MAROONVolume 78, Number 43 The University of Chicago Friday, March 6, 1970John Hope Franklin, Manley dis¬tinguished service professor and chairmanof the history department, said that the ar¬ticle didn’t refer to him and he didn’t knowwhom it was about.Allison Davis, professor of education,said that he knew of no black faculty mem¬bers in whose classes this “monitoring”was the case, but suggested that whatEvans and Novak were referring to was aseminar given by former graduate studentsin sociology which he believes were attend¬ed by Panthers. Morris Janowitz, professorand chairman of sociology, did not recallany such seminar and knew nothing of thealleged unauthorized auditing by BlackPanthers.The office of Evans and Novak in Wash¬ington, D C was contacted Wednesday andThursday, but at neither time would eithercolumnist speak to a Maroon reporter. Anassistant explained that the informationwas given in confidence by a faculty mem¬ber. While assuring the reporter that “ifit’s printed, it is correct,” she added thatshe knew nothing of the matter and wassure neither columnist would be willing totalk.Reaction among faculty and adminis¬trators was a combination of disbelief andsurprise. John T. Wilson, provost of theUniversity, commented, “I always takeEvans-Novak with a grain of salt.” EddieWiLiams, vice president for public informa¬tion, expressed no knowledge of who theprofessor was. Janowitz said of the column,“It’s a big thing. People have been talkingabout it for the past two days and not justthe Panther section.”Blackwood Says Limited SayIn Best Interest of UniversityIn a letter distributed to members of theUniversity Senate last week by four chem¬istry professors, music professor EasleyBlackwood is asking the Senate to voteagainst the recommendations of WegenerCommittee report discipline. The rejectionsare called for on the basis that “more stu¬dent power is against the best interest ofthe students themselves.”The Wegener report released December4, recommended that students should bevoting members of College disciplinarycommittees. The report, which was writtenby six faculty members and three students,proposed a system requiring five facultyand two students to sit on disciplinary com¬mittees.The Wegener report is currently beforethe University Senate for approval.Blackwood, who could not be reached forcomment Thursday, supported the stand ofbusiness professor Harold Demsetz. Dem-setz, a member of the Wegener committee,wrote a dissenting opinion in the report.Demetz said in his opinion, that his evi¬dence “strongly supports the belief that the inclusion of students on the disciplinarycommittee results in a reduction in the se¬verity of the sanctions.”Another dissenting opinion, signed bymath professor Paul Sally and assistant tothe ombudsman Tim Lovain, 70, recom¬mended a greater student involvement indisciplinary committees.Blackwood, in his letter dated February7, said:“Whatever conciliatory gestures we of¬fer the students must not be at the expenseof that which protects our academic free¬dom. It is clear that the only organ capableof this fundamental task is our Universitygovernment. . .The placing of voting stu¬dents on any academic policy committee ofthis University can only have the effect ofcompromising the power of its govern¬ment.”The four chemistry professors who aredistributing Blackwood’s letter to the Uni¬versity senate are Gerhard Closs, PhilipEaton, J W Stout, and W H Urry. Black¬wood’s letter was originally addressed tothe Council of the Senate. The legal basis of the claim is that inacting as an employment agency by offer¬ing “a cordial and efficient placement ser¬vice,” to firms discriminating againstwomen, the law school violates section 703(b) of the title:It shall be an unlawful employment prac¬tice for an employment agency to fail orrefuse to refer for employment or other¬wise discriminate because of sex.The EEOC has also specified that jobsmay not be restricted to members of onesex because of “preference of co-workers,employers, clients or customer,” tradition¬al restriction to members of the oppositesex, or requirement of personal character¬istics not exclusive to either sex.Some interviewers have reportedly saidthat their clients (often labor unions) would*refuse to deal with women, that womenlawyers were an economic loss, or thatwomen “are not equipped to.. .deal suc¬cessfully with business clients becausewomen are essentially passive and submis¬sive.”Last October, Nicholas Bosen, dean ofstudents of the law school, sent a letter toShearman & Sterling, a major New Yorklaw firm, concerning a charge made byNancy Grossman. He later retracted theContinued on Page FourWomen File Discrimination SuitBy Allen FriedmanA group of women law students is on theverge of setting a new legal precedent in itsattempt to achieve job equality, by suingthe law school here for violating Title VIIof the 1964 Civil Rights Act.The Law Women’s Caucus (LWC) hasfiled a complaint with the Equal Employ¬ment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)charging the law school with furthering dis¬crimination in hiring and placement ofwomen by certain law firms by allowingthem to use the school’s facilities to inter¬view applicants. They have not yet decidedto go to court, that decision depending onthe school’s response to their demand.Marjorie Gelb of the LWC described the ultimate goal of the suit, which is probablythe first of its kind, as seeking “to makeevery law firm in the county shape up.”The LWC approached law school deanPhil Neal with signed statements by womenstudents which Gelb saw as “indicatingthat this problem. . .is a real and pressingone.” According to a statement by law stu¬dent Judith Bernstein, an interviewer forthe firm of Kelley, Drye, Newhall, Ma-ginnes and Warren of New York City toldher that “We don’t hire women.”He also reportedly said that if womenwere hired by the firm they would have to“sleep with the senior partners.” Accordingto Miss Bernstein, the interviewer later ex¬plained that the purpose of his comment was to “test her mettle” under pressure.Neal replied in a letter dated February 5that he would initiate “a review and re¬statement of our policy desirable now.” Hehas also set up a faculty committee tostudy the issue and make recommendationson policy. He proposed pushing back theLWC’s February 9 deadline to announce anew policy since the next placement seasonwould not be until after spring. Neal told aMaroon reporter that “it is entirely likelythat we will have some sort of statement inour next brochure,” which is issued in thespring. Associate professor Owen Fiss, pro¬fessor Bernard Meltzer and professor Stan¬ley Kaplan have been appointed to the com¬mittee. They have been meeting with afive-woman committee.Phil LattiropJOHN HOPE FRANKLINArticle isn't about himSteve Aokl By Con HitchcockDespite statements in a nationally syndi¬cated column that a black professor here ishaving his class monitored “against ideal-ogical deviation” by two Black Panthers,black members of the faculty have deniedthat such a situation exists.A spokesman for Rowland Evans andRobert Novak, authors of the column whichappeared in the Sun-Times Wednesday,however, reaffirmed that the statementscontained within the column were true.The column described the University as a“paradise” compared with “often out¬rageous classroom intimidation practicedby student radicals across the cduntry.”They explained the reason for this as thefact that “the faculty and Levi believe inthemselves, unlike many educators acrossthe country.” It added “the Chicago facultybelieves it has an invaluable product thatshould not be denatured by studentwhims.”The response of black faculty membersto the charge concerning the Panthers wasnegative.Alphonso Pinkney, visiting professor ofsociology, said that even though he teachesa class in sociology of blacks, in whichmany black students are registered, heknew of no Black Panthers in the courseand denied the charge that he was furiousat the challenge to his authority.Last MaroonThis is the last news Maroon ofwinter quarter. There will not bean issue this coming Tuesday, butnext Friday will feature our tenth-week issue, a photographic andgraphic examination of the Univer¬sity edited by photographer-extra-ordinare, David Travis. Ad materialwill be accepted until the normalFriday deadlines.The first Maroon of spring quarterwill be Tuesday, March 31. Untilthen, have a happy.Black Faculty DeniesPanther MonitoringSVNA LASCIVIOUS BALL: Students at SVNA's activity before the skinny-dip II.Students Consider UnionizingA group of students in cooperation withstudent government (SG) is finalizing plansfor a “union of students.”The purpose of the union is to put togeth¬er a structure which could put pressure onthe University in the pursuit of certaingoals. Organizer of the student union proj¬ect is Larry Lambert, a graduate student inphysics and chairman of SG’s committeeon the constitution of the university.In commenting on the reasons for devel¬oping such a union, Lambert said, “It isright and it is necessary that students gettogether to organize and build a position ofstrength.”While Lambert concedes that creating aviable union will require much time andeffort, he is confident that students will ac¬tively participate in this project. A drive formembers will begin the first day of springquarter.Although the union membership willmake all decisions regarding policies and tactics, possible goals have been consid¬ered. Among those presently deemed fea¬sible are the right to collective bargainingover wages and working conditions for stu¬dent employees, the right to negotiateeducational and administrative policies andpriorities in teaching and research, and theright to negotiate the hiring, firing and pro¬motion of professors.Tactics that are being considered for theimplementation of the possible goals rangefrom strikes by student employees to thewithholding of rent, dormitory and boardfees and tuition.John Siefert, 71, who is participating inthe creation of the student union, pointed tothe precedent that such a union would set,“This is being done as a pilot project; if theUniversity of Chicago can be unionized, socan the other 400,000 college students in Il¬linois.”Continued on Page NineStraight Talk:Your diamond is at...DNf jfWElEftS »0« 59 Yf ACS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZADR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 NEELY’SSTANDARDSERVICETo Our CustomersI have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we cancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and better service.Please join us at our new location.6600 So Stony IslandPhone Bl 8-9645Thank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard Service5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRY Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.Bu t the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.RENMTf2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL 326-25502/The Chicago Maroon/March 6, 1970 Skinny-Dip II RaisesQuestion of HairinessA crowd of 151 appeared to attend thesecond nude swim-in sponsored by the Stu¬dents for Violent Non-Action (SVNA)Wednesday evening — but at least one“reveler” was turned away.“A guy from (Cook County) SherriffJoe’s (Woods) office wanted to come in,”one SVNA member said! When he was re¬fused admittance, “he said he was going toget a warrant and come back.” But by thenit was nearing 10 pm and the two-and-one-half hour swim-in was nearly over, thespokesman said.Unlike last week’s swim-in, SVNA did notreserve exclusive use of the pool. For thisreason, a spokesman said, suited batherscoexisted with swim-inners — “but as theevening wore on the bathing suits dis¬appeared as the nude hordes descended..”An SVNA lifeguard noted that conditionsfor swimming were better than last weekbecause there was “more turnover”.SVNA spoke to the dean of students officeTuesday regarding pool party plans. Whilethe office did not openly prohibit futureswim-ins, assistant dean of students JamesVice qualified his position in a letter toSVNA dated March 4.In the letter Vice said, “In view of the size and water circulatory capacity of theIda Noyes pool, swimming in the pool atany one time must be limited to 60 peopleto meet the minimal demands of sanitationand drainage.”The assistant dean added, “Students withlong hair, whether they are male or female,are asked to wear some adequate bathingcap. The filtration system is simply notequipped to handle a very hairy crowd.“I assume none will be heckled or ha¬rassed for waring reasonable swimminggarb.”SVNA has interpreted Vice’s commentsto mean that fewer than 60 nude swim-in¬ners wearing bathing caps will be okay, aspokesman said, but that the group willcontinue “negotiating” on the provisions.Future swim-ins are planned for nextThursday from 7:30 to 10 pm and duringspring quarter at the Point. Although “avisit from Sherriff Joe’s office” is expectednext week, the mechanics of getting intothe building and having any warrant readand checked by a University counsel wouldgive swimmers time to clear out.“You don’t have to let them in imme¬diately,” the SVNA spokesman said. “Weknow our legal rights.”Income TaxPreparationExpert ServiceWhile You WaitHerrTax Service Centers5503 Hyde Pk.2303 E. 71st955-2120 CARPET BARNWAREHOUSENr* and Lsed CarpelsRrmnants and Rail EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Ru^s & Fur (oatsInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Davs Tues.-thru Sal. 9-41228 W. kinzir 243-2271 scienceengineeringMali anil I i inali'recent graduatesB. S. 59,600-511,500ChemistryChemical EngineersBiological SciencesMechanical EngineersIndustrial EngineersElectrical EngineersPhysicsCivil EngineersMathM.S. IN ALLABOVE DISCIPLINESS12,000-513,500M. B. A. SI2,000*513,500PH. D.'s SCIENCEOR ENGINEERING$14,000,516,000Our clionti pay all fool, offordraft axamptloni. For a markatlurvtv of pofitiont for whichyou qualify, call W. L. Organ,427-0706Technical DiviiionC.I.P., Inc.332 S. MichiganEmployees PetitionFor Day Care CenterDavid TravisFlint First Official Coed DormWhile 60 residents of Flint house lookedon, the women on the third floor landing,the men on the second floor, Ed Turking-ton, director of student housing, cut the rib¬bon which was strung through the stairwell.From 5 pm March 4 onward, Flint house, inthe Woodward Court complex, is to be acoeducational house with no impedimentshindering traffic between the respectivemembers.The ceremony, which was also attendedby James Vice, assistant dean of students,began when Jim Sack, ’72, president ofLower Flint and master of ceremonies,turned the proceedings over to the keynote speaker, Greg Hancock, the resident headof Lower Flint. Hancock, attired in a tux¬edo, commented upon the long wait forthis affair. A scissors was then presented toTurkington, who, before the historical cutwas made, declared that a telegramwrapped around a rock had been thrownthrough his window that morning. Turking¬ton said that th2 telegram read, “It’s abouttime” and signed Wallace FranciscoSmyrd.The ribbon cutting was then toasted andTurkington and Sack acted as traffic offi¬cers as the first flow of men ascended thestairs, and the women descended to dinner. University Child Care, Inc. (UCCI) hasbeen operating a table outside Billings cafe¬teria during lunch hours (11 to 2) every daythis week to collect signatures for prospec¬tive clients. A sign over the table reads,“UC’s first employee-student child carecenter.. .Make your needs and ideas knownin a committee on fund-raising, program,staff, or long-range planning. Yearly mem¬bership per family: $.25”The group, which grew out of four peoplewho responded to vice president of planningWalter Walker’s offer last year to workwith interested individuals, now has an in¬terim board of directors, consisting of sev¬en members. There are six women and oneman; two members are graduate studentsand four are University employees. Theoriginal four were active with Woman’sRadical Action Project (WRAP) in organ¬izing support for a free day care center andlater joined the University Daycare Com¬mittee, headed by Walker. Prospectiveclients become members of the “not-for-profit, tax-exempt corporation” by signinga slip of paper and paying the membershipfee.According to Mrs Rebecca McIntyre, whoran the table Thursday, the University hassaid it is willing to buy the Church of theRedeemer at 56 St and Blackstone for apilot project if the corporation can gather asubstantial number of members. The corpo¬ration will have to raise funds for costs oth¬er than purchase of the building and neces¬ sary equipment. They hope to do thisthrough foundation grants and local fundraising efforts. UCCI needs to have an or¬ganized client group and a proposal forfoundation grants by the end of June, whenthe Church’s lease lapses, so the Universitycan take advantage of the option to buy.Mrs McIntyre is an employee in the ac¬quisitions department of Harper Library,an author of the report on daycare commis¬sioned by the Walker Committee, and amember of that committee and the interimboard. She said about 40 people, mostly em¬ployees from lower-paying jobs on campus,mailed in postcards supporting the daycarecenter in response to street canvassing.One-page resumes of “a report submittedto the University Daycare Committee, Sep¬tember 1969 by Connie Stevens and BeckyMcIntyre” are available at the table. MrsMcIntyre said the table will be set up inother locations around campus. She saidthe “University would like mostly workers”to be served by the day-care center, butthat it would be open to students, too. Any¬one connected with the University may be¬come a member of the corporation. Al¬though most of the members should bepeople with children, who will have a vitalinterest in the project, individuals withoutchildren are welcome to join if they wouldlike to help as organizers or contribute inother ways. For further information aboutjoining the corporation call Mrs McIntyreat 955-1038 or Mrs Stevens at 955-2096.Progress Comes Slowly In Cancer ResearchBy Wendy Glockner and Chris Froula“Progress comes in creeps, not leaps andbounds.” Thus Dr Alexander Gottschalk,director of Argonne Cancer Research Hos¬pital, characterizes the advancement ofcancer research at the University of Chi¬cago. •Cancer research at the University in¬department in the biological, clinical, andphysical sciences. Ben May Laboratoriesand Argonne Cancer Research Hospital arethe two formally-organized centers wherecancer research is underway.Talking to scientists here reveals thatcancer research involves as much in¬vestigation into the basic life processes ofnormal cells a working directly with can¬cerous tissue. Dr. Josef Fried, professor atBen May Labs and in the departments ofchemistry and of biochemistry explainsthat basic work is necessary before mean¬ingful advances can be made. “The cancerproblem is too complex for the biologicaland chemical tools which we have for deal¬ing with it, and short cuts won’t solve theproblem,” he says. “Development of theproper tools means increasing the chanceof finding answers to the causes and pro¬gress of cancer.”Argonne was established and funded bythe Atomic Energy Commission for the pur¬pose of using radioactivity in medically ap¬plicable ways, for example, to use radio¬active isotopes for diagnosis and treatmentof disease and disease states. Leon Jacob¬son, dean of the division of biological scien¬ces and Pritzker school of medicine, origi¬nated it as an outgrowth of the ManhattanProject. Jacobson believed that the study ofbiomedical applications of atomic energybelonged in the domain of the hospital andmedical school, and that a university envi¬ronment is essential for research. “Thenice thing about Argonne,” says Dr SamuelWeiss, professor of the department ofbiochemistry and associate director of Ar¬gonne, “is that the people who work he~eare topnotch scientists in many differentfields. Thus, extensive cross fertilization re¬sults, since communications are goodamong people of different disciplines.”The Ben May Laboratory was created in1951 by Dr Charles Huggins, Ogden dis¬tinguished service professor, in order to bring together an interdisciplinary team towork in cancer research. “Ben May Labshas been a training ground for researchpeople in academic medicine and has alsocontributed to experimental medicine,”said Dr Elwood Jensen, director of the lab¬oratories. The lab was established and ismaintained financially by Ben May, awealthy Alabama businessman. Doctors af¬filiated with the lab are funded also bygrants from the American Cancer Societyand-the National Institutes of Health. Thescientists at Ben May study the control ofnormal growth mechanisms and the regu¬lation of cells.Cell Mechanisms StudiedAmong research being conducted at Ar¬gonne is Dr Weiss’ study of what happensto a normal cell when a virus infects it. “Avirus is a piece of genetic material — DNAor RNA — wrapped in a protein coat, and isa biochemical parasite. Upon entering anormal cell, it may live happily with thecell, can kill it or transform it into a can¬cerous cell, which may then grow beyondcontrol of the body, thus producing cancer¬ous tissue,” he explains. “Thus far, wehave found some vents previously undis¬covered, which may explain the way inwhich the virus affects the cell mechanism,causing it to select the genetic message ofthe virus rather than that of the host.“In studying viruses, we find informationabout cell mechanisms that is common toall calls. For example, it is known thatsometimes a virus infects a cell, but re¬mains dormant until a stimulus, such asradiaion, triggers its action. Or, an embry¬onic cell makes proteins that it doesn’thave later, turning different parts of awhole warehouse of information on and offat various times in its life. The mecha¬nisms by which cells turn chemical infor¬mation on and off are fantastically com¬plicated, and we get ideas about them fromstudying viruses. If we can understand pro¬cesses in a virus-infected cell, then we canpass on to other areas of problems with thisnew knowledge, and accomplish more.“For about 12 years, Dr Weiss has beenstudying how the genetic material of a cellexpresses itself. A few months after comingto Argonne in 1958, he discovered the en¬zyme that creates RNA from DNA in ratliver nuclei. At Ben May, Dr Fried is working on pros¬taglandins, a newly discovered group ofhormones present in all cells, “An in¬finitesimal amount can have powerful ef¬fects on blood pressure and can cause con¬traction of involuntary muscles. Our phaseof research involves trying to synthesizethese compounds from their buildingblocks, since they are present in such tinyquantities that they are very difficult to ex¬tract from the cell,” he explains.“A second aspect of our work involvesthe interactions of these hormones with themacromolecules — usually proteins —which trigger their physiological action. Allhormones act by combination with a par¬ticular macromolecule, which ‘recognizes’it through the criterion of the specificity ofits chemicai structure. Usually you can’tfool the macromolecule into accepting an¬other than this specific molecule, but wehave found a way to present the hormone-receptor with a molecule which is verysimilar in chemical structure to that of thehormone, it then combines with the recep¬tor, but fails to elicit the hormone’s usualreaction. If you have enough of this macro¬ molecule in combination with the hor¬mone, it blocks the entry of the correct one,and thus you have an anti-hormone, be¬cause it prevents the action of the hormonefrom being triggered.Hormone inhibition provides research tool“These findings are important becauseby inhibiting the action of hormones, youcan discover something about the mecha¬nism by noticing what doesn’t happen —you have another research tool. On a prac¬tical level, possibilities for utilizing thesefindings include inducing abortions, sincethe protaglandins’ function is to stimulatecontraction of involuntary muscles, ofwhich the uterus is one; and in preventingmiscarriages, since an antihormone mightbe administered to prevent this stimulationfrom occurring prematurely. You can alsomodify the hormone’s action, making it aweak antagonist-effector, by manipulatingits chemistry.”He continues, “Dr Huggins won the NobelPrize for establishing the connection be¬tween steroids and cancer, and now weContinued on Page FiveMarch 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3By Audrey ShalinskyThe National Organization of Women(NOW) has decided to begin recruitment ofmembers here and on other nearbycampuses according to Phyllis Bere, chair¬man of the Equal Rights Alliance (ERA), agroup of NOW members who have receiveda second charter for the Chicago area fromthe national committee.A coffee will be held at St. Paul’s UnitedChurch of Christ, 655 W Fullerton Parkwayfrom 2-4 pm March 8 to “involve youngerwomen in the NOW movement,” Bere, whoprefers to be called either Phyllis or Bere but “never Miss or Mrs” said. The Nationalconvention of NOW will be held in ChicagoMarch 20 through 22.It is emphasized, Bere added, that menas well as women are invited to join. “Thething that makes men join is either a deepsense of justice or a boredom with the life-size Barbie doll that society tries to palmoff on them.”Bere believes that NOW has never triedto recruit from the University because itwas “mistakenly felt that nobody here wasinterested in what we had to say. NOW hasbeen pictured to younger women as leftoverMoratorium Plans April ProtestMore than 100 signatures on the morato¬rium’s “We Won’t Go” statement havebeen collected here, a spokesman for theUniversity moratorium said Thursday.The statement reads: “If ordered for in¬duction, I, the undersigned, will refuse. Iwill not serve in the military as long as thewar in Vietnam continues.”“This is really a good response — but weneed many more,” said Roger Black, afourth year student, and one of the orga¬nizers of the effort. He urged draft-eligiblestudents to consider the statement and tosign if they could.The “We Won’t Go” campaign is the firstnational action undertaken by the Vietnammoratorium committee since the “astonish¬ing” lack of response to the November 15march by the Nixon administration, Blacksaid.Black outlined the actions the morato¬ rium is planning this spring:• The nationwide “We Won’t Go” state¬ment, with release timed for Congressionalhearings on the draft later this month• National taxpayers demonstrations atInternal Revenue Service centers April 15to point out the inflationary weight the warhas put on everyone who pays taxes orbuys things in this country organizers hopeto recepture the mood of October 15; and• A three-day fast for peace, April 13, 14,and 15The moratorium is now setting up a localoffice, in the Loop, which eventually maybe the Midwest regional office — Chicago isthe largest city, and the Midwest the larg¬est region without a regular moratoriumorganization.The group hopes to collect all the draftstatements by March 10. Black asked stu¬dents who would be willing to help dis¬tribute leaflets to call him at 955-4706.IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.kickapocreek ^outdoorrockconcertmay 30,31This is your invitation to th« first KicKapoo Creek Outdoor Rock Festival We have as¬sembled one of the finest lineups of musical talent available The concert will be heldon 300 acres of farm land 8 miles South of Bloomington. Illinois All necessary medical,sanitation, and eating facilities will be provided, along with plenty of free parking Ourlocation is easily accessible as well as an ideal location So. let s come together inpeace. Memorial Day. May 30. 1970SEND CHECK or MONEY ORDER to TICKET PRICESNan*Addraaac«y SM ZipSchool1 Endow! For KM* UNTIL March ISMOO anth couponAFTER March ISSiOOO a* aMaaON May X• IS OO at Oata businessand artsMade and Femalerecent graduatesB. A. OR B. S.$9,000-$l1,000AccountingFinanceMarketingEnglishHistoryPsychologyChemistryM. A. - M. S. - M. B. A.$11,000-514,000MarketingAccountingFinanceStatisticsEconomicsPersonnelOperations researchPsychologyManagementMathPH.D’s ANY OF ABOVE$13,000*$16,000All of tht above salaryquotationi art withouteoneidtratlofi of #nptrlancrFor further Information call:Managar-Collaga Recruiting341-1190C.I.P., Inc.332 S. MichiganOur clients pay all faet-offardraft axemptioni. Wa also haveeome summer positionsevalieble poor suffragettes or as old ladies in flow¬ered hats.” She feels that NOW has been in¬timidated “by propaganda that said our ex¬perience was irrelevant.. .We are moreradical than you think but we don’t pushit,” she said.“WRAP (Women’s radical action proj¬ect) acts like they own the turf but they fallinto a trap,” she added, speaking of thecampus group here. “They take an avantguard approach and end up only talking topeople who already agree with them.” Shebelieves that it is “even necessary to talkwith the Ladies Clubs in Rogers Park andyou must do it with love.” Everyone shouldbe free and equal, but some are moreaware of discrimination, she said. Whenspeaking to housewives, Bere said she triesto convince them she is not denigratingthem, that she is not against the “nestinginstinct in any species.” Housewives mustlearn to face the reality of oppression and“not clothe their nakedness with borrowedclothing,” she said.Women are treated in two different waysby society, she said. “Either we are ig¬nored or we are patronized.” The pressridicules all stories about women’s liber¬ation except WITCH (women’s inter¬national terrorist conspiracy from hell) ac¬tivities which are already satire and cannotbe ridiculed, Bere said. The goal of NOW is a better society withvalues now termed masculine such as am¬bitious competition and violence no longeraccepted, she said. NOW works in two waysfor its goal — education — gathering thefacts — and legislation. They are currentlycampaigning for an equal rights provisionin the new Illinois constitution. They sentpledge cards to all the Con Con delegatesbefore their election and one of every threedelegates in Springfield is pledged to workfor such a provision.Bere testified before the Con-Con Bill ofRights committee, that “women will regis¬ter their displeasure if no provision is in¬cluded by voting against all sections of thenew Constitution. Women will repudiate adocument that repudiates them. As thiscommittee is our witness we shall be de¬nied no longer.”Bere does not believe that confrontationpolitics can work for women. “We canlearn a great deal from recent history andthere are paralills with the black move¬ment but can you see women advocatingseparatism?” she asked.ERA was granted a second charter aftersome disagreement because “It had beenthe feeling that one chapter per metropoli¬tan area was the ideal. The problem of howto bring more women into the movementhad not been faced yet.”Women Together in DemandsContinued from Page Oneletter. Miss Grossman filed a suit againstthe firm, becoming the first woman in thecountry to do so. According to Gelb, legalaction has taken so long in coming because“most women are afraid of being black¬balled.”Gelb referred to a standing policy at Har¬vard for the past several years, where let¬ters are sent out to law firms advisingthem about the school’s policy against dis¬crimination in hiring. In reference to Neal’shandling of the issue, she said, “he's doingmuch less than other law schools.” She alsocriticized the Law Students Association fornot taking decisive action.According to Neal, “the only schoolknown to have such a policy is Berkeley.”He felt that “the women are, in a sensebeing unjustifiably critical, “consideringthe willingness of the law school to in-BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMBIT STOREPL 2-47441150 E. 63rd Si.Checker TaxiHASIMMEDIATE OPENINGS• EXCELLENT EARNINGS•WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS PER WEEK FROM 2to 6 DAYS• DAYS or NIGHTS-Work doM to homo or school'MALE or FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY845 W WASHINGTON8:00 AM to 4:30PM: DAILY8:00 AM to 11:00 AM: SAT.CALL 421-1314 vestigate the charges and formulate a newpolicy.Gelb said the issue is complicated by thefact that discrimination shows up in areasother than hiring. In many firms, “nine outof ten women employed are in Trusts &Estates,” which is essentially writing wills.They rarely get to handle criminal cases ordo field work. )Before the case can go to court, the LWCmust write to the EEOC for a 30-day let¬ter’ permission to go to court within thattime period. The EEOC can take action onits own by filing a commissioner’s com¬plaint. “If they find cause,” Gelb said,“anyone in the country could sue thefirm(s). It would put every law firm in thecounty on notice that they could be sued fordiscriminating against women.”Although she would not cite figures, Gelbsaid the women students are very muchagreed on the issue.ijg* »>-* »:«»:<»:«»:«»:i »>:« >>:« >:•;« »>:«»:«w» *5!i »5!i iK« i5!i »!5!i »!5!i i5!» i5!« »5!« *I5!» 1K1 i5!i i5!n5WE 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 free"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 WHOLE 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 60204w >;»;* >;*;♦ »;v sv w ^ 'i»!*!» (Si »!•!« »5Ft »Si4/The Chicago Maroon/March 6, 1970Scientists Work in Many Areas of Researchv Steve AokfDR STANLEY YACHNIN: “The use of traditional chemical agents does not resultin a cure.Continued from Page Threeknow that prostaglandins have to do withthe synthesis in the body steroids. There isthe connection between our work and can¬cer.”With one grad student, Dorothy Schumm,Dr Fried has also done research with car¬cinogenic hydrocarbons, which occur insmog and automobile exhausts. ‘‘We havedevised a test system in bacteria, the evi¬dence from which suggests that when thehydrocarbons enter the body, they arechanged to a chemical substance which canreact with either a protein or a nucleicacid, thus creating a cancerous cell whichis beyond the body’s control.” Dr. Friedadded that “what is needed everywhere inscientific research is the type of inter¬disciplinary interaction which is supposedto occur at Ben May. Scientists are primadonnas, but it’s often true that a chemisthas the key to a biological problem, or viceversa, and the gaps between the differentfields must be bridged by scientists’ becom¬ing familiar with one another’s tools.”Dr George L Wied, Blum-Riese professorin obstetrics, gynecology, and pathology,and director of exfoliative cytology, isdoing research in clinical cytology, thepractice of early cancer detection at thestage when the lesion is too small to berecognized by the symptoms or by visualexamination. “The cytologic specimens areprepared from various body organs assmears,” explains Dr Wied. “These can befrom the respiratory tract, the female gen¬ital tract, the gastrointestinal tract, and soforth. Early cancer detection by means ofcytology is so far advanced that practicallyall uterine cancer can be detected in timeand cured with practically 100% success.”A huge and impressive machine embody¬ing a microscope, a computer, a televisionset, and a typewriter represents anotherphase of Dr Wied’s work — the applicationof computers in cell diagnosis. Called Tax¬onomic Intra-Cellular Analytic System(TICAS), the machine was developed hereby Wied over a period of two years. “Thecomputer looks — so to speak — into themicroscope at the sample, and learns tomake its own diagnoses. The system isequipped to transmit cytologic images overlong distances; thus, a small hospital in an¬other city can have a long-distance con¬sultation on problem cases by dialing theUniversity’s computer and transmittingcell data to it.”Functions of cancer cell provides basic lev¬elsDr Tokumasa Nakamoto, associate pro¬fessor in biochemistry and member of Ar-gonne, is involved in studying the “trans¬fer” enzymes whose role it is to effect theformation of peptide bonds in protein syn¬thesis, dictated by DNA via RNA, in theconstruction of amino acids to be built intoproteins in cancer cells. His work is aimedtoward characterizing the essential func¬tions of the cancer cell, one aspect of whichis protein synthesis. Dr Nakamoto empha¬sized that he has no illusion of discoveringa cure for cancer through this most recent research, which he began about six monthsago. “But work must be done on the basiclevels first, and will perhaps prove to be astep in that direction,” he added.He also explained that “nothing is knownabout the way in which protein synthesis isinitiated in the mammalian cell, and weare working at improving the activity ofthe rat liver cell-free system and also de¬veloping others. We feel that a more activecell-free system is a good first step in ap¬proaching the study of this problem.”Dr Shutsung Liao, associate professor inBen May Labs and in the department ofbiochemistry, is studying the molecularprocesses of androgen action. “We haveknown for some time that the hormonemechanism is one of the primary regu¬latory processes of the body,” he says.“Discovery of the exact mechanism of hor¬mone action is an important goal of biolog¬ical and medical science because disordersin the mechanism are involved in a numberof diseases.“Our studies with androgens and genetranscription and receptor proteins for an¬drogens suggest that dihydrotestosterone isthe active form of androgen and presentsthe possibility that some abnormalities re¬lated to androgen functions may be relatedto a lack of the “receptor protein” for in¬teraction with dihydrotesfosterone. We arealso continuing to study the multiple formsof RNA polymerase in mammalian cells.”The clinical applications of Dr Liao’s re¬search include treating benign disorders ofthe prostate, which are found in an esti¬mated 80% of men over 70 years of age.The growth of eight different cancers hasbeen found to be dependent on various hor¬mones produced by the body, includingbreast and prostate cancer and some formsof leukemia. By understanding the mecha¬nism by which androgen stimulates thegrowth of tissues, scientists working in thisarea hope to gain insights into treatingsuch problems.Diagnostic techniques developedResearch in hematology has led Dr Stan¬ley Yachnin, associate professor in the de¬partment of medicine and member of Ar-gonne, to develop more accurate ways ofdetermining the extent of blood-related dis¬eases. This “disease oriented research is,directed “toward lymphoma (the enlarge¬ment of lymphoid organs), leukemia, andHodgkins Disease.The treatment for the cure of Hodgkin’sdisease depends upon a high dosage of radi¬ation. Hence, Dr. Yachnin stresses the im¬portance of defining the extent of the dis¬ease before treatment begins. Hodgkin’sdisease spreads in “stages” to adjacentgroups of nodes. Since many of these nodesare obscure, Dr. Yachnin injects a radio¬paque material into the bloodstream, whichunder radiation, appears in cancerouslymph nodes. This procedure, lympha-geography, determines the extent of thedisease. Another method is the surgicalbiopsy of the lymph nodes and spleen,which has also greatly increased the ac¬curacy in diagnosing the disease. Lymphoma, which is more heterogeneousin origin than Hodgkin’s disease, is diag¬nosed through surgery. Dr. Yachnin isstudying the comparative effectiveness be¬tween a multiplicity of chemical agents andone of the more traditional drugs. “The useof traditional chemical agents does not re¬sult in a cure,” he said.According to Dr. Yachnin, the most effec¬tive therapy for leukemia is Chemotherapy,which is treatment with drugs. The mosteffective drug used in the treatment ofacute leukemia in adults is cytosine ara-binoside.In addition to diagnostic research, Dr.Yachnin and his colleagues continually car¬ry on basic research into the causes of can¬cer; this research involves studying the lifeprocesses at the biochemical level. Presentstudies examine the synthesis of DNA, cellinteraction, and control mechanisms of redblood cell replacement.Dr. Yachnin’s effective techniques for de¬termining the extent of cancer is closelytied up with cancer therapy. Dr. MelvinGriem, professor in the department of ra¬diology and member of the Argonne staff,is developing more effective techniques forcancer therapy, through the use of highenergy radiation equipment. Radiationtechniques have increased the cure rates ofHodgkin’s disease, cancer of the cervix,and cancer of the throat. According to Dr.Griem, more than two-thirds patients arecured of Hodgkin’s disease due to new radi¬ation techniques.Dr. Griem makes use of a computer inorder to determine the exact location of thetumors, so that he can create a dosage in aparticular area without affecting any otherareas of the body. Treatment usually takesplace everyday for six to twelve weeks. Dr.Griem stressed that high energy equip¬ment, which was an outgrowth of the Man¬hattan Project, is a much more effectivetreatment than traditional drugs. He is nowtrying to determine whether drugs wouldmake patients more susceptible to radi¬ation.Two doctors who are concerned with bothdiagnostic and therapeutic techniques ofcancer research are Drs Paul Harper andDonald Ferguson, professors in the depart¬ment of surgery. They have collaborated ona research project which shows a correla¬tion between the uptake of the element ce¬sium-131 into mitastic cancer and the ulti¬mate effect of treatment on the size of thetumors. This method enables them to test ifa patient with widespread cancer is gettingthe best possible therapy.Nuclear medicine expandsDr Harper, who is William Rainey Har¬per’s grandson, is doing extensive researchi n nuclear medicine. “Treatment ofpatients with intractable pain,” explains DrHarper, “involves placing a needle whichemits a radioactive source into the spinalcolumn.” The emission of radiation into the vertebrae under the spinal cord would de¬stroy the nerve fibers more efficiently.Another facet of research in nuclearmedicine involves the scanner. By dis¬tributing an isotope throughout the . body,and scanning it with a gamma ray detec¬tor, one is able to determine the dis¬tribution of the isotope in the body, andhence, the distribution of the cancerouscells. The most effective isotope, accordingto Dr Harper, is technetium, because “it iseasy to columnate and detect, and you canmake it in different forms to go to differentparts of the body.” Also, technetium has ashort half life so the whole procedure onlytakes about one-half hour.According to Dr Harper, “nuclear medi¬cine is becoming a major part of medicine.There are 3000 to 4000 diagnostic studies innuclear medicine yearly in the Universityhospitals and clinics.The department of pathology is alsopresently studying techniques for the cureof cancer. Dr Albert Wissler, professor andchairman in the department of pathology,and Dr Robert Orlando, instructor in thedepartment of pathology are seeking immu¬nological methods by which the body candefend itself against cancer. “We are try¬ing to excise a tumor and centrifuge it toisolate the membrane containing tumor-specific antigens. By purifying the tumorantigens and combining them with an adju¬vant (in order to stimulate the immune sys¬tem),” the scientists hope to develop an im-munologically active tumor-specific anti¬gen. Giving this back to the patient wouldhopefully promote cell-mediated immunityto the tumor antigen.The pathologists m their research inbreast cancer have also found a quan¬titative difference between the enzymes ina cancerous breast and those in a normalbreast. They hypothesize that if the en¬zymes were chemically inhibited they mayhave diagnostic, predictive, or therapeuticimportance.Jensen studies hormone receptorsDr Elwood Jensen, with his colleagues atBen May Labs, is focusing his research onestrogenic hormones. “Hormone dependenttissues have unique components which takeup and bind estrogen,” Dr. Jensen ex¬plains. “These are called hormone recep¬tors.” He is studying the way the estrogenand the receptor move together in the nu¬cleus of the target^ cell and stimulategrowth. Dr. Jensen has found that womenwith breast cancer who have the estrogenreceptor respond positively to an adrena¬lectomy, whereby the adrenal glands areremoved. (Those who don’t have the recep¬tor cannot be treated for cancer by the re¬moval of the adrenal glands.) Hence, thesex hormones which the adrenal glandsmake and which cause hormone dependentcancer can be removed from’older womenwho have the estrogen receptor.Continued on Page NineSteve Aoklthe ARGONNE CYCLOTRON: Instrument in hospital assists cancer research.March 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5EDITORIALSThe Wegener ReportIt has been a full quarter since the report of the Wegenercommittee on discipline became public. We have expressed ourviews on it already. Though far from perfect, and not going nearlyfar enough in equalizing the balance of control between studentsand faculty, the recommendations of the committee for a disciplin¬ary committee consisting of five faculty and two students is someimprovement over the present system. Early this quarter weexpressed our hope that the Council of the University Senate wouldvote to implement the committee’s recommendations.Since that time there has been official and ponderous silencefrom the Council. Obviously this is an important issue, not to bevoted on precipitously, but one entire quarter has elapsed sincethe report was submitted. It would be all too easy for anotherquarter to slip away before a decision is made by the Council,leaving them “no choice” but to make the ruling during thesummer, when the students are away. No matter what the Council’sintentions, students simply are not going to buy such an explana¬tion. The appropriate time for such a decision to be made is duringthe school year, when opinion of all the members of the University -community is accessible.A Skeptics 'Paradise'Members of the University community were variously amused,confused, angered and bored by a column which appeared inWednesday’s Sun-Times purporting to explain why the Universityof Chicago, a “paradise” among university campuses, has escapedthe scourge of pimply post adolescents tyrranizing over their weak-kneed elders, a condition which apparently afflicts most campusesacross the country. The University here was praised for the “fact”that it has the “academic self-confidence” not to pay any attentionto student requests for control.The analysis and judgments that went into this column byEvans and Novak are not the subject of this editorial; we wouldn’twant to deprive our readers of the* chance to figure out thelogic for themselves.We were particularly interested by one sentence in the column,which stated “the classes of one black professor, himself a militant,are being monitored by two Black Panthers (nonstudents) to guardagainst idealogical deviation.” Understandably concerned with sucha statement, we have been trying to track down its source. No oneon campus whom we have spoken to — and we have spoken tofaculty, and administrators, black and white — admits to knowingwhat the sentence refers to. When the writers of the column werecontacted, they stated — through an underling — that this informa¬tion was given them in confidence and they can reveal no morefacts.Evidently, the important men who wrote this column can’tbe bothered to explain a comment that has been creating a minorcontroversy on a small campus in Chicago. They can’t be botheredto speak with its student newspaper, and explain to its amateurjournalists the subtle ethics that allow them to print inflammatoryaccusations based on remarks made in confidence which theycannot therefore back up with facts.We do not intend to let our investigation of the columnists’statements drop. Although we are beginning to get the impressionthat they are the victims of a serious misunderstanding, we feelthat the issue is too important to forget about. The statement asmade is ambiguous — are the alleged watchdogs there with theprofessor’s permission? how do they plan to enforce their allegedidealogical patrolling? what is the viewpoint of the Panthers alleg¬edly involved in the issue?Until the facts of the Evans-Novak column are proved, weadvise that their allegation be taken with a good dose of skepticism.We on the Maroon will do our best to find out what they weretalking about in the mean time, and advise that you let the columnserve as a lesson — don’t believe everything you read in the papers./The Chicago Maroon/March 6, 1970 Student Objection UnsatisfiedBy 'Radical‘ English ChangesBy Virginia WexmanThis year, in response to student objec¬tions to the present undergraduate curricu¬lum for English majors, a committee offaculty members and students was formedto try to come up with a better one. Lastweek this committee presented its propos¬al. It proved to be a highly controversialissue among both faculty and student.I have been at several meetings in thepast few years where students expressedthe reasons for their dissatisfaction withthe present program. Those criticisms Iheard most often were:• Objections to the BA Final. Studentsdid not want to have to take such a big,pressure-filled exam• Dislike of literary hitoriography as arequired course• A feeling that the “context” part ofcontext courses was not successfulThe new program abolishes the BA Final,but substitutes a BA qualifying exam witha longer reading list to be taken at the endof the student’s junior year. It retains re¬quired context courses and calls for the*continuance of the literary historiographyrequirement.Predictably enough, many students werenot happy about the proposal. The com¬mittee members have argued that studentobjections are ill-founded. Students opposedto the program are accused of having a“course hang-up,” that is, they are said towant only courses because that is whatthey’re used to. The proposal’s virtue, inthe committee’s view, lies in the fact that itovercomes the course hang-up and reducesthe number of courses which a studenttakes while turning to other educationalmethods such as reading lists and semi¬nars. Because of this it is “radical” and“imaginative.” I agree that it is imagina¬tive; the committee is certainly to be com¬mended for coming up with what nobodyexpected. But that doesn’t mean that theiridea is necessarily a good one, does it? Ithink that the exchange of ideas which oc¬curs in a classroom is helpful. The com¬mittee says that it provides other ways toobtain this stimulation — students can au¬dit or come to special non-credit discussionsessions given on the reading list. But lookat how students actually operate. As of nowvery few students audit courses — thoughthey could — and the noncredit discussionsessions for the present BA Final had to beabandoned a few years ago because stu¬dents didn’t come to them.On the question of the exam the com¬mittee argues that students object becausethey don’t appreciate what it can do forthem — pull together the knowledge andskills they have accumulated over their ju-THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve Aoki, Phil LathropFeature Editor; Woody GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Stevo Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlockStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChism an, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsoll, Stan Goumas, Gordon Katz, SusanLoft, Gerard Laval, 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 Rosenbush, Paul Stelter.Founded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, ill. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit po5tage paid at Chicago, 1)1. Subscribersto College Press Service.. \ it t GADFLYnior year into a kind of culminating ex¬perience. An exam, though, is an exam,isn’t it? And this exam is a big one. It in¬cludes a question which “checks up” onwhether students have done the reading. Ican’t see how this will not necessarily re¬sult in the kind of last minute crammingand stress that students object to in con¬nection with the present BA exam. Andwouldn’t the new exam be even worse inthis respect? The student’s admittance tothe senior program and his graduate schooladmittance would depend on how well hehad done on the exam. Wouldn’t this add tothe pressure students would feel?Laziness is another factor cited as acause of student opposition to the program.But students at this University are remark¬able precisely for their intellectual in¬dustriousness and involvement. Studentshere are some of the least intellectuallylazy people anywhere.Finally, committee members argue thatthe reason these ideas will succeed in thefuture when many (like literary histo¬riography, context courses and voluntarydiscussion groups) have not been notablysuccessful in the past is that nobody be¬lieves in the present program because itdoesn’t represent any coherent philosophy.The new program, being different in thisrespect, would have the faculty solidly be¬hind it so that they would be able to bringnew vigor to these already tried ideas. Buta vote taken last Saturday showed a goodpercentage of the faculty opposed or neu¬tral about the new plan. How, then, arethese same faculty going to bring new lifeto ideas they don’t endorse?The necessity of complete faculty com¬mitment was also cited as a reason why theproposal could not be optional. The facultyis not 100 percent committed to the plan.Why now should it not be presented on anoptional basis?There have been many student objectionsto the new plan of a purely practical naturewhich the committee never addressed itselfto at all in my hearing. What about stu¬dents who decide to major in English late?Will they be ‘locked out’ by the nature ofthe program? What about students facedwith the excruciating prospect of a year ina seminar with a faculty member theycan’t abide? Will they have to sacrificetheir choice of subject interest to this con¬sideration? And what about the studentwhose interests are not specialized enoughby his senior year to benefit from the kindof seminar experience projected by the pro¬posal?Aside from questions about the specificaspects of the new curriculum, I haveserious misgivings about the abstract toneof the plan as a whole. It seems to treat theclassics of English Literature as datawhich the student is to learn to manipulatein a given number of ways (historically,contextually etc.). The emphasis seems tobe on theory at the expense of the worksthemselves; all of the required courses arein methodology rather than in the classicswhich form the substance of English liter¬ature.Students were given a chance to discussthe pros and cons of the new proposal at anopen meeting held last Thursday night. Avote was taken early in the evening whichshowed most of the students against it.Then Sheldon Sacks, Professor of Englishand chairman of the curriculum com¬mittee, said that, in view of the numberopposed, the program could not possibly gothrough, and any discussion would be mere¬ly “for fun.” After this, many students whowere against the program left. Those whoremained were subjected during the eve¬ning to a great deal of emotionally coloredrhetoric and flattery. There were three fac¬ulty members present at the meeting — allenthusiastically in favor of the plan. ThereContinued on Page Ninev■ ■ .—■' i .Number 18 Friday, March 6, 1970m /Politics Under Glass: The Law SchoolBy Nelson A. SoltmanIf I were you, I would choose the University of Chi¬cago Law School; it’s a fine law school, and has the addedadvantage of being a part of the University of Chicago,and you will probably feel comfortable there.Advice from a professor, May, 1966WHEN THE REPRESSION on the university campusesand in society at large gets even more severe than it isnow, proponents of the “law and order” society who wanta sophisticated model for political suppression will be ableto look at the University of Chicago Law School for theirguidelines. The educational policy of the school, the waystudents are treated, the manipulation and use of studentsto do the university’s “dirty work” against other students,and the relationship of the law school to local and nationalpolitical issues show a consistent pattern of grudging,mini-piecemeal reform, disregard for the students’ sensi¬tivity, and, — worst of all — an instinct toward the repres¬sive, reactionary rather than the progressive response toalmost any problem. For an institution which preaches thegospel according to reason and due process, this is both atragedy and an exercise in monumental hypocrisy.All of this became clear to me during the sit-in lastyear. Just as I used to think that racism was really badonly in Mississippi, I at first thought that the variousfacets of the law school’s political response to the sit-inwere an isolated aberration from a relatively satisfactorynorm. But as I thought about it, what happened during thesit-in was the manifestation of numerous tendencies whichhad been festering for a long while: It showed what therules were for “normal” times.I was tenpted to try to forget about all of this, and tosay that the “serious” problems were in Viet-Nam, in thePentagon, or in the poor communities. But the lawschool’s rhetoric was once so pleasant to me that thedisillusionment was something I could not ignore.BACKGROUNDPart of the disillusionment was my own fault — Ibelieved the law school’s advertisements. When I enteredlaw school, in 1966, I was told and believed that the facul¬ty and administration cared about the students and whatthey thought, and that the faculty would talk about someof the important questions concerning the law — like howracism and the distribution of power in this country andcity affect the operations of the law. I had even read in aNew York Times Magazine article that the law school hadthe best faculty in the country.I found several faculty members who shared my out¬look on issues external to the academic world, but thatwas about all. They often did nothing to put progressivetheories into operation for the law school, and, to mysurprise, seemed somewhat parochial in their view of thelaw school. Many seemed somewhat hungup that theschool was neither Harvard no rYale, and often triedto convince us that the school had the best features ofboth: the small, intimate size of Yale, with the high-pow¬ered intellect of Harvard. In fact, most law students even¬tually become bored with routinized, dull course offerings,and many stopped attending classes. The faculty seemedto think that boredom was the students’ fault.I found that in most of the classes the interest insocial justice was subordinate to the interest in legal tech¬nique and the preservation of the legal system; that thelaw school was out of touch with the social revolution thatwas occurring both across 61st street and inside its ownglass walls, and that the meaning of “All Power to thePeople” was antithetical to the thinking of most of thefaculty and administration.' This last point was underscored last June. When Ispoke with Dean Samuelson, Dean of Alumni Affairs,about the possibility of making a less elaborate graduationluncheon and instead having the class vote on giving the extra money to an organization like Operation Breadbas¬ket, he told me that this type of affair was important, justlike all alumni affairs, because it enabled the people whomake decisions in this society to keep in touch with oneanother.The school functions well within the accepted systemof United States society today. That is, it operates on theassumption that it is important to produce good lawyersand law professors because those people are in the fore¬front of the battle for social change, and it assumes thatmeaningful, permanent change can come through courtsand legislatures. There have been “good” draft-law deci¬sions, “progressive” criminal justice decisions, and nu¬merous civil rights decisions which read very beautifully.They do not, however, make American militarism lessfascistic or ominous, the police less oppressive, and theydo not eliminate racism. Those decisions simply place asugar coating on some unpleasant medicine: that no groupout of power can rely on the court system or a legislaturefor its salvation, and that its gains must be obtainedthrough an accumulation of power through peaceful orga¬nization if possible, but via disruption and violence if nec¬essary.This seems to have escaped most of the law faculty.The students were, especially in the first year, supposedto turn off the world outside of law. Both the internaloperations of the law school, and its relationship to theworld around it show that the law school seems to havepermanently turned off a part of its vision, and in theprocess lost a part of its soul.INTERNAL OPERATIONS: THE SLOW FERMENTLife inside the law school is beset with the samesymptoms of change and dissatisfaction that are foundeverywhere else. The faculty and the secretaries some¬times find themselves in opposite camps — last year someof the secretarial staff expressed anger at what they saidwas the exploitation by faculty of the secretaries’ skills without adequate sensitivity to the secretaries as people.Some of the secretarial staff circulated a petition, andtalked about joining the women’s caucus of the law school.After finally being accepted by the law school in largenumbers because of the pressures of the Vietnam warand the draft, women law students found that the battlehad just begun. The Law Women’s caucus recently filedcharges of discrimination against the law school, with theEqual Employment Opportunities Commission allegingthat the school, through its placement office, “otherwisediscriminates” against women by offering facilities to lawfirms which discriminate against women in hiring or pro¬motion.The faculty and administration run the law school,and their attitudes are quickly incorporated by most of thestudents: be cool, and lets try to work things out reason¬ably. The faculty makes the rules, and gives very fewstudents the feeling that it is their law school, too. Be¬cause the faculty generally are extremely competent aca¬demically, it is all the more frustrating and disillusioningto see that their policies within the school reflect the sameattitudes that are found in the rest of society. The lawschool is not a leader, but rather a mirror of a societywhose primary values are money and power, not socialjustice. If the law school is elite in any sense, it is because,possibly more than most other law schools, its pretensionsare so far out of line with the day to day operations ofthe school.ADMISSIONS AND RACEFrom my first day in the law school, the most glaringdeficiencies were the lack of non-white, minority groupstudents, and the lack of women. Since the law school hadadvertised itself as a national law school, I thought that itwas strange that it was almost completely white, and al¬most wholly male. I thought that at least the law schoolwould have more black students for its own defenseContinued on Page FiveHtumiImbibing at Kiernan’s PubIT’S NOT CLEAR to me exactly what the intellectual’srole should be — let him figure that out for himself if hecan figure out how to stop selling his time to the military-industrial complex and the fatheaded shit-mouths who sitstinkingly on top of many academic departments. But I dohave an idea of where the intellectual as writer (i.e.,student-faculty writer) should be heading, and that is outof the conservative institution that inhibits his weaning.The university has no room for a writer until his name ismarketable. Before then it will do all it can to divert hisenergies from studying the world and in a lot of pettyways it will even attempt to keep his mind off literatureby disciplining him with strict degree programs and a lotof works by fools like Johnson and timid fuds like Frye.Even at UC there has been an attempt to remedy theanti-creative atmosphere with student literary mags. Thelatest of these, and maybe the best in five years at least,is Barney Kiernan’s Pub, a booklet now on sale for 75cents at the Bookstore. It contains one short story each byKen Zweibel, Andrew Connor, Kundin (a pseudonym),Seth Masia, and Laurence Nadel, as well as poems byRichard Sieburth and some fine abstract drawings by Ar¬thur Kennickell. Some of the selections are very inter¬esting, but they all indicate, in varying degree, the prob¬lems and failings of the student.The first story, and one of the best, is Zweibel’s “TheSamuel Tiphen Story,” a tale that begins with the writerworking in or working out some intellectual statements —briefly, but disjointedly — saying a few things about am¬biguity and other subjects, and gradually defining his sur¬roundings as a library reading room where he catchesglimpses of other people in the apertures among shelvedbooks. He sits at Samuel Tiphen’s desk and the real storybegins, apparently a reminiscence of him and his girl¬friend now wife, economically (and slightly confusingly)told.One has to read this story carefully to stay with it, butit is surely the most rewarding of the realistic stories inBarney Kiernan’s Pub because it touches on a hard real¬ity, a stage that most everyone must pass through:“Somewhere, when was it? We had become one, and wehad used up all the green grass and all the easy laughterof our lives. Now when I am afraid, or when she is, Icannot lift her up and toss her into the air as if she wereyoung and small again with her tears ... I rememberwhen it was who am I, and now I know who I am, and Idon’t like it.”Zweibel’s is the only story in which the author gets intomore than one character’s head; and it is one of the two(with Connor’s) in which the story form is used imagina¬tively. While it has a slightly mechanical concluding sen¬tence and exploits a theme that seems to me, perhapsnaively, a little unreal, or at least overused (the beautifuigirl with mind permanently scarred by a miscarriage), italso takes a human situation by the horns, and is a re¬freshing alternative to the bippy bourgeois devil-may-carefiction typical of these days. Conflict, doubt, and self-hateare met squarely and with open eyes. The characters’situation is not stagnant.Three of the five stories are explicitly set in Chicago,but only one of them really comes to grips with the realityof the city and its people.Laurence Nadel’s “William, 1066; Bruce, 0.” concerns Barney Kieman’s Pub fia nauseating first-person protagonist and his attempts tomake a WRAP girl. He doesn’t understand her ‘radi¬calism,’ her larger self, or the community at large. Hehides behind, or is trapped in, an intricate mask of aca¬demic names and theories. Although he puts down one ofhis professors for being a professor, he himself is nothing.Seth Masia’s “Saul” is a fairly serious, ironically-pathetic story of a blind man who refuses to act like one.It suffers from a lack of distinctness in characterizationand a mass of details and events whose importances aredoubtful. It seems stupid and nasty to say this, since hav¬ing a piece of writing around that won’t complete itself isvery frustrating, but the story should probably be re¬worked.Modern writing as a whole suffers from a failure totell the truth and thus to make of itself something morethan a marginal activity. Commercial writing is a sell-out,but people don’t put you down for marketing your onlyskill. What is especially detestable is mass-marketed artwritten for a worthless, mindless TV talk show - Holly¬wood elite — things like “Easy Rider,” Philip Roth, andThe Life and Loves of Mr. Jiveass Nigger (a minor novelsoon to be made a movie, written by a young black manappealing crassly to the commerce of white racism and ajuvenile suburban black militancy and pseudo-in-tellectualism).The student writer’s problem is complicated by themore-or-less non-creative, academic values of the univer¬sity. He finds it difficult sometimes to separate criticismand fiction, rote bookish achievement and creative writ¬ing. Nelson Algren, one of the few tough realists aroundand still the king of Chicago writers (perhaps of all livingU.S. writers whose names are widely known), has writtenof this contemporary confusion quite tellingly:“The practice of fiction involves the writer, person¬ally, directly and whether he would or no, with multi¬tudes: that’s the basket he’s damned in. The Practice ofCriticism is a means of remaining personally uninvolved:that’s his basket ... It is easy to replace art by profund¬ity .. . He (the critic) demands that perilous voyages betaken and storms be endured but himself stays on the dock. He reminds us that the proper study of mankind isman yet keeps his own distance from men and women.The goodness of his intention is lent expression, while hisconscience is afforded ease, by the practice of Criticism.The risk of becoming identified with the objects of hiscompassion is obviated by his sagacity ...Andrew Connor’s “Thirty-Fifth Street” is the story of ayoung man’s witnessing of a suicide on the el tracks. Itstarts solidly with both feet almost on the ground — re¬ferring to the el as “a worm in the city’s gut” and to thecity itself as “the- necropolis” — but even at these earlystages there are some dubious statements that make oneimmediately accuse the author of shutting his eyes at thewriting table. For to say that “there is no life beneath theel” (a general remark, not an indication of setting) is todeny the setting of some fine stories written by otherpeople.The author chooses to attack the “I” protagonist’saversion to life instead of telling the story the protagonistrefuses to see. The character sees the man getting readyto jump from the platform and never thinks of pulling thetrain’s emergency stop. He walks down to the street afterdisembarking and hearing the conductor say that the manis still alive and they’ll have to jack up the car to ex¬tricate him. He tries to shut the incident out of his mind,until he gets on another train with the thought that thesuicide attempt has cost him an extra fare getting home.His problem is typically that of a hung-up intellectualtype:“Gradually I admited to myself that I wanted tothink that the man had fallen because suicide frightenedme. It seemed absurd, deprived of any meaning by itsvery nature. (?) Could I accept an absurdity? How couldlife be the same tomorrow?”Tomorrow morning he knows that he’s being foolish —and the author seems to know it — but still he decidesthere must be some “reason,” some rational “resolution”for the suicide attempt. A friend asks if he feels sorry forthe man, and he says, “No. Not if it was really suicide.”On the bus to work he sees the dying lake and thinks offeeding his fish. Perhaps it’s people like this protagonistwho keep Chicago going. Certainly it takes such mechani¬cal, dulled souls to keep the hustling thieves in power.The last story in the book is a high-strung tale called“Little Lollo and the Dying Guru” by someone using thename Kundin. The two characters are a metaphysical Hin¬du and a sexy Southern white girl named Lollo. They’re alittle unreal but awfully kinky and tied together in the endby something much more complex than dalliance; some¬thing about contemporary Americanism jumps in and out‘(sexy girls, submissive men cruel in little ways, anality,racism, delusions of superiority:) The fine, and possiblyfalse, line between Lollo’s desirability and sluttish com¬pulsion is also the fine line between self-respect and egomania, or nationalism and imperialism, to stretch a point.I’ll leave Richard Sieburth’s poems to a poet for dis¬cussion, since I don’t understand them much and can’t getpast their neutrality.If Barney Kiernan’s Pub can find a regular income, itwill be a good thing, since literary magazines are badlyneeded here. Something to break down the boredom, rou¬tine, and pomposity; something real, in which the writingis not just spewed out to make a deadline and for a grade.Richard HackAfter the Peace Corpswha t then?Wfe’re looking for hard-core human beings,as priests, ministers and rabbis.Call the Interfaith Committee for Religious Careers.22 West Monroe Street, Chicago 726-3717.'Grey City Journal/March 6, 1970muSidney Pollack Shoots“THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON’T THEY?” is basically asituation in service to a metaphor. The situation is amarathon dance, date 1932, place California, where theprize is $1500, the contestants are not allowed to stop, andthe crowd comes, in the words of Gig Young’s announcerand organizer, “to see people a little more miserable thanthemselves.”Utilizing a single metaphor like this, even when themetaphor is a good one and has a long tradition behind it(after all its is not that different to say “all the world’s adance floor” rather than “all the world’s a stage) is trickybusiness. The most common error is to overdo the meta¬phor, to pretend that one is presenting reality rather thanmetaphor. A dance hall may be a good metaphor for life,but it is not life. It is to Sydney Pollack’s credit that hekeeps this difference well in mind. The tinsel glitter of thedecorations, the crowd watching the dancers but well sep¬arated from them, the occasional glances of light throughthe windows or the sea through an open door, all theseremind us that the situation is a metaphor and only ametaphor. Likewise, Pollack avoids overplaying his meta¬phor. No attempt is made to present a cross-section of lifeand America: this particular story would not hold that.The colors are muted but not washed out, the setups tendtowards simplicity and are suited to the immediate situ¬ation. (Pollack’s tendency, like that of other men comingfrom television to the movies, is to shoot in medium closeshot. Luckily this is permissible when you are con¬centrating on couples dancing at close distance.) Sim¬ilarly, Pollack is also smart enough not to overspecify hismeaphoric significance. When he does overspecify, as inthe arty suggestive cross cutting between Jane Fondasfall and that of the fall of a horse in the grass, the meta-.phor loses its power. Jane Fonda is not a horse nor canshe be seen as one. That Michael Sarrazin sees the meta¬phor between them and thus agrees to shoot her is aCULTURE TCLTI8E = Gloria (Jane Fonda) tries to calm one of the girls whohas become hysterical from sheer physical and mentalexhaustion.significant and meaningful moment. That an exact equa¬tion is made in the film destroys the significance of thegesture and the metaphor.Where Pollack is least successful, and unfortunatelythis is crucial to the film, is in investing the metaphorwith meaning, in giving justifcation to the use of themetaphor to begin with. How this failure manifests itselfis best exemplifed in the first “derby” sequence, a de¬scription of an event where exhausted dancers are forcedto run a ten minute race or face elimination. They ShootHorses, Don’t They? is a story of destroyed people and inthe derby we witness, in the most distilled form, thatLife Without the Vulch?WELL FOLKS this is the last Culture Vulture for thequarter. Do you think you can struggle through these nextthree weeks without CV’s priceless advice of what to seeon the culture scene? Can you attempt to select your cul¬tural fare without the firm claw of the Vulch guiding yourhand? (As a help I would suggest taking one from columnA and two from column B and since we have three col¬umns, one from column C.) This is your chance to go italone, to throw caution to the winds, to start making deci¬sions. Now that you’ve been exposed to the excellent tasteof Papa Vulture — go to it!campOsFilmTonight Doc Films presents Hitchcock’s North by North¬west. How often do you find yourself rooting for a PRman-turned CIA agent though admittedly against hiswill)? If he’s played by Cary Grant in a Hitchcock picture,I guess you do. But then again, James Mason plays thevillain — so this picture has to be made. By the way afterseeing this one you’ll be sure to stay away from low-flyingairplanes. In Cobb at 7:05 and 9:30 for 75 cents.Sunday, CEF presents Love Affair or The Case of theMissing Switchboard Operator, which is Yugoslavian di¬rected by Dusan Makavejev. The film begins with “talks”by a sexologist and a criminologist and the main storyconcerns an affair between Isabela, a switchboard oper¬ator and Ahmed, a sanitation inspector. All of this takesThe Murray Louis Dance Company will perform in MandelHall on Friday, Saturday and Sunday (March 13, 14, 15).This is company’s only full dance performance duringthis Chicago visit. Special student-priced tickets ($3.00 and$1.50) are available at Ida Noyes Hall, Room 201, or callMI 3-0800, ext. 3574. place in Belgrade, otherwise known as Beograd, one of themost strangely capitalistic cities in Eastern Europe. InCobb at 7 and 9 for $1.Wednesday, those great philanthropists in CEFpresent TWO FREE FLICKS — Francois Truffaut’s ShootThe Piano Player and Jules and Jim. How can you miss?I advise you to start lining up at 6 am Wednesday morn¬ing. Jules and friend are at 7 and the Piano Player playsat 9. In Cobb.Saturday, March 14, (a week from tomorrow, if you’restill alive) CEF presents Tony Richardson’s Tom Jones.Seeing this movie makes any 18th century literaturecourse here you had to read Johnson worthwhile. In caseyou don’t know, it stars Albert Finney, Susannah York,Hugh Griffith, George Devine, Dame Edith Evans, DavidWarner, Joan Greenwood, Joyce Redmond, Diane Cilentoetc. etc. At 7 and 9 in Cobb for $1.Doc Films has two events scheduled which are sure toexcite any ciniaste (and you commoners too). On March31, they are bringing Joseph Losey (whose films haveincluded The Servant, King and Country and Accident aswell as a number of films made in American before hewas blacklisted) to campus. At 7 Losey’s film The Lawlesswill be shown and at 8:30 he will be present to talk withinterested people. Doc Films is presenting a retrospectiveof Losey’s work all during next quarter.Also Doc Films is bringing Phil Feldman, producer ofsuch films as You’re a Big Boy Now and The Wild Bunchto campus at a still unspecified time and place. Consid¬ered one of the “new breed” of film producers (whateverth'at means) he just completed another film with directorSam Peckinpah, The Ballad of Cable Hogue with JasonRobards and David Warner. A 16 mm documentary on themaking of Cable Hogue will be shown along with the talk.MusicTonight, Revitalisation presents Sha-Na-Na — that sing¬ing group which brings back the 50’s — those were thegood years? It’s hard to believe that the fifties were 10-15years (or 20 too if you want to be exact.) Take a strolldown memory lane. In Mandel at 8.The University Symphony Orchestra, the UniversityChorus and the Collegium Musicum present (in honor ofhis birth day) Beethoven’s Ninth Sumphony. Beethovenmust be beaming with all the celebrations that are goingon — I assume his hearing has gotten better than it was.This concert in which most the distinguished musicalgroups on campus participate, is tomorrow night in Man-del at 8:30 and it’s FREE.MiscellaneousYippie! presents another Yippie! nite on Monday. Fea¬tured there will be folksinger Bob Gibson who will debuthis new song, “The Ballad of Mark Clark and Fred Ham¬pton.” Other attractions will be the bands, WildernessRoad and Four Days and a Night. Also there will be anoxygen booth for those who really want to feel what realair feels like. The charge is $2 for those, and I quote “Horses”process of destruction which makes the piece take hold. Itis a fine chance for Pollack, who has been shooting fordetail throughout the entire film, to give those detailsmeaning. “Who will set the pace?” screams Gig Young,and we should indeed be watching how the pace is set,watching what happens to make the people continue, toforce themselves to run when walking is still an option.Pollack instead picks random moments. They are all log¬ical moments and they are moments we accept. They arestrung together so that while we are forced to feel thepain of the ten minute race we are not driven out of thetheatre. But they are not moments which illuminate, andthe business of metaphor is illumination.I must confess that I have not yet read the novel byHorace McCoy on which the picture was based. Afterseeing the picture, however, I am going out to read itright now because the picture is actually carried by thematerial, along with some fine acting.McCoy, who wrote the novel during the depression, atleast did not have the onus of recreating a period. (Pol¬lack’s solution, to give innumerable film references, isboth pretentious and treacherous. At one point Sarrazintells Fonda that he was a dead extra in Fallen Angel,apparently unaware that Otto Preminger’s masterpiecewas made in 1945, 13 years after They Shoot Horses os¬tensibly takes place. Ordinarily this would merely be anannoying, over-hip try. In the context of a picture so con¬cerned with details as this, it is undeniable evidence thatPollack’s eye for detail is simply not up to his pre¬tentions.)They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? is far from the worstpicture of the year, certainly far better than its brotherMidnight Cowttoy. But it is also a far cry from being thebest, and that is a pity because it so easily could havebeen. (It is playing at the State Lake.)Terry Curtis Fox— Never!$them, “who cannot figure out a method of hustling theirway in. Proceeds go for bail-bond, a more than worthycause, if I can read my crystal ball right. It’s at Lally’s, 7W. Tooker Place (at State and Chestnut) at 8:30.Wednesday, Gay Liberation presents an open dis¬cussion led by Naomi Weisstein on “Looking for a GayRorschach, or The Psychologist as Moralist.” It’s in Rey¬nolds Club South Lounge at 4 pm.This Week at the GargoyleFridayTonight the Collegium Musicum presents a concertwhich will include Cantata 199 of J.S. Bach and variousworks of Handel, Mozart and Barber. The group includesBarbara Pearson (soprano), Elliot Holup (violin) andGrover Schlitz (oboe). The performance starts at 8:15and is $2.SundayNUC women present an International Women’s Day,known as a glorious celebration, a festival of rebirth.There will be workshops, a talk by Nancy Stokely andHedda Ribolow on Health Care, and will be aperformanceHedda Ribolow on Health Care, and will be a performanceof Everywoman — Past, Present, Future, in which suchfamous women as Victoria Woodhull, Schourner Truth andElizabeth Gurley Flynn will appear. It starts at 7.Continued on Page SevenThe University of Chicago Orchestra rehearses for itsSaturday night “Beethoven commemoration” concert tobe presented in Mandel Hall at 8:30 with the UC Chorusand the Collegium Musicum, the orchestra will performBeethoven’s Ninth Symphony, plus “Fanfare La Piri” byPaul Dukas and “Overture to Magnon” by Thomas. Ad¬mission is free.March 6, 1970/Grey City Journal/3TI11T1IVaudeville9s Bach in TownIN A NOSTALGIA LADEN ATMOSPHERE last weekend,the Winkler-Bernstein circuit invaded the Reynolds Club topresent their twelve-act vaudeville show. Produced by twostudents in John Cawelti’s reading course in Vaudeville,the show attempted an authentic reconstruction of thevaudeville medium as it existed at the end of the lastcentury, and succeeded quite well. American vaudeville,which has been called the folk art of the urbanite, thrivedbest in the years between the 1880s and the first WorldWar, though it survived almost to the eve of the Depres¬sion. Its essence was institutionalized variety, a legacyfrom earlier touring entertainment, combined with ele¬ments of the circus, the minstrel show, and the melo¬drama. Acrobats, jugglers, magicians, comics, singers,dancers, and actors alternated in fast-paced shows de¬signed to appeal to city audiences.The vaudeville circuits, which were dominated by asmall group of magnates, most important of whom B.F.Keith and Edward Albee, nourished many entertainersMaureen Callaghan in a family act. who moved on to celebrity elsewhere: Eddie Cantor,George Jessel, Jack Benny, Fred Allen, Fatty Arbuckle,Milton Berle, Marie Dressier and Pat Rooney wereamong the successful graduates. But the great vaudevil-lians like Nora Bayes, Eva Tanguay, Irene Franklin, We¬ber and Fields, were national stars in their own right longbefore Hollywood and the radio networks pre-empted theterm. At princely salaries of thousands a week, working ingorgeous palaces replete with all the magnificence moneycould command, the stars created legends which old-timers and antiquarians cherish like the memorabilia of aforgotten religion. Baseball buffs are no more devoted totheir record books than the true student of vaudeville is tohis lore.And if accuracy was the test, the Reynolds Club showscored well. The Three Callahans, a family act, exchangedoutrageous puns, Sir Baldwin Spinet and Belle Canto did ascene from Patience, Princess Fatima slinked through asuggestive dance, the Harriet Beecher Stowe MinstrelTroupe imaged a Tambo and Bones routine, and PhineasT. Munrab (get it?) played the xylophone and a set ofwater glasses with verve and Onusual skill. The melo¬drama, “The Villain Still Pursued Her,” was superbly re¬enacted, with the burlesque, slapstick, and topical com¬ment characteristic of the playlets. If purists fell offendedby references to Spiro Agnew or life in Skokie they neednot have; vaudeville stars frequently referred to politicalevents in passing.It was, in fact, the critical tone of the whole show whichseemed most striking. The comedy of the vaudevilletheatre was frequently deflating; it took on pomposity,pedantry, and arrogance with equal energy. Almost everynational type, native-born and immigrant, received someshare of good-natured abuse. Red-blooded heroism itselfcame in for its share of ribbing. Pure hearts were asliable to provoke laughter as villainous curs were to pro¬duce hisses. A good deal of vaudeville humor, AlbertMcLean has written, “seems to have been the effort ofdemocratic man to reduce figures of respectability andprivilege to his own commonplace station.”The critical role of the comic themes, however, mayhave been over-emphasized by the Reynolds Club revival.The danger of reenacting vaudeville revues lies in theelement of self-parody revivals inevitably contain. Au¬diences gathered to share the memories of an archaic artform share different moods than the original crowds; sen¬timent becomes sentimentality, appeals to emotion pro¬duce belly laughs rather than heart throbs. The greatstars managed a peaceful coexistence between satire andsentiment; they had (heir followers weeping, deeply Villianous Dick Mintel threatens Jeanne Wikler with themortgage.moved, just before and after they rolled the same au¬diences in the aisles.No great stars, alas, illumined the Winkler-Bernsteinboards. Acts requiring either improvisation or subtlemimicry were the least successful. The monologue adapt¬ed from Aaron Hoffman’s German Senator did not workout; the malapropisms, misprouniciations, and bumblingcommentaries on the state of the country seemed arti¬ficial. It takes enormous comic talent to survive the hot¬house atmosphere of a revival, and voices which the mem¬bers of the cast simply did not possess.On the other hand, if the ghosts of Frank Tinney, MayIrwin, and Bert Williams were not ignited by the fire atthe Reynolds Club, the show was nothing to be ashamedof. There were moments when the lost rituals of thevaudeville theatre did come alive, and the rhythms ofmusic, humor, and action locked together to reveal theentertainment formula that worked for forty years. Andthe inability of reproduce the genius of the stars is, ofcourse, only the ultimate tribute to their true talents.Neil Harrist i. We're sorry about "Titicut" ■ • V * x " • V »d>'- *•V if V'But L OVE AFFAIRwill be here! Sunday, 8th7:00 & 9 P.M. - Cobb Hall -Contemporary European Filmsi»o4ooo<auiarehouseFINAL SALE 30%-50% OFFOUTERWEAR, SPORT-JACKETS. MAXI-COATS.SHIRTS. BELL BOTTOMSHOURS: Monday thru Friday - 12 to 10Saturday - 11 to 9Sunday - 12 to 62837 N. BROADWAY CHICAGO, 60657 SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Ratos forStudents and RolativosSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bad roams from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. P'easc call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive i CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Thos what you need from a $10Yused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼corpet. Specializing in RemnantsMill returns at a fraction of the^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.9Additional 10% Discount with this*Ad.I FREE DELIVERY THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback LinesIU1' Student l)iscount on QunltHPaperbacks & Hardcovers1540R. 55th St.-Ml 3-7511SOUL: TRANSLITERATION OFTHE SEVENTIESA service created andcelebrated by theCHICAGO AREA BLACK UNITARIANUNIVERSALIST CAUCUSMamie Gibson-Alex Poinsett-Richard ClayterSenator Richard Newhouse-The PharaohsChicago Children's Choir singersSunday, March 8 10:30 A.M.FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH57th and WoodlawnJack Mendelsohn, MinisterGrey City Journal/March 6, 1970 CHICAGO SINAI CONGREGATIONcordially invites youto attend a lecturefeaturingthe noted author and lecturerISAAC BASHEVIS SINGERFriday evening, March 13, 8:30 p.m.in the S.D. Schwartz Hall of the Temple1720 E. 54th StreetAdmission free I'iA Radical Critique of the Law SchoolDallin Oaks of the Law School as he appeared last year on his way to the disciplinary hearingsContinued from Page One)against charges of racial discrimination from the Wood-lawn community, or from black students within otherparts of the University.The truth turned out to be that the law school was somuch a part of the establishment that it didn’t even haveto bother with token gestures. There appeared to be aconscious policy within the school of calculated failure innot getting more women and minority group students.President Johnson’s escalation of the Viet-Nam Warpressured the selective service system for more men, andthe law school had to find enough bodies to fill its classes,so it began to take more women. In no way does it appearto have done so willingly. It still was very much like the“Rosie the Riveter” tales that I used to hear about theWorld Wars. Women would get the jobs that men got afterthe men went off to war. Only now, the women weregetting into the law school because the men had to stay inschool, join Vista, got to jail, or go to war.There are now more minority-group, non-whites in thelaw school than at any time during my three years there,but still less than 15. Moreover, the policy of the schooltoward their increased enrollment of Afro-Americans,Mexican-Americans, American Indians, or other minoritygroup students could not have changed much in six months:to wait for them to come up through the ranks of primary,secondary, and college education until they prove “uali-fied.” Quite blatantly, this is a cop-out, because it assumesthat if the schools of the poor and non-white communitiesdo not improve, then the law school will have to abide bythat decision.The proof of this non-policy can be seen in some his¬torical facts. In 1966, as I asked around, I learned fromDean Hormel, then Dean of Admissions, that the adminis¬tration and faculty agreed on the importance of havingmore blacks in the law school, but that many facultymembers were unwilling to “lower” their standards toadmit students who might .be “bad risks.” Later thatyear, Dean George Fee, then Dean of Students, told methat I should in no way consider the law school to beunconcerned:As far as being a lily-white law school, I don’t thinkyou know the efforts members of the faculty and admin¬istration went to last year to get Negro students to Chi¬cago. Another factor of which you are probably unawareof is that the Negro enrollment in schools which alwayshave a fairly high percentage of Negroes due to reputa¬tion, money, or other means, has dropped markedly inthe last two or three years to half and sometimes one fifthof what it used to be. One of the reasons for this, ofcourse, is that businesses are snapping up Negroes whenthey leave high school, college, or business school. Moneyattracts. I hardly think you can call Chicago culturallydeprived because we have no Negroes in the classroom.Take a walk along 63rd Street, even 61st Street. If we areculturally deprived, and live in an ivory tower, pleasetell me, for heaven’s sake, what Cambridge (Harvard),Yale, Stanford, Berkeley and 99 per cent of the otherschools in the country are. We have made studies on theNegro students who have attended the University of Chi¬cago and there are more than you think mainly becauseyou haven’t seen too many since you have been here.I think in many of their cases people here at the Schoolhave bent over backward consciously, or unconsciously,to help these students. I don’t wish to discuss how theschools you mention in your letter have handled the prob¬lem of insuring academic success (for blacks). I’ll be gladto discuss it with you when you come to the Law Schoolthis fall. I doubt you’d agree for one moment the waythey’ve done it, or the experiences some of these Negroeshave gone through feeling like a second class law student.I think a great deal can be done in this area, but only ifwe are realistic about the problems and yet willing tohelp those' people who are willing to help themselves.(From a letter dated August 22, 1967.)Some of the catalogue of other excuses I was givenover the past years are “We had white recruiters at blackcolleges, and that didn’t work,” “We had black recruitersat black colleges, and that didn’t work,” all of the “quali¬fied” minority group students prefer to go to Harvard orYale because of the prestige, and “with the increasingsense of black militancy, it is getting harder to convinceanyone that going to law school is the best step on theroad to revolution.”I might have accepted some of these arguments ex¬cept for two points: first, I didn’t think that all blackswere “militant,” secondly, I didn’t think that the lawschool ought to assume that it would fail just becauseother schools had tried and failed, if indeed they had.After all, the law school faculty are very creativepeople, able to come up with intricate, complex, and work¬able plans for the solution to dozens of problems outside ofthe law school; why not inside it as well?In fact, most of the arguments given to me seemedrationalizations for other policy considerations: that thelaw school valued its selection and educational methods sohighly that it didn’t want to open them to testing becausethey might be found wanting; that the admission of more blacks, women, or othe non-white minority group stu¬dents was simply not very important to the law school;and that the law school assumed and wanted to assume nospecial responsibility for doing anything to eliminate theeffects of racial, sexual, and class discrimination thathave resulted from people being told not to pursue ca¬reers, to become day laborers or housewives instead ofprofessional people, and being forced to sit in destructiveprimary and secondary schools. The admissions standardsof competence, as judged by grades and aptitude test per¬formance, although allegedly “neutral,” but in fact re¬inforce and perpetuate that discrimination.When coupled with the other pieces of evidence that Isaw, this admissions office policy seemed perfectly con¬sistent. The faculty on the law school was wholly white,and almost all male, even to the point that there were nononwhite or female Bigelow Teaching Fellows (first yearteachers in legal research and writing), although surelyby 1968 there must have been at least a couple of qualifiedpeople available that the law school could have hired.Moreover, the relationship of the Legal Aid Clinic tothe black community of Woodlawn seemed to show thatthe law school didn’t care about Woodlawn’s liberationexcept if that liberation could be ‘’channeled” into areasthat would not threaten the law school economically, polit¬ically, or physically. I think that any director of the legalaid clinic, black or white, who was seriously interested inhelping to make the people of Woodlawn freer would prob¬ably be stifled in confrontations with the law school bu¬reaucracy. Presumably, the legal aid clinic exists to pro¬vide legal services to the poor. Yet the law school facultylast year voted down a proposal to give students coursecredit for work in the legal aid area which would probablyprovide more legal services. They no doubt based theirobjections on some highly appropriate and correct techni¬cality. Finally, eight law schools in the country wererecently offered a special program of law educationwhereby students would spend several months workingwith experienced poverty law attorneys in a very intenseprogram. They would, ov course, receive credit for thiswork. Six of the law schools accepted the plan, Chicagoand Harvard rejected it. Chicago will probably keep onrejecting it until Harvard accepts it. The law school is ainfiltrated with bureaucratic malaise , academic in¬sensitivity, lack of creative energy, and racism as the restof our society.THE WORLD OUTSIDEThe same tendencies toward insensitivity and aloof¬ness, appeared in the law school’s relationship to nationalpolitics as well. In the spring of 1968, the administrationordered that a table set up to help recruit McCarthy vol¬unteers for the Indiana primary campaign be removedfrom the lounge. At roughly the same time, a petitionopposing the Viet-Nam War appeared in a local newspaper(I think it was the Chicago Sun-Times), and there were nofaculty signatures from the law school, although therewere professors from about 15 other schools who managedto find the petition and sign it.For balance, the administration allowed a collectionfor bail money after Dr. King was assassinated, then ear¬ly in 1969 allowed people collecting signatures for the re¬ turn of football to the University to set up a table in thelounge.(The memorable conversation which Walter Blum hadwith a number of students in the fall of 1967 probablyexpressed only his opinion, but it is worth mentioning. Inconversation about the best way to register dissatisfactionwith the war, Mr. Blum said that he did not understandwhy so many students were frustrated with the process ofgoing through our elected officials, senators and represen¬tatives. You’d be surprised, he noted, how many of yourparents know people who know Chuck Percy or other Sen¬ators, or know people who know people who know sena¬tors. When you see them, or you see Chuck Percy, hesaid, tell him what you think about the war.)There appeared to be a genuine revulsion among thefaculty after the police riot during the 1968 DemocraticConvention, and several of them expressed disgust bothafter the April 27, 1968 peace march and after the con¬vention at the cynical manipulation by the city of thepermit-granting process. But all of this good feeling wasundone, in my mind, by two factors. First, there seemedto be almost no support for the argument that the policeresponse was a deliberate, planned attack on the demon¬strators on both occasions. Secondly, I was aware of al¬most no criticism of the now-infamous Levi-Daley-Bundydinner.The University invited Richard J. Daley andMcGeorge Bundy to the inaugural, dinner at the HiltonHotel, less than three months after the Convention. Profes¬sor Richard Flacks’ letter in the Maroon (November 8,1968) appropriately characterized the obscenity of the Uni¬versity’s willing association with the law-and-order twins.Soia Mentschikoff could not understand why Mr. Flacksdid not want to be a part of Ed Levi’s dream, and I thinkthat most of the faculty probably agreed with her generalfeelings. This night to be was the law school’s triumph,one of its own was becoming head of the University offi¬cially and with the blessing of the establishment, and no¬body was going to mar this occasion by squawking aboutpolitics and morality. It was just a dinner, for god’s sake,let it alone. At worst, somebody probably thought thatinviting Daley was a public relations blunder, but notmuch else.Ultimately, though, the University’s choice of dinnerguests could not have been more appropriate. The dis¬cussions with the mayor’s office about the invitation, andthe association with Mr. Bundy must have somehow rub¬bed off on the University officials and especially the facul¬ty who were at the dinner, because the law school and theuniversity soon began to show their real political inten¬sions.THE LAW SCHOOL GIVES WARNING: OCTOBER, 1968,JANUARY, 1969In October, 1968, Ed Levi sent a memorandum to eachdivision of the University, asking them to set up a student-faculty committee in each department or division of theUniversity, to improve communications. Dean Neal askedthe Law Students Association, an organization to set upsocial and athletic events, to appoint representatives tothe committee. They chose from among themselves. DeanContinued on Page NineMarch 6, 1970/Grey City Journal/5POTPOURRI-Food: Greek and GermanDiana, 310 South Halsted, 263-1848Located in the heart of Chicago’s Greektown, the Dianais about as close to the real thing as you can find this sideof Athens: Greek menu (with translation), Greek-speakingwaiters and clientelle, and even Greek music on the juke.Being seated just opposite the kitchen, I had the opportun¬ity to inspect firsthand the numerous savory Greek spe¬cialties emanating from that quarter. Moussaka, theGreek lasagna with meat, cheese, and eggplant, was un¬usually rich and delicious. Egg lemon rice soup is differ¬ent and a steal at 25 cents a cup. Meatballs seared in thesame egg lemon sauce may be had. And of course shish-kabob and braised, seared, and roasted lamb are servedwith eggplant, potatoes, and squash. As a concession toAmerica’s excellent beef, all the lamb dishes are alsoduplicated in beef. To top off the list, you can have squidin wine sauce or octopus. All the above run about $2.00For another dollar you can have a combination plate (wayat the bottom of the menu) that has some of nearly every¬thing. For dessert, baklava is the obvious choice. VariousGreek wines (both resinated and not) are available andContributorsRennie Davis, currently out on bail, spent February21 (the day of the Conspiracy demonstration at the CookCounty Jail) in Block G, Tier 4, Cell 3.Epicurius Glutamate lives to eat, he does not eat tolive.Richard Hack is a 1969 graduate of the College andis currently spending his time writing.Neil Harris is associate professor in the history de¬partment.Nelson A. Soltman is a 1969 graduate of the LawSchool is engaged in poverty law work in Chicago. you probably won’t be carded. Fresh baked sesame breadwith every meal and Greek salads with feta cheese, an¬chovies, and olives for 75 cents. Be sure to dig the groceryon the way out and if you open your mouth, you might geta free Jordan almond flown in by the man behind thecounter. Daily, noon to mdnight. Jammed on nice week¬ends after about 6:15 (you might have to wait 20 minutes).The Berghoff, 17 West Adams and 123 North Wahash, 427-3170 and 782-7443 respectively.Oak panelled walls, the house’s own beer, all male wait¬ers, and you think you’re back in ze old country. GoodWienerschnitzel, roast duck, red cabbage, other meat dish¬es, and a surprisingly wide selection of seafood and fishMUSICIT’S NOT VERY OFTEN THAT Chicago is the locationof concerts of groups you want to hear.One exception however is the Band concert March 13.Unfortunately the 13th is the Friday night before finalsweek. Look at it this way, you are going to need to forgetyour problems for a little while that weekend anyway.What better way to forget your physics or French thana concert with the Band?The Band, for all of you who have been hibernating forthe past two years, is Dylan’s old back-up group whoproduced a record in 1968 called Music from Big Pink andThe Band in 1969.The group has written songs like “The Weight,”“Cripple Creek,” “Jemima Surrender,” “Chest Fever,”and “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.” The groupalso does some Dylan songs, or songs that they co-wrotewith Dylan like “I Shall Be Released,” “Tears of Rage,”and “Wheels on Fire.” They’ll be here on the 13th at theOpera House with tickets from $3.50 through $6.50. all 2-3 dollars a la carte. Steaks at $4.50-5.00. Light anddark beer in stiens, German and domestic wines. Goodselection of German tortes and other goodies for dessert,but the waiters don’t know what they are either, so don’tbother about those strange names — they’re all good. TheAdams branch is immense (lunchtime haunt of the Con¬spiracy trial), and the Wabash keller is also spacious, sothey can accomodate large parties easily. Service is un¬believably fast and efficient, but there’s no hurrying youto leave if you want to sit and appreciate that efficientGerman bustle. Different daily specials. Open 11 am toabout 9 pm every day except Sunday.Epicurius GlutamateThe Band in ChicagoTHEY DON’T FOLLOW FADSTHEY SET TRENDSSimonandGarfunkelBridgeOverTroubled HELLO,I’MJOHNNYCASHincludingHI WereA CarpenterSee Ruby FallBlisteredI ve Got A ThingAbout TrainsTo Beat The DevilKCS 9943/HC 1234*/18 10 0826t14 10 08261/16 10 0826Johnny's.latest collection of hitsounds gathered under a title that'sbecome a household phrase in mostof his fans' homes.□ $0698-track cartridge:□ BN 26456/N18 10186*$289KCS 9914/HS 1212*/18 10 07SOt14 10 07501/ 16 10 0750*Here’s the latest from Simon andGarfunkel. A brilliant new album!Features "Cecilia." "El CondorPasa," "Bye Bye Lowe." more .D $Q698-track cartridge:~ 9^89 8-track cartridge:•4*d iscount records ■fclCome in or order by mailDISCOUNT RECORDS STORE LOCATIONSChicago. III. / 201 N. LaSalle StreetChampaign, III. / 603 South Wright StChicago. III. / 55 West Monroe Street Name.Address.City. .State. .Zip Code.Enclosed is Check □ Money Order □ Amount.Add Sales Tas as applicable FACULTY:INCOME TAXPROBLEMS?Unusual problems of fac¬ulty income warrant specialattention.Will complete your formsor advise you how to do it.Call 752-7047for appointment6/Grey CXty Journal/March 6, 1976 The University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street at Woodlawn AvenueSunday, March 22 • 3:30 P.M.J. S. Bach&t. MattljnupasmmtRICHARD VIKSTROMDirector of C hope I Hu ticDonald Doig, EvangelistHenri Noel, ChriitusLaury Christie, topranoPhyllis Unosawe, cor.tralfbGeorg* DeLonVe, tenorTsu omu Masuko,. baritoneTK MCKEKUn 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 universitiesAVAILASLfc: All TICKETRON out-lets including Marina City, 300 N.State, end all Ward end Fieldstores. Cooley's Corner, 5211 S.Harper; Woodworth's Bookstore,1311 E. 57th.Reynolds Club Desk, 5706UniversityMAIL ORDbRS: Chapel Music,59th Street and Woodland Ave.,Chicago M637.Mease make checks payable toThe University of Chicago and en¬close self-addressed envelope.POTPOURRI -Conspiracy in the Cook County JailBLOCK G. TIER 4. CELL 3. The Time is 3 pm, February21st.i Abbie, Tom and Jerry are scattered in cells across thecorridor, caged up in 5 x 8 metal boxes 24 hours a day.We’re in the hole, recipients of the “basement bargain” ofCook County jail and in custody of men who are in a mad, race to govern America’s worst prison. John, Lee andDave have been moved to “open: tiers” where they canwalk about, if they are willing to squeeze through the oth¬ers who have been herded and shoved into quarters one-> half the size required by even this country’s backwardpenal standards.It’s a normal day. Radios and voices turned up fullvolume for a life of crashing, quarreling sound. It’s likebeing chained to the pounding noise of a New York subway* in rush hour, squashed by metal bars instead of humanbeings. I’m on my back, trying to think about my crime,when screaming alarms and crackling short wave radiosbring me out of bed to my feet.Twenty-three cells away, a man can look through anarrow window slit and see 26th street. That guy — num¬ber 26 — is the first to yell out. His message is passedalong from cell to cell, picking up speed and volume, eachL man adding his bit, as the word is spread by a chain of[ human voices.“They’re outside, getting ready.”“They’re outside, fucking with the jail.”L “The Stones, the D’s, the Panthers and the Con¬spiracy’s outside, man, and they is ready.”By the time the message is delivered to cell three, itsounds like Division Nine of the Viet Cong is outside.The guards panic. They blast out orders to the guyswho aren’t in solitary confinement to get to their cells:“Motherfuckers, lock it up. Let’s go now. Lock it up. Thatmeans everybody. Lock the fuckers up.”Up and down the tier, steel slams into steel, as peopleare pushed into cubicles and their doors locked.Inside the cells, the chatter begins.“I hope they break in and tear this hole apart.”“Shit, I hope they remember to break me out.”“Hey, I’m ready. I got my shit packed. I’m ready inhere, ready to run on out — yeh. I’m ready.”Guards double-time through the corridor in front of ourThe Crafts Coop has moved into the third floor of thel^Garg. Handmade items will be on display and for sale allday from noon through the evening, every day the Garg isopen.Gay Liberation rap session at noon.• NUC meeting at 8.TuesdayCrafts Workshop from 3:30-5.Drama Group meets at 8.Wednesday* SDS meetings at 12:30Folk Night for players, singeres and listeners at 8.. Thursday! Gay Lib rap session at 12.NUC presents a rescheduled Sidney Peck to discusshis arrest plus all the larger issues at 8.Poetry Group meets at 9.Elsewherei rfilmThe Damned, Luchinio Lisconti’s massive portrayalof the rise of Nazi Germany is documented through thehistory of one family. And what a family. With Dirk Bo-, ^arde, Ingrid Thulin and Hermut Berger. At the Carnegie,Hush St. at Oak.Andy Warhol’s Lonesome Cowboys started last weekhere in Chicago. Its publicity describes it as a Zane Greyj idea, written by Aristophanes, and performed by De-1 Sade’s stock company from Charenton. It’s at the Aard-vark, 1608 N. Wells, in Piper’s Alley.Z is a film of political suspense and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicaly*nd contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, Chicago and Michigan.Putney Swope is a mad attack on Madison Avenue,white liberals and other such imaginary phenomena and is• supposed to be pretty hilarious. At the Three Penny, 2424N. Lincoln.Gaily, Gaily is about a young innocent who comes toj Chicago during the rowdy 20’s — and then Chicago does, something to him. At the Esquire, 53 E. Oak Street.La Guerre Est Finie and Accatone, are playing adouble bill. La Guerre stars Yves Montand and is directedhy Alain Renais and concerns a partisan of the SpanishICivil War. Accatone is by Pier Paolo Pasolini of The?thPel ^ccor^n8 to St. Matthew fame. It takes place in|tne slums of Rome At the Festival. 3912 N. Sheridan.Zabriskie Point by Michelangelo Antonioni opensI n*ght in Chicago. He claims he is doing to America what bars. One stops to close window near me. A BlackstoneRanger yells out:“You better not go outside there.”The guard: “Why not? We got helmets and shit.”The Stone: “That ain’t gonna do you no good.”The guard: “We’ll see.”The Stone: “How many Stones down there? If thoseStones get your ass, I’m gonna laugh. You nervous, ain’tyou, guard?”The guard: “I ain’t nervous.”The Stone: “Best place for you is here, behind thesebars where it’s safe. Hey is the National Guard coming?”The guard: “The National Guard ain’t needed.”The Stone: “How come you scared, then? You know, ifhe did to England with Blow-Up. Much of it takes place inDeath Valley. It’s at the Esquire, 58 E. Oak.They Shoot Horses Don’t They has been raved aboutin many quarters. It looks at American society throughthe metaphor of a marathon-dance in the 3G’s. It starsJane Fonda, Michael Sarrazin and Gig Young. At StateLake Theatre.Adaptation-Next is two one-act plays, one by, old Chicagoan Elaine May and one by Terance McNally.At the Happy Medium, 901 N. Rush St. Tuesday — Thurs¬day at 8:30, Friday and Saturday at 8 and 11, Sunday at7:30.The Lot Assigned and Christmas Eve with Miss Fet-tengill are two original one-act plays by Don Abramsonand Lucille Bluestein respectively. Hull House PlaywrightsCenter, 222 W. North Friday and Saturday at 8:30.Endgame a play by none other than the Nobel Prizewinner Samuel Becket. It’s in a new theatre with a coffeeshop attached. Chicago repertory Company, 315 W. North,Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at 8:30.The Assault on Charles Summer by Hivnor has itspremiere 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 ex¬ample of Paul Sills’ “story theatre” this time taken fromthe Grimm Brothers. The Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln.Tuesday through Thursday at 8:30, Friday and Saturdayat 8:30 and 10:30.Justice Is Done or Oh! Cal Coolidge is the newest ofthe famous Second City revues. Second City 1616 N. Wells,Tuesdays through Thursday and Sunday, Friday at 8:30and 11, Saturday 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 CafeTOPA, 904 W. Belmont. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 andSunday at 7:30. It’s free but coffee is $2.Eddie in the Doorway is an original drama of fatherconflict. At the Hull House Playwright’s Theatre, 222 W.North. Friday and Saturday at 8:30. Students $1.50.Police—an interesting title is the Chicago premiere ofSlawomire Mrozek’s futuristic drama. At the Playhouse,315 W. North. Friday' and Saturday at 8:03 and Sunday at7:30. Students, $2.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. you guys would be nice enough to let us out, none of thiswould happen. Say, how many are out there?”The guard: “I don’t know, quite a few and they’re stillcoming.”The Stone: “What would you do if you saw some ofyour kin folk out there?”The guard: “Well they ain’t out there.”The Stone: “Yeah, but suppose they were. You’d haveto split heads of your own kin, wouldn’t you?”The guard: “It depends.”The Stone: “You better stay in here, motherfucker. Ifyour kinfolk catch you out there, they’ll run you back in,after they beat your ass for being a Pig! ”Through the closed windows, I can see men armed withshotguns dashing across the outer wall. A shout goes up:“There they are. Kill ’em, kill them pigs.”The voice chain comes alive:“They locked up the whole stinking jail so the mother-fucking guards could go outside to defend this hole.”“Hey, Officer Baron, they told you to go outside. Howcome you’re hiding in here? You scared?”“Break this motherfucker down. If they don’t breakthis motherfucker down they ain’t doing no good.”“Hey, 21 (referring to the man in that cell) turn therecord off, I want to hear outside.”Number 21 turns his radio up. It blares:“Thousands of demonstrators are protesting in Ameri¬can cities against the jailing of the riot defendants in Chi¬cago.”Cheers, hollers and whistles go up.Someone yells, “Hey, those white motherfuckers reallygetting it together.”Continued on Page EightIfliiCITYjoihiiHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, ard grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne Wikler_____StaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxC. F. Z. Hitchcock ’Frank MalbrancheThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.March 6, 1970/Grey City Journal/7LCUTIM IILTHEI' ■This Bird Has FlownrContinued from Page ThreeMondayf i > ‘ 11 k / M *• f“Yom Can’t Jail the Truth99Continued from Page Seven“If the warden runs out they’ll kill him, won’t theynumber three?”“You know the warden’s going out, if he sees thoseTV’s, he’ll do anything to get his name in the papers.”“Hey I can hear them. Turn that fucking radio off. Ican hehr them.”The tier settles down while the outside builds up aslow, steady sound,pushing through nearly a full foot ofwall. It’s faint but distinct. Five notes beat through thebrick. No words are intelligible at first. Then they come:“You can’t jail the truth.”“You can’t jail the truth.”The men inside pick up the chant.“You can’t jail the truth.”Someone says, “If you can’t jail the truth, how comeI’m in here?”Laughter.“Hey officer, open these windows, it’s stuffy in here.”More laughter.But the guard comes to my bars, smiles, gives me thefist, and starts opening the windows, letting the sound washover him. Great cheers go up for the guard. I can hearsomeone speaking on a bullhorn faintly. It sounds like Nan¬cy Kurshan. *Now the chatter starts again:“I want them to stop talking and come in here and getme out.”“It shows that people are okay. The people are readyto make this world free.”“You fucker, they ain’t ready. If they was ready,they’d pack their shit on them and come and free us.”“Is Moe out there?” (referring to Winston Moore, theWarden.)v “Yeah!”“What’s he doing?”“He’s out there running, trying to avoid an ass-whip-ping.”“They ought to kill him.”Four more guards job past our bars. The Stone says:“Look at them rubbing their fists. Don’t come backrubbing your eye.”“Hey number 15, what they doing?”“They’re throwing snowballs and bottles at the mother-fucking pigs.”“I hope they tear this motherfucker down.”“Kill Moe.”“Killing Moe won’t do us any good.”“Yeah, but I’d be plenty satisfied.” “I heard someone say down here they cut the telephonewires.”“That’s a good idea.”“If all the people out there was Stones, we’d get out.”“Turn on WBBM (the all-news station) and see what’shappening.”The radio barfs up some cigarette ad, and then a voicebeeps:“In Washington D.C., several thousand youthful sup¬porters of the Chicago Conspiracy gathered across fromthe Justice Department to hear Anita Hoffman, wife ofAbbie Hoffman, and William Kunstler, attorney for the Chi¬cago 7.”“Later the police had to push the crowd back. Thecrowd responded by throwing rocks and boards.”The announcement starts wild cheers and yells in Tier4.Then the radio voice continues:“Firebombs hit a police station, naval recruiting officeand the home of a judge today in New York.”This announcement brings pandemonium.Outside, a helicopter motor whirls directly overhead.Someone screams: “Hey, they’re coming over the walldown here. They’re coming over the fucking wall.”Three guards scramble down the corridor towards thatvoice. The air is charged with electricity.I Clarkenjoy ourspecial studentrateC <£ attimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officeT# different double featuredaily!• open 7 30a.m.-lateshow midnightI • Sunday film guildI • every wed. and fn. isladies day-all gals 75‘little gal lery for galsonly|« clarl? park mg-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.|« write for your freemonthly programClark & madison fr 2-28431INo one under18 admittedCONTINUOUSPERFORMANCES Sunday \etc York Times ^8:30 A H (daily too)BOB’S NEWSSTAM) *♦ 51st and Lake Park *•X Huge slocks of Current Haga- k^ lines. Paperbacks, Assorted^^ Pornography. Come & qpeet ^my dog “Michael. ”EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbork Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHLITZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWN8/Grey City Journal/March 6, 1970 The Stone prays: “Come on and get me. 0 come onand get me. I better put on my shit. Everyone get yourshit.”The Blackstone Ranger next to me listens and says“That motherfucker is scared.”A black guard pushes his face into the bars that holdthe Stone:“Let me tell you something, motherfucker. Negroessuch as you are never going to run this country, hear?”The Stone laughs: “You scared too, ain’t you? Youscared of that Conspiracy girl out there on that horn, causeshe’s telling the truth. We’re coming out of here. We defi¬nitely coming out of here. And if we don’t run the country,the country won’t run. Period.”I send along these notes as another reminder thatsomewhere sometime, jailhouses have to be taken on. Mostof the victims of this jail are black, rounded up by policeand wasting in cages because they can’t make the bail. Forthem every afternoon on G-4 ends as Conspiracy day end¬ed. The cell door breaks open at 5:30 pm and the guardsgrant a 8-yard walk to pick up a plateful of garbage Hereon G-4, freedom comes in a stroll for a quarter pound pileof cooked starch, except for an occasional beautiful mo¬ment when the people outside remember and gather to help 1to generate a spirit of resistance to those who say, “Fuckyou, Moe. We’re coming out! We’re coming out. Oh blow afucking hole in the wall right here, please.”The man next to me says, “Number three, we should <all start tearing up the courts. They’re all railroad jobs anddamn it, tearing up really gets results. We should all dowhat you did.”A chorus of “right ons” comes from both sides of the ,voice chain.Slowly the tension ebbs. The radios go back on. Guardsreappear, greeted with comments from the cells;“Let me see how many guards come in here with ablack eye.”“Tight-ass motherfuckers.”“You was luck they didn’t kick the shit out of you ”Over the radio, we listen to the sheriff of Cook County,Joseph Woods, the man who promised in 1968 to organize a *vigilante posse for use against demonstrators coming tothe Democratic Convention.Woods tells the reporter he had enough firepower andmanpower to keep the lid on. He boasts of keeping the fcrowd out of the tiers and preventing the Conspiracy fromseeing their supporters.Not for long, Sheriff Woods. Not for long.Rennie Davis ,HAVE YOU DISCOVEREDTHE BOOK CENTERIN HARPER COURT?IT'S WORTH THE EXTRA EFFORT■ — ■What Does the Law School Do?Continued from Page FiveNeal apparently didn’t seriously consider having an elec¬tion for this committee. After all, his law school has al¬ways been run from the top down, so why not continue itthat way.Finally, pressure from some students forced the com¬mittee members to resign, and new members were elect¬ed. The meetings of this committee don’t seem to haveproved very successful, except in perhaps forcing someslight course reforms, and convincing some of the facultymembers of how distrustful some of the students were ofthe way that the faculty and administration ran theschool.Some students on the curriculum committee that wasset up were astonished with the conservatism of some ofthe faculty members on curriculum issues. This probablywas the formalization of the attitude displayed at an openstudent-faculty meeting last spring, when one professorsaid that he didn’t think it was possible for the law schoolto teach any courses in poverty law, because there was nosuch academic field as poverty law. Well, if you can’tteach it, and you won’t let students do it, then maybethey'll forget that it exists, and will be satisfied.Faculty and administration attitudes toward law stu¬dents as a constant bother became apparent just prior tothe sit-in, when the law school bureaucracy ground outone of its more ridiculous successes. Before the winterquarter began, the faculty approved an option to takecourses for credit in other departments of the University,for third-year students only. The reform was long overdue,and was most welcome, but it was almost wholly emascu¬lated by the conditions attached to it. First, courses couldbe chosen from a narrow range of fields, almost ex¬clusively in the social sciences. Second, students had tosubmit a petition to a law school dean’s office to have thecourse choice approved. Next, the course instructor or thehead of the department the course was being given in hadto sign a permission slip to take the course. This mayhave been slightly reasonable, but it was absurd to expectthe students to get the course catalogue, look over thetitles of the courses, call professors to find out what thecourses were really about, type up petitions regardingcourses, and get the necessary signatures within 48 hours.That is, it was absurd unless you really wanted to harrassthe students, and treat them as children who could not betrusted with too much freedom. I think that the deadlineof 48 hours was imposed without a second thought ofwhether it would be inconvenient for the students, or whatthe students would think. In my moments of extremeparanoia and lucidity, it seems that the deadlines werecreated because the law school faculty didn’t want to bereminded how much students wanted to break out of thecase-book mold that they had been forced into over aperiod of two years.Professors that I spoke with across the midway wereamazed at the way the law students were being harrasstv,and at least three of them expressed strong resentment atthe added administrative burden that the law school hadplaced upon them.Thinking back on it, this was only another instance ofa lack of interest in what the students really wanted. Myfirst year in law school, I could never understand whystudents weren’t allowed to pick the general subject areathat their legal research papers would cover. In the springof 1968, the administration and faculty refused to permitstudents to receive credit for a seminar which theycreated on the Kerner Commission report, but without anyofficial notice made a seminar in “Public Regulation ofLand” into a course on the Kerner Commission report,with limited entrance into the course. Apparently, racismwas not an appropriate topic for a big, official law schoolclassroom.Thus, when the “outside-course” incident occurred, itpiled a couple more layers of grievances on top of whatwas already there: I couldn’t understand why second-yearstudents as well as third-year students couldn’t takecourses in other departments (apparently, this has beenchanged now). I didn’t understand why a lawyer whomight be involved in a community rehabilitation or renew¬al project shouldn’t be able to take a course in archi¬tecture, ert history, or sculpture. The reasons finallyseemed clear enough: students were incapable of ex¬ercising their own judgment on what was best for them intheir careers, the best education for lawyers is a profes¬sional education, and we — the faculty — have the ex¬perience and the wisdom to know what’s best for them,and we will force them to do what’s good for them —they’ll appreciate it some day.IT ALL HANGS TOGETHERI understand that the SDS has called a meeting fortomorrow to discuss alternatives for action in the currentcontroversy concerning Marlene Dixon, and that thesealternatives include possible militant action. Decisionstaken at these meetings will directly affect everyone inthe law school, and the University Community. I thereforeurge each of you to go to the meeting, to vote reasonablythe issues presented, and to stay until the meeting isadjourned, since decisions taken at these meetings are Stagg Field Labs, site of Shireman disciplinary hearings.often made by a few people who remain until the end.Phil C. Neal, Dean(The essence of a note addressed to all law stu¬dents shortly before the Mandel Hall meeting before thesit-in last year.)Phil C. Neal . . . recently observed that a universitycannot ask the protection of civil authority without sacri¬ficing its dxstanct qualities — just as a household that mustfall back on the law to regulate the conduct of its mem¬bers thereby ceases to be what it was.Neal's alternative solution is to appeal beyond thelaw to the intangibles of “University spirit and motive” —and at the same time limit access to the University . . .In NeaVs words, the University must be reserved ‘forthose who are prepared not only to renounce force andthe threat of force but the idea of coercion itself as ameans of making their views prevail.” The university, heconcludes, belongs to no one, but it does not follow thatit belongs to everyone.’Newsweek Magazine, June 23,1969Everything fell into place, turned upside down, andfinally made sense during the sit-in. I found out that whenpeople at the law school talked about academic integrity,they didn’t mean anything about the integrity of academ¬ics outside of their footnotes. And I found out that freedomfrom coercion meant freedom from coercion by people outof power. Most of all, I found out that all those lovelyconstitutional doctrines were useless when somebody wasat the mercy of the University’s tenured faculty, who onlytalked about them.In retrospect, I should have remembered that the lawschool’s ruling class was in many ways the University’sruling elite, and that when the repression came, it wouldbe handled by the law school. Ed Levi used to be the deanof the law school; his brother Julian Levi teaches a coursethere. Harry Kalven had many times expressed his beliefthat the University should be, and could be, a neutralforum for the discussion of ideas, and should not become apolitical institution, he apparently thinks that studentsviolate the mission of the University. Walter Blum had,according to a friend of mine, already figured out themarginal cost of the disruptive student, and apparentlyhad decided that the cost outweighed the benefits. More¬over, all of these men, along with Bernard Meltzer, weregraduates of both the University and the law school hereat Chicago, and they didn’t seem able to willing to consid¬er that this institution could, or should do other than whatthey thought was best for them. They own the law school,despite what Phil Neal says.It didn’t seem likely that the police would be called,but I was unprepared for the sophistication and efficiencywith which the sit-in was suppressed. The Oaks and Shire¬man Committees loaded themselves up with due processuntil they felt they had enough, then went about theirbusiness of expelling and suspending the students theywanted to expel and suspend. It was the sit-in, those com¬mittees, and the law school’s manipulation of its internalpopulation that brought home to me, more than the Viet-Nam War, the Democratic Convention in 1968, or any oth¬er single event how difficult the fight to halt the rise offascism will be. In many critical respects, the law school here has had a great opportunity to be a model of a small,creative, innovative institution, on the side of humanismrather than on the side of repression. It has failed, miser¬ably, to do wo within its own glass walls.During the sit-in and the disciplinary proceedings, thefaculty, for all of their rhetoric, participated in, or sup¬ported, by action or inaction, the most pernicious, in¬sidious, disciplinary procedure that I could have imagined.Many of them, the “liberals”, registered only verbal dis¬appointment at the hearings, both the procedures and theresults, but I wasn’t aware of any o fthem publicly regis¬tering their opposition. The entire faculty seemed to showan intense interest in lost research time, rather than intrying to bring some sanity to the hearings; although I’mnot sure that the results of the hearings would have beenvery different.I could only conclude that academic matters weremore personal, more difficult, and less important to speakout about than were other matters. Or else, the Universityand the law school were such closed places, that it wastoo difficult to say anything publicly.Then, law and order came home. The law school’sown actions, and its use of its students during the sit-inshowed how the forces of repression using the good in¬stincts of many people to implement a devious plan.The law school proved that, like the rest of thissociety, its ultimate force within the community rested noton the ideas of due process, justice, or openness which arethrown about in the classrooms, but on its ability to de¬fend itseif through a security force.The closing of the school, one Friday in February, wasan incredible scene. Somebody, maybe everybody on thefaculty, decided that there was a threat to the law schoolfrom some of the sit-in supporters, and that an occupationwas at hand. Two first-year faculty members, Owen Fiss,a first year faculty member with impressive liberal cre¬dentials, was in charge of the security forces to defend thelaw school. The law school administration had earlier ad¬vertised him as someone that many of the liberal andradical students would feel comfortable with, and I thmkthat he was selected to direct the security forces to cootysome of the liberal students into thinking that the securitymeasures were a necessary evil in this particular situ¬ation.I was working on the fourth floor of the law schoolthat afternoon, and at about 2:30 went downstairs for acup of coffee. When I came to the first floor, I saw Profes¬sor Fiss standing in the middle of thehallway, directingmany nonuniformed security guards to their stations atthe law school doors. When I asked him what was happen¬ing, he said that “we” feared an occupation. Details of thereasons for, or the facts about this impending occupationwere sketchy, but Fiss said that he saw no reason whyany institution or organization could not defend itself inwhatever way it deemed appropriate at the moment. Theissue of a collective defense for some of the students whohad been summoned was not yet resolved, and it wassuggested to Mr. Fiss that this was a perfect example of agroup that would not be able to defend itself in the waythat they chose. Mr. Fiss replied “that’s different,” andappeared exasperated when it was suggested that the stu¬dents were defending principle, while he and the lawschool were defending private property.Later that evening, after approximately three peoplehad tried to walk into the law school, a classmate told methat one professor had told him the real reason for theclosing of the law school: that many University of ChicagoLaw School Alumni in the Chicago Bar Association wereunhappy that Ed Levi hadn’t called the police to get thestudents out of the administration building, and that someof these alumni had threatened the law school with a lossof contributions if the school didn’t prove to them thatthey were on the right side of the law and order issue.Whether or not this was true, which I assume it was,is less important than that in the context of everythingelse, it seemed so reasonable and appropriate for the lawschool. Money in this country has never had to worryabout its freedom of speech — it makes the rules of thegame. The law school is supposed to prepare people for aprofessional role in this society — there couldn’t havebeen a better way.THE LAW STUDENTS’ ROLEThese security measures were the negative responseof the law-and-order mentality to political dissent. Thepositive thrust of the repressive administration was some¬what more localized: to use law students as part of aningenious pacification program to crush the student move¬ment on campus.a. Law students whose sympathies were “neutral” oroutspokenly against the sit-in were used as marshals forthe disciplinary hearings, and some were involved in phys¬ical confrontations with other students.b. Some law students who were sympathetic to the sit-in were on a list of “approved” personnel, who could gointo and out of the administration building, acting as a“legal liaison,” and were assured of not being summoned.These people accepted the protection of the repressiveContinued on Page 11March 6, 1970/Grey City Joornal/9PLAyCCT’S ALL-NIGHT SHGWPERFORMANCES FRIOAY 1 SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREMarch 6RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY March 7FOUR HORSEMEN OFTHE APOCALYPSEMarch 13 March 14THI LIQUIDATOR THE COMEDIANSMarch 20 March 21Betty Davis - » Betty Davis^ WHAT EVER HAPPfNED TO BABY JANE? DEAD RINGER1 March 27 March 281 CARTOON FESTIVAL hMv TO BE ANNOUNCEDApril 3 April 4Seat Ceanery, Tippe Hedrea ^OaivMARINE BATTLE Of BRITAINTICKETS S1.SO ST. PATRICK’S SHOWSAT.. MAR. 14. 8:30 • OPERA HOUSETickets: $6.00, 5.00. 4.00, 3.00Tickets NOW at Box Office, or at all Ticketron outlets, Marina City,and all Marshall Field & Company, Montgomery Ward and Crawfordstores. By Mail send check or money order with self-addressedenvelope to Opera House, 20 N. Wacker, Chicago, III. YOU NAVENEVER SEENANYTNINOLIKE IT!ADULTSONLY!EASTMANCOLORextra! extra!“OPERATIONSWITCH”LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337 2113Visit tka Uidariroaad — One week to go, kiddiesTAKCAW-YANCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outMODERN DANCE CLASSES4.30 to 6.00Mondoy * SofurdoyBallet, Rock A Jazz taught.Allison Theater Dance Center CAFE ENRICO1411 E. 53rd ST. SUNDAY, MARCH I"ainavour at the top of hit form,constantly entertaining."—Tim*sCHUCK WAGON LUNCHALL YOU DESIRE$1.75 $4.95, $5.95, $4.95. $3.95, $2.95PEAFQAMANCE 0»LY-J:30 P.M.OPERA HOUSETicktts at Sox Office andAll Ticketron Outlets ANCHOR CAMERA1523 East 53rd St. PL 2-2228FAST QUALITY PROCESSINGASK FOR YOURPROFIT SHARING BONUS CARDSAVE 20%TONIGHTROCK 'N' ROLL REVIVAL OFFOR TWO HOURSRELIVE THE GOLDENMEMORIES OF 1950ROCK WITH THESHA-NA-NA AT MANDEL HALL - 5706 S. UNIVERSITYFRIDAY, MARCH 6 -&00 PMDOORS OPEN AT 7:30 PMTICKETS: $2.50 and $2.00 at Mandel today.VETERANS OF THE WOODSTOCK FESTIVEL, FILLMORE EAST & WEST, DICK CAVETTSHOW, KINETIC PLAYGROUND, ELECTRIC CIRCUS, MADISON SQUARE GARDEN,MERV GRIFFEN SHOW, AND BOSTON TEA PARTY.HEAR ALL THE OLDIES AND SEE THE FUN¬NIEST STAGE SHOW OF ALL TIMES, IN¬CLUDINGBIRD DOGWIPEOUTLITTLE DA RUN'HANDY MAN CHANTILLY LACEAT THE HOPSILHOUETTESBLUE MOONTELL LAURA I LOVE HERWHY DO FOOLS FALL IN LOVETEENAGER IN LOVEROCK & ROLL IS HERE TO STAYANY ONE WEARING GREASY HAIR AND D.A. OR RUBY-REDLIPSTICK AND A PONY TAIL WILL PROMPTLY BE LABELEDLASCIVIOUS.A Revitalization Happeningll/Grey City Journal/March I, 197$Wither the Future of Law Study(Continued from Page Nine)mechanism and were manipulated into being an arm tolegitimize the political suppression.c. Law students and others who were allowed to comeinto the disciplinary hearings as “spokesmen” for thesummoned students played a similar role. By gettingsome defendants off with reduced sentences or with lightpunishment, thse spokesmen gave legitimacy to the com¬mittee (See, it works sometimes) and to the committee’sdecisions to expel and suspend over 120 students. It wasnot that the law students were not voluntarily involved inthe disciplinary process; in fact, everything that theirteachers had taught them said that it was their duty to doso The problem was that the professors used these stu¬dents and patted thwm on the back for doing such a goodjob without benefit of the presumption of innocence, or theright to remain silent, when what they were really doingwas helping the university administration keep its housein order.I wondered after this what the role of real lawyers is;nobody in law school ever talked about it quite in terms oflawyers being the chief legitimizing force in the society. (Ihave rarely felt so awful as when Dallin Oaks con¬gratulated me for the job I did in front of his committee.)In that sense, the law school faculty provided an excellentseminar in political suppression for lawyers — but it wasnot exactly what I had in mind for a course with field¬work I think in retrospect that the committees, and thelaw students, were used by the administration to prove tothe more conservative faculty members that the policedidn’t have to be called, and that the University couldhandle its own problems, I suppose by appealing to the"university spirit and motive.”d Law students went along with Mr. Oaks through theadministration building after the sit-in, to bear silent wit¬ness to the exaggerated tales of destruction which wentthrough radio and television. I remember hearing one ra¬dio program which mentioned, along with the reports ofdestruction, that observers including law students wentthrough the building with members of the committees.c. Law students were used to do research for the ad¬ministration, under the direction of Walter Blum, on waysto keep students off campus if they were expelled or sus¬pended and decided to continue to try to disrupt the uni¬versity. As I recall, this focused on the mechanism of the“peace bond.” f. Finally, in proof that its intentions were nothing lessthan honorable, law professors rescued two law studentswho were sitting in on the first afternoon that the AdBuilding was occupied. They were warned, I think, aboutthe possible disruptions of their careers if they did notcomd“ out of the building. They were never summoned.The law school’s triumph in all of this activity was that itsuccessfully figured out ways to use its own students to dothe administration’s work, and that one of its tenured pro¬fessors was there to give legitimacy to the process ofdiscipline. The law school’s loss was that it lost a lot of itsrespect, and what was left of its soul.EPILOGUEAbout a year and a half ago a firend of mine who wasin the law school here suggested that there ought to be alaw which prohibited anyone with either liberal or radicalinclinations from going to law school, since all that wouldhappen was that they would get thrown into a corruptlegal system where they could do no good, and all of thatenergy for reform or revolution would be dissipated andlost. I am not quite ready to accept that proposal whole¬heartedly, but I agree that anyone with strong liberal orradical inclinations who goes to the University of ChicagoLaw School is very likely to get a fantastic educationwhile in law school to prepare him for what he will findoutside.The instincts of the law school administration and fac¬ulty are generally against any changes in procedure, anyexercise of real power by the students, any democratiza¬tion of the law school, and anything except helping indi¬vidual students get their thing. This help may be neces¬sary, because of the way the outside jvorld is set up, but itshould not be bought at the cost of three more years oftreating students like children, and of manipulating themand using them as a pacification team.Absent any realignment of power within the lawschool, which I believe to be a long way off, (20 or 30years), I think that there should be no requirements forthe third year, that students should be able to create theirown projects and work on them for an entire year’s credit,and that anyone who wants to should be on the Law Re¬view, that the course offerings could at least be supple¬mented by a course in “Repression and the Law,” taughtby a teacher selected by the students, with a curriculumselected by the students, that grades should be abolishedand that a People’s park should be created on the lawCommemorating the 200th Anniversary of the composer's birthBEETHOVENSYMPHONY NO 9 (CHORAL)UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAUNIVERSITY CHORUSCOLLEGIUM MUSICUMSaturday, March 7, 1970 Mandel Hail Admission FreeEL TACOMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANT1607 E. 53rd St.• HUACAMOLE• TACOS• ENCHILADAS• TAMALES• TOSTADAS• CHILI•MANY OTHER DISHES•CARRY OUT SERVICEOpen 7 days a week11:30 A.M. - 12:30 A.M. THE BAND IN CONCERT9* school’s property, some of the grassy area, or the ballfield-tennis court area in back of the law school.These proposals are intended to satisfy people who willreject this article by saying that there’s nothing construc¬tive said.) I don’t understand, and probably never willunderstand, how people can thank students for what theirdisruption had donefor the university: bringing studentsand faculty together talking about important educationalissues, and providing the impetus to some very mean¬ingful reform — while throwing out of school the peoplemost responsible for that process and that change. Theactions of the law school during the sit-in last yearbrought me closer to an act of violence than did the sher¬iff of Yazoo City, Mississippi six and one-half years ago,when he escorted me out of town at rifle point. The lawschool has all of the defects of the rest of society, withoutmuch of a sense of relationship to the movement, or to thecause of political freedom within its own walls. It is inter¬ested in maintaining its own power, not in enacting anyideals of a good, just, moral society.The conventional wisdom says that the law school is anational law school, but it has not convinced me it reallycares about admitting more minority group students, orwomen, unless forced to do so; it says that the law schoolis an intellectual stronghold, but they restrict students’choices about their courses, and ultimately about theirlives.One day this past summer, I was talking with a groupof friends, and meant to say “professors.” Instead, itcame out “repressers.” In an ironic way, though, theyhave provided me with the best education anyone couldhope for. It has taught me more about society’s manipula¬tive, repressive structure than I could have hoped to learnfrom almost any other experience. For that, I can thankthe faculty for a most worthwhile, relevant education.OPERA HOUSEFRI - MAR 13 - 8-.30 P.M.BOX OFFICE OPENS FEB 23 TICKETS AT BOX OFFICE$6.50. $5.50. $4.50. $3.50MAIL ORDERS - SELF ADDRESSEDSTAMPED ENVELOPE - BOXOFFICE - 20 N. WACKER ■ CHICAGO All Groups andIndividuals Interestedin PresentingPrograms DuringFOTA '70Must Have CompleteInformation Sheets InBy Friday, Mar 6.•i Best picture of the year."—Roger Ebert Sun-TimesChicago Avenue at Michigan Cinema TheatreMatinees Daily • far student group rates caM: WH 4-5SS7March 6, 1970/Grey City Journal/!!SAVEon all Spirits and Winesfor your vacation needsLOWEST PRICES IN THEMIDWESTCHOOSE FROM THE TREMENDOUS WINESELECTION - 1400 DIFFERENT WINE VINTAGESFROM 1822 to 1967All nearby states have much higherprices. Stock up before leaving Chicagoand save as much as $200 per fifthThe Party Mart2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210with this coupon onlyCanada Dry full case $27512 NO DEPOSIT FIFTHS12/Grey City Journal/March 6, 1970Agnew Reflects Dangerous US ProblemBy Mitch BobkinIn the summer of 1968 when Richard Nix¬on chose Spiro Agnew as his running matefor the Presidency, Agnew’s name was in¬deed not “a household word.” Most Ameri¬cans had never heard of him. In the yearand a half since the election, Agnew hasbecome a symbol of what troubles Amer¬ica. His name probably causes more violentreactions than any other on the politicalscene with one generation on one side andanother on the other.During the campaign, Agnew set out tomake himself an individual of some re¬nown. In his speaking engagements, hecalled some of his constituents “Japs” and“Pollacks”, referred to the slums of ourmajor cities by saying “if you’ve seen one slum, you’ve seen them all,” and attackeddemonstrators for going too far. By electiontime, his demeanor was laughable. He wasconsidered a harmless dolt, and Nixon wasthought to have made an obvious mistakein judgment in the choice for the Vice-Presidency.Since that time, Agnew has become moreand more vicious in his attacks. He firstwent after the news media and the liberalEastern establishment. More recently hehas again turned to what he calls the“kooks,” “demagog” and “revolu¬tionaries” in this country. Last Friday’sDaily News says “Agnew said that 25 yearsago the ‘tragi-comic antics’ of society’s‘misfits’ would have ‘brought the Estab¬lishment running with butterfly nets rather ANALYSISthan television cameras.’ ” Also: “He (Ag¬new) drew upon the Chicago 7 trial to ex¬plain how ‘courts are becoming carnivals,laws are flouted’ and ‘criminals committheir despicable acts against society in thename of political activity.’ He said that‘whether or not one agrees with every rul¬ing that the judge makes ... is not thepoint. The point is that a handful of odd¬balls deliberately set out to politicize asimple criminal proceeding and to disruptthe most basic protection of our society —AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAY"Underground" Opens“The Underground,” a new snackbar-res¬taurant located in Pierce Tower, opened forbusiness Sunday.“Opening night was a fabulous success”said Gary Moore, ’72, student manager ofthe new snack bar, “we were sold out ofmany items before we knew it.” Many ofthe customers shared this view. Out of thegroup of people waiting to place orderswer2 heard exclamations such as “They’vegot real cheesecake!” and “looks like thefood might be allright.” According to MikeWalder, ’72, the snack bar’s first customer,“The food’s really good and the prices areeven better.” The most severe criticismleveled against the new establishment wasthat “it’s not much better than the oldsnack bar unfortunately.”It was the failure last fall of the oldPierce Tower Snack Bar which broughtabout the opening of The Underground pos¬sible. Plagued by financial problems andlack of clientele, the old snack bar, oper¬ated by the Pierce Tower Council, wasforced to close last quarter. Believing therewas still a demand for the snack bar if itwas run differently, a group of about tenTower residents organized, to reopen thesnack bar. Their contract with the Univer¬sity calls for a joint faculty-student com¬mittee to review the snack bar’s operationevery month. The group hopes to avoid thefinancial problems experienced by the pre¬vious operators of the snack bar by work¬ing on a profit sharing instead of a salarybasis.Helped out by a grant from Contempo¬rary European Films, the new operatorswere able to make extensive changes in theatmosphere of the snack bar. Their goal isto create an environment where food canbe enjoyed. A sign by the entrance of thesnack bar states that they are “a studentgroup serving Pierce Tower and the Uni¬versity with quality food, low prices, and arefreshing atmosphere.” One customercommented “They’re doing much betterthan before ... nobody even swore at me.”The Underground” is open Mondaythrough Saturday from 8:30 pm to 12:30Pm, and Sundays from 4:30 pm to 12:30 pm.Peck To SpeakSidney Peck, a co-chairman of the Ne\Mobilization Committee to End the War iiVietnam, will speak Thursday, March 12, athe Blue Gargolye’s Hyde Park Corner, beginning at 8 pm.Peck, who was named a non-indicted ccconspirator in the Federal case against thiChicago 7 for his attempts to negotiate between demonstrators and the Daley regimnt the 1968 Democratic convention, waconvicted of resisting arrest during thdemonstrations on an escalated charge amwill be sentenced the day after his speedat the Gargoyle.Peck, an associate professor of sociologat Case Western Reserve University iiCleveland, helped found the Cleveland Are;Peace Action Council, the Ohio Peace Action Council, and was one of the organizerof the November 13 to 15 anti-war March o:Washington. THE NEXT ROCKETTES: See the little men in blue, standing in a row.Cobb Stays OpenCobb Hall coffee shop, robbed of about$400 last weekend, will remain open for therest of the quarter, according to its man¬ager Wayne Elzey. Elzey does not know yetwhether it will be open next quarter.Employees in the coffee shop are workingwithout pay, and several have obtainedloans from friends. University police areworking on the case, and would not com¬ment on any progress.Women's DayInternational Women’s Day will be ob¬served on campus Sunday at 7:30 pm at theBlue Gargoyle.A coalition of women’s groups, includingtheUniversityWomen’s Association(UWA), Women’s Radical Action Project(WRAP), and the women’s caucus of theNew University Conference (NUC), willsponsor the celebration.Activities will include a folk dance, anexperience in non-verbal communication, amodern “women’s liberation dance”, and adiscussion of a proposed women’s liberationoperated medical center.Hedda Ribolow, graduate student inbiochemistry and a member of the UWA,said that a multi-media skit is planned to“educate women to their role as in¬struments of change.” A 25 cent donation isrequested. Free baby-sitting service will beprovided.Later next week, UWA will hold a meet¬ing Thursday at noon in Reynolds ClubSouth to discuss plans for a two-day femin¬ist teach-in to take place in May.Polluttion Open HouseCongressman Abner J Mikva (D-2ndDist.) and H. Wallace Poston, newly ap¬pointed commissioner of Chicago’s depart¬ment of environmental control, will beamong ten guests at an air pollution openhouse to be held at the Quadrangle ClubFriday, March 13. Sponsored by the air pollution committeeof the Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference, the open house will enable allconcerned Chicagoans to personally meetand question Mikva, Poston and many ofChicago’s leaders in the fight against airpollution.Guests-of honor include: David Currie,member, Illinois state air pollution controlboard; John Kirkwood, director, air pollu¬tion programs of the TB institute, and exec¬utive secretary, clean air coordinatingcommittee; Joseph Karaganis, director ofcampaign against environmental violence;Dr Bertram Carnow, medical director ofthe tuberculosis institute; Richard Kates,chairman, clean air coordinating com¬mittee; Laura Fermi, Edith Harris andBarbara Fiske, charter members, cleanerair committee of Hyde Park and Kenwood.Blues BenefitA blues benefit to reopen Alice’s Restau¬rant, a popular cultural and political centerthat was evicted from its location on Lin¬coln Ave on the north side, will be held atthe First Unitarian Church, Woodlawn and57 St March 14th.The benefit will feature Luther Johnson,the Muddy Waters Blues band and otheracts. The shows will start at 7:30 and 10:30pm.Tickets can be purchased for $2.50 at theBlue Gargoyle or for $3 at the door.Loan ProblemsNational Defense Student Loan funds for1970-71 will be more' restricted than thisyear. All graduate students who will needloan assistance next year should begin in¬vestigating now the possibility of obtaininga loan from the Federal Guaranteed LoanProgram administered through local banks.Undergraduates who are planning to ap¬ply for guaranteed loans should talk withtheir banks in the next few weeks since thedemand for such loans will be very high.Any questions may be directed to the LoanCounselor, ext. 4595. the dignity of our courts.’ ”Agnew is no longer laughable; he is dan¬gerous. Too many people think that hisstatements are merely the ravings of amadman, that his beliefs are merely hisown and do not necessarily represent thoseof the administration. This is a mis¬conception of Agnew’s role in Washington.When Nixon chose Agnew for the job heknew exactly what he was doing. Agnew’smanner and opinions are exactly in linewith Nixon’s and by choosing Agnew, Nixondoes not himself have to make the chargesthat Agnew now does. Rather, he can relyon Agnew to attack the forces which Nixonand Mitchell and friends want to repress.Agnew is a very important part of thepresent administration. After all, if Nixondid not want Agnew to say what he cur¬rently has been, he could very easily si¬lence him.The most scary thing about Agnew is notthat he is mad, nor that he is Vice-Presi¬dent, but rather that he draws support forhis ideas and plans all over the country. Hehas hit upon the “silent majority” that Nix¬on refers to and has polarized them on hisside of the generation battle. The silent ma¬jority was not just a scheme of Nixon’s.There is such a group in this country andthey are indeed a majority. By appealing tothem and their feelings of fear and distrustof demonstrators, Agnew and Nixon haveconvinced them that demonstrators are“kooks,” or as Foran puts it “fags” (adubious crime at best) and that as “kooks”they should be taken care of, perhaps withAgnew’s butterfly net. Rather than tryingto reassure Americans that dissent is partof the American system and that even“kooks” have certain rights, the adminis¬tration decided to play their ace and pola¬rize the silent majority against people likethe Conspiracy 7. By doing this, there willbe little opposition to a trial like the trav¬esty we saw in Chicago or to the killing ofBlack Panthers in cold blood. Far too fewpeople realize that this is fascism encroach¬ing upon us. Far less than this realize theimplications that Agnew’s line of attackmight conceivably have upon the Americanpeople. The loss of freedom by one groupwithin a society is a loss by all; no societythat claims to be free can withhold the bas¬ic freedoms due to all men from any indi¬viduals whatever their political beliefs.When fascism begins, it can build and builduntil it gobbles up all the freedom in sight.If Americans are not careful, the “silentmajority” may become an oppressed ma¬jority as well.After listening to Agnew for almost twoyears, it is not at all inconceivable to hearhim suggest rounding up all the “kooks”and treating them or locking them up sothat they could not, as Agnew was quotedas saying in the Daily News, “take govern¬ment out of the ‘hands of the elected offi¬cials and have it descend to the streets.’ ”He also said in the Daily News story that“most of them need treatment more thanpublicity.” He also said in Harrisburg Palast year “we can afford to separate themfrom our society with no more regret thanwe should feel over discarding rotten ap¬ples from a barrel.” How many Americanswould correlate such a move with Hitler’sconcentration campus? How many Ameri¬cans would realize that once a ball startsrolling, it gets increasingly hard to stop?Unfortunately too many have already beenconvinced that Nixon and Agnew knowwhat is best for America. The longer theygo on thinking that, the harder it is going tobe to convince them otherwise.It appears as every day passes that Nix¬on with Agnew as his running mate will bereelected in 1972. Can you take four moreyears living in Nixon-land? If not, perhapsyou should seriously consider the alterna¬tives. Now is the time to think about 1972,not in June of that year when the candi¬dates will have gathered their politicalvotes before the convention through politi¬cal favors. If we sit back now, we deserveNixon and Agnew for four more years. AndI wouldn’t be at all surprised then, if theystayed on for four more, and four more,and four more, and four more ...Mitch Bobkin, 72, is the Maroon’s Man¬aging editor.March 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7WhatmakesSammyrun?*The murder of Fred Hampton.The Daley machine.The Gang Intelligence Unit.The exploitation of the black community.The Vietman war.Sammy Rayner is running for Congressto represent the people of the 1st district.He is running at a time when we needhim most. A time when this city and thenation are in a state of grave crisis. He has run before. But each time hisvictory was stolen by the currupt powersthat have Chicago in their filthy grasp.But this time, we won't let them do that.Thousands of us are going to man thehundreds of precinct polling places andmake sure this election is fair.Sammy Rayner will win a fair election,March 17th.Help him!I — —,| Yes I will poll watch March 17th. Polls open at 6 a.m.I I am available from to |I do do not have a car. I| Name .I Address j. Telephone number , 1| Clip and send to the Vietnam Moratorium Committee, .1 Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago. ji1 Fighting the Machine costs money. Enclosed is a check■ made payable to the Rayner Campaign Fund forI $1[ $5I $25I $100? otherj NameI Clip and send to the Vietman Moratorium Committee,J Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago.Vietman Moratorium8/The Chicago Maroon/March 6, 1970Yippies Plan To Free'Big John Hancock'HANCOCK BUILDING: Yippies will invade the top of the building. David Travis By Nancy Chisman“The soul of man requires open vistas,”the yippie protest flier against the admis¬sion fee to the observation floor of the JohnHancock Building says. “The view fromthis building, like the view from a localmountaintop is the property of those wholive in the shadow of the mountain.”The flier details the reproach and con¬demnation of the John Hancock Mutual LifeInsurance Co., owner of the building, andthe leasing agents, Sudler & Co. for alleged¬ly extorting admission fees of $1.25 (foradults) and $.75 (for children). “The young,the poor, the black, and the elderly needFREE excursions available to them as arelease from the oppressiveness of thecity.” These people “are selectively dis¬criminated against and systematically ex¬cluded by the high admission fees.”Supporters of the action include WITCH(Women’s International Terrorist Con-Cutbacks May Hurt DiscoveryContinued from Page FiveSince the research in diagnosis and thera¬py is at such an advanced level, much ofthe work that scientists do requires equip¬ment that has not yet been invented or de¬veloped. So, on the first floor of the hospitalare an electronics shop and a machine shopof which the primary concern is designingand building equipment and instrumentation systems for diagnostic work.Donald Charleston, associate professor inradiology and supervisor of the electronicsshop, says “We have pretty good commu¬nications lines with the doctors — they arefamiliar with our jargon and we withtheirs. If they need an instrument to. say,look at the kidneys, then we design it ac¬cording to what they expect out of it. Wecan spend from a few months to threeyears working on a device, depending onhow complex a system it is and how ad¬vanced the state of the art is. We usuallybuild a haywire prototype, which we test onanimals and nefine. Our end product is ori¬ented toward clinical work.”John Stupka, foreman of the machineshop, says “we work with everything frommud to platinum, doing really delicate toreally brutal work. It’s the kind of workthat you don’t just walk away from at theend of the day; you keep thinking about theproblems.”Some of the devices which have been de¬veloped at Argonne are: a brain scanner, todetect brain tumors; image-enhancementtechniques, through which X ray and blackand white films are presented in color, sothat a doctor can make a more accuratediagnosis from the picture; a “whole bodycounter”, which basically is a large,shielded room in which a patient who hasbeen given an isotope-tagged drug lies on astretcher while a Geiger counter traces theradioactivity position; a blood-cell separa¬tor, which sorts out blood cells in solutioninto different sizes; a cobalt rotational-therapy unit, in which the patient lies on astretcher while a cobalt source, focussed onthe tumor, rotates about his body; a linearaccelerator, which takes up three roomsand is used in therapy; and accessories forArgonne’s cyclotron, such as a machine toradiate gases.“It’s exciting work,” says Charleston,“although of course it gets frustrating too.We’ve been very successful and have agood reputation, which is due to the fantas¬tic group of people who work here. But themost exciting thing is that in this work, youare constantly learning, because in order todesign these devices, you must understandwhat they are doing.”Government cutbacksCancer research at the University hassuffered from government cutbacks tosome extent. Most cancer research scien¬tists maintain that cutbacks are due to acombination of “an anti-intellectual atmos¬ phere and a tight money situation.” Peopleare dissatisfied because we have not founda cure for cancer yet” said one doctor. Dr.Gottschalk explained the causes for govern¬ment cutbacks in his analysis of cancer re¬search itself. “People don’t appreciate thedifficulties in curing cancer,” he said.“Progress comes in creeps, not leaps andbounds. When breakthroughs come, theywill be for specific cancers, not all can¬cers.” Since “no breakthroughs have comeyet” however, several scientists have beenforced to interrupt or disband projects, dueto lack of funds.Both Drs. Griem and Yachnin are con¬cerned with the recent cutbacks in govern¬ment funds to research scientists. “Thisanti-intellectual and anti-scientific atmos¬phere is partially because the middle class is fed up with the university and the unrestthere,” said Dr. Griem.Dr. Yachnin attributed loss of govern¬ment funds to a “society which emphasizesmission oriented research instead of re¬search without immediate result.” Theslow but steady pace of cancer researchdoes not bring immediate results.One doctor explained the long term impli¬cations of the cutbacks. “Right now peopleare concerned with the immediate resultsof health care. However research in thegeneral biological sciences is important inthat it will ultimately affect health care.And we could have both health care andresearch if we had more money.” Indeed,most of the scientists are concerned withthe “lack of responsiveness to the changingneeds of society.”DR GEORGE WEIDUses many instruments DR ALEXANDER GOTTSCHALKComments on cutbacks spiracy from Hell), Yippies, CRAP (Citi¬zens Revolt Against Pollution), SCREWEE(Society to Combat Rape and Exploitationof Women), Jerry Rubin, Progressive La¬bor and SVNA (Students for Violent Non-Action), who all believe the view from thebuilding belongs to all people as a naturalright. They are calling on John Hancockand Sudler & Co, with persuasion if pos¬sible, though “anger if necessary,” to“dedicate the 94th floor observatory tothe free use of the people as a thank yougift for the use of the people’s visualspace.”Saturday, March 7, at 11 am “radicals,conservatives, concerned citizens, vocalminorities, sorcerers eclipsing the sun,witches invoking the fog, freaks, freaks,freaks!” will attempt to get into the obser¬vation area free. Their alternate plan, incase their first is thwarted, is to get asmany members of tribes, communes andnations in under the “family maximum” of$3.50 as possible.Once inside, the groups will improvise,Yippie fashion. Participants are urged tobring capes, flowers etc. to demonstratewith.The groups point out that the HancockBuilding imposes great disadvantages onthe city of Chicago, clogging North Michi¬gan Avenue with traffic, causing thedeaths of hundreds of birds by standingin their migratory paths and blocking theview of sky to people on the ground. Theymaintain that the management of thebuilding has no right to charge for a viewthat was there before the building wasbuilt.SG Favors MoveTo Student UnionContinued from Pago TwoSiefert also proposed some new ways ofraising funds for the union. He indicatedthat besides having standard dues, theunion might also have “a marketing struc¬ture to provide students with products andservices which are now being offered bythe University.”Student government expressed its sup¬port for the student union concept at is lastmeeting Wednesday evening in Ida NoyesHall. In a resolution passed at that meet¬ing, SG pledged cooperation and funds forthe development of the union.The resolution passed by the assembly ofSG reads: “Resolved that SG in coopera¬tion with other interested parties will sup¬port and organize a union of students. SGdoes not and will not make union policy. Allpolicy decisions will be made by the unionmembership. Support shall include finan¬cial support for organizing and publicity.”Questions Raised On CurriculumContinued from Page Sixwere no faculty members present who wereopposed. It was stated during the meet¬ing that those faculty members who op¬posed the new curriculum objected to itbecause it would place more demands onthem as teachers or, in the case of juniorfaculty opponents, because they were af¬raid that the plan would mean that fewerteaching positions would be open in the Col¬lege for them, and that they might there¬fore be put out of a job. I think the facultymembers opposed to the new program havebetter reasons than this, and I can’t believethat students are willing to discount totallythe opinion of this group — it includesmany of the most popular faculty mem¬bers, teachers with whom the students feelin strong sympathy on other issues, peoplerespected by the students for their fair-mindedness and integrity. A little over a week after the proposalwas made public, it was voted on by thefaculty. The committee argued that it wasbest to vote immediately, in spite of theemotionally charged atmosphere which ex¬isted in the department at the time, be¬cause the old program is so bad that keep¬ing it another year would be highly irres¬ponsible. In order to see that the new pro¬gram would go into effect next year it wasurged that an immediate vote was man¬datory.But how many faculty members were ledto vote for the proposal because they weremade to feel that the unity of the depart¬ment was at stake? And what support didthe advocates of the plan pick up by insist¬ing that the vote be taken at a time whensome highly, influential faculty membersstrongly against the proposal were notpresent at the meeting? Why weren’t stu¬dents permitted to distribute opinion surveyforms to attempt to discover how wide¬spread the opposition among students real¬ly was? All of these things worked for the success of the proposal. How many of themhappened by chance?Maybe the program is, after all, a goodone. But I wish that I had heard more con¬vincing arguments supporting it. I wish fac¬ulty opposition views had been given achance for a hearing by students as well asthose of faculty supporters. I wish thatpeople had been given the opportunity to sitdown and examine the plan in the cold lightof reason before a definite committmentwas demanded of them. As things standnow, the issue of the merits of the new pro¬gram has become linked to the question ofhow the decision-making process works inthe English Department.Virginia Wexman, 10, is an EnglishmajorThe Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevent to the University com¬munity. The opinions of the guest colum¬nists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in stibmit-ting columns should contact the editor.March 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONBusts InformationMany students have expressed concernabout police drug raids in the Universitycommunity. I have no expertise or author¬ity whatever in this matter but I have gath¬ered the questions most frequently askedand have discussed them with members ofour law faculty. I have deleted those ques¬tions for which the only answer is, “Wedon’t know” and present the remainder inthe hope that they will give whatever reas¬surance may go with knowledge.1. What should I do if the police come to thedoor?Ask to see the search warrant, check theaddress on it and point out any errors. Do not obstruct the police. Do not be “smart.”Don’t argue. Try to stay with the policewhile they are in your apartment. Note thenumber on the star or badge of each police¬man and his nameplate. If you can, notethe number on the plate showing throughthe back window of the police car. Note thetime. Make an immediate record of whathappened — if you are not arrested. Reportthe search and other relevant informationto James W Vice, assistant dean of stu¬dents.If you are arrested, you are entitled to atelephone call from the police station. Tele¬phone, working down this list: your familyif they are in Chicago; your lawyer, if youhave one in Chicago; your roommate orBULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, March 6DISCUSSION: "Greece Today," The Illinois Committeefor Democracy in Greece, Crossroads Student Center,5621 S Blackstone, 8 pm.CONCERT: "Sha Na na," Revitalization, Mandel Hall, 8pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: University Church of the Dis¬ciples, 8:15 pm.Saturday, March 7CONCERT: Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, Mandel Hall,8:30 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: Don Carlos, Mundelein Col¬lege Auditorium, 6363 N Sheridan, 8:30 pm.Sunday, March 8T E A C H-OUT: Gay Liberation-Women's Liberation,Northwestern University Business Building, 1912 Sheri¬dan, 6 pm.LECTURE: "Ecology, The Global Crisis," Dr. JamesHolloman, Bonhoeffer House, 5554 Woodlawn, 6-7:30pm.CELEBRATION: International Woman's Day, the BlueGargoyle, 7 pm.FLICK: "Love Affair," CEF Films, Cobb Hall, 7 and9:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Cloister Club, 8 pm.Monday, March 9LECTURE: "The Dilemna of the Dramatist," W.Moelwyn Merchant, Swift Commons, 4-6 pm.MEETING: UC Baha'i Fellowship, Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Wednesday, March 11 DISCUSSION: "Looking for a Gay Rorschach, or Thenolds Club South Lounge, 4 pm.Psychologist as Moralist," Dr. Naomi Weisstein, Rey-FLICK: "Jules and Jim," "Shoot The Piano Player,"CEF Films, Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:15 pm.LECTURE: "Creative Scepticism," W. Moelwyn Mer¬chant, Swift Commons, 4-6 pmThursday, March 12MEETING: University Women's Association, planningmeeting for a two-day feminist teach-in to take placein May, Reynolds Club South Lounge, noon.Friday, March 13LECTURE: "Apollo with Christ-a Tentative Conclusion,"W. Moelwyn Merchant, Swift Commons, 4-6 pm.FILM: "Nayak," India Association, International House,7:30 pm.Saturday, March 14FLICK: "Tom Jones," CEF Films, Cobb Hall, 7 and9:15 pm.BLUES CONCERT: First Unitarian Church, 2 sessionsat 7:30, 10:30 pm.Sunday, March 15BLUES CONCERT: Hull House, Broadway and Belmont,2 sessions at 4, 8 pm.Thursday, March 19ISRAELI FOLK DANCE PARTY: Hillel House, 7:30-11pm.Cohn A Stem(fount $c (danuroaShopThe fashion revolt continues...with our new un-suit from Robert Lewis. The wetlook Nylon jacket in navy or white overred/white/blue flared cotton pants. Jacket $17;pants $20.IN THE HYDE HARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsO/The Chicago Maroon/March 6, 1970 Murray Louisdance companya multi-media program ofmodern dance with elec¬tronic music and pro¬jections"...kinesthetically antic...”-- - The Village VoiceMandel HallMarch 13 4 14, 8:30 p.m.March 15, 3 p.m.Tickets on sale atIda Noyes HallPublic $4 and $2.50Students $3 and $1.50Prwnfd by Itio Univorvty of Chicago Mod¬ern Dane* Club and fha Illinois Art> CouncilYou 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 close friend; or the University Security Of¬fice, MI 3-0800, extension 3061. The SecurityOffice will contact one of the deans whowill attempt to locate assistance for bailbond.2. What is a search warrant? Who issues it?Do I get a copy?A search warrant issued by a magistrategives the police the power to search prem¬ises described in the warrant. Ask to see itat the door. Check for errors. Point themout. You do not get a copy but you have aright to read the warrant.3. Should I get a receipt for anything takenfrom my room? Can I get it back if it is myacne pills?Yes. Yes, unless it is destroyed in wholeor part in the chemical analysis process. Ingeneral, keep your medicine cupboard“clean” and labeled with the druggist’sprescription number and his address read¬able.4. Do they have to knock?Yes, as the law now stands, though Fed¬eral legislation varying this requirementfor certain special search warrants is nowpending.5. Will the University of Chicago help me inthese matters?If you are unable to contact family,friends, or your personal lawyer, the Uni¬versity will try to locate assistance for ar¬rest and bail matters. Persons connectedwith the University will later provide infor¬mal legal advice and will aid you in locat¬ing legal counsel if it seems needed.(James Vice will refer you to the appro¬priate persons.)6. Is the University concerned about these raids? Is it doing anything about them?Yes. Yes, we are doing what we can butthe criminal law runs through the campusThe University cannot insulate you fromthat law and the consequences of your ownbehavior. Please report any evidence of ha¬rassment of students to the Ombudsman orto James Vice.7. Are there informers on the campus?Newspaper reports indicate that thereare. We do not know them. They certainlydo not have our permission to be here inthat role.Roger HildebrandDean of the CollegeDorm FoodIn' the current discussion of the reformsbeing considered by the University for thedormitories (i.e., the Masters and co-edu¬cation) very little has been said about thecommittee studying the board contractsthat many students are forced to sufferwith. It is a commonly accepted fact thatdorm food is bad. But there is not a com¬monly accepted conclusion about what canbe done to improve it. Possible reforms in¬clude the dropping of certain meals fromthe dorm contracts, the increasing of por¬tions and many others.There are many students who probablyhave suggestions concerning improvementsin the dorm food. I’m sure that the com¬mittee would be interested in hearing theiropinions. All students interested in discuss¬ing dorm food should call either the IHCor the student housing office to get in touchwith those in charge of the committee.Epicurius GlutamateMubtfjtafiFeaturing Chicago's Largest Display of KLH Music SystemsNOW IN STOCKTHE NEW STEREO TAPE DECK USINGTHE DOLBY NOISE REDUCTIONSYSTEM ONE OF THE TWO NEWGREAT LOUDSPEAKERSFROM KLH —PRICEDFROM 55.00 TO 190.00 INBOOK SHELF UNITSNEW319”THIS KLH IS THE BEST BUY IN THE AUDIO INDUSTRYOLD!!199’5MiuiVvaft41 E. Oik St.-DE 7-4151 OLD! BUT STILLTHE BEST PORT-ABLE YOUR MON-EY CAN BUY2115 W. 95k $t.--77«554(Maroon Classified Ads)THINGS ARE IN THE SADDLE AND RIDE MANKINDMUSICIANS'FREECLASSIFIEDFree space is provided herefor hungry musicians: If youneed a gig, are looking forsomeone to play with orsomething to play, feel freeto mail us your ad, shortand to the point. If youhave something to sell, onthe other hand, you paythe usual 50c per line. Mailyour ad to: Chicago Ma¬roon, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637 •SCENESTeach-Oout on Sexual-role liberationMarch 8, 6PM, 1912 Sheridan,Evanston.Prepare for the last two weeks ofwinter (ugh) quarter — Freak outwith SHA-NA-NA's 1950s rock re¬vival tonightWriters' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)It's tough and cool — 50's rock androll. TONIGHT at MANDEL HALLwith SHA-NA-NAComing Up This Sunday CEF FilmLOVE AFFAIR, Or The Case ofThe Missing Switch-Board Operator.March 8 at 7 8. 9PM. Cobb LIBER¬ATED YUGOSLAVIAN COMEDYJUST IN TIME SPRINGTIMEWomen's Lib & Gay Lib sponsorTeach-Out, March 8, 6PM, Bus SchBldg, 1912 Sheridan, Evanston onsexual-role liberation.Relieve the pressures of cramming!Enjoy yourself at the Murray LouisDance co. concerts. March 13, 14,15. Student tickets $3.00 and $1.50.Two hours of glorious old time'rock an droll for only two bills — >TONIGHT with SHA-NA-NA at Man-del Hal, 8 PMMake the Scene with Good SoundBe Our Stereo Type and SaveSSSOn Stereo Components at Musicraft.On Campus Bob Tabor at 363-4555All Brands Low Prices.Rock and Roll Is Here To Stay —See how it all started with SHA-NA-NA tonight at MandelBENEFIT FOR ALICE'SBlues Concert w/Muddy Waters 8<Luther Johnson at the LutheranTheological School, 57 8. WoodlawnSat. March 14th 7:30 $3.00Murray Louis Dance Co., MandelHall, March 13, 14, 15. Ticketsavailable at Ida Noyes 201Japanese Flower arrangement $6one lesson includes materials. CallFA-4-7346Did you know Helen Keller was aWobblie, or that Victoria Wood-hull ran for Pres, in 1872 on theEqual Rights party?Come join us in reclaiming our lives!Celebrate Int. Woman's Day,March 87:00 at the Gargoyle Feminist teach-in in May. Planningmeeting Thursday March 12 S. Rey¬nolds Club 12. UWA. All FeministsWelcomeEUROPE $199 round trip (jet).Booking fast. Call or write: Itkin,15-9 Vassar Dr., Kalamazoo, Mich.49001 (616) 349-7011DON CARLOS — Werner Kreigl-stein's experimental adaptation —will be presented again on SaturdayMarch 7 at the Mundelein CollegeAuditorium, 6363 N. Sheridan. Cur¬tain 8:30, fix $1.50. If you didn'tunderstand it the first time comesee it again."GREECE TODAY," Discussion Fri¬day 8 pm at Crossroads, 5621 Black-ston, All are welcome!Zero Population Growth — Monday,March 9, 5600 Woodlawn, 8 pm.Hear Ehrlich on tape. STOP POPNOW!SERVICE: ELECTRIC ECCENTRICEPILECTRIC ECLECTRIC ECCEL-SIASTIC TICK TOCK TICK TOCKTICK TOCK MARCH 8 11 AM —UNIVERSITY CHURCHThey Shoot Horses Don't They?Dance at Hillel and find out Thurs.Mar 19 7:30-11The Baha'i Faith teaches that "Thefundamental purpose of religion isto promote concord and harmony,that it must go hand in hand withscience, and that it constitutes thesole and ultimate basis of a peace¬ful and ordered and progressivesociety." Mondays, Ida Noyes 7:30pm Everyone WelcomeCampaign Against Pollution:Doing a thing at Bonhoeffer HouseSunday March 7 6 pm Supper Fol¬lowingSee the exciting Murray Louis DanceCo. coming to Mandel Hall. Getyour tickets now at Ida NoyesHall 201. The Bandersnatch is having trouble.Not enough money coming in. Un¬like every other food operation oncampus, we are expected to try toand break even, so when we startlosing money, it means all sortsof pressure is on to raise prices +cut costs. We've already had toraise some prices. Beyond that,we can't incure any more cost. Nopay raise. Can't afford to expandinto the Cloister Club so you canhave our food but avoid our jukebox, expand menues, or stay openlater. We need your business. Ifyou never come, start. If youcomfe once a week, come twice.Listen to your conscience and eatlunch here. Take a study break at10:00 and have some coffee andpie here. PATRONIZE THE BAN¬DERSNATCH. You'll never regretit.CO-OP LIVINGMeeting today for co-op living groupin Reynolds South Lounge at 4:30ATTENTION SCULPTORSSculptor leaving town. Sacrify forquick sale turn table, work benches,hard to get seasoned large timbees18 by 18 by 4 ft long, lime stones,sturdy platform step ladders, andother paraphernalia. No reasonableoffer refused. Inquire in store,4819 S. Ashland. Phone YA 7-3225.FOR SALEFight Pollution. Fly American Air¬lines to Arizona During SpringBreak and Breathe. Cali CampusRep. Jim Sack 684-6667.Walnut Dresser bureau and BedX2476 or 752-8284 Eves.Adler J2 typewriter elite age 4yrs $75 Call 324-9463.60 Lincoln, Class, $125, 643-8210MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Week *for your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE:HEADING: 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!There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre,#.r - — —L, l— Stereo Components at DiscountsSave on Dyna, AR, Scott, ADC,Up to 25%. Sherwood & SANSUIUP to 40% at MUSICRAFT CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 and Save$$ZOOM! Honda 337, $385, 643-8210Man's Bike used 3 mons. 752-0170For sale glass-topped metal secydesk and typewriter. So-8-330665 CHEVELLE MALIBU STA WGNDELUXE $900 AFTER 5 721-5302From Wd 56 Drr. 77.50 m 667-5695ZOOM-Nikkor Auto Lens 43-86mmf3.5 to Fit Nikon F or Nikomat$120. Ed Stern X-6357 pms.SPACEFern Rmmte Wtd Own large room58 Harper 42/mo. Call 9553916.TENANT REFERRALREASONABLE RENTALSDESIREABLE APTSUnfurn 8. FurnishedLAKE FRONT COMMUNITYSOUTH SHORECHAMBER OF COAAMERCE2343 E. 71st St.SEE: MONICA A. BLOCKNOrmal 7-2004Share Apt. Own room. Own bathrmMust co-sign lease From May 1.$80 mo 53 & Hyde Pk. 752-7516.Roommate Wanted. Pref male gradshare w/2. Own room, completeturn. Large turn apt w/firepl, view.Avail Mar 20. $67 mo. 5470 Cornell,top fl. 324-2431.Seek fern 4 own rm in Ige nice7rm SShr apt. Dshwshr, aircond.near 1C, CTA. 684-5690 aft. 5.1 or 2 Fern Grads to Share FurnApt Sprg Qtr — Option on Lease55th 8. Ingleside 493-3389.Female roommate wtd. spring qt.56th 8, University 288-7069.Roommate wtd: two junior medstudents desire to replace a thirdgetting married. 3 bedroom apt at57 8, Drexel at $45/mo. Availablemid-June 324-2279, evenings. Planahead!Sublet Spr (Sum) 4RM Apt Furn56 8, Drexel $115/mo 955-7767.Wanted: 4 bedroom apt near cam¬pus from June or Sept. BU8-6610ext 1307.Beautiful spacious 5 and 6 rm aptsat 71st 8, Jeffery for informafioncall — Albert H. Johnson RealtyCo., 732 East 75th Street — HU 3-1470.Nearby unfurn apt. 3 rm. pvt. prch,$105. Free utils. Call 955-9209 or WA2-8411, x311.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.Female Roommate Wtd. 57th 8>Dorchester — $65/Mo. 288-6357.Person needed to share beautifulspacious apartment near Coop $50Immediately or April 1. Leavemessage 643-9870Wanted: A person looking for morethan just a place to live, livehere. Own room. Close to campus.Call 324-6389Wanted Rmmates, grd stds. 955-2559. 57 8, KenwoodWtd: male or female rmmate; ownbdrm in 3 bdrm apt, 54th 8< Wood¬lawn. $58/month. Avail Mar 20667-1072 or leave a message forRay, 929-1880Need 4rm apt NOW — Call 363-9580SPACIOUS 7 rm-2BA So. Shore AptUniv Bus After 5 721-5302Roommate wanted starting Aprilapt. near campus $60 own room,hip, responsible. 752-4958LaRousso’s |Fine Italian Food ||Complete Dinner or Snack1645 E. 53rd.667-9390For Rant Country HomeCompletely modernized farm home on 2ocret - 3 bedroom, itudio, ttudy - 2 completebath* in beautiful Jock ton Township, N. Val¬paraiso, Indiana. Rental $200 per month - JOmin. drive from U of C. Quiet, Peaceful.Reclusehed Zeetet Realty0(00 219-926-1674 Spacious 6 room apartment 55th 8<the lake, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths,ample free parking, available forrent May 1, 643-3168Most Attr. 6 Rm Apt. 2 Bedrmplus den Near Lake I.C. 8. UofCBus Serv. Includes Carpeting anddrapes 8. elect. $170 922-6793 Days799-6641 Eve.Sublet Now 2'/z rms S Shore 955-2761GETTING TOGETHERAttractive young Blonde needs malecompanionship. Open minded, diver¬sified interests. Very liberal. CallDiane FA47400, Room 520. Homeweeknights after 5:30, all Sat, Sun.Freshman boys wants to meetfreshman girl. Call 6849771 tonightbetween 6:30 and 6:50.Back to Chgo Summer DesiringChick for dating, photographing,tennis and general grooving. Rich¬ard Weinberg Harvard Pennypacker48 Cambridge 02138RIDESRide Needed to N. California March20 or 21. Share Driving, Expenses.Phone Denise WE50058. *Need Ride to Boston for 3 overBreak. Will share expenses —Please Call FA42800, ext 211.Ride Wanted to Florida — Miami.Share Driving, expenses. 684-2452.Need a ride to New York After2/20. Share expenses. 363-140. ???WANTED: Ride to New York, for1, 2, or 3. Will help drive andshare expenses. Call 363-1352PEOPLE FOR SALEBabysitter in my home Vic 57-S.Maryland. Call 643-8139NEED NEW HOMESTitoby Needs a Home. Sp.F. GoodCat For Lonely People. 643-4581.FOR ADOPTIONBeautiful Siamese, male, X2666CHAMPION ROACHKILLER CATFREE Call Abe 6673374, 9558775 PlezGRADUATE STUDENTSRemember the days of your youth?Bring back the good old days ofinnocent rock 8, roll without anysocial import. Bring it all backwith the rock 8< roll revival ofSHA-NA-NA tonight at Mandel Hall— only 2 or 2Vt billsCEFWowee! another Eastern EuropeanComedy. Those Slavs are funnierthan the Pierce Tower Snack Bar— LOVE AFFAIR Sunday in CobbHall 7 and 9PMAnother 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.PEOPLE WANTEDFlying to Boston Spring Recess Bea Companion for A child. Remuner¬ation Rather Generous. 4103 or3245887.Free room 8< board in exchange forevening babysitting start now orspring quarter. 684-1369.Test Your Emotional Sensitivity ina Short, Unique Expt. Call Stuart955-2761.LADIES! EARN DECENT COMMIS¬SION SELL IMPORTED STONENEKLACES Earrings to FriendsNeighbours Call 8780156 / 7846810Eves.COACH HOUSE APT for rent fromApr. 1 $140/mo on campus busroute in Kenwood Ideal for singleperson call 285-6283j PIZZA jpLATTERjPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsI Compare the Price! II I11460 E. 53rd 643-28001^ WE DELIVER jHOUSE FOR SALEBrick duplex, 7 rooms, 4 bed¬rooms, 2 baths, garage, near1C and library, South Shore,$11,000; call 721-0111. LOST AND FOUNDFound a young black fern cat withwhite chest 8< feet near EleanorClub about 2wks ago. If she's yourscall 363-2235.Lost: G. Shepherd (F): Bl, Tan,White; Vic 57 8, Maryland; Call 3246883 — Reward.PERSONALGAY WOMEN: Gay Liberation isno bastion of male chauvinism.Come join us. Call 955-7433.Relive the spiffy music of the fif¬ties — see SHA-NA-NA tonite atMandel Hall. Only 2.50, 2.00To the Field Sitter:I am waiting for you by the re¬frigerator—LaraWe Don't Keep Telling You HowFriendly Our Skies ... We MakeThem Friendly Instead. Fly Amer¬ican Airlines to Tulsa, Toronto, OrTucson. Call Campus Rep. JimSack 684-6667.Take your best girl to the rock 8,roll revival of SHA-NA-NA tonightat Mandel Hall, 8 PMGay Liberation's closet-burning ser¬vice is open to all men and WO¬MEN eager to be rid of the damnthings.Lonely, no one ever calls? Keephoping, Student Govt Might. We'rerunning the long awaited telephonesurvey on Student activities, so ifsome one calls you, please answerhis questions. It means that you'reone of the lucky RANDOM peoplepicked from the Student Directory.Chicks and liberated women — puton your high-heeled sneakers forSHA-NA-NA tonight!Don't Walk Through Any Dark Al¬leys, Gordon.Mother Rieser's Chopped Liver isworth $17 a person.Dear CEF:Thank you. Vaudeville lives!— The Wikler-Bernstein Circuit.Trade 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.Why haven't we heard from youguys in the Modern LanguageReading Closet?And WHILE We're questioning stu¬dent bureaucrats, Doug, where didthe money come that paid for thatlong letter in the classifieds?Guys — grease back your hair to¬night and go see the rock 8< rollrevival of SHA-NA-NAThank you everybody for a happy,happy birthday. DGSPhonographic Literature Free!!!Good Sound for Your Pornographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8, Tape Decks Save$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.ISTo Roger Sandy Ed Norm and theCouncil — high tuition and no stu¬dents on the council — taxationwithout representation.To Ed from all of us this is ourUniversity too.Join us — union of studentsMessage to the people from theBlue Gargoyle:In spite of our efforts to cut downon our financial losses t£e Gar¬goyle is still very much a profitlosing thing. We lose about $60 aweek or roughly $600 a term andif we don't begin to come closer tobreaking even we could fold.The Gargoyle carries a heavy pro¬gram load which is designed toserve the people: artists, musicians,politicos, dancers, poets, craftypeople, just about anybody — freeof charge. If we are to continue toserve the people we will need thesupport of the people. So when youcome to the Gargoyle on Mondayand notice a rise in the prices onour menu you should know thatwe are asking for your support.POWER TO THE PEOPLE. TheBlue Gargoylegovernment and form a new one that suits them better. This is a most valuable and sacred right - a right we hope and believeis to liberate the world. A. Lincoln-1848March 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/11fsi*HGfr< "'"•id*tLif $ mmill ' , leMefWd CfocefD Wdl b«com«the moil hazardous »»r corridor.,n the United Stales .Beiaukr ol Ih, l.nW'.i i^W1u»« to build ii thf j»po,,leIX lb» lav* n aimou tt»u,^5Si‘*° •» »l>«Ol«« Mn be'w*5|f£itCOmotMari dftiU&M* .Thanaw McConnick Place not be.ng »umH»oo'*dlo* tha vu«u •■ 'm.ir 'eve. ''o'* low "yog .*.. .will hM lo be .emoriebed at cooudarabl* com Th« airport in |tw lake it /U'onftv opposed by both / ' 'lhePro'esiroiial Ati T.a">c —Controllers Assoc rat ron and ,the Arrlme Pilots Assocraiton^A h,**k °, d ,„k th, „,*,*,*,v«* < and oil to the airpor"" "■ ’ £ J1 !*•»would would* look like a puddle An■•t wmI) ashore’Lake liilichijin jifamous doho salmon..already-m dangef as a species, could suffer, a death blowfrom the effects.of the construction and ope»at»on of the airport' in*'the lake \ /. . .lb will* boating on lake M«.hi*«’m ih* CfMcafb ktea «•" riwjm*•tbastrce"v * lomb.nation o* no.sesafety end pollution bom the -upon m th* bk»\ Ask tt* people who lw* n**i o Hat*wh*i happens io there television'reception every time one of:the big"-:-planes goes by and the.* w.it hewell over 1000 ol theme day. The additional construction coinot building *n attporitn the take•re like to mean that ii will cost *a brihon dollars more than analternative lend site1The airport would be sonaen ,n iT*"**>*» the eftaci it one o'./ “*** Thould give way if hit toieaample by a plane or a ship| I IfMauwe bui a,vl .a depon w. ha,.0 be bu.lt on Shore The land aroundIhe U.i.vrn ty <.l it, , dlf idMuuv,n. ol Scene, ami . idol,-*' Ult (So may Ih, U . ly , 'Rainbow Beach and Pan. antT{valuable watarlronl propeily 3.danger ot being needed to. h,gr'He hotels airport moteti anrrijapaitment houses needed neart•RB airport land imposs.ble-io tm the takel Jfej ' * a w b'S Th« pollution from the pl*nes JV 'the commercial ventures1; and’the' airport iltell is likely lo dose ,ChKkgu s few remaining.sw»m ^y m.ng bokches \ :\ . V Many stK.olog.sls arid ,esOKlg.s'tsa., laed.cti.K) that rhe Hyde Pa.kOakland Kenwood and SouthShore neighborhoods will lose ■■■>*their identity; and change fromresidential to Urge.y commerce1areas-r5n^esiimaTe has it jhalj4?.^=additidf^al lanes of highway^;will have to be built^from th^Loop to the’Indiana line to-/'ha nd le t he add 11 io na I traffic pfc M'llrons of cubtc yards of dirt will have'brOugh t > m by bar ge: from- some/Ini-yWhert The Indiana Dunes'are/one^ver'y^. : lootcal soot /-/r>\ -O ,>'No one can predict how drasticV ; tfi v //S fb« •fftet will.be on the natural'\ »nd flora 0r the lake\ Chemical pollutants on and in . .Tens ol thousands: perhaps hundreds of'house Illy.,! iK-rviny yVo„i,t:hdv, |u tnrelocated Irom ttie south side in an unusually short lima This could result inoyerciowding m northern as well assouthern suburbs^ - ^i, / ‘||h^an||pt5^k^^cummeroafoper at ions that mustbe near an airport but cannot be'.built m the l»hr\-. % rilbai will the eltec, be on „ boolshosc.neiy and lens ol thousands olIh mi I. ifis lake off a „JMttfffH of -in,,fp |» , ,f dav^takenthem oWf The'.south sideI^§|8WBSSS883oc i88S8S23fcjew.Slyt§§§o§aaj|yDjvC) Qd00v3CKij'*lgDatoooeoopflK!Sl^QDOOOOaBlTrrDlQQDOOOSO^DOiJDOOOODaBDLinODQOOO00001®issssssssas®iogaii>uQODogguba&mo?'C 3aaaooQOD0D0oD h^oDaj0 goadoyoafloDooD gg.IMltWIImsLoaaoooooaagaodgodaoosoiio oocioaaaoanooooooooFnSpoo-People so often say, on pollution and ecology issues, "If only someone had done something 10 years ago..."Wei now is 10 ye<n ujo lui the airport in Lake airport unnecessary, the land can surely be sold atMichigan The issue i t/ery mm h alive Mayor a profit )Daley favors an airport in the lake not necessarily We ask for your support in the fight against thenow,' but event i,i",, and the uty . ontmues to con- airport m the lake We ask for contributions to:*.i< ; ftjr picins help spread this message (and we offer variousBy tlie time 'eventually' gets here, we won't have a trinkets in return see coupon for details)choice. All possible alternative sites will be covered We are a group called SAIL I fiat stands for'wit/ tract .housing, and we II be stuck with an air Stop the Airport In the Lake. We,are an outgrowthport an ’hr lake, whether we want it or not of the Campaign Against Environmental ViolenceW< .Relieve it/is (f.i'tu al that Chic ago decide right (now with thousands of people m the Chicago areanow,'tins year; never to put an airport in Lake on record supporting our goals). Thank you.:-1" h“M" -A few reasons are dep.c ted above ) Sponsored as a public service by: i : a 11>wai11 si ii Businessmen for the Public Interestselet t k)ii and land <u cjuisition 'tor tin; new airport - ' Gordon B Sherman. President: ... I ;i,,i'i Unv an right Marshall Patner;Executive Director■■ : • ■; mat • a ^.j l()‘> N IX'arborn St., Chicago. Illinois 60602 SAIL, 109 N. Dearborn, Suite 1001, Chicago 60602 |( ) l am opposed to putting an airport in Lake Michigan/( ) Here is my contribution of $1 or more, to help buymore ads like this: one. Please send me a freeDon’t do it in the lake button & bumper sticker.( ) Here is my contribution of $5 or more. Please sendme a button, a bumper sticker, & a large poster sizedreproduction of this ad, suitable for framing (etc ).Name ■ ; ;:c - —————/AddressDONT DO ITIN THE LAKEBumper sticker(nol adujl Mate).Button(not ,actual size)12/The Chicago Maroon/March 6, 1970