jail. It was a funny feeling for someone who hasbeen practicing law for some 22, 23 years, and who hasvisited many people in many hoosegows around this coun¬try, to prepare to go in. I was all psychologically preparedand I came to court and they finally disposed of Jerry,and Lee and John. Then they were taken away from the Steve Aokitable one by one, starting on Saturday. On Saturday westarted with nine men at our table and by the time JohnFroines was led away there was just two of us. This won¬derful table we’ve had in the courtroom for so long clut¬tered with everything from jellybeans to NLF flags. Sud¬denly it was all empty — there were a few pieces of paperon it and Len Weinglass and myself.Then he came to me and he read off these 24 or 25citations for contempt. I might say I had always beenwarned by many people along the way that the penaltiesfor homosexuality were very stringent and I suddenly re¬alized this when I heard I got six months for kissing RalphAbernathy in the courtroom. But he read off my 24 cardin¬al sins and then he asked me if I had anything to say. Ihad prepared a statement because I wanted it to be quiteclear and I read to him a two page statement. It was astatement in which I said I hope that whatever happenedto me didn’t discourage lawyers, young and old around thecountry from taking rough cases. That it didn’t deprivethe movement of form of worker — the lawyer who serveda valuable purpose in political cases up and down theland. Then he came to the end after I gave my little swansong and he read the punishments off.I was never a very good mathematician — that’s whyI went to law school in the first place. Otherwise I wouldhave been a doctor — what else is a Jewish boy going todo? But I had heard enough six months and four monthsto know that it amounted to a powerful lot of months. Mywife was in the back of he courtroom doing the figuringand she got it as four years and 13 days. But it hadn’tsunk in as yet — I just knew it was a lot. Then the judgestopped and I prepared to go with the marshals. Then hesaid, “I’m going to stay the execution of this sentenceuntil May 4 because you may have things to do for thedefendants and they need a lawyer to do these things.”A great feeling of relief came over me, even though Iwas prepared, this was an enormous really sweet feelingof not having to go in that day. And I suddenly realizedhow precious it is to be free. No matter how prepared youare to be unfree. I realized that’s what it was all about —that this sweet feeling of not having to be confined, nothaving to be regimented, not having to be in the control ofother human beings for your food, for your clothing, foryour shelter. To have even the minimal freedom which isavailable outside was so precious to me I was almostashamed of myself that I would feel this terrible rush ofrelief when my brothers had been taken from the tableand were in Cook County Jail. I knew how they must feelwhen they cannot have this freedom — and it was impor¬tant for me to have learned this lesson. I realized thatanything we have to do to stay free is what we have to do.I never realized it as poignantly as at that moment in thecourtroom when the execution of my sentence was stayed.It taught me, I guess one of the most valuable lessons ofmy life that people who want to breathe free, free spirits,cannot afford if humanly possible to go to jail or to seetheir brothers go to jail. If this feeling is as strong in youas it was in me (and I haven’t forgotten that moment at2:05 pm last Sunday and I probably will never forget it.) Isay to you and the only message I can really give whichhas any significance, is for God’s sake stand and fight andtell this country of ours that they will go this far and nofurther so help us.February 20, 1970/Grey City Journal/7IF ORDEREDFOR INDUCTIONI WILL REFUSE.I WILL NOT SERVEIN THE MILITARYAS LONG ASTHE WARIN VIETNAMCONTINUES.If you are eligible for the draft andif you can sign this statement, sign it,now.The Moratorium is collecting them,tens of thousands of them, all aroundthe country to release all at once, atthe end of March when hearings onthe draft begin in the House and theSenate.Signing the statement does notcommit you to a particular option,such as C.O., prison, or Canada. It simply says that if you exhaust alladministrative and legal remedies, youwill refuse induction into the armedforces while the war in Vietnam goeson.It says that you will not go toVietnam. It says that you will not lendyour body to the army while that waris being waged.It is legal to sign; stating your in¬tention to refuse the draft is legal.And because of the series of recent Supreme Court decisions, signing willnot subject you to reclassification.Think about it, and if you can signit, sign now. Put the statement in anenvelope and mail it to the VietnamMoratorium Committee, Ida Noyes,1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Il¬linois 60637. If you are on campus,you can send it faculty exchange.If ordered for induction, I, the undersigned, willrefuse.I will not serve in the military as long as the war inVietnam continues.Name Lottery number(The signer is a draft-eligble male who has not faileda draft physical.I. J I want to help your campaign to collect “We Won’tGo Statements.”Here is my contribution for: $1 □$5 □$10 □$100 □$ □1 would like to volunteer to work with the Mo¬ratorium.NameAddress.Telephone number.VIETNAM MORATORIUM.1212 East 59th Street; Chicago, Illinois 60637t/Grqr City Jtmri/Fefarnary 2t, 1ST*rmoituCreative Anachronisms at the UCTHE LORD AND LADY moved forward in the line. Theywere among the last to be presented to the king andqueen. The herald announced them.“The Baron Karl von Blitzschwert, and the LadyTaubchen,” he cried. They knelt, murmured appropriatewords to the king, and at his sign rose.After the presentation, the king rose. “Lords andLadies of our domain, and all our guests,” he announced.“At this time we give ourselves up to feasting and revel¬ry.” He beckoned to an impressive-looking monk thatstood near who came forward and bowed. “We now ap¬point our Ordinal Lord of Misrule,” said the king, andgave his scepter into the hands of the monk and sat himon the throne. “I must retain your lady, sir,” said themonk with a lecherous grin and so the queen remained onthe dais beside him and the king went below into the hall.And when did these events occur? Not so very distantin time, in fact, this coming Sunday. For the event was agrand midwinter revel, sponsored by the Society forCreative Anachronism, Inc.The Society for Creative Anachronism is a (very) non¬profit corporation, organized with a humorous slant, forthe purpose of recreating pre-baroque culture, specificallymedieval.The Society was founded on the West coast about fiveyears ago. It is divided into the West, Middle and Eastkingdoms, corresponding to geographical area of the coun¬try, and there are a few princedoms and dukedoms underthe East and West kingdoms. The Middle kingdom is thelatest founded, having but recently (July 1969) changed itsstatus from that of a principality under the Kingdom ofthe East. Its first king, Cariadoc of the Bow, yet reigns.Each kingdom is governed by a king, who is selectedby vanquishing all challengers on the Field of Honor at acrown tourney. His lady becomes queen. Since a kingmust preside at a tourney he cannot participate and isthus prevented from succeeding himself. Any knight whohas been king three times is entitled to be made a duke.Any lady who has been queen at least once is made amember of the Order of the Laurel.The major activity of the Society is the Tourney. Theweapons are of rattan, not metal; no metal weapons areallowed on the Field. The techniques are quite differentTeach-in onCRISIS IN THE MIDDLE EAST:POSSIBILITIES FOR PEACESaturday, Feb. 21st, 1-4 PMMandel HallSpeakers include:Adlai Stevenson IIICandidate, U.S. SenateProfessor L. Coert RylaarsdamU of C Divinity SchoolDean Oscar MillerEconomics Dept., U of IllinoisCarl Shier, International RepresentativeUnited Auto WorkersSponsored by the U-C Youth Committee forPeace and Democracy in the Middle East stwentsUo00For Information call BU 8-6610, ext. 3316from fencing, and also from those used by comic-bookcharacters.But the Society is not geared to fighters alone. Smithsand armourers, makers and players of (medieval and Re¬naissance) musical instruments, leeches, witches, seamst¬resses and embroiderers, calligraphers and scholars, theo¬logians and cooks, singers and dancers are welcomed.They especially want medieval and Renaissance dancers.Admission to Society events such as the Revel is opento members, guests and all interested persons. The onerequirement for admission is that one must come in anapproximation of dress worn prior to 1650. Lest you des¬pair you should know that it is very simple to pin twotowels together and put a belt around them to make the “towel surcoat,” and that something can always be donewith a sheet, and that a turtleneck worn over tight pantsmakes a good approximation of doublet and hose. For theladies a little more work is required, but an appropriatedress can be made using a long nightgown, evening dressor smock as a base.His Majesty Cariadoc of the Bow, King of the MiddleKingdom, doth invite any and all who care to appear (inappropriate dress) to a Grand Midwinter Revel, Sundaythe 22 of February, 1970 at 8:00 p.m., 5711 Harper. Therewill be music, dancing, food, drink, games and foolery.Questions concerning this revel or other aspects of theSociety may be asked of David or Diana, 363-3637, orFreida, 493-3896. Come, rejoice, be merry.THEATREG without S and S without GTHE VICTORIAN FESTIVAL presents a double-bill intheatre this weekend, with “An Evening of Gilbeit and of' Sullivan.” Don’t get excited, all you G & S fans — this isW. S. Gilbert, and Morton & Sullivan. Even so, this prom¬ises to be quite an evening, with performances of Morton& Sullivan’s Cox and Box and Gilbert’s Rosencrantz andGuildenstern in the International House Auditorium at 8pm Friday and Saturday.Cos and Box is directed by Roland Bailey and DonaldCurrie. Annette Fern is directing Rosencrantz and Guil¬denstern. The latter, a parody of Hamlet, includes suchUniversity Theatre favorites as Kenneth Northcott (asClaudius), Caroline Heck (Gertrude), Nicholas Rudall(Hamlet), Pat Prinz (Ophelia), and Peter Just and Christ¬opher Lyon as Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, respective¬ly.The Elizabethan-Victorian costumes were designed byLonnie McAllister, famous for her haute couture in lastyear’s Shoemaker’s Holiday.Tickets for this short but delightful evening cost $1.50,and are available at the Reynolds Club desk or at thedoor. Gertrude pleads with king Claudius forthe life of herson Hamlet in Gilberts’ “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern ”February 20, 1970/Grey City Journal/9DOC FILMS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 207:15 & 9:30 COBB HALL $1.00enjoy ourspecial studentrateC £ attimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredaily• open 7:30 a.m.- lateshow midnight• Sunday film guildevery wed. and fn. isladies day-all gals 75little gal lery for galsonly• dark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• v.Tite for your freemonthly program ANCHOR CAMERA1523 East 53rd St. PI 2-2228FAST QUALITY PROCESSINGASK'FOR YOURPROFIT SHARING BONUS CARDSAVE 20%Clark & madison fr 2-2843tTHEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback LineslO'/i Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks <£ Hardcovers1540E. 55th St.-Ml 3-7511 NOW!TRIPLE AWARD WINNER'-New York Film Critics—National Society of Film CriticsTHIS USSR rfs... at these selected theatres—in CHICAGO—COLONY—CORAL—abcGATEWAY—abcGRANADA—HYDE PARK—abcRIVIERA—TIFFIN—in the SUBURBS—abcBERWYN. Berwyn—GLENCOE. Glencoe-GOLF MILL 51, Niles—GLEN, Gary, Ind.— HOLIDAY, Park Forest—abcMERCURY, Elmwood Park—abcOAKBROOK. Oakbrook—PARTHENON, Hammond, Ind.—RANDHURST CINEMA, Randhurst—abcRIVER OAKS, Calumet City—THUNDERBIRD, Hoffman Estates—abcVARSITY, Evanston—WHEATON, Wheaton AN EVENINGOF ORGAN AND BRASSRockefeller Chapel, Feb. 24Edward MondelloAdolph Herseth andChicago Brass EnsembleJohn Fry speaker STOPTM* VICIOUS CllClfIN WOOOtAWNThis is a benefit performance to support the Early Child Development Program and theprojected Community Education Center at the First Presbyterian Church. Both of theseprograms are designed to help black children in Woodlawn to break the vicious circle ofpoverty, malnutrition and ADC.Tickets at SG, Reynolds Club, Woodworth's, Book CenterA special Benefit PerformanceEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaia1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372■BS9BBSS Theatre First. Inc.presentsTHE TENTH MANComedy-Drama by Paddy ChayefskyDirected by Michael LucchesiHeartwarming Jewish Humor - You'll Enjoy!Friday-Saturday-Sunday PerformancesThis Week thru March 8(February 22 and 28 SOLD OUT)(Curtain 8:30 p.m., Sun., 7:30)$2.00 - Student Discount Admn., with ID, $1.25AT THE ATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport - 463-3099Black Coinym. Sat.Feb. 21Cobb Hall THE FESTIVAL OFTHE ARTSANNOUNCESA RECEPTION FORMAESTROCARLO MARIA GIIJLINICl EST CONDICTOR OF THECHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAloon) llomluif, February 23, tO - 12 *11oReynolds C-iuh Sou lit -JiuutujeRefreshments Witt Be ServedALL STUDENTS, FACULTY, EMPLOYEESAND FRIENDS OF UC INVITEDOTA '70:\.v 'V ^g 14* * *' '--'IT*■y -** ■*"* mrsTT ?w winnw. - —« nr— ?«8innaaHMM»rws9Bcrs r* - •■wr -"gy ■ %*-THEITEEThe Non-Camp Melodrama LivesIN THESE DAYS OF CAMP, high camp, and camp-on-camp, it is rare to find sober, artful treatment of theatri¬cal pieces which come between the sacred classics and theavant-garde. Perhaps the worst victim of derision and/orneglect is melodrama, which is either relegated to thedaytime TV soaps (and once there, stripped of all subtletyand style) or camped up with moustache-twirling villains,innumerable asides, and hissing audiences. By thus pan¬dering the the modern audience (the soaps feeding themoralistic eroticism of the ladies and the “mellers” wink¬ing knowingly at their oh-so-sophisticated audiences),neither adulteration of melodrama requires much talenton the part of the actors or directors. Considerable talent,however, is required to present a real, honest, un-campymelodrama to the audiences of today — more specifically,to a University audience of today. The Court Players’production of Angel Street for the Victorian Festival was arare and delightful rebuttal to the idea that real melo¬drama is dead and cannot be exhumed.Which leads us rather indirectly to the plot of theplay, written by Patrick Hamilton in 1937, but set in anultra-Victorian home in 1880. Mrs. Manningham, mistressof the house, seems to be losing her mind. She seems toforget things, to lose important papers and jewelry, tocommit petty errors without knowing it. Her husband isnone too sympathetic, continually suggesting to her thatshe is going mad, and ridiculing her in front of the ser¬vants. To make matters worse, Mrs. Manningham per¬ceives a nightly dimming of the lights, followed by strangefootsteps in the attic which she has never entered. Thelady is at the end of her rope. Enter the Deus Ex Ma-china, Inspector Rough. He informs Mrs. Manningham ofhis theory that her husband is none other than a famousmurderer who, fifteen years before, had killed an old ladyin that very house and then sought vainly for some pre¬cious rubies. He then married the rich Bella in order tobuy back the house and continue his search. The mys¬terious walker upstairs is none other than Mr. Manning¬ham, who, fearing that his wife knew too much, is deliber¬ately driving his wife insane. The dimming of the gas¬lights is due to lights being turned on in the attic. Afterelaborate schemings, the villain is caught, and after adelicious speech of revenge by Mrs. Manningham, theplay ends fairly happily.If this sounds familiar, it’s because the famous movie Gaslight was taken from this script. Nonetheless, a plotlike that is difficult to get away with unless the actorshave the restraint and subtlety to play it for what it isworth, and no more. The Court Players demonstrated thisfinesse by affecting the audience in the way that melo¬dramas Were undoubtedly designed to affect them. I, forone, felt genuine suspense, an occasional chill up anddown my spine, and empathy with the heroine — respon¬ses rarely to be enjoyed in the theatre today.Controlling the show, the stage, and most importantly,herself, was Pauline Brailsford as the slightly neuroticMrs. Manningham. The heroine is a weak female, prone tofainting, headaches, and, when pressed, to hysteria. MissBrailsford’s hysterics gave you the creeps, but artfully —one never tired of her, nor laughed at her. When delicacywas required, it was unsurpassed. Miss Brailford’s profes¬sionalism is a welcome addition to the UC theatre scene.George Tountas, as Mr. Manningham, balanced MissBrailford’s performance beautifully. In contrast to herweakness and histrionics, Tountas, with his movie-starface, chilled the audience with his icy stare and purelynasty tone of voice. All he needed was the trace of aGerman accent and he would have been a perfect Nazi.But with his long black cloak and top hat, Tountas wassuitably Victorian, and very impressive.Inspector Rough was played by none other than JamesO’Reilly, who also directed the show. Although I’m notquite sure that his portrayal was exactly as Hamilton hadTAKCAM-YHfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUN DAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outl3l8Eas^3r^MU4H^^STATION JBD HAS MOVEDFROM 1435 E. HYDE PARKTO THE FLAMINGO HOTELSTATIONflnnouncLncj,THE BESTFOOD AND DRINKSIN TOWN5500 So. Shore DriveOur telephone remains thesame: BU 8-9241 or PL 2-3800ORDER YOUR LUNCH FROMMR. PIZZA'S... in eSMydc ^Pa/tfc1459 E: HYDE PARK BLVD.... phone 493-8282Our new delivery service starts at 11:00 a.m. For noon delivery,please call one hour in advance. This Service is for office andresidential customers from Hyde Park to Southcommons.PIZZA, CHICKEN, RIBSSHRIMPS, ITALIAN BEEFSHAMBURGERS, SOFT DRINKS»-« i i 1 , * W May I have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EfendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkU of C Tuesday Night Special20% reduction. The Efendiinvites students, faculty andstaff for memorable entrees(S3.50-5.7S) This ad entitlesbearer to 20% reduction ofdinner cost, includingcocktails and wines. envisioned, O’Reilly was quite subtle and very funny. Hisbrown suit with a red vest was a knockout.The roles of the two maids were also done com¬petently. Louise Ehrlich was demure and sympathetic,while Pat Prinz, with her sparkling eyes and rosy com¬plexion, gave us an admirably saucy little tart.The setting was quite a feat for the limited facilities ofthe Bergman Gallery. For those of us who delight in agingVictoriana — deep red velvet and brown wood, decadenttea services, wealthy-looking silver, flounces and knick-knacks shadowed by an all-pervading gloom — it was afeast for the eyes. Less sensitive souls might call it“tacky” or “depressing.”One glaring defect in the performance, however, wasthe unevenness of the British accents. Miss Brailsford, anative Briton, was of course faultless in her intonation,and Tountas was also convincing. O’Reilly tended toswitch from British to Irish to Chicago and back, whichwas more forgiveable in his comic role than in any other,but still very noticeable. The cockney accents of the twomaids also needed a lot of work.It was certainly a gratifying experience to see melo¬drama treated fairly and well. Only once on Friday nightdid the audience hiss the villain, and that seemed to be anuncontrollable invective rather than an effete expressionof camp. This was one battle won against cynicism.Jeanne Wikler20% STUDENT DISCOUNTLAST THREE WEEKS! 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Kin lie (at Racine)MU 4-1849 243-2271 IN ^HARPER COURTCHANCESOUR SPECIALITYWorld-famous choicest steakburgerdraft beer -*j free peanuts <—te;s Open daily forcocktail*, lunch, dinnerand in between5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454Closed MondaysThe International House Welcomes youto a FREE showing of the Yugoslavianfilm, I EVEN MET HAPPY GYPSIES.7:30 PM Sunday February 22 in theInternational House Auditorium. Filmnotes will be available before theshowing to compensate for lack ofdubbing or subtitles, so come early. Areception will follow in order to discussthe film with Yugoslavian students.PLAyCOrS ALL-NIGHT SHOVBIBKNMBNUS fBIOAT 1 VBTUBOtT KKlOttlNC Uil BttUUB fU'UBIFeb. 13Richard BurtonElizabeth TaylorTHE NIGHT Of TMIOUANA Feb. 14PARANOIAFeb. 20FeNini'sSfc Feb . 21Sandy DennisTHAT C0L0 BAY IN TM PAMFeb. 27MNimm Feb. 28HdMrrf Bertee, PoterO'TeeleBKKETTMarch 6RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY March 7FOUR HORSEMEN OFTHE APOCALYPSEMarch 13THE LIQUIDATOR March 14THE COMEDIANSTICKETS SI.SO‘Best picture of the year."~Gont Siskel, Chicago TribuneUpa»|»e’xt<M Chicago Avenue al Michigan Cinema TheatreDaily • tar tMaaf firou* rates call: WH 4-5667:—-—~! . j "epc* 'tL ftLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page SixMrs Dixon was searching for a radical ap¬proach to sociology within the University.She was actively engaged in “thought andstudy” and planned to rework many of thethings she had written. For all sorts of ad¬ministrative and intellectual reasons herdepartment found she did not live up to itsstandards. It told her that since she hadnothing finished to present, it could not re¬tain her. The Gray committee found thatnormal administrative procedure had beenfollowed in Mrs Dixon’s case. Whatever onethinks of the objective fairness involved inthe evaluation of Mrs Dixon’s work, onecannot deny its subjective effects on her. Itis easy to read her Maroon interview as areaction to her experiences of last year. Ineffect, she learned last year that, in fact, itwas “not possible to sit in the universityand talk learnedly about revolution.” Herinterest in revolution led her to change herapproach to her discipline, rethink the workshe had done, and therefore not produce thefinished written work by which the in¬tellectual abilities and potential of academ¬ics are (often prematurely) judged. In hermind at least, her interest in revolution ledto her ouster from the University of Chi¬cago.It is only by confusing cause and effect,then, that Mr Weiss finds “convincing proofof the wisdom of the faculty of the Univer¬sity.” And only by the most ahistoric kindof reasoning that he uses a person’s beliefsafter a very traumatic intellectual andemotional experience as “evidence” of herbeliefs and even of the necessary directionof her thought before that experience. Inhis desire to prove the “wisdom of the fac¬ulty” and the “unwisdom of the students”in the Dixon case, Mr Weiss has strayed farfrom the most rigorous standards of legal,historical, and social scientific inter¬pretation.In his discussion of Richard Flacks, onthe other hand, Mr Weiss is merely obscure on certain points. Mr Flacks was given ten¬ure only in the College. His department didnot rule out tenure in the future, but it didnot attempt to meet the offer he had fromanother university. In fact, it promoted himto associate professor without granting theusual tenure that accompanies that positionbecause, in the words of the chairman,“new devices” were needed to deal with“changing and difficult times.” Usuallywhen your department does not even at¬tempt to meet a competing offer, it meansit prefers that you leave. Mr Flacks, likeMrs Dixon, has left the University of Chi¬cago. His decision to leave was based onhis interpretation of his department’s ac¬tion: he assumed they wanted him to go.If, as Mr Weiss indicates, “we can find inRichard Flacks a person still committed tothinking and understanding the events ofour times” (and, incidentally, to changingthe society as well), then what proof of thewisdom of the faculty is it that he is nolonger teaching at the University of Chi¬cago? What is there to congratulate aboutthe sociology department’s decision not togrant him tenure last year and so to makea competing offer appear preferable to re¬maining? Surely, even by Mr. Weiss’ stan¬dards of evidence, the Flacks case provesthe unwisdom of the faculty (and deservesno congratulations at all) and the wisdomof the students who attempted to protestthe sociology department’s decision, des¬pite the fact that their forum was deniedthem since the decision was announced inthe last weeks of spring quarter and in thefinal issue of the Maroon.Joan W. ScottCollege HistoryAnother AttackAlthough Mr Weiss’s letter in last week’sMaroon merely expresses the same oldtired ideas and prejudices which we havegrown so accustomed to hearing at this University, we feel, because both of us areclose personal friends of Marlene Dixonand Dick Flacks, a responsibility to correctthe gross misrepresentation of them and todefend them against the attacks that some¬how continue long after they have ceased tobe a “problem” to this University. Further,we feel the necessity to respond directly toMr Weiss because his letter is so extremelyrevealipg regarding the very issues thatwere at stake in last year’s sit-in. Indeed,his letter, rather than serving to settlethings once and for all as he apparentlybelieved it would, has served only to inciteus further.First of all, it is obvious that Mr Weiss istriyng to employ a favorite tactic of many“liberal” ideologists — the tactic of divideand conquer. To explain the University’sso-called “different” decisions in the twocases by reference to the different “spirit”of Richard Flacks is an insult to both Dickand Marlene. Dick Flacks fought long andhard for Marlene during the sit-in. Both ofthem have always fought long and hardfor what they believed in and both continueto do so. Although it is true that they havevery different personalities and styles,Marlene and Dick were good friends; bothwere and are part of the same movement,and both basically believe in the samethings. The tactic Mr Weiss was using is avery old one. It is a form of intellectualracism used in an effort to divide the fewremaining radicals in the University.Secondly, what impresses Mr Weiss mostabout Flacks is his “readiness to makeonly provisional judgment, to see varioussides even to the opposition to Gov. Rea-gen.” Once again, the value of non-com¬mitment, the corner stone of the professedideology of the University (although clearlynot of its actual policies), is apparent. It’sgood never to be sure about anything —that’s a good excuse for never doing any¬thing. What Mr Weiss calls Marlene’s “dog¬matism” is really a criticism of the fact that she believes what she says, that shemakes choices based on what she believesand then acts according. And when Mi'Weiss praises Dick’s readiness for provi¬sional judgments he overlooks the fact thatDick, like Marlene, does look at a situation,does come to principle conclusions based onhis appraisal, and does act according to hisconclusions. And really, Mr Weiss, we mustask you — have you never made more thana provisional judgment; are you married,what about your friends, what about yourown certainly (dogmatism) about the cor¬rectness of the University with regard toDixon and Flacks?Thirdly, Mr Weiss does correctly per¬ceive that Marlene was indeed fired. He isnot, however, as specific on the issue ofFlacks, noting only that “The Universitygave Richard Flacks tenure.” To state thematter in this way obscures reality. TheUniversity did give Dick Flacks -tenure inthe College. It did not give him tenure inthe sociology department. We wonder whythis distinction managed to elude Mr Weiss.We could, as Chris Hobson does, merelyassume that Mr Weiss is being dishonest.Certainly, this is a possibility. Yet,we believe that it is just the Marxistperspective so disliked by Mr Weiss thatsheds the most light on his omission. Asmost people know, the University is a sys¬tem of power, and in this system, the Col¬lege is on the bottom. Indeed, it is unfortu¬nate, but it is a fact that for every “grandold man” of the College, there are ten pro¬fessors who, if possible, want nothing to dowith it. Now, Mr Weiss, we note, is a pro¬fessor in the divisional social sciences mas¬ter’s program and in the College, and wefeel this understanding of his social position(the position essentially of a lumpen-aca¬demic) goes a long way to understandinghis attitudes. It’s no doubt upsetting to himto find an appointment in the Collegetreated by those around him as a worthlessContinued on Page Nine! PinalPLATTER!j Pizza, Fried Chicken |j Italian Foods |l Compare the Price! Il I11460 E. 53rd 643-2800|I WE DELIVER I_______ JDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644NEEL VSSTANDARDSERVICElo Our CustomersI have moved to a larger and moremodern station. 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ILL TICKET pricesNamaAddraaaOty Stata ZipSchool Aoa1 Endoaat For tiQligftl UNTIL March IS$8 00 wtth couponAFTER March IST10 00 all «alMON May 30SIS 00 ai Gata•/The Chicago Maroon/February 20,1970v.v.N t»». •*. Ti’Of ♦'itvi'i'AOpinions Denounce Jury Decision, HoffmanContinued from Page Three“The inclusion of Bobby Seale in the caseis an example of the prosecution’s over¬reaching, which produced theatrical con¬sequences. A great deal of disturbanceseems to have been caused by his presenceand unmanageability. And if the 7 are notguilty of conspiring, certainly he is not.“Another interesting point is that the offi¬cial theory (Daley’s conspiracy theory) ofthe cause of the riots is wrong. Even thisjury did not accept it.”Kalven adds that issues uncovered bythis trial which will probably be broughtout in appeal are the first amendment is¬sues and the question of the resiliency ofthe legal system. He speculates that “thecontempt citations will be carefully scruti¬nized, and the sentences lessened. This trialis like a Pirandello play, with lots of levelsof meanings to it.”A member of the citizens’ committee toContinued from Page Sevenconcession. Perhaps he dimly perceivesthat this is in fact the way most people doview it. What we feel is bothering Mr Weissabout the situation then is the threateningidea that if people don’t think the College isworth much, they may not think he is ei¬ther. We happen to think College teachingis tremendously valuable. But yes, MrWeiss, most of your colleagues do think it’sshit.The last point we want to deal with is MrWeiss’s dismay that Marlene’s views havechanged since before the sit-in, and his util¬ization of her current beliefs as a justifica¬tion for her firing last year. Clearly, asChris Hobson pointed out, there is a prob¬lem of causality here. We don’t see how asystem of ideas evolved after Marlene wasfired justifies her firing. What happened toMarlene (and many others) last yearchanged their ideas. Again, it does not sur¬prise us that Mr Weiss has assumed that ifMarlene told the Maroon certain things inJanuary she must have believed them ayear ago. One of the things we found lastyear was just how hard it is for the “schol¬ars” of the University to deal with the ideaof change.Mr Weiss criticizes Marlene for believingthat “there can be no division between the¬ory and practice.” Yet, the truth of thisstatement is precisely what most of uslearned last year. No matter how much weread about Marx, and basically believedthe University was a system of power justlike any other institution, most of us stillmaintained bourgeois illusions that the Uni¬versity must in some way be different. Welearned better — but not by reading. Welearned by waging a struggle in which wewere defeated. But the insight most of uscame away with was that we had learnedmore in the sit-in and its aftermath thanthrough any othes experience we had hadin the University — and thus we learnedthe truth of one of Marx’s basic proposi¬tions. This is why Majlene’s ideas, as wellas those of many of us, underwent profoundchange. This is the meaning of Marlene’sview that you can’t just “think and studyabout revolutions” and it is just what MrWeiss’s static view of the world does notpermit him to understand. Finally, we haveto admit that in writing this letter a certainbourgeois attitude on our part is showingthrough. After all, we are angry and we arewell aware that we are writing a highlyemotional letter. We are well aware thatwe have been trying to contain our angerwithin the academic forms with which wehave been taught to express our hostility.But, in writing this letter we have dealtanother blow to that bourgeois attitude ofours because we’ve said what we wantedto say and we’re still P.O.’d.Ethan Cummingscommittee on humandevelopmentBarbara Greenbergdepartment ofsociology investigate the activities of conventionweek, Kalven feels that the granting of per¬mits was handled “clumsily and arbi¬trarily, which probably contributed to thecause of the riots.” Kalven added that tohis knowledge, Judge Julius Hoffman made“impolitic judgments, and had an awkwardpersonal style,” but did not violate anyprecedents or laws. “I’m not sure whowould have handled it batter,” he said.“There were problems both in the tactics ofthe defense and in the resiliency of thecourt itself.”Galanter stressed that, due to the “am¬bivalent verdict,” and the many grounds ofprocedure with which the decision of thecase might be reversed upon appeal. — eg,Judge Hoffman’s refusal to allow RamseyClark’s testimony to be presented to thejury — this case may not be the test casefor the constitutionality of the conspiracylaw that many had hoped it would be. “TheWeiss Defends HimselfMr Hobson is incorrect in saying that Ioffered “convincing proof” in my letter; Iargued that the Maroon had through theinterveiw with Mrs Dixon and Mr Flacks. IfMrs Dixon is “academically and emotional¬ly eviscerated” there is certainly nothing inher gutty remarks that would indicate it.However much eviscerated she is, she cer¬tainly is not “lying on the floor;” she tellsus herself how active she has been spread¬ing the movement around. Perhaps MrHobson read only my letter and skipped theMaroon’s interesting interviews?As for Mr Flacks, Mr Hobson is also in¬accurate. Tenure is a status conferred bythe University and is applicable in the Uni¬versity, not in the College or in a depart¬ment. Mr Flacks’ tenure appointment wasin the University; his departmental ap¬pointment in Sociology was renewed, butwith the reservation that the department bepermitted to pass on his continued mem¬bership at some future time.But no decision they would have made inthe future would have affected Mr Flacks’tenure in the University. Whether this wasa “calculated academic dead-end” orwhether at that future time the departmentwould not have continued his membershipis something that I do not think Mr Hobsonknows any better than I.He argues as if Mr Flacks would havebeen the only scholar operating outside thegraduate department of his profession, inthe eventuality of the department not con¬tinuing his membership at this future time.But a glance around the University wouldturn up scores of persons of high profes¬sional stature in just this position, and not abit at their “academic dead-end.” Even ac¬cepting Mr Hobson’s finding that I “lack... the most elementary honesty,” I atleast take care in my letters to get the factsright.Roger WeissAssociate ProfessorSocial ScienceVerdict RepliesAfter the Conspiracy was found guilty ofinciting the police to riot, several well-known people commented. Sen. Huey P.Long (1935) said, “If Fascism came toAmerica it would be on a program ofAmericanism.” Helen Keller (1919): “Thewise fools who sit in the high places of jus¬tice fail to see that in revolutionary timesvital issues are settled not by statutes, de¬crees and authorities but in spite of them.”Mark Twain (1885) noted that the defend¬ants’ “kind of loyalty was loyalty to one’scountry, not to its institutions or its officeholders.” Thomas Paine (1776) anotherwell-known agitator said, “There are per¬sons. . .who see not the full extent of theevil which threatens them; they solacethemselves with hopes that the enemy, if hesucceed, will be merciful. It is the madnessof folly to expect mercy from those whohave refused to do justice”. Patrick Henry tradition of the higher courts is to focus onnon-constitutional issues first, and then getto the constitutional ones,” he explained.He added that if the case were remandedupon appeal, the possibility of the prose¬cution’s pressing charges for a second timemight be small, since a new trial would beso expensive, and the “tremendous amountof publicity” given the trial might makefinding a new jury very difficult.Galanter considers Hoffman’s contemptsentences “a striking escalation of judicialpower. Hoffman was the perfect fall guyfor the disruptive tactics that some of thedefendants wanted to use. It’s a shame thata rigid, uptight judge had to try a casewhere the defendants are pros at provokingpeople like that.” *Len Radinsky, assistant professor inanatomy, said of the verdict, “The con¬spiracy trial dramatizes the extent to whichfascism is upon us. The rulers of this coun-(1775) declared, “Gentlemen may crypeace, peace — but there is nopeace.. .What would they have? Is life sodear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchasedat the price of chains and slavery?” HenryThoreau (1879) said, “Under a governmentwhich imprisons any unjustly, the trueplace for a just man is also in prison.”Frederick Douglass (1857) noted that “ifthere is no struggle, there is no progress.Those who profess to freedom and yet dep¬recate agitation are men who want cropswithout plowing. They want rain withoutthunder and lightning.” Joe Hill (1915)from his death bed expressed an ideashared by the defendants, “Don’t waste anytime mourning — Organize.” A group ofrevolutionaries wrote: “We hold thesetruths to be self-evident; that all men arecreated equal; that they are endowed bytheir Creator with inherent and inalienablerights;.. .that whenever any form of gov- try are out to crush dissent by any meansnecessary, including murder, as in the caseof the Black Panthers. If we don’t rally nowto fight the growing repression, to defendthe conspiracy 8, the Black Panther party,and other political prisoners, we soon won’tbe able to.” Ted Cohen, of the philosophydepartment, considered the verdict “goodnews for the trial,” adding that “the lawsare awful — unjust and, I think, uncon¬stitutional.”Other student reactions:“There were no legitimate grounds forthe trial. The conspiracy defendants andlawyers as well, appearing from contemptcitations, were railroaded. The prosecutiondetermined to associate these people withideas that the jury would find repugnant,whether the defendants actually believed itor not. It appears obvious that during theconvention, lots of people were beaten upby the police, and then they drag thesepeople in here and tell them it’s their fault.The whole thing is ridiculous,” said AndrewConnor, ’70.“I wish they’d handled it differently andgot rid of the law, instead of turning thetrial into a circus,” said Susan Leff ’71.“There’s something that smacks ofthought crime here. The law is unfair. Idon’t like the thought behind the law or be¬hind the convictions,” was the comment ofRoger Smith, business school.“I can’t be happy that the sentencingrests in Judge Hoffman’s hands. At thesame time, I’m glad that Froines and Wei¬ner got off, and I wish they all had. Thisverdict undermines the real possibility ofrevolutionary spirit, and there may neverbe a test case of the law,” said an unnamedstudent.“I’m very angry, and want to strikeback. I would have liked to see a mistrialdeclared. I can’t say the verdict was unex¬pected, but the jury’s finding them guiltywas a great shock,” said Norman Katz, ’70.In Kalven’s opinion, “each side won itsobjective — the prosecution got its con¬victions and its publicity, the defense gotits opportunity to make the system look badand its publicity. The real loser is societyat large, in having had such a disastrousshow put on at its expense.”Continued on Page TenMORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates farStudents ond RelativesSingle reams from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12 00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 doilylake ViewRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-100054S4 South Shore DriveCOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM -2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM -9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) Hold upyour local gasstation.If you’ve not a bit of larceny inyour heart,you’ll love theRenault 10.You see, it nets 35 miles to thenallon.And as far as nas stations areconcerned, that’s hinhway robbery.So don’t he too harsh when theboys at your local nas station acta little nrumpy.In fact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then sunnest they net one torthemselves.After all, they minht have a hitof larceny injnm ■ III^Altheir heartsttx>.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550February 20, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page Nineernment becomes destructive of these ends,it is the right of the people to alter or abol¬ish it, and to institute new government. .(1776).William Saroyan has written: “if youkeep on taking aspirin long enough it willcease to deaden pain. And that is when thefun begins. That is when you begin to noticethat snow isn’t beautiful at all. That iswhen your hair begins to freeze and youbegin to get up in the middle of the night,laughing quietly, waiting for the worst, re¬membering all the pain, not wanting anylonger to be half-dead, wanting full deathor full life. That is when you begin to bemad about the way things are going in thiscountry.. .That is when, weak as you are,something old and savage, and defiant inyou comes up bitterly out of your illnessand starts to smash things, pushing youinto the sun, getting you away from eva¬sions, dragging you by your neck to life.”Michael BarnettPhysicsConspiracy TrialI should like to reply to the commentaryon the conspiracy trial written in thesepages by Con Hitchcock. It strikes me oddthat in the days following the close of thetrail there is much criticism of attorneysKunstler and Weinglass and the eight de¬fendants for not having “gone along at alowered voices tempo.” The purpose ofsuch passivity is presumably either to gainacquittal or to insure that on appeal of averdict of guilty the issue will be resolvedon substantive rather than proceduralpoints.It is, of course, possible that had the de¬fendants sat through the proceedings with folded hands and if the counsel for the de¬fense had accepted absurd rulings withoutstrenuous protestation appeal would be de¬cided on substantive grounds. But this as¬sumes that had the defendants been moreorderly, the conduct of the court wouldhave been altered. The initial actions of thecourt (incarceration of four pre-trial attor¬neys and the refusal of counsel to BobbySeale) and the past history of Judge Hoff¬man’s conduct cast considerable doubt onthis assumption. It was the court as well asthe defendants that set the stage for proce¬dural rather than substantive appeal.This raises the possibility that the statuteitself is largely irrelevant to the struggle ofthe Conspiracy, a fact which the ten menmost intimately involved in the case under¬stood, but which the liberal response to thetrial fails to take into account. Judge Hoff¬man is quite right: it is not a statute or aseries of defendants on trial. It is the appli¬cation of a set of procedures which wechoose to call a legal system. I say appli¬cation for the procedures themselves haveconsiderable merit. But such a statement ismeaningless without examining the socialand political context in which these proce¬dures operate. It is this entire context towhich one must address oneself in speakingof a legal system. And such was the struc¬ture of the defense in this trial. It was achallenge not simply to the statute but to alegal system which mocks equal access andfair hearing before law, and which reflectsin its procedures more than its statutes thecriminal inequities of an imperial-tech¬nological state. To decry the activities ofthe defendants as leading to procedural is¬sues rather than the seemingly more im¬portant substantive issues raised by onestatute is to misunderstand the significanceof the struggle we have recently observed.The Conspiracy has begun a political edu¬cation program around institutions we pre-SPRINGQUARTERTEXTBOOKSMost of the Spring Quarter text¬book information has not beenreceived by the bookstore. Whenwe receive the information, wewill make every effort to obtainthe needed books by the first dayof classes on March 30th. Cur¬rently, the normal delivery timefor an order involving textbooks isabout three weeks. Please returnall required and recommendedlists no later than February 23rdto insure arrival. viously sensed to be some kind of refuge.We now know as we have never quiteknown before the social and political con¬text of the law and the court system. Weknow as we have never quite known beforethat the legal system is not the neutral ar¬biter of conflict. And we know as we havenever quite known before that it is thecourt and the state which are in contemptof the people.Free All Political PrisonersF Thomas HechtAmerican Bar FoundationNew University ConferenceStudent ActivitiesAnd so once again we sniff the possibilityof a protracted feud between various de¬partments of student activities. Like all theothers, this struggle displays timeworn ear¬marks: editorial denunciations, vituper¬ative personal ads, and the poison of pastgrudges washing over the scene up to ev¬eryone’s knees.I am tired of it all. As an actor in the BigStudent Activities Arena, my job and myactivity are directly affected by the recentconflict. Come this summer, various weigh¬ty briefs might be filed with CORSO de¬manding more money for this or that orga¬nization because of the foulups or bias re¬vealed this quarter. Certain groups will bemade to suffer at the hands of the nextCORSO and others will gain. power struggle. I work for a federally li¬censed radio station and could be fined andjailed for certain offenses. Yet within thecontext of the University I refuse to takemyself that seriously. I am 19 years old andrevel in the informality of life around me. Ican dress as I please, and say what Iplease in any reasonable tone. Yet whendealing with the student activities jungle Ifind this informality greatly reduced. I findthat officers of committees and organiza¬tions approach each other not as fellow stu¬dents, or as relatively equal individuals,but clothe themselves in all the dignity andauthority their voices can muster.I am tired of dealing with kids my ownage who already sound like the most pol¬ished beauracrats. What is needed is real¬ity. We are all charged with various im¬portant duties, disbursing impressivequantities of money and delivering vitalservices to the University community. Ifind it depressing that this must be donefrom dozens of individual stepladders.If everyday relationships must undergosuch a radical transformation when enter¬ing the activities arena, then we are allactors and are only obstructing the possbilebenefits of our respective organizations.Philip HessBusiness ManagerWHPK-FMYet we all will lose. As long as the stu¬dents who participate in these organiza¬tions strive to imitate the tactics of theworld outside, the activities will continue towallow in the swamp of personality and Letters PolicyThe Maroon will consider for pub¬lication all letters and gadflies whichare signed. The name of the authorwill be withheld upon request.5 Hour Service MODERN DANCE CLASSESJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERS 4,30 lo 6.00w'otKKiy - jurv/raoyFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured Storage MM. Rodi ft Jazx taughtShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles Allison Theater Dance Center1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-6933 17 N State7:30 AM to 7:00 PM Stevem ButkJtngRoom 190210% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRY 332 9923"Alhambrahash inns to make youfeel as beautif ul as You 'lllook l inelv tailoredoriginals of Jomestuand imported fahrii sMod. Id ward la neonrentional andcasual st yles plusdressy things fromSJO VV to <,1011.IK) mmost si:es. Stop inand browse awhile Youare welcome'HoursMon.-Wed10 00 to 7 30Thurs.- Sat.10 00 to 9 301453 East Hyde Park(CCOsfl>99xoxicw9Bisocoec«o»ao>coeooccoc60x66oosisoofl006»aeoa^BELL SHELLSERVICE5200 S. Lake Park493-5200"Buy Shell From Bellsince 1926 !//10/Th. Chic*. M.roon/M»na4iy.20t AW* Glttfi jj OHW |HT WA-jjivtO rfT ,(A(Maroon Classified Ads)IF YOU CAN’T FIND A PARTNER USE A WOODEN CHAIRSCENESGav Liberation Dance!pierce Tower. Sat. Feb. 21 8:30 $1.00Straights invited.Paying more and enjoying it less?Friday at 8-Blue Garg.OTIS RUSH IN PERSONFor the Swingin'est, Alive-est MosrFantastic Dance UC Ever Saw.Feb. 28, Ida Noyes 9-1.bOYCOTTBOYCOTTBOYCOTTBOY-COTTDont rent a tux, leave yourlong dress at home, and keepyour dance pumps on the shelf.Wash Prom shall not stealwith impunity. Unknown agentsrule us each in his cell.Yavneh Presents Howard Pollackof Univac on Torah and Technology— The Widening Gap Sun 7:30 Feb22 Hillel House.DANCE To the Otis Rush BluesBand Live at Ida Noyes. Feb20.Melvin Periwinkle swims every nitein the INH Pool in a green polkadot bikini. Wed. nite Feb 25 Melvinwill swim in his green polka dotskin. Come dip in your own skinwith Melvin INH pool 8-11 pmCome see the bearded tady at TheGAY Liberation Dance.See Mr. Rudail soliloquize, Feb 20,21, International House Aud, 8:00PM, $1.50.Put classical roots under the Jof-frey because your eyes are bluesuch a deal on the American Ballet.Buy Wash Prom Tickets anytimefrom today on, at the BookstoreReynolds club, or Student Activitiesoffice. Only $4.50 a couple!!! Cheapat half the price . .. Special FORDON CARLOS BRING IN DONCARLOS TICKET STUB AFTER11:00, GET WASH PROM TICKETFOR $2.50 .per couple)What does Levi DO with all ourbread? Find out Friday at 8.We can't promise, but if you cometo the Gay Lib Dance (Sat.) youmay find that some of your bestfriends are.Remember the Crowd at the OtisRush Dnce Last Year During TheSit-in? Repeat Performance Feb28. Not the Sit-In, The Dance.COX AND BOX and ROSENCRANTZAND GUILDENSTERN tickets onsale at Reynolds Club desk and atdoor.Ball your won at the Lascivious Cos¬tume Ball INH Fri Feb 27 9 pmEven without a female imperson¬ator, the Wikler-Bernstein circuitvaudeville show has a great bill.You should see the jugglers! Febru¬ary 28 and two shows on March 1.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)Priv Art Show. Contemp work; Nav-aho, Hopl, Zuni, Pueblo Pottery.Feb 21-22. 667-0840.Can you be busted for photos ofMelvin's green Polka dots? Findout answers to this and other dirtyquestions from Prof. Harry KarlenPorngoraphy and the Law" Thurs.Feb 26 8:30 pm Kent 107POIVOITS GALAW! at the Gay LibDance, Sat, at Pierce Tower. KUM1"Just keep on chuggling" hoofer atthe American Ballet.INDIA ASSN PRESENTS KABULI-WALA Hindu Movie Eng SubtitlesSat Feb 21 7PM Judd 126 Basedon Famous Story By Tagore.CELEBRATE! REJOICE! DANCE!N THE STREETS! DON CARLOS15 here! Don't miss this majorevent. This weekend in Mandel Hallfor only $1.50 per student.!« you liked Walter as George Wash¬ington, you'll love Frank Mal-branche as Lady Godiva at theLascivious Costume Ball Fridaypeb 27 9 pm INHFIGHT THE ESTABLISHMENT!Pay Homage to a King on Feb 22. "Tai Chi Chuan": Discussion ofChinese Philosophy Led by BobCheng, Tonite, 8PM 5621 Blackstone.Giulini ReceptionFeb 23 10AM REYNOLDS S'.LOUNGE — FOTA '70.Planning to write a porny book?Find out if you can be busted.Come hear Prof. Harry Kalven on"Pornography and the Law" Thurs.Fob. 26, 9:30 pm Kent 107-A LACevent.CONTROVERSY! CAPITAL IDEA!SEE SCAF Overcome By Statists!Soc Sci Lounge 4:30PM Mondays!CESAR STRIKES, JEWEL SCABS.RACHEL, RACHEL with JoanneWoodward this Sunday at 78t9 inCobb Hall — CEF.Ball Lasciviously at the LasciviousCostume Ball — Fri Feb. 27 pmCloister Club — $1, 50C w. costumePremiere:Easley Blackwood original composi¬tion — Organ and Brass. Feb 24.Amos Kenan will be at Hillel to¬night speaking on "THE 'NEWLEFT' IN ISRAEL". 5715 WoodlawnSweetlife — BLACKFRIARS try¬outs. 3rd fl. Ida. 7-9. Feb 248.26.Jewel Scabs Grapes and HustlesMBA's! Rally 12:30 Wed Feb 24,Reynolds South, Followed By Pro¬test At The C.C.E.Come Revel With Us In MedievalFashion. 22/2/70. 5711 Harper 2:00PM.Do you miss those old fashionedskinny dips in the creek? Come doit in the Ida Noyes Pool — Feb. 258-11 pmGiulini ReceptionFeb 23 10AM Reynolds S.Lounge — FOTA '70.Organ and Brass — proceeds toEarly Child Development Center InWoodlawn.RALLY PROTEST BOYCOTT JEW¬EL' REYNOLDS SOUTH, 12:30Today.DON CARLOS ends early enoughfor you to go to either the WashProm or the Gay Lib dance. Toeach his own, so they say.Spread culture — buy an Organand Brass ticket with your pen¬nies — Student low price.SVNA presents Prologue — a filmsmuggled In from Canada. Kunstlerwill speak afterwards. Proceeds tothe Conspiracy. Mon Feb 23 Man¬dat at 7:15 and 9:30GRAND OPENINGThe Craft Coop will open on 3rdfloor of the Gargoyle on MondayFeb 23, featuring rag dolls, Ukra-nian belts, pots, scarfs etc. Work¬shops in the crafts coming soon.YAVNEH LECTURESRabbi Saul Berman Brookline, Mon.Feb 23 7:30 Hillel House. 5715Woodlawn.BONHOEFFER HOUSESunday at Bonhoeffer House, 5554Woodlawn, 6 p.m., with Lois Wille,reporter for Chicago Daily News."Journalism In the non-age of Ag-new." (February 22).YOGA CLASSESThree Openings Now in each Class:Tues7-8;Frl7-8;Sat2-3. Relax. Exer¬cise. Meditate Sri Nerode DO3-0155.CARLO MARIA GIULINIRECEPTIONFOTA '70 Presents C M Giulini —Guest Conductor CSO Mon Feb 2310-12 Noon Reynolds Club S LoungeALL INVITED!PEOPLE WANTEDNeed AID In Writing Paper in U.S.Foreign Policy. 10-l2Pages. MARTHA'S VINEYARD Summer1970 Student EMPLOYMENT OP¬PORTUNITIES. Hundreds of jobs!Detailed descriptions including res¬taurants, hotels, shops. SEND $2 00APPLIED RESEARCH ASSOCI¬ATES, Dept. 8, PO BOX 3903, New. Haven, Conn. 06525.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.Wanted: Permanent, full time, cler¬ical assistant at the U. of C. Press.This is an opportunity for a begin¬ner with reasonably good typing,but not much experience, to learna specialized field in publishing.Willingness to learn, meticulous at¬tention to detail, and nonlazy mindare essential. You will learn aboutcopyrights and publishing contracts,licensing of foreign translations andof reprints and quotation rights.Though much of the work is rou¬tine, there is a great deal of varietyand you will rarely do one thingall day long. The department issmall, so you won't be buriedamong a lot of people. Yourachievements will stand out andpromotions and raises will be basedon them. If you are interested, callMrs. Walson, Ml. 3-0800, extn. 3398for appt.Tryouts — Feb 24 8. 26 7-9 IdaNoyes Theater BLACKFRIARSY'all Come.LADIES! EARN DECENT COMMIS¬SION SELL IMPORTED STONENECKLACES Earrings to FriendsNeighbours Call 8780156 / 7846810Eves.SPACE2Vi Rm Sublet Spr. and Sum. $109furn 57th 8< Blackstone 955-9516.4 bdroom apt near campus wanted.From June or Sept. BU8-6610, ext1307.Unfurnished Studio and 2 BdrmApartment Available Now. 5243 SKenwood. Call Mr. Stoll D03-6200or Steve FA4-0342.Wtd Unfurn Apt For 1 Pers NearCampus Upto $120 Eves 288-4897.4th Year Med Student Wants Placeto Live Until June 10. Call 667-4653.Paul.Graciuos Kenwood house for rentSpring Quarter. 548-4748.Room in Private House. 53rd 8> Dor¬chester. $10/week. MU4-1092.Available April 1, Large 7Room AptNear Coop, 1C t> Lake. $150/Mo,324-7183.Beautiful soacious 5 and 6 rmapfs at 71s1 8. Jeffery for informa¬tion call - Albert H. Johnson RealtyCo., 732 East 75th Street - HU 3-1470.5300 So. Shore Drive. 1 Bdrm. Apt.Avail. March 1, on Lake, near 1C,bus lines, Hyde Pk. Shops. 288-7358 eves.1 bdrm furn Univ apt avail for SprQtr 363-3430.Free Room in Exchange for BabySitting Evenings 684-1369.Wanted: 2 Male Rmmts to sharehuge furnished apt in So Shore.48.75 for your own bedroom. UCbus passes 20ft from your door.Available Marl. Live with effeteintellectual Oberlin grads. Call 955-7177 after 6PM.Male Rmmate Needed From Mar. 1-Apr30 Only #37.50/Mo Own Bdrm6022lngleside #2 Call 324-8034.FOR SALEStereo Components at Large Sav¬ings! Save $90 on Sherwood Receiv¬ers. Discounts on AR Dual DYNAGarrard. MUSICRAFT Campus RepBob Tabor 363-4555 Save $.Typewriter Excellent Condition BestOffer HY39426 Evenings.2 '60 VW's $100, $500 955-7809.21" TV, Desk, 2x12 Gold Rug, Pory.Typ'r, Stereo Taperec'r, Buffet,Misc. Furn. 7520180, Eves.MAH. YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON121^ E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637dates TO RUNname, address, phone.CHARGE: 50* per line, 401 per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75( perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are Ire*. Garrard 4HF Single Play TableFor Sale. $20. Call 721-0676.'59 VW overhauled brakes, clutch,engine. No rot, excellent shape. $350Ml3-0800 ext 3263.Stereo Components at Savings $Save $50 on Sansui Rcvr. Also onGarrard, Dual, AR, DYNA, Koss atMUSICRAFT. Campus Rep BobTabor 363-4555 for Price Quote.Students Subscription Rates on Play¬boy Magazine.7 months $6.001 year $8.50Send check or money order to BigBunny c/o Chicago Maroon, 1212E 59th St, Chicago, 60637.Put classical roots under the Jof-frey.. .because your eyes are bluesuch a deal on the American Ballet.MOVING SALE$100,000 INVENTORY TO MOVECraig Deluxe Casette LOST AND FOUNDHandmade Many Colored 6ft Scarf.Lost Feb 12. Seeendipitous Reward.Please Call 955-1469.EXPEDITIONEverglades Escapades March 21-29Call HICKORY ex. 2380SKIINGSKI JACKSON, WYO. March 20-29.$146. Hurry — 10 places. 6845388.WASH PROMRecorders $69 $ 38Sony 3 Head TapeTransports $35Fisher AM-FM Tuners $25Utah 12 inch 3 WaySpeakers $89 $ 49Sherwood 90 Watt Ampli¬fiers $230 $110DYNA Stereo Power Amps $35Garrard Record Changers $15Sherwood 160 Watt Amps $330 $165Sherwood SR5 3-Way12" Speakers $120 $ 72SALE ENDS FEBRUARY 26THOUSANDS TO CHOOSE FROMPRICES SUBJECT TONEGOTIATIONSCHWARTZ BROS.8533 COTTAGE TR4-4131OPEN SUNDAYS 11-5Outside of the Royal Ballet CoSwan Lake implies the AmericanBallet. Discount tickets at theMaroon.For Sale Bed — Single Exc. Desk3'6"x6'8" Able to Hold 3 TiersBooks Rug — Gray 9x9 CoffeeTable CALL 324-8034.Mexico, California, Arizona. GoSomewhere Warm During SpringBreak on American Airlines.. .CallJim Sack 684-6667.WANTEDTop Flight MBA Grads For Man-agerial Positions With Largest Gro¬cery Chain in Chicago, 5th in US.No Conscience Necessary See Jew-el Rep at CCE Feb 24.VIVACIOUS95% of All Ex-Virgins Polled ThinkDennis Sato is Vivacious InquireCoulter 534 and Find Out For Your¬self.CATS WANTEDPregnant female cat or cat withlitter 10 days old or less desperate¬ly needed. If you don't know whomto give your kittens to, or if youdon't want to raise them yourself,let me do It. R. Shtaer, ext 2847or 2848.NEW MAG WILL PAYFor Reviewers, feature writers, in¬terviewers, photogs, designers Sendsample of your work to New Magc/o The Maroon.NEED NEW HOMESFree young cats 363-6337 Greg.LOVING CATS FREE TO LONELYPEOPLE. CALL JACKIE 363-9580. The Maroon has done us, the si¬lent majority of the University, aDASTARDLY DEED — No interestin the WASH PROM: HAH!I think it's about time the CAMP¬US showed the Maroon that theyARE NOT the sole determinant ofthe campus attitude.The WASH PROM is a tradition— but only in the sense that it is,and has always been, the biggestaffair of Winter Quarter. At themoment, it is the only affair thathas had the interest of over 500people in this quarter. And that iswhy CORSO funded us. Perhaps itwas excessive. And, If over 500people attend it will cost CORSOless. In one sense, its more moneyspent on one night than any otheraffair. Unfortunately, we can't askfor doners to the amount thatFOTA, for example, can. FOTAlast year was alloted $6500 for its"2 weeks." And, about 3 times thatamount in contributions. But WASHPROM isn't "culture;" it's merelya lot of fun for a lot of people.WASH PROM WILL BE HELD ONSat, Feb 21. Tickets are being soldat the Bookstore, Reynolds Clubdesk, The Student Activities Officeand Ricketts. Price $4.50. Ticketsalso at door. Come — and have thebreak Winter quarter needs!Sincerely,Sheldon SacksChairmanWASH PROMPERSONALSSupport our Bail Fund. $1 at theGay Lib Dance CORSO gave us theshaft.Sound Investment ServiceSave $ on All Stereo SystemsAt MUSICRAFT on Campus CallBob Tabor 363-4555 and Save $$Remember the Good Old DaysWhen Women Were Broads, HairWas Greasy, And Music Was "ShaNa Na"TRYOUT for the "Sweetlife."George Washington was a gay oldFellow. Help us by coming to ourdance. (He would have) Gay Lib¬eration.Edward Mondello — Feb 24.SHA NA NA NA, SHA NA NA NA NASHA NA NA NA, SHA NA NA NA NASHA NA NA NA, SHA NA NA NA NASHA NA NA NA, SHA NA NA NA NAYIPYIPYIPYIPYIPYIPYIP,BOOMBOOMBOOMBOOMBOOM,BOOMBOOMGET A JOBOTIS RUSH DANCEFEB 28 Ida Noyes 9-To-l Need WeSay More? (Revitalization)MASSIVE RALLY12 NOONSATURDAYFEBRUARY 21SNOW YOUR CONTEMPTwith Bill Kunstler. Phil Ochs 6 Bobby Rush(speakers)noon at the FEDERAL BUILDINGDearborn A JacksonJJ0 Recemum at Ceek Ceenty Jeil<Mak - J »_hi i_xun anB vjbiiiwi in««-. 1- I 1 »-IJ» E-IJ _A VJMv^OvvwVLuuo vwvmnf • •■wwiuro oKswr If you like Trial by Jury, you'lllove COX AND BOX and ROSEN¬CRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN.Rev Fry — profits of his book goto a dump Daley fund — hear himat an Evening of Organ and Brass.When has so much been spent on sofew at U of C? Wash Prom illegallyspirits away the largest chunk of $given any one nite .stand to bringballroom dancing back to the mid¬way.GUILINI RECEPTIONFeb 23 10AM Reynolds S.Lounge — FOTA '70.Thinking of Transferring FromBeautiful U.C.? First, Get A Lookat Berkley or Stanford. Fly Amer¬ican Airlines to San Francisco. CallCampus Rep Jim Sack: 684-6667.There will be No Gay people atthe Wash Prom. You'll find themat Pierce Tower.Gilbert without Sullivan? Sullivanwithout Gilbert? Feb 20 and 21, In¬ternational House Aud, 8:00PM.Revitalization Did it Again. OtisRush — Alive — At Ida Noyes.Mayor Daley is a Lesbian. Come tothe Gay Liberation liberation. Satnite at Pierce Tower.Is Frank Malbranche really just edirty old man? Find out at theLascivious Costume Ball FridayFeb 27 p pm at INHEver Wish You Were a "Teenagerin Love" Again? Sha Na Na.What's A "Teenager"?What's "Sha Na Na"They Sing Songs You Dug WhenYou Were a Teenager.Some Sound Advice! Save $$$$$$On Stereo compoerrts Garrard DuelDYNA AR Etc at MUSICRAFTCampus Rep Bob Tabor 363-4555.Did you hear the one about the tui¬tion rise being a strategy to knockout the college?Confidential to Gay Lib — It wasintended as a pun. Our apologies.The Wikler-Bernstein Circuit.Gay Liberation Dance or WashProm. Obvious choice.Practice your libertine arts at theLascivious Costume Ball Fri. Feb.27 9 pm INHFor those of you who like a littlerational discourse with your cul¬ture, the cast of DON CARLOS,this quarter's major theatrical eventwill rap on the play its meaningand who knows what else after theplay ends. FREE COKES too forall the caffeine freaks.we'll make a space in the livesthat we've planned....To L: "I've been where you'rehanging/I think I can see howyou're pinned..."—J.Question: How do you fight mis¬appropriated funds, male suprema¬cy, heterosexual chauvinism, beautycontests, and still have a greattime? Answer: Come to Chicago'sfirst Gay Liberation Dance. Anhistoric occasion. Sat night. PierceTower. 8:30 to 1,Come see the film the US customsoffice would not let into the coun¬try — rated tripple Q (politicallyrestricted) by Uncle Sam — Pro¬logue in Madel on Monday — 7:158i 9:30 — Proceeds to the Con¬spiracy.Wash Prom riding the piston of lo¬cal bureaucrats suffering from nos¬talgia life $1700 from CORSO andleave the remaining U of C organi¬zations to mend their fences as bestthey can.OVERLAND EXPEDITIONTO INDIAleaves London late June.Details trncoun terOverland23 Manor House Drive,London, NW6FACULTY:INCOME TAXPROBELMS?Unusual problems of fac¬ulty income warrent specialattention.Will complete your formsor advise you how to do it.Call 752-7047for appointmentClass inFolk Guitarwith TED JOHNSON fromthe Old Town School ofFolk Musicft LIHNHOfF STUDIOS1438E.57rt.St. 288-3500MAY THIS PAGE STAND IN MEMORY OF THE WHITE MANAND THE PERSON WHO TURNED HIM LOOSE.FeWvery 20, 1970/TkeLAST CHANCE!To Buy Winter Quarter TextsWinter Quarter TextbooksThe bookstore has made every effort to have a sufficient quantity of required andrecommended titles in stock for this term. Because of the limited amount of space we mustbegin returning texts no later than February 23, 1970. Please make every effort to purchaseany needed texts this week. After the 23rd we cannot be responsible for course requirementsfor the Winter quarter.If you do not have a charge account with our store, you are invited to open one now,purchase your texts, and pay for them in thirty days.