Conspiracy 7 Celebrate at Court HousePhotos by Steve AokiFREE ON BAIL: At the Court House restaurant in Harper Court, Saturday the Conspiracy defendants celebrated their freedom.At left, David Dellinger and his wife, Leonard Weinglass, and Jerry Rubin offer a toast. At top right is Tom Hayden, atbottom right Rennie Davis and Dellinger. By Steve CookA m i d d 1 e-aged, moratorium-buttonedlady entered the Court House Restaurant at52 st and Harper Saturday night.“Where are the Conspiracy 7?” sheasked, anxiously. “A friend called me upand said that they are eating dinner heretonight.”She recognized familiar faces from thenewspaper photos in the dimly lit HarperCourt restaurant and went over to their ta¬bles to congratulate them.Just a few hours after getting out of CookCounty jail Saturday, the conspiracy de¬fendants, with their lawyers, families, andfriends, had a freedom party at the Court¬house restaurant. The seven had been freedthat afternoon by the US Court of Appealson $15,500 posted bond, ten percent of thebond total. Defense lawyers William Kunts-ler and Leonard Weinglass had flown toChicago from New York that afternoon tobe with the defendants.Happy to be out of jail, though missingsome hair due to the prison barbers, thedefendants dined on beef fondue and cham¬pagne.“We’ll never feel so good to be togetheras we do now,” said Lee Weiner. “It’s goodto break bread together.”With the Midnight Special turned up onthe restaurant’s speaker system, and il¬luminated by a photographer’s floodlight,the party continued past midnight. The cel¬ebrants arrived in small groups; Abbie andAnita Hoffman were the last to arrive.Abbie’s hair' was considerably shorter,yet a stir went through the normally sedaterestaurant as diners recognized him. As heate, the Yippie leader joked with the otherdefendants about his haircut.A boisterous William Kunstler toastedjudge Julius Hoffman with, “one, two,three,. .. bullshit!”. Kunstler joked about running for presi¬dent, and nominating “attorney ‘Wein-traub’ to the Supreme Court.”“It’s good to be back in Chicago,” saidKunstler, “but I wouldn’t have said thatbefore today.”Rennie Davis, one of the first to arrive,said, “It feels terrific to be out.” Whenquestioned about the demonstrations in Cal¬ifornia he said, “It was Santa Barbara thatgot us out. Santa Barbara was our apellatecourt.”Continued bn Page Five1500 Jam Ida Noyes for LasciviousnessA gala finish to the 25th annual libertinearts conference CLAC, sponsored by Stu¬dents for Violent Non-Action (SVNA), washeld last Saturday at Ida Noyes hall as thelascivious costume ball, which ran from 9pm to 2 am, drew about 1500 persons invarious stages of dress and undress.Top event of the evening was the crown¬ing of Andy Gurion, whose official entryname was Gangrene LaRue, as Mr Univer¬sity of Chicago. Mr UC was escorted downthe main stairs by Judy Alsofrom 73. MissAlsofrom is the roommate of Miss UC, Ir¬ene Dymkar, who attended the ball butcould not be found in time for the 12 o’clockcrowning.“I’m so thrilled,” gushed the new Mr UC.As I came down the stairs, people I don’teven know congratulated me.”Da Boys from Miami, another entry inthe contest, served as bodyguards to MrUC. Runnersup in the voting were CharleyPetosky, 5412 Drexel, and the MagneticBroccoli.The activities were emceed by SVNAmember David Affelder, who awarded afull-expenses paid vacation in the coalfields of Scranton, Pa, to the new Mr UC.Affelder also conducted a contest for the “most lascivious costume,” with the help ofan applause meter behind the throne. Thecontest was a tie between a male in a full-dress uniform — “the most obscene cos¬tume I could think of,” he said — and afemale dressed as Justice who declaredthat “I have been raped.”Following the contest, Affelder an¬nounced SVNA efforts to institute a weeklynude swim-in, led the crowd in cheers of “Iam Horny” and read selected passagesfrom a pornographic novel.Affelder also apologized for SVNA’s in¬adequate preparations for the crowd whichturned out. Roger Darrow, minister of in¬formation for SVNA, submitted the follow¬ing to the Maroon:“On behalf of Students for Violent Non-Action, I would like to apologize for the in¬adequacies of the lascivious costume ball.We expected 500 people, and so were unpre¬pared for the ‘at least 1500’ who showed up.To those who were disappointed with thefilms shown: our janitor didn’t comethrough, and so we had to substitute whatwe could get at the last moment.Next time will be better. Very definitely.Though the planned pornographic readingContinued on Page Nine David TravisTHE NEW MR UC: And the winner is Gangrene LaRue.Journalism Associates Broadcast On WHPKAssociates of the center for policy study— journalists spending six months oncampus to broaden their knowledge of ur¬ban problems — have been using their timein joining activities of the University com¬munity.Among the associates are John Harlow, anews editor for the associated press in NewYork City, and Ladley K. Pearson, reporterfor the Newark Evening News, Newark,New Jersey.Both are serving as newscasters for Sta¬tion WHPK. the student-operated station inMitchell Tower on the University campus.Harlow presents a 15-minute news broad¬cast every Tuesday at 7 p m, and Pearsona similar program on Thursdays at 7 p m.They are two of the five journalists se¬lected last fall by the center for policystudy to spend 24 weeks on the campus tostudy, engage in research, and participatein community projects so that they mayreturn to their jobs better qualified to inter¬pret the problems of urban dwellers.Harlow, a native of New Zealand, hastraveled widely. He has toured SoutheastAsia as a free lance writer, sending his sto¬ries and photos to New Zealand newspapersand preparing special reports for the NewZealand Broadcasting Corporation. He vis¬ited Laos, Thailand, Viet Nam and othercountries. In 1968 he came to the UnitedStates. He covered the Republican andDemocratic national conventions in Miamiand Chicago. While reporting the Demo¬cratic convention, he was trapped in themelee between national guardsman anddemonstrators at 18 St and Michigan Ave.Gassed and pummelled during the fracas,he admits that his first impressions of Chi¬cago were anything but pleasant. He adds, Lloyd Eldon SaundersJOHN HARLOWAP reporter on the airhowever, that he was also caught in demon¬strations at the Republican convention inMiami and barely escaped a bottle thrownat him by a participant.After the conventions, Harlow traveledthroughout the US and Canada, visiting 44HOWARD’S GULFSERVICE STATION&PANTRYPantry open until 12:00Station open 24 hours5701 COTTAGE GROVEAll Groups andIndividuals Interestedin PresentingPrograms DuringFOIA '70Must Have CompleteInformation Sheets InBy Friday, Mar 6.2/The Chicago Maroon/March 3, 1970 PLATTER;. Pizza, Fried Chicken |j Italian Foods jI Compare the Price! II I11460 E. 53rd 643-28001I WE DELIVER II -JGraduates:May weplant a seedin thefurrows ofyour mind?Attend the:I llinoi sState GovernmentCareer ConferenceThursday, March 5, 1970University of IllinoisChicago Circle Campus601 South MorganChicago, Illinois9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Student Center states and eight Canadian provinces in ajourney that covered more than 46,000miles. Late in 1968 he joined the associatedpress in New York as a reporter and re¬write man, then became a news editor forits New York City bureau.Asked why he applied for an internshipas an associate, Harlow replied:“I want to know more about urban af¬fairs and problems. Although I alreadyknew much about them, since I have trav¬eled extensively over the US there is muchto learn.“About 90 per cent of the news I report oredit in New York originates in the slums.Most of it is crime news, but street disturb¬ances and demonstrations also take upmuch of my time. I am especially inter¬ested in the development of US cities, andplan to do my research paper on one ofthem.”Harlow is especially pleased with his in¬troduction of stock market news on hisweekly WHPK broadcast. “They were nottoo eager to have me include such data,”he says, “but I consider stock market newsvital information, for it tells us much aboutthe state of the nation’s economy.” Pearson feels that Newark, a 300-year-oldcity, is facing the kind of problems that willconfront all major US cities. He says:“Newark, a city of 400,000 people, waslost in the shadow of New York until 1967,when it emerged as an urban phenomenonIncreasingly, the city of Newark is beingprobed, studied and explained as the pro¬totype of the American city of the 1970’sand 1980’s.“The problems other urban areas can ex¬pect to face in the next 20 years, Newark isfacing now. The cultural, economic, social,political and demographic forces that willperhaps younger cities in the future aremolding Newark now.”Looming large in Newark’s future plansis a $19,000,000 low-income, large-familyhousing project. The building will be de¬signed to encompass 460 apartments rang¬ing in size from three to five bedrooms, andaccommodating an estimated 2,500 children— an average of seven youngsters per fam¬ily. The five-story building will be con¬structed on the site of a hill, with the mainentrance located at the third floor level sothat tenants will either walk up or down totheir apartments and thus eliminate theneed for elevators.Just as enthusiastic over his broadcastingrole at WHPK is Ladley Pearson of theNewark Evening News Pearson creditsHarlow with getting him interested in radiobroadcasting, something he had never donebefore.Pearson was born in Hackensack, N.J.,and was graduated from Rutgers Univer¬sity (1964) where he had majored in Eng¬lish. Early in 1966 he went to the NewarkEvening News as a feature writer and re¬porter in the publication’s shore bureau atBelmar, NJ In 1967 he was transferred tothe paper’s home office in Newark and wasassigned to such areas as urban affairs andthe radical student movement. He coveredthe Woodstock festival, the Columbia Uni¬versity student uprisings and the poorpeople’s march. “Urban renewal,” Pearson points out,“has never focused on large-family units,and I know the Newark project will there¬fore be watched with great interest.”It will be Newark, obviously, that Pear¬son will make his research project.Asked how he hopes to benefit from hisstudy on the Midway, Pearson replied:“I want to know more about the ‘forma¬lized’ methods or, if you want to put it an¬other way, the academic handling of urbanproblems. I have had considerable ex¬perience in reporting urban affairs, but Inow need academic background. I want toknow how these problems are beinganalyzed and solved by professional sociol¬ogists and by scholars and urban affairsspecialists.”Murray Louisdance companyi multi-media program ofmodern dance with elec-ronic music and pro-ictions...kinesthetically antic...”- - - The Village VoiceMandel HallMarch 13 & 14, 8:30 p.m.March 15, 3 p.m.Tickets on sale atIda Noyes HallPublic $4 and $2.50Students $3 and $1.50raiantad by Untvurvty of Chicogo Modm Done* Club and lb* Illinois Arts CouncilACTORS * SINGERSBrecht - WeillTHREEPENNY OPERADirected byJames O'ReillyMusical DirectorJoel CopePerformancesApril 24-25-26 DON’T GETJAMMEDinto a teaching position that’s unsatisfactory and aplace you can’t stand. Your prospective studentsneed your full attention and only if you’re happy canyou give them what they need. It’s your career, beselfish enough to make it a good one.There’s no question about it-students in elemen¬tary and high schools need young teachers, withfresh progressive ideas, to answer and satisfy theirthousands upon thousands of questions. Answersthat, when handled creatively and interestingly, notonly give information but cause young minds tomold into strange-wonderful patterns. A goodteacher is a catalyst. They need you. Chicago needsyou.But over and beyond their need, a starting salaryof $8,400 annually and one of the highest teachersalary schedules in the nation indicate that Chicagowants to satisfy the needs of its community.Your endeavor may be needy students and an ade¬quate salary-but then again it may be a healthynon-stop social environment and night life, a 10mile lake front beach, open air concerts, the balletor fine colleges and universities to continue youreducation. The community of Chicago, on the shoreof Lake Michigan.Get off to a good start in your career. If you'rea graduating senior with a degree in education, in¬vestigate teaching in the Chicago Public Schools.OPENAUDITIONSTRYOUT DATES& TIMES:Wed., Mar. 4th-2:30-5 pmThurs., Mar. 5th-2:30-5and 7:30-9:30 pm,Sat., Mar. 7th1:30 - 3:30 pmREYNOLDS CLUBCheck Bulletin Board forExact LocationsA University TheatreProduction For further information write:DIRECTOR OF TEACHER RECRUITMENTChicago Public Schools, 228 N. La Salle Street,Chicago, Illinois 60601I am interested in teaching: f Grades K-3 □ 4-6 □ 7-8f : High school ! ’ Special Educationsubject areaMissMrlAddress — lCity State 7 i p l1College Graduation 11— lyr.* * ‘ v \Pompidou Eats, TalksAs 10,000 ProtestTrustees To Hear Pollution PetitionForum To ViewStudent LivingThe College Forum will hold its finalmeeting of the winter quarter Friday,March 6 on “The Life of the Body and theLife of the Mind: Student Housing at theUniversity.”Participants in the discussion to be heldin Ida Noyes library at 3:30 pm are: BenRothblatt, assistant to the provost and au¬thor of the public relations housing supple¬ment which appeared in the MaroonJanuary 6; Frank Day, ’70, chairman of thestudent government housing committee;Roger Weiss, associate professor in the so¬cial sciences division and the College andmember of the University committee on co¬op housing; Peggy Primeau, ’70, memberof the Blum committee on student housing;and Robert Stein, associate professor ofEnglish and resident head of Thompsonhouse, Pierce tower.Issues which will be discussed include theresident masters plan and the role co-ophousing can play on campus. urban congestion, juvenile delinquency andenvironmental pollution, stressing that Chi¬cagoans “are particularly sensitive” tothem.Although well-received, the speech didnot cause any flurries of excitement.French reporters accompanying the Presi¬dential tour of the US pointed out in privatethat as the American visit progresses.Pompidou’s speeches are getting progres¬sively duller. One of them referred to Sat¬urday evening’s address as “mortelle(deadly).”Summarizing opinion of those who attend¬ed the Saturday dinner, Kenneth Northcott,chairman of the department of Germaniclanguages, described it as “very unimpres¬sive altogether.” Northcott and his wifewere present at the dinner because ofNorthcott’s association with the Institute ofEuropean Studies.As the President and Mme Pompidou.France’s Foreign Minister Maurice Schu¬mann and his wife and other members ofthe party left the Palmer House, demon¬strators chanted in protest. Some of thedemonstrators waited in the hotel arcadeand as Pompidou passed, shouted “Pom¬pidou, shame on you!” The President, vis¬ibly disturbed by the presence of the pro¬testers, was heard to utter, “il a fut saviorraison garder.” (it is necessary to remainreasonable).”After the Pompidous left the PalmerHouse to return to the Drake Hotel to spendthe night before flying on to New York Sun¬day morning, the press was briefed on thepre-dinner activities of the French Presi¬dent.Reviewing the questions asked of thePresident by the publishers and editors,Mme Simonne Servais said that he hadbeen asked what the French Governmentpromises to its students. In his reply, Pom¬pidou pointed to a significant increase inthe number of French university students(200,000 in Paris) and suggested that thispresents a possibility for conflict and, thusthat there must be reforms.Pompidou stressed the necessity tohumanize the process of the university edu¬cation. No student, the President said,wants to be sent mechanically to study at amechanized educational institution.GEORGES POMPIDOU: The President of France was guest of honor at a dinnerSaturday at the Palmer house. By Gerard Leva!As 10,000 shouting Chicagoans marchedaround the Palmer House Saturday nightprotesting France’s sale of jet fighterplanes to Lybia, French President GeorgesPompidou, attending a dinner given in hishonor, urged Americans to take note of thegrowing problem of environmental pollu¬tion.Sponsored jointly by the Chicago Councilon Foreign Relations and the AllianceFrancaise, the dinner at the Palmer Housewas the major event of the 20 hour visit toChicago of the President and his party.About 600 persons paid $37.50 to have din¬ner with Pompidou.Conspicuous by his absence was MayorRichard Daley. Although Daley greeted theFrench President on his arrival at O’Hare,he did not attend the Saturday evening din¬ner.Following brief words of praise for thecity of Chicago and “the reality of herachievements,” Pompidou turned his atten¬tion to the “unexpected problems for menliving at the close of the twentieth centu¬ry.” He noted the mounting problems ofMembers of the Coalition to Stop Pollu¬tion Now (CSPN) a campus organization,last week presented Walter Leen, the Uni¬versity’s general counsel and secretary ofthe board of trustees, with a petition for theUniversity to cede its Commonwealth Edi¬son proxies to the coalition. CSPN wants touse the proxies at Com Ed’s April 27 stock¬holders’ meeting to demand that the city’slargest coal burning power plant institutemore stringent pollution control and an airclean-up program.The petition also urges the University tojoin a city-wide campaign to pledge non¬payment of electric bills, putting the moneyinto a trust fund until Commonwealth Edi¬son has put forward an anti-pollution pay¬ment.Leen, who told a Maroon reporter hethinks it is a good idea to stop pollution, hasreceived the text of a petition he willpresent to the next meeting of the in¬vestment committee. Leen has not receiveda list of the 1400 signers of the petitionwhich he plans to present along with thetext. CSPN had not prepared the list untillast Thursday and they plan to discuss itfurther during tonight’s meeting.According to the figures for 1968, the Uni¬versity owns over 33,000 shares of Com¬monwealth Edison stock. This is a small percentage of Com Ed’s 134 million shares,but according to Cynthia Ward, ’73, aspokesman for CSPN, only a very smallnumber of stockholders show up at ComEd’s meetings in person, “therefore even aminority of proxy holders that show up.could be extremely vocal.”Two weeks ago the city-wide CoalitionAgainst Pollution (CAP) of which thecampus organization is a member, held ameeting to collect proxies from citizens ofChicago. Miss Ward said the meeting con¬sisted “entirely of people standing up andsaying, ‘I have the proxies for a certaincompany and have also bought a certainnumber of individual proxies myself.’ ”The Lutheran Theological Seminary hasturned over 500 proxies to the coalition.The coalition claims that CommonwealthEdison yearly bums 6 million tons of highsulfur coal in its Chicago plants. CSPN fur¬ther claims that the company has doubled its profits over the past decade, and netted$131 million in 1969; that construction is go¬ing on at two nuclear power plants on thebeach at Zion, 42 miles north of Chicago;and that the plants will pour three billiongallons of hot water into Lake Michigan aday.In its petition, CSPN says a choice be¬tween the Commonwealth Edison manage¬ment and the anti-pollution forces is in¬escapable, and states the University cannotremain neutral. CSPN has completed amailing to all faculty members asking fortheir support of the petition.The investment committee meets onceper quarter at the call of the chairman. Nodate has yet been set but the committeewill probably meet before the end ofMarch, Leen said. A CSPN spokesman saidit would like to present the petition to thecommittee but this possiblity has not beendiscussed with Leen.Upper Flint To Have Unlocked DoorsCoeducational housing will arrive oncampus at 5 pm Wednesday, March 4 withthe opening of the locked doors betweenUpper (women) and Lower (men) FlintHouse in the Woodward Court complex.This event comes after several weeks ofnegotiation between the respective housepresidents, resident heads, and EdwardTurkington, director of student housing.Woodward Court is composed of threeunits, Rickert, Wallace, and Flint, each di¬vided into two houses of two floors. LowerFlint is the sole male house, and as suchpreviously provided a “security problem”which prevented the doors between the sec¬ond and third floors of the unit to beopened.With the opening of the doors, a matronwill be stationed 24 hours a day in the cen¬tral unit in addition to locking the court¬yard doors to Wallace and Flint after mid¬night. Access to the Houses after midnightwould be through Rickert Lounge or thetunnel, which is also to be opened to LowerFlint residents.It is hoped that this proposal will “great¬ly increase the freedom of movement with¬in the Houses while maintaining an appro¬priate measure of security. It would, in ef¬fect, make Flint a truly coed house.”Accompanying the opening of the doorswill be a ribbon cutting ceremony in thestairwell between the second and third floorat which Mr. Turkington will preside. Mark IsraelTHE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME: Students in Flint house can now use thedoor to visit members of the opposite sex.March 3, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3Students Comment on Dorm Masters PlanBy Gordon KatzThe resident masters program promisesconsiderably to change dormitory life. Ithas excited both praise and criticism frompresent dormitory residents.The program, scheduled to begin nextfall, will place senior faculty members andtheir families in Woodward Court, PierceTower, and Burton-Judson Courts. Accord¬ing to Edward Levi, president of the Uni¬versity, “resident masters will have gener¬al responsibility for encouraging thecultural and intellectual programs of theirresidence units and will work with residentheads and students in the undergraduateCollege houses to broaden and strengthenprograms already underway.’’Wayne Booth, Pullman professor of Eng¬lish and former dean of the College, hasbeen designated to serve as master forWoodward Court, while Kenneth Northcott,professor and chairman of the departmentof Germanic languages and literature, hasbeen appointed to a similar position atPierce Tower. The resident master for B-Jhas yet to be named.To accomodate the masters, a two-storyapartment dwelling will be added to PierceTower adjacent to its main entrance; theOVERLAND EXPEDITIONTO INDIAleaves London late June.*485Details EncounterOverland23 Manor House Drive,London, NW6 WAYNE BOOTHFuture resident master of Woodwardeast dining room of Woodward Commonswill be converted into an apartment; and alarge part of the second floor of MeadHouse in B-J will be remodeled.Many of the students questioned about their response to the program had praisefor the qualifications of the appointees buthad strong reservations about aspects of itsimplementation. Lucy Arimond 72, a resi¬dent of lower Wallace, said she had “a tre¬mendous amount of respect for WayneBooth,” but thought him “crazy to live inthe cafeteria.” She also expressed dismayat the thought of “footing the costly bill.”Jay Ranney 73, who lives in ShoreyHouse where Northcott is currently resi¬dent head, felt that “most students likeNorthcott — but there is much sentimentthat the money could be better used.” JohnDabrowski, a second-year student in lowerFlint, called Wayne Booth “a wonderfulman,” but the plan “a half-assed idea.”The financing of the resident mastersplan draws the most criticism. One studentat Pierce thought it “a very poor decisionto waste $60 thousand when the moneycould have been put into scholarships orCORSO.” David Jeremias, a first-year stu¬dent in lower Flint, said the dormitory al¬ready provides “plenty of intellectual com¬forts; the money could be used to providemore immediate comforts.”Residents of the second floor of MeadHouse in B-J were particularly displeasedwith the proposal in light of their imminentdisplacement and an increase in dormitoryrates. One student noted that the presenceof the master “would eliminate eight roomsat $600 per year each.” Roger Weigand 72found the University’s loss of revenuecoupled with the rent increase “incred¬ible.” “Maybe the program could be benefi¬ cial culturally, but the University’s notmade a case of it,” he said.Another B-J resident contended that“with the tight housing situation, studentsshould not be forced to vacate preferredrooms merely to house a faculty memberwhose contribution, at best, would benebulous.”Two students in Dodd House forsee a con¬flict between certain B-J traditions and theraising of children. Nathan Hawley, a third-year student, said he thought that “throw¬ing firecrackers into the court at 3 am andchanting ‘ass-ream’ would have to be re¬pressed.” Mike Prais 72 pointed out “nextyear B-J, with coeducation, will be a betterplace to conceive children than to raisethem.”Some students also felt skeptical towardthe prospect of one faculty member pre¬siding over the'entire dormitory complex.“Contact with any other house is rather re¬stricted,” said Tom Jahnke, a first-yearstudent living in B-J. Bruce Kovarik 72 ofThompson House admitted that “there isnot much inter-house contact in the Tow¬er.”One student in upper Rickert commentedthat the masters quarters should not be iso¬lated from the students as they would be atWoodward and Pierce.Despite the qualms that most of thosequestioned expressed, a few students feelthat “the resident masters program Lsworth experimenting with.” Bernie Feria71, of Pierce, thought it “a very good idea,particularly when you get an exceptionalman like Booth or Northcott.”OVERLAND EXPEDITIONTO INDIAleaves London late June.*485Details EncounterOverland23 Manor House Drive,London, NW6Checker TaxiHASIMMEDIATE OPENINGS• EXCELLENT EARNINGS• WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS PER WEEK FROM 2to 6 DAYS• DAYS or NIGHTS-Work close to home or school-MALE or FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY845 W WASHINGTON8:00 AM to 4:30 PM: DAILY8:00 AM to 11 00 AM SATCALL 421-1314 IN "%HARPER COURTOUR SPECIALITYWorld-famous choicest steakburgerdraft beer -*• free peanuts je-e\% Open daily forcocktails, lunch, dinnerand in between5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454 v ^Closed Mondays EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372XAllegheny Airlineshelps you beatthe waiting game..And saves you up to 33V-3 %.Allegheny's Young Adult Card lets you flywhenever you want to (even holidays)and still get advance reservations.If you’re between 12 and 22,what are you waiting for?Stop by any Allegheny ticketcounter and purchase yourYoung Adult Card.Only $5.00 for all of 1970.Allegheny Air SystemWe have a lot more going for you Samuel Beckett'sWAITING FOR GODOTTo be Presented May 8-9-10Directed by Roger DoddsTRYOUTSTues., March 3, Thurs., March 57:00 - 9:30Ida Noyes Cloister ClubOr by appointment: call 324-2016Scripts available Univ. Theatre OfficeThis “patch”identifiesthe world’s bestbeer drinkers!ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS4/The Chicago Maroon/March 3, 1970oQeaiifO ‘>4t\0t91 rfrusM»' s tUGreyhound Plans'Bus-in nVice Squad's ManleyInfiltrates Gay LibGreyhound Lines has announced the “un¬leashing of the world’s first ‘bus-in.’ ”The bus-in is a students-only bus migra¬tion to Florida from 36 colleges, includingthe University of Chicago, during springbreak. Direct return service will be pro¬vided from Florida to the schools.According to Greyhound, bus service isbeing arranged from the campuses to the“ever-popular youth destinations of Day¬tona, Miami and Fort Lauderdale.” Theschools were selected on the basis of paststudent travel to Florida.Greyhound believes that the bus-in willhelp its “all-out drive” to “reshape its im¬age in the huge youth market.” In that con¬nection, Greyhound has announced that it is“talking bus-in with college through their own communications channel — pop post¬ers.” The bus line plans to distribute morethan 110,000 “colorful pop posters” ex¬tolling the bus-in at the 36 colleges involvedand at many Greyound terminals in theEast.Charles Kirkpatrick, Greyhound Lines-East marketing vice president, believesthat both students and parents will be hap¬py with the bus-in. He claims that “for par¬ents, there should be less worry knowingprofessional Greyhound drivers are takingtheir children to and from the Florida fun-spots.”All interested students should make res¬ervations with their local Greyhound repre¬sentative. Police detective John Manley, a vicesquad member noted for his arrests of ho¬mosexuals and whose appearance before ameeting downtown last week was picketedby the campus Liberation group, infiltrateda campus Gay lib meeting Tuesday, Febru¬ary 23 posing as a member of a San Fran¬cisco-based homosexual organization.Manley had called Steve May, a co-chair¬man of the campus group, the night beforeindentifying himself as “George Man-drenas.” “Mandrenas” said he would be inChicago for a few days and would like totalk with the Gay Lib group about themovement.Mav said he talked with “Mandrenas”for fifteen minutes on -the phone, tellinghim about Gay Lib and the group’s plannedpicketing of a Women’s Bar Association(WBA) of Illinois meeting, February 24.The picket was to protect the alledged per¬secution of homosexuals by the invitedspeaker, Officer John Manley. “Man¬drenas” said he would try to make it to theGay Lib meeting the following night.When Manley walked into the Gay Libsupper meeting at the Bandersnatch in IdaNoyes Hall, several members vaguely rec¬ognized him from pictures, but the grouphad been discussing infiltration so much,“that it would have been like calling wolffor the millionth time,” Steve May said.At the meeting, “Mandrenas” discussed“One,” the homosexual organization of thecampus of San Francisco state, which hepurported to belong to. “One” was com¬pared with Gay Lib as many probing ques¬ tions about the activities of the Chicagogroup were asked.Members of the Gay Lib did not know thetrue identity of “Mandrenas” until Manleystepped up to their picket line at 29 S LaSalle the next day and identified himself.Members of the organization expressedgreat anger over Manley’s action and havesent a letter to Captain Harry Ervanian,director of the police department’s internalinspections division, about the incident. Theletter also questions the action of OfficerCharles Glass, a co-worker of Manley’s,who came to Ida Noyes Hall February 23after Manley had left, asking Gay Libmembers to give him the names of peoplewho witnessed Manley making false arrestsof homosexuals so the charges againstManley could be cleared up in a few days.The letter questioned the authority ofManley and Glass to conduct investigationsof Gay Liberation, the propriety of Glass’sinvestigation of a complaint against his co¬worker, and the propriety of Glass’s at¬tempt to get the names and addresses ofwitnesses to Manley’s alledged acts of har-rassment. The strongest objection con¬cerned Manley’s misrepresentation of him¬self at the meeting.Gay Liberation was established over sixweeks ago on campus to free homosexualsfrom social suppression, $550 was raised ata Gay Lib sponsored dance held February21 at Pierce Tower, to begin a bail fund forarrested gay people, The dance, first of itskind in Chicago was attended by 500 gaypeople and 150 straight people. There areabout 20 “hard case” members in thegroup.Conspiracy Defendants Celebrate FreedomContinued from Page OneBlonde Michelle Dellinger, youngestdaughter of the defendant David Dellinger,got a hug from each of the defendants asthey arrived.Her father, looking tired but happy, satwith his wife and daughters.“I didn’t believe it was true when I flewinto Chicago this morning,” said Mrs Del¬linger. “I didn’t believe it until I saw themwalk out of the Federal building this after¬noon.”Jerry Rubin, sitting with his wife, talkedabout what went on inside the prison duringthe demonstration at the county jail a weekago.“We thought it was really great. Theylocked everybody up in separate cells dur¬ing the demonstration — they usually letthem walk around. At first, they thought itwas the Blackstone Nation coming to freeall the prisoners.”“It was you guys who helped get them-out,” added a friend of Rubin’s referring tothe nation-wide demonstrations in supportof the defendants last week.Nancy Rubin said she had heard aboutthe order to free all the defendants on hercar radio Saturday morning, and imme¬diately went to the jail to see her husband.Jerry, now beardless, said he was .watch¬ing “Superman” on television when he wasinformed of the bond order by some of theprisoners who had heard it on the radio.“Jail ain’t so good, said John Froines.“Jail is not a good place to be. It’s theregular hours that fuck you up,” he addedwith wink.Tom Hayden and Rennie Davis were thefirst to leave; Kunstler and Foinesfollowed them out of the restaurant. Out¬side, the five police cars which had con¬spicuously parked outside the Courthousehad gone.A knot of well-wishers gathered aroundAbbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, and LeonardWeinglass as they left the feast. As hewalked out the door, a student kissed Abbieon the cheek, and he broke into a grin. IN HYDE PARK: Free on bail, the conspiracy defendants and their lawyers celebrate. Their:ase is pending before the US appeals court. (Photos by Steve Aoki) ||March 3, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/ 5EDITORIALConspiracy BondAnd DemonstrationsTo everyone’s surprise, including the Conspiracy defendants andtheir lawyers, the US Circuit Court of Appeals decided Saturdayto release the Conspiracy 7 from jail on bond. The seven had beenlocked up in jail for more than a week since Judge Hoffman’scontempt citations and the verdict of the jury. The circuit courthad waited a week to overrule Judge Hoffman’s “no bail” order,which he announced at the time he locked the Conspiracy 7 up.We don’t pretend to know the inner mental workings of thefive judges who sit on the Seventh Court of Appeals. Yet it seemsclear that the widespread national revulsion of the “no bail” orderand of Judge Hoffman’s general handling of the trial was of primaryimportance in freeing the conspiracy.There are many who “ain’t marchin’ anymore”, but whenthousands took to the streets last week to show their contempt forthe prosecution and Judge Hoffman, they could not be ignored.In New York, Chicago, St Louis, Washington, Berkeley, and finallySanta Barbara it became clear that quite a few people were willingpublicly and militantly to voice their protest to the jailing of theconspiracy.Jerry Rubin, in his last remarks to Julius Hoffman beforebeing taken away to jail, said that the judge had radicalized more“Why doesn't someone in¬dict Foran and Hoffman forconspiring to incite riots?They've certainly done agood job.1'youth in America than the defendants ever could. He was ap¬parently right, for in jail the defendants were suddenly moredangerous than outside. Governor Reagon had to declare a “stateof emergency” in Santa Barbara to prevent more bank burnings;window-smashing broke out in many cities.In Wilmette last week, US Attorney Foran, suddenly an experton masculinity, declared that after five months of intensive personalinvestigation, he had found all of the defendants to be “freakingfags.”Foran, like Judge Hoffman, had quite a lot to do with therecent demonstrations. And if he keeps on in his new campaign tobecome Chicago’s house Spiro, he will no doubt have much to dowith future such actions.The analysis that finds the seven defendants the sole in¬stigators of the rising discontent in America is quite wrong. Theirtrial, and subsequent jailing, has made them heroes, but it has notmade them the movement. There are many more than sevenpeople in this country who are willing to demonstrate their con¬tempt for Judge Hoffman, for his court and his jails.Why doesn’t someone indict Foran and Hoffman for conspiringto incite riots? They’ve certainly done a good job.They have taken the roles given them by the kingmakers inour society and taken them to the heights of the absurd. They havenot only alienated, but angered all sensible people in our societyby their conduct. Hoffman’s heavy-handed use of contempt cita¬tions to the extent of personal vindictiveness, and Foran’s slander¬ous remarks are examples of what is wrong in America.We congratulate the Conspiracy defendants on their freedomfrom jail. If there was no conspiracy in Chicago before the con¬vention, there certainly is now. SDS Committee InvestigatesPrograms for Pahlavi BuildingBy SDS Pahlavi CommitteeSeveral people in SDS have beendoing preliminary research about the Pah¬lavi building, the construction of whichmay soon begin at the corner of Woodlawnand 58 St. We held a forum Sunday, Febru-ry 15, and presented what information wehad. Students from the Iranian and ArabStudents Associations came to the forumand very forcefully put forward their opin¬ion of the destructive effect that US impe¬rialism is having throughout the MiddleEast. The discussion touched upon the ex¬ploitation of oil reserves in Iran and vari¬ous ways in which the people have beenprevented from getting more jobs an^ ahigher share in the profits.The results of our research to date are asfollows. In December of 1967 the govern¬ment of Iran, on behalf of Shah Pahlavi ofIran, pledged $3 million to the University,$2 million of which was earmarked for theconstruction of the Pahlavi building and theremainder to endow professorships. Thebanquet at which the funds werepresented was attended by, among others,lawyers from several major New Yorkfirms, top ranking officials from such ma¬jor corporations as Pan Am and Teledyne;and R. W. Komer, former deputy ambassa¬dor in charge of pacification projects inVietnam.The building is to house two separate in¬stitutions: the Center for Middle EasternStudies and the Adlai Stevenson Institutefor International Affairs. The Center forMiddle Eastern Studies will be primarilyused for the study of culture, although ithas several political scientists on it as well— one of whom, Leonard Binder, was from1964 to 1968 under a $64,000 contract fromthe Air Force to make a report on the rela¬tive stability and instability of different na¬tions of the Middle East. Another, MarvinZonis, wrote a book in Persian exploringwhat forces have prevented a revolutionfrom occurring in Iran.The Adlai Stevenson Institute will be dis¬cussed below. Although separate entities, itshould be noted that both institutions willhave the same board of directors — whichincludes representatives of the First Na¬tional Bank of Chicago and the ContinentalIllinois National Bank, two of the ten larg¬est banks in the US — and that both in¬stitutions will be headed by William Polk.Polk was a member of the Policy PlanningCouncil of the US Department of State from1961 to 1965. He is the author of a veryinteresting unpublished paper entitled “AnAnalysis of Social Change.” This paper be-THE CHICACO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve Aoki, Phil LathropFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Gordon Katz, SusanLeff, Gerard Leval, Joseph Morris, Tom Moss-berg, Ellen Sazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, DavidSteele, John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, Jerry Levy,David Rosenbush, Paul Stelter.Founded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University of fChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in the IHyde 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. • GADFLYgins by explaining that the US “... main¬tains teams of observers, reporters and so¬cial engineers in nearly all of the countriesof the underdeveloped world.” But our pastprograms of support for the traditional rul¬ing classes have not worked toward politi¬cal stability in those countries undergoingrapid modernization. He suggests switchingour support in such cases to the “new men"of the middle class who wield effective po¬litical power.The Adlai Stevenson Institute of Inter¬national Affairs, now situated in RobieHouse, has been engaged in several re¬search projects and conferences over thepast two years. Of these, three in the pastand 1 projected for the future are of par¬ticular interest. In 1968 it held a conferenceon Vietnam, which was attended by variousprofessors: EqbaL Ahmad, expert on laborrelations and guerilla warfare; Polk; Ches¬ter Cooper from the Institute for DefenseAnalyses, notorious because of its role informulating weapons and tactics for thewar; Col Fred Haynes from the MarineCorp; and Sir Robert Thompson, ex-head ofthe British anti-guerilla forces in Malayaand chief British military advisor to the USin Vietnam.A second conference, which took placelast summer, was on the topic of “vio¬lence.” It gave special emphasis to thequestion of student unrest. Attending it,among others, were: Polk; Eqbal, thesame expert on labor relations mentionedbefore; Capt. Patrick Needham, ChicagoPolice Department; and Morris Janowitz,well known for his work on how to keepdown ghetto rebellions, “Social Control ofEscalated Riots.”A third project dealt with setting up apilot project in agricultural development inthe Jalisco State of Mexico. It guaranteesUS businessmen an annual return of 20 per¬cent on their initial investment for 20years!Since the success of the pilot project, alarge scale program funded by 11 major UScorporations has been started, which amember of the Institute described as “mon¬strous” and “dangerous.” He was quick topoint out, however, that the Institute wasnot involved in the large scale program; ithad merely broken the ground.For this spring the Stevenson Institute isplanning a conference about the nation¬alization of oil in Peru. Standard Oil, theproperty of the Rockefeller family, illustri¬ous patrons of the University — used tohave direct control over the oil wells inPeru. With the recent military coup, how¬ever, investors have been kicked out. Theperspective of this conference is to in¬vestigate the possibility of setting up a Lat¬in American common market, wherebyprofits from the distribution of Peruvian oilover the international market could be con¬trolled by US businessmen. First Nat l ofChicago and Continental Illinois Nat’l —board members of the Pahlavi building —are sending interested officials to the con¬ference.A number of people in SDS feel that suchevidence as we have points to the fact thatthe Pahlavi building will be used as a“think-tank” to provide newer and betterschemes for extending the economic andmilitary interests of the US around theglobe. Iran is only one example.The SDS Pahlavi Committee is continuingits research. But we think that it’s crucialfor other interested people on campus tooffer their suggestions, knowledge, andcriticism. We are particularly eager tohear the opinions of students, faculty, andworkers who will be directly associatedwith the Pahlavi building. If you are inter¬ested in working on any aspect of this,please contact us at 288-3010.6/The Chicago Maroon/March 3, 1970VCobb RobbedCobb Hall coffee shop was robbed ofabout $400 some time between Saturdayand Sunday morning, and will be forced toclose unless it can recover or raise thatamount by Friday.According to Craig Eidson, an employeein the coffee shop, the robbery was dis¬covered Sunday by the manager, who im-,mediately called campus police. City policeare also working on the case.Eidson said that the coffee shop is tryingto organize a collection from students sothat it can stay in business. “It’s the end ofthe month, and the bills have come in,” hesaid. “Our contract will be cancelled if wecan’t pay by Friday.”The stolen cash was located in a safewith a combination lock, but Eidson saidthat “anyone at all good at safe-crackingcould have done the job.” He mentionedthat the handle of the safe had been broken,suggesting that the few people^knowing thecombination were not involved. He added,however, that that large an amount of mon¬ey was not usually kept there over theweek-end, and speculated that non-studentswho frequented the coffee shop might havebeen aware of this.Eidson said that the coffee shop’s man¬agement had been asking the University tochange the locks on its doors, complainingabout the number of janitors with masterkeys. The locks have now been changed.Employees in the coffee shop are nowworking without salary, because “we wantto see this place stay open.” SVNA has alsopromised a benefit for the coffee shop nextquarter.BA ExamThe BA final examination in gen¬eral and specific fiqlds for historymajors will be given Wednesday,March 11 from 1 to 4 pm in Quan-trell auditorium. All students wish¬ing to take the exam should regis¬ter in Gates-Blake 206 by Friday,March 6. Eidson said he was “very bitter” aboutthe robbery: “This is a really good place, agood institution. People would rip us off allthe time, and we’d get by somehow; nowit’s all over.”Cobb Hall coffee shop is located in thebasement of Cobb Hall, and is usually filledwith students.Education ProgramA new program at the University to trainteachers who in turn will train other teach¬ers promises to become a significant aid inimproving teaching quality in elementaryand preparatory schools.The program is sponsored jointly by theUniversity’s graduate school of educationand the Chicago Board of Education isfunded by a $292,500 grant from the UnitedStates Office of Education. It was begunlast fall to help bridge a serious gap inteacher training.Known as trainers of teacher trainersprogram (TIT), the project was designedto provide:• In-service training of experiencedclassroom teachers;• Doctoral training for students in teach¬er education, and• New resources for training elementaryand secondary school teachers.Reception PlannedThe University office of admissions andaid plans to invite to campus in early Aprilall black students it plans to admit nextyear.According to Jerome Culp 72, a memberof the student advisory committee to theoffice of admissions and aid, students inter¬ested in working for the reception shouldcontact the office or attend a meetingWednesday at 7:30 pm at the College aidoffice, 5737 University Ave.Pollution ConferenceThe Ad Hoc University committee on theenvironment is planning a series of confer¬ences and workshops to be held on Mon¬days during the second through fifth weeks of spring quarter. Co-sponsors of the seriesare the Center for Policy Studies and theBeardsley Ruml Colloquia.The aim of the conferences is to developframeworks within which the issues of pol¬lution can be understood and courses of ac¬tion evaluated. Various community organi-AbortionConsider infanticide. The death or eventhe suffering of a baby is repugnant to vir¬tually everyone. Radicals on the left agitatefor free post-natal care and provide freebreakfasts for children while corporationexecutives donate to orphanages. We areusually shocked when we first learn thatthe ancient Greeks, our cultural forebears,abandoned unwanted neonates on the near¬est handy mountain side, to die of ex¬posure. Our collective hearts are torn by the sigh of Biafran toddlers — starving —with swollen bellies and withered limbs.Then consider abortion. Those who advo¬cate it as a means of getting rid of unwel¬come responsibilities appear to view theprocess as the simple surgical removal ofunwanted tissue. A supposedly lifeless, soul¬less, impersonal blob is simply jettisoned.In a few months, however, this blob wouldhave become a creature of infinite worth,and the individual who harmed it would beuniversally condemned. To kill it would beTuesday, March 3ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello, University organ¬ist, Rockefeller Chapel, 12:30 pm.TALK: Luis Adolfo Siles, ex-president of Bolivia, "Youthin Latin America", Center for Near Eastern Studies,Kelly 413, 1:30 pm.SHERRY HOUR: Physical Science Collegiate Division,Cobb Coffee Shop, 4:30 - 6 pm.MEETING: Coalition to Stop Pollution Now, Ida Noyesfoyer, 7:30 pm.WRAP: Seminar on the biological basis of sex differ-® Blue Gargoyle 8 pm.MEETING: Outing Club, discussion of interim tripP p|eos, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.•-LICK: "Therese Desqieyroux, Doc Films, Quantrell, 8Pm.bcc£J)ANCING: International House, 8 pm.BEETHOVEN SONATA SERIES: Paul Badura-Skoda,pianist, Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm. SEMINAR: "Tape Concepts and Usage," ComputationCenter, Research Institute 180, 3:30-5 pm.LECTURE: Pierre Cachia, professor at Columbia Uni¬versity, "Popular Narrative Songs: The Folklore ofModern Egypt", Center for Near Eastern Studies, Fos¬ter Hall Lounge, 4:30 pm.FLICK: "Classical Groups as a Source of AlgebraicProblems", the undergraduate math club, Eckart 202,8 pm.FUCK: "The Girl Can't Help It", Doc Films, Quantrell,8 pm.FOLK DANCING: English, Scottish and Scandinavian,Ida Noyes dance room, 8 pm.Thursday, March 5Wednesday, March 4CARILLON RECITAL: Robert Londine, visiting carillo-LPTTn.?£cke,eller Chapel, 12:30 pm.rhii RE: Mor,on< Lieberman, -professor dept, of psy-noiogy and human development, "Time, Remem-a.nd Crisi* in Later Life", Soc Sci 122, Rosen-wa,d 2, 11:30 pm. ORGAN RECITAL: Guest organist. Rockefeller Chapel,12:30 pm.LECTURE: "Biblical Reverberations", third lecturein a series by W. Moelwyn Merchant, visiting profes¬sor at the divinity school and NCD, Swift Commons,4-6 pm.LECTURES: Eugen Pusic, professor of administrationat University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia on "Social Changeand Social Policy: Levels of social and economic de¬velopment as limits to Welfare Policy, SSA lobby, 8GO CLUB: Ida Noyes, 7 pm.HYDE PARK CORNER: Panel including Panthers,Young Lords, Ybung Patriots, high school Black Stu¬dent Union and high school Radical union 3 pm. murder, a crime which, it may be safelyassumed, even the most vigorous advocatesof abortion would abhor along with every¬one else.So it would appear that, at least in theview of the abortionist, some radicalchange has taken place; the question is“when?” At what point did the blob becomea person, with rights to be protected? Wasit when it became an “individual?” Thefetus from the beginning had separate cir¬culatory and nervous systems from themother, thougff they were, to be sure, poor¬ly developed at first. Did the magic mo¬ment occur when it became independentfrom the mother? This won’t occur untilsome time after birth, nor will it develop apersonality until a while after birth.Was it a parturition, the moment ofbe performed guiltlessly just so long as itwas finished before labor would have be¬gun. But if the fetus were properly caredfor, incubated, etc., it still might survive,even after removal; if not properly caredfor, it would not survive even after normalbirth.Would the one who denied it the neces¬sary care at the seventh month be greatlydifferent from the Spartan father who leftan infant daughter out in the weather. Sug¬gesting at this point that the job just beperformed earlier does not help much, formedical technology may soon reach thepoint where it can support the fetus in anartificial environment almost from the very-beginning. So abortion during the thirdmonth would carry about the same moralContinued on Page Nine Leslie Strausszations will also be participating.Each of the four scheduled conferenceswill consist of a seminar followed by work¬shops focusing on the particular issuesraised in the seminar. Each conference willstudy one aspect of the environmentalcrisis: the first will include a general in¬troduction to the problem of pollution and adiscussion of major ecological theories; thesecond will address itself to the economicand political issues involved; the third con¬ference will examine the current legal andpolitical avenues open to citizens; and thefourth will discuss philosophical and radi¬cal overviews of the pollution problem.The third conference will coincide withthe April 22 national teach-in on the crisisof the environment, and will consist of aday-long series of seminars, workshops andfilms. Speakers will include faculty mem¬bers from this and other universities, andexperts in the fields of law, political organi¬zations, and conservation.Students interested in helping to plan theconferences should contact Jim Boiani at955-0341 or Bill Wheeler at 493-6164.Hyde Park CornerRepresentatives of young political groupsin Chicago will discuss their political activi¬ties at this week’s Hyde Park Corner, heldat,the Blue Gargoyle 8 pm Thursday.Participants in the panel will includemembers of the Black Panthers, the YoungLords, the Young Patriots, the High SchoolBlack Student Union, and the High SchoolRadical Union, a city-wide organization ofwhite students.The End Is NearFriday’s Maroon will be the lastnews issue this quarter. The March13 paper will be devoted to “GrabBag: graphics and photographiesfrom University of Chicago students”.YearBox editor David Travis, 70,will edit the supplement.Organizations wishing to announceevents through March 31 in the ca¬lendar should bring notices to theMaroon office, Ida Noyes 303, be¬fore 3 pm Thursday.March 3, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/ 7IV-*CANNED HEAT* JOE COCKERCOUNTRY JOE & THE FISHGRAND FUNK RAILROADGRATEFUL DEAD •jB.B. KINGRICHIE HAVENSTHE HOG FARM*SWEETWATERIRON BUTTERFLY • MOUNTAINKINKS • LITTLE RICHARDJOHN MAYALL*STEVE MILLERJOHNNY WINTERSLY & THE FAMILY STONETEN YEARS AFTERIKE & TINA TURNERPLEASE SEND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO:BOX NO. 34FLOWERTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 19031TICKET RESERVATIONS $20.00 FOR WEEKENDPLEASE SEND__ T TICKET RESERVATIONS'ENCLOSE A SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED ENVELOPEMARCH 27. 28. & 9,9MIAMI. FLORIDA(.ETHER MARCH'^h, 28lh AND 29th, IN MIAMI, FLORIDA TOCELEBRATE WINTERS • END AND PERFORM THE RITES OE SPRING■ bOO ACRES OE QUIET COUNTRYSIDE WILL BE THE HOST.WINTERS • END IS THE HOG FARM AND COMMUNAL KITCHENS,INDIAN TRIBAL GATHERING, TRADING POSTS AND VILLAGES. . $20 FOR THE ENTIRE WEEKEND SH0RELAND HOTELSpecial Rates farStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 doilyDouble bed rooms from $11 00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 doilytake ViewRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveTAhSAM-YANCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY| I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out3 IH East 63rd MU4-I062 EveryoneEATSatGORDON’S1321 E. 57th *Jj£« *;j£t i^i ivi immffltrKirffiwRuSwSttlRwffiiEWttRirSuSiiRirSiiRwSwgngJIWE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTERwith a rank ofDOCTOR OF DIVINITY"And ye shall know the truth and the truthshall make you tree"John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who believe as wedo, to join us in the holy search for Truth. We believe thatall men should seek Truth by all just means. As one of ourministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for ex¬emption from property and other taxes,3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ec-^ clesiastic powers.4. Seek draft exemption as one of our workingmissionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, the¬aters, etc., give reduced rates to ministers.GET THE WH0U PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinityand I.D. card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use whenyou wish to ordain others. Your ordination is completelylegal and valid anywhere in this country. Your moneyback without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send yourOrdination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND NOW TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHP.O. Box 1393, Dept. 66Evanston, Illinois 60204»:«»:< »-•;« >-♦:« >>;« »:«>>:« »;•:« »:•:< >>:« »>;« »>:«»;♦;<»:< »;•:« >;•;« >>:<»;«;« *j*!t «MODERN DANCE CLASSES4:30 to 6:00Monday - SaturdayBallot, Rodr & Jazz tought.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. Slat#Stawns BuildingRoom 1902332 9923 * Cornell Dloeiil* 1645 E. 55th STREETCHICAGO, ILL 60615 *|| Phone: FA 4-1651 If•lJS» »fJlw «rf%,/ -IET *IdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J Wood, Jr., CIUOne North laSolie St., Chic 60602FR 2 2390 - 798 0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondoys,Others by ApptSUN LIFE OF CANADA MUSICRAFTOFFERS SOME SOUND ADVICESAVE $70 TO $190ON SHERWOOD SOLID STATE RECEIVERSSHERWOOD 6000120 WATT AM/FMSOLID STATE RECEIVER3 YEAR WARRANTYREG $419.50NOW $229 50SHERWOOD 6000SHOWN WITH DUAL CHANGERALSO - SHERWOOD 7800160 WATT AM/FM RECEIVER3 YEAR WARRANTY REG $424.95NOW $269 95ON CAMPUSCALL BOB TABOR363-4555M E. Oik St.-OE 1-4156 •MmiOvaftf/The Chicago Maroon/March 3, 1970 2035 W. 95tn St.--715-6506» u. j v* -• f X K4t' * f •'letters to the editors of the maroonContinued from Page Sevent burden as abortion during the eighth.So the original question remains. When inthis gradual, cell-by-cell growth process,does the transformation occur? At what0 point does abortion become infanticide?Ray TindelNear Eastern Lang and Civ> Art ComplaintsUndergraduate students in the art historydepartment have been obedient, diligentand determined in using the availableI means (student-faculty committees, advi¬sors, opinion polls) in our attempt to makenecessary changes in the curriculum pro¬gram of the art history major. For thosestudents in the College who feel that theyhave adequate voice in the present academ¬ic structure and that such changes as stu¬dent observers to the faculty council arenot needed, we wish to relate our ex¬periences in using the given channels. Forothers who have already become dis¬illusioned, let this stand as one more ex¬ample of the faculty’s disinterest in andlack of respect for student opinion andneeds.Let the need for improvement in the un¬dergraduate art history program be illus¬trated by the fact that the faculty-studentratio is 1 to 1.5 but in the six basic requiredcourses the average class size is 56 stu¬dents. After two years of petitions, letters,presentations, and student meetings, weI were finally this year granted participationin a student-faculty committee to study thecurriculum. There were several meetings of^ this committee and student ideas seemed tobe met with some degree of accord, but westudents could not help but feel that thecommittee was only there to listen to ourideas rather than to hash out a proposalagreeable to both parties. This feeling wasconfirmed when two faculty members onthis committee left campus and no replace¬ments were appointed. The third member,in preparation for the all-faculty meeting called to consider the curriculum, wrote areport which falsely implied that it repre¬sented the “recommendations” of the com¬mittee. To that same meeting students sub¬mitted a poll of their opinions which hadbeen gathered from extensive discussionswith all but one of the undergraduate ma¬jors.We were allowed to attend the next facul¬ty meeting where the various proposalswere discussed. The talk began with a dis¬cussion of what kind of a B.A. com¬prehensive examination there should be,the rationale being that from the exam, therest of the program would follow. A patch-up job was the intent of the faculty, andthat is exactly what they accomplished.The fact that 15 out of 17 students opposedthe exam and favored a BA paper or pre¬sentation instead did not matter at all. Wefeel that the following quotations which arenot verbatim but are accurate approxima¬tions of statements made by faculty mem¬bers at the meetings, express faculty re¬sponse to sincere student interest:“A comprehensive examination in theonly acceptable method of avaluating a stu¬dent’s breadth of knowledge.”“If you students don’t get together andtalk about your subject by yourselves, wecertainly can’t help that. We’re not here tohelp you socialize.”“I can understand that those of you whoare not planning to go on to graduate schooland who will become housewives, have nointerest in a rigorous standard of achieve¬ment.”“I would not be able to approve a take-home comprehensive because dishoneststudents would take advantage of the op¬portunity.”“It’s almost five o’clock, so I think wehad better call a vote.” (The meeting hadbegun at 4 pm.)It hardly remains to be reported that onlyone minor change resulted from such “ra¬tional discourse.” It is our conclusion thatapathy on the part of both students and fac¬ulty will continue until students are given actual power in the decision-making pro¬cess to replace the present token participa¬tion.Margo Jones, 71Diana Boldt, '70Schnitzer SpeaksContrary to Doug Kissel’s allegations, asChairman of CORSO last year (1968-69), Inever (at least in my waking hours) servedas Secretary of SG. Nor did I receive anyremuneration from CORSO funds, let alone$800. Nor did any other member of CORSO.We may have sown, but we did not reap.Jeff SchnitzerWhy So Few?On Friday, February 20, at 3 pm, one ofthe major and most intelligent advocates ofhigher education in the Congress of theUnited States spoke at the Oriental In¬stitute. Representative John Brademus hadan audience of about 12 people. As near as Icould tell, there were a few graduate stu¬dents, a smaller number of under¬graduates, no faculty, and no one else fromthe administration.The publicity was insufficient, perhaps,but it should have been adequate for thosewho are interested in the relations, finan¬cial and otherwise, between the federalgovernment and higher education, especial¬ly private institutions like the University ofChicago. Could it be that no one is inter¬ested?Students for example:• Rep. Brademus was perhaps the primedefender of student rights in defeating theoppressive legislation proposed last year inthe House regarding student disorders. Hadhe not been on the Special Sub-Committeeon Education (Higher Education), students,especially those who cannot afford to at¬tend college without aid from federal pro¬grams, would have significantly less free¬dom than they now do. Rep. Brademusmight well infer from his experience on the 20th that his is a voice crying in the wilder¬ness, that he has no support from thepeople he has served well — at least at thisUniversity. I trust that students will beequally quiescent when that voice is over¬powered by more strident ones.• I assume that no students will com¬plain when they find that National Defensestudent loan funds are not available tothem next year. The Nixon administrationhas proposed a budget which allows $20,-000,000 less for the NDSL program than thisyear, a year of drastic reduction itself! RepBrademus pointed out that President Nixonis proving to be a major enemy of highereducation. If the President’s opponents inCongress find the kind of support Mr Brad¬emus found here, they might under¬standably lose some of their enthusiasm forthe fight. NDSL benefits only students, yetnot one student or student group has askedme, to say nothing of Rep Brademus, howthey might help in getting this programfully funded.• Rep. Brademus has been a majorproponent of legislation to help provide forequal opportunity in higher education.There’s a lot of talk around this campusabout such things as equal opportunity. Is itall just talk?Mr Brademus came here primarily tospeak to students; he agreed to come be¬cause he was sponsored by Student Govern¬ment, and this implied that students wereinterested in the role government plays intheir own lives. Does the attendance in¬dicate ignorance or apathy or both?Finally, the absence of faculty and ad¬ministrators is also disappointing. Any whoare interested in the future of this Univer¬sity and education in general must beaware of the importance of men like RepBrademus. He needs their advice, andtheir support, they need his political wis¬dom and his advocacy.Perhaps I’m reading too much into oneincident. Perhaps Rep Brademus’ receptionContinued on Page TenLascivious Scenes at the SVNA Ball»>* T THE BALL: The beautiful people showed up en masse at the Lascivious Costume.ball, Some of the revelers .are sKo^hContinued from Page Onerooms did not materialize, SVNA did man¬age to find a quality film which was shownto a packed house on the second floor.The ball also featured a body-paintingroom, complete with strobe lights, two rockbands and steaming vats of “wild lightningpunch.”SVNA reportedly grossed $900 from theball, of which $700 was needed for thebands, lights, guards and cleanup. “Moneytaken in at the dance will be thrown intothe next dance.” an SVNA spokesman said.March 3. 1970/Th« Chinwo Minvin /QLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page Nineis not an indication that this Universitycommunity is doing too little in this area toensure its own future, as well as the futureof a diverse, pluralistic higher education inAmerica. It does suggest, however, thatstudents, faculty, and administrators alikeshould at least examine their activities tobe certain that they are making every rea¬sonable effort.Timothy W SchollAdmissions and AidLab School CritiqueAs a U-High student, I was very dis¬satisfied with your article in the February24 Maroon (Lab School Exhibits Freedom,Change).In truth, your uncritical quotes of MrRinne and Mr Carmichael are very pro¬vocative to those of us who are more famil¬iar with their words. The administrationcontrols almost everything with a firm, re¬stricting hand. The workload is nonsensi¬cally heavy, and the majority of the teach¬ ers are mild liberals with slightly “ex¬perimental” curriculum. It is so slight thatthe classes for the most part still bore thestudents to death, and a learning ex¬perience is rare.The school administration is smooth inpromoting us, but don’t listen to what wewant, and apparently, are unaware of thegreat amount of freedom involved for aperson to be individually creative. It ap¬pears to me that they care less about usand more about the orderliness of learningand behaving.They take direct orders from the parents,and are very timid about carrying out stu¬dent requests, let alone listen to or under¬stand them.In short, the Lab school is an institutionthat provides the typical atmosphere forthe pre-college education. Over-intellectualeducation that narrows the spirit and limitsthe mind. Contrary to your article, we arenot one big happy, understanding family.We are very unsatisfied with educationalexperience in this school.David LaufeSophomore Maroon BiasMy congratulations on one of the mostbiased, prejudiced pieces of reporting Ihave ever read (Lab School Exhibits Free¬dom, Change — February 24).When one wants to know about the NewLeft, does he only talk to the Nixon-Agnew-Mitchell administration? If he wants toknow about the 1968 Democratic Con¬vention, does he only talk to Mayor Daleyand the City Council? If one reports on jailconditions, does he only interview the war¬den and his guards? Of course not. Whythen, if you wanted to inform the Univer¬sity about Lab School student involvementin school issues, did you only interview theadministration on this issue?Believe it or not, the students in U-Highcan think on their own. They don’t needothers to speak for them. There are severalstudent organizations concerned with get¬ting students involved in decision making.The Student Legislative Co-ordinatingCouncil (SLCC), the official student organi¬zation, was completely ignored in your ar¬ticle. At present, SLCC is trying to get facultyand administrative support for a bill thatwill allow students to represent and/or beallowed to vote on several faculty-adminis¬trative-parental organizations. Despite yourobjective reporting, the going has not beeneasy. Not all of the faculty and adminis¬trators have met us with a smile and openarms. In one instance, we were told tomind our own business (i.e. keep your nose1in a book and keep your mouth shut).The students of the. University HighSchool want to have an influence on theireducation and their academic environment.’On March 3, the faculty will vote on a billallowing student participation in the admis¬sions procedure. In about two weeks, thefaculty and administration will begin to de-'bate and vote on a bill that will allow stu¬dents to be represented on many of the gov¬erning organizations in the high school.This is when we will know if Dewey’s philo-,sophies still live. This is when we will knowhow much support the high school studenthas. This is when we will know if U-High istruly a school of freedom and change.Robert JaffeSLCC Vice President LimefShaDp*68-1-TJegI Me<TheIF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.Where’s the 3 largestwedding ring selection?119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOODEVERGREEN PLAZAllbllhatb'hi (*«.(»$ 'or i» »f*rsPlArCOrS ALL-NIGHT SHOWPftfOSMAWh EIEEOAT i SATJHlOAr EOtlOWING EAST aiGUEAft FEATUREMarch 6 March 7RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY FOUR HORSEMEN OFTHI APOCALYPSEMarch 13 March 14THI LIQUIDATOR THE COMEDIANSMarch 20 March 21Ratty Davis . Batty Davis| WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? DEAD RINGERMarch 27CARTOON FESTIVAL March 28TO IE ANNOUNCEDApril 3Smh C—wry, Tippi HwirwiMARNIE April 4RATTLE Of BRITAINTICKETS SI.SOmimrn,04 N »«mni 444 ,4)4 " »»»*« inr -1.1, o. WrilOur Far East policy [Won|Tea<I Bide| sex ibrings peopletogether.The Jade East manifesto. Its aim: tobring men and women all over the worldcloser together.Our policy would allow for all sorts of skirmishes, territorial gains and conquests.And still keep the peace.Just put some Jade East on your faceand neck. And anywhere else. If you've gota girlfriend, take her out as planned. Ifyou're seeing a few girls, do whatever it isyou're doing.Now comes the best part. Since allgirls are different, all reactions will bedifferent. Some will be aggressive. Others,submissive. But whether our policy leads tofinal agreement or not, one thing's for sure.The negotiations alone will be worththe price. Jade EastMake love, not wanJade East After Shave and Cologne.10/The Chicago Maroon/March 3, 1970m(Maroon Classified Ads)THE WALLS BELONG TO THE PEOPLE!SCENESCRAFT coopruv and Browse at the Craft Coop.Sale of Candles, Jewelry, Pots Etc3 Floor Blue Gargoyle Opens 1PM.Impress your Girl—Take Her to Seersha-NaNa. March 6, 8—Ish.IK Love it or Leave it. . . . Ifyou Decide to Leave it, Fly Amer¬ican Airlines to Either Coast. ForDetails Call Campus Rep Jim Sack684-6667.Chavurat aliya meets again WedMarch 4 8:30 5112 S Kimbark. Willdivide into smaller groups accordingto interest to discuss settlement atKibbutz Mishmar David, or in anurban collective in a developmenttown N. (Maalot?) or S. (Arad?)Also more general info and discus¬sion about role of professional onK bbutz, Dont forget Hebrew con¬versation 7:30: Ride 752-5416 or 652-6120.tpSCD Invites The College For Sher-ry. Come and Create Some Mech¬anism for Student-Teacher interac¬tion. Cobb Basement: Tues. 4:30. .Hyde Park Corner: Radical Groups— at the Blue Gargoyle Thursdaylet 8.Tryouts for Strindberg's A DreamPlay. A FOTA Production Call Ext.2874 or 684-5534 for Appt. March 2-8Sha-Na-Na Tix at Mandel Box OfficeBeginning Today (Sigh).Meet, Talk, Listen; Do You WantThe Opportunity? PSCD Sherry.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)Community Union South Shore Meet-ng to Discuss Community Action ofVarious Kinds Organizing a neigh¬borhood coffeeshop etc. Thursdaynights at 8PM Clairbournes Book¬store 2308 E 71st.Coming Up This Sunday CEF FilmLOVE AFFAIR, Or The Case ofThe Missing Switch-Board Operator.March 8 at 7 & 9PM. Cobb LIBER¬ATED YUGOSLAVIAN COMEDYJUST IN TIME SPRINGTIMEWomen's Lib 8. Gay Lib SponsorTeach-Out, March 8, 6PM, Bus SchBldg, 1912 Sheridan, Evanston onsexual-role liberation.ADVERTISERS!a few matters ofimportance:Because of finals, we will billabout March 18 for advertisingdone in February PIUS that doneon March 3, March 6, and March13. (We will not publish on March10.) Advertising place for theMarch 31 issue will be billed onApril 30. Bills dated March 18 willbe due on or before April 18.TENTH WEEK ISSUE: This will bemostly photos of the Universityand Hyde Park put together byDavid Travis, 3-year Photo Editorof The Maroon and presentlyEdotor of the YearBox, andMaroon Senior Editor, RogerBlack. This will be an especiallywell-read and memorable issue.This will be the last Maroonwinter quarter; the next will beMarch 31.HOUSE FOR SALEjBnck duplex, 7 rooms, 4 bed¬rooms, 2 baths, garage, nearK and library, South Shore,511,000; call 721-0111.- Eat at the Blue Gargoyle.Teach-Out on Sexual-role liberationMarch 8, 6PM, 1912 Sheridan,Evanston.End of the quarter blues gettingto you? Leave the books and joinus for Hebrew 7:30 and Israel set¬tlement disc. (Chavurat aliyah) 8:30tom. 5112 S. Kimbark.What Student-Teacher Interaction?CEFAnother Public Service! CEF Presents Two Free Flicks!Truffaut's Jules and Jim and AlsoShoot The Piano Player at 7:00 and9:00 Respectively on March 11Films Everybody Wants To SeeAgain and Again.SPACEFemale Roommate Wtd. 57th &Dorchester — $65/Mo. 288-6357.2Bd Rm Apt Avail Now to Shre5426 S Ingleside. Call 752-2473 Eve¬nings. Sublet Now-March to Sept. 4RmsOption on Oct Lease. 51 8< Univ.Call 493-6336 Evenings. $117.Female roommate wtd. $50/MonthCall Carol 643-8548.Sell Coop Apt. 5 Rm. Near UC.Modern Building, laundry, parking,yard, play equip. Under $10,000.288-3035.Wanted: A person looking for morethan just a place to live, liver here.Own room. Close to Campus. Call324-6389'"'W-v ' •' • ’•“/ could have had that war won in two weeks — if it hadn’t been forFulbright and Mcamara and Morse and Humphrey and Rusk and Cas¬tro and De Gaulle and . .WANTED:AGGRESSIVE, HARD-NOSED,MISERLY, MATERIALISTIC,MONEY-GRUBBING, FANATIC.What for?To become Business Manager of The Maroon, effectiveJune 15, 1970, and continue through June 15, 1971.REWARDS$$$MONEY$$$A 5-figure income if you want to do this 40 hours per week - $5000 if20 hours, palatial offices in the top of Ida Noyes, free parking oncampus (plus numerous other fringe benefits too numerous and sneakyto mention here)WHO CAN APPLY?Anybody male, female, or in between, who is registered as a student(graduate or undergraduate) at this illustrious university. Any major isfine, but this is especially good experience for:MBA STUDENTSFirst year MBA students; Having financial problems and need re¬warding part-time work? No business experience, but feel you needsome? Kill 2 birds with one stone, and apply today.WHOM TO SEEEmmet Gonder, Business Manager, or Joel Pondelik, Asst. BusinessManagerWHEN TO APPLYNOWApplications will not be considered after March 6, 1970. Nearby unfurn apt. 3 rm. pvt. prch,$105. Free utils. Call 955-9209 or WA2-8411, x311.3>/2 Rm Apt to Sublet March 1 $60Mo. 684-2452 or 363-0665.Furnished Studio Apt $99 a MonFor Rent: 54th and Harper CallFA4-0342.Sublet Spr (Sum) 4RM Apt Furn56 & Drexel $115/mo 955-7767.Male Roommate Wtd. 57th 8, Wood-lawn — $55/Mo. PL2-9647.Wanted: 4 bedroom apt near cam¬pus from June or Sept. BU8-6610ext 1307.Beautiful spacious 5 and .6 rm aptsat 71st & Jeffery for informationcall — Albert H. Johnson RealtyCo., 732 East 75th Street — HU 3-1470.U. of C. lecturer wants to RentHouse, Coachse, or Lg. Apt. withYard for 1 Yr. or Longer by June1st Call 955-4966.FOR SALEYou Deserve Better Than NewarkThis Vacation. Fly American Air¬lines to San Francisco (If You LackCourage, We Also Fly To Newark).Call Campus Rep. Jim Sack at684-6667 for Info.For Sale: Single Bed with LeatherHeadboard. Exc. mattress and boxspring. MU 4-3303.Adler J2 typewriter elite age 4yrs $75 Call 324-9463.RECORDS!Oldies! 20,000 in Stock. Send 35‘for 2,000 listing catalog. MailOrders Filled. RECORD CENTER1895 W. 25th - Cleve., OhioRecord Tapes DUNE ACRES, INDIANAHouse for sale by Own¬er Large, 4 bedrooms.Wooded, lakeview lot.219/926-1589—!■=■„ -..-1. ..MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637dates to runNAME. ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50' per line, 40‘ per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75c perline, 60‘ per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^. You don't needinsuranceprotectionfor your car(if you liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’llwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with.you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971sentryjTINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization For Sale: Exc bed $20 324-8034.21" TV, Desk, 9x12 Gold Rug, PortTyp'r, Stereo Taperec'r, Buffet,Misc. Furn. 7520180, Eves.Squirrel Monkey, 5Mo. Male, ShotComplete, Only $15, 643-7450.Stereo Components at Large Sav¬ings! Save $90 on Sherwood Receiv¬ers. Discounts on AR Dual DYNAGarrard. MUSICRAFT Campus RepBob Tabor 363-4555 Save $DUAL 1019 Record Changer withPickering Cartridge and Base withHinged Plexiglass Dust Cover, Af¬ter 6:00 288-1100x804.PEOPLE WANTED—•Test Your Emotional Sensitivity ina Short, Unique Expt. Call Stuart955-2761.The sales staff of FORM furnitureis seeking a commission for thefurniture they sell. Managementsays no. We welcome the help ofany of the co-op members, who feelthey can be of assistance. Come tothe store, 5201 S. Harper.Free room 8< board in exchange forevening babysitting start now orspring quarter. 684-1369.Babysitter in My Home Vic 57-S.Maryland. Call 643-8139.Wanted for $, Dog lover to Boardand Care for Doberman — 23 Marto 27 Sept 1970 — 493-5470.PERSON WANTED For ParttimeWork 15/Hours/wk. Hours flexiblebut must be during the day. Jobinvolves some office work (typingability required but no shorthandnec.) working out on 63rd st. withblack & white business men & wo¬men (including some liaison workWoodlawn community organiza¬tions). Sex or race immaterial aslong as desire to work in a blackcommunity is present. Call Wood-lawn Business Men's Ass'n at 363-5362.SKIINGSKI JACKSON, WYO. March 20-29.$146 Hurry — 5 places. 6845388.CATS WANTEDPregant 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. Shlaer, ext 2847or 2848.LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA¬TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALL236-1423 9-5 Weekdays.THE UNIVERSITYCOVERS ITS TRACKSWHEN DEALING INITS SLUMSReliable rumbles have it the U. ofC. is converting all of its slumholdings that have marked it th#number one slum landlord intoindividual Delaware corporationswith anonymous shareholders.. .i.e.the University of Chicago.LOST AND FOUNDLost: G. Shepherd (F): Bl, Tan,White; Vic 57 & Maryland; Call 324-6883 — Reward.Reward for Yellow Notebook Be¬lieved Left in Mandel 493-2205.HAPPY BIRTHDAYDASHARIDESNeed Ride to Boston for 3 overBreak. Will share expenses —Please Call FA48200, ext 211.Ride Wanted to Florida — Miami.Share Driving, expenses. 684-2452.PERSONALTrade Charter Flight Return Tickets(London to Chicago); Have 2 Re¬turns Oct 2 (Fit 70D), Will Tradefor Sept 20 (Fit 70A). Call 383-0078or 682-3433.Sha-Na-Na. Greasy. Cool.Don't Walk Through Any DarkAlleys, Gordon.Elvis and Ricky Cant CompareWith Dreamy Keen Sha-Na-Na.LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue Nick Reread the Keats. Relax. DoWhat You Want To. (smile)Who're Elvis and Ricky? Huh?Sound Investment ServiceSave $ on All Stereo SystemsAt MUSICRAFT on Campus CallBob Tabor 363-4555 and Save $$The Kids Thought I was SquareUntil I showed Them My Tickets toSha-Na-Na. Now I'm a BMOC.Light-lovers: Don't spend yourmoney on GE lightbulbs when youare entitled to 10 free ones fromevery electric bill. Bring in your billto Berman's Hardware, 53rd andKenwood and they'll give you 10bulbs of up to 150 watts.Confidential to EW: stay away fromthe phone until you learn how touse it.There are some very strange peopleat the lascivious ball. There werealso some very normal people act¬ing very strange.Confidential to ID: where the hellwere you Saturday night anyhow?Thanks to St Jude for favors grant¬ed — RNThanks to RN for favors granted —St JudeConfidential to NC: how does itfeel up there against the wall?The following is a free political an¬nouncement — Foran, you are astoned drag.Confidential to ATG: who says apaper needs footnotes. Pedant.Pentax H3v BodyUsed $75.0024mm f/3.5 SuperTakumarUwd 95.00150mm f/4.0 SuperTakumarUMd 75.00Cannon Pellix f/1.8UMd 175.00Leica M3 DR f/2.0SummicronUm«) 195.0050mm f/2.0 SummitorUMd 40.00Yashkamot 1.24UMd 74.00tuna ProUMd 35.00200mm f/4.5 LentarUMd 20.0085-205 Sun ZoomUMd 80.00Cannon Ql 1.9UMd 60.00foloroid 103UMd 45.00Nikon Super 8 Movie Camera, New;Regular price $270.00, Discounted to $210.00Our fiom it received fresh weekly from KodakPicture Blocks in Stock24-hour black & white and color slideprocessing 48-hour block & white and colorslide processing 48-hour color printprocessingExhibit of Dovid Travis's Photographs1342 E. 55th St.HY3-9259 _APPEARING SOONMarch 3, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/111a'hMreR j ■TORChBOOksJust publishedMIRCEA ELIADEThe Two andThe One“A stimulating synthesis of psy¬chology, anthropology, and reli¬gion.”— The Catholic Herald. “Aninterpretation of religious lorethat looks for the most possiblemeaning.” — WAITER ARNOLD,Commonweal TB/1483 $1.95ERICH FROMM, D. T. SUZUKI& RICHARD DE MARTINOZen Buddhismand Psychoanalysis“The first major attempt to bringtogether two of the most power¬ful forces operating in the West¬ern mind today." — CHRISTMASHUMPHREYS. A Harper ColophonBook. CN/175 $1.60CLAUDE LEVI-STRAUSSThe Rawand the CookedIntroduction to a Scienceof Mythology"[This book] adds yet anotherchapter to the tireless quest fora scientifically accurate, estheti-cally viable, and philosophicallyrelevant cultural anthropology.”— Natural History. Translatedby John and Doreen Weightman.TB/1487 $2.95john t. McAlister, jr.,& PAUL MUSThe Vietnameseand Their Revolution"Some of the most thought-provoking, poetic essays so farwritten upon the Vietnamese rev¬olution and the Vietnamese peas¬ant's intimate relationship to it.”— ALEXANDER WOODSIDETB/1503 $1.95Tfct iteiriMci mmt He K <tv\•mt! the CookedAt all bookstoresbfn Harper &) RowIHI7 49 Fast 3Td StreetNew York, N Y. 10016DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 fheCirt versify ef Chicege*ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street at Woodlawn AvenueSunday, March 22 • 3:30 P.M.J. S. BachBt. ilattlmiipafiHumRICHARD VIKSTROMDirector of Chapel MusicDonald Doig, EvangelistHenri Noel, ChristusLaury Christie, sopranoPhyllis Unosawa, contralto. George DeLo'ie... tenorTsuiomu Mesuko, baritoneTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 24 members ofTHE CHICAGOSYMPHONY ORCHESTRATICKETS: $4.50 Reserved$3.50 General Admission$3.00 UC Fac/Staff$2.50 Students of all collegesand universitiesAVAILABLE: All TICKETRON out-lets including Marina City, 300 N.State, and all Ward and Fieldstores. Cooley’s Corner, 5211 S.Harper; Woodworth's Boolstore,1311 E. 57th.Reynolds Club Desk, 5706UniversityMAIL ORDERS: Chapel Music,59th Street and Woodland Ave.,Chicago 60637.Please make checks payable toThe University of Chicago and en¬close self-addressed envelope.WE NEED YOUITO NEED US!TYPING WORKWE EXPERTLY TYPE ANY WORKYOU NEED.OVERNIGHT SERVICE IF RE¬QUIRED.BRAND NEW EQUIPMENT CON¬SISTING OF I.B.M. "SELECTRIC"TYPEWRITERS.CHOICE OF TYPE FACES ANDSPACING.VERY REASONABLE RATES TAI¬LORED TO YOUR BUDGET.CALLABILITY GIRL776-3854Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.Bu t the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.RENAULT:oCeAluJmportl,Jsnc.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 INDONESIA FOOD - DRUNKSd’v ^ W Jl ftI 1 '! * * r1 i-5 fv ‘li 1 rc \ > V.XIijTHE VOLSTEAD ACT2238 N. LINCOLN348*7228*■&&&&&& jpofcfcjpJlp jb jf.dipJic.jb jf.%.f* v* *s s* 190 East Delaware MBA Students! Are youj*getting fed up with your present job? Tired off*f* dressing up in dress, hose, girdle, etc. or suit,4*-ft ( «4* white shirt, and tie? Tired of getting peon'sf*f* wages while studying for your MBA? Like to getff4t ft■j* out of that horrible drag, get your MBAf+quicker, run your own show, wear what you ftft ft£ damn well please to work, and get some really £ft i i ftu good work experience?5 ft| EARN $10,000 OR MORE! $|^l have audited financial statements proving^^ that the Business Manager of The Maroon |£made this much in one school year by working40 hours per week. ft| APPLY TODAY (APPLICATIONS CLOSED ON|ft MARCH 6, 1970) Call Emmet Gonder or Joel ftft ftft Pondelik, at home, or at The Maroon,ftft 643-0800, extension 3263 for details. ftf j this summermake Israelyour campusAmerica’s only chartered university in IsraelBar-Ilan Universityannounces a special summer program combiningthe opportunity to study for college creditwith off-campus participation in the excitingcultural and social life of Israel.<Uuly 12 to August 23«L selection of courses inpolitical science, religion,literature, language;opportunity to earn upto 6 creditsC classes in Englishcopen to undergraduateand graduate students,teachers, and others whohave completed at leastone semester of college C coeducationalC excellent living facili¬ties on modern campus inRamat Gan, near Tel AvivC tours throughout Israel,field trips, cultural events,recreation, etc. -C single fee of $995.Covers all expenses (trans¬portation, tuition, hotelsand dormitory accommo¬dations, dining, tours,gratuities, etc.)For full information write: Office Of AdmissionsBar-Ilan University / 641 Lexington AvenueNew York, N. Y. 10022 / 212-751-6366Bar-Ilan University is a liberal arts and sciences institutionchartered by the New York State Board of Regents.The University invites inquiries about regular academicprograms extending one year or longer.WoRCH £ at«9f>(0D£l&KH GREASEBOBBY SoxPONY TAILSZOOT SUITSTOUGH iCOOL...f)W0T»eftt>ISTH\)6UISH£0KtVlTAUZAT/OfUPftODUcr/OA/ bl ,! [*. Nj h. S ii Cl> v ■ show.Tney io:-.’. cat, .resseo f*t to *.<■! inassoitmei.’. c: g-dj lame, black pant*,,\H:e 5GCf.>, t—*hirts, etc , and pro-c«‘ec : ) pos • ..nd mug their waythrou. ar c.enir.g of golden oldies.Trey run tr.roi.gh all your favorites,err.Dedishing them with tre perform-ar.ee c.iChes of fifties roCK— cnoreo-graphed steps, hand-wringing, tneme.odramatic delivery. Along treWwV, they c*.cr. the inevitable laughs,str.ke tne correct response chordsand firai'.y split,-leaving a sea of smil¬ing races. It's a good old time for ev¬ery ood/.You should go see Sha-Na-Na ifthey come your way oecauv aJ'-n-teoly, they're a lot of fun to watch.12/The Chicago Maroon/March 3, 1970