Bus Tour Reveals Surprising FactsBy Judy AlsofromWhat do twenty grandmothers, severalbored and restless children, a few families,one sailor, and a Maroon reporter and herroommate have in common? They all tooka Greyline bus tour of the South Side ofChicago one Saturday afternoon.We started out from the side entrance ofthe Conrad Hilton Hotel, and settled backfor our $3.50 worth of sightseeing.We proceeded down the Day Ryan Ex¬pressway with a full explanation of its his¬tory (part of the courteous extras of thetour provided by our bus driver) and sawIllinois Institute of Technology. We werenext privileged to ride down the Lake ShoreDrive (learning how it was reclaimed landformed in the Zanzibar process) and ar¬rived at the Museum of Science and In¬dustry. Our tour guide informed us that agreat man (he could not remember who)once said that one needs 8 hours a day for31 days really to see the museum; and thentold us to be back at the bus in half anhour. He added that we might have someproblems getting about as the public highschools throughout Chicagoland were hav¬ing a science fair. Once rolling again, ourguide said “And now we are entering theproperty of the University of Chicago. Thiswas originally a medical school founded byJohn Rockefeller in 1894.”So started the wealth of misinformationand sometimes very startling facts thatpoured from our guide’s mouth as we start¬ed d^wn «he M'dwav. “And now, on our right we have the IdaNoyes Library and Blaine Hall.” We nextheard that the outstanding merit of Rock¬efeller Chapel is that it was the site of theSharon Percy-John D Rockefeller IV mar¬riage where that “famous couple” attend¬ed. “You know who I mean — Lynda Birdand what’s his name the movie actor.” Wealso saw the ‘Dean’s’ house and were re¬minded that the youngest Dean, Hutchin¬son, said that you can’t mix football andstudying. “He was right. They abolishedfootball,” our guide announced.We then turned down Woodlawn and sawthe “girls” cafeteria and pick-up place,where they all pick up their boy friends.”Then we came to the “reason why weturned down this here narrow street, on theright the famous Robie House built byFrank Lloyd Wright in 1904 after which theinternationally known Imperial Hotel wasmodelled, which no longer stands.”Turning onto 57 St our illustrious driverpointed out the “Rekenstein” library on theright and the “quadaqua” club on the leftand the “quadaqua campus.”On 55 St our driver knowingly pointed outone of those rare floating buildings, the Lu¬theran Theological Seminary (or as he putit, theology seminary). “Notice how thebuilding floats on its arches,” and all thegrandmothers noticed, took pictures andwent back to sleep.We then went down Kimbark and heardContinued on Page Three 55TH STREET: Location of the "theology seminary," one of the floating buildingsa Greyline bus tour points out during a Hyde Park tour.Volume 78, Number 47 The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 7, 197050 March To Levi'sFollowing ConferencePOLLUTION: Students concerned with air pollution, which is visible on the Point,met last night at the opening session of the Sick Earth Conference, after which50 students marched to President Levi's house. By Allen FriedmanFifty people marched on President Ed¬ward Levi’s house after the opening sessionof the Sick Earth Conference, a discussionof definitions and the elements of pollutionheld Monday night in Quantrell auditorium.The march coincided with workshops onthe various issues raised, which were heldfollowing a panel discussion and question-and-answer period.One of the three panelists, author andfree lance writer Gene Marine, joined themarch with the Campaign Against Pollu¬tion (CAP) to President Edward Levi’shouse to ask Levi why the board of trusteeshas delayed in deciding what to do with the4000 shares of Commonwealth Edison stockthe University owns.Members of the Coalition to Stop Pollu¬tion (CSP) met with members of the boardlast month to find out how the Universitywould vote at the Com Ed stockholders’meeting April 27.According to CPS spokesman Bob Cfea-Ex-Premier Edgar Faure To LectureEdgar Faure, former prime minister ofFrance will deliver a lecture at 4 pm Tues¬day, April 7, in Kent 107.During World War II, Faure was activein Algiers as a member of the French com¬mittee on national liberation. From 1946 to1958, he represented the Radical-Socialistparty in the High Court of Justice.He took part in the prosecution of Nazileaders during the war crimes trials at Nu¬remberg in 1945. From 1946 to 1958, whilerepresenting the Radical-Socialist party inthe National Assembly, he held a number of important offices. These included Secre¬tary of State for Finance in 1949-50, Min¬ister of the Budget in 1950, Minister of Jus¬tice in 1951-52, Prime Minister in 1952 andagain in 1955-56, Minister of Finance andEconomic Affairs in 1953-54, and Ministerof Foreign Affails in 1955.In 1958-59 he again became Minister ofFinance. In 1962 he went to the Universityof Dijon as professor of law, remainingthere until 1966 when he was appointedMinister of Agriculture.Faure was Senator for the Jura depart¬ ment as a member of the Democratic Left.He completed a number of important mis¬sions for the French government, includinga trip to China in 1963 that resulted in theresumption of diplomatic relations betweenFrance and China.As Minister of Education under formerPresident Charles de Gaulle, Faure begana program of university reform. He wassucceeded by Oliver Guichard when Pom¬pidou became President, but he won in theJura area of eastern France as a memberof the National Assembly. mer, the trustees said that they could meetno earlier than April 20th to decide how tovote.Told that Levi was not at home, thegroup instead listened to Creamer and oth¬ers who urged University action on theCom Ed issue.Population authority Garrett Hardin, vis¬iting professor at the University this quar¬ter and second of three panelists empha¬sized the environmental dangers posed bythe population explosion, pesticides, and in¬dustrial and automobile air pollution.Speaking on the possibility of contagioncaused by exponential population growth,he warned that “We may re-enter a worldof bacterial and viral pollution.”Hardin added that the carbon dioxideproduced into the air acts to keep in heatfrom the sun, and that this ‘greenhouse’ ef¬fect is dangerously self propagating.Society’s approach to the problem ofstopping pollution was criticized by JohnSheaffer, executive director of the LakeMichigan and adjacent land study commis¬sion.Sheaffer quoted a permit issued to in-vest:gate Com Ed plant showing that theburden of proof is on the public “that thepollution is having an adverse effect on thecommunity.”He also criticized the concept of setting astandard and “getting” anyone for break¬ing the limit. This “playing the numbersgame” often reduces to asking “what canthe technology permit us to gain” and usesthat figure as the standard, he said.Sheaffer concluded, “We are approachingthe problem in a way that is destined tofail.” He attributed this failure to lack of“conceptual framework with which to un¬dergird our program.”THE MAROONACap and Gown GivesWay to the Year BoxA multi-media collection of articles,photos, and other surprises called “Year-box” is replacing the old Cap and Gownyearbook. After four years of financialproblems and poor campus response, theCap and Gown was taken over last fall byDavid Travis, former photography editorfor the Maroon.“The old Cap and Gown was just an ex¬tension of a high school yearbook,” saidTravis, now editor of the YearBox. “No onewas excited about it since 1965 when DannyLyon ran it. They sold out; someone evenstole the copy from the library.”“I redesigned the yearbook inside fourtimes, then I designed it as a paperbackand as a magazine. Finally, I came up withthe idea of a box.”Working with Travis on the YearBox arepast Maroon editor Roger Black, who is de¬signing it, and Steve Cook, literary editor.Inside the “box” will be a collection ofarticles individually printed as pamphletson colored paper, photographs, and as¬sorted oddities. Travis is featuring a port¬folio of his best photos of the Universityand Hyde Park. Some will be printed postersize.Along with the photos, there will be sev¬eral articles printed in separate pamphletson the University and campus life. The ma¬jor piece is a complete guide to Hyde Park,which will include restaurants, theaters,bookstores, grocery stores, shops, and any¬thing else that is relevant to living here.Joseph Schwab, professor in the naturalsciences and education, has written an ar¬ ticle on the history of the University. PaulSprague, assistant professor of art, is writ¬ing an article on the architecture of theUniversity. Bluesman Paul Butterfield willhave something on Hyde Park.Mitch Kahn, Maroon sports editor, hasreviewed the history-making 1969 footballseason, and Frank Malbranche has prom¬ised a piece on the mythological origins ofStudents for Violent Non-Action.Student suggestions are needed for therecipe book for students, which LeslieStrauss is compiling. Ideas can be sent tothe Yearbox office on the second floor ofIda Noyes above the Bandersnatch.Non-literary things in the box include agame for students designed by Don Pa¬lumbo, a bust of President Levi in two di¬mensions, and a stampbook consisting ofphotos of graduating fourth-year students.Paul Asbel, of Jeff Carp’s band and “Fa¬thers and Sons,” is doing a record for thebox.“We already have subscribers from allover the country,” said Travis. “Evensome from Washington DC.”“We’re sending one filled with blood tothe Selective Service,” added Black.Seniors can reserve copies of the boxThursday and Friday when they can havetheir pictures taken for the senior stampbook.The box will cost $5 and can be orderedthrough the Yearbox office or at the Year-box table in Reynold's club next week. It isdue to come out May 5, and can be pur¬chased on campus at that time.Men and Women off FlintPlay Ball Saturday.WHITHER JEWRYIN AMERICA & ISRAEL?A conversation withRABBI ARNOLD J. WOLF(Cong. SoM, Highland Park)At HILLEL HOUSE5715 WOODLAWN tonight8:00 p.m.Straight Talk:Your diamond is at...tth/JhmSbUNI ’twfiEtS »OR 56 t|A*S119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGliWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA2 new productions from the director of HAIRTHE NEW TROUPEformerly of the La Mama Repertory Troupeunder the direction of TOM O'HORGANGURTONS APOCALYPTIC NEEDLEdevised & with music by TOM O'HORGANApril 7-12, Horp«r Th«at*r, 5238 S. Harp*r at 53rd St.Tum. thru Fri. 8:30 p.m./Saturday 7 8 10 p.m./Sunday 3 8 7i30p.m.W. Wed.. Thun. U 50 8 3JO/Pri., Sat.. Sun. S3.30 8 4.30Tieketi at bo. office - open* noon doily ... and aM TICKETRON outlet* md. ManhaH Reid 8Co. SI.00off with itudent 1.0. except Sat. night - phone 441-6338lor information641-6338 f CornJ( DLriit ** 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *^ Phone: FA 4-1651 ^SUB FORREST OFSCHOOLYEAR $4 : PIZZA jPLATTER;Pizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsI Compare the Price! II I11460 E. 53rd 643-28001I WE DELIVER IL----........4BTH WEEKHAVENEVER SEENANYTHINGLIKE IT!EASTMANCOLORexclusive dhoovitty THE MOST TALKEDABOUT PICTURE“Spiked Heels and^ Black Nylons”LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337-2113 A CONVERSATIONWITH COPLANDAaron Copland and a distinguishedpanel will discuss his work and trendsin contemporary musicApril 7, 1970Mandel Hall8:30 p.m.Sponsored by the Music Departmentand the Alumni AssociationAlumni and Faculty tickets - $1.00Available at Alumni House5733 University AvenueStudent tickets FreeAvailable through FOTAInformation desk, Administration BuildingStudent Activities Office, Ida Noyes Hall2/The Chicago Maroon/April 7, 1970Dropout Rate CausedBy Isolation, OutragePolice Raid Apartment in HydePark Searching for Wilkerson injury, marriage, discontent with the Uni¬versity, expulsion, leave of absence andchange in career plans.It’s a social phenomenon that almost ev¬eryone goes to college,” Haye said. “Theworld has gone screwy because for almostany job, a BA or a BS degree is de¬manded.” Playe pointed out that many ofhis colleagues see the drop out rate ashealthy because students are leaving a situ¬ation not suitable for them.A second year transfer student who con¬siders the University one of the betterschools in the country said “If I were todrop out it would be because of dis¬illusionment with the entire educationalsystem and not just this school.”She went on to say, “One thing about Chi¬cago that really bothers me is that studentsare so susceptible to expulsion. The Univer¬sity condones most student protests, butwhen the students begin to criticize theschool, they are kicked out. This place is sounresponsive to students and their demandsfor a voice in the school’s curriculum andoperation.”Some students come to the University notknowing what they want and, finding noth¬ing, leave. Others come with a definite ideaof what they want and don’t find it either.One student, unsure of whether to stay orleave said, “The undergraduates here aregetting a raw deal. For instance, I wantedto take a course in political science. Thereare six undergraduate courses and twentygraduate courses. This whole place is setup for graduates.” She added that a friendof hers in the law school said the under¬graduates should sue the University.Playe pointed out he was most worriedabout students who had no plans after drop¬ping out. Many students commenting onfriends who have dropped out said the Uni¬versity gives no sense of direction to stu¬dents.Tour IncludesUnknown SitesRally To Be Held forLegislation requiring state-paid health in¬surance for poor peop e, written by gradu¬ates of the University law school, will bethe subject of a rally Thursday, April 9 at7:30 pm, at University of Illinois’ ChicagoCircle Center, 750 S Halsted.The proposed bill would require the stateto purchase regular health insurance pol¬icies (such as the present Blue Cross sys¬tem) for poor people who cannot afford thepremiums themselves, guaranteeing thesame service to poor as to richer currentho'ders of health insurance.The bill stems from a summer programin 1967 in which the University’s StudentHealih Organization sent medical, law, den¬tal, and social work graduate studeits intothe ghetto to see conditions for themselves.The bill (HB 1479) has already passed theS;ate House and is now pending before acommittee of the Senate. It is being spon¬sored by lccal Illinois Rep. Bob Mann, alsoa graduate of the law school here. The bill would be the first of its kind inthe country completely to eliminate the dif¬ference between poorer and richer patientsseeking care.As far as doctors and hospitals are con¬cerned, all fees would be paid equally re¬liably by similar health insurance agenciesfor both poor and rich.Presently people on welfare have a spe¬cial “green card” which allows state pay¬ment of their medical expenses in somecases, but many doctors and hospitals havefound the state is slow to pay, taking up tosix months, and the state usually “dis¬counts” fees, paying only 70 percent ofwhat is asked.According to supporters of the bill manypeople not under welfare or the state’smedically indigent aid program still cannotafford to pay high medical costs, and mustresort to free clinics in local hospitalswhere the present system’s slow or non¬existent payments have made poor patients increasingly unwelcome, leading to theovercrowding at the County Hospital thathas become acute.The bill would raise the present eligibilityceiling for the average family of four ofabout $3600 a year salary and $800 savings,to allow salaries of up to $4200 a year andsavings of $2100 with provision for raisingthese regularly. This is the maximumamount for which Federal matching fundsare now available.A H /de Park apartment building, knownto be inhabited primarily by students, wasraided by police without showing searchwarrants on two occasions looking for Cath-lyn Wilkerson, one of the women sought bythe police and FBI after the explosion ofwhat newspapers have called a “bomb fac¬tory” in New York. She is also one of theunindicted co-defendants of the Weath¬ermen Conspiracy case.The building, at 54 St and Ingleside Avewas first entered March 16, the day MissWilkerson was to report for trial on chargesarising out of demonstrations in Chicagolast fall. Police told the apartment’s resi¬dent that they were investigating a homi¬cide, and searched his apartment. Theyshowed him a picture of Miss Wilkerson anumber of times and asked if he knew her.The next day plainclothesmen who said amurder had been reported searched theapartment again, also without showing asearch warrant. The plainclothesmen wenton to the other apartments in the building, telling residents that there was a shot re¬ported, they were investigating a robbery,or that they were looking for a body.In a related incident, last week policewent to an apartment on University St look¬ing for Len Handelsman, expelled ’69,sought by police as a Weatherman. Theyhad no search warrant and were notallowed in. Police have visited that apart¬ment house a number of times looking forpeople associated with radical activities.This apartment has gotten a great deal ofattention from the narcotics division whichthe residents feel is harassment related tothe police feelings that the apartment isnow or once was inhabited by radicals.A number of raids have taken place onthe north side for 12 as yet undiscoveredWeathermen being sought for federal trial.WHPK on one of its weekend broadcastsforecast an increased number of raids inHyde Park and warned residents to be pre¬pared for such occurrences, urging them toask to see a search warrant. TOUR: Among the landmarks on a toursculpture and the "quadaqua campus." Continued from Page Onethe interesting story of the 53 St KimbarkPlaza. “You see, all the store ownersaround here got together and bought theproperty, and so they all now have thesame address, 53 Kimbark Plaza.” Thegroup was amazed.As we travelled down Kimbark welearned the various prices of all the apart¬ments in the area, and were told that onecannot buy anything in the Kenwood areafor less than $80,000. “To avoid deteriora¬tion, the University of Chicago buys up anyapartment they hear about which is goingto be turned into a one or two room kitch¬enette.“Now we are in Brown Town, USA, theHarlem of Chicago, and this is where theUniversity of Chicago’s property ends.” Itwas here at 47th street that we began ourtrip back.of the University are the Henry MooreNew Health BillSteve Aoki By Nancy ChismanThe drop out rate at the University isalways a favorite topic of discussion andrumor, with conjectures ranging from adrop-out rate of nearly zero to practicallyeverybody who enters.Dean of undergraduate students GeorgePlaye clarified the situation in the Collegein a recent interview, stating that 55 to 58percent of the original class of 1970 willgraduate on time this spring. The drop-outrate of 1969-70 for the entire College is ex¬pected to equal last year’s when 500 stu¬dents dropped out of the College. Playe alsonoted that 50 to 60 of last year’s drop-outshave since returned to the University.Most of the drop-outs transfer to otherschools and although no pattern exists,Playe said many may be seeking smaller,less urban environments. “The largest rea¬son for dropping out,” he said, “appears tobe because of personal problems.”Speaking to students, however, manyblame the University itself for causingthese personal problems. One student, whois dropping out at the end of the year said,“I keep asking myself ‘what is this placedoing to me?’ All the teachers and olderstudents I’ve talked to say ‘It’s not whatthis place is doing to you, it’s what you’redoing to yourself.’ The thing is that theschool lets you do it to yourself. There’s nosense of community at all in this place.”Playe listed other reasons that causedstudents to leave the University as familyproblems, financial difficulties, illness orApril 7, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3SCIENTISTS LOOK AT OUR CITIESA Lecture SeriesCities are huge laboratories for trial and error, failure and success - and new strategiesfor thinking about them must be found if their suffocating, strangulating problems are to besolved. Five scientists of disparate disciplines will explore such innovations in thinking in alecture series co-sponsored by the University's Center for Policy Study and by the Center forUrban Studies. The first speaker will be Dr. Humberto Fernandez - Moran, the A N. PritzkerProfessor of Biophysics at the University and a renowned authority on electron microscopes.His topic: "Humanity and the Challenge of Inner Space."April 9 Dr. HumbertoFernandez - MoranUniversity ofChicagoApril 16 Dr. Roger RevelleHarvard UniversityApril 23 Dr. Amitai EtzioniColumbia UniversityApril 30 Dr. E. S. SavasOffice of the Mayor,New York CityMay T Dr. George WaldHarvard UniversityAll lectures to be held inQUANTRELL AUDITORIUM, COBB HALL, S011 Ellis Avenue8.-00 PM.Sponsored by the Center for UrbanStudies and The Center for Policy Studyof the University of ChicagoADMISSION FREE4/tA. ’ Chicago' M.ro4h/April 7,‘*970Steve AoklDenied Married Housingmarried student housing. In a later inter¬view with the Maroon, Turkington ex¬plained that married student housing re¬ceived real estate and water tax rebates asregistered student housing.Members of the campus organization ofGay Liberation, formed last quarter tofight oppression of homosexuals, criticizedwhat they called the University’s unwilling¬ness to risk placing student needs over taxbrackets.In another incident, co-chairmen of GayLib Step May, ’71 and Nancy Garwood, ’71reported malicious letters had been sent totheir parents concerning their involvementin the group. The incident is currently un¬der investigation by the organization.Despite similar harrassment and publiccensure, the movement has continued togrow in Illinois. Groups have been formedat Roosevelt University and Circle Campusin Chicago, Northwestern, Illinois StateUniversity at Normal, Northern IllinoisUniversity and DeKalb. A non-studentgroup has been organized on Chicago’snorth side. An eight page Gay Liberationsupplement written largely by Universitystudents, will appear in Friday’s issue ofthe Seed.In conjunction with the Student Mobiliza¬tion Committee, Gay Lib groups will ob¬serve a Gay Liberation Day April 16 aspart of the week of anti-war protest. GayMemorial HeldMemorial services for Christian Mack-auer were held Monday at 5 pm in BondChapel. The Harper professor emeritus ofhistory died at his home at the age of 72on March 21.Dean of the College Richard Hildebrandbegan the services with memories of Mack-auer as a critical and sympathetic instruc¬tor of undergraduate history.“Christian Mackauer was the presidinggenius of the history of western civilizationin the College,” he said. “He embodied inhis work the grace of a scholar and thepassion of a teacher.”Speakers included James Redfield, mas¬ter of the new collegiate division (NCD),and Karl Weintraub, Donnelley associateprofessor of history. Redfield spoke ofMackauer’s devotion to the study of his¬tory,’saying, “Mackauer always returnedto the civilization of the Greeks for his ideal... yet he never reduced civilization to‘civility’. people will march as a contingent in theApril 15 mass march.As part of Gay Liberation Day, a marchwill be directed to the city court building at321 N La Salle, where Dave Stienecker, whoexposed the allegedly anti-homosexual ac¬tivities of Sgt. John Manley of the ChicagoPolice Department Youth division, is ontrial for criminal defamation. Stienecker,whose critical article appeared in a Sep¬tember edition of the Mattachine MidwestNewsletter, is charged with causing breachof peace by inciting homosexuals in Chi¬cago to resist arrest by Manley or harasshim.Last Saturday, Gay Lib sponsored adance in Woodward commons which over1200 people attended. The Poncho Pilotband performed, and $1200 was grossed.Gay Lib has asked for an injunctionagainst Manley for his allegedly anti-homo¬sexual activities.Members of the University organizationhave increased their activities to educatethe public. During finals week of winterquarter, six members of Gay Lib spoke to250 sociology students at suburban ElkGrove high school. The group was invitedby the sociology team with the approval ofthe principal. Members are also leaflettingthe Carnegie Theater where the “Boys inthe Band,” a film about a homosexual’sbirthday party, is playing.for MackauerPassages from the writings of Sophocles,Max Weber, and Jacob Burckhardt wereread to illustrate the ideas on civilizationand history which Mackauer spent his lifeteaching.Weintraub said, “This man had nobible,” to point out the critical nature ofMackauer’s work and thought.Redfield remarked, “As I speak I can seehim rising politely to tell me that I hadmisrepresented him once again.”One of the most popular teachers oncampus, Mackauer came to the Universityin 1943. His special scholarly fields wereancient history and sociology of religion,but he also taught Roman history, socialscience and Greek.Mackauer was awarded the QuantrellAward for excellence in undergraduateteaching in 1956 and was appointed profes¬sor in 1957. The special post retirement po¬sition of a University tutor in the NCD wascreated for him in 1966.'55r and'15'To SpeakOn Hyde ParkCornerThe Chicago 15 and the Beaver 55, twogroups of anti-war activists who face trialfor destroying draft files, will be represent¬ed at Hyde Park Comer Thursday night (8pm at the Blue Gargoyle).The Beaver 55‘spokesman, Tom Trost, isa laborer, ex-army sergeant and former or¬ganizer of the Young Christian WorkerMovement.The case of the Chicago 15, who arecharged with mutilating files at the SouthSide draft board on 63 St, may raise a newlegal controversy. US District Judge EdwinRobson, who will try the Chicago 15 May 4,imposed a gag rule on the defendants Feb¬ruary 24, ordering them “to make or issueno statements, written or oral, either atpublic meeting or occasion or for public re¬porting or dissemination in any fashion, re¬garding the jury or jurors in this case ...the merits of the case . .. the evidence ...the witnesses or rulings of the court.”The penalty for defying this injunction iscontempt for the lawyers and revocation ofbail for the defendants.The reason for imposing the gag rule, ac¬cording to Judge Robson’s decision, is thatpre-trial publicity will make an impartialtrial impossible. Robson pointed to the for¬mer association of defense counsel WilliamCunningham with lawyer William Kunstlerin defend'ng a similar group of draft cardburners, the Catonsville Nine. The decisioncriticizes Kunstler’s speech-making activi¬ties during the Conspiracy trial.The Committee to Defend the B:ll ofRights is running a full page ad today inthe Chicago Sun-Times requesting moneyfor the Chicago 15. According to executivedirector Richard Criley, the committee has“volunteered to speak on things I’m surethey (the 15) would like to have said.” Heattacked the gag rule as a “blanket denialto open their mouths,” and said it was anexample of how “the use of rulrngs sup¬posed to protect the people become uncon¬stitutional invasions of the first amend¬ment.” Criley criticized the courts’ treat¬ment of “highly political cases.” Robson’sorder, he said, is an example of “thecourt’s hypocritical act of pretending thatthese are criminal cases.”Nancy Smedley of the American FriendsService Committee called the gag rule an “unprecedented restriction of the individualto discuss his case before the trial.” Mostimportant for the defendants, she said, isthat it is now “impossible for them to speakpublicly in order to raise money for theirdefense.”Yesterday afternoon defense lawyerswere scheduled to go before Robson andrequest that he vacate his order. Assumingthat this request will be denied, the defenseplans to request the Seventh Circuit Courtof Appeals to overturn Robson’s order.Judge Robson cited as precedents to hisorder the case of Shepherd vs. Maxwell andthe trial of Reis Lopez Tijerina. Dr. Shep¬herd’s conviction for murder was reversedby the Supreme Court on grounds of prej¬udicial pre-trial publicity. In the Tijerinacase, the defendant, a leader of the Chicanomovement in New Mexico, was ordered notto make any statements during the trial.Criley said that Robson had “turned up¬side down” the Supreme Court ruling byusing it to put limits on the defendants in¬stead of on the prosecution as originally in¬tended. About the Tijerina case he saidTijerina had not had competent defensecounsel and that “the legal arguments werenever made in that case.”Gay WomenBy Nancy ChismanThe University housing office has deniedtwo female members of Gay Liberation,one a student and the other a Universityemployee, permission to live together inmarried student housing because theirmarriage is not recognized under Illinoiscivil law.In a letter to a friend of the women, di¬rector of student housing Edward Turking¬ton said the tax status of the Universitywould be jeopardized if students not legallymarried were housed in married studentapartments.Turkington went on to explain that rela¬tives of students, nonstudents, and studentswho consider themselves married but arenot legally married are also barred from. ..April Ch(c^ Mwon/5EDITORIALEducationTwo recent — and at first glance unrelated — items to appearin the pages of the Maroon have given us occasion to do some think¬ing on the uses of the University.The first one, which appeared in Friday’s paper, is a letterfrom Richard Flacks, formerly a faculty member here. The letter,which we generally agreed with, protested a letter by Roger Weisswhich attempted to vindicate the University’s judgment in its denialof tenure to Marlene Dixon and its offer to Flacks. After makingsome unpleasantly true suppositions about the reasoning behindthe offer made to him, Flacks’ letter concludes saying, “From thisdistance, Chicago looks like a center of reaction — one of thecommand posts in the war against the young . . . it is systematicallyorganized to rob young people of their youth.”The second item is a story in today’s paper about dropoutsfrom the University of Chicago. Dropping out is a favorite topicof conversation, particularly among undergraduates. Many believethat a large percentage (2/3 or over) of the undergraduates dropout, and that more would if they didn’t feel constrained by socialand fillial obligations to remain in school. Reasons for leaving theUniversity include unsatisfactory academic quality, dislike for thecity of Chicago, and personal pro Diems such as marriage, parent¬hood, or lack thereof. The constant complaint, however, and theone that accounts for such extravagant estimates of attrition rang¬ing to 85 percent of a given class, is that life in general here isunbearable, and that the University makes people lead sterile,depressing, bitter existences.We know what they are talking about. Life here, particularlythe bewildering first year of college, spent in a penitentiary-likebuilding with 400 other bewildered 18 year olds, can often turninto an ironically paradoxical cycle of academic work toward in¬tellectual progress and increasing spiritual isolation or emotionalregression. The anomie one can experience, living in a Hyde Parkapartment with 14 different names over the mailbox, can make onevery bitter toward the reason one is living in a such a place — theUniversity.And yet, do we have the right to make such claims of theUniversity — that it make us serene as well as educated, wellintegrated as well as erudite? It seems that many of us come tothis — or any — university with the extremely naive assumptionthat education leads to contentment. If the University is performingits educative functions well, then it should be teeming with doubts,discontent, an inability to remain satisfied. It is unfair and illogicalto expect that the experience of getting an education, particularlywhile we clamor for even more engagement with pressing socialproblems, is going to be pleasant. We insist on our right not tohave our lives determined by the University, and then we’re bitterbecause the University doesn’t make us happy. We want to befree and independent, but we demand that our University be coor¬dinated, homogenized, “meaningful and relevant.”Lest anyone think we are castigating students for an offenseagainst an innocent party, we’d like to point out that members ofthe University — faculty and administrators — are among the chiefoffenders in propagating a misleading impression that the Univer¬sity should and will deliver to its students a revelation, a set ofclear directions to the good life. One of the most destructive thingsthis University does is neglect to explain fully its brand of educa¬tion, which is professionally academic and scholarly. The facultyoffer stirring tales of how this brand of education leads to happiness,honor, and the good life; and half of these tales are delivered withconviction, half of them with uneasy longing, but few of them recalland mention the related sacrifices and anxieties.What is needed, perhaps, is more careful consideration, bothby students and by those who would make people students, of whateducation can and cannot do. Students have no right to expectthe University to save their souls, but infinitely more guilty arethe faculty who hint that the University will do so if only we liveby its golden rules. LETTERS TO THE EDITORSPave It!In crossing the campus quadrangles, Ifrequently notice that the trees and grassinterfere with my getting to the building Iwant by the shortest possible route. If Istay on the sidewalks, I have to walk atleast an extra half block, and even if I cutacross the grass, I sometimes have to walkaround a tree.I wish to suggest to the Administrationthat in order to make it more convenientfor students to reach their destinations inthe shortest possible time, the trees on thequadrangles be cut down and the grass betaken up and replaced with cement. Notonly would this save the students’ time, butin the long run the University would savemoney since there would be no necessityfor pruning and spraying the trees, for rak¬ing leaves, or for cutting the grass. In addi¬tion, it would eliminate the necessity forthe silly signs that say, “Keep off thegrass.”Gael HodgkinsDivinity SchoolResist the CensusThis week you will receive a governmentcensus form. All of you will be required bylaw to answer 23 questions, 20 percent ofyou, 66 questions. Failure to answer themcan result in a $100 fine and/or 60 days injail despite the fact that the 70 Census isboth illegal and immoral.It is true that our Constitution decreesthat a census be taken every ten years forpurposes of apportioning representativesand direct taxes (direct taxes? do we stillhave them?). Yet it is hard to understandhow some Census questions — e.g. “Do youhave a flush toilet?” “Do you have a bath¬tub or shower?” “Has this person beenmarried more than once?” — help'to deter¬mine apportionment.The tenth amendment to the Constitutionreads, “The powers not delegated to theUnited States by the Constitution, nor pro¬hibited by it to the States, are reserved tothe States respectively, or to the people.”Thus, the power to conduct a census forreasons other than apportionment lies ei¬ther with the states or with the people. Inmy op'nion, it lies with the people.Amendment IV states, “The right of thepeople to be secure in their persons,houses, papers, and effects, against unrea¬sonable searches and seizures, shall not beviolated.” What is reasonable about a man¬datory census questionnaire; what crimehas been committed to warrant thatsearch?Remember that “the enumeration in theTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah G'azer. PeteGoodsell, Gordon Katz, Susan Left, GeraMLevel, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, JanetPine, Audrey Shalinsky, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Monty Futch,Jesse Krakauer, Bruce Rabe, David Rosen-bush, Leslie Strauss.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 Roo-’s303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. <0637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mall $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. Constitution, of certain rights shall not beconstrued to deny or disparage others re¬tained by the people.” And thus, if the Fed¬eral government is denied the power of in¬vasion of privacy (Amend. IV; applicableto the states by Amend. XIV), the right toprivacy must be the people’s! On to moral¬ity.Most of us would accept as a basic moralprecept the idea that it is wrong to initiateforce; it is wrong for me to start fights.How then can we justify a law which forcesinnocent people (those who haven’t in¬itiated force) to divulge personal informa¬tion? Were the US government to do this inVietnam, we would denounce it as rabidaggression. Are not all men equal in rights?Is not the 70 census immoral?That the government, in all its paternal¬ism, thinks it good for you to answer thecensus is irrelevant, as is the possibilitythat you may want to answer the census.What is relevant is that you are required toanswer the census. Is Big Brother to beyour master? Is you house B.g Brother’scastle? Resist the census, census resistancesuggests that you attach one of the follow¬ing three staiemsnts to your questionnaire:• I have filled out this 1970 Censusquestionnaire under threat of punish¬ment. I believe it is a violation of myright to privacy.• I have only answered certa;n of thequestions on this Census. I refuse to an¬swer the remainder because they viol¬ate mv right to privacy.• I refuse to take part in the 1970Census because the government has noright to compel individuals to answersuch questions.Or, do your own thing. In 1970, the fine waslevied only twice and the jail sentence notat all. The punishment is small, the causeimportant. RESIST THE CENSUS.Sophie Cooper, 73Diana RevisitedMr Barry Shapiro’s letter to the Maroon(April 3) concerning the Diana Res¬taurant did not surprise me. I have alwaysfound the treatment one gets in that restau¬rant rather shocking. To relate one of sev¬eral instances. In am Greek (as are mostKazazis’s’ whose name ends in an -s) andone evening I went to dinner at the Dianawith my wife, with whom I speak Swedish.Continued on Page TenBULLETINTuesday, April 7SYMPOSIUM: Aaron Copland and others, Mandel, 8 pm.FLI«.K: Accident, Qu'.ntrell, 7:30 and 9 pm.REHEARSAL: University Chorus, Lexington Hall,Beethoven 9th singers need not re-sudition, 7:30 pm.MEETING: To plan the April 15th Viefntm Moratorium,Reynolds Club South Lounge, 8 pm.WHPK: Musical Society's April Fool concert, 7:30, FreeForm Forum, Sick Earth Conference Part I, 9 pm.DISCUSSION: "Whither Jewry In America and Is¬raeli". m conversation with Rabbi Arnold Jacob Wolf,(Congregation Sole!) at Hillel House, 8 pm.Wednesday, April 8FLICK: Fuck, Quantrell, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.LECTURE: Eugene Perkins, black poet and teacher,editor of Bl*ck Expression magazine and author ofApology to My African Brothers and Black is Beautifulwill give a lecture and poetry reading on "The Chang¬ing Status of the Black Writer". SS 122, admissionfree. Reception and discussion afterwards in Nonesuch,3:30 pm.MEETING: Mass open meeting on Moratorium, Rey¬nolds Club, 7:30 pm. See Thurs. for details.Thursday, April 9SPEECH: Mlachy McGurran, Chairman, Irish Republi¬can Clubs of Northern Ireland, will speak on the cur¬rent situation in Northern Ireland and the role of theI. R. A. Blue Gargoyle, sponsored by the New Univer¬sity Conference. 8 pm.DISCUSSION: Undergraduate mathematics club presentsa panel discussion on the "Ideal Undergraduate Math¬ematics Curriculum" with Profs. Browder, Glauber-m3n, M-clane, and Sally. Eckhart 206, 8 pm.TRYOUTS:"One act plays and an interlude by BertoltBrecht: The Exception and The Rule, The ElephantCalf, The Measures Taken. South Lounge Reyno’dsClub. For scripts contact Stephen Jaeger, Cobb 513,ext 4133. Singers needed. 7:30 pm.RALLY: Peoples' rally for health, University of Illinois,Chicago Circle Center, 750 S Halstead. To support Rep¬resentative Mann's legislation for state paid health in¬surance, and an end to the dual system of health carefor rich ar.d poor. Backed by Medical Committee forHuman Rights, Chicago Welfare Rights Organization,Natural Association of Social Workers. 7:30 pm.CONFERENCE: Negotiation, Sponsored by the Educa¬tional Leadership Institute. Ext 3188 for info.6/The Chicago Maroon/April 7, 1970♦ « ♦ ♦ 1 » tSteve Aokl David Affelder WillBe WHPK DirectorDavid Affelder, newly appointed stationmanager of WHPK, has announced thatspring programming will boast “tightenedup scheduling” with more emphasis onnews and talk shows. Affelder, a familiarface on campus and a veteran of SVNAmovements, is remembered by many forhis role as master of ceremonies at lastquarter’s Lascivious Costume Ball.Programming this quarter features theusual “mixed bag” of rock, country, andblues along with specialized programs invarious areas of music. Tuesday nights, forexample, WHPK will broadcast a series ofclassical music concerts including the Beethoven sonatas being performed weeklyon campus by Paul Badura-Skoda. Mondaynights Peter Kountz charts the history ofjazz and broadcasts early recordings ofgreat artists, many of which are on rare78’s.According to news director Mark Carey,WHPK will devote special attention toecology, the proposed student union, andcultural transformation groups such as gayand women’s lib. The station will alsobroadcast live any event “of immediateworth” and plans to carry full live cov¬erage of this month’s moratorium activi¬ties.Lectures on Cities To Begin ThursdayA lecture series on Scientists Look at OurCities, co-sponsored by the Center for Pol¬icy Study and Center for Urban Studies,will begin Thursday, April 9.Dr Humberto Femandez-Moran, Pritzkerprofessor of biophysics at the Universityand a renowned authority on electron mi¬croscopes, will begin the series that daywith a lecture on Humanity and the Chal¬lenge of Inner Space at 8 pm in Quantrell. The other lectures in the series will beby:• Dr. Roger Revelle, director of the Cen¬ter for Population Studies at Harvard Uni¬versity, on Thursday, April 16• Dr Amitai Etzioni, director of the Cen¬ter for Policy Research at Columbia Uni¬versity, on Thursday, April 23• E S Savas, first deputy City Adminis¬trator, office of the Mayor of New YorkCity, on Thursday, April 30Tenants Refuse To Pay RentSome 60 unionized residents of 5327-35 SDorchester Ave began withholding rentApril 1 to persuade landlord GordonThomas to sign a tenant’s contract.The non-payment will become a strike ifcontract agreements between the landlordand residents *are qot finalized by April 15,according to Frank Day ’7(f, chairman ofthe student Government tenant union,which organized the building.Tenant demands in the 10-page proposedcontract include:• improved grievance procedures fortenants, who want “very fast and guaran¬teed” reactions to heat or water failures orother building code violations, according toDay • giving landlord Thomas responsibilityfor the property• rent increases negotiated with tenants• giving tenants the right to rent strike ifgrievances are not met within reasonabletime• seeing that security deposits are re¬turned before tenants move outIn return, Day said, tenants would agreeto keep apartments clean, wrap garbage,and pay rents on time.If the rent strike occurs, tenants willplace unpaid rent money in escrow in abank. This action is the first sponsored bySG’s 6-month old tenant union.MODERN DANCE CLASSES4,30 to &00Mourfoy • SotvcdoyMM, Rock 4 ion fought.Allison Theater Dance Center17N.StotohaildinQRoom 1903332-9923Tou don't needinsuranceprotectionfor your car(if yon liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’llwant auto insurance that'lreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971sentry®xTINSURANCEme Hardware Mutual* Organization # Dr George Wald, Higgins Professor ofbiology at Harvard University, on Thurs¬day, May 7.All lectures will be at 8 pm in Quantrell.The scientists will provide not only special¬ized information on urban involvements butalso generalized, humanistic, and philo¬sophical approaches to the use of tech¬nology in solving urban problems.Dr Femandez-Moran joined the facultyof the University of Chicago in 1962. In 1968he was named the Pritzker professor ofbiophysics.He is a former Minister of Education inVenezuela.The electron microscope developed by DrFemandez-Moran is 50 to 100 times morepowerful than the strongest optical micro¬scope and has made it possible to studymolecular shapes, cell architecture, crys¬talline arrangements, and protein com¬position. Thursday, which is WHPK’s busiestnight, the station will feature “The Univer¬sity in Exile” a talk show which promisesto bring luminaries of the Chicago media tothe Hyde Park air waves. Irv Kupcinet,Mike Royko, and Marty Faye are tentative¬ly scheduled for appearances. Anotherhighlight of that night’s programing is“Educational Radio’s Best Hits,” cutswhose sources range from Radio Moscow toCongressional Reports.Of recent concern to the staff of the sta¬tion is the FCC’s new censorship policies.The station’s license comes up for renewalat the end of this year, and it is claimedthat professional lobbyists are attemptingto curtail the licensing of non-profit, educa¬tional radio stations.WHPK has no censorshp policy and noword or phrase is banned from its air¬waves. Affelder reports that that stationhas received no complaints from any of itslisteners. He attributes this to the fact thatthe station broadcasts on only 10 watts to asmall, local audience.WORK FOR THE APRIL 15 MORATORIUMORGANIZATION MEETINGWEDNESDAY APRIL 8 8:00 P.M.REYNOLDS CLUB SOUTH LOUNGETHE MORATORIUM COMMITTEE PRESENTSIN COOPERATION WITH REVITALIZATIONPHIL OCHSIN CONCERTFRIDAY APRIL 10 8:30 P.M.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELTICKETS 2.00 AND 3.00MANDEL HALL BOX OFFICESTOP THE WARBRING THE BOYS HOME NOWApril 7, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7PASSOVER APRIL 20-28WHAT'S YOUR 6RIPE?1. No one loves me.2. I'm flunking out of school.3. Tuition's going up.4. Dorm fees are going up.5. U. C. pays me $1.67/hr.6. I'm required to go to graduation.7. Students have no effective grievanceprocedure.8. They cancelled my registration over alibrary fine!9. University Expansion is forcing my rentup.10 . Those goddamn meal contracts!1 1. The University won't let me moveout of the dorm.99177619842001DON'T GRIPEORGANIZE!!JOIN THE UNION OF STUDENTSIf you want to know more about theunion - Come to the meeting onThurs., April 9 at 9:00 pm - BlueGargoyleONLY YOU MAKE THE UNIONONLY YOU MAKE UNION POLICYIbmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmiIJ270 SEDER WORKSHOPS.History and TraditionsMonday, April 13,4:40 - 6 pmHaggada - Traditional and CreativeTuesday, April 14, 8 -10 pmFood and RitualThursday, April 16, 8 - 10 pmSEDERS: No community seder at Hillel.We encourage the trend to makeyour own seder. Haggadot, songsheets supplementary readings, se¬der instructions, Passover recipesavailable. LUNCHES: 11:30 to 1:00 p.m.Tuesday, April 21 to Tuesday, April28.Cost:Sl.50SUPPERS: 6:15 p.m.Wednesday, April 22 toMonday, April 27.Cost:$2.50RESERVATIONS: Deadline April 10. Norefunds after April 15. Payment mustaccompany reservations.HOSPITALITY: Home hospitality at a student seder, with a student family, at aneighboring Reform, Conservative, or Orthodox congregation, or congregational familycan be arranged through Hillel.The Department of Musicand theFromm Music FoundationTHE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS OFTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORALPH SHAPEY • M usic Director\\ orks bv Dugger • Rhodes • Copland • FossFRIDAY • APRIL 10 • 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission tree with ticket. Tickets at Concert Office, 5835 l ni\ersit\ A\e.LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStocks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH UBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue SH0RELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call H. FingerhutPI 2-10005454 South Shore DriveLLAycer’S all-night suchPfBKWMANUl ftIDAT l iATUROAY tOUOWtNG IASI fifGUlAB HA1URIApril 3June fondo-Robert Radford eRi April 4BAREFOOT IN THE PARK BATTLE Of BRITAINApril 10Natalie Wood-Robert Radford April 11■Mta Mia Ferrew-Ehiabeth TaylorTHIS PROPERTY IS CONDEMNED SECRET CEREMONYApril 17Rod Steiger floifi Blosm 4B April 18■Oh« Richard Burt on-Elizabeth TaylorTHREE INTO TWO WON'T GO BOOMApril 24Warren Beatty-Eva Marie Saint wM April 25AIL FALL DOWN ROMEO 1 JULIETMay 1James Coburn wfl May 2mtkf Zero MosteiTHE PRESIDENT'S ANALYST THE PRODUCERS Yours for the askingNEW 1970roc> v SmokersCataloglfjr;72 pages of color with a "wholenew world” for pipe and cigarsmokers We'll include a "trialrun"ofour(amous3Star Tobaccotoo!For your free catalog and sample,write Dept C.c9uwn dtiied fy'to.17 SOUTH WABASH AVECHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60603Losey s AccidentWarhol’s FuckACCIDENT at 7:15 and 9:30 tonightFUCK at 7:15 and 9:30 tomorrowBOTH IN COLOR!Cobb Hall $1. 00doc films'«S,LI'L: 1 1 -,J ^J . * n,Union of Students Called Power-SeekersBy John PowellIf the new union of students is to speakonly for its members, and leave everybodyelse alone, then it will be just another stu¬dent organization, and it might be gen¬uinely radical — for there is nothing moreradical than toleration. If the student unionshould be organized, like most labor unions,as a band of power-seekers, then they areas reactionary as any power-holders. Mostunions possess the power to exclude non¬members from whole occupations, by vir¬tue of the closed shop.The major point of labor organization isto enforce a strike, to prevent non-mem¬bers from working, by violence. Withoutviolence a union walkout would be simplemass resignation. Would a student unionseek to gain support from a majority, thenspeak in the name of everyone, and thenexpel students from the University, or atleast block their way to classes, for notjoining the goddamn union?Why should scabbing be suppressed by aunion at a factory strike, and tolerated at auniversity strike? If the new student unionis intended as a step toward the great revo¬lution, then the hell with both. I am notinterested in replacing one set of power-holders with another.One of the great myths of trade unionismand revolution is the idea of popular con¬trol, and indeed Staughton Lynd was quotedin last Friday’s Maroon as saying, “One ofthe things we’ve got to learn from the tradeunion movement is to think in majoritarianterms.” Majority rule is a fine way to de¬cide policy when members of an organiza¬tion have joined voluntarily and do notthrust themselves on others.In politics, however, where people are notgranted the right to ignore the state, major¬ity rule tends to minimize violent conflict,but otherwise there is nothing upliftingabout majorities. If a majority imposes its will by force on a minority, whether themajority be composed of suburban busi¬nessmen, factory workers, students, or po¬lice, the majority is committing evil — andis encouraging the beleagured minority torebel. A condemned man resents popularand unpopular executioners equally.So long as revolutionaries are power-seekers, they cannot achieve liberation forpeople. On the contrary, revolution wouldbe the greatest boon to bureaucracy sinceinvention of the inscrutable form. Bureau¬cracy only exists, after all, to administercompulsion as ordered by those on top.When orders are issued, there must be amultitude of regulations and a personnel hi¬erarchy, to assure that officials do not actcontrary to the vision of the rulers: Withoutbureaucratic regimentation subalternscould always establish independent powerstructures and frustrate the dreams forrevolutionary social change.A bureaucrat’s greatest talent is to throwobstacles in the way of people, but that isall a revolutionary wants to do, to savepeople from their ignorant, bourgaois ways.Revolution requires the triumph of bureau¬cracy more entrenched and enlarged thanever before, and I doubt that you could citea single example of a political revolutionthat has resulted in fewer laws, bureaus,administrative decisions, officials, andforms, than flourished in the old regime.Ask any revolutionary specifically whatlaws, regulations, and forms he would abol¬ish and not replace. What “radical” actual¬ly believes that government should with¬draw from human life?Politics is betrayed as sheer swill when itoffers as heroes Lenin, Castro, Che,Kwame Knrumah, Ben Bella, Mao, ChouEn-Lai, Nasser — or Franklin Roosevelt,the Kennedys, McCarthy, and Nixon. Thereis nothing heroic about power-seekers. IfCuba and North Vietnam were such enlight¬ GADFLYened places, they would not be so wellknown for boastful politicians. Heroes arepeople who do things well without regard topower: inventors, doctors, entrepreneurs,merchants, psychologists, moneylenders,writers, actors, scholars, mechanics, wait¬resses. A country or city should be consid¬ered great to the extent that its politicalleaders wield little power and are unknown.A radical’s task is to sever a citizen’s linkto the state, by casting officials off of yourback and out of your way. A radical wouldbum both his draft card and his govern¬ment scholarship check. A student who ac¬cepts tax-extracted scholarship funds, is nomore independent than an oil company thataccepts depletion allowances; a boondoggleis still a boondoggle.I believe that the fundamental evil is bar¬riers that keep non-union members out ofjobs, people without licenses out of profes¬sions, that keep new businesses from com¬peting with established ones, that requirethe poor to pay higher food and milk pricesto enrich farmers, that destroy poor homesin the name of urban renewal, and thatdrive foreigners from our shores.If the University is to be reformed, startby weaning both students and adminis¬tration of funds levied by compulsion fromthe citizenry. Many of the most blatantdeficiencies in schools, I am convinced, in¬here in their relation to politics, and notjust the military wing of politics. Since gov¬ernment provides schools with vast boodle,it holds the reins; if businessmen contrib¬ute heavily, they hold the reins.Since students pay only a fraction of thecost of education, it is not surprising that research is emphasized over teaching. Theonly way for students to control educationis to pay the cost, if necessary with a loanat market interest. A student who demandsthat the government subsidize him, merelyindicates the price at which he can bebought off.When schools are operated as charities,they are beholden to whoever pays the defi¬cits. Even poor welfare recipients knowhow difficult it is to avoid surveillance andharassment by social workers: Surelymiddle class students should be able to un¬derstand the cost of “free” dependence.If a school charges enough to earn a prof¬it, it must respond to the multitude of stu¬dents, not to legislators, and furthermore itcan expand to satisfy demands without beg¬ging government to squeeze a few moreshekels out of the people.Finally, you do not have to organize tohave an effect on a school; just go awayand patronize another. Leave mass organi¬zation to the lemmings. The reason whystudent strikes cannot close down per¬manently a major university, is becausenone of them survive on student money.At the same time that schools of all kindsrevert to private ownership and chargewhat they must to achieve independence,and assu. e student-consumer control, politi¬cal bureaucracy must be cut back so that itcan be hauled away with the garbage. Theonly hope for liberation without bureau¬cracy, is a policy of toppling barriers, byrepealing laws, abolishing agencies, firingofficials, and burning forms. You should beable to cancel government like a magazinesubscription.The 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 submit¬ting columns should contact the editor.SeniorStampAlbumBe a part of the first Senior Stamp Album in the his¬tory of publication. The Album will be a part of the1970 yearBox. Seniors are asked to co-operate byscheduling a time (at 10 minute intervals) on eitherApril 9 or 10, 1970 with the yearBox office, to havetheir portraits taken. The sittings for the portraits willbe on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E 59th StThe sitting fee is a mere buck ( one dollar). Pleaseanswer promptly either by mail of by a call toMI3 - 0800 ext 3579. The yearBox will also be onsale at the time of your sitting for five bucks. Par¬ticipate in the yearBox. Be happy.LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page SixEvidently the latter fact fooled one of theemployes (for the benefit of Diana fans:the red-headed lout in the grocery store upfront) into believing I was not Greek, so hepreceded to make a smart-alecky remarkat our expense. I turned around and askedhim in Greek what he had said. He turnedyellow and started inquiring about my na¬tionality, where I was born, what I did for aliving, and similar vital issues.Fortunately for them, most Americanswho go to the Diana probably don’t knowGreek. If they did, the appetite of some ofthem might be affected by, among otherthings, the pro-junta signs on the walls ofthe grocery store — at least they werethere two years ago, which is the last timeI went to that restaurant.No, thanks, when I have an irrepressibleyen for non-wife-made Greek food, I go tothe Greek Islands, on Jackson near Hal¬stead, or to the Grecian Restaurant (thename is yegh, but the food isn’t, and by along shot), on Lawrence.Thank you.Kostas KazazisLinguistics Lab School CritiqueI cannot let your article on the Laboratoryschool appearing in the 24 February num¬ber of the Maroon pass without comment.Your description of the Lab school was re¬stricted to the internal workings and prob¬lems of the school. Whatever your intent,you have left a distinct impression that theLab school is primarily an experiment inteaching, and not too successful an ex¬periment at that. The tone of the articleimplies that the activities of the LaboratorySchool are carried out in the true spirit ofacademic adventure. The sad fact of thematter is that the Lab school is no suchthing. It is for all intent and purposes, aprivate school for University faculty chil¬dren. I would like to register here mystrenuous objection to the use of substantialUniversity funds (a loss of about $1,000,000per year) to underwrite a parochial schoolwhich uses the veneer of “University Labo¬ratory” to gain legitimacy.My objection goes considerably beyondthe questionable University Laboratory la¬bel. As a member of the faculty who prefersto send his children to the public schools, Ican attest to the fact that the University’sA good crycleanses the soulAfter all is shed anddone, your soul may besaved ... but your contactsneed help They need Len-sine. Lensine is the one con¬tact lens solution for com¬plete contact care... preparing,cleansing, and soakingThere was a time when youneeded two or more different lenssolutions to properly prepare andmaintain your contacts No moreLensine, from The Murine Com¬pany, makes caring for contactlenses as convenient as wearingthem.Just a drop or two of Lensinecoats and lubricates your lens.This allows the lens to float morefreely in the eye, reducing tearfulirritation. Why? Because Lensine is a compatible, ' isotonic" solu¬tion. very much like your eye s nat¬ural fluids.Cleaning your contacts withLensine retards the build-up offoreign deposits on the lenses.And soaking your contacts m Len¬sine between wearing periods as¬sures you of proper lens hygiene.You get a free soakmg-storagecase with individual lens compart¬ments on the bottom of every bot¬tle of LensineIt has been demonstrated theimproper storage between wear- ings permits thegrowth of bacteria onthe lenses This is asure cause of eye ir¬ritation and in somecases can endangeryour vision Bacteria can¬not grow in Lensine be¬cause it's sterile, self-sanitiz¬ing, and antiseptic.Lensine ... the sou/ution forcomplete contact lens care. Madeby the Murine Company, Inc.not yourcontacts policy of sequestering the faculty childrenaway from the shortcomings of the neigh¬borhood generates a palpable resentment inthe non-University portion of the HydePark-Kenwood community. Our neighborsfeel they have been abandoned by the Uni¬versity and they resent the implication ofthe Lab school policy that the neighborhoodschools offer no promise for faculty chil¬dren. Instead of the neighborhood schoolsrepresenting a legitimate point of coopera¬tion and constructive interaction, theschools issue has become a wedge betweenthe University community and its neigh¬bors.If the Committee of the Council and thepre-collegiate board recognizes the dele¬terious aspects of the Laboratory school, asI am sure they must, why then does it per¬sist in authorizing the loss of $1,000,000 peryear to subsidize it. The answer is simplythat they fear a substantial portion of thefaculty will leave if they don’t. I suppose ifone recruits a faculty using the Lab schoolas a carrot and thereby strongly selects fora faculty which finds an elite private schoolan acceptable alternative to a good neigh¬borhood public school, then you will be insome trouble if the carrot is phased out.Implicit in the entire argument for theLaboratory school is the assertion that theLaboratory school provides a better educa¬tion. I seriously question whether once nor¬malized for family background the Labschool product develops intellectualy anyfurther than his public school counterpart.Although I am sure that scores on the Na¬tional Merit Scholarship Examinations arenot considered a valid test of what the Lab school tries to achieve, it is the only objec¬tive basis I have at the moment by which tocompare two high school groups at the highachievement level, this last year, KenwoodHigh School’s first graduating class placed9 finalists on the basis of their exam scores.Based on the number of children in attend¬ance this was the best performance of anypublic high school in the entire Chicagolandarea.Perhaps it is the emotional developmentof the Lab school child which the facultyvalues so much. Your article certainly doesnot paint a very attractive picture. Indeedthe disaffection of the students in the highschool is quite predictable. Here we have avery sensitive perceptive and sociallyaware collection of children brought up on asteady diet of egalitarian liberal traditions.Arkansas and Alabama are obscenties andMalcolm X is a hero. About age 14 theybegin to realize that they, just like theirsuburban Little Rock counterparts havebeen sequestered away to be educated as alocal elite. The most charitable conclusionthat they can draw is that their parentsare hypocritical.So you see I can’t accept your article asan adequate description of the Lab school.As the financial pinch increases, as elitismof the older faculty is replaced by the socialawareness of the younger academicians,when the University of Chicago decides tolive as a partner with the community, thenMrs Robins’ prediction of change mightwell be vindicated — perhaps the Labora¬tory school will once again become a truelaboratory.Paul SiglerBiophysicsWorld Campus Afloatis a college that does morethan broaden horizons.It sails to them and beyond.Again in the 1970-71 academic year, theaccredited World Campus Afloat program ofChapman College and its associated Collegesand Universities will take qualified students,faculty and staff into the world laboratory.Chapman College currently is acceptingapplications for both the fall and spring semesters.Preliminary applications also may be made forall future semesters.Fall semesters depart New York aboard thes.s. Ryndam for port stops in the Mediterraneanand Latin America, ending in Los Angeles. Springsemesters circle the world from Los Angeles, stop¬ping in Asia and Africa and ending at New York.For a catalog and other information, completeand mail the coupon below.You’ll be able to talk to a World CampusAfloat representative and former students:• Sunday, April 12,2 p.m.• Holiday Inn• 644 Lake Shore Dr. N., Chicago, Illinois• French Rooms.s. Ryndam is of Netherlands registry. Art student Leana Leach of Long Beachsketches ruins ot once-buried city duringWorld Campus Afloat visit to Pompeii._ WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT® Director of Student Selection ServicesChapman College. Orange Calif. 92606 WCA - 4/6Please send your catalog and any other facts I need to know.Mr.MissMrs. SCHOOL INFORMATIONLast Name First Initial HOME INFORMATIONHome Address StreetName ot School City StateCampus Address StreetCity State Zip"Campus Phone ( )Area CodeYeaTirTSchool ~ App7ox7 GPA on 4 0 Scale Home Phone ( )Area CodeUntil into should be sent to campus □ home dapprox, dateI am interested in □ Fall SpringQ 19j □ I would like to talk to a representative ot WORLDI CAMPUS AFLOAT(Maroon Classified Ads)BEPPO SAYS "KISS A RAT, RATKISS! /#SCENESFIELDS in Kent on April 16.lohn B Sebastion and Poco in oneconcert April 19 at Mandel Ticketson sale April 14.NIGHTC LUB*NIGHTCLUB*NIGHTCLUBAfter the movies, plays, and suchTome to the NIGHTCLUB IDANOYES.Phil Ochs Friday April 10Listen to WHPK-FM for John Se¬bastian's and POCO's new albums^Bernard Epton, Hyde Park's Re¬publican State Representative WillDiscuss "Republican Politics in aDemocratic City" Tonite at 8PM.Ida Noyes 3rd FloorCHEC COURSE — THE BLACKAPTS - Meets, April 7, 8PM EleanorClub.Relive April Fool's — See W. C.Fields in IF I HAD A MILLIONKent 107, April 16 at 7:15 8. 9.John Sebastian — a smash at Wood-stock Festival.Eat DINNER AT THE BANDER-SNATCH open at 5:30 every night.Rabbi Arnold J. Wolf at Congrega¬tion Solel will be at Hillel tonight,8:00, for a conversation on "Whith¬er Jewry in America and Israel?"The NIGHTCLUB is OPEN MOSTAll Saturday Nights - Come FOOD-MUSE.A Natural High is the Best HighTranscendental Meditation. TuesApril 7, 8:00pm. Ida Noyes.THE UNDERGROUND Rehearsal: University Chorus. Tues.7:30PM Lexington Hall. Beethoven9th singers need not reaudition.PRE-MED CLUB MEETINGespecially 4 1st yr pre-meds. MrsJacques will speak on choosingMedicine as a Profession Th, 7:00PM Billings M137.CELLO-PIANO RECITALLarry Stein, Cellist and Larry Men-des, pianist. Music of Grieg, Beeth¬oven, and Hindemith. Mandel HallSat. April 11 8:30 Free. Sponsoredby Dodd House.PHIL OCHS FRI AP 10SENSITIVITY TRAININGA Weekend sensitivity training work¬shop will be conducted April 10-12 by staff of UC. counseling center.If you would like to apply callMl 3-0800 ext 2360 immediately forfurther information.ENCOUNTER^ GROUPPERSONAL I INTERPERSONALGROWTH. Trained Experiencedtrainers conduct ongoing Group Ex¬perience For info 8i registration.Call Tom or Norm 288-2917.LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA-TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALL236-1423 9-5 WEEKDAYS.PEOPLE WANTEDWaiter or waitress expd. 5PM-8PM.1321 E. 57th St. 752-9251. GORDONS. Women wanted to work in box of¬fice of Harper Theater Dance Fes¬tival full-time or part-time fromApril 20-May 17. Afternoons and/oreves. Call for interview. WA 4-1530.House manager wtd. for HarperTheater Dance Festival. Part-time.Some mornings, some afternoons,some evenings. From April 28-May17. Must be mature and able toaccept responsibility. Call WA 4-1530 for appointment.STUDENTS, STAFF, Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. $1.50 for an hour's work,plus the chance of a bonus. Oncampus. Call x4710 for an appoint¬ment.PEOPLE FOR SALETyping. 955-4659 pm 8< weekends.<7san experiment in good eating.Pierce Tower basement—open night¬ly 8:30-12:30 and 4:30-12:30 on Sun¬days.Got the Blues? Well, We Do. TheCHICAGO BLUES BAND, HomesickJames, Sunny Lind Slim and ShakyHorton, Mandel Hall, Sunday, April12. IN HONOR OF TAX RESISTANCE, THESTUDENT COOP ANNOUNCES ACOUNTER SURCHARGENOW thru APRIL 15NEW RECORDS10% OFFOUR USUALLOW PRICES KWriters' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377) USUAL SALEUST PRICE PRICE4.98 3.29 2.963.98 3.99 3.596.98 4.49 4.04EUROPE $199 round trip (jet).Booking fast. Call or write: Itkin,15-9 Vassar Dr., Kalamazoo, Mich.49001 (616) 349-7011Marco Polo Travel. 2268S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.Turn on Naturally. TranscendentalMeditation Tuesday April 78:00PM Ida Noyes Hall.Visit Joseph R. Shapiro's privateart collection in his home Wednes¬day evening, April 15th. Bus trans¬portation available from Ida NoyesHall for 50c. Details and sign upsheets in the Student Activities Of¬fice, Room 209, Ida Noyes Hall.The Neo-Dadaist Party. B.Y.O. THIS SALE WAS MADE POSSiBU BY OUR INCREASING SALES VOLUME. IFRECORD VOLUME CONTINUES TO INCREASE, Wl Will BE ABU TO HAVEMORE SUCH SA1ES AND/OR LOWER OUR REGULAR PRICESSTUDENT COOPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT.MON. - FRI. 9 A.M. - 10 P.M. SAT. NOON - 6 PJlisaIntroductory LectureTUESDAY, APRIL 78:00 P.M.IDA NOYESTRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONAS TAUGHT BYMAHARISHIMAHESHYOGITRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION IS A NATURAL SPONTANEOUSTECHNIQUE WHICH AUOWS EACH INDIVIDUAL TO EXPANOHIS MIND AND IMPROVE HIS LIFE. Students InternationalMeditation Society MUSICIANSTHE SUNSHINE GOSPEL MISSION(a hard-rock band with much ex¬perience on UC campus) returnsto UC for the spring Qtr. for In¬formation on bookings contact RICKLEVICH BU 8-6610 Rm 3212.THE PEPPERBANDE PLATTERHAS Proceeded to Pressing Gigs at684-6667. Check with Bookings Man¬ager Soon to Fit Your Gig in thePepperbande's Filling Itinerary.Opportunity for Rock Band 8./orRock Musicians!!! Tryouts forSweetlife, an original musical TuesApr 7, 10-12PM; Thurs 9, 7-10pm.Ida Noyes. Bring Eqpt Music Read¬ers Preferred for More info callLouis FA 4-3028.FOR SALEOlympia Portable Typewriter. Ex¬cellent Condition. Best Offer. 324-2799 After 5.1965* Corvair Monza Convertible.Excellent Shape Mike 363-1977.If you wish to buy a copy of thenew 45 Record of Conspiracy 7.Call CA 5-6605 LOWE'S.1962 Corvair $115, 643-8210.Honda 337 Scramb. $385, 643-8210.19" TV Asking $50. 373-0589.SPACEWanted: 1 Bdrm Apt nr campusJune or July and forever aftercall Snell 48 or Hitchcock 62.3 rms. 124. inc. util. Married stud,only May 1, 667-8356 after 6.SUBLET ~ 4/9 to 6/9/70. Furn 1bdrm apt $160 mo. 978-0838.Summer Sublet. June-September.Fully furnished 6-room apt. oneblock from campus. 3rd floor.Stereo, Books, Porch and tree. 684-3839.Apt Wanted Near Campus for 1Female. 243-9738.4Vi Rm Furn Apt 54-Cornell Sublet20 June - 10 Sept for $240. PL 2-7999.Heart of Hyde Park, 2’/z rms, $100per mo., lease required. 667-8474.For Rent S. S. House 4 Bdrms.Super Delux.For Rent or Sale S.S. House SuperDelux, Cal Wolf: SA 1-7842.Rmmt Wanted for 4 Bdrm Apt at55th and Hyde Park Two BlocksFrom 1C and the Point $70/Mon.Prefer Someone who will be stay¬ing in HP This Summer Call 288-0709 Kenney Warm People.Nice House Large Yard. 2 Car Gar.2 Baths. 955-5916. For SALE.6 rm clean sunny spacious apt w/piano 3 bedrms. Mid-June to mid-Sept. $200/mo (negot.) 955-7352.Sale or Rent Deluxe 4 Rm SSApt. Ideal for Couple. 221-7916 Eves.3 Rms Furn Util incL $125. 5405S. Woodlawn. Ml 3-2760 or 667-5746.Nearby unfurn. 2, 3 rm. apts. $85up. Free utils. Stm. Ht. Quiet. Light.955-9209 or WA 2-8411 x311.Fern Wanted to Share 2-Way Apt.54 & Harper 85/mo own rm. 493-4773.Co-op House has vacancy for malegrad student $33. PL 2-9708.HOUSE FOR RENTMay 15 to September 15. Five bed¬rooms, 2'/2 baths. Located nearcampus. Responsible person wanted.Call 363-5810.GETTING TOGETHERWarm, Friendly, But Shy MaleSeeks Warm, Friendly Female.Please Leave Message, MaroonBox S.LOST AND FOUNDFound: a change purse with money,etc. Call 493-6133.VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS!Have you had good experience orbad experiences with local VWdealers? We have had a complaintabout VW service, and we wouldlike a sampling of public opinionbefore we take action. Send repliesto Box VW, Care of Maroon, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637. IdaNoyes Hall.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 6063?dates to runname, address, phone.CHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75c perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free. EL TACOMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANT1607 E. 53rd St.HUACAMOLE•TACOS• ENCHILADAS• TAMALES •TOSTADASCHILIMANY OTHER DISHESCARRY OUT SERVICEOpen 7 days a week11:30 A.M. -12:30 A.M. NEED NEW HOMESSave a Handsome Black Male Catfrom Pound. Call Dan. 363-9580.More Baby Gerbils, free. 493-9265.PERSONALSPassover reservations due at Hillelon April 10th.J. Wickler is selling body printsfor 8< to any interested party. Highquality glossy proof . . . suitablefor framing. An investment inAmerica's future.Life is a great body builder.SEBASTIAN 8,POCO**THE SUPER-CONCERT — April 19 at Mandel.This SATURDAY THE NIGHTCLUBfeatures a surprise Guest Artist —a new sound. NEW FOOD.Phil Ochs Friday April 10.TUMBLEWEED I LOVE YOU.JEW.If you have moved since Fall re¬gistration your Passove' |-t‘<'-not reached you. We are sorry wedo not have your correct address.See ad in this issue of the Maroonand stop in at Hillel to reserveyour Passover meals.Phil Ochs Friday, April 10.One Step Beyond: The True TalesOf Carver Opportunities Availableto Women College Graduates . . .to be told soon ... see Friday'sMaroon."John Sebastian's first solo albumis far superior to his old work withThe Lovin' Spoonful which waspretty great too."The BANDERSNATCH is the onlyrestaurant in all of Hyde Park thatsoils STRIP SIRLOIN STEAK DIN¬NERS and EGG ROLLS and FRIESand VERMICELLI and more toccmeGot the Blues? Well we do, TheChicago Blues Band, HomesickJames, Sunny Lind Slim and ShakyHorton, Mandel Hall, Sunday, April12.A Natural High is the Best HighTranscendental Meditation TuesApril 7, 8:00PM Ida Noyes.STUDENTS! WRITERS!Literary Consultant Can Help Youwith Your Papers and Manuscripts.Call 624-1914 5-7PM.Turn on Naturally. TranscendentalMeditation — Tuesday April 7,8:00PM Ida Noyes Hall.Unlike several other food dispen¬saries on campus, our prices haveactually gone DOWN. We now havehave the lowest prices on campus.We are THE UNDERGROUND.Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.But the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILLTEL 326-2550April 7, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/11"As le flics moved in, students hurled stones from behind barricadesof classroom furniture. At one point, the police rioted out of controlof their own officers. Crying 'death to students/ they smashedwindows, slashed car tires and struggled with special mobile-guardforces who had to be called in to protect the students from theenraged policemen."--NEWSWEEK, March 23, 1970That was the scene at Paris University's Nanterre campus last month.The educational reform plan created by former French Minister ofEducation Edgar Faure has been largely ignored by PresidentGeorges Pompidou. But Faure has been re-elected to the AssembleNationale, where he can serve as a rallying point for opponents ofPompidou's conservative policies on education. Hear Faure at thesingle public appearance he will make at the University of Chicago.A Lecture byEDGAR FAURE* Former Premier of France* Former President of the Council ofMinisters and Minister of Education* Professor of LawSponsored ByThe Center for Policy StudyIn Cooperation WithThe Departments of Political Science,Education, and Romance Languages and LiteraturesTUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1970 • 4:00 p.m.Kent 107 Lecture HallADMISSION FREENo Tickets Necessary12/The Chicago Maroon/April 7, 1970