MILTON FRIEDMANLectures Monday A method of direct chemical analysis hasbeen developed at the University to detectdiseases that cause physical and mental ab¬normalities in an unborn baby up to sixmonths before its birth.This advance diagnosis can allow thephysicians and parents of abnormal chil¬dren to seek termination of pregnancywhile such a procedure is still simple andsafe or to assure parents with potentialgenetic problems of their child’s normality.The technique was developed by Dr Reu¬ben Matalon and Dr Albert Dorfman of thePritzker School of Medicine. Dr Dorfman isthe Crane distinguished service professorand chairman of the department of pediat¬rics, professor of biochemistry, and direc¬tor of the Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., mentalretardation research center and the LaRa-bida-University of Chicago Institute. DrMatalon is assistant professor of pediatricsand in the LaRabida Institute.“The technique involves inserting aneedle into the uterus and withdrawing asample of the amniotic fluid which sur¬ rounds and protects the unborn baby,” DrDorfman said.“This fluid can then be analyzed for theamount and composition of a group ofchemical compounds (mucopolysaccha¬rides). The presence of these substances inabnormal amounts or in abnormal formsindicates that the unborn child has a dis¬ease of the connective tissues (mucopoly¬saccharidoses or Hurler’s syndrome). Thisdisease causes severe mental retardationand crippling.Previously, amniotic fluid has been usedas a source for cells from the unborn child.These cells were cultured, or grown, andthen examined visually or chemically to de¬tect cellular abnormalities that may in¬dicate chromosome defects, such as occurin mongolism, or chemical defects that oc¬cur in inherited diseases.“The new procedure of cliemical analysisof amniotic fluid is more rapid, cheaper,and more accurate,” Dr Dorfman said.“This means that the prospective parentscan, if they so decide, have the pregnancy terminated while such a procedure is stillsimple and safe.”“In the past, all such a couple could dowas either take their chances with theprobability factors or refrain from havingchildren. Such couples can now get a defini¬tive diagnosis of their child’s normalcywhile they still have the option to end thepregnancy safely,” Dr Dorfman said. “Thisenables them to avoid bearing deformedchildren and yet have as many normal chil¬dren as they choose.”Be There!All Maroon staff members are expect¬ed to attend the election for editor for1970-71, which will be held in the Maroonoffice, Ida Noyes 303, at 5 pm on Mon¬day, April 13.In a statement issued Thursday, Caro¬line Heck, current Maroon editor, an¬nounced that she would not stand fori e-elcction, but was available for coro¬nation.THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 48 The University of Chicago Friday, April 10, 1970April Moratorium To Include Ochs, GoodellDavid Rosenbush The campus Vietnam moratorium com¬mittee in conjunction with Student Govern¬ment (SG) is asking professors to postponeall classes next Wednesday between thehours of 10 am and 2:30 pm in observanceof the April 15 national day of protest. Let¬ters have been sent to President EdwardLevi and Dean of Students CharlesO’Connell asking that they endorse the pro¬posal for class postponement. As of yet noanswer has been received.Moratorium activities will officially beginthis evening with Phil Ochs performing inRockefeller Chapel at 8:30. Ochs, whose ap¬pearance is intended to bolster the financesof the moratorium committee, has added“rock and roll revival” songs ala ElvisPresley to his usual folk-protest concert.Tickets will be sold until 8:30 at the Mandelhall box office.Moratorium sponsors plan to gather sig¬natures at the door in support of Rep Rob¬ert Mann’s proposal that would have theIllinois General Assembly declare that noIllinois resident would be legally obligatedto serve in an undeclared war beyond theterritorial limits of the United States. A billsimilar to this one was passed and signedinto law in Massachusetts earlier thismonth.On Wednesday, moratorium activitieswill commence at a 10 am convocation inMandel Hall. Leading speakers will be Sen¬ator Charles Goodell of New York and I.F.Stone, editor and publisher of “Stone’sWeekly ” It is also hoped that RichardFriedman To Lead Pollution TalkEconomics professor Milton Friedmanand others will discuss “The Legal andEconomic Aspects of Pollution” Monday at7:30 p m in Mandel Hall.Other panelists on the discussion, open tothe public without ticket and withoutcharge, will be:• Ronald H. Coase, economics professorin the law school and the graduate school ofbusiness;• R. Stephen Berry, chemistry professorand in the James Franck Institute;• Harold Demsetz, professor of businesseconomics, and• George Anastaplo, lecturer in liberalarts.The program is being sponsored by theUniversity’s Center for Policy Study in co¬operation with the student-faculty Ad HocCommittee on the Environment and theBeardsley Ruml Colloquium. The program will begin with brief presen¬tations from each of the panelists followedby a panel discussion and questions fromthe floor.During April the Ad Hoc Committee onthe Environment is sponsoring a series ofpanels and workshops on the environmentalcrisis.Monday night’s program will be the firstof this series conducted exclusively by fac¬ulty members.Eddie N. Williams, acting director of theCenter for Policy Study and vice-presidentfor public affairs, said:“The adage that ‘you don’t get some¬thing for nothing’ is probably as relevantto the growing and necessary debate overenvironmental pollution as to any othermajor issue facing the country. “Among the critical questions central tothe debate are: What are our realisticgoals? Who pays the social and economiccosts of their implementation? Should thesecosts take precedence over economic andsocial welfare?“These are some of the issues which Uni¬versity faculty will examine in the panel on‘Legal and Economic Aspects of Pollu¬tion.’ ”The Center for Policy Study was createdin 1966 to provide a forum for the reviewand public discussion of major issues. Itssubjects such issues to searching and di¬verse analyses by scholars, statesmen, andbusiness, labor, and civic leaders.Friedman is one of 30 members of theUniversity’s faculty who are Fellows of theCenter. Flacks, a former assistant professor of so¬ciology here and now teaching at the Uni¬versity of California at Santa Barbara, willbe able to attend.At 11:15 five buses will load outside Man-del Hall on University Avenue to carry stu¬dents to the noon rally at the Civic Center.The Civic Center demonstration is one in aseries of national taxpayer rallies. Amongthe featured speakers are Goodell, con¬gressman Abner Mikva, and George Wileyof the National Welfare Rights Organiza¬tion. There will also be various labor lead¬ers on hand who will point out connectionsbetween inflation, low wages, and the war.After the speeches there will be a marchto the offices of the Internal Revenue Ser¬vices at 608 Dearborn. A delegation willcarry “People’s Alternate Tax Forms” tothe IRS office to protest the government’suse of tax dollars on the war in Vietnam.Another rally will take place at 4:30; thisone at the Federal Building and sponsored,by the Chicago Peace Council. Conspiracydefendant Rennie Davis is scheduled tospeak.Wednesday evening the New UniversityConference and the Vietnam moratoriumcommittee will jointly sponsor a teach-outin Mandel hall. Marlene Dixon, former as¬sistant professor of sociology here andpresently teaching at MaGill University, inMontreal, will be the featured speaker.As part of the nationwide “Fast forPeace” taking place early next week, somestudents at the Chicago Theological Semi¬nary in co-operation with the CTS businessoffice will contribute the cost of the mealsfor which they are contracted for April 13,14, and 15. In addition, Sunday, April 12, at7:30 pm in Hull Chapel of the First Unita¬rian Church there will be a pre-Vietnammoratorium fast.” Leaders of the morato¬rium committee have urged that peoplegive up their Monday and Tuesday nightdinners and send the amounts that dinnerwould normally cost them to the Vietnammoratorium committee in Ida Noyes Hall.The money saved by not eating will bedistributed between the American FriendsService Committee for civilian relief workin Vietnam and the United Farm Workersand the National Welfare Rights Organiza¬tion to combat hunger in America.Monday night between 7 and 10 pm thenon-violent training and action center willhold training sessions for those who wish tobe marshalls at Wednesday’s rally andmarch. It will be held on the second floor ofthe Lutheran Theology Seminary.Method Detects Birth Abnormalities$™s3SG Votes for Class HaltAt its first meeting of the spring quarter,the student government (SG) assemblyvoted to request professors to postponeclasses scheduled during moratorium activ¬ities April 15.Meeting in Social Science 122 Tuesdayevening, the assembly expressed a mea¬sure of support for the anti-war activities.Specifically SG. urged professors withclasses between 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. tore-schedule them so as to permit studentsto attend the various moratorium activities.Only 27 representatives were present atthe meeting of the SG assembly. Althoughthe group is supposed to have 100 members,with a quorum set at 51, it was able to conduct business due to the number ofmembers who have officially been expelledfrom the assembly for absenteeism. A quo¬rum, according to election and rules (E&R)committee chairman Cheak Yee, ’70, is nowset at 17.Further business discussed by the re¬maining assembly members included a re¬port on the development of a student union.Larry Lambert, chairman of the committeeon the constitution of the University, re¬ported that present membership stands at190. A major meeting for union membersand prospective members was held Thurs¬day at the Blue Gargoyle at 9 p.m.In discussing proposed procedures for se-Sec Finch Praises BettelheimAt 25th Anniversary DinnerRobert Finch, secretary of health, educa¬tion, and welfare, (HEW), was the featuredspeaker at a Tuesday dinner com¬memorating the 25th anniversary of BrunoBettelheim’s leadership of the Shankmanorthogenic school.University President Edward Levi alsoannounced that a Bettelheim professorshipwith an endowment of a university chair bythe University foundation for emotionallydisturbed children. Speaking at the Pick-Congress hotel Finch praised Bettelheimfor his work, saying that the federal gov¬ernment had funded several mental re¬search centers using techniques developedby Bettelheim, who is the Rowley professorof education and in the departments of psy¬chology and psychiatry. Said Finch, “All across the board, it canbe said that the influence of Dr Bettel¬heim’s insights and of his disciples is per¬vasive.”He told the audience of 400 guests thatHEW plans to invest in model residentialfacilities, special classroom techniques andother sorts of therapy for youngsters suffer¬ing from mental illnesses.Bettelheim came to the University in 1945and became head of the orthogenic school,which specializes in the cure of adolescentmental illnesses, in 1946. He has writtenseveral books, the latest being Children ofthe Dream, describing the school and itsmethods. The school also trains graduatestudents and professionals in psychologyand psychiatry.THEMODERNITYOFTRADITDNPblitical Development in IndiaLloyd l. Rudolph and Susanne Hoeber RudolphThe persistence of traditional featuresof Indian life within a modernized so¬ciety is the theme of this book which,as Asian Review says: “shows a quitenew level of sympathy and penetra¬tion." Particularly outstanding is thebrilliant section on the way in whichGandhi restored India's political po¬tency, lost during imperial subjection,by transforming traditional Hinduvalues of asceticism and non-violenceto serve the needs of a modern massmovement.Paper $2.75. Also in cloth $8.75THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS2/The Chicago Maroon/April 10, 1970 In Opening GameThe University of Chicago baseball teamopened its season on new Stagg Fieldagainst Kendall College Thursday. Theydefeated Kendall 10-5. John Tweed pitch¬ing the winning game.The tentative starting line up includedJim Bartlett, center field; Richard Katz,second base; Rick Morra, left field; JimStankiewicz, catcher; Erik Furtkamp, firstbase; Richard Janda, short stop; Gary Le-land, right field; Rick Schmelbeck, thirdbase; and Norm Katz, lead off pitcher forthe first three innings. Coach J. Kyle An¬derson also indicated that Morra wouldpitch the second three innings, and that John Tweed would pitch the last three. Hespeculated that Jim Nicewander, KenBrooks, and Tom Cullen .would probablybe played in the game.The team just came back from a week inOrlando, Florida where they participated inan invitational tournament sponsored byRollins College of Winter Park. The otherteams participating in the tournament wereCornell University and Brown, besides Roll,ins and Chicago. The team, whose flight toFlorida was paid for by the University, lostall six games of the tournament. “But,”said Coach Anderson, “we were the onlyteam which was not shut out in any game.”on April 15lection of the student ombudsman, the as¬sembly decided to confer with members ofthe Faculty Student advisory committee onCampus Student Life (FSACCSL) and withthe present ombudsman, Steve Cope, 70.SG has been asked to submit the name ofone student to serve on a committee whichwill assist in selecting next year’s ombuds¬man. When asked about his prospects for theseason, the coach replied, “We are in bet¬ter shape now for the beginning of the sea¬son than we have been in the past 15 years.We came out better than I expected fromour experience in Florida, I’m very encour¬aged. We have good hitting and good pitch¬ing; our season will be determined by theinfield — if we can just plug a few holes.The boys had a very good attitude in thetournament, they were johnny-on-the-spotevery day. They played six games in sixdays, and the first three were in 90 degreeweather. It was quite an experience and weshould do better for it.”The last portion of the meeting was de¬voted to a brief presentation by the RevHarold Walker of the First PresbyterianChurch in Woodlawn. He thanked the as¬sembly for last quarter’s fund raising effortwhich provided the early child developmentprogram and community education centerwith over $6000. Describing many of theprograms that are now being carried out atthe community education center, RevWalker noted that many of them could nothave been possible had it not been for theSG work. This viewpoint was shared by one of theteam members, “I think that those kind ofgames down there will really prepare usfor the season. On the field, we were led byour co-captains Stankiewicz and Janda, andpitchers like Katz and Morra.” About theirperformance in the tournament, he said,“It’s really easy to get discouraged, but thecoaches worked really hard to keep ourspirits up and encourage us.”The next game is Saturday, away atNorth East Illinois.PAUL NEWMAN iSBUTCH CASSIDY ANDTHE SUNDANCE KIDIS ROBERT BEDFORD.KATHARINE ROSSNot that it matters, but most of it is true.A GEORGE ROY HILL-PAUL M0NASH PRODUCTIONCoStarring STROTHER MARTIN JEFF COREY HENRY JONESExecutive Producer: PAUL MONASH, Produced by JOHN FOREMANDirected by GEORGE ROY HILL, Written by WILLIAM GOLOMANMusic Composed and Conducted by BURT BACHARACH A NEWMAN-FOREMAN PRESENTATIONPANAVISI0N COLOR BY DELUXE ~toin<iiops f aitm Or m, Head' a sung a, | j inoin,, jHYDE PARK THEATRE53rd & LAKE PARK6 Faculty ReceiveGuggenheim AidThe Guggenheim awards are consideredto be among the highest honored profes¬sional funding in the country.The topics to be examined by the six Uni¬versity awardees include thematic and sty¬listic study of Old French hagiographic nar¬ratives by Dembowski; an examination ofthe law on contemporary issues of freedomof speech and dissent by Kalven; study ofthe poetry of Algernon Charles Swinburneby McGann; theoretical studies in musicanalysis and history by Meyer; study of thepolitical dimensions of social change in Ra¬jasthan, India by Mrs. Rudolph; and ex¬perimental studies by Dr. Weiss in the mo¬lecular biology of tumors induced by ani¬mal viruses.Kalven will remain in Chicago next yearto work on a book. Both Meyer and Weisswili be on sabbaticals in California. Mrs.Rudolph will return to India to work on aproject. McGann will be in London, andDembowski will also be in France.Moscona Analyzes Biological ProblemsEUGENE GOLDWASSER: Goldwasser, at left, in his lab with student Six faculty members have been awardedGuggenheim foundation awards for 1970.They are Peter Dembowski, associateprofessor of French and dean of students inthe humanities division; Harry Kalven,professor of law; Jerome McGann, associ¬ate professor of English and humanities;Leonard Meyer, professor of music; Su-sanne .Rudolph, associate professor of polit¬ical science and social sciences; and Dr.Samuel Weiss, professor of biochemistryand associate director of the Argonne Can¬cer Research hospital.Steve Aoki Over $2,600,000 was awarded this yearfrom the Guggenheim fund to 286 scholars,scientists and artists chosen by the selec¬tion committee from among 2313 appli¬cants.> By Christine Froula“The issues raised by problems of devel¬opmental biology have potentially profoundsocial implications, and I am impressedwith the need for society to begin thinkingabout them now.”Dr. Aron A Moscona, professor of biolo¬gy, and Dr. Eugene Goldwasser, professorof Biochemistry and associate of ArgonneCancer Research Hospital, as co-directorsof the Interdepartmental Training Programin Developmental Biology, are helping toprovide the opportunity for thinking to cen¬ter on these problems.All cells of the body contain the samegenetic information, but as the embryo de¬velops, cells differentiate into various celltypes, forming tissues and organs. Howcells select and express only a part of theirgenetic information, how they commu¬nicate with each other and coordinate theiractivities, and how this process of devel¬opment sometimes goes wrong, producingmalformations — these are the questions with which developmental biology is con¬cerned.“Advancements in the field are fastreaching the stage where we can manipu¬late the development of the unborn fetus,”asserts Dr. Moscona. “Developmentalbiology is a key science, because much ofwhat an individual will be is determinedwhen it is developing as an embryo. Ourknowledge, viewed from a practical per¬spective, faces one question: can we im¬prove the fate of man?”Dr Moscona believes that “any tamper¬ing with the individual is a priori bad, un¬less proven beforehand to be good. Wemust know a lot about what we are doingbefore we begin applying our knowledge tohumans — this is what we have learnedfrom atomic scientists.“But, on the other hand, a full under¬standing of how an individual develops canbe unquestionably beneficial to mankind.The brain cells that we have now areformed, counted, arranged before we areborn, and much of what the brain will be-Copland Explains Composing,Answers Questions For 350Robert BlacksbergAaron Copland, composer, and thisweek’s guest conductor of the Chicago Sym-phom, emphasized the joys and difficul¬ties of composing, performing, and listen¬ing iu music before an audience of 350Tuesday night in Mandel Hall.Copland answered questions posed bypanelists Easley Blackwood, composer andprofessor of music; Margaret Murata,graduate student in music; and Calvin Saw¬yer, introduced as a “devoted amateur mu¬sician.” The alumni association and festi¬val of tne arts (FOTA) sponsored the dis¬cussion.Copland declared composing is a processof self-discovery, noting that after longwork, the composition shows emotions inways he would not have -otherwise ex¬pressed. Inspiration for composition comesin “nuggets,” snatches of a music idea, bethey melodic, harmonic, or rhythmic,which the composer has to work to develop,he suggested.As for conducting his own works, as hedoes downtown this weekend, Copland saidthat he finds each new orchestra excitingbecause different performers provide newideas of interpretation.Acknowledging the difficulty of under¬standing and performing contemporarymusic Copland claimed, “The composer’spurpose is not to bathe the listener in thewarm bath (of the familiar) but to chal¬lenge him, to make living more intense.”As for the professional judgment of musicin prize competitions, he indicated hesitan¬ cy about accepting the verdict of judgeswho often reward music they find familiar.He couldn’t be entirely critical, however, “Ihave been a judge too many times to objectto competitions — and have won a few.”Asked why there aren’t more womencomposers, Copland hesitated claiming thistroubled him greatly. He replied, with asmile, “Women here won’t like this, but no¬tice there have not been many great wom¬en mathematicians or philosophers, either.Perhaps this shows a lack of ability tohandle abstract thought. The femininemind thrives on specifics.” The remarkwas roundly hissed.In describing his own work, Coplandnoted the influence of Stravinsky andSchoenberg in the ’20’s. In the ’30’s he at¬tempted to simplify music to reach a great¬er audience and attempted to write musicidentifiable as American.More recently he has been influenced by12 tone composition.Asked whether recent works were com¬missions or inspirations of love, he replied,“I don’t like that dichotomy. My latestworks were commissions which I acceptedwith love.”A question that asked whether he hadcomposed works just for himself surprisedCopland. He claimed it never occurred tohim to do that, since he considered music aform of communication, and he never knewsomeone who did compose such music, towhich Blackwood commented, “Now youdo.” come functionally is decided in its devel¬opment. But we must realize our profoundand dangerous ignorance, and not attemptto manipulate something which we do notyet fully understand.”The Training Program in DevelopmentalBiology was established last year and ismaintained by the National Institute ofHealth. Its essential feature is that it is in¬terdisciplinary, enabling the student to de¬velop a broad conceptual outlook throughstudying in various fields, such as biology,virology, pediatrics, and biophysics.Dr. Moscona explains that the programwas designed and will continue to be re¬vised by both faculty and students. “De¬partments are like cages in an old-fashioned zoo,” he says. “This programprovides the student with the opportunityto take the maximum benefit from whathe University offers, regardless of itsstructure.“The student has the opportunity to de¬sign his own education, to a large extent,”he continued. “We assume that the stu¬dents’ claims are justified, that they knowwhat they want. The experience of the fac¬ulty must merge with the aspirations of thestudent in order to solve the problems oftomorrow.”Dr Moscona stressed that the student’sopportunity to spend time in many differentlaboratories is important in his choosingwhat his special field will be. “Unlessyou’re very involved in what you’re doingand happy about it, your professional yearsmay not be as fruitful as they should be.We provide the student with the chance tobecome a competent scientist, but not aspecialist from the word go.”Describing the main areas of research indevelopmental biology, Dr Moscona beganwith cell recognition. “It’s beginning to ap¬pear that cells ‘know’ that other cells arebeside them because their surfaces are cov¬ered with specific molecules, whichfunction as locks and keys.“Cells from different tissues have differ¬ent molecular combinations, and the com-plementality or non-complementality of ad¬jacent cell surfaces triggers a chain ofevents affecting the development of the tis¬sue or organ,” he said.“Another question is the area of growthregulation — the mechanism which givesthe signal for cells in an organ to stop mul¬tiplying when that organ has reached itsfull size. An example of a malformation re¬sulting from this signal’s coming too earlyis microcephalism.“In some animals, growth is controlled inthe adult state: if you cut off part of a ratliver, that part is regenerated, but thisdoesn’t happen with humans, and we don’tyet know why.”Dr Moscona described another area of re¬search in which animals have been rep¬licated by removing the nucleus of a ferti¬lized egg and replacing it with the nucleusof a cell from a mature animal.Continued on Page 15 The fellowships are granted, according tothe foundation, “on the basis of demonstra¬ted achievement in the past and strongpromise for the future both to younger andolder applicants.”Most of the awards this year went toteachers. The institutions with the mostnumber of grants are University of Califor¬nia at Berkeley — 23; Harvard University— 17; UCLA — 10; Columbia and Stanford— 9; and Cornell, University of Illinois, In¬diana University, University of Pennsylva¬nia, Princeton, University of Wisconsin andYale - 8.HARRY KALVENGoing to write a bookllpiflfitpiliSG Votes for Class HaltAt its first meeting of the spring quarter,the student government (SG) assemblyvoted to request professors to postponeclasses scheduled during moratorium activ¬ities April 15.Meeting in Social Science 122 Tuesdayevening, the assembly expressed a mea¬sure of support for the anti-war activities.Specifically SG. urged professors withclasses between 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. tore-schedule them so as to permit studentsto attend the various moratorium activities.Only 27 representatives were present atthe meeting of the SG assembly. Althoughthe group is supposed to have 100 members,with a quorum set at 51, it was able to conduct business due to the number ofmembers who have officially been expelledfrom the assembly for absenteeism. A quo¬rum, according to election and rules (E&R)committee chairman Cheak Yee, ’70, is nowset at 17.Further business discussed by the re¬maining assembly members included a re¬port on the development of a student union.Larry Lambert, chairman of the committeeon the constitution of the University, re¬ported that present membership stands at190. A major meeting for union membersand prospective members was held Thurs¬day at the Blue Gargoyle at 9 p.m.In discussing proposed procedures for se-Sec Finch Praises BettelheimAt 25th Anniversary DinnerRobert Finch, secretary of health, educa¬tion, and welfare, (HEW), was the featuredspeaker at a Tuesday dinner com¬memorating the 25th anniversary of BrunoBettelheim’s leadership of the Shankmanorthogenic school.University President Edward Levi alsoannounced that a Bettelheim professorshipwith an endowment of a university chair bythe University foundation for emotionallydisturbed children. Speaking at the Pick-Congress hotel Finch praised Bettelheimfor his work, saying that the federal gov¬ernment had funded several mental re¬search centers using techniques developedby Bettelheim, who is the Rowley professorof education and in the departments of psy¬chology and psychiatry. Said Finch, “All across the board, it canbe said that the influence of Dr Bettel¬heim’s insights and of his disciples is per¬vasive.”He told the audience of 400 guests thatHEW plans to invest in model residentialfacilities, special classroom techniques andother sorts of therapy for youngsters suffer¬ing from mental illnesses.Bettelheim came to the University in 1945and became head of the orthogenic school,which specializes in the cure of adolescentmental illnesses, in 1946. He has writtenseveral books, the latest being Children ofthe Dream, describing the school and itsmethods. The school also trains graduatestudents and professionals in psychologyand psychiatry.THEMODERNITYTR/MjflONFblitical Development in IndiaLloyd l. Rudolph and Susanna Hoeber RudolphThe persistence of traditional featuresof Indian life within a modernized so¬ciety is the theme of this book which,as Asian Review says: “shows a quitenew level of sympathy and penetra¬tion." Particularly outstanding is thebrilliant section on the way in whichGandhi restored India's political po¬tency, lost during imperial subjection,by transforming traditional Hinduvalues of asceticism and non-violenceto serve the needs of a modern massmovement.Paper $2.75. Also in cloth $8.75THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS2/The Chicago Maroon/April 10, 1970 In Opening GameThe University of Chicago baseball teamopened its season on new Stagg Fieldagainst Kendall College Thursday. Theydefeated Kendall 10-5. John Tweed pitch¬ing the winning game.The tentative starting line up includedJim Bartlett, center field; Richard Katz,second base; Rick Morra, left field; JimStankiewicz, catcher; Erik Furtkamp, firstbase; Richard Janda, short stop; Gary Le-land, right field; Rick Schmelbeck, thirdbase; and Norm Katz, lead off pitcher forthe first three innings. Coach J. Kyle An¬derson also indicated that Morra wouldpitch the second three innings, and thaton April 15lection of the student ombudsman, the as¬sembly decided to confer with members ofthe Faculty Student advisory committee onCampus Student Life (FSACCSL) and withthe present ombudsman, Steve Cope, 70.SG has been asked to submit the name ofone student to serve on a committee whichwill assist in selecting next year’s ombuds¬man.The last portion of the meeting was de¬voted to a brief presentation by the RevHarold Walker of the First PresbyterianChurch in Woodlawn. He thanked the as¬sembly for last quarter’s fund raising effortwhich provided the early child developmentprogram and community education centerwith over $6000. Describing many of theprograms that are now being carried out atthe community education center, RevWalker noted that many of them could nothave been possible had it not been for theSG work. John Tweed would pitch the last three. Hespeculated that Jim Nicewander, KenBrooks, and Tom Cullen .would probablybe played in the game.The team just came back from a week inOrlando, Florida where they participated inan invitational tournament sponsored byRollins College of Winter Park. The otherteams participating in the tournament wereCornell University and Brown, besides Roll¬ins and Chicago. The team, whose flight toFlorida was paid for by the University, lostall six games of the tournament. “But,”said Coach Anderson, “we were the onlyteam which was not shut out in any game.”When asked about his prospects for theseason, the coach replied, “We are in bet¬ter shape now for the beginning of the sea¬son than we have been in the past 15 years.We came out better than I expected fromour experience in Florida, I’m very encour¬aged. We have good hitting and good pitch¬ing; our season will be determined by theinfield — if we can just plug a few holes.The boys had a very good attitude in thetournament, they were johnny-on-the-spotevery day. They played six games in sixdays, and the first three were in 90 degreeweather. It was quite an experience and weshould do better for it.”This viewpoint was shared by one of theteam members, “I think that those kind ofgames down there will really prepare usfor the season. On the field, we were led byour co-captains Stankiewicz and Janda, andpitchers like Katz and Morra.” About theirperformance in the tournament, he said,“It’s really easy to get discouraged, but thecoaches worked really hard to keep ourspirits up and encourage us.”The next game is Saturday, away atNorth East Illinois.PAUL NEWMAN fSBUTCH CASSIDV ANDTHE SUNDANCE KIDIS 80BE8T BEDFORD.KATHARINE ROSSNot that it matters, but most of it is true.A GEORGE ROY HILL-PAUL M0NASH PRODUCTIONCoStarring STROTHER MARTIN JEFF COREV HENRY JONESExecutive Producer PAUL MONASH, Produced by JOHN FOREMANDirected by GEORGE ROY HILL, Written by WILLIAM GOLDMANMusic Composed and Conducted b» BURT BACHARACH A NEWMAN-FOREMAN PRESENTATIONPANAVISI0N’ COLOR BY DELUXE [ hw bobi bachabxch s 'fUMiopi On e, Head',,sung ihp^a.M S.NMM r«f MATUREW OSCMtriOM XHYDE PARK THEATRE53rd & LAKE PARK6 Faculty ReceiveGuggenheim AidSteve AokiEUGENE GOLDWASSER: Goldwasser, at left, in his lab with studentMoscona Analyzes Biological ProblemsBy Christine Froula“The issues raised by problems of devel¬opmental biology have potentially profoundsocial implications, and I am impressedwith the need for society to begin thinkingabout them now.”Dr. Aron A Moscona, professor of biolo¬gy, and Dr. Eugene Goldwasser, professorof Biochemistry and associate of ArgonneCancer Research Hospital, as co-directorsof the Interdepartmental Training Programin Developmental Biology, are helping toprovide the opportunity for thinking to cen¬ter on these problems.All cells of the body contain the samegenetic information, but as the embryo de¬velops, cells differentiate into various celltypes, forming tissues and organs. Howcells select and express only a part of theirgenetic information, how they commu¬nicate with each other and coordinate theiractivities, and how this process of devel¬opment sometimes goes wrong, producingmalformations — these are the questionsRobert BlacksbergAaron Copland, composer, and thisweek’s guest conductor of the Chicago Sym-phonv, emphasized the joys and difficul¬ties of composing, performing, and listen¬ing io music before an audience of 350Tuesday night in Mandel Hall.Copland answered questions posed bypanelists Easley Blackwood, composer andprofessor of music; Margaret Murata,graduate student in music; and Calvin Saw¬yer, introduced as a “devoted amateur mu¬sician.” The alumni association and festi¬val of tne arts (FOTA) sponsored the dis¬cussion.Copland declared composing is a processof self-discovery, noting that after longwork, the composition shows emotions inways he would not have -otherwise ex¬pressed. Inspiration for composition comesin “nuggets,” snatches of a music idea, bethey melodic, harmonic, or rhythmic,which the composer has to work to develop,he suggested.As for conducting his own works, as hedoes downtown this weekend, Copland saidthat he finds each new orchestra excitingbecause different performers provide newideas of interpretation.Acknowledging the difficulty of under¬standing and performing contemporarymusic Copland claimed, “The composer’spurpose is not to bathe the listener in thewarm bath (of the familiar) but to chal¬lenge him, to make living more intense.”As for the professional judgment of musicin prize competitions, he indicated hesitan- with which developmental biology is con¬cerned.“Advancements in the field are fastreaching the stage where we can manipu¬late the development of the unborn fetus,”asserts Dr. Moscona. “Developmentalbiology is a key science, because much ofwhat an individual will be is determinedwhen it is developing as an embryo. Ourknowledge, viewed from a practical per¬spective, faces one question: can we im¬prove the fate of man?”Dr Moscona believes that “any tamper¬ing with the individual is a priori bad, un¬less proven beforehand to be good. Wemust know a lot about what we are doingbefore we begin applying our knowledge tohumans — this is what we have learnedfrom atomic scientists.“But, on the other hand, a full under¬standing of how an individual develops canbe unquestionably beneficial to mankind.The brain cells that we have now areformed, counted, arranged before we areborn, and much of what the brain will be-cy about accepting the verdict of judgeswho often reward music they find familiar.He couldn’t be entirely critical, however, “Ihave been a judge too many times to objectto competitions — and have won a few.”Asked why there aren’t more womencomposers, Copland hesitated claiming thistroubled him greatly. He replied, with asmile, “Women here won’t like this, but no¬tice there have not been many great wom¬en mathematicians or philosophers, either.Perhaps this shows a lack of ability tohandle abstract thought. The femininemind thrives on specifics.” The remarkwas roundly hissed.In describing his own work, Coplandnoted the influence of Stravinsky andSchoenberg in the ’20’s. In the ’30’s he at¬tempted to simplify music to reach a great¬er audience and attempted to write musicidentifiable as American.More recently he has been influenced by12 tone composition.Asked whether recent works were com¬missions or inspirations of love, he replied,“I don’t like that dichotomy. My latestworks were commissions which I acceptedwith love.”A question that asked whether he hadcomposed works just for himself surprisedCopland. He claimed it never occurred tohim to do that, since he considered music aform of communication, and he never knewsomeone who did compose such music, towhich Blackwood commented, “Now youdo.” Six faculty memners have been awardedGuggenheim foundation awards for 1970.They are Peter Dembowski, associateprofessor of French and dean of students inthe humanities division; Harry Kalven,professor of law; Jerome McGann, associ¬ate professor of English and humanities;Leonard Meyer, professor of music; Su-sanne .Rudolph, associate professor of polit¬ical science and social sciences; and Dr.Samuel Weiss, professor of biochemistryand associate director of the Argonne Can¬cer Research hospital.Over $2,600,000 was awarded this yearfrom the Guggenheim fund to 286 scholars,scientists and artists chosen by the selec¬tion committee from among 2313 appli¬cants.come functionally is decided in its devel¬opment. But we must realize our profoundand dangerous ignorance, and not attemptto manipulate something which we do notyet fully understand.”The Training Program in DevelopmentalBiology was established last year and ismaintained by the National Institute ofHealth. Its essential feature is that it is in¬terdisciplinary, enabling the student to de¬velop a broad conceptual outlook throughstudying in various fields, such as biology,virology, pediatrics, and biophysics.Dr. Moscona explains that the programwas designed and will continue to be re¬vised by both faculty and students. “De¬partments are like cages in an old-fashioned zoo,” he says. “This programprovides the student with the opportunityto take the maximum benefit from whathe University offers, regardless of itsstructure.“The student has the opportunity to de¬sign his own education, to a large extent,”he continued. “We assume that the stu¬dents’ claims are justified, that they knowwhat they want. The experience of the fac¬ulty must merge with the aspirations of thestudent in order to solve the problems oftomorrow.”Dr Moscona stressed that the student’sopportunity to spend time in many differentlaboratories is important in his choosingwhat his special field will be. “Unlessyou’re very involved in what you’re doingand happy about it, your professional yearsmay not be as fruitful as they should be.We provide the student with the chance tobecome a competent scientist, but not aspecialist from the word go.”Describing the main areas of research indevelopmental biology, Dr Moscona beganwith cell recognition. “It’s beginning to ap¬pear that cells ‘know’ that other cells arebeside them because their surfaces are cov¬ered with specific molecules, whichfunction as locks and keys.“Cells from different tissues have differ¬ent molecular combinations, and the com-plementality or non-complementality of ad¬jacent cell surfaces triggers a chain ofevents affecting the development of the tis¬sue or organ,” he said.“Another question is the area of growthregulation — the mechanism which givesthe signal for cells in an organ to stop mul¬tiplying when that organ has reached itsfull size. An example of a malformation re¬sulting from this signal’s coming too earlyis microcephalism.“In some animals, growth is controlled inthe adult state: if you cut off part of a ratliver, that part is regenerated, but thisdoesn’t happen with humans, and we don’tyet know why.”Dr Moscona described another area of re¬search in which animals have been rep¬licated by removing the nucleus of a ferti¬lized egg and replacing it with the nucleusof a cell from a mature animal.Continued on Page 15 The Guggenheim awards are consideredto be among the highest honored profes¬sional funding in the country.The topics to be examined by the six Uni¬versity awardees include thematic and sty¬listic study of Old French hagiographic nar¬ratives by Dembowski; an examination ofthe law on contemporary issues of freedomof speech and dissent by Kalven; study ofthe poetry of Algernon Charles Swinburneby McGann; theoretical studies in musicanalysis and history by Meyer; study of thepolitical dimensions of social change in Ra¬jasthan, India by Mrs. Rudolph; and ex¬perimental studies by Dr. Weiss in the mo¬lecular biology of tumors induced by ani¬mal viruses.Kalven will remain in Chicago next yearto work on a book. Both Meyer and Weisswill be on sabbaticals in California. Mrs.Rudolph will return to India to work on aproject. McGann will be in London, andDembowski will also be in France.The fellowships are granted, according tothe foundation, “on the basis of demonstra¬ted achievement in the past and strongpromise for the future both to younger andolder applicants.”Most of the awards this year went toteachers. The institutions with the mostnumber of grants are University of Califor¬nia at Berkeley — 23; Harvard University— 17; UCLA — 10; Columbia and Stanford— 9; and Cornell, University of Illinois, In¬diana University, University of Pennsylva¬nia, Princeton, University of Wisconsin andYale - 8.HARRY KALVENGoing to write a bookDR SAMUEL WEISSGoing to CaliforniaApril 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3Copland Explains Composing,Answers Questions For 350What in Sam Hill isa yearBox?AmwL, yearBox is a yearbook.In a Box.It has all the things a yearbookhas. But they aren’t bound into abook.And since the things aren’tbound, they don’t have to be thesame size or shape.Or printed on the same kindof paper. Or printed with the same colorof ink.Or printed at all!You see, you can put all sortsof things into a box that you couldnever get into a book.Such as balloon and a large game.And that’s what we are goingto do.Put a large game into a box.And a balloon (actually a de-flatable bust of Edward Levi).Along with a portfolio of finephotographs by student photo¬graphers.And not just five or six goodphotographs, but scores of them.And a 32-page guide to HydePark, the most complete everprepared.And a record (!) of Paul Asbell’sgroup doing two songs especiallyfor you.As well as a recipe book of farout recipes.A senior class stamp album.Senior class stamps. Really.A very interesting piece ofsculpture.Several snazzy posters.A surprising group of recol¬lections by ten surprising alumni.A replay of the Maroon’ssmashing football seasonA Hyde Parker’s notes on themoon trip.A critical survey of planning anddesign in The Grey City. And all of this in different sizes,shapes and colors.And all jammed into a box.YearBox.Fantastic.And here is one more fantasticthing::YearBox only costs $5.NameAddressj City, State Zip jI [YearBox will come out around May 15. j* If you live in Hyde Park, watch for posters |I then to see where to pick up your yearBox. 1I If you live outside of Hyde Park, the Box l. will be sent to you.] IWe can guarantee you a yearBox if we II get your order by May 1. After that, it’s 1I first come, first served! I\ IyearBox 1212 E. 59th, Chicago, Illinois 606374/Th« Chicago Maroon/April 10, 1970itsCrisis of Developmentthemselves with revolution rather than se¬riously considering problems of over¬development.”While it is difficult to prove that war andmisery stem from development itself,Faure pointed out, “it is not logical for richcountries to compete in the same way aspoor countries.” He listed the problems ofan affluent society as education, environ¬ment, urbanization, transportation andmanipulation. The French politician point¬ed out that the greatest manipulation ofpeople stemmed not from advertising butfrom politics.He emphasized that the greatest problemfacing society was how to overcome its ill¬ness. “There must be a cluster of changeswhich cover society throughout — a set ofchanges, not just one front at a time.”“The changes need thorough planning,Faure said. “Because knowledge can not besevered'from life the universities must con¬tribute to the planning.” He also pointedout the importance of public opinion in thecuring of overdevelopment. “It is a shamethere is a waste of talent and skill ondreams of revolution. Real agitation bringsabout public conservatism.”Faure concluded his remarks saying,“Management of development must be im¬proved. The basis on which life in over-developed countries is based must behumanized.”The speech of President Faure was spon¬sored by the center for Policy study in co¬operation with the departments of politicalscience, education and the romance lan¬guages and literatures.FOTA Sponsors 'City of Mah' ExhibitFestival of the Arts (FOTA), in con¬junction with the University’s BergmanGallery, is sponsoring for the first time aphotographic competition and exhibition onthe theme, “The City of Man.”The competition is open to any photo¬grapher who follows the rules outlined inthe contest brochure and entry forms,which may be obtained from the BergmanGallery.Three prizes of $100 each will be awardedto the entries judged to be the best inter¬pretations of the contest theme.The judges will be:• Arthur Paul, Vice-President and ArtDirector of Playboy magazine; • Art Sinsabaugh, Professor of Art at theUniversity of Illinois; and• John Tweedle, Producer and Directorof the weekly program, “Our People,” onChicago’s WTTW-TV and WXXW-TV, and aformer free-lance and press photographer.Principal contest rules include a stipula¬tion that up to four monochrome and/orfour color prints may be submitted and thatan entry fee of one dollar accompany theprints and the official entry form. All work,including the printing, must be exclusivelythat of the photographer.The contest is innovative in its unusuallyflexible rules. Although all work on the print must be that of the photographer whosubmits it, for the purposes of this event, a“print” may consist of up to 320 squareinches of photographic paper used in anyway with any number of images on onemount. Prints may be black and white, col¬or, or both. Detailed rules and entry blanksmay be obtained from the Bergman Gal¬lery.The competition will close Monday, May11. The accepted photos will be exhibited inthe Bergman Gallery Tuesday, June 2,through Saturday, June 27.Further information may be obtained bycalling the Bergman Gallery at Midway3-0800, Extension 4137.EDGAR FAURE: The former premier in Kent hail Tuesday. Former French Premier Edgar Fauretold an audience of over 300 persons in Kentauditorium April 7 that he was most con-c e r n e d with the problem of over¬development in the world today.Faure, whose forty-five minute talk wastranslated into English by Aristide Zolberg,chairman of the political science depart¬ment, said affluence “doesn’t seem to fulfillthe aspirations of human beings. Under¬developed nations can identify their goals... but developed nations find that diffi¬cult.”Faure, who also criticized intellectual cir¬cles for not taking the problems of growthseriously, said “There is a loss of in¬tellectual energy when people concernMann Working on State BillTo Keep Men Out of VietnamState Rep Robert E. Mann (D-Chicago) isplanning to introduce a bill into the stateassembly which would prevent the federalgovernment from requiring Illinois service¬men to fight in the Vietnam war.The bill, which will be introduced Tues¬day, is similar to a recently passed Mas¬sachusetts law which prohibits servicemenfrom that state to fight in a war not de¬clared by Congress.Said the Hyde Park Democrat, “TheState of Illinois has a legitimate right toprotect its citizens from serving in an unde¬clared war. We are establishing a civilgrievance procedure to test president pow¬ers which we contend have been abused be¬cause of the constitutional requirement thatCongress, and only Congress, has the powerto declare war. We are saying, in effect,that Congress should either declare war orsend our boys home.”The bill would authorize the state attor¬ney general to sue in the US Supreme CourtIdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CIUOn« North la So lie St., Chic. 60602FR 2 2390 — 798-0470 Office Hour* 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE OF CANADA EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 [1 CHARTS/GRAPHSLeroy lettering(Near campus)on behalf of the state and any state in¬habitant required to serve.Mann added that his bill would authorizeclass actions, so that an individual’s suitcould be joined by everyone in the samesituation. He said that the bill affords theGeneral Assembly the opportunity to test incourt the unconstitutionality of “the oppres¬sive burden of the most unpopular war inour history.”The Massachusetts law will soon be test¬ed in court, as one resident has filed a suit,contending that the army is planning tosend him to Vietnam. Massachusetts Attor¬ney General Robert Quinn said he wouldseek an immediate decision from the USSupreme Court on the conflict between thestate law and federal policies.Mann has represented Hyde Park and thesurrounding area in the General Assemblyfor the past eight years. He is the recipientof the Best Legislator award of the Inde¬pendent Voters of Illinois (IVI) and is a co-chairman of the moratorium day April 15 inChicago. 363-1288DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644CHECKERTAXIHASTHE IDEAL JOBFOR THECOLLEGE STUDENTWE CAN ARRANGE AWORK SCHEDULE TO FITANY CLASSROOMSCHEDULEWORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS 1 TO 6 PER WK.WORK CLOSE TO HOMEOR SCHOOL AT ONE OF 9GARAGESWORK DURING SUMMERVACATION, SEMESTERBREAKS AND HOLIDAYSEARN AS MUCH AS FULLTIME WORKERSMALE OR FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY845 WASHINGTON8:00 to 4:30 DAILY8:00 to 11:00 SAT.CALL 421-1314 StampAlbumSeniors, put down this Maroon and come over toIda Noyes and get your picture taken for thefamous yearBox stamp album.If you don't make it today, you won't be ableto order prints for your mother who has beenwaiting 20 some odd years for your graduationpicture to hang on her wall and God knows willkill you if you don't get one.There will be one more session Tuesday—withour own photographers, but that's it.If you don't make it then, we'll just have touse your pig book picture, with short hair andeverything.If you come now, you will wait five minutesat the most. The portrait company only chargesa dollar for the proofs, and your mother willcertainly reimburse you.Or call Ml 3-0800, ext. 3579, and make anappointment. Our operators are waiting for yourcall! ■The pictures are being taken on the third floorof Ida Noyes, 1212 East 59th Street.yearBox1970If you want to find out more about yearBox,turn to the back page.April 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5fVDID YOU KNOW...There is an active, established malehomophile organization in Chicago?ONE OF CHICAGO...established in 1964, has frequent meet¬ings with guest lecturers and en¬tertainment ... also frequent social ac¬tivities in our permanent clubrooms.For further information, callFR 2-8616 or write toONE OF CHICAGO, P.0. Box 62a Chicago, Illinois 60690.All replies are sent first classin plain envelopes.MASHgives aDAMNMASH20th Century foi presents lTJLilL cram An Ingo Preminger Productions.,'"* DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITTCo StarringSAUY MlLfRMAN ROetRT DUVAU • JO ANN PflUC ■ RfNt AUBtRJONOIS Produced by INGO PREMINGEROitecled by ROBERT ALTMAN Screenplay by RING LARDNER, Jr. from a novel by RICHARD HOORfRMusic by JOHNNY MANOfl PANAVISKJN* C010R by Oelu.e*abc GREAT STATES THEATREUNITED ARTISTSRANDOLPH at DEARBORN BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMENT STOREPL 2-47441150 E. 63rd St.MODERN DANCE CLASSES4.30 to 6.00Monday - SaturdayBallot, Rack & Jan taughtAllison Theater Dance Center17 N. StatuStawii BuildingRoom 1903332-9923 “Eagle: Blackstone south of 53rd. Somewhat higher pricesand ostentatious, LC faculty may be found imbibing here.’'Maroon Restaurant ReviewIf You’ve got it, flaunt it!THE EAGLEcocktails5311 BLACKSTONE luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933EL TACOMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANTitu*t»«»l#|1607 E. 53rd St.HUACAMOIE • TOSTADASTACOS • CHILIENCHILADAS • MANY OTHER DISHESTAMALES • CARRY OUT SERVICEOpen 7 days a week11:30 A.M. - 12:30 A.M.‘Best picture of the year.’Siskol. Chicago TribuneChicago Avenue at Michigan Cinema TheatreDaily • far stadeat group rates call: WH 4-5667the ultimate triRETURN TO THE "2C01” EXPERIENCE The U A Cinema. 150. Edens 2. andCinestage Theatres are equipped with the best (i lrark magnetic stereophonicsound in the country You will hear "ZarathustM." "The Blue Danube." andGyorgy Ligetis electronic compositions from surrounding overhead speakersand live frontal console speakers (4 high. 3 wide. 3' deep) The screen at theCinestage is 70 across. U A Cinema 150 is 70' across and tlie Edens ? is fiO’across (combined that's longer than a city block! You will see "The Dawn ofMan" and "To Jupiter and heyond" projected from the finest 70 MM equipmentin super panavision and metrocolor RETURN TO "2001" EXPERIENCE.CINESTAGE EDENS 2 UA CINEMA 150100 N Dearborn. ChicagoV. M1 ““ Edens Eapresswa*L 8 3V 4445 till 22nd SI. Oak brook3255150 THEPOL. SCIENCEMAJOR SAIDDICTATORIALLY:MILLERMAKES IT RIGHT!SEND USYOURAD-VERBIALPUNS ABOUTCOLLEGEMAJORS. IFPUBLISHED,WE’LL SENDYOU AREFRESHINGREWARD.COLLEGE BOX 482) MILLER BREW. CO.MILW., WIS. 632016/The Chicago Maroon/April 10, 1970NOWWithThisAd $6.98 Reduced to $4.49$5.98 Reduced to $3.69$4.98 Reduced to $2.99Offer Expires April 17, 1970. OPENMonday-Friday 12-8 p.mSaturday 10 am - 6 pmSunday 12-5 pm684-1505 1444 E. 57thLOWE'S HAS MOVED!WE ARE NOW AT 1444 E. 57thALL Capitol RecordssALE *** jl*** * mumm m■»'+**'.*'*"*'#*******teal Groups FormUnited Area Caucusthat a structured sense of dealing withwomen’s lib could be developed, accordingto members. There are now about 400members in 20 citywide chapters.A name l’or the group will be selected atthe next meeting.Format at meetings includes a generaldiscussion followed by committee meetings.The committees WITCH, health, organizing, and counter curriculum correspondto programs already in operation.At the Tuesday meeting, several WITCH-es recited part of the hex against the Uni¬versity which they cast last fall in front ofthe cafeteria: “Damn your extolling, con¬trolling, discriminating, eliminating, ener¬vating, women hating, motherfucking,blood sucking, urban renewing, Freudianspewing ... What are you doing?“Though now the witches’ hex is done,the struggle for freedom has just begun,sisterhood, the tie that binds; First liberateourselves, then liberate our minds.”In the area of health, members talked tothe head of the gynecology department atBillings about the “lack of policies” on con¬traceptives. The possibility of students us¬ing the Abortion Counseling Service at theSouth Side Center was discussed.The organizing committee discussed sem¬inar programs such as the Speak Out onAbortion sponsored last quarter.The possibility of including rap groups aspart of the committee’s function will be de¬cided at the next meeting. The counter cur¬riculum work this year has involved talkingwith various Soc 2 sections.Women’s lib has several activities thatconcern the April 15 moratorium. A wom¬en’s contingent will march from the CivicCenter to the rally at the Federal Building.Members fear the moratorium may sponsora benefit to be held at the Playboy Club.About 50 graduate, undergraduate andstaff women from Women’s Radical ActionProject (WRAP), Women’s InternationalTerrorist Conspiracy from Hell (WITCH),NUC Women’s Caucus and United Women’sAlliance (UWA) united to form the Univer¬sity chapter of the Chicago Women’s Liber¬ation Union Tuesday.WRAP has officially dissolved but theWomen’s Caucus and UWA will probablycontinue to function, according to a formerstudent now employed at the University.The purpose of the merger is to pull to¬gether activities, overcome communicationproblems and make a real “sisterhood” atthe University, according to an informationsheet publicizing the meeting. The organi¬zation will meet Tuesdays at 8 pm in IdaNoyes Library during spring quarter.The union was founded last November soWomen's Career Seminars ScheduledMrs Anita Sandke and Judith Farling ofthe Career Counseling and Placement Of¬fice have asked women’s honor society NuPi Sigma and the housing staff to sponsor aprogram of informal seminars for under¬graduate women entitled: “One Step Be¬yond: The True Tales of Career Opportu¬nities Available to Women College Gradu¬ates.”Residents of Snell house were invited to a“lunchfast” for a program of anecdotal,survey information that Mrs Sandke andMiss Farling have accumulated throughtheir counseling careers.Although the series is to be held in thewomen’s dormitories, it is hoped that allCollege women will attend.A brunch Saturday at 11:30 am, at Wood¬ ward Commons will feature noted law fig¬ures Mrs Jean Allard, University graduateand general counselor for Maremont Corpo¬ration; Mrs Margaret Rosenheim, profes¬sor in SSA; and Mrs Sybille Fitzsche, StaffCounsel for ACLU and actively involved inthe abortion issue.Three teas from 3 to 4:30 pm are alsoscheduled as part of the series. Thursday,April 16, the tea at Woodward Commonsentitled “Opportunities in the Humani¬ties,” will feature Mrs Marion Alt, person-nal superintendent at the Art Institute,Miss Alice Necker, film director for CSBand Mrs Linda Rockey, a reporter for theChicago Sun-Times.Participating in “Social Science Seance,”April 21, at Breckinridge Lounge, 1442 E59th st, are Mrs Harriett Moore, senior consultant of Social Research, Inc, MrsSelina Reed, associate professor and chair¬man of the social service department atChicago City College, Kennedy-King, andMiss Karen Borst, an urban developmentspecialist in the Model Cities committeeof Housing and Urban Development.April 23, the series will conclude inWoodward Commons with a phenomenolo¬gical discussion of vocation potentialitiesin the sciences and mathematics. Speakersare Miss Joan Hurley of the investmentoffice at Harris Trust & Savings Bank, Dr.Lauren Pachman, a pediatrician at La-Rabidea Hospital and the UC departmentof pediatrics, and Miss Cecelia Paluch,group leader of the spectroscopy sectionof physical chemistry and analyses, Vel-sicol Chemical Co.April 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7«■.♦Jr* ...» » M •*.* > » » *.*»* ••»•»»*»*•**»*«•** rvw\EDITORIALS: ^him■■■■■■■■■■■■wm^The Bookstoreand ProcrastinationSpring — dare we say it — is here, and the realization of ahope that once seemed very remote prompts us to make anotherwistful prediction: someday, somehow, the University is going toannounce, and maybe even construct its new bookstore.It was just about this time last year that we had a conversationwith Harlan Davidson, the general manager of the bookstore, inwhich he told us that though he didn’t know for sure that day, bythe next week certainly he would be able to tell us where the book¬store would be moving by the fall of 1969, to get out of its miser¬able quarters at 58 St and Ellis Avenue. As we all know, it tooka fire to get the bookstore out of that location and into what isprobably the only place worse than its old quarters, literally a holein the wall surrounding the old Stagg Field. The old bookstore hasbeen tom down, and the new one practically has, as the wrecker’sball that demolished the stone wall has left only a small cornerstanding.Since the bookstore fire last fall, we have been waiting tohear where the new bookstore will be. So far all we have gotten isalternating intervals of silence and committee reports, none of whichhas the power to do anything about the bookstore. The Maroon hasfirmly established itself as a pest on the fifth floor of the admin¬istration building, where, in any week, one may observe as many asthree elaborate transferral of calls — known in the vernacular as“passing the buck” — all culminating in the astounding messagethat there is as yet no decision on the bookstore. Both the com¬mittees involved — the Wade committee on the bookstore andGoldsmith committee on the priorities of the University — havecome to the same recommendation, which is that the bookstoremove into the building presently occupied by the University ofChicago press. Employees at the Press have been telling us talesfor months about their imminent move (we.always feel constrainedto tell them in turn about the bookstore employees’ perennial storiesof their always imminent move). The point is that the decision tomove the bookstore has not been made yet, and it’s hard to under¬stand why not.The University is, of course, in financial trouble. There is areluctance to begin any project — such as construction — thatwill cost a lot of money, as a new bookstore inevitably must. Inthis case, though, it’s not as if the University has any choice. TheRegenstein library is due to open in the fall, and we find it hard toimagine that the University is going to show off its brand newmonolith with a miserable piece of wall stuck in front of it.The University is going to have to have a new bookstore,whether it feels ready to pay for it or not. We can’t see how post¬poning the decision is doing anything but cost money, as the day 'when the bookstore must vacate the Stagg field wall comes closerand closer with no new location announced. The University hadengaged in the same wasteful procrastination before. They haveknown that bookstore would have to be moved long before thefire; the old bookstore stood on land that was designated for useby the hospital. Instead of finding a new site when there was notthe expensive presure they now. face, the question was relegatedto obscurity.It would seem that the dallying over the decision will at leastinsure that the decision, once made, will be a good and carefullyconsidered one. We don’t think that careful consideration was thereason behind past years’ delays in dealing with the problem ofthe bookstore, but we have more hope for the current deliberationsUniversity students have patiently waited 78 years for a bookstorewith the right books, with more space, and the other amenities,and hopefully, we’ll get one before another three quarters of acentury elapse.Chicago Maroon/April 10, 1970 " "" ~ <9LETTERS TO THE EDITORS"Abort Them“I bear horrendous tidings: some of themare alive and among us. Of course I amreferring to that very sorry lot of unpopu¬lar, unfashionable, illiberal, and unenlight¬ened individuals who cannot keep pacewith the progress of ethical thought butpersist in clinging to the inhuman and noth¬ing will persuade them to adopt the new,progressive creed. Apparently they willcontinue to obfuscate the much laudedPrinciple of Feminine Convenience (alsodesignated Male Independence) in a cloudof suspicion. Undoubtedly they will per¬severe in making unsophisticated observa¬tions upon the injury rendered the unbornchild, whereas it is, of course, the moth¬er’s body alone which is at issue.Undeniably, they will again bore andbelabor us with objections that man’s wis¬dom in this matter is insufficient to make asubtle distinction between human and non¬human. I say reactionaries like that shouldhave been aborted.Paris T Le Jeune, ’73To Unionize . . .John Powell quite frankly doesn’t knowwhat he’s talking about in his gadfly“Union of Students called Power-Seekers.’’Contrary to Powell’s belief the union isneither violent, a “step toward the greatrevolution,” nor a pack of wild eyed radi¬cals.The union could be all of these things: itis none of them. What the union is will bedetermined by its members, not by me, andnot by Powell through innuendo.If the Maroon wants to run Powell’sdribble I think that’s fine; but it shouldhave been labeled a Smear, not a Gadfly.John Siefert, ’71Union of Students... or NotIn his gadfly in last Tuesday’s Maroon,John Powell is correct when he says thatthe tactics of a student union will be un¬democratic if they inconvenience non-mem¬bers.But if a student union represented theonly way in which students could influenceUniversity policy, then this criticism couldbe dismissed as a piece of unrealistic ideal¬ism. The point is that there are some goodreasons why a student union would notachieve anything worthwhile, in any event.Larry Lambert, an organizer of theunion, states in his letter to the MaroonTHE 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 Froute (Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Olater, PeteGood sell, Gordon Katz, Susan .Left, GeraldLaval, 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 Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 50437. Phono Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3253. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. that “our strength will depend critically onbuilding a broad base of support, and thatin turn will depend on raising issues whichdirectly affect a great many students.”But what if the most important issues arenot those “which directly affect a greatmany students?” Some of the most criticalproblems involve complaints about curricu¬lum and requirements within particular di¬visions and departments. Such issues arenot the kind around which a broad base ofsupport could be built. They are also muchmore likely to be resolved through smalland informal conversations with faculty,and not through mass confrontation. Itseems, however, that Lambert is more in¬terested in finding issues that can mobilizethe campus for action than in focusing onworthwhile grievances: demands are beingtailored to fit tactics, a rather irresponsibleway of proceeding to say the least.But whatever issues the union should de¬cide to raise, its operations will always beineffective, for the simple reason that theywill attempt to put pressure on the Univer¬sity. After last year’s sit-in and this year’sHutch boycott, how can the organizers ofthis union remain so unaware of what theUniversity’s response to coercive action is?Staughton Lynd seems to think that all thesit-in needed was more initial support, butthere is no reason to believe that the Uni¬versity would have acted differently had2000 instead of 400 students occupied the Adbuilding. It was not prepared to give in tothe use of force under any conditions, andthe student union will be a failure as longas it chooses to ignore this policy.Clearly, relations between students andfaculty-administration could stand someimprovement. But the myth that sees thelatter as a small group of evil men, whowill have to give up their power in the faceof a mass student rebellion, is an obstacleto any such progress. As an organizationbased completely and solely on that myth,the student union is both useless and un¬desirable.Paul Bernstein, '72Money SolutionsWhile carefully reading the Maroon thispast quarter I have learned that the Uni¬versity is facing another financial crisis,and, in consequence, the students mighthave to accept an additional 10 percent in¬crease in tuition and dorm rates next year.If this ugly rumor is true, I would like tosubmit an alternative plan for securing thenecessary funds. If the University is a com¬munity, and if we all (faculty, adminis¬tration, and students) profit spiritually byits existence, then it follows that we allContinued on Page 15BULLETINFriday, April 10SEMINAR: Dave Fultz, "Symmetrical Natural Con¬vection in a Computable Situation," dept, of thegeophysical sciences, Henry Hinds Lab 101, 4 pm., teawill precede. . „DISCUSSION: John Gueguen, "The Idea of a City,Crossroads, 5421 Blackstone, 8 pm.CONCERT: The Contemporary Chamber Players of theUniversity, Mandel, 8:30 pm., free with ticket.DISCUSSION: "What Alienation and Exile Mean for Meas a Jew," Hiltel House, 8:30 pm.PHIL OCHS: In concert for the Moratorium, Rockefel¬ler, 8:30 pm., tickets S2 and $3 at the door.Saturday, April 11CANCELLED: Hillel House's "Choosing a Sex Ethic."RECITAL: Piano and cello, sponsored by Dodd House,Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.NIGHT CLUB: Live jazz, folk songs at Ida Noyes, 9 pm.to 2 am.TEACH-IN: "The Bill of Rights Needs Help," The FirstUnitarian Church, 57th. and Woodlawn, 10:30 am.DISCUSSION: "Movement to the Right: Perspective ofthe ACLU," Bonhoeffer House, 6-7:30 pm., dinner fol¬lowing.Monday, April 13WORKSHOP: "Seder - History and Tradition," HMIelHouse, 4:40-6 pm.SICK EARTH CONFERENCE: Part 2 at Mandel, 7:30pm.MEETING: Baha'i Fellowship, Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Tuesday, April 14WORKSHOP: "Seder -T Traditional and Creative Hafl-gada," Hillel House, 8-10 pm. 'TALK: Julia Abrahamson, staff writer for the NewAmerican Friends Service Commiltee book Who ShallLlvo? Man's Control ovor Birth and Death, Zero Popu¬lation Growth, Hyde Park Union Church at 5500 Wood-lawn, 8 pm.Joseph Losey: Beyond the CameraJoseph Losey, who is the subject of the current Doc FilmsTuesday night series, came to speak on campus lastTuesday. What follows are excerpts from an interviewwith Mr. Losey that afternoon, used by permission ofFocus! magazine, in which a more complete version willappear. Mr. Losey’s most recent picture, Figures In aLandscape, had just been previewed in Chicago and thefirst questions refer to it.• How did you become involved with “Figures In ALandscape”?• I became involved on a basis which I would never doagain. There already was a crew, there already was ascript, and there already was a cast. I didn’t use thescript.• Cinema Center (the film’s producers) are still publi¬cizing the original writer. •• There’s not a line of his in the picture. There’s not aword. ... I had known Robert Shaw for some time pre¬vious. I had wanted to do a film of The Man in the GlassBooth and we had become friends. So, when it was sub¬mitted to me, I was very dubious about it; he said to me,“for God’s sake don’t be too hard on it, because if you doit will all fall to pieces.” And I said I will be not hard onit if you will give me assurance that you will work withme on the script.• Do you like it as it turned out?• Not entirely, no. I tried to make a frame for otherpeople to fill in. I tried not to be at all explicit aboutanything except the general lines about what I was talkingabout, so that it would be filled out by what people arefeeling and thinking and what they choose to associate itwith. But I think if we had more time some of the dia¬logue probably would have greatly improved. In fact, agreat deal of it was improvised. The scene where theobserver is shot out of the plane I shot once and it wasobviously not working at all. I had a talk with Robert andsaid “I think the man has got to be really manic in thisscene. There have got to be moments in the picture wherehe is clearly out of his mind. I think it ought to be ‘redIndian’ and crazy, completely mad, out of a western.” Hesaid “let’s try it” and that whole business of his searchingthe dead observor and all of his comments were impro¬vised. In fact the idea of the watch was improvised. Thedate, the month, and the time were all the precise date,month, and time of shooting. So that’s the way it gotwritten and then some of the lines got changed in postsynchronization (recording sound after a picture is shot —ed.). • You wouldn’t call this picture baroque.• Some people already have.• I don’t know how you feel about the term baroque al¬ways being applied to you.• I like baroque architecture and. I like baroque paintingand I like being baroque and I like exaggerations. I don’tbelieve in realism. I don’t think there’s anything quite sodull as “please pass the iqustard” type of realism. Itseems to me there’s no point in presenting what you thinkand feel and see on film unless you present it larger thanlife, stronger than life. As I’ve said often enough, it’s not aquestion of reproducing reality but rather it’s a questionof breaking down reality into the elements you see, itscomponents, and then making a selection of those ele¬ments and reconstructing a new hyperreality. This issometimes called (depending, I suppose on one’s degree ofsuccess with it) self-indulgence, exaggeration, melodrama,overacting. When it works it’s called none of those things.Even when it does work it may be called all of thosethings simply because it embarrasses an audience or acritic, because it is saying too much and demanding toomuch of an audience before an audience is ready for it.This is not a justification, because I think sometimes onedoes make mistakes. I’ve been seeing a number of myfilms again at Dartmouth where I’ve been teaching — Ihesitate to call it teaching, but at least I’ve been workingwith students for three months. I ran four or five of myfilms for them at various times. I was astonished to find,to take an example I think all of you know — there is ascene in The Servant, a scene in a kitchen on a very hotsummer night, of a seduction. There’s a water tap whichis dripping and there are sounds outside of night, latenight, of guests going and coming, and the wealthy youngman is in the process of being seduced by the maid in thehouse with whom he has been left alone, apparently acci¬dentally but in fact by contrivance, by the contrivance ofthe maid. And I set the scene almost as a kind of oper¬ating table, a very heavy wooden table with a very glar¬ing light over it and it was shining on pots and kettles andthis dripping shining tap. When the film was made Ithought the tap was used very discreetly. It obviously is asexual symbol. The sexuality of it was somewhat in¬creased by the fact that as his pulse and his semen rises,the tempo of the dropping increases. This was done quiteconsciously and quite arbitrarily. It always worked ex¬tremely well, with critics and with audiences, but with theDartmouth audience it suddenly got a most embarrassinglaugh. It seemed to me terribly corny and terribly ob¬vious. I didn’t see how I could have done it. Now onehever knows with that kind of thing whether it’s just a question of the times having changed or whether one’s selfhas changed, or whether it’s the difference of audiences.But there is another thing about all that that I’ve dis¬covered. You see at that time I was fighting censorshiplike mad. There was virtually no nudity. There is also inthat picture a scene in which the servant and the samemaid prepare to take a bath in the master’s bathroomtogether and they start to undress and the girl is shownfrom the waist down, naked, sitting on the man’s lap, hisshirt is unbuttoned, and she had her breasts carefullycovered with adhesive tape, which nobody these dayswould dream of doing. It was impossible to shoot thatscene with any kind of freedom that would have concealedthe adhesive entirely. So if you look carefully you will seesome of the adhesive tape, which is pretty embarrassing.That was only six years ago. Now, of course, the girl andthe man would both be completely naked and everybodywould be quite easy about it. Times have changed thismuch ... Now one looks at this and it’s so old fashioned,so embarrassingly self-conscious, that it creaks. On theother hand, I’m not positive that it isn’t still right. I knowthat if I were doing it now I would do it quite differently.The whole style of the picture would probably be quitedifferent. I’m not sure that what was done then was neces¬sarily wrong, but within the context of today’s audiencewith the pictures that you’re all seeing and the things thateverybody is being conditioned to, it would make it lookterribly heavy handed.• l was sort of thinking about that tap. There’s a verystrong, very precise physiological feel to the tap and thetap is more than just a sex symbol. You get a real physicalpresence with the sound of the clock ticking and the tapdraining and it’s kind of a physiological enactment of thesex act.• It’s a heightened sensuality — auditory and tactile andvisual...• There seem to be very explicit sexual symbols in“Accident.”• What do you consider the sexual symbols?• The punting pole for example.• The whole thing about symbols is a very strange anddifficult one. I enjoy symbols and I think that we speakthrough symbols, particularly visually. There was a timewhen I was particularly willful about symbols which isprobably a part of the reputation for being baroque, be¬cause I like to make them kind of inescapable. Then I gotover that and felt that a symbol was only valuable inproportion to its not being evident, but by this time thereContinued on Page Fourif\ cvmirmrmr !*«'«*• V'* «V*V% V* ViWkV* k’»V *In a Purple Pants Suit? ! ?I’VE NEVER BEEN SO insulted in all my life — imagine— employed by a bloodsucking representative of the rul¬ing class — the Dry Dock Savings Bank and in a purplepants suit no less! Talk about being exploited! and mis¬represented! What will Madison Avenue think of next!Nothing is sacred anymore (not even the Culture Vul¬ture!) I’m going to complain to the Bitter Besiness Bu¬reau, I mean the Better Business Bureau. I’m an outrage,I mean I’m outraged. I’m revolting, I mean this is revolt¬ing. Oh you know what I mean.FilmCAMPUSYou all remember Sympathy for the Devil (how canyou forget it, it was the best night of sleep you had in amonth); well Godard returns to campus again with PierreLe Fou. It’s about an ad man who gets involved with apolitical murder. Belmondo and Anna Karina star. At 7:15and 9:30 in Cobb for $1.Tomorrow Black Colony presents Woman in theDunes. An allegory, this Japanese film tells the story of aman and a woman stuck in a sand dune (sounds prettydry, doesn’t it). In Cobb at 7:30 and 9 for $1.Sunday, Pierce Tower Cinema presents the Czechclassic The Shop on Main Street. It tells of the affectionwhich grows between an old Jewish woman and a Czechwho hides her from the Nazis. In Cobb at 7 and 9:15.Tuesday Doc Films presents Joseph Losey’s The Ser¬vant which documents the complete manipulation and de¬struction of a young aristocrat by his servant. (That’swhat he gets for not cooking his own meals.) It stars abrilliant Dirk Bogarde and James Fox. In Cobb at 7:15and 9:30 for $1.Wednesday Doc Films presents a double feature forits series on disorientation: Jack Smith’s Flaming Creat¬ures and Roger Corman’s Little Shop of Horrors. If DocFilms didn’t get busted for their last feature (Fuck) theymay turn up to show these two movies. The former is acamp tribute to great movie idols o*. the ’40’s and the lateris a horror flick starring Jack Nicholson of Easy Rider(obviously minus football helmet).Thursday is William Claude Fields’ If I had a Million.William Claude is known to you who are not in the in-crowd as W.C. Without knowing too much about the filmyou can be sure he 1) kicks a dog 2) smacks a baby3) and takes a few swigs on the side. In Kent 107 at 7:15and 9.MusicTonight the Contemporary Chamber Players present aconcert of Copland, Sextet, Rhodes, Autumn Setting; Dug¬ger, Intermezzi; and Foss, Paradigm. The inimitableRalph Shapey is of course the conductor. It’s FREE inMandel and at 8:30.Also tonight, the UC Moratorium Committee, with alittle help from their friends, Revitalization, brings us PhilOchs in a concert in Rockefeller Chapel at 8:30. Rumorhas it that Ochs is going back to the ’50’s rock style, withlittle or no redeeming social importance. Should be inter¬esting. Tickets are two and three clams, on sale in theMandel box office and at the door.Tomorrow two UC virtuosos will be presenting a con¬cert of Cell-Piano Music. Larry Stein, Cello; and LarryMendes, Piano will be performing works by Beethoven,Grieg, and Hindemith. It’s FREE in Mandel at 8:30.Jimmy’s — which has always been a cultural center The Culture VUItureS Swoop throughDry Dock Country.Around 59th and Lexington, where Dry Dock Savings Bankis located, pickings are lush tor the purple-pantsuited culturevulture. Countless galleries and shops in Dry Dock Country lurethe bird of refined tastesBright and early of a Saturday, she flits into GarrickStephenson on East 57th to have them authenticate a R^gencependule she picked up in Paris last summer Briefly she setsdown at the Record Hunter at 56th and Lexington, where shecompares van Karajan’s treatment of the Immolation of B'unn-hilde with Mehta's.Then she wings her way north for an indispensable stop atDry Dock, the only bank within miles open on Saturday Afterwhich she darts into the French Institute to inquire about acourse in Provencal poetryThere follows a trts sfrieux lunch at L'Etoileon 59th, the topic being her forthcomingtrip to the Anatolian digs Next, she soars off to Sherry Lehmann at Madison and 61st todebate the merits of a Haut Bnon '62 versus a Pom mar d 66Now comes the main event of the day. the Saturday Routeup Madison, the Gallery Promenade Jams' Hammer1 Emmerich'Pace' A crowd, a very flock of culture vultures' "So exciting' Sovital'" she chirpsExhausted, the purple-pantsuited culture vulture fluttersback to her nest at dusk, there to renew her strength for a newforay on Dry Dock CountryDry Dock SaMBwisn't ft {treat to bonk wNCre ewryffvngX ymm Mura moo Dry Oack Caunhy « Wmcorel too « ft* » . 1M OMncoy So mm (»**• & * «M«a «l tVy OOCkDi> Dock W ta* » WMBtf urnlUir ■« PWt S< lOxYlOuaana M. r«mt ** U3of sorts has expanded its activities (no they’re not startingto build a Lincoln Center-like complex on their grounds).Sunday afternoons there is a country music play and sing.Groups come all the time to perform. You may even findsome grass (I guess I should say hay because there’s agreat chance for misinterpretation and Jimmy’s will bebeseiged) in your beer.Monday Revitalization presents the James CottonBlues Band and if that don’t revitalize you folks, I don’tknow what will. It’s in inevitable Leon Mandel Hall (whowas he anyway?) at 8 pm.MiscellaneousChicago’s own world famous Chicago Review (they’vemade several attempts to steal yours truly away butfrankly they didn’t offer a high enough salary) presentspoet Kenneth Koch on Thursday at 8:30 in Mandel Hall.Mr. Koch most recent book of poems is Pleasures ofPeace and he has written a number of plays includingGeorge Washington Crossing the Delaware.Dr. Joseph Berke, an associate of Ronald Laing and aradical psychiatrist will be on campus speaking. He de¬fines what he practices as anti-psychiatry ‘‘as it relates toa general theory and practice of cultural revolution inadvanced post-capitalist countries.” I wonder what Sig¬mund has to say about this. He will be giving a lecture onTuesday at 11:30 in Judd 126 and will speak informally tointerested people in Judd Commons between 2:15 and 4:15. This Week at the GargoyleFridayFOTA drama group meets from 7:30-10:30.MondayGay Liberation, that philanthropic organization whichgave the Garg $150 which they made at their dance onFriday to keep the Garg limping along financially has itsrap session at noon.NUC meets at 8.TuesdayThe Crafts workshop runs from 3:30 to 5:30.The Drama Group keeps at it from 7:30-10:30.The Association for the Advancement of ContemporaryMusic (AACM) presents Nosredna Yelhsal at 8.WednesdayFolk Night starts at 8.ThursdayGay Liberation rap session at 12.The Poetry group meets at 9.Hyde Park Corner returns in full force at 8.ELSEWHEREFilmThey Shoot Horses Don’t They has been raved aboutin many quarters. It looks at American society throughthe metaphor of a marathon dance in the 30’s. It starsJane Fonda, Michael Sarrazin and Gig Young. At StateLake Theatre.Z is a film of political suspense and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicaland contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, Chicago and Michigan.Putney Swope is a mad attack on Madison Avenue,white liberals and other such imaginary phenomena and issupposed to be pretty hilarious. At the Three Penny, 2424N. Lincoln.M*A*S*H is a bitterly cynical look at war which justtears it to shreds. It stars Elliot Gould and Donald Suther¬land. At the United Artists, Randolph and Dearborn.The Boys In Hie Band is the film version of the playwhich seemed to break the ice on the subject of homosex¬uality on Broadway. At the Carnegie at Rush and State.TheatreThe People Vs Ranchman is the name of Megan Ter¬ry’s new play (she wrote Viet-Rock.) As you can guess it’spolitical and includes a lynching. It’s at the KingstonMines Theatre 2356 N. Lincoln, weekends at 8:30.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.Police — an interesting title is the Chicago premiereof Slawomire Mrozek’s futuristic drama. At the Play¬house, 315 W. North. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 andSunday at 7:30. Students, $2.Adaptation-Next is two one-act plays, one by old Chi¬cagoan Elaine May and one by Terance McNally. At theHappy Medium, 901 N. Rush St. Tuesday — Thursday at8:30, Friday and Saturday at 8 and 11, Sunday at 7:30.Continued on Page SevenPANASONIC sMmdcdeMODEL RQ-209SPortable Cassette Tape Recorder$39.95AC/BATTERY OPERATIONOperates on batteries or AC house current. Travels with you, orcan be used at home, in the office or in the classroom.UNIQUE AUTOMATIC RECORDING LEVEL CON¬TROL CIRCUITRYEngineered with special built-in recording level circuitry thatautomatically adjusts for uniformity in sound level and assuresyou true recorded tones, automatic trouble-free operation.ACCESSORIES:1 - Remote dynamic microphone with stand1 - Pre-recorded cassette tape1 - Earphone4 - "C" size PANASONIC Hi-Top batteriescarrying case optional *************Sunday IS etc Sork Time* £JJ.-30.4.W (daily too) ** BOB’S NEWSSTAND .♦ 51st and Lake Park•ft Huge mock* of Current Maga- *^ nine*. Paperback*, Amorted y. Pornography. Come & meet*I «‘’Michael.'************^ my dog ‘'itiirnori. ^■ enjoy our ■special student mm rate m; QC C at all^0 times m■ for college students■ presenting i.d. cards■ at our box officeradio, television,high fidelity &industrial electronicssales O serviceWHIRC SERVICEIS A TRADITION" HAVILLr’S1368 EAST SIM). CHICAGO 6061S • 613-7600 ClarkISf < »different double featuredailyopen 7 30 a.m. —lateshow midnight• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. is ,ladies day-all gals 85‘little gal lery for galsonlydark park mg-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p m• write for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-284312/Grey City Journal/April 10, 1970April 10, 1970/Grey City Journal/3Festival on April 28. His company’s repertory will includea premiere of a new work featuring Louis Falco, an ac¬complished young dancer who recently formed a companyof his own. Mr. Limon has received the Capezio Award,the highest dance honor, and he is the head of the ModernDance Department at the Juilliard School of Music. Of hiswork, Mr. Limon has said, “What I want to do is to givean audience an unforgettable experience. What I don’twant to do is to amuse and entertain.”For those who would prefer a unique and entertainingblending of the arts, the Alvin Nikolais Dance Theater willprovide just that from May 5 to May 10. Mr. Nikolais is anextraordinary director who does all the choreography, cos¬tume designing, and lighting arrangements for his com¬pany as well as composing his own electronic music. Hispresentations will include the Midwest premiere of“Echo,” regarded as one of his most sophisticated pieces.Paul Taylor, opening on May 12, is also a CapezioAward winner. “Up with dancers,” he says, “and downwith choreography.” Built more like a halfback than adancer, Mr. Taylor often surprises his audience with hisclassical grace. His programs are humorous and musical;he dances “to” the music rather than using it merely asbackground.Tickets for the festival may be purchased at the Har¬per Theater, 5238 S. Harper Avenue or reserved by callingWA 4-1530. Single tickets range from $3.50 to $6.00, with a$2 discount available for students. Each of the three com¬panies will perform on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Sat¬urdays, and twice on Sunday’s from April 28 through May17. There will also be mini-concerts available for ele¬mentary and secondary school children.POTPOURRIDanse Nouvelle at the Harper Megan TerryMelodrama Play is the story of Duke Durgin, popularrecording star, who has made it big with one song but whohas found it difficult to think up another. His managerlays it on the line: create or perish. We discover thatDuke got his first song from his brother, Drake, so whenDrake comes to visit Duke there are altercations. Well,the manager sends in a guard, Peter, who stands watch tomake sure nobody leaves and a song gets written. ButPeter has a problem: he wants someone — it turns out tobe Drake — to give him an honest opinion of his charac¬ter. This need to define himself comes to override hispolicing duties, and he lets Duke leave. He won’t let themanager get in. Over the radio we hear an interviewbetween Duke and a sociologist who is trying to determinehow the success of his popular song has affected his per¬sonal life. Meanwhile, Duke’s secretary-lover and a friendDrake brought with him have been killed by Peter be¬cause they were getting in the way. Then, as Peter isabout to beat Drake’s brains out, there is a knock on thedoor, and the play ends with a Pinteresque question markon everyone’s face. And there you are.Gorton’s Apocalyptic Needle, now through Sunday atthe Harper Theater, is O’Horgan’s reworking of two medie¬val plays, Gammer Gorton’s Needle, a farce, and TheApocalypse, a mystery play. What he does is juxtaposethem, now one, now the other, so that after we see a scenewith the farcical antics of Gammer, Hodge her servantwith pants that want mending, Diccon the Knavish trick¬ster, and the rest oi the ribald crew, on comes Antichristwith demons and angels hastening the end of time. Andthen back to the farce.Such a yoking together of radically different dramaticmodes never took place in the Middle Ages, of course. Asthe church mystery plays gave way to secular drama,farcical and comical elements popped up in certain of theBiblical stories, such as the Wakefield Noah or the YorkCrucifixion; but they intermingled with the story, made ita story seen from the point of view of the unknown peoplewho happened to live at the time of the great events,- or,as in Noah, seeing the great events as background for thedomestic farce between Noah and his wife. The idea ofjuxtaposing farce and mystery doesn’t make any moresense today than it would have then.Perhaps O’Horgan wants to show us how the sacredand the profane were so amazingly mixed in the MiddleAges. They why not produce the Second Shepard’s Play?Maybe he wants a synthesis to arise out of a mixture ofopposites. But oil and water don’t mix; or, if they do, asin salad dressing, they will stay together only so long asyou continue to shake it up. Maybe that’s it. Keep a shak-in’.Nobody can accuse The New Troupe of being lazy.They really work hard at putting on a show, putting theaudience in an environment. Gurton’s Apocalyptic Needlehas music, dance, incense, acrobatics, outrageous bawdyhumor, cod-pieces, a naked Antichrist with red wings, a-naked Christ with white wings, and Latin liturgy (some¬times translated). Perhaps the liveliness of the cast wouldbecome more infectious in the audience if a few goatskinsof wine were passed around.And to help you out in understanding what’s going onup there, just remember that one day, as Gammer Gurtonwas sewing up the seat of Hodge’s pants, she lost herneedle. Diccon thought it would be a good joke to tell herthat Dame Chat stole it. Thereby hangs a tale of war andribaldry. For in fact, as the disputants discover to theirdelight at play’s end, the needle has all this time beenfirmly lodged in Hodge’s ass.John R. HoltTHE KINGSTON MINES THEATER CO. (2356 N. Lincoln;tel. 525-9893) is now presenting on Fridays, Saturdays andSundays at 9 pm for a minimum ten week run, MeganTerry’s The People Vs. Ranchman.I might as well be subjective and get it over with: of allChicago theaters, whether boulevard-established-com¬mercial or side-street-struggling-non-profit, I like theKingston Mines Theater best. The theater building, theactors, the directors, the set, light, sound and costumedesigners — all are good. And, of the new American play¬wrights, I find Megan Terry the most consistently inter¬esting and talented: in my opinion, she has been able toutilize mixed media, multiple focus (taking down all fourwalls instead of just the fourth alone), extraneous dialogue(where words are used outside of the story line, ratherlike stage properties or sound effects), and the rest of themixed bag of tricks in the new theater, and combine withthese techniques a sense of drama, meaningful form, and,may she be praised, intelligence.Miss Terry’s themes are often specifically Americanand political. Viet Rock: our disastrous foreign policy;Massachusetts Trust: our hopeless presidential elections;Ranchman: the crisis in our judicial system. She has doneother things too. such as her television play, Home, whichis a sci-fi fantasy about living conditions in (he future; orher recent play about the French mystic, Simone Weil.I don’t think Ranchman is her best play, but I enjoyed itvery much and think it’s pretty good. The production, aswe are coming to expect from the Kingston Mines, is solidthroughout. Allen Carlsen’s direction and Jack Gra-bowski’s light and set design couldn’t be done better byanyone; and the actors, led by Jack Wallace’s inspiredperformance as Ranchman, are all admirably capable.What is the play about? As we enter the courtroom, weare frisked, politely. Checking for concealed weapons, por¬nography, kazoos. One Ranchman is to be tried, and weare to witness. Voyeurs appraising the obscene. Othersare there: one side, well dressed and hungry for ven¬geance; the other side, unwashed and unkempt, full ofcontempt. Ranchman, con and pro. The prosecutor is nat¬ty. speaks fluent Dueprocess, advocates for the People.The judge is sober, demands order, gets none, loses hishead on occasion. Ranchman, all muscle, pubic hair, andspontaneous vitality, is charged with, not treason, but sexcrimes; two matrons, a girl, a male adolescent. He is tried, more or less; convicted, after a fashion; sentenced,decidedly; executed, thoroughly (electrocuted, gassed,hung, and shot). But he still lives. Is he guilty as charged?At various points in the play the action of the trial isstopped, and we witness some amazing fantasies. Rash-omon style, the girl seduces him, the matrons yearn forhis sex, the boy wants manhood. Who is he? RichardSpeck or Natty Buinppo? Lady Chatterly’s lover? HarpoMarx? Joe Christmas? Brenden Behan? Frank Mal-branche?As we learned from a real life trial in Chicago recently,more can be on trial in the nation’s courtrooms than al¬leged criminal acts of a defendant. Ranchman vs. thePeople. They want him lynched, but they also want some¬thing he has. Others want to make him a hero, but hedoesn’t want that honor, since he knows that heroes getscrewed. The judge is fed up with everybody, and finallybreaks out with, “Lamme get my hands on the sonof-abitch!” (Something I was waiting for). If you missed theshow at the Federal Building, or even if you didn’t, youmight go on over to Lincoln Ave. and root for your favor¬ite disease.THE NEW TROUPE (formerly part of the famous Cafe LaMama) under the direction of Tom O’Horgan (director ofHair), is now at the Harper Theater in Hyde Park (seethem at 8:30 tonight, 7 and 10 pm Saturday, 3 and 7:30pm Sunday). See them, ’cause they’re where it’s at.Last week at the Latin Theater in Old Town The NewTroupe presented two one-acts by Sam Shephard, TheHoly Ghostly and Melodrama Play. Both plays revealShephard’s flair for the whimsically poetic and his pen¬chant for dealing with life’s problems in an ingenuous,almost adolescent way. The Holy Ghostly concerns acountry Father and ins city Son, a Walpurgis Night theyspend before a campfire in the Badlands, with the Fatherfinally taken up into the bosom of the Holy Ghostly. Thedemons that disturb the night are evidently Indians inmasks and loincloths, but they are less Indians thanphantasms pulsating in the psyches of Father and Son;and the generational conflict between them is less one oflife styles than one ol time and dying. As the actors sever¬ally chant at the beginning, “You’re already dead and youdon’t even know it . . . Imagine hanging around for alleternity in the state of mind you’re in now . . . You’re aghost.”JOSE LIMON, ALVIN NIKOLAIS, and Paul Taylor will befeatured at the Fifth Annual Harper theatre Dance Festi¬val, beginning April 28 in Hyde Park. Judy Sagan isproducing the festival in cooperation with the Illinois ArtsCouncil and the National Endowment for the Arts.The dance series will offer works by students of two ofthe founders of modern dance: Paul Taylor studied withMartha Graham, Jose Limon with the late Doris Humph¬rey. Alvin Nikolais represents another branch of moderndance characterized by his multi-media productions.Jose Limon, who sees the American dance idiom asnonacademic, experimental, and eclectic, will open theLouis Falco, Guest Artist Allegro Conspirito ReviewLast Saturday , Allegro Conspirito, a campus mu¬sical group, presented an evening of musical dramaat the Blue Gargoyle. A reading of Heinrich Scheutz’The Seven Last Words of Christ was followed by aperformance of the medieval Maastrich Easter Play.A review of the performance, written by Bob Silvery,was not ready lor printing in time for the GCJ dead¬line. The review will appear in next week’s Journal.Continued from Page Onewas an increase in what I call buffism: people were find¬ing symbols where I didn’t know they existed. And this isperfectly fair because one does really have an unconsciouslanguage of symbols and probably uses symbols withoutknowing them, knowing that they’re there, which isn’t tosay that they’re not there.• Looking at “Figures In a Landscape” 1 had the feelingthat the shooting was very economized. Am I right or doyou shoot lots of angles?• No I don’t shoot lots of angles. I don’t shoot lots ofangles for a number of reasons one of which is fear ofinterference. There is always a mixture of motivation.One is a stylistic one, and the other one, the more inflex¬ible one, is this question of protecting yourself againstvandalism, or against certain, types of interference thatmay not be vandalistically intended.• Was there much interference on “Boom!” or “SecretCeremony?”• There was no interference at all. There is interferencenow. Well, I’ve given you a classic example of the kind ofthing that has happened now. I did Secret Ceremony ex¬actly as I wanted it. There was no interference at all.There were certain suggestions about changes when it wasfinished, but there was no obligation to take the sugges¬tions. Then began the fight on exploitation.I have with The Servant and Accident and a few otherfilms been responsible for posters, TV spots, “Coming At¬tractions” things of this sort, and I always had the help ofthe censor in this, because in England the censor is quitean educated and intelligent man. But in this case Univer¬sal was putting out posters for Secret Ceremony that prac¬tically said, and certainly very precisely suggested, that itwas a lesbian film. In every bit of their advertising, theyshowed the two women, usually in some intimate relation¬ship with each other, which was of course from the film,and then they ran captions such as “The Time Has ComeTo Speak of Unspeakable Things!” or “More HauntedThan Rosemary’s Baby!” or whatever it might be. Theydeliberately put out a campaign to foster the idea that itwas a film about lesbianism, which of course it was not.The result is that people who wanted to see a lesbian filmcame and were very disappointed, and/those who didn’twant to see a lesbian film didn’t come. They also made noeffort at all to deal with the real problem, which was that I was making my kind of film with actors who usuallymake another kind of film. The fact that Elizabeth Taylorand Mia Farrow were in it didn’t mean that it was aHollywood film. Anyway, after the film was exploited inthis fashion, I got a call from the chief editor of Universalin Hollywood, Bill Hornbeck, who was one of the greateditors of silent films and who is now working for Univer¬sal as their kind of editing supervisor. He rang me and hesaid, “I’m being asked to make changes in Secret Cere¬mony for television and the changes will make the filmabsolutely pointless, it will destroy its rhythm, it willmake it meaningless footage.” There is a girl who is schi¬zophrenic and hysterical and who thinks of herself aspregnant and who thinks of pregnancy almost as a childwould, although she is a girl of eighteen, and she puts atoy under her dress, to reproduce the appearance of preg¬nancy. Now her pregnancy is, in her sexual fantasy, byher step-father, and they are seen very briefly in what Iconsider to be one of the most beautiful scenes I haveever shot, it lasts about twenty seconds, they are shownmaking love on the beach. There is also a conversationabout sex between the woman that she makes play therole of her mother, who isn’t her mother, and herself, asvery little girl and mother discussing sex in a very in¬nocent way and talking about the kind of sounds that aremade in sex. These three scenes they wish to take out ofthe film altogether for television. Well there is nothingthen. There is no theme, there is no story, there is nointelligibility, there is nothing. In fear of a refusal byNBC, which pays a studio a million dollars for the use of afilm, they were precensoring themselves and doing all thereverse things they were doing when they were selling itas a film. Against this there is no protection. This to me isone of the most flagrant things that endangers filmmakingat this moment. Certainly if they are buying a film ofmine or film of John Huston’s or a film of GeorgeSeton’s, or Fellini, they are buying a product that hasmeaning. Someone who goes to see Fellini’s Satyriconthinks that he is going to see a particular thing. If heturns on the television with the intention of seeing this, orif he is somebody who is uninformed, and is told it’sFellini’s Satyricon but it has forty-five minutes taken outof it grossly, it’s not Fellini’s Satyricon, it’s not anybody’s,it’s NBC’s version of what they need to fill the time. Andthe Director’s Guild up to now has been able to do nothingabout it and the individual directors have been unable to do anything about it. It seems to me that the laws governing fair trade practices should go into it but they haven’t"It’s quite shocking. It’s particularly shocking because oneis increasingly dependent on television sources for monevto make films at all. Columbia Broadcasting has set up asubsidiary called Cinema Center, which is their film com¬pany, which they subsidize for the purpose of making fea¬ture films so that when they’ve mutilated all the existingfeature films they can have some of their own to mutilate 8• Why did they let you shoot it in Cinemascope if theywere going to show it on television?• Well you know, I don’t know. We were talking about itthis morning and again it’s this terrible business of over¬acting. When you have the sense that there is somebodymerely waiting to tell you what you can and you can’t doand who barges in at the critical moment of your ownfunctioning, then you get stubborn on something on whichyou haven’t completed the creative process. I suddenlyfound out myself this morning why the hell I’d shot it inPanavision when I know that there is no possible Pan-avision size in television and I know that it’s got to beshown on television because it’s television money, and Icame to the conclusion that this is another example of thisoverreacting I suppose that somewhere in the back of myhead I figured that if I made it in Panavision they coulddo less about it on television.• Another thing that television has done is to make itimpossible to work in black and white.• Yes and this is terribly regretable. I first encounteredthis and couldn’t quite believe it, on Accident, which Ididn’t want to do in color, but I couldn’t get the moneyunless I did it in color. I’m glad now I did it in color Inthe past three months I’ve seen a number of prints ofpictures like Accident on which I really killed myself — Ihad seventeen prints on Accident before I would permitany one to be shown. I saw a print that was absolutelyunrecognizable. There wasn’t a foot of it that I would haveok’ed. Now why was that? Because there are no stan¬dards, there is no data. The American distributors, with adupe negative, are using different raw stock, they areusing different baths, and they get a totally irrelevant,totally different result. Now this happens of course inblack and white but it is less flagrant.If ORMAN MAILER, in Armies of the Night, callsJerry Rubin “the most militant, unpredictable, cre¬ative — therefore dangerous — hippie-orientedleader available on the New Left.”In DO IT!, Jerry Rubin haswritten the most important politicalstatement made by a white revolutionary inAmerica today. It is The Communist Manifestoof our era and as a handbook for Americanrevolutionaries must be compared to CheGuevara’s Guerrilla Warfare.DO IT! is a Declaration of War betweenthe generations — calling on kids toraise a new society uponthe ashes of the old.DO IT! is a prose poem singingthe inside saga of the move¬ment; it is a frenzied emo¬tional symphony for a newsocial disorder; a comicbook for seven-year-olds;a tribute to insanity.Eldridge Cleaver has writtenan introduction to it andQuentin Fiore hasdesigned the bookwith more than 100pictures, cartoons andmind-zaps.Cloth: $5.95, Paper: $2.45Simon and Schuster MENTIONTHEMAROONTHE KM»OF//FF/FF/jEtt/0 FrestFWilt Ot IT-'A7 WIMfir £.00 P/44/Grey City Journal/April 10, 1970DEAR PEOPLE,I SAT DOWN to write a review of this book in a groovyTom Wolfeian style so everyone will know that I am hipand that Jerry Rubin is hip and everything else in theUSA is a bummer because we’re so hip.But I’m not going to.Instead I’m going to write you a letter about the rea¬son I dug this book. I read it during exam week which is avery good time, I’ve found, to read books by Jerry Rubin,comic books by Maruel, and watch mindless TV. Examweek is a time when the ugly University of Chicago, theblue books, bullshit, and intellectual-type crap comesdown hard on everyone here. It’s all so profound that itmakes me sick for at least a week afterwards.Has anyone out there in campus-land thought aboutwhat Richard Flacks meant when he said that “one of thethings I most hold against the University of Chicago is theway it is systematically organized to rob young people oftheir youth. Maybe this is why so many of its inhabitantsgrow old before their time, while others, as a last resort,make calculated use of infantilism.” Flacks sent that fromCalifornia. Jerry Rubin, who has spent a lot of time inthat state says something very much like that: “Thefunction of school is to keep white middle-class youth offthe streets. High schools and colleges are fancy baby¬sitting agencies.“Vietnam and the school system are the two mainfronts in America's genocidal campaign against the youth.Jails and mental hospitals follow closely.”Sure Rubin’s talking about Berkley, and Flacks aboutUC, but the idea’s the same. What did you get on yourfinals? Did it make you happy or sad? Did it make yousick?All of that makes a good deal of sense; I’d been goingaround doing a lot of things that had very little to do withthe classroom, and then along came finals, and ... Ifreaked out. At best they were a chess game, at worst,total bullshit. But of course, yours weren’t or were they?I notice that this year, the professors are talkingabout the ideologies of students, and assigning Soul On Icefor readings. Now that is a sign that the New Left or thestudent revolution or whatever you call it this week isMUSICDURING THE EARLY 1900’s a new musical style wasbeing developed by the people of the southern AppalachianMountains. The music was characterized by fast, livelyguitar, mandolin, and banjo finger-picking with the tunebeing carried by the country fiddle. This new style waspopularized and defined by Bill Monroe and His BluegrassMountain Boys (it was from Monroe’s band name that themusical term “bluegrass” originated). Bluegrass achievedalmost instant popularity when Bill and his band joinedthe Grand Old Opry in 1939. Early Bluegrass was almostentirely instrumental and the phenomenal picking whichgood Bluegrass requires was the hallmark of Monroe’sband and the major contributor towards their enthusiasticpopular reception. Monroe also established the traditionalbluegrass band: the rhythm is carried by two or threeguitars; the bass keeps the beat; the fiddle, banjo, andmandolin alternate solo picking with carrying the tune.Since that time hundreds of groups and individualshave used Bluegrass to achieve popularity; new in¬struments (the bagpipe for example.) and styles havebeen adapted to it; and millions of people love it. For allthese years the center of the evolution of Bluegrass hasstill been the southern Appalachian Mountains of Northand South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia,Georgia, and West Virginia. Good Bluegrass can be heardthroughout the South at Bluegrass Conventions and Festi¬vals which are held during the spring and summer. Theseconventions are not publicized in the North, which is ourloss since they are absolutely fantastic.The oldest, biggest, and quite possibly the best festivalis the Union Grove Convention which is held annually atEastertime in the heart of Bluegrass territory, UnionGrove, North Carolina. This year, over 150 Bluegrassbands (I can personally testify that every one of the bandswas great) and countless individual performers appearedfor the competitions. The band contest as well as the indi¬vidual competitions in mandolin, guitar, clawhammer ban¬jo, five-string banjo, and fiddle are held Good Friday andSaturday evenings. While the evening concerts are great,the best happens in the mornings and afternoons. Hun¬dreds of musicians come to the convention in clans, fami¬lies, groups, and alone. They meet and jam with othermusicians over the campfires and form impromptu bandswhich will compete in the evenings. Also during the day,individuals and groups will try to gauge the audience re¬ception to their new tune or particular style. The majority Rubin’struly dead. Everyone knows that we at the University onlystudy things that are dead. Ah, the final fatal kiss ofdeath. A class on the ideologies of students!Which brings me back to Jerry Rubin’s book. It’s gotlots of pictures and it is designed by Quentin Fiore (of theMedium is the Massage). But it is a book! It’s about theYippies up ’til the People’s Park in Berkley last spring,of individuals are amateurs and they are playing and per¬forming simply because they enjoy it. Slick promoters andmanagers are a rare breed at the festival. Bluegrass ishappy music; the musicians get a happy feeling playingit, and they easily convev their feelings to the audience.The Union Grove Convention was initiated 3 years pri¬or to the Grand Old Opry in 1924 at Eastertime. TheConvention has steadily grown through the years but thisyear, due to the renewed interest in country music, theattendance was more than double that expected. Thou¬sands of freaks from the South, Northeast, and West co¬existed quite happily with equal numbers of people fromMiddle America and the Mountains. It’s too bad that youmissed this year’s convention, but if you are serious abouthearing lots of fine Bluegrass and you don’t want to waituntil next year, there are still many Bluegrass Festivalsand Conventions scheduled throughout the South this com¬ing spring and summer.I’ll mention three of the most promising events. TheOzark Mountain Bluegrass Festival will be held at Emi¬nence. Missouri, in the heart of the Ozarks. There will be3 days of “Bluegrass picking, singing, and square dancingon the banks of the beautiful Jack’s Fork River” July 3, 4,and 5. The Cobb County Buie Grass Festival will be heldat the North Georgia State Fairground, Marrietta,Georgia, May 8 and 9. It should be good (but watch your¬self). Finally, the Grayson County Old Time Fiddler’sConvention will be held at Independence, Virginia June 26,27, and 28. The prize money offered should be enough toattract quite a sizable number of good groups and individ¬ual musicians. If you’re interested in attending any of theabove Conventions or are offering a ride, give me a call at324-7183. Wally HewittPublish!Once more the Grey City Journal editorial staffextends a gracious invitation to all of you untapped,unpublished critics, commentators, observers, photo¬graphers, poets, authors, or just plain opinionated rap¬pers, to submit your stuff to this high-class rag. No¬body has a monopoly on anything — as a matter offact, we rather prefer bright new faces. So get a headstart on the tenure rat race and grace your portfoliowith the pages of the Grey City Journal. Just drop bythe third floor ot Ida Noyes and ask for us. Heroesbut there have been so many changes since then. Weath¬erman, the Panthers repression, the Trial. Bombings inNew York and Spiro on TV. By the time Rubin’s book gotthrough the presses of Simon and Schuster, it is eightmonths later and the Revolution ain’t here yet. Of course,there’s no time limit. Or is there?Do It! follows the ramblings of the happy hippythrough his star-studded career in the history of the stu¬dent movement. From the Berkley Free Speech move¬ment, the Vietnam Day Committee, Rubin’s try at theBerkley mayorship, the HUAC hearings, the founding ofthe Yippies. Then Jerry and Abbie Hoffman burn moneyat the stock exchange, levitate the Pentagon, and organizethe troops for Chicago.In between are the bits of wisdom and philosophy thatprove once and for all that Jerry Rubin really is an in¬telligent evil man, just like Tom Foran said.An important axiom in this philosophy is that the pigsare the best Yippies of all. Like LBJ, Nixon, Spiro, Daley,and Judge Julius. They are the Cause, the Reason, if youwant to know. Which is all very true . ..The introduction is by Eldridge Cleaver, and it’s main¬ly about why Cleaver, the Panther of Panthers, is writingan introduction for Crazy Jerry Rubin.“Jerry makes us laugh at these pigs from their comicexposure, because he knows that once the people laugh atthe king, laugh at their rulers, see them as a pre-posterious joke and fraud, the people will next rise up andkill pigs and destroy their power. A laughed-at pig is adead pig, barbecued Yippie-style. I can dig that, but Irelate most heavily to pig barbecued on the Block.”Which is, after all, the difference between white Yip-pie and Black Panther.But back to Rubin and what he has to say on theuniversity:“The university is a place for making it, a high-pres¬sure rat race. Competition for grades, degrees, books, rec¬ommendations, getting into graduate school and getting agood job.”“The academic world is a hierarchy, and everybody’salways kissing ass of the guy on top of him.”Which is especially true, if you look around you.But in any case the Revolution isn’t here yet. The lastchapter of Do It! is concerned with a detailed descriptionof the great Judgment Day a-comin’ when the good guysbeat the bad guys and happiness reigns. Even Sprio’sdaughter will join the great celebration, but we won’t letDavid Eisenhower come, will we? For more details, readthe book.The cover of this book says that it’s supposed to bethe Communist Manifesto of our era, which is a prettygood trick. Actually, the other one that Marx wrote is toooutdated and it doesn’t have pictures, either. After Marxdied, everyone read his book, and they started to say,“Well, that’s very scientific, you know, but this stuff aboutviolent revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat, Idon’t know .. .”And then the Bolsheviks went ahead and did it, andthen everyone said, “Well it won't happen here.”And then the Chinese went ahead and did it.And then the Cubans went ahead and did it.And then the Vietnamese went ahead and did it.Who knows, it just might happen here.After all, Jerry Rubin did it.• Love, SteveApril 10, 1970/Grey City Journal/5Harvesting the Bluegrass■iI'Vfc'VSH'VlHllVl’U «>-<>. *•»•*■* » * * * i * » f • ’ . ‘ > *"»'*•NEIGHBOR FINDS STABBED BODY OF MISSING GIRL.AGED TWOSURTAXI PRESIDENT S AIDES DENY HE PLEDGED A PULL OUT By 19701 UC REGENTS BARRED FROM FIRING REDSm*|LfATE ■Our thing is your ring —ShlJhm^h»'Nf fwfifts tot 59 YfAtS FACULTY:PROBLEMS?Unusual problems of fac¬ulty income warrant specialattention.Will complete your formsor advise you how to do it.Call 752-7047for appointment119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZARUGBYDisplay your athletic prowess and stu¬pidity ... play RUGBYThe U of C club needs more bodies tomutilate and saturate with beer. No ex¬perience is necessary.Practices at 4 pm Tues. and Thurs. atStagg Field.Attention - Men Under 25Save $$ On Auto Insurance.S25.000 B.l. and P.D. SI .000 Madkol Payand Unimwiad Motorati ProtectionSingle MaleAge 21 - 25.Married MaleAge 21 -25.... *139J76 per 6 me.per 6 mo.WITH GOOD STUDENT &YOUNG DRIVER DISCOUNTSENTRY. ITINSURANCE Jim Crane238-0971 The University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street & Woodlawn AvenueSun., April 26, 3:30 P.M.IsraelInEggpt(The Exodus Story)byGeorge Frederick HandelRICHARD VIKSTROM,Director ef Chanel MusicROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 24 members efTHE CHICAGOSYMPHONY ORCHESTRARosemery Bock, sopranoPhyllis Unosawe, contraltoDonald Doig, tenorEdward Mondello, organistTICKETS:$4.S0 Reserved; S3 SO General Adm.$2.50 for Students of ell collegesend universitiesAVAILA0U:TICKETRON outlets et Marine City,and ell Montgomery Ward end Mar¬shall Field stores. Cooley's Corner,5211 S. Harper Ave., Woodworth'sBookstore. 1311 E. 57th St.Mail Orders to:Chapel Music,Rockefeller ChapelSfth Street end Woodlawn AvenueChioago 40437Please enclose self - addressed,stamped envelope and make chockpayable to The University of Chicago. Its not only a!970Volvo.Its a 1974 trip to Europeand a!978 swimming pool.Hus a\oU tr.»m M,d.Hl \ Idler m IGTll soulsl J «Jr*ni4lM «nu'liluirs|IAj IJni'dtlirUrip> in rear dmJilitcf idtpHioMN \f.ii-mitisinp. ^KlsasH.rtur.SlHHfUtiFli.it * terrauee- rise f.„ s mt »mlI- Uiif tliv ...me- » tie ...»... ait.-m m h.mpra* ell VitlMve*. IK 1**711.f.s U*l. • W. . 4|»*l *dX f.e.W .r.-llw. ‘ IIHl t IMMIph f.MletgtfC. IhiI <>.««.sfr-srs v .. .telH.mmR pn»l.l<i Vtthiw .rju^rrrsl Iwir m* I 'M (tilths l nititriluUnatin* l*«telc\«*n ir^r* net F niopr aihI -sstnini.npII.w.th*-,,>.,<! • It i.wm Vllo*S» thrsw- irar* frsmi nu». I'jp**.xsm vImh.1.1 li.tr! Vtete^ lf y.„ hi.thr, mf.HHMtH«ikt*s'|>r«iK ihr .n.Mirx \ ••ss'ifmir mllliri'ai lli.sl nukr.mally pprnsi (sir a irs. tjr. ihwm |»*»iWr. ■ .n-.ili u»4e^esicdfc4c4c2ic9ic2^2|e9|n|a|c4F Cornell florist J* 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, IU. 60615 *2 Phone: FA 4-1651 m** *********** 6120 S. WESTERN Hnlfi Uj]your local gasstation.It you've not ,1 hit ol larccnv invour heart,you’ll low theRenault 10.Vhi see. it yets 15 miles to the)$il Inn.And as tar as j»as stations areconcerned, 'hat’s highway rohKrv' S' don't he tin' harsh u hen theK'\s at vour local ^.s station acta little jjrumpvIn fact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it costst«' hu\ a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then surest thev <ict one torthemselves.After all, they mijjht have a hiti't larceny in|their heartstoo. ln2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550OVERLAND EXPEDITIONTO INDIAleaves London late June., s485Details EncounterOverland23 Manor House Drive,London, NW6PASSOVER APRIL 20-28SEDER 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:$1.50SUPPERS: 6.15 p.m.Wednesday, April 22 toMonday, April 27.Cost:$2.50RESERVATIONS: Deadline April 10. Norefunds after April 15. Payment mustaccompany reservations.at aH°tuTAUTY: H°me hosPitality at a student seder, with a student family, „neighboring Reform, Conservative, or Orthodox congregation, or congregational familycan be arranged through Hillel. 1HILLEL 5715 WOODLAWN752-1127 MUSICRAFT FOR SOUND ADVICESAVE$170ON H. H. SCOTT'S TOP RECEIVERSCOTT 388B160 WATT AM-FM RECEIVERSOLID STATE2 YEAR WARRANTYREG.*45 000 NOW$27995FREE DELIVERY FOR U of CSTUDENTS OR FACULTY•MmiCiaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-65006/Grey City Journal/April 10, 1970SmallStepsForwardOne Day at a Time by Joan Baez (Anguard VSD-79310):VSD-79310):I am not a Joan Baez fan from way back. Frankly,Miss Baez has always bored me. She sings every song inthe same, unemotional style, yet she is still a big name.When I heard One Day at a Time, I began to understandBaez’s popularity.This album does not redeem Joan Baez entirely. Shedoes have a technically perfect voice. Her range is limitedin the lower register, but she reaches high notes verywell, with steadiness and clarity. She often engages invocal theatrics that are pleasant, if not always useful. Butthis alone does not make her a good singer. On this albumshe still sounds dead half of the time. Yet in the otherhalf, she does do some very good things. “Sweet Sir Gala-had” written by Miss Baez is my favorite cut on therecord. Perhaps because she wrote it, Miss Baez putsmore feeling and warmth into it than she does in most ofher other songs. Lyrically, this song is also quite good,telling the story of Joan’s sister, Mimi, who was widowedby the talented writer and performer, Dick Farina. Othergood cuts on the record are “Ghetto” by Delaney of Dela¬ney and Bonnie fame, “Joe Hill”, “A Song for David”(Joan Baez’s husband, David, is in jail for draft resis-tence), and .“No Expectations” by Mick Jagger and KeithRichard of the Rolling Stones. The success of these songsrests equally with Miss Baez and the very good Nashvilleback-up group.There are also some bad cuts on the record, thoughthey do not outweigh the alburns good qualities. “LongBlack Veil” was done by Joan Baez a long time ago, butshe updates it here. Unfortunately, she still refuses tochange genders with the result that in her high sopranovoice, she sings that she was “in the arms of my bestfriend’s wife.” Her version of “Carry It On” is very inferi¬or to Judy Collins’ and many of the other songs are typi¬cally dull in the Joan Baez tradition.Yet I still like this album. Either Joan Baez is gettingbetter or I am becoming more aware of her talents. Inany case, One Day at a Time is my favorite Joan Baezalbum and if you like her, that should say quite a bit.John B. Sebastian by John Sebastian (Reprise 6379):John Sebastian sings like Crosby, Stills, Nash andYoung. In fact, Crosby, Stills, Nash, plus their drummer Dallas Taylor all perform on John Sebastian’s album andhe appeared on their great record, Deja Vu, so the com¬parison is not far-fetched at all. Like CSN&Y, Sebastiansings folksy, gentle songs and also captures the same ex¬perienced but enthusiastic spirit that CSN&Y is famous for.Since John Sebastian left the Lovin’ Spoonfuls almosttwo years ago, he has been working on his solo album.Two years is a long time to work on one album and this isthe major complaint against John B. Sebastian; it is oftenover-refined. Some of the songs, particularly “BabyDon’t Ya Get Crazy”, “Fa-Fana-Fa” and “What SheThinks About” have been worked on so hard and trackedby so many different performers and instruments thatJohn Sebastian often gets lost. On stage, John Sebastianusually performs alone and plays just an accoustic guitar.If he had done this on all of this album instead of just onhalf of it, the album would have been a much greatersuccess. Instead, he is often blanketed under Stills’ guitar,the Ikettes back-up singing and fourteen other featuredperformers.However, every song on this album is a great com¬position. Sebastian’s imagery is fresh and original. Histunes are catchy and memorable. Because of this, evenhis over-produced songs are interesting and partially suc¬cessful. And then there are the other songs, some aretruly superb. “Red-Eye Express”, “She’s a Lady” and“You’re a Big Boy Now” are my favorites. The last twoare very quiet and very catchy with John Sebastian’swarm voice spreading easiness and comfort. Even someof the multi-tracked songs like “Red Eye Express” suc¬ceed. After all, the featured performers on the album areall extremely talented and when their talent and Sebastianmatch up correctly, success is unavoidable. John B. Se¬bastian. All in all, a fine record.Morrison Hotel by the Doors (Elektra EKS -75007):After their last and worst album, Soft Parade, theDoors had almost no where to go but up and Morrison Hotel is a step in the right direction. Unfortunately, it isnot a giant step, only a small one. The record returns thegroup to rock and roll, at which they are quite adept,after a period of over-produced, violined, sweet Morrisonsongs like “Touch Me.”The album opens with “Roadhouse Blues”, a goodhard song on which Morrison (that old sex symbol) onlygets homy once or twice. Lonnie Mack, a fine guitarist,plays bass on this song giving the group a new sound.However, following this good start, the group regressesinto the lizardy escapades of Jim Morrison with “Waitingfor the Sun”. Morrision sometimes writes good songs. Thisis not one of them. His poetry is often excellent. This isnot one of those times. Count this song as a completeloss.After that, the album moves back and forth from goodhard rock to shlock poetry and typical Doors music. Yeteven at their worst on this album, the Doors still seem tobe heading somewhere and they do have inherent talent.Krieger, Manzarek and Densmore (the other Doors) areall fine instrumentalists and they can be heard better onthis album than they have in a long time. Let’s hope that •the Doors continue to move in a forward direction. Theyonce had the potential to be the best group in America.Somewhere along the way, they lost the right road andnow they seem to be finding it again.The Great PumpkinContributorsSteve Cook is a third year student in the College.He is the assistant news editor of the Maroon.Wally Hewitt is a student in the College.John Holt is a member of the committee on socialthought, and is teaching at the University of IllinoisCircle Campus.GITYjsuftimturns turnsLook Out, Dry Dock!Continued from Page TwoThe Lot Assigned and Christmas Eve with Miss Fe-tengill are two original one-act plays by Don Abrahamsonand Lucille Bluestein respectively. Hull House PlaywrightsCenter, 222 W. North, Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Epiphany Theatre Company presents three one-act plays with the intriguing titles of Sand, Antigone andSomeone. They’re at the Jane Adams Center of HullHouse, 3212 N. Broadway on Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Organic Thtalre’s adaptation of Animal Farm isbeing shown Thursdays and Fridays at 8 pm and Satur¬days at 8 and 10:30. The theatre is located at 925 W.Diversey, 477-1977, and tickets are $2.50 except on Thurs¬days when students can get in for a buck.Blues and Soul PlacesSOUTH SIDE - Must be 21Burning Spear 55th and StateTurner’s 39th and IndianaPepper’s 43rd and VincennesTheresa’s 48th and IndianaI Spy 500 W 63rdClub DeLisa’s 56th and StateBlue Flame Oakwood and Cottage GroveSouth Side Jazz every Wednesday 9-4 am at Jose¬phine’s Pumpkin Room, 2015 E. 71st St. Call 288-9331 formore information.WEST SIDEShantay 4654 W. MadisonEddie Shaw’s Lounge 4423 W. Madison L and A 1422 S. PalaskiWalton’s Corner S. Roosevelt and Washtenaw1815 Club Annex 1815 W. RooseveltLicking Stick 1700 W. RooseveltSportsman’s Roosevelt and KedzieKey Largo Roosevelt and DamenFlamingo 2500 W. RooseveltArtThe Museum of Contemporary Art presents an exhibi¬tion called “Evidence on the Flight of Six Fugitives”which displays the works of Michael Heizer, Peter Hut¬chinson, Richard Long, Walter de Maria, Dennis Oppen-heim, and Robert Smithson. All react against the idea ofpermanence. The museum is at 237 E. Ontario.£ Here 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, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxC. F. Z. HitchcockFrank 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.April 10, 1970/Grey City Journal/7WE'D LIKE YOU TOGET FROCKEDJOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTERWITH A RANK OFDOCTOR OF DIVINITY"And ye shall know the truth and the truthshall make you free" John 8:32We wont men and women of oil ages, who believe as we do, to joinus in the holy search for Truth. We believe that all men should seekTruth by all just means. As one of our ministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for exemption fromproperty and other taxes.3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiasticpowers.4. Get sizeable cash grants for doing our missionary work.5. Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries.We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, theaters, etc.,give reduced rates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinity and I.D.card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use when you wish to ordainothers. Your ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere in thiscountry. Your money back without question if your package isn'teverything you expect it to be. For an additional $10 we will sendyour Ordination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND NOW TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHP.O. Box 1393, Dept. GBEvanston, Illinois 60204 You don't have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip”.LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueBERTONEBODYFiat balances new engine,independent suspension, radialtires, superb handling to make thisthe Pace Car for the 70's!Fiat 850Sport Racer JESSELSON’Sre752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 -1340 E. 53rdMORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST. Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHLITZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNR0GBNHi HHHHHI11 ■ 1. e a ■ ■ Jr6120 S. WESTERNOPEN SUNDAY471-0900 ccEXPANDYOUR MINDTHROUGHTRAVELCooks Travel Cheques are your passport to adventure Special StudentMini-Price, only 50CperS100 issuance charge. With prompt refund if lostor stolen. Go with Cooks.. .''The Action Money.'' STUDENTS FACULTYMME> MONEY <SAVEBUYATOUR • LP RECORDS • AUDIO EQUIPMENT• PRE-RECORDED and BLANK TAPES• MUSICAL INSTRUMENTSWHOLESALE PRICESCOMPETE WITH ANYONEEARN • MONEY for YOURSELF on EVERY SALEYOU MAKE• SAVE MONEY for YOUR FELLOWSTUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERSFOR FULL,. DETAILSCONTACTMl. JACK COHEN - DISTRIBUTORS, INC.46-35 54th ROADMASPETH, N.Y 11378(212) 361-3088* SUBSIDIARY ofSAM GO OO V , INC.DON’T MISS YOUR FLIGHT TO EUROPE!FLIGHT AIRLINE DATES DESTINATION FARE70A AIR CANADA June 23Sept. 20 Chicago/ParisLondon/Chicago $24070B EL AL June 26Sept. 11 New York/LondonLondon/New York $18970C AIR CANADA Aug. 8Sept. 7 Chicago/Paris $229London/Chicago waiting List70D AIR CANADA Sept. 2Oct. 2 Chicago/AmsterdamLondon/Chicago $21970E TWA Sept. 4Sept. 25 New York/LondonLondon/New York $205i U. of C. CHARTER FLIGHTSIDA NOYES HALL, #306Ml 3-0800 - EXT. 3598, 3272 ?i CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998* Has what you need from a $10Yused 9 x 12 Rug, to o custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants<Mill returns at a fraction of the *^original cost.tDecoration Colors and Qualities▼Additional 10% Discount|Adj FREE DELIVERY TY$e■s net 8arr5Ctn be 3 par*otAnd V0uc;enpartTa^P3*inle'^rro- act'°"tar^?. worncomthe fortwi oner-*V *7\VAtAA* T4UPOS!) A nr ••AOC ciSCO'mO'U’tO nAw*.*c5 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 & LAUNDRYSH0RELAND 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. FingerhutPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive8/Grey City Journal/April 16, 1676 • 9h0WtKH’rt^.r \yi riyv. * i -S-» V*. ■« t A*. avW.Ml FV Mr 4 4*. v ., r. mum>»■***+ **-•■■«■*-**<Military Meet SecretlyIn Asian Studies Buildingother uniformed men.Further substanciation for the meetingcame from Steven Davidson, graduatestudent in Far Eastern Studies, who hadspoken to a janitor in Foster about 9:30pm. He asked the janitor if any militarymen had been seen. According to Davidson,he started to take him to the meeting room.When Davidson said “I not part of themeeting, I’m just looking for it,” thejanitor said, “It’s a secret meeting” andrefused to give further information. Whenquestioned about the military man by aMaroon reporter, the janitor replied, “Theman you are looking for left two hoursago,” repeated several times that no meet¬ing was going on and seemed amused atall the excitement.A thorough Bondian search of the build¬ing proved all rooms empty except 102,where four men in business suits wereseated around a table.Two students, however, said they over¬heard fragments of conversation from themeeting in 102 earlier that evening.One young man, a graduate of the Uni¬versity, said he heard the men discussingproblems of “basic training.”“Someone was telling the men to lockup their wallets when they go to thelatrine and how much underwear to take,”he said. “He also explained that 1200 hoursmeans 5 o’clock in the afternoon.”The four men left Foster about 10:30 pm,The first man, asked if he was a professorgave the answer, “None of your business.”“Are you from the University of Chi¬cago?”“Yes.”“What department are you?”“Oh, I do a lot of things.”According to Trudy Karlson, 70, thejanitor told one student that the militarymeeting has been carried on, “for years,every three or so months.”Hospital Obtains Patient Care FundsThe 22nd annual dinner dance of theNathan Goldblatt society for cancer re¬search will be Sunday, April 12, in the Con¬rad Hilton Hotel.A highlight of the program will be thepresentation of the society’s annual checkto the University hospitals and clinics,which will be used for indigent patientcare. It will be accepted by F Regis Kenna,director of the University hospitals andclinics. An affiliate of the Nathan Goldblatt Me¬morial Hospital, one of the 11 hospitals andclinics making up the medical complex atthe University, the Nathan GoldblattSociety has raised nearly $750,000 to sup¬port cancer research and patient care.Both the Society and the hospital werenamed for Nathan Goldblatt, a prominentChicago businessman associated with theGoldblatt Brothers department stores, whodied of cancer in 1946. The organization to raise funds in hismemory was planned by Mrs Goldblatt, asponsor of the society; Mrs Samuel Pines,and Mrs. Morris Olin. It came into officialexistence in 1948, with Mrs. Morris J Silveras the first president. Nine hundred mem¬bers were enrolled the first year.The current officers, in addition to MrsGoldblatt as sponsor, are Mrs Silver, honor¬ary president, and Mrs Harold Friedman,president.By Sarah GlazerThe appearance of a man in militaryuniform in the Far Eastern Library lastnight provoked speculation about the exist¬ence of a military meeting on campus.Arriving at Foster Hall about 10 pmlast night a Maroon reporter found sevenstudents talking excitedly outside the build¬ing. Only Hal Pollard, 70, who works inthe Far Eastern Library, had actuallyseen the uniformed men. Pollard said,“two-siarred general about 50 with a mandressed like a seargent and carrying anattache case” entered the library about 8pm asking for two men.They told the security guard on dutythat they were looking for a meeting. Theguard then called the security office tofind out the meeting’s location, Pollardsaid According to Pollard, “the securityoffice said they didn’t know of any meet¬ing. so the guard said it must have been asecret meeting.”The guard took the military man toFoster, the Southeast Asia Studies Build¬ing.• On his return the guard reported he hadfound the meeting at which were sevenSteve AokiIn The Name of HumanityVOTE NO ON THE QUESTION OFIMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL FROM VIET NAMStop the killing? . . . End the fighting? . . . Peace and freedom for Asia? . . . These are the objectives allAmericans should be advocating. But they will never be accomplished by an immediate withdrawal.From the beginning of the war until the present time, untold atrocities have been committed by the Com¬munist forces in the name of “liberation.” These Communist massacres are planned and organized. They are anintegral part of Communist war policy rivaling in brutality the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis in World War II.THE PERPETRATORS ARE REWARDED AND PROMOTED, NOT TRIED BY COURTS-MARTIAL.Whatever America’s mistakes have been in Viet Nam, they cannot be remedied by the horrible consequencesof immediate withdrawal."I think it wouldbe a major mistaketo unilaterallywithdraw.”Robert F. KennedyWisconsin State JournalMarch 28, 1968 "While immediatewithdrawal would endthe war, it wouldlose the peace.”Eugene McCarthyCBS NewtMarch 12, 1968"The first consequence, as anyone can foresee, (of immediate withdrawal) will be the cold-blooded massacre of acouple of million South Vietnamese who have put their faith and confidence in the United States.”Joseph Alsop, October, 1969■ ■ ■ ■Most students supported the policy of continued training and arming of the South Vietnamese to defendthemselves. Most students do not advocate the dangerous policy of “peace at any price.”RESPONSIBLE VOICES MUST BE HEARD . . . VOTE Mfl ON APRIL 1314Aaril 10. IWO/Th. ChteMH>For group rates call DE 7-1118PLATDCy’S ALL-NIGHT SUCHPttKMMANUVtBIOfiT 1 SMUtOM KXlOWING lAST B(GUIAS KATUBli- \ .vv V»\ W ’« VV »1»' * Van '.vr<%'tVl'r,«' f ■Pierce Cinema PresentsSundayApril 12 THE SHOP OH MAIH STREETAcademy Award - Best Foreign Film of '65Saecial Prize — Cannes Film Festival Cobb Hall7:00 & 9:15April 10WILD IN THE STREETSShelly Winters & Christopher Jones April 11MONTEREY POP FESTIVALJonis Joplin, Anri HandraxApril 17WILD ANGIESPeter Fonda 1 Nancy Sinatra April 18FACESJohn CassavetesApril 24Warren Boa tty-Eva Mario SaintAll FALL DOWN April 25ROMEO A JULIETMay 1Janies CobarnTHE PRESIDENT'S ANALYST May 2Zero MattelTHE PRODUCERSAugust 2THE PRODUCERSZero MattelAugust 1THE PRESIDENT'S ANALYST OPERAHOUSEFRIDAY,APRIL 24at 8:30 P.M.Tickets: $6.50, 5.50,4.50,3.50BOX OfnCE OPENS TOMORtOW APRIL 6MAIL ORDERS TO 20 N. Wocker Drive Enclose Self-Addressed, Stamped EnvelopeMust Be Postmarked No Later Then April 17th . LIMITED ENGAGEMENT BEAVERS Stete INDEFINITE ENGAGEMENT On (he,,end Chestnut. April 10th end 11th. April letest elbum "Duet- The Illinois Speed Press19th, ?0th end 2Ht On Columbia Records "Duet" is available atell Polk Bros stores for only $2 99We Want You To Join Our ChurchAs AnOrdained MinisterAnd Have The Rank OfDoctor of DivinityWe are a "on-structured faith, undenominational,with no traditional doctrine or dogma Our fastgrowing church is actively seeking new ministerswho beheve what we believe. All men are entitledto their own convictions. To seek truth their ownway. whatever it may be, no questions asked Asamintstet of the church, you may1. Start your own church and apply for exemption from property and other taxes2 Perform marriages baptism, funerals andall other ministerial functions.3 Enioy reduced rates from some modes oftransportation some theaters, stores, hotels,etc4 Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries We will teh you howEnclose a free will donation for the Minister'scredentials and license We also issue Doctor ofDivinity Degrees We are State Chartered and yourordinatior is recognized in all 50 states and mostforeign countries FREE LIFE CHURCH-BOX 4039. HOLLYWOOD. FLORIDA 33023 Raleigh bicyclesdon't cause cancer.Smoke one todayCheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh. Robin Hood. Falcon,Peugeot. Gitane, Merrier.Coppi and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. I sedbicvcles spasmodically.Fly-bv-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8Smoke a Raleigh bicycle today DODD HOUSE PRESENTS ACELLO-PIANO RECITALLarry SteinCello Larry MendesPianoPerforming works byBeethoven, Greig, & HindemithSaturday, April 11,1970 - 8:30 PMMandel Hall, 57th & UniversityAdmission FreeThe Department of Musicand theFromm Music FoundationTHE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS OFTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORALPH SHAPEY • Music DirectorW orks bv Dugger • Rhodes • Copland • FossFRIDAY • APRIL 10 • 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission free w ith ticket. Tickets at Concert Office, 5835 l niversitv Ave. FAR EAST KITCHENCHINESE* AMERICANFOOD* COCKTAILSOpen daily 10 - 10Fri.&Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E, 53rd955-2229TAhSAM-YMfCHIN ESE-AME RICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outi PIZZA ;PkATOMPixxa, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsI Compare the Price! II I11460 E, 53rd 643-2800|I WE DELIVER I woman in thedunesDirected by HIROSHI TESHIGAHARASATURDAY APRIL, II" *C06BMAll " 7 30 A 00 ADMISSlONi I OOTKKtTS SI.SOPLAYBOY IV]10/The Chicago Maroon/April 10, 1970Jean-Paul and Jean-LacBelmondo and GodardPIERROT LE FOUIN COLOR AND IN CINEMASCOPETONIGHT!! Cobb Hall 7:15 and 9:30 $1.00BMt ColonyAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAY MftMT Mr «kjf» VFjt-m*Coulson ElectedJohn Coulson, vice-president in charge ofresearch at the Leo Burnett Company, Inc.,Chicago, has been elected president of theUniversity’s Alumni Association Cabinet,the governing body of the University’s 80,-000 alumni.Coulson succeeds outgoing President FayH. (Mrs. Calvin P.) Sawyier.Other officers of the 148-member Cabinetinclude Richard J. Smith (AB 37, JD 39),Chesterton, Indiana, who was re-electedVice-President; and two new Vice-Presi¬dents: Geralding Smithwick Alvarez (PhB’34), Chicago, and Robert E Mann (MBA’52, JD ’56), Chicago.Coulson, born in Chicago, joined theBurnett agency in 1950 as a research super¬visor. He was named manager of the re¬search department in 1955 and was appoint¬ed to his present position in 1957. From 1948to 1950 he was senior associate at JosephWhite & Associates, and from 1938 to 1948with Montgomery Ward & Company.He received his AB degree from the Uni¬versity in 1935 and an MBA from HarvardUniversity in 1938. He served in the Navyfrom 1941 to 1945 and is a retired Lieuten¬ant Commander in the United States NavalReserve.He is Past President of the Chicago chap¬ters of the American Statistical Associationand the American Marketing Association,as well as past Vice-President of the AMAnational organization (1968-69).Art FairA screening for artists who wish to exhib¬it their works in June at the 23rd annual57th Street Art Fair will be held at 9:30 amSaturday, April 11, in the First UnitarianChurch of Chicago, 5650 South WoodlawnAvenue.Judges will select 50 artists, craftsmen,and photographers from the more than 100 the building, not to persuade the landlord tosign a tenant’s contract. Tenants maintainthat they have not discussed a strike.Moneyexpected to bring their works to the screen¬ing.Each of those “fortunate 50” and 200 vet¬eran exhibitors will set up shop from noonto dusk Saturday and Sunday, June 6 and 7,on the playground of the Ray School, East57th Street and South Kimbark Avenue.This year, for the first time, photographywill be accepted. A few of the 50 selectedartists will receive Newcomer Awards.Judging painting and sculpture will beRichard Florsheim, Mary Gehr, andRudolph Pen.Selecting exhibitors of crafts will be Her¬man Garfield, Leah Balsam, and Maria Ka-zazis.Judging photographs will be Harold Allen Steve Aokiand Joe Jachna.All the judges are prominent local artists.The 57th Street Art Fair is the oldest inthe Chicago area. Admission will be with¬out ticket and without charge. Also, the ex¬hibiting artists will not be charged commis¬sions by the fair.Rent StrikeSome residents of 5327-35 S DorchesterAve, who began holding rent April 1, havesubmitted changes in the information whichthe Maroon received from another sourceand printed concerning the tenants’ action.Tenants point out that they are withhold¬ing rent to protest inadequate conditions in The University has received $388,850from the United States Office of Educationfor the 1970-71 academic year under the Na¬tional Defense Education Act.The funds will be made available forgraduate fellowships for the study of for¬eign languages and related subjects.They are part of a nationwide total ofapproximately $5.75 million in federal fundsmade available for the program, now in its11th year.The grant to the University is the thirdlargest sum given to any one university for1970-71. Columbia University and the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin are the only in¬stitutions scheduled to receive largeramounts.By area of subject matter, the approxi¬mate number of fellowships to be madeavailable at the University are:• East Asia, 21;• USSR and Eastern Europe, 11;• Latin America, 3;• Middle East, 14;• South Asia, 24; and• Western Europe, 5.Nationwide, students participating in the1970-71 program will receive training inabout 60 foreign languages and such relatedstudies as geography, history, and anthro¬pology in the areas of the world wherethese languages are spoken.Schools receiving the grants will nomi¬nate for selection qualified students whoare preparing for careers in teaching orpublic service.Fellowship awards cover tuition and re¬lated fees, and each fellow receives ap¬proximately $2,250 for the academic yearand $500 for each dependent.Continued on Page 13Phil OchsTonightRockefeller ChapelConcert time 8:30 p.m. Tickets on sale until 8:30 p.m. atthe Mandel Hall box office. $3.00 and $2.00.Attend the Vietnam Moratorium Committee rallyWednesday April 15, at 10 a.m. Featured speaker, SenatorCharles Goodell. Buses will leave at 11:15 for the noon rally atthe Civic Center Plaza.TIX AT DOOR TOOApril 10, 1970/Th® Chicago Maroon/11■rIF YOU HAVE 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 to, your school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. Phone:767 2070 Phone:767 2070AIRPORT CYCLE SALES4520 W. 63rd ST.CHICAGOPrices from S 169.00 Open Daily to 9 P M. Sat to 4 P.M.Theatre First, Inc.presents"ONDINE"By Jean GiraudouxDirected by Nancy KoleDramatic Fantasy - A Classic Beauty!Friday-Saturday-Sunday PerformancesApril 10 Through April 26(Curtain 8:30 p.m.. Sun., 7:30)STUDENT DISCOUNT WITH ID • $1.25(Regular Admission, $2.00)AT THE ATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport - 463-3099 RESERVE A PROFITABLE HIGH PAYINGJOB FOR THIS SUMMER WITHGOOD HUMOR CORP.IN 1969 OUR COLLEGE STUDENTEMPLOYEES AVERAGED OVER $150 00PER WEEK*.HOW DO YOU QUALIFY?• WORK TWOPART TIMEDAYS PER WEEK(3-8 P.M. OR 4-9 P.M.)Five nights a week Randy Morrisoncompetes with the likes of Dick Cavett, Merv Griffin,Johnny Carson and the late movies.Randy Morrison presents progressive sounds..Weeknights from 7 'til midnight.Catch it when you can.WLSFM Fight air pollution.S3FREOW12/The Chicago Maroon/April 10, 1970. » \.5SM. - » ,y . • WORK SAT. A SUN.UNTIL SCHOOL IS OVER(8 HRS. EACH DAY)WHAT WILL YOU EARNON A PART TIME BASIS?• OUR RECORDS INDICATE EARNINGS OF$50.00 to $100.00 PER WK. PART TIME.IF YOU FULFIL THE ABOVE WE GUARANTEE AFULL TIME SUMMER POSITION WHEN YOU AREAVAILABLE.INTERVIEWS EVERYDAY (7 DAYS) 9 A.M.-5 P.M.4825 W. ARTHINGTON ST.TWO BLKS. SO. OF CONGRESS XWAYAT CICERO AVE.•BASED ON 10 WEEKS EMPLOYMENT ON ACOMMISSION BASIS OF 20-22%.THECARPET BARNWAREHOUSE BOOKVv> and Used CarpelsRemnants and Roll Ends NOOKOrirntal Reproductions Special OrdersAntique French Wilton Modern Library,Full Line New DirectionsFur Rugs & Fur (oats Most Paperback LinesInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Davs Tues.-thru Sat. 9-41228 W. kinzie 243-2271 /(/.< Student Discount on QunhtiPaperbacks A Hardcovers1540E. 55th St.-Ml 3-7511Inner-City Creative Arts andBlues Show Sunday, April 12-Mandel Hall ,Art work by prison inmatesdisplayed for sale2:00 - 9:00 p.m.Minority Coalition Organization of SSA issponsoring this benefit for two.Blues ShowChicago Blues BandHomesick JamesSunny Lind SlimShaky HortonMat. 5:30 p.m. Eve. 8:30 p.m.Prices $3.50 - $3.00 - $2.50Tickets on sale Mandel HallBox office Mon. - Sun. 1:00 - 5:00 p.m.r~MliL iVJiikn Jirivii.iiMLAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYContinued from Page 11Visiting ProfsMichael Polanyi, a philosopher at Oxford,Harry Prosch, professor and chairman ofthe pnilosophy department at Skidmore col¬lege, Saratoga Springs, New York, Ben¬jamin Nadel, a scholar in the history andlanguages of the Black Sea area, andFrantisek Svejkovsky, professor at CharlesUniversity, Prague, Czechoslovakia haveall been appointed visiting professor at theUniversity.Polanyi and Prosch have both beennamed Howard Willett visiting professorsin the college for this quarter. They will bethe fourth and fifth scholars to hold the po¬sition since the Willett Charitale Founda¬tion of Chicago created the post in 1967.Roger Hildebrand, dean of the college,said of Polanyi that his frequent visits overthe last 20 years have added distinction tothe University. Polanyi will deliver fourlectures, open to the public without charge,on “Kinds of Knowledge.”Prosch will give a course entitled “Sci¬ence and Man: Polanyi’s Thought.” Hisarea of academic interest is the ethics andpolitical philosophy and he has done re¬search on Plato, Kant, Hegel and Polanyi.Nadel, a former professor at the Univer¬sities of Lodz, Poland and Leningrad,USSR, is currently conducting lectures forgraduate students and faculty of the centerfor Balkan and Slavic students at the Uni¬versity. He will serve as a visiting profes¬sor in the humanities division this quarterand will offer courses in the history of theJews in eastern Europe to both graduateand undergraduate humanities and socialscience students.Svejkovsky, a distinguished medievalistwith a special emphasis on the Czech me¬dieval era has previously served as a vis¬iting professor in France, Germany and Italy. He will be a visiting associate profes¬sor of Slavic languages and literatureshere.YPSL ConferenceMichael Harrington, author of The OtherAmerica and The Accidental Century willbe the featured speaker at the MidwestYoung People’s Socialist League confer¬ence in Breasted Hall Saturday at 3:30 pm.The conference will include four othersessions. Friday, at 8 pm, Peter Novick,associate professor of modem Europeanhistory and Penn C Kembel, former nation¬al secretary of the Socialist party will dis¬cuss problems of American foreign inter¬ventionism, in Ida Noyes east lounge.Saturday and Sunday sessions of the con¬ference will convene in Reynold’s club. At10:30 am Saturday, a discussion of the la¬bor movement in the United States will fea¬ture Carmen Mendoza, state president of Mike Brantthe state, county and municipal employeesof the AFL-CIO; Saul Mendelson, chapterchairman of Local 1600, American Feder¬ation of Teachers; and John Chico, finan¬cial secretary of Local 65 of the UnitedSteelworkers.Sunday at 11 am, biology professors Ron¬ald Alderfer and Richard Levins, will dis¬cuss the fight for a clean environment.At the final session Sunday at 1:30 pm,James Burnett, professor of political sci¬ence at Berkeley, will discuss American so¬cialism, past, present, and future.Department ChairmanEugene Parker, originator of the conceptof solar wind, has been named chairman ofthe physics department, and CR O’Dell,professor of astronomy has been reap¬pointed chairman of the astronomy and as¬trophysics department and director of Yer-kes Observatory. Parker, a member of the faculty since1955, currently is professor of physics andastronomy. He will be replacing Mark In¬graham, Allison distinguished service pro¬fessor of physics who will return tofull-time teaching after ten years as de¬partment chairman.O’Dell has served as chairman of his de¬partment since 1966. He was appointed afull professor in 1968 after spending threeyears at the University. He had previouslytaught at the University of California atBerkeley.VISATo protest Illinois legislative attempts tocut funds for mental health, members ofVISA (Volunteer Institutional Service Ac¬tivity) will hold a press conference Mondayat 10 am at the State of Illinois Building,160 N LaSalle.“The only way anything can be done is toshow VISA’S and public support for mentalhealth programs,” said Janine Jason ’71, aVISA worker at Chicago State Hospital.All VISA workers and interested personsare urged to show support at the meeting.People's 20Support campaigns continue this weekendfor the People’s 20, the anti-machine slateof 20 candidates running for control of theWoodlawn Model Area Council, local plan¬ning agency for Woodlawn’s Model CitiesProject, before the election Tuesday.Saturday at 10:30 am, a People’s 20 pa¬rade will move from campaign headquar¬ters at 63rd St and Kimbark to CottageGrove Ave.At a meeting for pollwatchers Sundaynoon at HQ, 1228 E 63rd St, election lawsand “how to handle the machine’s precinctcaptains” will be explained.Continued on Page 15xLegal and Economic Aspects of Pollution"Panel Discussion with University of Chicago Faculty V.^x-x-xw-wxw* Milton Friedman, the Paul Snowden Russell DistinguishedService Professor of Economics* Ronald H. Coase, Professor of Economics in the Law Schooland the Graduate School of Business* R. Stephen Berry, Professor of Chemistry and in the JamesFranck Institute* Harold Demsetz, Professor of Business Economics in theGraduate School of Business* George Anastaplo, Lecturer in Liberal Arts at the UniversityExtensionADMISSION FREE7:30 p.m. Monday, April 13Mandel Hall, 1131 East 57th StreetSponsored by the University's Center for Policy Study in cooperationwith the student-faculty Ad Hoc Committee on the Environment andthe Beardsley Ruml Colloquium «April 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/13• : i ' ' ; II- m i i i | \ » ' UU"M " ' • " 1 U U 1 \ ' 1 ' 1 11 ' '-‘s* '' l',' ‘ • i i t i,m i.m.i ■ i i i i t i,., i(Maroon Classified Ada)SO BIG IT COULD HAPPEN ONLY IN OUR LONG ISLAND WAREHOUSlMUSICIANS'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. 60637SCENES This SATURDAY THE NIGHTCLUBfeatures a surprise guest. Artist-anew sound. NEW FOOD.MISCELLANY SALE!!!Sat, Sun, April 11-12 at 5406 SWoodlawn, Apt A, 1st floor. 10 amto 5 pm. CLOTHING-new and used,salesman's samples. Honda 50 cc,English racer, new set of McGregorwoods, furniture, appliances.GETTING TOGETHERWarm, Friendly, But Shy MaleSeeks Warm, Friendly Female.Please Leave Message, MaroonBox S.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.CELLO-PIANO RECITALLarry Stein, Cellist and Larry Men-des, pianist. Music of Grieg, Beeth¬oven, and Hindemith. Mandet HallSat. April 11 8:30 Free. Sponsoredby Dodd House.PEOPLE FOR SALENeed your manuscript typed profes¬sionally? fast? Call E. Lauritis 684-2743 days. PL2-3800 eves.IBM Selectric Thesis Typist. 2Blocks from Ad Bldg. 955-1795.WANTEDOld VW Bug or Bus Cheap 955-7809.Wanted: The temporary use of awood-burning set for nefarious pur¬poses on the part of FOTA. Guaran¬tee I'll return it in good condition.493-8041.ENCOUNTER GROUPPERSONAL - INTERPERSONALGROWTH. Trained Experiencedtrainers conduct ongoing Group Ex¬perience For; info & registration.Call Tom or Norm 288-2917.PHIL OCHS TONIGHTPHIL OCHS TONIGHT.RUGBYPhil Ochs tonight Rockefeller 8:30-tickets $2 and $3 sold In Mandel till8:30. TIX AT DOOR TOO.Philochsphilochsphilochsphil / tonight.Throw off depression: See W.C.FIELDS and GARY COOPER inIF I HAD A MILLION, ThursdayApril 16, Kent 107; 7:15 8. 9.00.When the evening is spread outagainst the sky/like a patient ether¬ized upon a table, come hear philochs.Re-live April Fools': see W.C. •FIELDS in IF I HAD A MILLION,Kent 107, April 16, 7:15 & 9:00.Bigger than Elvts. #.Presley. More ,powerful than Sha Na Na. PhilOchs. Tonight. Rockefeller Chapel.Be there.Garin Omek, a Grp of American ^Students Planning to Settle in Kib-;butz Tel-Katzir (1972) is Having Con-'vention Near NY City April 17-19.Cost from Midwest $35 Incl Transp.For More Info of Applic Cali Jerry752-5416.THE SHOP ON MAIN STREETSunday April 12 at 7 & 9:15 COBB.T-Group lead by Ester Ticktin and .Gayland Gump for info call Gayland iFA4-9500 1917.,We lost our shirts last quarter —will you help us get them back?IF I HAD A MILLION, in Kent 107,this Thursday at 7.15 and 9:00.,Please come, . , *Archaeology Club ’ABORTION TALK—Tues, April 148PM 5600 Woodlawn. Julia Abra¬hams on. Friends Serv. Comm. .Zero Pop Growth meeting follows.College students and Faculty Invited -,each Monday 2:30-4:30 to HistorysTea. Cobb Lounge thru BergmatvfeGallery. Guests for 4-13 will be Mr.Charles Grey and Mr. : Emile Kara- •'fiol.Student Panel tonight at 8:30. "WhatAlienation & Exile., Mean for as aJew"—Hillel House. ,CANCELLED!! ' "Choosing a Sex’4*Ethic" Prof.4 Borowitz cannot come frto Hillel House ^ . a*££*vyou who get worked up by the sight- — ■*£ of leg hair (reminds you of theDon't miss the‘„ Seder'-Workshops— Ji'tack of public hair in our rag)See ad this issue ^ don't fret We supply enough of.— — ~ »— that too So swagger or mince! in!Tonight ('('The -Idea of* a.'City"ydis-*,#.*'(and leave gs a check A three year'scussion f by John Guegu , .cription is now available for.Crossroads, 5621 Blackstone., '■-,'‘$24. What a deal! But if you thinks■'. ■■ ■ j can get some ' legs on yourSlide program on Baha'i* youth —•- own and don't need us that badly,<active in over 300, countries Mori- . . ..day, April 13, Ida Noyes, 7:30PM.Will you Investigate? Rugby A Great Way to Work Up aThirst UCvsChicago Lions Sat at2pm in Grant Park.Leather Balls in Action" U of CRugby Team vs Marquette Sun- at2 PM Stagg Field Be an AthleticSupporter.THE LION ROARS ;Leo Muldave, who is associated. with . the Underground, did knowthat the ad was running, but it, was indeed run as a filler ad bythe business staff of The Maroon.1It was not ordered by, nor paidfor by the Underground.PLAYBOYHey all you legmen! And all chickswho like the sight of a well-turnedthigh, : calf or ankle. The legmen'sparadise is now available. Get itnow before the midi craze hits andthe only pulsating, bulging calf youcan see is on the Russian Olympicsteam. We can supply you with morelegs than a mannequin factory;#even Maggie Maroon votes for ourlegs. Every now and then for those#of you with a purient interest, weair-brush, the legs so the hair, be¬comes invisible. But for those of .Writers' Workshop PL-2-8377.NIGHTCLUB NIGHTCLUBThis Sat. IDA NOYES Folk Songs& Jazz . trio, , and EGG ROLLSJUKES — Lowest. Everyday Pricesin Hyde Park. ,' a two year subscription only costs$18, a one year costs $8.50 and aseven month only costs $6. Butdon't let these stylish, smooth, long,thin, limbs pass you by. If youcan't come in to the Maroon office,send us your check, payable toPlayboy and address it to the BigBunny, the manager of our. very. own . hutch.LEARN RUSSIANG- . - fr - il, O., / jnand Poco in the\super-concert. RUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA¬TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALL236-1423 9-5 WEEKDAYS1 -I 1 H. r.f ,CHICAGO BLUES BAND, HomesickJames, Sunny L,nd Slim and Shaky, “ A _Horton - SPECIAL GUEST M U D U T LOST-* FOUND'WATERS MarAprils 12 , „ \gjj£’ /1 Original Doll Girl Sought After by‘... i. -acious Good Guy., • , y , i’ ’ . ,art collection in‘“his home 'Wed- ; Found:-a change purse, with money,nesday evenin', ■—1 Call 493-6133. ,transportation available from - Ida ‘ ! ‘Noyes Hall for. 50 cents Details'and DOLL-GIRLSign up sheets in the Student Acti- — — ——-vities Office Room 109, Ida Noyes-st* Doll-Girl Please-Tony'CO4 0309 or FA4-3400, xl07. BEEF WELLINGTONThe most peculiar of all the fishfamily is the Carp ... we haveit from reliable sources that ourfamous CARP is splitting for GreatBritain to cut another Fathers andSons record with the well-knownHarry Winwood and Roger Clapton... What is GLOPINATION? . . .SVNA Sponsored a kool-aid-in onthe quads Wednesday ... By theway, GEORGE: is it true blondshave more fun? . . . STEVEFREER and Harker are back, mak¬ing occasional appearances on andabout the campus ... the GAYLIB dance was a 'raving success';it was so good, in fact, evenCARMEN MIRANDA showed up!(sans 'fruit') . . . Freaked outKEITH (from Plants Alive) hasfinally split for Mexico ... STEPhas a new trauma; one leg islonger than the other ... Hasanyone noticed that KEN GINS-BURG strangely resermbles HedyLamarr? ... Is it true that ANDYGURIAN wears a leotard clever¬ly contrived from frankfurter skins?. . . Why is it PETER (of DOCFilms) can't run a projector witha chick around? . . . Has anyonenoticed TONY MOULTON'S newHat? It's a piece of dandruff tiedon with % ribbon . . . DONALD:who was that woman we saw, youwith? . . , Out Paul JOEL ain'tnever done no rustlin' . . . exceptwhen he wore tafetta shorts! . . .Attention GAY LIB: April 31st, theNUSSBAUM school of hairdressingis sponsoring a Flounce-in . . . BOBEVANSON tells us that ChickenDelight is what a rooster feelswhen he sees a groovy pluuet . . .HOWIE ARONSON offers this one:El Paso is the option that a Mexi¬can football player has when heuses El Runno or El Punto .'. .It's been rumored that PAT COOP¬ER looks vaguely like ClaudetteColbert . . . There is a $5 rewardfor the identification of the "gor¬geous redheaded male" that JANEsaw in the bookstore last week . . .R.D. DOUGHERTY makes housecalls ... the suggestion box for.'GAY LIB is located in the Weiboldtcomfort station! . . . Well, it's time ,to bind up my wounds and crossthe Great Divide where I live inan abandoned harp caseSPACE >■ Summer Sublet. June-September.Fully furnished 6-room apt. oneblock from campus. 3rd floor.Stereo, Books, Porch and tree. 684-3839.^4’/j Furn Apt 54-Cornell Sublet20 June - 10 Sept for $240. PL 2-7999. Baby sitter wanted, one afternoon If you wish to buy a copy!per week. One child 2Vi blocks new 45 Record of Corisfiifrom campus. 288-2434. Call CA 5-6605 LOWE'sf|||1962 Corvair $115, 643-821ofFor Rent S.Super Delux. S. House 4 Bdrms.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.) 955-7352.3 Rms Furn Util Incl. $125. 5405S. Woodlawn. Ml 3-2760 or 667-5746.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 RENT ~May 15 to September 15. Five bed¬rooms, 2Vt baths. Located nearcampus. Responsible person wanted.Call 363-5810.MUSICIANSYoung Pianist and Flute PlayerWill do household Chores and Baby¬sitting. In exchange Music LessonsCall MU4-4831 Lora.The Pepperbands will be AboardAmerican Airlines Fit 279 to Dallasfor their Appearance at the MissTeenage Amerika Pageant. Groupies—Call 684-6667. For Reservations.Others—Same Number to book yourgig-THE 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.PEOPLE WANTEDResponsible student (pref. gradmale or couple) to live rent freethis summer (ca June 10-September1) in exchange for non-time-con¬suming duties. Write Box xxx. Ma¬roon, giving references.OPPORTUNITY, sparetime, address¬ing envelopes and circulars! Make$27,000 per thousand. Handwrittenor typed, in your home. Send just$2. for INSTRUCTIONS Plus LISTOF FIRMS using addressers. Satis¬faction Guaranteed! B8,V ENTER¬PRISES, Dept. 4-U, PO Box 1056,Yucaipa, Calif. 92399.Deliveries and errands for HydePark publishing firm. Must knowChicago area, have car and beavailable approximately 30 hoursper week. Salary and expenses.Call Mr. Carney at 493-2020. *Extras to make film about SpanCivil War-meet CTS Cloisters (58th8, Univ) Sat 1:30-Listen to zippyspeeches 8, get shot at. SG needs student for OMBUDSMANComm. Send name & quals to SGoffice by Fri Apr 10. x3273.Does Your Roommate's Singing GetYou Down? Send Him To UsBLACKFRIARS SUNDAY 3 PMIDA'S.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.Manager — Asst Managers WorkersThe Bandersnatch is looking forNew Manager for next year. Decentsalary! Job requires about av. 15hrs/wk and loads of RESPONSI¬BILITY. Call Student Activities OH.Leave Name.Does Your Roommate's Singing GetYou Down? Send Him to Us.BLACKFRIARS SUNDAY 3PM, IdaNoyes.ASST MANAGERS 8, StaH withrapid promotion if you're goodBANDERSNATCH! Call StudentActivities Off leave name.Decent Pay. RESPONSIBILITY!Half-time typist needed NOW thruJune or Sept. Judd 12 x3891. GoodPay.FREEAll Steel Desk Free Needs Work* 643-3714 After Five. Honda 337 Scramb. $385^^119" TV Asking $50 373-05831- . '1966 SAAB 96 exc. ?$600. 827-8324. . -CONDUCTED SALE-LVgL__DUFurn 8, Misc. Sun < AS-v5401 H P. Blv THE DOrMpfU-'677-1921. namm*NEW BEATLE PIRATES$4.37 at JUKES. WStereo Components -^aitlBEgggHSave on Dyna, AR ■Up to 25%. Sherwood i-'&lifsWfftstjmUP to 40% at MUSICRA&gPffiJ«Rep Bob Tabor 363-4S55Wncl§ffit&TZOOM! Honda 337, $385,^6j3T?^TJPERSONALSFOR SALEOriental Rug 6x10, Pole Lamp,Bathroom Items, Drapes, EndTables,, Other Items. S06-0029.Celebrate Spring in a Classic 1959Triumph TR3. New Brakes, Tires,Clutch. Runs and Looks Good. 684-0870 Betw/6-10. $400.Double Bed Mattress. Very GoodCondition. $10. 324-9358.VW 58—runs good radio and goodtires $75 955-9818.Smith Corona Portable ElectricTypewriter: $60; 12-String Guitar:$50. L Preston 285-5209For Sale ’63 Volvo, Excel. RunningCond. Snowtires, New Bat. $580.' Call At, 288-6694 Eves.s '63 Chrys Convert Gd, Cond New? Tires Dependable. Call 643-6551.% Double Bed mattress very goodcondition $10. 324 9358 ■Olympia Portable Typewriter.'Ex¬cellent Condition. Best Offer. 324-'2799 After 5.Townhouse S Shore Area Mdrn 2Bdrm 1 Vi Baths S Shore Chamberof Commerce N07-2002.> Sublet‘5 rm apt-e min from Bill-HingsiJn 12-Sept 4. $167. Negot. Ph. ■'955-3889 after 6.Beg June 15 3' i Rm Apt 54 &, Wdl Furn if Desired: Good forCouple Call - 667-3136 Eves: s Wanted 2 bdrm apartment in' HydePark for occupancy around July 1, -Call 493-4039 after 7PM. v .2 bdrm apt, Ig. kitchen, 55th, 8,Hyde Park. Call 288-7372 eves 8,, .weekends.• Super 2 Rm Apt in S Shore July Vand Forever. Rm for Darkrm $97.Call 374-9383 or x2968. ' ’( *'■# — p.Fantastic 8 Room Apt to Share ^ ■with 2 other male grad studntsspace for 2 or 3. Own Bedroom,• Furnished. $57 per Mo.- for , Sum.,. - v, 1and/or Next year 10 min. from::. campus. Call 221-3411 ; barrage■'V Quiet Clean Furn IVi Rm apt Nr- . ’ //. Harper Ct. Sublet Now to Sep-Opt% Next Yr. 104/mo. 363-1872 Eves. • 4 / Jack and Jill went up'@^f^rlifetch a pail of water;aj’tc^f^?efdown with hepatitis.How lonely sits the ,city^Fil5ffi|full of people! How likeJMEgMhas she become, she thatflva'sto&x'tlamong the natlon«l»-*'>l3|v.*/v"The toilet training bf^nclust^i^keep it from further . rup'tu^.mqmmgfecosystem requires ariloverfiajiffifWthe internal and externSjs^^Swhich control «i»oratmmXJ*utf^aNader."It is the Internal thr'ea^Gom^noafrom men of good interitiom^~good will who wish^tofereflffiImpatient with the slowngs'slfftlgeiflsuasion and example to/achie^Itti^great social changes the.yjerwsiw^ithey are anxious to uwafn^BSSBlof the state to achieve^tlfe^PnSaand confident of their^ov^pgait^ito do so."—Mitton Friecirnaraf**^®SiSM*"Its time the utility'".inSus?c^ifessed its anti-fish aknow that the finny lim'eWuiS^egare always going ardun^KelQQainQup our water intakesno harm, of course,!'butMv^c?n«lallow ourselves to getJsHtiffwmffabout it."—"Power Enoineer.i"With Western Pairy's Prociuct'^R^itasteless sodium ca 'SAVERTONE, you c,tfully use sodium caseiriatfSp^janlemulsifier and binder,/foiSsaSjqMlsalad dressings, oil. emulsioffsfc'iwegg substitutes. , Youwherever you 1 « " '%der for a minute .whatMtr^^^Ssumers will think & ..know."—"Food Ttcfino^jffar'Professors Fried man,-tGoaseDemsetz, Anastaplo—yPart 2, The Sick Ear'mj^ocS^Mandel Hall, MondavagAmilM97:30PM.Room available in 7 room apart-,ment with private one-half bath.Male or female. $55 per month.52nd St. 684-3915. Sue or ext 3317.Lovely spacious Room for Rentin Kenwood home. Call 548-4748.Roommate wanted 57th 8, Maryld.288-4303. 75/Month.Apartment Wanted for Next YearBegin Jun or Dept Pref Small for2 sunny with windows Call Fran752-5416 or Chris x3777 Room 501. IN HONOR OF TAX RESISTANCE, THESTUDENT COOP ANNOUNCES ACOUNTER SURCHARGENOW thru APRIL 15NEW RECORDS10% OFFr § OUR USUALLOW PRICES', >, .. . - ..USUAL SALEUST PRICE PRICE4.98 3.29 2.965.98 3.99 3.595-98 4.49 4.04THIS SALE WAS MADE POSSIBLE BY OUR INCREASING SALES VOLUME. IFRECORD VOLUME CONTINUES TO INCREASE, WE WILL BE ABLE TO HAVEMORE SUCH SALES AND/OR LOWER OUR REGULAR PRICESSummer Sublets! 7 room apt nowseeking subletters/ 4 bdrms so you'll:get your own, 2 baths plus, only*3 blocks from campus. Besides,rent is only $37.50 per month! Whata deal. Call 955-0348 and ask forWendy. Or talk to whoever answers.Live in Frederika's Famous Build¬ing. Nearby unfurn. 2, 3 rm apts.$85 up. Free utils. Stm. Ht. Quiet.-Light. 955-9209 or WA2-8411 x311.Wanted: 1 Bdrm Apt nr campusJune or July and forever aftercall Snell 48 or Hitchcock 62. .MON STUDENT COOPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT- FRI. 9 A.M. -10 P.M. SAT. NOON - 6 P.I CAN ONE HALF OF THE WORKING CLASS TO KILL THE OTHER HALFfJ. Gould, robber baron, 19th centuryj14/The Chicago Maroon/April 10, 1970AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYContinued from Page 13Volunteer pollwatchers or canvassers areurged to attend the meeting or call for de¬tails at 955-7891.If elected, the slate would form half ofthe 40-member Model Cities Council. MayorDaley appoints the remaining 20 members.Because even one machine candidate vic¬tory would give Daley a majority, the en¬tire People’s 20 slate must be elected to“win”.Over $9 million of the $38 million appro¬priated for the Model Cities program inChicago will be spent next year in Wood-lawn.The 30 candidates on the ballot includethe People’s 20, three independents, andEmbryo ResearchRaises QuestionsContinued from Page Three“Now, the implications of that are notgoing to escape various administrations forvery long,” he said. “We have already be¬gun to see the consequences of past igno->-ranee — thalidomide, food additives, radi¬ation, sex education, birth control.“Biology is a part of the social fabricnow. and if the members of the society areinformed in the basics of biology, furthermistakes can be prevented.”Dr Goldwasser’s research is concernedwith mechanisms which control the devel¬opment of blood cells; Dr Moscona’s, withnerve cells. “In the past, people learned tomanipulate gene material in bacteria, mod¬ifying gene expression in the organism,” heexplained.“It is now possible to do the same thingin the embryo, to change or accelerate cer¬tain functions, to emphasize or de-empha-size others. This is where the potentialbenefits or dangers derive from. The con¬sequences can be beneficial or disastrous.” seven machine-supported candidates.The People’s 20 has received endorse¬ments from Aldermen AA (Sammy) Ray-ner and Leon Despres, as well as Con-Condelegate A1 Raby and the IndependentVoters of Illinois.New Tennis CoachChristopher Scott has been named tenniscoach at the University. He had formerlybeen associated with the Office of CollegeAdmissions at the University.The appointment was announced byWally Hass, professor and chairman ofphysical education.Scott is ranked seventh nationally as aplayer by the American Tennis Association.He played for the Harlem Globetrottersprofessional basketball team from 1947 to1949.A native of Chicago, he attended WayneState University, Detroit, Michigan, andRoosevelt University, Chicago. He and hiswife, Tuschrora, have three children, Mar¬cus, Christopher, Jr., and Boita.Commenting on Scott’s appointment,Hass said:“I am pleased to have Chris Scott joinour staff of coaches, and I am looking for¬ward to a fine tennis program.”Scott will succeed William J. (Bill) Moyleas Tennis Coach. Moyle will concentrate onthe varsity swimming team which hecoaches.Scott joined The University of Chicago’sUndergraduate Admissions Office Staff in1968. He has coached basketball teams in¬cluding the Girls Professional BasketballTeam of the Wilson Sporting Goods Com¬pany; the Kansas City All-Stars profes¬sional team; the New York Collegians pro¬fessional team, and the Chicago Comets, anAmateur Athletic Union team.He also has served as a tennis instructor for the Chicago Park District and for theChicago Prairie Tennis Club.English MeetingThe final draft of the curriculum proposalof the English department undergraduatecurriculum committee has been completedand is being mailed to all English majors.Anyone who does not receive a copy bymail may pick one up at Wiebolt 205.Before this draft is submitted to the fac¬ulty, there will be a meeting for Englishmajors to discuss the proposed programTuesday at 7:30 pm at the Mandala.Faculty HonorsDallin Oaks, professor of law, has beenappointed executive director of the Ameri¬can Bar Foundation, the research affiliateof the American Bar Association.Oaks will replace Geoffrey Hazard, pro¬fessor of law, who resigned to return to full¬time teaching and research. Hazard willalso be visiting professor at Yale Univer¬sity’s law school next fall.Oaks is currently on leave from the Uni¬versity, serving as legal and research advi¬sor to the Bill of Rights Committee of theIllinois Constitutional Convention andstudying the Exclusionary rule for the LawEnforcement Assistance Administration ofthe United States Justice department...Richard Swan, professor of mathematics,has received the Frank Nelson Cole prize inalgebra, presented only every five years bythe American Mathematical society.The prize also went to John Stallings,professor of mathematics at the Universityof California at Berkeley.RecitalA recital by cellist Larry Stein and pia¬nist Larry Mendes will be presented Satur¬day at 8:30 in Mandel hall. Works to be performed include Beetho¬ven’s Sonata Opus 102 No. 2; Grieg’s So¬nata in A Minor; and Hindemith’s SonataOpus 11 No. 3.The recital is sponsored by Dodd Houseas part of its cultural program.Admission will be without ticket andwithout charge.Year BoxSeniors who didn’t get their picturestaken yesterday or today for the year Boxstamp album, have something to worryabout'. To make sure the album isLETTERContinued from Page Eightought to accept some responsibility in thisfiscal crisis.I propose that the faculty and adminis¬tration accept a five percent decrease intheir salaries and university grants to showtheir support. With this sacrifice and goodexample before us, I think we studentswould be more than happy to do our share(a five percent increase would be fair,don’t you think?).This way we all will be doing our part tokeep the University afloat in this time ofdire need. And if some members of our dis¬tinguished faculty and administration feelunduly put upon, then the rest of us whocare enough to give ungrudgingly andproudly will be well off without these Philis¬tines who care more for money than ideas.But I’m confident that this will not be thecase in this, our community.Robert McKeanEnglish* ACTUAL IIIt P%ACE DECALEQUALITY DECALTHE PEACE FLAG DECAL CO.ROOM 24, 3 E. ONTARIO,CHICAGO, 111.75' for one decal 50 each additional decal.Add 25‘ par order for postage and handling.Add sales tax where applicable. HOWARD DOES HIS THINGNow services ofCOPS CEDTERavailable to students,staff and faculty.They accept 102 forms, cash,personal checks (with ID's) andbookstore charge cards:or Information:Dial 4222(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)BIG, HUH? EVEN WE CAN'T BELIEVE IT!"Why don't we go ahead with muchmore pollution? In that way, thebodies of the younger generationscan build up immunities. That,in turn, will produce offspring withbuilt-in anti-pollution protection."Through the years, we havedeveloped many pesticides. Andwhat happened? The bugs camealong with an entire new generationthat were completely immune. Arewe going to allow the Infintesimalbug to outsmart us?"—Mrs. EstherFriedman in a letter to the editor,Chicago Daily News, February 4,1970.Little teenage goddessDon't tell me noInto the park tonightWe're going, to to goLet me beYour teen-age Romeo . . .Men marched asleep/Many had losttheir boots/But limped on blood¬shed — the old lie: DULCE ETDECORUM EST PRO PATRIAMORI. If you don't believe it, hear PHILOCHS TONITE.STUDENTS! WRITERS!Literary Consultant Can Help Youwith Your Papers and Manuscripts.Call 624-1914 5-7PM.Your mother wears cowboy boots. . . uc off.A million dollars won't get youinto Kent this Thursday — but 75cents will.Tonight see the Phil Ochs youknow and love — with a new PhilOchs you wouldn't believe. Tonight.Rockefeller Chapel.Confidential to Joel P: About thosebody prints — sorry, but I don'thave any just of my feet with awhip next to them, nor one of justmy seven cephalic orifices. Its allor nothing.-J.W.Throw off depression: see W.C.Fields and Gary Cooper in IF IHAD A MILLION Thursday April16, Kent 107, 7:15 & 9:00. Traditional U of C song of theweek: (Tune: Rambling Wreck fromGeorgia Tech)Oh, If I had a daughter, sir.I'd wash her scuzzy hair. Andsend her to Northwestern, sir,They have no scuz up there.But If I had a son, sir, I tellyou how he'd be —He'd make some ass and blow somegrass, and go to the U of C.(chorus) I'm a gibbering Jew fromChicago U and a helluva piece ofshit. A helluva, helluva, helluvapiece of shit.I couldn't get in to Harvard andthis Is where I fit.Like all the rest of the U of C,a ween, and a nurd, and a flit.SUPER FILMThe Shop On Main Street thisSunday. Cobb Hall at 7 & 9:15.Hendrix and Gypsies at Jukes, 53rd& Lake Park.Freedom Seder & 4th World Hag-gadahs on Sale at Hillel. Cost,$1.00 and $1.25, respectively. Jukes is not Hiding Jukes —Under I.C. Tracks 53rd Street atLake Park Ave.SWEETLIFE: Consider the Alter¬native!John Powell: Please Call SophieCooper — BU8-6410 1104x.Jukes — GRAND OPENING Spe¬cial Through Sunday 10% Off al¬ready Low Prices with this Ad.1552 E 53rd — Under 1C.What are you doing about "SWEET-LIFE"?When ARE YOU DOING IT?Come and See how little a Recordcan Cost.JUKES*53rd & Lake Park.It's spring, and the world is mud-luscious, especially in Vietnam.PHIL OCHS TONITE.Got the Blues? Well we do. TheChicago Blues Band, HomesickJames, Sunny Lind Slim and ShakyHorton, Mandel Hall, Sunday, April12. mGot the Blues. Well, We Do. TheCHICAGO BLUES BAND, Home,sick James, Sunny Lind Slim andShaky Horton — SPECIAL GUESTMUDDY WATERS — Mandel Hall,Sunday, April 12.John Sebastian was the heart andsoul of THE LOVIN' SPOONFULDo You Believe in MagicDaydream, Summer in the CityYou Didn't Have To Be So NiceNashville Cats, Younger GirlRain On the Roof, Night OwlBlue, Jug Band Music, Amy'sTheme, Did You Ever Have ToMake Up Your Mind?, Six O'clockDARLING BE HOME SOONShe's Still a Mystery, MoneyYou're a Big Boy NowJOHN B. SEBASTIAN wrote allof them, and more.Minnette's Custom Salon 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing; clothes copied & designed.Phonographic Literature Free! 11Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers & Tape Decks Save$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555. If you have moved since Fall re¬gistration your Passover letter hasnot 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.Passover reservations due at Hillelon April 10th.CARS!The Maroon needs cars. We go toHinsdale Monday and Thursdaynights so that you can get yourfavorite rag. However, to get there,we need automotive transportation.Unfortunately, few of us have cars.If you do, and would be willingto rent it to the Maroon for $5(we supply the gas) or If you candrive us out and get the sameamount, call us either Monday orThursday afternoons at the office,ext 3263, 3264, 3265, or 3269. (Ob¬viously, phones we got. Cars wedon't.)April 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/15THEMAROONGET INV<In Israel ThisSUMMER IN KIBBUTZ i7 weeks work on a kibbutz \10 days field trips j10 days on your own 110 weeks-$650 i OLVEDSummerISRAEL SUMMER INSTITUTE2 weeks kibbutz2 weeks Jerusalem based3 weeks field trips, seminars7 weeks - $925ARCHAEOLOGY DIG !2 weeks insturction at Tel Aviv University i4 weeks "Dig" at Tel Beersheba j1 week intensive field trip j3 weeks (optional) on your own |(can also earn 6 college credits) i7/10 weeks - $699 !I SUMMER SESSIONS AT TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY4 weeks on campus (can earn up to 6college credits)Summer Session courses (in English)choices in Sociology, Gov't, History,Language & Literature4 weeks field trips, Dig and/or kibbutz8 weeks - $945iARTS SEMINAR j• .3 weeks instruction in art, painting, drawing \or music (instrumentalists) j2 weeks kibbutz i2 weeks field trips i7 weeks - $960 !CALL OR WlAMERICAN.ZIONIST Y220 South State Street 939-642 FOLK DANCE INSTITUTE3 weeks instruction and practiceModern and/or Folk Dancing2 weeks kibbutz2 weeks field trips7 weeks - $960KITE:OUTH FOUNDATION!7 Chicago, Illinois 60604