Interview With Poet Allen GinsbergFollowing his poetry reading to a packed house at theBlue Gargoyle Monday night, Allen Ginsberg returned tohis hotel room where he was interviewed by ChristineFroula, the Maroon’s associate features editor. In thecourse of his one hour talk, among the things Ginsbergdiscussed were the University and his works.How do you see your own poems?I hear them. I hear them as a series of vowels, linked toone another, in deep breaths — mantra-like, oming. I amarticulating exactly what’s going on in my body and in mymind, in terms of the flashes of pictures into view —recollections appearing from memory, and phanopoeia, orthe projection of direct experience of the moment throughthe senses, to the direct experience of the senses, throughthe moment.The poetry is a composition of all of that data, present¬ed as a series of vowels, which come from somewherearound my solar plexus.Does it just flow out of you as a direct consequenceof being alive?Exactly. I don’t work on it. It flows. It’s a very naturalthing, it’s doing what comes natural.How would you characterize the relationship betweenyour art and your politics?In the art I’m presenting my direct perceptions and POET ALLEN GINSBERG -Interviewed following poetry recitalpersonal experiences in the middle of a police-state robotsociety dominated by the military and the Mafia, whocontrol all the means of public communication and controlthe projection of imagery on the unconscious, so that thevisual perceptions that I have cut through that mass of hallucination created intentionally and artificially by May¬or Daley, or Nixon, or President Levi, and propose anauthentic contact with human personality which they haveobliterated by robot reduplication of bureaucratic imag¬ery—For instance, the bureaucratic imagery that the trusteesof this University print, that I read today in a publicrelations announcement that by some sleight of hand theUniversity and its trustees are not responsible for therobot-excrement cast into the air by this University, in theform of smog.But I see that robot excrement, and as I’m involvedwith a direct kind of language that tells the truth ratherthan lies, I see that the syntax and generalized abstractionof today’s trustee statement saying that they are not re¬sponsible for their own consolidated air pollution is a packof lies, and is the abuse of language.I have to smell their satanic smog, and I have to singand talk to students who have been literally brainwashedby universities, not just the University of Chicago, whichby all apparent indications is controlled more by theMafia than by the government.What do you mean by “brainwashed”?The students have been intimidated, tne professors havebeen intimidated. There’s secret chemical and biological.warfare going on here which nobody will admit. The Uni¬versity withholds its information on where its financialContinued on Page TwoTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 52 The University of Chicago Friday, April 24, 1970Tenants Win; Eviction Notices WithdrawnSteve AoKiGregory Uses Humor, BlastsDick Gregory leaned on the podium inMandel Hall, draped his arm over the topand talked straight to the crowd.“You got to understand the state of thisnation. We left you young kids with all theproblems and none of the tricks. We usedup all the tricks.”Gregory, coming on part night club com¬ic, part black militant, and part Baptistpreacher, attacked a wide spectrum of re¬cent national events: drugs, Spiro Agnew,bombings, American Indians, money, Nix¬on, the war, and, of course, the black manin the ghetto.Revitalization sponsored the program butthe crowd was Gregory’s.“Nixon, why he’s been messing with themoney. Now he’s been messing with theniggers for a long time, but now he’s mes¬sing with the money and in this countrythat’s like messing with Jesus.“That’s the only God we know. Whereelse do you see the words, ‘In God WeTrust?’ ” Gregory talked fast and loose when tell¬ing a joke, taking his time with the punchline. Yet the joke always had a sting.“I dig Spiro Agnew because he is con¬sistent. I’ll bet you that next week he willget on the tube and say Nixon’s a honky.”When Gregory called J. Edgar Hoover a“faggot” there were some hisses in the hallfrom Gay Liberation sympathizers, yetGregory’s non-stop style kept returning tothe black man in the ghetto and in thesouth.Occasionally he slipped into high poweredspeech making, forgetting the jokes.“If democracy’s as good as they say itis, how come they’re running all over theworld trying to cram it down other peo¬ple’s throats?”On the conspiracy trial:“Judge Julius J. Hoffman would makeHitler look like he had a lot of class.”Gregory also talked abCut the university.“You know they couldn’t educate youhere at the University of Chicago. If theyreally did that Rockefeller Chapel wouldn’t By Sue LothSixteen Hyde Park eviction summonseswere quashed Tuesday in Cook County Cir¬cuit Court on the grounds that the sum¬monses were not personally served to ten¬ants.The tenants, residents of 5330 Blackstone,have organized a union and have joined theTenant Union Organization of the HydePar k-Kenwood Community Conference(HPKCC) in order to develop a new tenant-landlord relationship.The union has gone on rent strike and hasplaced rent in escrow, to protest buildingcode violations and a rent increase of 15 to18 percent in all apartments.In handing down the decision, Eugene L.Wachowski, presiding judge of the munici¬pal division of the court, noted the in¬creased credibility of a collective action bytenants, whose corroborated testimony was“crucial” in the case.In the day-long trial, tenants testifiedthey were in places such as Colorado andRacismbe standing. You’ve got to understand whatthat represents.”Gregory talked for three hours. No onewalked out.Gregory made a special point of attack¬ing the Earth Day demonstrations lastweek.“Go out to U S Steel,” he said, “onyour next Earth Day and it would be EarthDay all right. You would be three feet un¬der the earth.“A polluted soul will mess things up a lotmore than polluted air. Polluted air doesn’tblow up.Gregory kept repeating several phrasesduring his speech, such as “There aren’tany more tricks left,” and “Nixon is mes¬sing with the money.” Yet he always cameback to racism.“We aren’t asking white folks in Americato come out in a moral bag. All we areasking is that you treat black leaders like awhite cop treats a black pimp. Let that whi-tey cop just look the other way. That’s allwe ask.” California during spring vacation, the timewhen a sheriff’s deputy testified he person¬ally served them with the summonses.In spite of the plaintiff’s protests, JudgeWachowski also ordered the realtor, SargenInc, to accept the rents of the only two ten¬ants properly summoned, thereby avoidingevictions.The case was handled for the HPKCC’stentant Union Organization by CommunityLegal Consuls James Latturner, Gerry Bro¬dy, and Rich Weiss.Tenants submitted a draft contract andmet twice last month to discuss grievanceswith their landlord, Eugene Gray of SargenInc.The proposed contract sets out recogni¬tion of the tenant union as collective bar¬gaining agent for conditions; buildingmaintenance and repairs; inequitableleases; retaliatory evictions; unfair rent in¬creases; and grievance and arbitrationprocedure between the landlord and tenantsto resolve future problems.The contract was drafted with the help ofHPKCC staff member Joe Hacala.Tenants voted to withhold rent until finalnegotiations were underway. Sargen re¬sponded by filing eviction suits against thetenants.While Gray refused to talk after court,Frank Takahashi, trustee, accountant, andrepresentative of the owners of the buildinghas agreed to meet with the tenant union.The city has inspected the building forcode and electrical violations. To order theinspection, tenants made apartment byapartment inventory of conditions and filedto the city through the HPKCC. “It’s slowand bureaucratic, but it’s the only way todo it,” one tenant said.Students, welfare workers, University po¬licemen, psychiatrists, professors, andsalesmen have participated in the rentstrike. Association members include gradu¬ate students Larry Miller, philosophy;Renee Goldstein, psychology; RachelKeith, political science; Alice Davison,linguistics; and Robert Anderson and Rob¬ert Hoge, anthropology.Anderson has also been working with theTenant Union Project of Student Govern¬ment.The tenants remain optimistic about asatisfactory settlement.pGinsberg Recites, Chants for FOTAContinued from Page Oneinvestments are although it’s supposed to be a place ofscholarship and open research.Secret investment and difficulty in getting ahold of fiscaland ecological information of the university is contrary tofree scholarship. It’s a mass hex by some sort of policestate bureaucracy, and it’s no wonder that they developedthe atom bomb in a place like this.Brainwashed is also the modality of thinking which hascreated the dualism of discourse in the minds of the stu¬dents — otherwise known as double talk. The professorsand the administration also — teaching is setting an ex¬ample, and the trustees’ statement about the smog whichthey’re responsible for is a piece of teaching which intendsto confuse the meaning of the language.The language is totally unclear, double-talky — Bureau-cratese — the use of abstract terminology to completelyobscure any connection of the content to data.Do you think that you as a poet experience things dif¬ferently from most people?“I don’t experience differently, it’s just that my ex¬perience is changed by my awareness of the fact that I’mexperiencing something.What was the source of this awareness?Originally I had a clear and direct opening of con¬sciousness, a good week of intermittent awareness of thefact that I was one sentient being among many sentientbeings, and that the entire universe was a mind, and thatall sentient beings are equally conscious, and were asconscious of me as I was of them.And this experience came from within yourself?Bight. It was catalyzed by the experience of hearingBlake’s poetry. When I was singing in the church, I wassinging in that deep voice, a dark gray voice that comesfrom the center of the body rather than from the in¬tellectual head.How would you change things so that more peoplewould come to experience this?Well, in terms, of the University, I would change the educational system: I would follow the recommendation ofthe National Student Association at their Convention in1966, when they proposed that universities such as theUniversity of Chicago should establish a program of inter¬disciplinary psychedelic research, as a part of their elec¬tive curriculum. To the extent that the academic worldhas refused its responsibility to investigate this importantarea of human consciousness, philosophy, and psychology,it has ceased to be a responsible academic community.I think it would be useful to break down the Aristoteliandualism that is superfluously dominant here, to not allowthe first year student to read any books at all, but to setup centers for the personal investigation of consciousness,putting as much money into that kind of research as thisUniversity has put into developing materials for the atombomb.What have you to say about the accessibility of East¬ern philosophy to the Western mind?Well, Eastern and Western philosophy ultimately are thesame. The Gnostic tradition of the West is the same as thenon-dualistic philosophy of the East, and actually doescontinue in the West up through great Westerners likePythagoras and Eckhart and Paracelsis and WilliamBlake.I’m not talking about Oriental philosphy, I’m talkingabout self-knowledge, and what I’m proposing is that be¬fore we begin handling abstractions, they begin to exploretheir own mind and body consciousness, in all availableways — in addition to philosophy, sensory deprivation,light, sound, strobe light, and drugs.I think that’s the sine qua non of what education issupposed to be: the search for wisdom, which is apparent¬ly last on the curriculum here. “Academe” is a grove oftrees, people talking about soul in a grove of trees, andthat’s not practiced here, so this place is neither academ¬ic, nor searching for the “leading out” which educationhas as its etymological root.Do you think that these changes in education wouldsolve all the problems that we have now?Well, it would solve a lot of the problems with doubletalk that is given to students, and a lot of confusion. TheUniversity of Chicago is, at the moment, characterized bydepression and diffusion and mental fog. It’s one of the dreariest places I’ve been recently, and that’s reallyamazing because of the original proposition that it’s aplace to come to open your mind.You know, it goes back to the history of repression ofconsciousness here at the University, back to the dayswhen the Chicago Review repressed large sections ofNaked Lunch. Now, nobody denies the classic value ofNaked Lunch, but twelve years ago it was suppressedright here.In Jane Kramer's book, you are quoted as envisioninga society in which drugs would be irrelevant. What wouldsuch a society be?I don’t remember ever saying that. Psychedelic herbsare an ancient healing resource. I would like to point outthat Exodus 30 proposes for the tribe of Aaron the use ofcalamus or sweet flag as an ointment, and calamus islisted in an encyclopedia of hallucinogens as a naturalsource of LSD.What we’ve had is a vast civilized brainwash, which isnow attempting to destroy nature, but we’re also destroy¬ing our own inborn knowledge of the ground we walk on,the trees and flowers that provide us with spiritual ca¬talysis with nature.Another thing, the rejection of natural evidence of drugsis only part of the entire ecological conspiracy againstnature and man, in a mechanized society.Back to your Awareness — did this come after youbegan writing poetry?Mmm — yeah.Did it come all at once, or gradually?It came all at once.And have you felt the same since then?I’ve felt a continuum of a larger consciousness in whichI’m two eyes out of many eyes, all of them looking out thesame consciousness. Most of us live under the same modeof illusion of separateness — most beings think they’reseparate.And, incidentally, they are separate — but in the groundContinued on Page TenMondayApril 27The End of Amer¬ican Political Pu¬berty:the social and political im¬plications of environmental control.Linton R. Caldwell:Professor of Political Science, University ofIndiana. Prof. Caldwell will discuss thecynergistic effects of integrating politics,economics, and environmental control.Edward Goerner: Professor of Joseph Sittler:Political Science, University of Notre Professor of Theology, University ofDame. Prof. Goerner will discuss the Chicago. Prof. Sittler will discuss man'sreligious and secular alternatives to loss of his sense of nature and its effecttechnology as sources of political upon his social, political and ethical lifecommunity.Kent 107Regenstein Will OpenAbout Early Octobersions’ books within its stacks. The art li¬brary, however, will remain in GoodspeedHall, and the music library will move to thespace that classics presently occupies.Natural science libraries, with one ex¬ception, will remain in their present loca¬tions. “The biology library will be given atemporary home in the bottom level of Re¬genstein,” said Gwynn. He also pointed outthat neither the law library nor the SSAlibrary would shift from its current site.There are hopes for a Central Science Li¬brary, and proposals for a new physical sci¬ence building which might house a joint sci¬ence library. These plans, according toGwynn, are just in the formulating stagesand “are yet to be funded.”The General Reading Collection will re¬main in its current location, and it is ex¬pected to expand its circulation to 60,000volumes and to serve as part of an under¬graduate library. This library, which willseat nearly 700, will occupy the entire thirdfloor of Harper as well as portions of Busi¬ness East. Most of the vacated space inHarper library will be turned over to theCollege for offices, classrooms, and semi¬nar rooms.Roger Hildebrand, dean of the College,has announced the appointment of a specialfaculty committee that will work with ar¬chitects in planning the remodeling of Har¬per. Although it is not expected that theentire remodeling can be completed by Oc¬tober 5, it is hoped that sufficient remodel¬ing of the undergraduate library will becompleted to put it to use for the autumnquarter.The undergraduate library, Gwynn for-sees, will serve as an aid to the incomingstudent by making it easier for him “tofight his way into a large research li¬brary.”Despite the opening of the undergraduatelibrary, Gwynn is quick to point out thatthere will be no restrictions on the use ofRegenstein by non-graduate students. “Wehope the undergraduate library will be ef¬fective, but we also hope undergraduateswill want to use Regenstein,” he said.Steve AoWJOSEPH REGENSTEIN LIBRARY: Books will start moving in in mid-July, andit will be fully operating by autumn. After years of plans and preparations,the Joseph Regenstein Library has beententatively scheduled to open its doorsaround the beginning of October. “We hopeto begin moving books by mid-July and areexpecting to be fully operating by autumnquarter,” declared Stanley Gwynn, associ¬ate director for services of University li¬braries.Eight professional moving firms are bid¬ding on the project which will transportover 1.6 million volumes to the Regensteinfacility. The 1.6 million figure representsone-half of the total number of books thelibrary is capable of holding.The Regenstein Library, comparable infloor space to the Museum of Science andIndustry, will cover a total of 11.6 acres or580,000 square feet. Both the first and thesecond floors will be in the vicinity of twoacres. In addition to books, the building willhave 2,200 study seats not including loungechairs and consultation tables.Regenstein, being primarily a researchlibrary for the social sciences and thehumanities, will hold most of those divi-Married Tenants Ask New ContractSteve AokiBy Nancy ChismanThe Married Student Housing Tenant As¬sociation (MSHTA), made up of more than55 percent of the tenants in married studenthousing, has submitted a proposed contractto the University Realty Management.The University has not yet responded tothe contract, which concerns building con¬ditions, tenants’ responsibilities, leases,rent, inspections and grievance procedures.The Dean’s Budget Committee, releaseda statement April 14 saying there would beno increase in married student housingrates for the coming academic year.Members of the steering committee ofMSHTA noted that married student housingwas the only University housing whoserates would not be increased next year, andthe only housing with a tenant organization.Roald Campbell, chairman of the depart¬ment of education and a member of theDean’s Budget committee, said the decisionnot to raise rent in married student housingwas made because at the time the com¬mittee met, MSHTA was making studies ofmarried student buildings and the com¬mittee thought a rent-raise decision mightbe premature.In a statement to the news editor of theMaroon, MSHTA said: “The central issuein response to which the married studentsorganized their association was rents ...“On January 19, after careful planningover the course of two months, the associ¬ation launched an organizing drive whichwas designed to obtain authorization cardssigned by tenants which empowered theMSHTA to represent the tenants as theircollective bargaining agent.‘After two weeks, authorizations from amajority of tenants had been received, andthe association set about finalizing the draftof a contract proposal calling for recogni¬tion of the MSHTA as the sole collectivebargaining agent for tenants in marriedstudent housing, and calling for a proce¬dure whereby rents would be negotiated be¬tween University Realty Management andthe tenants.”Copies of the contract were given toKendall Cady, manager of the UniversityRealty Management and director of studenthousing Edward Turkington, February 27.Cady was invited to a March 2 meeting todiscuss the contract, and Turkington’srequest to attend was agreed to by MSHTAand Cady.According to the MSHTA statement, athird person from the University was alsopresent at the meeting. The University hadretained Alex Elson, a veteran labor law¬yer and arbitrator of labor disputes, “toreview the association’s contract proposaland make a recommendation to the Univer sity on what sort of response ought to bemade to the proposal.”The statement continued, “The represen¬tatives of the association, who had hopedthat this meeting might have begun mean¬ingful negotiations, made it clear to Mr El¬son that they were interested in negotiatingan agreement, and that they would encour¬age the University to present a counter pro¬posal and to empower someone or somegroup to negotiate in its behalf.”In a letter to University President Ed¬ward Levi, Warren Copeland, president ofMSHTA said, “Our representatives metwith Mr Elson once again on March 7. Wesought at that time to explain to him whatour proposal meant. All parties present rec¬ognized that both of these meetings werenot negotiating sessions but rather prepara¬tory to the University responding to ourproposal. Mr Elson advised us on March 7that he would probably be able to completehis work in about two weeks.”The letter, sent to Levi after Turkingtoitadvised MSHTA representatives that anydecision to sign such a contract would haveto be made “at the highest levels of theUniversity,” told the University presidentthat the organization continued “to await aresponse from the University.”John Hillman, ’70, a member of MSHTAsaid that Elson has since been appointed bythe University as its representative to dealwith the association and its proposals andto conduct discussion. However, no negotia-. tions are yet forseen.At an April 20 meeting association repre¬sentatives expressed dismay at the Univer¬sity’s delay in response to the proposal. Itwas decided, however, that the only courseopen to MSHTA was to wait the two weeksfor the University to respond.Elson recently told association represen¬tatives that he would have a written reportcompleted within two weeks.When Elson was approached about thetime involved in reaching an agreementwith the University he said haste was notnecessary since the leases for married stu¬dent apartments were not mailed until Julyor August. When one representative said hebelieved they came out much sooner, Elsonsaid he would make sure they did not comeout until later.At the April 20 meeting it was also dis¬closed that the complaints of tenants in sev¬eral married student apartment buildingswere not being handled. Representatives ofthe organization decided to institute theproposed contract’s grievance proceduresin those buildings.The grievance section in the proposedcontract states:“a) A grievance concerning an individual Tenant shall first be handled by the Tenantand appropriate representatives of theLandlord (University Realty Management)and/or a representative of the Tenants As¬sociation.“b) A grievance concerning an entirebuilding or involving an appeal arisingfrom the failure of the procedure in clause‘a’ shall be handled through a meeting ofrepresentatives of the Tenants Associationresiding in that building and appropriaterepresentatives of the Landlord held no lat¬er than one week after the initial complaintor the appeal.”A third clause concerns the entire systemor a failure of the procedure in clause “b”.Many in the association and outside areskeptical about whether anything can bedone to establish tenant voice. Hillman said“a working relationship must be estab¬lished with University Realty Managementbefore any efforts can be made effective.”April 24, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3Tenants Filing Suit;Calling Lease UnfairThe tenants of 1221-23 East 57 St havefiled suit against a Chicago real estateagent, stating that their lease is “inequi¬table and unenforceable.” The case will beheard Monday at 10 am in the Civic Center.The tenants of the building are membersof the Beechwood Tenants Association.They include high-school teachers, Univer¬sity professors, and employees of BillingsHospital. Among them is Donald Herring,assistant professor of English and huma¬nities.The suit is the result of 16 months ofstruggle by the tenants to have their build¬ing brought up to minimal safety standardsof Chicago’s building code and to establisha collaborative relationship with their land¬lord.The tenants first met in January to dis¬cuss problems in the building such as lackof heat, falling plaster, dangerous porches,and a spluttering fuse box, as well as theirdifficulties in reaching their real estateagent, William Bradley.Alderman Leon Despres helped the groupin contacting the Building Department. Or¬ganization help and legal aid also camefrom the Tenant Union Organization of theHyde Park-Kenwood Community Confer¬ence (HPKCC).After inspections which verified nine ma¬jor electrical violations and many buildingcode violations, the Building Department ofChicago began proceedings against Brad¬ley.Shortly after this he issued new leases tothese tenants increasing their rent by asmuch as 20 percent, noting that “by theincrease in rental we can modernize andimprove the property in a way to be pleas¬ing to you.”Later conversations between Bradley andthe tenants revealed that these improve¬ments and modernizations were those re¬pairs demanded by the city to meet min¬imal code standards.Stating that they felt they should not haveto pay for bringing the building up to codestandards, the Beechwood Tenants Associ¬ation attempted to negotiate with Bradleyfor a lower rent, and a formal contractwhich would establish both his responsi¬bilities to the building’s tenants and theirsas tenants to him.Hold ElectionsFor FSACCSLElections for the student members of theFaculty-Student Advisory Committee onCampus Student Life (FSACCSL) havebeen set for mid-May. The committee con¬sists of five faculty members appointed bythe President, eight students from the vari¬ous academic areas, and the dean of stu¬dents, ex officio chairman.Three students from the College, twofrom the professional schools, and one fromthe humanities division, social science divi¬sion and combined physical and biologicalscience divisions are elected.To run, a student must file from the aca¬demic area in which he will be a registereddegree candidate in 1970-71. Nominatingforms which must contain the signatures of40 students, may be picked up in Adminis¬tration 401 and returned by 4 pm April 30.Ballots will be counted by current studentFSACCSL members unless they are run¬ning for re-election. Members for 1969-70 in¬clude Timothy McGree, Cassie Schwartz,Jerry Webman, David Friedman, PeterRabinowitz, Robert Cooley, William Cooleyand James Kerwin.During its two year history, FSACCSLhas concerned itself with a review of Stu¬dent village plans, a review of the Kalvendisciplinary procedure report, and the Uni¬versity’s selective service policies.The committee recommended the returnof football, library numbers for studentidentification at the Regenstein library, andcontinuation of the Ombudsman post.4/The Chicago Maroon/April 24, 1970 Bradley responded by offering two yearleases at the increased rent, and a “gentle¬men’s agreement” that code standardswould be met.The tenants decided to file suit, and onthe advice of their lawyer continued to paytheir rent at the previous figure. Evictionnotices were served on a few of the tenants.These were appealed to Circuit Court JudgeJohn J Lupe, who ordered Bradley to ceaseeviction proceedings, so that the case couldbe given the “thoughtful analysis” it de¬served.According to the tenants’ lawyer GilbertCornfield, the suit could have importantconsequences for all Chicago apartmentrenters.“If the tenants win their suit,” said Corn¬field, “it could mean a complete reforma¬tion of lease arrangements to reflect bothlandlord and tenant rights and responsi¬bilities.“Certainly it would mean a recognitionthat building code requirements are part ofa tenant’s contractual rights with his land¬lord, and that a landlord cannot exact fullpayment of rent while violations continue. Steve AofclAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYResident MastersThe resident masters’ residences atWoodward Court and Pierce Tower willboth be completed during the summer.Work began last week in the east diningroom of the Woodward cafeteria on the newhome of former dean of the College WayneBooth and his family. The residence, whichwill cost approximately $40,000 to con¬struct, will have two entrances.The back door will be what was formerlythe second serving line to the cafeteria. Anew front entrance and stairwell is beingbuilt adjacent to the Kimbark exit in thecentral unit.The rooms will consist of a large livingroom — dining area, three bedrooms, afamily room, study, kitchen and two baths.Scheduled completion date is August 3.The new residence for professor of Ger¬manic languages and literature KennethNorthcott and his family at Pierce Towerwill be an addition to the present building,rather than a remodeling such as at Wood¬ward. The home will cost $60,000.The two-story structure will encompassthe present entrance and extend to thechain link fence on North Field. The secondstory will extend over the present sunporch.The new home of three bedrooms, familyroom, living room — dining area, study,kitchen, and two baths should be completedby mid July.Presently, no resident master has beenchosen for the Burton Judson complex. Ac¬cording to the Housing Office, when one ischosen, for technical reasons, the residencewill have to be in one of the houses. Thereis a possibility that an apartment will beset up in Mead House. campus disturbances there. Blum wascharged with conspiracy to commit riot.Twenty other people were arrested in thedisturbances. Four of them, includingBlum, were charged with conspiracy tocommit riot. Police labeled the four mem¬bers of the Weatherman faction of SDS.Blum participated in last year’s sit-in andwas subsequently expelled the year he wasto graduate. He was president of studentgovernment during the 1968-69 academicyear.Blum was also arrested last October forconspiracy to riot during a conspiracy dem¬onstration in front of the Federal building.He is not one of the 12 Weathermen underindictment for conspiracy to riot during the“Bring the war home” demonstrations onthe Near North Side and the Loop last Octo¬ber.O'Connell Dean AgainCharles D O’Connell has been reap¬pointed dean of students at the Universityfor a three-year term. The reappointment,effective July 1, was announced by Presi¬dent Edward Levi.O’Connell was first appointed dean of stu¬dents in 1967. From 1958 to 1967, he servedas the University’s director of admissionsand financial aid. He is also an associateprofessor in the humanities collegiate divi¬sion. He served as secretary of the facultiesof the University from 1959 through 1969.O’Connell was also for seVeral years amember of the board of directors of theNational Scholarship Service and the Fundfor Negro Students, and Vice-President ofthe Association of College AdmissionsCounselors from 1960 to 1962. NSF FellowsForty-one present and four former Uni¬versity students have been named to re¬ceive National Science Foundation (NSF)graduate fellowships for the academic year1970-71. They are among 1,941 studentsfrom across the nation who were awardedfull-time study grants in the sciences,mathematics and engineering.More than 7,560 students competed forthe fellowships. Each application was re¬viewed by panels of scientists appointed bythe National Research Council, after whichNSF made the selections.At the University, the awards went to 22students in the physical sciences, 19 in thesocial sciences and psychology, and 4 in thebiological sciences.BULLETINFriday, April 24WOMEN'S LIB: Rap, noon.LECTURE: Dr. Roderick Childers, "Recollections ofof Brendan Behan," Billings P-117, 12:30 pm.TALK: Hans-Joachim Torke of the Free University ofBerlin, "Continuity and Change in the RelationsBetween Bureaucracy and Society in Russia," Busi¬ness East 103, 4 pm.TALK: Muhammed Muieeb, vice chancellor, JamiaMillia University New Delhi, "Two Kindred Spirits—Ghalito and Emily Dickenson," Foster Idunge,4:10 pm.DISCUSSION: "Women's Lib: American Hangup orInternational Movement?" Crossroads Student cen¬ter 8 pm.THREE PENNY OPERA: Reynold's CliA) theatre, 8:30pm., tickets $2, also playing April 25, 26.FUND RAISING: MCO, SSA lobby, 9 pm. - 1 am.PICKET: Gay Lib at the Normandy, 745 Rush, 10 pm.,April 25 also.Blum Busted Saturday, April 25Former Student Government presidentJeff Blum, expelled ’69, is being held on$3,000 bond in Berkeley after recentCorrectionThe information given in the lastMaroon on the film series entitled“Civilisation” was incorrect. Thefilms are shown on Wednesday andSunday (not Friday). On Sunday,April 26, the first of the series willbe shown again at 7 pm, and thefourth (not the third) of the serieswill be run at 8 and again at 9 pm.The series runs through May 27 (notApril 27). TALK: Fafher Carl Leziak, "A Dying Church in aDying Society," College of Complexes, 105 GrariaAve., St. Regis Cafe, 9 pm., SI.WORKSHOP: Dr. George Bach, "How to Fight withyour Mate to get Closeness and Understanding,OASIS, 20 East Harrison, 10 am. - 5 pm. 545 perperson.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm., 50c.Sunday, April 26CHARLES O'CONNELLRe-appointed dean of students GAY LIB: Open meeting, 5310 Harper, 1 pm.EXPERIMENTAL WORSHIP: Uhited Church of HyaePark, 1448 E 53rd, 4 pm.Monday, April 27GAY LIB: Women pnly, lunch, Blue Gargoyle, noon_LECTURE-FILM: Hungarian Ethnic Dance, Ida Noyes,7:30 pm.Tuesday, April 28LECTURE: E. Welskopf, professor of ancient historyat Humboldt University, "Freedom and Leisure orCitizens In Antiquity," Breasted Hall, 4 pm.NUDE SWIM: SVNA, 7:30 pm.CLEAN THEATRE: FOTA, 8:30 pm.Jimmy's Celebrates 30th AnniversaryBy Roger BlackWe were going into Jimmy’s and threehippies lurched out of the door, ran into us,stopped, and one of them said: “What arewe doing stumbling out of Jimmy’s at 1:30in the morning?” And then they stumbledon out and down 55 St, and we stumbled in.Inside it is dank and beery. The place isnoisy. The ceiling is black. Cigaret buttsmay be dropped on the floor. The furnitureis battered. Beatles records are playing.The bartenders arp happy. Everybody isdrinking, and shouting, and having a goodtime.Jimmy’s was 30 years old last week. Jim¬my himself is somewhat older, but hehasn't lost his touch. As much beer is soldin his place as in any in the city. Maybemore. Large pitchers are dispensed for$1.75, and enthusiastically drunk.From the outside it is not prepossessingJimmy’s does not remind you of, say, theOak Bar in the Plaza. For one thing, a shotof Jack Daniel’s costs a buck and a half inthe Oak Bar and only 60 cents in Jimmy’s.There’s probably not any vomit in the bath¬room at the Oak Bar. But you don’t findany of your limousine liberals in Jimmy’s.Jimmy’s is not effete. It may be in¬tellectual as compared to other saloons.Guys don’t sit around, jawing about Agnewand watching the game on the TV. Peoplein Jimmy’s talk loudly and with a style thatimproves as the evening wears on. Jim¬my's has a color TV all right,but the lasttime it was turned on was to hear WalterCronkite tell the good news about Carswell.Yes well, Jimmy’s is pretty intellectual assaloons go, but the point of it is drinking.Jimmy’s as we say back home, is a seriousdrank in’ bar, and the intellectual facade ofthe University of Chicago just fades awayin there, (along with your troubles, heart¬aches, worries, and the exigencies of life inthe Ugly City.) And there is one thing Jim¬my’s and the Oak Bar have in common: the tables are made out of wood, along with thechairs, and the bar. No Formica. No crap¬py Muzak.Wilson (that is Jimmy’s last name) start¬ed as a bartender in the old University Tav¬ern which was later torn down to makeroom for that monument of a penetentiary,Pierce Tower. In ’48 Jimmy and a friendset up their own bar in a room across 55thon Woodlawn. Now there are three rooms(two of them accessible only with a Univer¬sity I.D.), but the saloon is about the same,it is just collected some dust and sentiment.People in Hyde Park don’t say, let’s gohave a drink, they say, let’s go to Jimmy’s.On any given night you may expect to findJimmy himself (who still likes to work be¬hind the bar), several tenders (for ex¬ample, John Martin who is known to hisfriends as Troll, a former astrophysics graduate student who went through the Col¬lege, got elected permanent King of MeadHouse in 1965 and finally got fed up), also aprominent young biology professor, someeditor from the UC press, several groups ofrowdy students, a few of the drunken regu¬lars, an out-of-place Yaley looking couple,some heads who got thirsty, and maybe oneor two heavy truck drivers.One of these last was in the other day, adriver for Budweiser, and he saw a bigBudweiser label framed hanging behind thebar with a wooden hand attached to it, withthe third finger extended in the inter¬national symbol of scorn. The truckdriversaid to the bartender, “You better take thatdown.” And the bartender said, “No.” Andthe truckdriver said, “Well, I’ll just comebehind the bar and take it down myself.”“If you try, I’ll hit you on the head with this baseball bat,’ the bartender said, tak¬ing out a baseball bat which is kept therefor just such a purpose. The truckdriverlooked at the bat and stomped, like Broder¬ick Crawford in a Fritz Lang Movie, out.Jimmy doesn’t serve Budweiser. Heserves Schlitz. He hasn’t served Budweiserever since one day early in the fifties whenhe asked for a discount from the Budweiserman and the man, in somewhat rude man¬ner, told him no. Jimmy said he sold asmuch beer as anyone in town and he knewother places were getting discounts. Andthe man said Budweiser makes this place,people come here just to drink it. And Jim¬my said the hell with you, or words to thateffect. And the next day the order fromBud just sat out on the sidewalk while theSchlitz men carried in kegs of their beerand set them up.Maroon Office Invaded by Russian ThrongBy Roger BlackRussians.Thirty Russian journalists crowding intothe third floor of Ida Noyes, drinking Vod¬ka, taking pictures, hobbnobbing with thestaff of The Maroon, the student newspaperof the University of Chicago.What are they doing here?Well, a week ago we received a commu¬nication from the International Visitor’sCenter asking whether or not we wouldcare to receive a delegation of actual Rus¬sians who were coming to this country tosee what it was like. They were to spend 18days, starting in New York, then going onto Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta (Atlanta?Right on), and some place in California.Well, why not? So they came, 20 or 30 ofthem, with several interpreters, straightfrom the airport, and thirsty. The Maroonbought them five bottles of Vodka. Godknows what they thought of it. And we allpassed out copies of the paper, and Caro¬line Heck, our editor, submitted to an inter¬view (through interpreters).“What subjects do you write about? Isthere any, how do you say, control?”Quite an event. At the end, they all gaveout trinkets, Lenin pins, some of them theplastic kind that flash back and forth. Italked to one woman who had a hair stylemuch like Jackie Kennedy or Carter Bur¬den’s wife. She looked like she was fromNew York. She said, “I am from Georgia.”I smiled. She said, “Not your Georgia.”Jeanne Wikler, co-editor, Grey CityJournal: “They seemed to be as interestedin me as an individual as in me as a stu¬dent or an American. Wanted to know mygoals in life, my political ideas and affilia¬tions, how much money my father had. Themen were gallant to the point of male chau¬vinism (they wouldn’t let me sit next to thewindow for fear I might catch cold).“They seemed very pleased to hear that Iknew a little about Russian history and lit¬erature, but were firmly convinced that the American press prevented any real com¬munication between their people and ours.They showered us with souvenirs. One ladytook a sip of our Korona vodka, gagged in¬voluntarily, and politely asked what itwas.”Judy Alsofrom, news staff: “I felt likethey were leering at me. One guy spentabout five minutes trying to teach me tosay hello in about ten syllables. I still can’tsay it.”Emmet Gonder, business manager: “Oneof the most decadently capitalistic studentnewspapers in the country today enter¬tained one-and-a-half score nasty Commu¬nist pinkos — honestly! To preserve theproper ethnic atmosphere, The Maroonserved native beverages. As they used tosay in the paper back home, ‘A Good TimeWas Had By All.’ ”Steve Cook, editor-elect: “I talked to onejournalist about the gay liberation move¬ment on campus and in Chicago. Now I’mnot in the movement, but have been meet¬ing some of the leaders lately. The. Russianwas a middle-aged, roly-poly man with avery red nose and greasy short hair.“When he was satisfied that gay lib wasself-supporting and was not as such illegal,he wanted to know what their programwas.“I told him.“Do you mean to say that these peoplewant to be recognized just like normal boysand girls? he asked. I said yes and hechanged the subject.“The Vodka was beginning to fry myskull, so I thought I would do the thing forthe American radicals.“ ‘Don’t let these tourist people fool you,’I said to the Russian. ‘Our country hastwo sides. On one hand it can put a man onthe moon and then on the other they leavebehind some of the greatest social prob¬lems in any nation: racism, the military-industrial complex, the growing gulf be¬tween rich and poor, the war, pollution;just look across the street at Woodlawn...’ “At thaf point the interpreter suggestedthey leave. The Russian gave me a pinwhich I can’t translate, but it flashes whenthe light hits it like a Mickey Mouse pin,except that it has a picture of Lenin on it.“They also gave me a package of ciga-rets which taste. like Balkan Sobraniescrossed with Winstons.”Con Hitchcock, managing editor: “Sip¬ping Bloody Marys and fielding questionsfrom 30 visiting Russian journalists is notthe conventional way of putting out the Ma¬roon, but this is the way we did it Thurs¬day. The visitors, desirous of interviewingnoted anarcho-hippie student editors, ar¬rived at our office, armed with notebooksand pencils and full of probing questions.“Brought up with an anti-Communist bent,I immediately stashed our confidential in¬formation and prepared to give a rousingdefense of God, motherhood and the Ameri¬can way to the intruders from behind theIron Curtain. But I never did, and had tocontent myseif with answering their ques¬tions. For this I was rewarded with fivebuttons commemorating Lenin and theCommunist youth organization. The Vodkawas lubricating and helped make theafternoon enjoyable and educational. Butit is still a hell of a way to run a news¬paper.”Sue Loth, news editor: “The staff had ad¬vance warning that ‘the Russians werecoming’ but the real shock to our systemswas that any group of 30 people would wantto study us.“I felt the same discomfort many jour¬nalists do when they realize that for once,they are the objects under scrutiny. Iwished I knew Russian shorthand, to get apeek at what was being scribbled in theirnotebooks.“For all our jesting about “Red spies”,I’m still more suspicious of the Red Squad.Nancy Chisman, news staff: “A young,English speaking woman from Georgia wasvery interested in the life of the Universityof Chicago students. She had difficulty un¬derstanding the concept of the college with¬ in the university but was most amazed atthe cost of attendance.“ ‘Did you say 400 or 4000!?’ she said witha heavy accent.“One man across the aisle looked up inastonishment as a young man with shoul¬der-length hair under a cowboy hat walkedby towards the Maroon office. The Russianbegan to scribble furiously into his note¬book.”Joel Pondelik, assistant business man¬ager: “Invading the Maroon’s citadel ofKapitalism we all exchanged samples ofmoney; I tried to show them the cash box,and give some flavor to what it means tobe part of big-time business. All agreedbeing rich is better than being poor.“Advancing to a more political level, ex¬changes of Lenin’s anniversary pins tookplace, and a defensive display of Lenin, Ha-vanna, and Vietnam posters was examined.After the formalities, metaphysics entered,the Vodka flowed, pictures were taken, andwe all sang a chorus of ‘Back in theUSSR.’ ”David Travis, photography staff: “Ashort, brown haired Russian draped with acamera, began motioning with his handsand muttering. Unfortunately I could notunderstand a thing. He pointed to a Maroonas if he wanted one, but was not allowed tohave one.. More muttering. I gave him aMaroon. More muttering.“Finally feeling somewhat frustrated, heleveled me by saying, ‘Sprechen SieDeutsch?’ I muttered. After my polite“Sie’s” dropped, my grammar crumbled,and only a few, well-memorized nouns re¬mained, we both muttered. He took a hand¬ful of Maroons and left.”Caroline Heck, editor: “They seemedmost genuinely interested in getting con¬crete pieces of information about the Ma¬roon, and what role it played. The Rus¬sians, were charming, earnest, eager toplease, eager to learn, and ultimately total¬ly out of touch. They did not approve of ourVodka.”April 24, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5EDITORIALSTenant UnionsAlthough their actions haven’t been grabbing the headlineslike post office and teamsters strikes do, tenant unions are none¬theless making news. Today’s Maroon carries stories of three; andat this point the news looks encouraging. In two of the cases in¬volved, tenants felt they had a right to the maintenance of at leastminimum city building standards in their apartments. The membersof the Beechwood Tenants Association, 1221-23 E 57th st have filedsuit against their landlord stating that their lease is “inequitableand unenforceable.” Residents pay their rent but since last autumnhave refused to sign 1970 leases until the case comes to court nextMonday. They were protected from eviction by a recent Illinoislaw which permits tenants to “in addition to other remedies, suelandlords directly about illegal conditions.”As the Beechwood group’s lawyer has noted, a victory for thetenants would be “a recognition that building code requirementsare part of a tenant’s contractual rights with his landlord, and thata landlord cannot exact full payment of rent while violations con¬tinue.” A second group fighting for their rights is the 5330 Black-stone Tenants Association which last month began a rent striketo speed negotiations regarding building code violations and rentincreases. Their latest battle came Tuesday, when 18 tenants inthe association were called to evictions court; Tuesday evening, 18unwounded veterans returned to their building, an owners’ re-presentive now willing to talk.Still another organization fighting for tenant’s power is theMarried Student Housing Tenants Association, which for monthshas worked for negociations with University Realty Management.Although no negotiations have been formally initiated, the associa¬tion (which includes more than half the residents of married stu¬dent housing) notes that it is both the only unionized student hous¬ing and the only University housing whose rates will not be in¬creased next year.None of the negotiations have yet been settled; yet the earlyresults look promising. Many organized tenants have stood together,met pressure and survived. The tenants movement is a fast-growingone. The Tenant Union organization of the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference is presently working with more than 65tenant groups in the Hyde Park area; Student Government’s tenantunion project has also helped groups organize. Involvement inunion meetings, strikes, negotiation and court dates is a lesson incity politics. More important though, united tenant action can alsocut across barriers of class, occupation, age and race to generate adeeper sense of community.FOTA and SpringIt’s nearly the end of April and, true to Chicago form, springis just around the corner. Someday the trees will be green and theair warm. One infallible sign of spring and better times has alreadyarrived, however, paying no attention to wintry weather — theFestival of the Arts.FOTA truly came into its own last year with a series of eventsthat astounded, delighted and soothed the campus, making theUniversity of Chicago a generally nicer place to be. This year’sFestival of the Arts got underway this week via Allen Ginsberg,and we have every hope that it will be as stupendous as last year’sprogram was.It was strikingly evident last year, but is equally true thisyear, that for many students the arts provide as much interest andactivity as politics, often seized on as being every student’s burn¬ing concern. FOTA provides an opportunity for students with seri¬ous interests in the arts to communicate their efforts to otherstudents, usually free of charge. It also provides a rare occasionfor some sense of community spirit among the people who inhabitthis campus. Before last year, we never missed the full extent ofwhat FOTA could bring us; now it seems impossible that we coulddo without it. Our best wishes to FOTA and hopes for its success. LETTERS TO THE EDITORSBookstore MoveI should like to suggest that the problemof the bookstore could be solved with rela¬tively minor expense as follows: When thenew library becomes available in the fall,space in old buildings will be available forrearrangement. It should not be too diffi¬cult to transfer the registrar’s office to thefirst floor of the Walker Museum, a largearea, the bursar to the first floor of Rosen-wald, an equally large space, and thebookstore into the first and second flowsof the ad building.H.S. AnkerGadfly Re-consideredThere were in your Gadfly column of the21st (“Technology Won’t Solve PollutionProblem’’) a number of useful commentsupon our “Sick Earth” Symposium of the13th. In responding to what he took to havebeen the argument of my paper, your col¬umnist made several points worthy ofserious consideration.It should be noted, however, that has ex¬tended response was not to my position butto one I question along with him, the posi¬tion that “a polluted environment is onemore challenge to a new species, one that itis adapting to without ultimate dis¬advantage, loss of health or danger of ex¬tinction.” I find it significant that ourcontemporaries, who tend to regard them¬selves as moderns, relativists and “evolu¬tionists”, simply will not settle for the “as¬surances” wlvch might be offered by sucha position. I believe it instructive to consid¬er why this should be so — and this I ad¬dressed myself to both in my paper and mthe discussion which followed.Your Gadfly columnist observes that “theinteresting question for all of us is, Howlong is man likely to last? and more ... isthere anything we can do to prolong ourexistence?” It is understandable (and, in asense, natural) that many, perhaps most,men can be moved to regard these as themost interesting questions — but seriousteachers should demand more of reallythoughtful students, unlike what is happen¬ing in our universities today.The primary concern in my remarks ofthe 13th was neither with pollution simplynor with the survival of our species — I amconfident we will continue to have both pol¬lution and our species in too large a mea¬sure for a long time to come — but ratherwith the implications of what almost all ofus are assuming and thinking about thesematters, beginning with our usage of suchTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Con HitchcockNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Steve Cook (News). ChrisFroute (Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glaier, PeteGood sell, Gordon Katz, Susan Left, GerardLevel, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, JanetPine, Audrey Shalinsky, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Monty Futch,Jesse Krakauer, Bruce Rahe, 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. M437. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3243. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mall $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. terms as “pollution” and “environment ”Both of these terms, I suggested, can beshown to rest upon (and to conceal) an in¬tellectually unfashionable but quite humanawareness by us of nature and of the na¬ture of man — an awareness which is notcharacteristically modern and which war¬rants careful examination by the thoughtfulamong us.The truly interesting question forthoughtful students can well begin with aconsideration of what man is, what man isat his best and what kind of community ismost likely to permit and even encouragethe development of that best. I suspect thatsuch considerations may also be imme¬diately useful, in that they can help us em¬ploy properly the economists, doctors andother specialists who have something to sayabout pollution. But it is more appropriateto the human being that his primary em¬phasis should be on the understanding rath¬er than on the useful, even when the usefulis directed to the question of our physicalwellbeing and preservation.Is not that which makes our species dis-is directed to the question of our physicalcapacity to recognize and to address our¬selves to the most serious and enduringquestions about the nature of things and,indeed, about the nature of nature?George AnastoploLecturer in the Liberal ArtsNeutral?The University of Chicago does morethan pollute the mind; it pollutes the envi¬ronment as well. Whether the University ofChicago is the city’s sixth worst or tenthworst polluter is unclear.It is clear that if you couple the Univer¬sity with the corporations headed by itstrustees, the whole interlocking directorateis responsible for most of the environmen¬tal violence in Chicago.One questions the willingness of thesemen to respond to environmental violencewith anything more than the bandage ofpublic relations. Image, not substance,seems to be their major concern.When asked to turn over the proxies on4,000 shares of Commonwealth Edison stockowned by the University community to thecampaign against pollution, they refused.Their response to the petition of over 1,-000 students and faculty was to reply with apress release announcing that the role ofthe University is to think, to discuss, — butnot to act.Now other universities have not found itimpossible to act against environmentalviolence as well as talk about it. The Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania, Antioch College(to name a few) have turned their proxiesto General Motors stock over to CampaignGM. The Lutheran School of Theology hasturned its Com Ed stock proxies over to thefight against pollution.These institutions act. They vote againstthe management that is raping the worldwe live in. The University of Chicago actsas well. It votes with management.As one University spokesman put it, “Ifwe don’t have confidence in management,we sell our stock. Otherwise we vote withmanagement.” Under these circumstancesI would be quite happy to settle for neutral¬ity. A neutral university would sell thestock it owns in criminal corporations,Commonwealth Edison among them.But the University of Chicago is not neu¬tral. It lends its votes and its public imageto the side of pollution and profit, even tothe point where its president emeritus,George Beadle, its vice president emeritus,Warren Johnson, the dean of its medicalschool, Leon O. Jacobson, and AlbertCrewe of its Fermi Institute sit on a pollu¬tion advisory board to spruce up Com¬monwealth Edison’s relations with the pub¬lic.I hope these men become as tired ofContinued on Page Seven6/The Chicago Maroon/April 24, 1970; v*.,*.*.*-» J>. J / *,HL4 i J ** i .«4J i AJ J i > M-tU.t,Uf I■> Wfiy* *:VXKIM±’MUXlilSIKX,i, . «•, » *< % % V**''-* •*- » *♦•••■*• .■>.*.•». ■ : "4, *■* *'***''Ht'**V*it%M-4-.V4 »"*.** J» **4, V V*1«CNumber 22 Friday, April 24, 1970“Flo Ziegfeld Woulda Loved It!"DanceApril 24: Modern Dance Concert, presented by UC ModernDance Club. International House Assembly Room, 8:00pm.April 27: The Synthetic Theatre. New and experimentaldance works. Ida Noyes Gym, 8:00 pm.April 29: Modern Dance Films. A Dance Chromatic, byEd Emswhiller. Totem — Alwin Nikolais Dance Co. Reve¬lations — Alvin Ailey Dance Co. Exerpts from Swan Lakewith Galina Ulanova and the NY City Ballet. A Night withthe Peking Opera. Ida Noyes Theatre, 7:30 pm. Programof films subject to change.May 2: Master Class in Modern Dance Technique, withmembers of the Jose Limon Dance Co. Ida Noyes Gym. 1:00 pm. Register with Elvi Moore, Ida Noyes 201, ext.3574, $1 registration fee.May 3: Folk Dancing with Orchestra. Main Quads by Ten¬nis Courts, 3:30 pm.May 3: The Columbia College Dance Troupe. Dancetheatre-piece Journey, including dance, sound, and slideprojections. Shirley Mordine, director. Gerald Mitchell,Donna Sugarman, Martha Carr and students of ColumbiaCollege. Ida Noyes Theatre, 7:30 pm.May 7: Folk Dancing, UC Folk Dancers. Main Quads atnoon.May 9: Master Class in Modern Dance Technique. Impro¬visations and Composition with Alwin Nikolais (for ad¬vanced students only). Ida Noyes Gym. Register withMrs. Elvi Moore, Ida Noyes 201, ext. 3574. $1 registrationfee.May 14: Folk Dancing, UC Folk Dancers, Main Quads atnoon.May 15: Folk Dancing, Main Quads at noonMay 16: Master Class in Modern Technique. With mem¬bers of the Paul Taylor Dance Co. Ida Noyes Gym, 1 pm.Register with Mrs. Elvi Moore, Ida Noyes 201, ext. 3574.$1 registration fee.May 17: The South Side Dance Workshop. ContemporaryInterpretative Dance, including improvisations and cho¬reography. Carter Frank, Alex Holm, Elizabeth Jaworski,Weina Kathmann, Joy Swatez, Marjorie Witty, 3:00 pm.May 22: Multi-Media Rock Cantata, The Civil War, byWilliam Russo. Presented by the Free Theatre of the Co¬lumbia College Center for New Music. Ida Noyes Gym,8:30 pm.Note: In case of rain, the Folk Dancing will be movedinside Ida Noyes.FilmMay 4: Shakespeare Festival: Julius Caesar with MarlonBrando. Quantrell Auditorium, 8:00 pm. Co-sponsored byContemporary European Films.May 4: Outdoor Movie. Title to be Announced. MainQuads, 9:30 pm.May 6: Shakespeare Festival: Hamlet, with Lawrence Oli¬vier. Quantrell Auditorium, 8:00 pm. Co-sponsored by Con¬temporary European Films.May 11: Shakespeare Festival : Macbeth, by Orson Welles.Quantrell Auditorium, 8:00 pm. Co-sponsored by Contem-Continued on Page SixSPRING MEANS A LOT of things in Chicago. The suntries a little harder to get through the impenetrable greycurtain that inundates the city (and presumably this areamust be sixth worth in the city. Too bad, UC is always thebridesmaid, never the bride.) People think about puttingtheir winter clothing in moth balls (but you have to out-bluff the weather since once you do put your wooliesaway, there's sure to be a cold wave.) People start learn¬ing how to walk again after practicing the blizzard slumpfor about six or seven months.The other thing which makes a spring, a spring is thecoming of FOTA. What is FOTA? Does it make antibalis-tic missies? Is it the intelligence arm of the Navy? A newCIA? Is it an abreviation telling the Transit Authoritywhat to do? In case the grey smog has clogged your brain,it stands for Festival of the Arts.By looking at this list of events and people who arehappening or performing you can imagine that the peoplewho organized the cultural explosion are a combination ofSol Hurok, Ed Sullivan, William Rainey Harper, DavidMerrick, P. T. Barnum and Fairfax “You Wonder Wherethe Yellow Went” Cone. It doesn’t seem surprising thatthe makers of FOTAS PAST AND PRESENT ARE IN¬VOLVED IN BRINGING IN THE August 29th Rock Festi¬val in Soldiers Field. They’ve succeeded where AbbieHoffman failed — what a little education at UC can do!In any case, pulling together Edward Albee, WilliamBlake, Alwin Nikolais, Jimmy Breslin, Bertolt Brecht, theLake County String Band, Orson Welles, Jose Limon,Studs Terkel, Laurence Olivier, Paul Taylor, EasleyBlackwood, Shirley Clark and Cold Blood (just to name afew) is quite a feat in itself. That conglomeration wouldmake quite a cocktail party.FOTA is just another reason for not doing your work(along with lying on the grass, playing Frisbee, hangingaround coffee shops etc.). FOTA especially is addictiveand habit-forming — once you start you can’t stop. It’salso a cheapskate’s paradise since practically everythingis FREE. Give in to your urges — Spring and FOTA comeonly once a year — get them while they last. April 28, 29: “Out At Sea,” by the Polish playwright Mro-zek. Directed by Werner Krieglstein. Bartlett GymnasiumSwimming Pool. 8:30 pm. May 1: Renaissance PlayersPerformance. Harper Library Quadrangles. 1:00 pm.May 8, 9, 10, 11: Cain’s Company presents William Blake’sThe Marriage of Heaven and Hell directed by Nick Ru-dall, Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30 pm. Co-sponsored by Uni¬versity Theatre. Ticket prices to be announced.May 8-10, 16-18: They Shall Not Pass. Adaptation of playabout Spanish Civil War first done in the Federal Theatre,done now using improvisational techniques. Chris Lyon,director. Chicago Theological Seminary Cloisters, 8:00 pm.May 10, 12: Student Prize-Winning Plays. Winners of the$75 FOTA contest. The Author and the Animal in ’im, byPaul Baker, and The Washing Machine, by Leanne Star.Ida Noyes Theatre, 7:30 pm.May 13: Le Tetrau de Paris Acting Co. from Francepresents a production in French of Ionesco’s The Chairsand The Lesson. The Company has had a successful run inNew York. Mandel Hall, 4 pm, tickets $1.50.May 14, 15, 16, 17: Waiting for Godot, directed by RogerDodds. Lutheran Theological Seminary, 8:30 pm. Co-spon¬sored with University Theatre. Ticket prices to be an¬nounced.May 21, 22, 23: Three Brecht plays: The Exception andthe Rule, The Elephant Calf, and The Measures Taken.Directed by Prof Stephen Jaeger. Outdoors, SutchinsonCourt. 8:30 pm.Theatre- 1iTT;t.t m.-tri-jr-rf ft i‘ *? N Y Y 1w - » ^ «* tv t*t.»■ »t«r jT t«»tyy» **.*.*V»>**.*»>*»«» * o-tti*.—>•«» « «*-«» -» ■» *■- ->•-♦—>--»'■» - mr~mnm*+-mum** ^ . **■• *«.»|^.-. .., / i * \ *ciirni mini —.Sweatshirts and Trading Cards...ALL OF YOU remember in this column two weeks agowhen yours truly presented documentary evidence of hisexploitation by Dry Dock Savings Bank (they’d just betterlook out.) Well it occured to me that it might not be sucha bad idea to use Madison Avenue to my advantage. Canyou imagine Culture Vulture board games — the object ofwhich is to see how many events you can sneak into. Whatabout C.V. trading cards, cereal bowls, lunch boxes, whis¬tles (of course they sound like squawks), note books,sweat shirts. As long as I’m going to sell out, it might aswell be all the way. You might say it’ll be not with awhimper but a bang (that phrase was about as original ascereal bowls, lunch boxes and trading cards.)CAMPUSFilmTonight Doc Films presents Alain Resnais’ Muriel.Renais, who directed last week’s La Guerre Est Finie,examines people trapped by their pasts. Somehow thepresent always seems to be pursued by the past. In Cobbat 7:15 and 9:30 for 750.Tomorrow night, CEF presents The Fifth Horseman isFear. Situated in Nazi-occupied Prague it concerns a Jew¬ish doctor’s frantic search for morphine for his patient. InCobb at 7 and 9:15 for $1.For its Tuesday night Joseph Losey festival, DocFilms presents Eva with Jeanne Moreau and Stanley Bak¬er. Losey called it his best film until the producers got toit. It’s in Cobb at 8 for 750.Wednesday night, Doc Films presents Resnais’ Nightand Fog (seems like it is getting to be a Resnais Week).He is studying a concentration camp and does so by look¬ing through the deserted grounds as well as includingfilms of it in action. The second feature is Godard’s Allthe Boys are Called Patrick. Godard was just startingthen so the obscurity hasn’t developed to its fullest pow¬ers. The third feature is Don Siegel’s Flaming Star whichtells of racial tensions during an Indian uprising in the1870’s. All three are at 7:15 and 9:30 in Cobb for 750.TheatreThis week-end, alienation comes to campus (thenagain was it ever missing? — this time it’s in the theatre)when none other than Bertolt Brecht’s The ThreepennyOpera opens in Reynolds Club Theatre. Though theycouldn’t get Lotte Lenya they do have James O’Reillydirecting, and Bob Keefe, Pat Prinz, Don Swanton, EdreneFerman Heiss, Pauline Brailsford, Bill Lycan, BarbaraBernstein, and Pat Billingsley as Macheath, his womenJESSELSON’Sirr752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 -1340 E. 53rd... I III: MOST BEAUTIFULEXPLOI TATION FiLMEVER" • PRODUCED/'^ 1 Zhe SecretSex. Livesmrap flv tP Ml iMkWMiM •t:T*frrrrirrr EASTMAN COLHOT plus... WOW!BLOODED WOMENPS, LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337-2113 and his cohorts. It plays Friday, Saturday, and Sundaynights at 8:30.Wemer Kreiglestein of Don Carlos Fame is directing aproduction of Mrozek’s Out at Sea which will be per¬formed (of all places) — in the Bartlett Gymn swimmingpool. You don’t have to wear a bathing suit — the au¬dience will be the only ones who will be high and dry. It’sTuesday and Wednesday at 8:30.If you’ve suddenly become excited about theatre afterseeing what’s going on this quarter, there’s still anotherwork to add to the calendar. Robert Hopkins is directingEdward Albee’s The Sandbox and Ray Bradbury’s Deathand the Maiden and is holding auditions tomorrow from3:30-5 in Reynolds Club Theatre. The Sandbox’s charactersare Granny, Mommy, Daddy, the Musician, and theYoung Man. Death and the Maiden’s company consists ofa 91-year old maiden and a young man.MusicThere is a Contemporary Chamber players’ recitaltonight. It stars James McKay, basoon; and John Cobb,pianist. They will perform Bach’s Suite No 1 in G Major,Hindemith’s Sonata for Bassoon, Schwantner’s Chroniconand Telemann’s Sonata in F minor. It’s in Mandel at 8:30and FREE!The Committee on Southern Asian Studies presents aconcert of Indian music with Ustad Amjad Ali Khan, In¬dia’s outstanding young sarodist with Sharda Majaraj ac¬companying him on the tabla. For all you who aren’t inthe know, the sarod is a 25-stringed instrument, playedwith the fingers and a plectrum. The tabla is really twohand drums, treble and bass, tuned to the tonic of the soloinstrument. It’s tomorrow in the Law School Auditoriumat 8:30, $2 for students.MiscellaneousCRAP, CSP and GASP (Grateful Americans Support¬ing Pollution) are going to picket the Com Ed. stock¬holders meeting on Monday. A free bus leaves from be¬hind the Ad building at 9:30. GASP promises to bring apollution-making machine with them — after all the bigcompanies (and good ole UC) aren’t effective enough. Thismachine promises to be efficient, cheap (much less than acouple grand for a car.)WHPK SpecialsMonday7:15 p.m.: UC Musical Society, Part Song Concert9 pm: Selections from Kenneth Koch’s poetry readingTuesday7:30 pm: The Threepenny Opera Thursday7:15 pm: A discussion of FSACCSL8 pm: Selections from Edgar Allen Poe read by RichardSpore of the Dylan acting company9 pm: The Debutante Hour — Harry M. Petakisscreenmaker of movie about Nick the Greek; SheldonKarambelas middle-East poet plus the usual hagglersThis Week at the GargoyleFridayWomen’s Liberation rap session at noonMondayGay Liberation and Women’s Liberation Rap sessionat noonA number of Latin American Filmmakers are present¬ing The Discovery of America a film by Jaime Barrios. Itis a personal discovery of American society. At 8.NUC meeting at 8TuesdayCrafts Workshop 3:30-5:30U High Student-Teacher Coalition invites all to attendat 8WednesdayFolk Night at 8Art of the Short Film — a showing of short ex¬perimental underground films at 7:30 and 9:30.ThursdayGay Liberation rap session at noonHyde Park Corner will present Preacherman, thechairman of the Patriot Party, the group of radical whiteAppalachians. He will sing, rap, and answer questionsabout the people, the party, and the struggle. At 8.Hyde Park Comer at 8Poetry Workshop at 9ELSEWHEREFilmThey 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 suspence and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicaland contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, Chicago arid Michigan.M*A*S*H is a bitterly cynical look at war which justtears it to shreds. It stars Elliot Gould and Donald Suther-Continued on Page TourKATE BARKER and the kids who called her Ma.JAMES H NICHOLSON »„0 SAMUEL Z ARKOFF mu«<SHELLEY WINTERSThe meanest brood of hoodlums ever spawned.Only a mother could love THEM...Only THEY could love a mother like“BLOODY MAMA”!19/0 Ament an International Pictures Inc Original Sound Track Album available on AM(KlCAN iNIfRMHONAl HI COHOSPAT HINGLE DON STROUD ■ DIANE VARSIBRUCE DERN • CLINT KIMBROUGH • ROBERT DeNIRO • ROBERT WALDEN :noouciotoiMctfoav ROGER CORMAN mcurivt mooucinSAMUEL l ARKQFF & JAMES H NICHOLSON co moouct* NORMAN T HERMANsewn.**, K ROBERT THOM stoat it ROBERT THOM mo DON PETERS COLOR 0, MOVIUAB »n AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL nou*2/Grey City Jouraal/April 24, 1970From Hutch Court to Bartlett PoolWITH THE PRODUCTION OF The Threepenny Opera thisweekend, an exciting quarter of dramatic activity has be¬gun which may set a new record for theatre on thiscampus. FOTA, University Theatre, Cain’s Company, Re¬naissance Players, as well as numerous private endeavorswill be responsible for a mind-boggling choice of produc¬tions to act in, help with, or just attend. Some are free,some are not (the “standard” ticket price has gone up to$2, due, they say, to inflation). Some are original, andthere are some of the old favorites from Shakespeare toBeckett. To help you figure out which night to see what,here is a list, by school weeks:Fourth week: University Theatre’s Threepenny Opera,„ by Brecht (of course). The show opened Thursday but willrun through Sunday. Directed by James O’Reilly, theshow features old pros such as Bob Keefe, Pauline Brails-ford, Donald Swanton, Pat Prinz, Barbara Bernstein. Cur¬tain time is 8:30 each night. Tickets are $2 apiece.Fifth week: Tuesday and Wednesday nights, UC audienceswill be treated to a cathartic experience with WernerKrieglstein’s newest endeavor, Slawomir Mrozek’s Oot AtSea. Krieglstein, famous in Chicago for his production ofDon Carlos last quarter, is directing the Polish work in anew kind of theatre: the Bartlett Gymnasium SwimmingPool. From the title, you can guess that the setting isappropriate. Admission is free, and although bathing suitsare not required or requested, Krieglstein asks that 1)each spectator bathe or shower before arriving (“We wanta clean theatre!” said Krieglstein) and 2) each spectatorfast for three hours before showtime, in order to be physi¬cally as well as emotionally prepared. “Curtain time” is8:30.On May Day, celebrations will be held on the quadswith the repeat performance of last quarter’s RenaissancePlayers production, Robin and Marion. Directed by An¬nette Fern, the original cast will perform — Jim Miller,Don Swanton, Barbara Bernstein, Judy Nelson, and others— with the added attraction of Thomas Busch. At 1 pm, inthe courtyard behind Swift Hall.Also this weekend, Blackfriars opens its spring pro¬duction, Sweetlife, a musical based on The Marriage ofFigaro and set today at a modern University. The bookWoodstock and lyrics were written by Seth Masia, and the music isby Jim Rebhan. The cast includes Eric Josephson, SusanBosworth, Andy Gallant, David Webers, and Mary Con¬nors. Sydney Bendix is the director. Sweetlife will bepresented in Mandel Hall, with tickets at $2 and $2.50 (50cents off for students).Sixth week: Blackfriars again, same as above.Running Friday through the next Tuesday will be thisis No More year’s Cain’s Company production (they did Yeats’ Cuch-ulain last year and Cain the year before): The Marriageof Heaven and Hell, by William Blake. The stage adapt¬ation was the concerted effort of the three Cain’s Com¬pany patriarchs, Virgil Burnett, Jerome McGann, and Da¬vid Nicholas Rudall. As usual, the company will performin Rockefeller Chapel, where multi-media effects will beused. The dates are May 8-12, time is 8:30, tickets are $2and not reserved.This weekend and the next, The Collective, an ex¬perimental theatre group on campus, will present TheyShall Not Pass, an adaptation of Ruth Deacon’s FederalTheatre sketch, Spain 1937. The Collective, which bases itsproductions on improvisation and mixed media, includesDavid Chase, David Cole, Annette Fern, Gerry Fisher,Linda Gossen, Christopher Lyon, and Lee Strucker. BuzzSawyer will play piano. They Shall Not Pass will bepresented in the Chicago Theological Seminary Cloistersat 8:30. Admission is free.Seventh week: The Collective again presents They ShallNot Pass.Thursday through Sunday, University Theatre willpresent Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, directed byRoger Dodds. This is the first time that a campus produc¬tion has been held at the Lutheran School of TheologyAmphitheatre (in that new building on 55th and Univer¬sity). Marylin Milberger and Gregory Ferguson have de¬signed the set for the show, which includes Bill Reddy (asVladimir), Steve Mencher (Estragon), Lenny Kraft (Poz-zo), Jim Miller (Lucky), and Danny Greenwald as theBoy. Tickets are $2 with group discounts. Curtain is 8:30.Eighth week: FOTA is sponsoring a trilogy of Brecht one-acts, to be performed outside in Hutchinson Court on May22, 23, and 24. The plays are The Exception and the Rule,The Measures Taken (both directed by Stephen Jaeger)and The Elephant Calf (directed by Peter Jansen). Musicis by Hans Eisler and Norman Siegel (brother of a famousmagazine editor). The plays range from raw politics (agit¬prop plays) to broad humor. Masks and mime will be usedextensively. The three plays will be presented at 8:30 eachnight, for free.Also this week will be a staged reading of Shakes¬peare’s Winter’s Tale. James Redfield is directing, andVirgil Burnett is designing this production. Actors includeBill Bezdek and Annette Fern, with a lot of New CollegiateDivision people. It will be held in the Ida Noyes Theatreon May 22, 23, and 24.WHEN THE AQUARIAN EXPOSITION, better known asthe Woodstock Music and Art Fair, was first announced, itseemed like they were trying to provide Easterners with aMonterey Festival. By the time it occurred, surviving anofficial declaration of “disaster” without a single report,official or otherwise, of violent behavior on the part ofparticipants or police, it became clear that “Woodstock”was indeed unique, a final monumental tribute to the “hip¬pie” movement of the sixties, a place where the mostmarginal members of the youth culture from Great Neckcould comfortably coexist with the Hog Farm. Abbie Hoff¬man, America’s greatest sftand-up comic since Lenny Brucedeclared Woodstock his place of residence while partici¬pating in a trial that made it clear that things wouldnever permit a Woodstock again. (They never did. TheStones tried it at Altamont and instead of love and peacefound murder.)If Woodstock the event managed to escape from underMonterey, Woodstock, a movie directed by Michael Wad-leigh and now playing at the State Lake, never quite gotout from under Monterey Pop. Like the Pannebaker film,the Woodstock film was designed by the festival’s produc¬ers to make back the money they knew they couldn’tmake on admissions (a problem that proved even greaterthan anyone ever predicted). Also like the Pennebakerfilm, Woodstock belongs to that sad group of Americanfilms which pretend to be cinema-verite. Unfortunately forWoodstock, the roving camera crews dispatched through¬out the festival were neither competant in finding inter¬esting subjects nor in filming those people and events theydid decide upon.The example of this that sticks most in my mind (andquite honestly not much of this picture does) is an in¬cident where one of the camera crews picks up a hitchhi¬ker and immediately turns him into subject. The sequencebegins with a close-shot of the boy and the off-screen voice°f the interviewer saying “obviously you didn’t come forthe girls.” What made this absurd statement “obvious”iand after the nude bathing sequence, one of the few mo¬ments of pacing in the three-hour length of the picture, thestatement seemed more absurd than ever) was not evi¬dent until a good two minutes later when the camera final¬ly pulled back to reveal that the solitary hitchhiker wasactually a part of a couple.This refusal to be concerned either with meaningfulframes or even establishing shots (the most notable trade¬mark of the American misunderstanding of true writefilmmakers) mars the musical sections as well. These se¬quences were directed personally by Mr. Wadleigh whose experience filming similar performers on television is sad¬ly in abundant evidence. The great innovation of Wood-stock is split-screens, but these are, with a very few ex¬ceptions, used with/so little visual or musical taste that allwe are given is a set of moving peep-holes. Groups withchoreographed stage acts like Sha-Na-Na or The Whoprove madening. We see enough to know that something isthere. What it is we are never able to see.The sound quality was the finest cinematic sound I haveever heard. The film is also of value for self and/or friend-watchers. Multiple shots are sure to reveal someone youknow. A warning, however, for those who wish to relive itall. The first time (about three shots in, in fact) a partici¬pant pushed a joint at the camera (an action repeated sooften it made smoking seem like a little boy’s bad joke) afew whiffs of the sweet smell travelled through the hall. Inless than twenty seconds the ushers were shining lights insmoker’s faces and the smell was gone, never to besniffed again.Terry Curtis Fox Ninth week: University Theatre’s Experimental Weekend,with an Albee play, a Bradbury story, and an originalpiece. Bob Hopkins is directing Albee’s The Sandbox, asatire of empty American values, and an adaptation ofBradbury’s Death and the Maiden, a story about a 91year-old virgin. The original play is called Throne, a non¬dialogue play by Krin Gabbard. The triple-bill will runMay 29, 30, and 31 in the Reynolds Club Theatre.ContributorsW. Z. Merbisc is currently training his pet fleas for astarring guest appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show. At thepresent moment he is looking for a ne.y cave to live in asthe irate record companies are beseiging his present quar¬ters as a retaliation for his expose. People with sparecaves should send letters to W. Z. Merbisc c/o Carvel IceCream Truck No. 6, Chicago, Illinois.Donna Lenhoff is a first year student in the College.Sue Lerner is a first year student in the College.April 24, 1970/Grey City Jouraal/3CULTURE VULTURE...and Cereal Bowl..Continued, from Page Twoland. At the United Artists, Randolph and Dearborn.The Boys in the Band is the film version of the playwhich seemed to break the ice in the subject of homo¬sexuality on Broadway. At the Carnegie at Rush and State.I Am Curious (Yellow) has caused a lot of furor be¬cause of what the people are doing but the picture isreally about what the people are thinking. At the Playboy,1204 N. Dearborn.Eisenstein’s Ten Days that Shook the World has beenrestored and has new music by Shostakovich. It is anEisenstein which isn't shown as much as the others but ishis epic documentation of the Russian Revolution. Alsoplaying with it is a partially restored copy of one of hismissing films, Bezhin Meadow. At the Festival, 3912 N.Sheridan.Fantasia — Disney’s classic featuring Night on BaldMountain — great for heads. At the Esquire, 50 E. Oak St.The Virgin President is a satirical political comedyabout an inept president. It stars Severn Darden of SecondCity Fame. At the Threepenny Cinema, 2424 N. -Lincoln.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.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 at8:30 an 11, Saturday at 8:30,11 and 1.Police— an interesting title is the Chicago premiere)f 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.The Parson in the Cupboard is the newest of PaulSills’ story theatre. Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln Tuesdaythrough Thursday at 8:30, Friday and Saturday at 8:30and 10:30 and Sunday at 7:30. Theatre games Sunday at 3An Evening with Bill Lederer includes 3 one-actors bythis Chicago playwright. At the Hull House PlaywrightsCenter, 222 W. North, Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Lady of Larkspur Loffon and The Happy Journeyfrom Trenton to Camden are two plays by Tennessee Wil¬liams and Thornton Wilder respectively. Cafe TOPA, 904W. Belmont. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30.Theatre in Media is multi-media works in television,film and radio. The Theatre of Phynance, 2261 N. LincolnMondays at 8 and 10.The Fourth Force improvisational farces and work-in¬progress, 4715 Broadway, Monday 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 Theatre’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.To the Induction Center is an original drama per¬formed by the Actor’s workshop at the Unity, 656 W. Bar¬ry. Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Elephant Calf and Ginger Anne are two plays by Bertolot Brecht and Derio Washburn respectively. At theColumbia College Performing Arts Center, 1725 N. WellsThursdays at 8:30 and FREE.Naked Lunch is a drama made from the works ofWilliam Burroughs. At the Columbia College PerformingArts Center, 1725 N. Wells, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 30and FREE.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. MadisonL and A 1422 S. PaulaskiWalton’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./ ' y *you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booxc.tass ale and Schlitx beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . , , luncheon . . . dinner . , . late snacks . , .5311 BIACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933ACE you' THINKINGAGCIJTSWEETLIEE? U. T. TRYOUTSFOR THRONE, AN ORIGINAL ONE ACT PLAY WITHOUT WORDSBY KRIN GABBARD. REYNOLDS CLUB SOUTH LOUNGETUESDAY, APRIL 28, 6:30-8:30 PMATHURSDAY, APRIL 30, 4-6 PM1/Grey City Journal/April 24, 1970 1 3PennyOperaTHIS WEEKEND ONLYApril 23-26 8:30 p.m.Reynolds' Club Theatre51th & University Ave.Tickets $2-00 atReynolds' Club Desknrrnrr*An Expose of the Record IndustryTHIS IS A LETTER to all you AFFLUENT AMERIKANSTUDENTS out there. Don’t look over your shoulder tosee if I mean someone else, because no doubt you, despiteyour Salvation rags, are just such a person. The subject oftoday’s tirade is the delineation of one of many ways inwhich you’re getting the shaft. The poor thing about thisparticular shaft is that you’ve been greasing it yourselffor some time, and now it just slides in and out the easierfor it.Hop down to your favorite record shop, slide throughthe door, pop your fingers several times to establish yourcoolness, and plunk down Mommies money for the latestlp hits. As you pay, recall the Good Ole Days whenrecords were less than $3.50 everywhere. You have moneyto burn, so what the Heinrich Himmler. It costs a certainamount to be in, and I suppose hippness goes up with thecost of living.Here comes the tragic part, i.e., when you get home.Take out your records (after marveling at the latest day¬glo cover art and the blurry, Instamatic pictures), andweep. Before you is a cheap piece of plastic that might aswell be do-do in the can. I’m not talking about the musicitself. That may be fine, though rare. Check out the disk.Notice how it bends, kind of like those Life Magazine freeswing records. Notice how well it sounds, Definitely notunlike those freebies, either. And you paid $3.00 (if youwere lucky); $4.00 (if your not). And the record companyspent at most 50 cents to press it. If you have a goodsound system, a la AR and Dynaco, you can really hearthe difference. There’s a distinct hiss; turn the volume upand it’s a roar. If you really picked a winner, maybe therecorded signal begins to break up and distort. Sometimesthe blasted thing actually skips. If you have some sort ofportable record player, don’t think that you won’t know it,either. As a matter of fact, the sound on your copies willbecome noticably worse; the sound will stay perfect foronly six to ten plays. "16 TOMSample of Trashy Cover Which Shoots Up PriceThis is one of many situations in which it would seemthat you’re trapped. The worst performed records couldbe on the best produced, mastered and pressed records.Most people buy records for the names and the sounds;few buy for the general quality of the label. The situation,then, is not some sort of Freidman-dream in which youcan take your business elsewhere. You may be able toseek out fantastic discount houses, but when your recordsare played, they will die at the same rate.To be specific, there are few record companies thatseem to be proud of their product. The only gold star inany judging goes to Polydor. Not only are .the disks pro¬duced well, but they are pressed well. Vangaurd also getsa star, but with one point missing. Quite often, somethingin the pressing or production is amiss. From this point, it’s down hill. The big companies, Atlantic, RCA, Elektraand Warner Bros, don’t seem to give a damn as long assales are good. In two weeks mail-opening at WHPK, RCAsent several new releases on incredibly thin plastic thatcan’t last. Atco sent the new Live Cream album, withAtco’s usual background hiss, and Warner Bros, had thenerve to send two albums that skipped or had seriousflaws. One of these records was Joni Mitchell’s latest, andI understand that many copies are in rough shape beforea tone arm gets near them. There are many other offend¬ers. Creedence Clearwater’s own Fantasy label even hasflaws you can see, let alone hear. The bootleg albums, allthe rage now, will forever be an outrage. Many look likepock-marked battlefields, and sound like war moviesoundtracks. All of them will last for but a few playings.The only things that can be done are pretty pitiful atpresent. You can spend lots and get a lightly-loaded tonearm, or you can get mad. Every time you get a bum disk,take it back and shout a while. The record store shouldgive you a new copy and return the old one to the dis¬tributor. The distributor must, in turn, send the bummerback. This process is painful, a? it is expensive, so themore records the distributor must return, the madder hegets. Naturally, the grubbers in the front offices of therecording companies will get the flack and maybe some¬thing will come of it. If letter writing is your thing, youcan send your guided missiles to these top people and letthem know what you think. For a while, your cries will beignored, and then maybe you’ll start getting form letters,free samples and pictures of your favorite stars. Eventual¬ly, someone will discover how expensive all of this give¬away stuff is, and you’ll get better records. Remember,the many may not be able to bust our music, but we canbust his bank!!P.S. That new McCartney album sounds as if it wererecorded in a cheap restaurant that specializes in friedeggs.W.Z. MerbiscWe Want You To Join Our ChurchAs AnOrdained MinisterAnd Have The Rank OfDoctor of DivinityWe are a non-structured faith, undenominational,with no traditional doctrine or dogma Our fastgrowing church is actively seeking new ministerswho believe what we believe. All men are entitledto their own convictions. To seek truth their ownway. whatever it may be. no questions asked As aminister 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 Enjoy reduced rates from some modes oftransportation, some theaters, stores, hotels,etc4 Seek draft exemption as one of our workmg missionaries. We will tell you howEnclose a tree will donation for the Minister'scredentials and license We also issue Doctor ofDivinity Degrees We are State Chartered and yourordination is recognized in all 50 states and mostforeign countries. FREE LIFE CHURCH-BOX 4039. HOLLYWOOD. FLORIDA 33023.Ton don't needinsuranceprotectionfor your car(if von liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’llwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971SENTRY®frINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization Cohn A. Stem®oum Sc (EampufiShopSWABBY JEANS by H.I.S.Here’s the last word in slacks ... Swabby Jeans - injailhouse stripes! They cling, way down. Thenwithout warning - they flare out. Button throughfly. $8IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsApril 24, 1970/Grey City Journal/5One FOTA Money.. •Continued from Page Oneporary European Films.May 18: Student-produced movie. Ida Noyes East Lounge,8:00 pm.May 24: Student Films from FOTA ’69, by Ron Meadow,Lexington Hall, 7 pm.May 29: Shakespeare Festival: Othello with Lawrence Oli¬vier. Quantrell Auditorium, 8:00 pm. Co-sponsored by Con¬temporary European Films.ArtMay 1-20: Outdoor Sculpture Exhibit. By Virginia Ferrariand students. Medical school Quadrangle. All the time.May 15-16: Contemporary Fine Arts Exhibit. Photograph¬ies, painting, graphics, sculpture. Prizes awarded to mem¬bers of University community. Judges: Prof. H. A. Van-derstapen, Prof. Louis J. Natenshon, Virginia Ferrari, andCameron Poulter. There will be some non-competing ex¬hibits by special invitation. Bergman Gallery, regularhours. Co-sponsored by the Bergman Gallery. June 2-27: The City of Man. FOTA regional photographyexhibit. Prizes will be awarded by: Arthur Paul, VicePres. & Art Director, Playboy. Art Sinsabaugh, Prof, ofFine Arts, U. of Illinois, Urbana. John Tweedle, Producerand Director, “Our People,” WTTW.MusicApril 30: Fine Arts Quartet. Lutheran School of Theology,8:30 pm.May 1, 2, 8, 9: Sweetlife, presented by Blackfriars. Musi¬cal was written by Seth Masia with music by Jim Rebhan.Mrs. Sydney Bendix, director. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.May 1: Outdoor Brass Concert. U. of Chicago Brass En¬semble. Roof of Hutchinson Court at noon.May 5: An Evening of Music for Violin and Piano. FrancisAkos, violin. Eloise Polk, piano. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.May 6: UC Concert Band Performance. Hutchinson Courtat noon.May 6: Workshop in Classical and Medieval Music, withSusanne Block. Ida Noyes Library, 3:30 pm.May 6: Susanne Block performance. A program of Me¬dieval, Renaissance, and Early Baroque music. LutheranSchool of Theology, 8:30 pm.May 7: Lake Country String Band Outdoor Concert. Wood¬ward Court, 8:30 pm. Co-sponsored by Woodward CourtHouses.May 8: Student-faculty Musical Recital. Ida Noyes Li¬brary, 3:30 pm.May 9: UC Musical Society Concert, Robert Holst, Con¬ductor. Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.May 10: An Afternoon of Music for Woodwinds and Key¬board. Chamber Music concert. Quantrell Auditorium, 3:30pm.May 10: An Evening of Organ and Brass, with UC BrassEnsemble and Larry Mendes, Organ. Bond Chapel, 7:30pm.May 13: UC Concert Band Performance. Hutchinson Courtat noon.May 13: Easley Blackwood Piano Recital. Quantrell Audi¬torium, 3:30 pm.May 19: An Evening of Song, including songs from Ger¬man, French, Italian and English Repertoire, plus oper¬atic arias and duets. Catherine Malfitano, soprano. PriceBrowne, tenor. Michael Kraus, Piano. Time and place tobe announced.May 23: UC Symphony Orchestra presents its Spring Con¬ cert. Works to be announced. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm. Spon¬sored by the Music Department.SpeakersMay 5: Studs Terkel, radio commentator and author ofDivision Street—America and the new Hard Times willspeak on “Jay Street” in the Law School at 8 pm. Co¬sponsored by the Music Department.May 7: Nelson Algren, Chicago author of Man With aGolden Arm, A Walk on the Wild Side and Chicago: Cityon the Make will speak in Breasted Hall at 8.Continued on Page SeverinnCITYjo PBWILHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.lU 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.J immy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHLITZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWN Our thing is your ring —UNI Ifwftfts *OR 59 TfAtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD CVKRORIEN PLAZAA brilliant film from the director ofLAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD,HIROSHIMA, MON AMOUR andLA GUERRE EST FINIEalain resnaisMURIELIN COLOR! Venice Film Festival prizewinner!TONIGHT!! 7:15 and 9:30pm 75£ in Cobb ' doc films FOR FEMALES ONL YDryer Liberation(Males may read but not participate)Shampoo, Haircut and Aircomb$6.00The Looking GlassBeauty Salon1515 E. Hyde Park Blvd. 955-5555PLArCCri ALL-NIGHT SHOWf.lOAT I MTtfOM KXtOWING Uit BIGGIW fMlUftiApril 10-WHD IN THi STREETSShelly Winters 1 Christopher Jones April 11MONTEREY POP FESTIVALJams Joplin, Jimi HendrexApril 17 April 18WILD ANGIES t, FACESPeter Fonda A Nancy Sinatra John CassavetesApril 24 April 251M0 CLOWNS ^ * ROMEO & JULIETMay 1 May 2Janies Cobum mMBM . Zero MostelTHE PRESIDENT'S ANALYST THE PRODUCERSAugust 1 August 2THE PRESIDENT'S ANALYST wM hr THE PRODUCERSJames Coburn Zero MostelBlock Colony Presents: fAR FROM VIETNAMa film of color by Godard, Ivens, Vorda, Rene Resnais, Lelouch, & others. Sunday, April 26 - 7:30 & 9 PM - Cobb HallJournal/Anril U IOTArecordsPaul McCartney MinusThreeWITHIN A WEEK OF THE announcement of the break-upof the Beatles, Apple Records has released the first PaulMcCartney album. Predictably, McCartney (Apple STAO3363) incorporates trends we have learned to expect fromPaul’s work on Beatle albums — for example, the stylized...i—nf “DM Darlinp” or “Honev Pic” nr the carlvcuteness of “Oh! Darling” or “Honey Pie” or the earlysexy excited vocals of ‘‘Kansas City” or ‘‘She’s A Wom¬an ” Paul’s image of himself has always been apparent —one can see it in the photograph of him, holding his guitar,wearing a Audded shirt and a soulful look, on the insidecover of the album — and he is self-conscious and a littleindulgent in this first solo effort. What saves this album isPaul’s sense of musical balance and proportion. The onlyother credits are “photos and harmonies” by his wife; thisis completely his album.The Beatles have been progressing avyay from live per-formable music to studio-produced sounds. Paul, too, con¬ceiving and performing this album alone, relies heavily ontechnology to make this album. He and his complex elec¬tronic equipment create an intricate, carefully-consideredsound. He exercises complete control over his media — allthe tracks are carefully balanced and expertly mixed.This total deliberation prevents melodies from being toocute. For example, in the second cut, “That Would BeSomething,” the words and melody are repetitious andalmost trite: “That would be something to reach in thefalling rain, Mama.” But the musical elements in thisselection save it. The vocal treatment adds variety andinterest; the instrumentation provides tension and drive.There’s a controlled excitement here, an excitement thatmoves through the song, carrying you with it.When the other Beatles have done individual work, theyhave followed personal inclinations to their logical ex¬tremes. George Harrison’s Wonder-Wall Music and thetwo records by John Lennon and Yoko Ono cannot beconsidered part of the mainstream of Beatle music.McCartney’s album, however, is a more direct contin¬uation of Abbey Road. “Oo You,” one of the best cuts onMcCartney, has a guitar passage patterned on the openingguitar in “Something.” The percussion effects usedthroughout Paul’s album are heavily influenced by thedrumming on Abbey Road. Once again, it is the interplaybetween a carefully placed voice and complex elec¬tronically controlled instrumentation that creates Paul’spersonal mixture.The album McCartney is a musical whole, a total musi¬cal conception rather than a collection of short catchytunes. The cuts follow one another in close musical prog¬ression. Interludes like “Glasses” and “‘Singalong Junk”tie the album together emotionally as well as musically.Reiterations of melodies give the album continuity. Suchdevices help create a mellow unity.Despite the good feeling the album gives, there is some¬thing missing. In an album so influenced by the group asa whole, we miss the other Beatles. So does McCartney.First of all, the weakest point of the album is the lyrics,which lack depth. Most songs are composed entirely of afew uninteresting phrases. Here is a need for the collabo¬ration of the others. Moreover, the extensive overlay anddubbing techniques and the use of four-part harmony inThe new MILL RUN THEATREat Golf and Milwaukee Roadsin Niles,IllinoisMISS Kin IKWILLIE TYLER and LESTERApril 28 thru May 3 m aid CIEIextra added attractionGODFREY CAMBRIDGEMay 5 thru 10Tuesday thru Thursday 8:30 pm. $7 50. $6.50 - Friday and Saturday: 8:00 p m. andn nn p m ,50. $6 50 - Sunday Matinee: 4:30 p m $5 50. $4 50 - Sunday evenmo:8 00 p m. $7 50. $6 50.Bo* Ottite opened Mon thru Sat. - 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 pm Sun-Noon to 7:00 p.m.SEATS NOW AT BOX OFFjCE OR JBY MAIL ;Name Phone .Address . ZipI would like. . Tickets it $ . . tech For . PerformanceIdatel Time (Indicate curtain timelMake checks payable lo Mill Run Theatre end mail to 600 Golf Mill ShoppingCenter. Niles. Illinois 60648 Please enclose self addressed envelope with yourorder Phone 298 3730 or 298-2170 Tickets available el all TICKETR0N (dialT I C K E T S) outlets including Montgomery Ward and Marshall Field Storesand at Mill Run Theatre in the Golf Mill Shopping Center.Ask about our student and group discount. places show that Paul is still writing for a group. Thereare places in the album where one waits for the entranceof the other familiar voices. There are places where onewould like to hear George’s intricate guitar style. The cutthat is the strongest and most straightforward, “MaybeI’m Amazed,” is also the one in which we are most awarethat Paul is alone. This is a sincere song which packs anemotional punch; yet, how much better it could have beenas a group effort. With all its weaknesses, McCartney creates a con¬sistently appealing and happy sound. Through his controland musicianship, Paul involves the listener. He indulgesin many special effects — some work, but some don’t. Theweak points of the album'are relative to our expectationsof the Beatles; they do not, however, detract from theoverall enjoyment afforded by the album.Sue LernerDonna LenhoffTwo FOTA ShowContinued from Page SixMay 11: Edward Albee, the award winning playwright ofWho’s Afraid of Virginia Woolfe?, A Delicate Balance, TheBallad of the Sad Cafe, The American Dream, Zoo Storyetc will speak on “The Playwright versus the Theatre” at8 in Mandel Hall.May 12: Jimmy Breslin, columnist, novelist of The GangThat Couldn’t Shoot Straight and unsuccessful candidatefor New York City Council President under Norman Mai¬ler, in the Law School at 8. Co-sponsored by the Depart¬ment of Social Sciences.May 14: Robert Downey is coming and bringing his 2classic underground films with him. Chafed Elbows willbe shown at Z pm and No Excuses will be seen at 8. Hewill be there for discussion after the 8 pm film. In Man-del.May 16: Reuven Gold, mystic story-teller of Hasidic andZen masters. In Ida Noyes Library at 8. Co-sponsored byHillel House.May 17: Paul Goodman. Social Commentator, essayist,poet and author of Growing Up Absurd, Utopian Essays,Practical Proposal and Compulsory Education and theCommunity of Scholars. In Quantrell at 8May 18: Donald Shojai, assistant professor of English willpresent an evening of Persian Stories in a place to beannounced at 7:30 pm.May 18: Shirley Clark will be here with her undergroundfilm Portrait of Jason. Miss Clark will be in residence atWoodward Court during her three-day stay and will ap¬pear at Pierce Tower and Burton-Judson. At 8 in the LawSchool. Co-sponsored by the Emily Talbot, Miriam TalbotFund, the Interhouse Council, and Woodward Court.May 19: Shirley Clark and her film the Cool World at 8 inthe Law School. May 20: Shirley Clark and her film The Connection at 8 inthe Law School.HappeningsMay 1, (rain date, May 4): FOTA Opening Ceremonies,Maypole Dance, Country Dancers, Songs. Main Qua¬drangles at noon.May 4, (rain date, May 6): Chalk-in, Hutchinson Court at11:30 am.May 5, (rain date, May 7): Contest Day, Main Qua¬drangles 1-3 pm.May 8: Mixed-Media Happening, paint-in and lightrshowwith Tom McKinley, Wesley Ward and Jeff Henkin of theMcKinley Jazz Trio at 8:30 pm in the Bergman Gallery.May 9: Cricket Match. UC Saisbury CC versus WinnetkaCC in North Field from noon to 5:30 pm.May 21: Simultaneous Chess Matches with Robert Byrnes,International Grand Master in Ida Noyes at 3:30 pm.May 21: Chess Lecture. Demonstration by Robert Byrnes,International Grand Master, in Quantrell at 8:30 pm.Special EventsMay 2: Beaux Arts Ball, annual masquerade ball featur¬ing Cold Blood and second group to be announced. Withgigantic light show. In Bartlett Gym, tickets $3 person atMandel Hall Box Office.May 15, (rain date May 17): Gala Performance 1970.Outdoor aural visual extravaganza performing Rachmani¬noff’s Easter Sunday on carillon and brass, Handel’s Roy¬al Water Music on carillon and another piece with a Gi¬gantic fireworks display. Outside Rockefeller Chapel at8:30 pm. Concert of Jazz and Contemporary Music by theChicago Arts Quartet, on the Midway of Main Quadranglesat 9:30 pm.BUYMRS. WIKLER’SHOME-MADE PIESImported Carof theYearRoad Test MagazineShouldn't youconsiderToyota Corona?Consider the no-cost extras, like re¬clining bucket seats, nylon carpeting,vinyl upholstery. Consider the per¬formance. 0-to-60 in 16 seconds. Atop speed of 90 mph. Consider thequality control. Over 700 tests andinspections. Then consider the price.$1950*COMPETITION MOTORS, INC.7722 & 7756 Stony Island •Chicago, Illinois374-4555TlOfYlOlTlAl•POE price. White tidewoll tires, acces¬sories, options, freight and taies extra. THIS SATURDAYthe committee on southernasion studies presentsUSTAD AMJAD ALI KHAN •SarodPANDIT SHARDA MAHARAJ • TablaLAW SCHOOLAUDITORIUMSaturday, April 25,8:30 P.M.Tickets on sale in Foster Hall, 106 andat the door. $3.00 general admission;$2.00 with U. C. ID. 0 2 13 19Your car has five numberson the speedometer. Volvo has six.One could get the impressionthat the people who made your carlack a little confidence.6120 S. WESTERNDEPARTMENT OF MUSIC CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSJAMES McKAYBassoonJ OWN COBB at the pianoWorks by Bach • Hindemith • Schwantner • TelemannFRIDAY • APRIL 24 • 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALLAdmission is free • The public is invitedAprU 24, 1970/Grey City Jeuraal/7ars: irmAMumut vt;r. nTheatre 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 - 463-3099Clarktheatre 1enjoy ourspecial studentrate95 £ at alltimes MODERN DANCE CLASSES4.30 to 6:00Monday - SaturdayBallot. Rock & Jazz taught.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. StotoStovant BuildingRoom 1902332-9923for college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double feature|dailyopen 7:30 a.m. —lateshow midnightSunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 85'little gal-lery for galsonly• Clark park mg-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly programClark & madison fr 2-2843]FAR EAST KITCHENCHINESE & AMERICANF0QD & COCKTAILSOpen daily 10-10Fri. & Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd955-2229 LLi-mrpizza :PLATTEKPiizo, Fried Chicken .Italian Foods ^Compare the Price! I1460 E. 53rd 643-280<>!WE DELIVER IL...——— — J “The sharpest group of improvisationalists ever captured on film...”—Chicago Film Festival“...Assaults American standards in a half-funny, half-biting way...it’s really fantastic.” —Prattler, N.Y.C.Special Limited EngagementStarts April 22Student Rates2424 N. Uncoln ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street & Woodlawn Av,nu#_ Sun., April 26, 3:30 P.M.I IsraelI Jtt^1 £nypt(The Exodus Story)byGeorge Friderie HandelRICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chepel MusicROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 24 members otTHE CHICAGOSYMPHONY ORCHESTRARosemary Bock, sopranoPhyllis Unosawa, contraltoDonald Ooig, tenorEdward Mondelle, organistTICK ITS:*4.80 Reserved; S3.SO General Adm.12.50 for Student* ot ell college*end universities.Chapel Box-Office opensat 2:30 PM. For furtherinformation call643-0800, Ext. 3387TAKCAVt-YMCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLI DAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outEast 63rdFree Parking3®neSfia 2424 N. Lincoln - phone 528-9126EL TACOMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANT1607 E. 53rd St.HUACAM0LETACOSENCHILADASTAMALES T0STADASCHILIMANY OTHER DISHESCARRY OUT SERVICEOpen 7 days a week11:30 A.M. - 12:30 A.M. ACADEMY AWARDWINNERCinema TheatreMy • hr sMaM imp rates call: WH 4-SCC7 CARPET BARNWAREHOUSENew and Used CarpelsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur (oatsInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Days Tues.-thru Sal. 9-41228 H. Kinzie 243-2271EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde PorkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644CEF PRESENTS:THE FIFTH HORSEMAN IS FEAR.SATURDAY, April 25,7:00 & 9:15 P.M. - COBB HALL8/Grey CKy Journal/April 24, 1970Continued from Page Sixbeing used in the charade of advisory com¬mittees as students have. If they are reallyconcerned about the problem of pollution, Isuspect they will.But the University goes on. I wonderwhat goes on in the boardrooms whentrustees like Robert Gunness make corpo¬rate solicitation visits for the University ofChicago. What promises are exchanged.What deals are made.Are they explicit? Or are they unspokenagreements among “gentlemen?”It makes me wonder how neutral thisUniversity really is.John Siefert, 71New Democratic CoalitionSfudent InvolvementIn the fall, Student Government called forthe seating of two SG observers on theCouncil of the University Senate. Sub¬sequent efforts have convinced me of thefutility of this approach. Student Govern¬ment is an alien structure to the depart¬mental committees and consensuses, to thedivisional bodies, and to the University andCollege Councils that function in con¬sultation and conjunction with the Adminis¬tration to determine the academic policysphere of the University. It is unreasonableto assume that any student organizationwhich attempts to circumvent the givenpower matrix by appealing directly to theadministration or to the Council (of theUniversity Senate) will be successful, espe¬cially if the student organization is not builton similar grounds.No strong sense of community exists be¬tween students in the differing divisions.Ideological and material conflicts are ob¬ scured by the banalities of the divisionaland departmental loads imposed on educa¬tion-seeking students. A student can onlyrelate to those students who also endeavoragainst the same departmental or division¬al red tape.Student Government as a student powerorganization can achieve nothing. That isnot to say that a differently oriented Stu¬dent Government cannot accomplish any¬thing. There are many student relatedproblems that are properly within itssphere. The independent funding throughCORSO permits SG great flexibility in itsactions, but to waste the limited funds onproblems unrelated to its student con¬stituency is folly. Many student servicescould be accomplished with the funds.Given the tenor and temper of the aver¬age student as a constant, student power inthe University can be achieved onlythrough the divisional and departmentalstudent advisory councils. Involvement inthe decision-making procedures of the divi¬sion will continue to remain a gradual pro¬cess, dependent upon each and every divi¬sional council’s proficiency and endeavor.In those divisions where the councils re¬main passive, their roles in divisional ques¬tions will be overshadowed.I would like to suggest for the future anarea of involvement consistent with the na¬ture of the advisory councils. Each April,various faculty are nominated by their de¬partmental colleagues for the Universityand College Councils. Students are in¬eligible (by University statute) for mem¬bership on the Council. However, the aca¬demic advisory councils can engage intheir advisory capacities by advising thefaculty in their nominating caucuses. Thisfunction is consistent with the nature of theadvisory councils. Faculty who are moreA HANDSOME UNIVERSITY JACKETtailored on our new modelThe material—lightweight Dacron poly¬ester and flax is one of our most popularfor warm weather sport wear. The styling— new broader lapels and patch pockets—adds much to the smart good-looks of this3-button jacket. It comes in solid yellow,light blue or natural... and will serveparticularly well with our lightweightpatterned trousers. $58.50ISTABLISHID 1(1*C (tP 40'/ii In ©JiOMens v'Boys furnishings.SHfals echoes4 E MADISON ST., NR. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. 60602ATLANTA • BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • NEW YORKriTTSBL RGH • SAN FRANCISCO • SCARSDALE • WASHINGTON CANOE TRIPSInto Quetico-Superior Wilderness.Plan an exciting canoe trip for thehighpoint of your summer vacation!Rates you can afford. For in¬formation write or call BILL ROM'SOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.218—365-4046. acquainted with the student and his con¬cerns can be endorsed in the nominatingcaucuses. Thus in an indirect method theviews of the student can be represented onthe University and College Councils. Thefuture role of student involvement in theCouncil can be clearly charted from anevolutionary development like this.Name withheld by requestGay Lib Speaks OutMr Turkington’s reason for the ban ofGay Lib dances is that non-Universitypeople attend. As pointed out by NUC“Presence of ‘non-U’s’ has become a legiti¬mate reason to supress social events oncampus.”We similarly question the legitimacy ofthis reason; but we challenge the dis¬criminatory application of this policy. Bothpremises — that Gay Lib dances are justsocial and that they attract non-UC students— have been arbitrarily applied to Gay Lib¬eration.To dismiss our dances as social is to denythe educational and cultural goals of GayLiberation. We are not satisfied with politetolerance of our social behavior.Our goal is to make homosexual behaviora legitimate and acceptable way of ex¬press ing affection toward another.“Straight” society must not simply toler¬ate two males dancing together; it mustconsider that acceptable behavior for itself.The dichotomy of “gay” or “straight” willdisappear when members of the same sexcan physically relate to each other withoutfeelings of guilt.If this challenge to the institutionalizedforms of relationship between two people,is to be dismissed simply as a “social”event then I suggest that the administrationhas a more limited view of “culture” thanmost of its faculty.The other premise for the suppression ofGay Liberation is that Gay Lib attractsnon-University people. Skip Landt has ex-x tended this premise to justify restrictions on all Gay Lib events. He has insisted thatGay Lib, unlike any other student organiza¬tion, must give him a written pledge of howwe will insure that non-University peoplewill not attend our teach-out.We object to the University’s policy ofrestricting events and agree with the NUCletter Tuesday.However, we must fight this clear case ofdiscrimination against our organization.The evidence against Gay Lib is equivalentto the evidence against every other campusorganization. Restricting only Gay Lib ac¬tivities is a perversion of justice.What is the evidence that non-UC peopleattended this dance? Neither of our oppres¬sors — Turkington or Landt — attended thedance. Are they basing their judgment onjust gossip?In any case, how does one decide that ourdance was not predominately UC? Is it be¬cause many people felt free, was it becausemany were black, or was it because manywere homosexual? Certainly, the dis¬tribution of ages at the dance was morerepresentative of the student body than it isat most other student events.Landt said in the Maroon that he “wouldbe concerned if a very substantial minorityof the audience in any on-campus eventwere non-students.Why is he only concerned about Gay-Libactivities? A substantial portion of the au¬dience is non-University for services atRockefeller Chapel and concerts at BondChapel and Mandel Hall. (Perhaps Gay Libshould check ID’s at these events.We demand some evidence why our ac¬tivities deserve special restrictions. TheUniversity should check ID’s at either ALLof the campus events or at NONE of thecampus events.There is not basis for labelling our eventsas “social” while other events are consid¬ered “cultural.” It is just as arbitrary todecide on the basis of gossip that ourevents attract non-University people whiletheir events do not.Murray EdelmanGay LiberationYou doift have to betogpjWfto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip”. THE QUARTERCENTURY CLUBCLIP THIS COUPONAD AND SEND TOTHE MAROON WITHANY CONTRIBUTIONYOU CARE TO MAKEFORJOEL'SBIRTHDAYYOWZAH, YOWZAH,YOWZAH, YOWZAHMALE OR FEMALEIF 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 toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. Do It in Europe!U.C. Charter Flights,Ext. 3272, 3598GOING, GOING, ALMOSTGONE! ONLY A FEW SEATSREMAIN ONTHE U.C. SUMMERCHARTER FLIGHTS.Ext. 3272, 3598.GROUP FLIGHT 70ETWA Sept. 4 - N.Y./London $205.Sept. 25 - London/N.Y.Infants under 2 pay 10% of the group fare andchildren aged 2 to 11 inclusive may travel at half-fare.MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.April 24, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7NOW IN PAPERBACK »An incomparable reference toolMasterpktfs*OF AMERICANLITERATUREThe Nineteenth CenturyEdited by FRANK N. MAGILLwith the assistance ofDayton Kohler and StaffInvaluable for students and teach¬ers, this series presents in digestform the sequence-by-sequencestory of each famous work repre¬sented, with useful reference dataand critiques.VOLUME I P/161ALCOTT to EMERSONAlcott: Little Women • Aldrich: The Story of a Bad Boy• Bellamy: Looking Backward • Bierce: Tales of Soldiers andCivilians • Bryant: Poetry • Cable: The Grandissimes •Chesnutt: The Conjure Woman • Cooper: The Deerslayer;The Last of the Mohicans; The Pathfinder; The Pilot; ThePioneers; The Redskins; The Spy • Crane: Maggie: A Girlof the Streets; The Red Badge of Courage • Dana: TwoYears Before the Mast • Dickinson: Poetry • Eggleston:The Hoosier Schoolmaster • Emerson: Essays: First and Sec¬ond Series; Poetry; Representative Men; Society and Solitude.VOLUME II P/162FREDERIC to IRVINGFrederic: The Damnation of Theron Ware • Garland:Main-Travelled Roads • Hale: The Man Without a Country• Harris: Tales of Uncle Remus • Harte: The Luck of Roar¬ing Camp and Other Sketches • Hawthorne: The AmericanNotebooks; The Blithedale -Romance; The English Note¬books; The House of the Seven Gables; The Marble Faun,The Scarlet Letter • Hearn: Chita • Holmes: The Autocratof the Breakfast-Table • Howells: A Hazard of New For¬tunes; Indian Summer; The Rise of Silas Lapham • Irving:The Legend of Sleepy Hollow; Rip Van Winkle.VOLUME III P/163JAMES and JEWETTJames: The Ambassadors; The American; The AwkwardAge; The Bostonians; Daisy Miller; The Golden Bowl; ThePortrait of a Lady; The Princess Casamassima; RoderickHudson; The Sacred Fount; The Spoils of Poynton; TheTragic Muse; The Turn of the Screw; Washington Square;What Maisie Knew; The Wings of the Dove • Jewett: ACountry Doctor; The Country of the Pointed Firs.VOLUME IV P/164LONGFELLOW to NORRISLongfellow: The Courtship of Miles Standish; Evangeline;The Song of Hiawatha • Lowell: The Biglow Papers; AFable for Critics; The Lyric Poetry • Melville: BenitoCereno; Billy Budd; The Confidence Man; Israel Potter;Mardi; Moby Dick; Omoo; Pierre; Poetry; Redburn; Typee;White-Jacket • Norris: McTeague; The Pit.VOLUME V P/165POE TO WHITTIERPoe: Essays; The Fall of the House of Usher; The Gold Bug;Ligeia; The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym • Stowe: UncleTom's Cabin • Thoreau: Essays; Journal; Walden; A Week onthe Concord and Merrimack Rivers • Tourgee: A Fool'sErrand • Twain: A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur'sCourt; The Gilded Age; Huckleberry Finn; Life on the Mis¬sissippi; The Prince and the Pauper; Roughing It; TomSawyer • Whitman: Democratic Vistas; Leaves of Grass;Specimen Days • Whittier: Poetry; Snow-Bound.Perennial Library Books0817 At your bookstore, or write Dept. 53,HCirpCT o) ROW 49 E. 33d St., New York, N.Y. 10016 I! auto ©jeurope■ 44-B I dept.■ STUDENT/FACULTY GRANT ProgramSpecial rates in European overseas travel■ for purchase, lease, & rental of cars. For\details and brochure write: UniversityGrant Dept., Auto Europe, 1270 Second^nue, New York, New York 10021.8/Tho Chicago Maroon/April 24, 1970 &Ml|i} TURN ON NATURALLY.TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION.FRIDAY MAY 1,8 PM-107 KENT HALLTRANSCENDENTALMEDITATIONAS TAUGHT BYMAHARISHIMAHESHYOGItranscendental meditation is a natural spontaneoustechnique which allows each individual to expandHIS MIND AND IMPROVE HIS LIFE Students InternationalMeditation SocietyBudweiserKing of BeersAnheuser-Busch, IncST. LOUIS • NEWARKLOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTONCOLUMBUS • JACKSONVILLEPlease help.All of us hate to see empty cans and bottles lousingup what’s left of a beautiful country.It’s too bad packaging technology today isn’tas exotic and convenient as the gimmicks andgadgets on the TV thrill shows; like you, we’d likenothing better than for every empty can andbottle to self-destruct. Someday, soon, things willbe different, though... because we and a lot ofother concerned people are all working on theproblem in earnest.Meantime, there is a foolproof way to keep cansand bottles from cluttering up the countryside,and you can do your part:Please don’t throw them there in the first place.ZPG Member Refutes SDS Pollution PolicyX By Richard Suiter“Population control won’t solve existingproblems.” An SDS leaflet against pollutionrecently seized upon this obvious truth inan effort to discredit the population controlmovement. But we in the movement say,“Of course — but it is one necessary stepamong many which must be taken.”Oversimplifying grossly, we can pin theblame for pollution on four causes:• Militarism. We have been system¬atically destroying the environment in VietNam ever since we got there, and there isno end in sight. But this is nothing new:war is inherently destructive of people, ofcities, and of the countryside — it’s part ofthe “game”.Practicing for war is also destroying ourenvironment. Nuclear tests in Nevada andAlaska, nerve gas in Utah, bombing prac¬tice on Culebra, Nikes on the Point — that’sall part of the game too. Militaristic adven¬turism must be stopped.All military establishments must be dis¬mantled. War must be abolished com¬pletely (even wars of national liberation),while we’ve still got some land and waterthat is not ruined by it.• Corporate Greed. Industry has been in¬creasing profits at the expense of the envi¬ronment for generations. A prominentindustrialist recently said, “A river’s capac¬ity to absorb waste products is our greatestnatural resource, and should be exploited tothe fullest.”A throw-away bottle saves the company anickel — never mind if it costs the people50c to dispose of it (in a dump, which rapesmore land). We all know this story — itmust be stopped. BY ANY MEANS NEC¬ESSARY.• Individual Wants. Middle-class Ameri¬cans have come to believe that their birth¬right includes two super-polluting automo¬biles, an eight-lane freeway to whereverthey want to go, a four bedroom and three bath quarter acre estate, a shopping centertwo blocks away, and air conditioning, col¬or television, and a self-cleaning oven touse up all that electricity that Com¬monwealth Edison is churning out alongwith the pollution.And the average middle-class familythrows away enough food every day to sus¬tain a good many starving peasants (not tomention all the Gainesburgers we feed ourpampered pets).As long as we look upon these things asour rights, is it any wonder that the steelmills are pouring out tons of crap everyminute to keep us supplied with our super-polluting V-8s? And is it any surprise thatmillions of acres are being paved over forfreeways, parking lots, shopping centers,and housing developments?This is what we’ve got to turn around. Itisn’t “Walk, don’t take the bus,” but “Takethe bus, not your car.” As long as we valuehighly all these things that destroy our en¬vironment, its degradation will continue.• Too Many People. No matter howmuch industry is forced to cut down its pol¬lution, no matter how many notches wetake in our over-stuffed belts, and no mat¬ter how evenly the world’s resources aredistributed, the degradation of the environ¬ment will continue as long as the popu¬lations burgeons.Even supposing that all the necessary re¬forms mentioned above were sufficient forthe present — what about 32 years fromnow, when the earth’s population will betwice what it is now (if the present growthrate continues)?If this doubling takes place, we can besure that the level of misery among thepeople will be far greater than it is now.Perhaps a small elite will be able to live inrelative luxury (if they are lucky they’ll geta two room flat), but the masses will bemuch worse off than now. GADFLYwages will be lower for those who do work.Prices will be sky high for food and cloth¬ing. Millions of people will be crammedeven more tightly into sprawling cities.Even with projected improvements air pol¬lution will be a world-wide phenomenon.Very likely, however, this doubling willnot take place. Sometime before the year2000 we will probably experience a death-rate “solution” to the population problem.Famine, plague, mass asphyxiation, orthermo-nuclear war will reduce the popu¬lation to a level that the earth can support,if not to zero.So population control is necessary to ourvery survival, let alone the preservation ofour environment. Necessary, but not suf¬ficient. Of course controlling populationgrowth won’t solve the pollution problem,but it will make it possible to solve theproblem by attacking the other causes dis¬cussed above. And the same goes for anyother problem facing the world today.But there is one more hang-up which stillfaces the population control movement —the charge of genocide. The same SDS leaf¬let aptly points out that to tell the workingpeople, Blacks, Chinese, Indians, Brazi¬lians, or whoever, that they should startpracticing birth control “is inherently rac¬ist.”They are also correct in calling this posi¬tion “intellectually dangerous,” but for thewrong reason. It is dangerous because itleads us to think that birth control is some¬body else’s problem, that all we have to dois help other people control their popu¬lations.Unemployment will be higher than ever; But birth control begins at home. Even aside from the moral problems involved intelling others what to do, there are severalgood reasons why we should begin popu¬lation control closer to home.(1) Middle-class Americans pollute muchmore than poor peasants, so that ourgrowth is much more damaging thangrowth amidst the poor. And the damagewe do with our pesticides, radiation, andsmog is much more permanent than thedamage that an Indian peasant can do.(2) We are, like it or not, great examplesto the rest of the world. We didn’t spreadCoca-Cola to the ends of the earth by tellingthe distrustful natives, “Here, try this,” butby consuming it in such prodigious quan¬tities that they figured it had to be good.The same thing is going to be true of thepill, or of any olher means of birth control.When the underprivileged millions aroundthe world see white middle-class Americapracticing birth control and enjoying itsbenefits, they will certainly want to join us.(3) Finally, it is ever so much more ef¬fective to begin with ourselves. Nobodylikes to be told what to do by some outside“do-gooder,” and generally such a victimresolves to do exactly the opposite of whathe is told.But if I’m part of the group, if it is mynext door neighbor in Suburbia that I’mtrying to reach, then it is much more likelythat he’ll listen and be convinced. Evenmore important, if I start at home I canbegin at once with myself, and resolve tohave no more than two kids.I don’t have to worry about how to getstarted, I can just do it. Then I can workout from there to convince my relatives,friends, and neighbors. Such is the stuff ofa true revolution.Richard Suiter is a member of the HydePark Chapter of Zero Population Growth,and a graduate student in philosophy.v ZHIZN SOVF.TSKAY VFORUM ANDDISCUSSIONwith 4 editors of Soviet Life magazine—Oleg Benyukh, editor-in-chief—Nikolai Zhiltsov, managing editor—Nikolai Popov—Mrs. Irina Calitenkoin a discussion and question session From the U of C - Messrs.Tang Tsou, Arcadius Kahan, Morris Janowitz, Jeremy Azrael,and Richard Hellie.4:00 P.M., Tuesday, April 28,Ida Noyes East LoungeApril 24f 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9Ginsberg Says 'Dying Is Becoming a Carrot'Continued from Page Twoof consciousness I rely on most to recur the realizationthat we are all one. It just has to be discovered.And what’s dying?(Pause) Becoming a carrot. Dying is becoming a carrot.Did your poetry change after your Awareness came?Yes, the poetry became much more intense, and I begantrying to articulate particularities of perception that wereclues to universal anatomy, or clues to the nature of thegreat being of reality, of the awareness of oneself as apart of the nuosphere or interconnected consciousness.The problem is how to evoke that awareness, in yourselfand in other people, and that is the task of poetry.Do you think people can be reached through poetry?Oh yes — I was reached through poetry. I was reached,or catalyzed by Blake. And the reason that people can bereached by poetry is that it’s not ideas in words, poetry’sa physical thing, a series of vowels breathed from thebody.In setting up a structure of vowels that conduces you tobreathe deeply from the center of your body in order topronounce those vowels, you actually affect the physi¬ological operations of the person, which in turn has aneffect on the consciousness. Now, poetry is a way to gethigh. And the way it works is by pronouncing the rhyth¬mic series of vowels aloud — you will get high, because itforces you to breathe differently.Shelley’s “Ode to the West Wind,” Hart Crane’s “Atlan¬tic,” some of the Psalms, “Kaddish,” some passages ofMilton, even some lighter lyrics of Campion, if you dothem with the right kind of breath. Some will hyperventi¬late you, some will control your breathing in such a waythat they give rise to your breathing through the chakra.How do you think of yourself as an artist? Did youTwo booksforEarth DayRENE DUBOSREASON AWAKE:SCIENCE FOR MANThe Pulitzer Prize winning author of SoHuman an Animal now challenges his fel¬low scientists to contribute to the reorder¬ing of mankind's priorities, before it is toolate. "His discourse is characterized byluminous rationality."—Natural History Magazine$6.95 cloth, $2.95 paperPIERRE DANSEREAU, EditorCHALLENGE FOR SURVIVALLand, Air, and Water forMan in MegalopolisThis interdisciplinary study offers manyoriginal ideas for the salvation of the urbanenvironment. Suggestions offered rangefrom changing our recreation habits to thepossibilities of growing algae for food andoxygen. $7.95Address for orders-.136 South BroadwayIrvington, New York 1053310/The Chicago Maroon/April 24, 1970r.ty c£frf. \ow, m. t,-r4A always write, did you always find yourself expressing yourexperience through your art?Yes. It’s the only way it could be, on account of I’m afaggot. I had to try to figure out who I was, and what Iwas, because I couldn’t make it or normal terms.I couldn’t just go along in normal thought patterns; Ihad to think for myself and feel for myself, and that madea difference. It’s like somebody who’s blind developinghearing.How did your perception change after your Aware¬ness came?A more microscopic examination began, -and I began toconcentrate my attention on minute particularities, (or asPaul Williams says, “No ideas above the thing.”)That’s what I’m interested in pointing out about what’sgoing on here. Like, I’ve been asked “How can I freemyself from the tradition of iambic pentameter in order towrite poetry?” Now, no professor of poetics around heretold that student to stop trying to free himself and justlisten to the rhythms of his own speech. And that’s afourth year English major! It’s incredible.I mean, here’s a person who’s lost in a world of verbalgeneralization that is so far removed from the actualbreathing and speech that he is not able to get back.That’s also what I mean by brainwashing' — literally,brainwashing.Is this true only here at the University?Well, it seems to me that the entire environment ofChicago is responsible — I find it neither at Berkeley norat Columbia. It’s got to do with Mafia control of Chicago.There’s an enormous relationship between the fact thatthe Mafia control Chicago and the fact that Edward Levi’spresident of the University of Chicago.What would you do if you were in Mayor Daley’s posi¬tion, mayor of Chicago?5 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 & LAUNDRYSHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudent* and Relative*Single room* from $10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rate* on requestRooms available forparties, banquets, onddances for 10 - 500. Please call H. FingerhutPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveCome to theBeaux Arts BallCold Blood ond Corky SiegelHappy Year BandsSpectacular Light ShowMay 2Bartlett Gym 8:30 - 1:30Tickets in Mandel$3FOTA'70 I’d get me to a nunnery, immediately. No, I’d get abullet-proof vest, I guess. I’d immediately stop all construction downtown, people are proud of the fact that theycan neither see nor hear what’s going on around them. yI think the construction industry and real estate speculation are sapping up all the energies of the city. They’retrying to build a major robot city at the expense of humanvalues. The problem is that the construction industry kcontrolled by the Mafia.And probably the University of Chicago is participatingin all that, which means that the faculties of architecture*the faculties of sodiology, the faculties of urban planningare lost in vast, generalized theoretical propositions thathave no application to human needs of now. And They’regetting rich on it, too.Some of your poetry you write under the influence ofdrugs — is this usual for you?No. Portions of “Howl” and some other poems whichare labeled as written when I was on drugs, but most ofthem are not. It’s like sometimes you use a pencil andsometimes you use a typewriter. I think that somethingwhich comes with the use of drugs is an ecological con¬sciousness.Apparently it’s been noticed that as a general tendency,when people turn on, they become aware of the robot-noise-metal-horror-steel city, and they become consciousof the operations of their bodies and the sensitivities oftheir bodies, and the tenderness of the body, the tender¬ness of living matter.They realize how that tenderness is being numbered bybuildings getting higher and higher and higher until theyobliterate the sky and the whole planet — as well as thesky being smog, noise pollution, and the pollution of lan¬guage.Any closing remarks?WE'D LIKE YOU TOJOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITH AS ANGRPAINCD MINISTERWITH A RANK OFc poctor piviKirrvWe want men and women of all ages, who believe as we do, to join us inthe holy search for Truth. We believe that all men should seek Truth byall 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 from propertyand other taxes.3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiastic powers.4. Get sizeable cash grants for doing our missionary work.5. Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries We contell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, theaters, etc., give reducedrates 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 ordain othersYour ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere in this country.Your money back without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send your Ordination andD.D. Certificates beautifully framed ond glassed.SEND TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHBox 1393, Dept. G8, Evanston, III. 60204NameAddressCity State- Zip— $10 incl. □(no frames)$20 end. □(deluxe frames)IdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child seducation. Why not call me.today?Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays.Others by ApptRalph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalie St.. Chic. 60602FR 2 2390 — 798-0470SUN LIFE OF CANADAYes — close the interview by saying that the Universityof Chicago is like a charnel house.(Maroon Classified Ads)YOWZAH, YOWZAH, PUPPET SHOW PREVIEWS AT MAROON!SCENESEUROPE - $199.00 round trip (jet),itkin 1509 Vassar Kalamazoo, Mich.49ppl. (616) 349-7011.ffvnp LIVING GROUP BY-LAWSNEED TO BE FORMED FOR ne¬gotiations With THE UNIVER¬SITY, MEETING TODAY AT 4:30IN REYNOLDS CLUB SOUTHlounge.FREEDOM & LEISURE OF CITI¬ZENS in antiquity a lecture byProf E. Welskopf. Tuesday, April28, 4:00 PM in Breasted Hall.For those without faith In eitherdogma or divisive violence, themessage of Baha'u'Llah offers aprogram, a challenge, and a pro¬mise. Tonight, Ida Noyes, 7:30 PM.Investigate It!Minnette's Custom Salon 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing; clothes copied & designed.Phonographic Literature Free!!!Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers & Tape Decks Save$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.BLACKFRIARS new musical hitSweetlife-May 162, 849. Ticketsavailable April 26 at Box Office."WOMEN'S LIBERATION: Ameri¬can Hang up or International Move¬ment?" Discussion Friday at Cross¬roads, 5621 Blackstone 8PM.Writers' Workshop (PL 2-8377).SWEETLIFE is Coming, are you?Turn on Naturally. TranscendentalMeditation Tues April 27, 8 PM.Ida Noyes.May 18.2,88.9,^1:30 MAN DEL HALL—SWEETLIFE^Marco Polo Travel. 2268S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.Are you thinking of SWEETLIFE?A Spring evening walk to theNIGHTCLUB at IDA NOYES. ThisSAT. trip to the Jazz ALIVE andfood at the NIGHT CLUB.A Natural High is the Best High.Transcendental Meditation. Fri.May l, 8pm. 107 Kent Hall.Gasp along with GASP - 10:00 AMPrudential Bldg. • bus leaves ADBldg, at 9:30.French Fries EFF ROLLS, & CreamPie, and Milk Shakes: Eaten at theBANDERSNATCH 4/20/70 by theGaloping Glutton.GAY WOMEN: FOR INFO ON GAYWOMEN'S LIB GROUP CALL 955-7433.HEAR YE! HEAR YE! HEAR YE!Let it be Known By all those withanimadversions towards Lab SchoolSpecies:The BANDSNATCH is open onlyto University Students, Faculty,etc. during the evening hours.The evening Bandsnatch is YOURS-YOURS-and only YOURS.The King's Kup Fri. Nites 6-1125 W. Jackson at Plymouth CourtFree: Entertainment!, Coffee!! To-nite: Stiller Blue MOZAIC!?! AGreat New Rock Band!!!So you go to the movies, concertor other such thing - But after talkabout it at the NIGHTCLUB till2A.M. from 9PM in IDA NOYE.How many times can Carolyn Hic¬key slide her dick up some one'sass before she gets a blister.Ed Anderson on MORALITY VSETHICS AS BEHAVIORAL GUIDE¬LINES. IVCF, Sunday, 7:30 P.M.,Ida Noyes 213.Classical Guitar Concert by JANARNOLD of Hyde Park Music &Recording Studios for the EthicalHumanist Society of Chicago. Fri¬day April 24 at 8:00 Rm 801. FineArts Bldg. 410 S. Mich. Donation:$1.00 for Students.Turn on Naturally. TranscendentalMeditation. Fri. May 1, 8PM. 107Kent Hall. BONHOEFFER SUNDAY APRIL 266PM. Revs. Z-phaniah Gunda andPhilemon Mkhize The Church andAfrica. Dinner following discussion.St Gregory's, Zephaniah Gundapreaching, 10am CTS Chapel. AFRI¬CA SUNDAY.Support Pollution with GASP. Seethe Pollution Machine at Com Edstockholders meeting. *COALITION OF TIME MAGAZINEPOLITICOS KEEP THE MAROONUNDER THEIR GREASY THUMB.Here Profs. Caldwell, Goerner 8,Sittler at the Sick Earth Confer¬ence, Monday April 27. 7:30-9:30P.M. Kent 107.Spring, and a time to listen . . .Sick Earth Conference Part 4GAY LIBERATIONSun-Open Meeting — Women 8, Men1PM — 5310 S Harper: 955-7433.FSACCSL ELECTIONMAY 11-15Eight graduate and undergraduatestudents will be elected May 11-15to the Faculty-Student AdvisoryCommittee on Campus Student Life.Petitions for candidacy are avail¬able in Administration 201 andmust be filed by April 30.In its two year history, FSACCSLhas made recommendations on theStudent Village, disciplinary proced¬ures, University policy toward theSelective Service, and a range ofother issues affecting students.Membership on the Committee isan opportunity for students to con¬tribute their opinions and effortsfor the improvement of the Univer¬sity community.LAST GRASP ~BOTH SIDES NOW! NDC andGrateful Americans Supporting Pol¬lution (SVNA) will demonstrate atthe Com Ed Stockholder's meetingMonday at the Prudential Center,Mich and Randolph. Free bus willleave from front of Ad Building at9:30AM.FOTA 70Dance ConcertU.C. Modern Dance GroupApril 24 International HouseAssembly Room.Synthetic Theater ExperimentalDance Co. presents new and ex¬perimental dance works April 27,8:00 Ida Noyes Gym.Beaux Arts Ballwith Cold Blood and Corky SiegelHappy Year BandSpectacular Light ShowMay 2. Bartlett Gym 8:30-1:30Tickets in Mandel Hall BoxOffice $3.Out At Sea — play directed byWerner Krieglstein. April 28, 29,8:30. Bartlett Gym Pool.Modern Dance Films by UC ModernDance Club. April 28, 7:30 IdaNoyes Theater.SPACESick Earth Conference Part 4 Beautiful apt to sublet mid-June toSept, 2 bedropms, living room, kitch¬en, porch and furniture 53 andKenwood $135/mo windows andeverything. 324-3623.Fern. Roommate, Large SS Apt.$60. 721-5820.Sublet. June-Sept. Fully FurnishedSpacious 6 Rm Apt South Shore.Large Yard Nr. Lake. $130 perMonth. 375-4187 after 3PM.Sum Sblt 5Rms $110/Mo. 54 St. 8.Univ. Furn Mos. Negotiable. 493-4071.Air Cond Room Avail in 1400 E.57. From June 15-Sept 2. For Fe¬male — Call Eve 493-8845; 324-3060.Wanted 2Rmmates Mid-June-EndSept. Fully Furnished Apt Nice Dog1360 E 52nd Near 1C, Co-op. $54/mo.752-2454 after 3PM. 3 Rm Furn Air-Cond Apt Hyde Pk& Dorch July-Aug. $110/Mo. 493-2748.Summer Sublet. Palatial in Spirit;Small enough to keep clean. 4 rm,luxuriously appointed: air cond,terrace, huge 4-lang lib, piano,hearth. Ideal for couple in classicalmusic, classical Slavic romance Lit.On Harper. Under 120/mo. 667-8278.Summer Sublet: June-Sept 3RmFurnished Apt. New Modern Bldg.Air Cond. Ideal Location Nr Cam¬pus & Shopping. Call Eve 493-9729Parking Space Too.-Need to rent Music Practice Roomfor one. 752-2985.2 or 3 Roommates for Huge 3-Bedrm Apt. Sublet or Permanent55th 8. Univ. Jerry PL 2-7715.Summer Sblt 3 Rooms Furn 8. TV1 Block from Campus 955-1022.Rmmt Wanted: Own Room-$42.50 8,Util Avail 5/1. 684-3744; 5221 Ken.APT WANTED: 2 or 3 bdrm. about$180 mth frm June or Sept. 55thto 59th best. 324-6048 eves.Need 3 Bedrm Appt Near CampusFor Summer. Furnished. X4206.Summer sublet - own room in 4bdrm apt, $56/mo incl util, 5738Maryland, 324-2279, eves.Live in Friederika's Famous Build¬ing. Nearby unfurn 2, 3 rm apts.$85 up. Free utils. Stm. Ht. Quiet.Light. Pvt Ba. 4-6PM. 6043 Wood-lawn.Heart of Hyde Park, 2V»Rm. Delux$110, lease req. 667-8474.Nice House Large Yard. 2 Car Gar.2 Baths. 955-5916. For SALE.Co-op 2Vt Rm Modern Apt for Sale.54th PI. and Dorch; Balcon; LgeYard. Excel, for one or Couple.955-3595 Eves.Summer Sublet: Spacious, cleanfurnished four room apartment.Various goodies (e.g. air condi¬tioner, television . . .). Near shop¬ping, campus. Call 493-5858.3 rm near Coop furn 6/15-9/30.$150/mo nego pf couple 955-6714.APARTMENT WANTED:Leaving? Three (or four) peopleneed Hyde Park apt June and for¬ever. 955-6714 or Ml 3-0800, ext 3754Rm 220.Wanted One Bedroom ApartmentTo Sublet for Summer-BeginningJune 1 Please Call 667-7451.Cheerful 5 Rm Furn Apt-AvlbleSummer, Option on Next Yr. CallEves 288-3356. 5342 Greenwood.6 room apt for summer. 288-4234.APARTMENTS AVAILABLE now—May 1 Studios-1 bedrm-2 bedrm-3bedrm. 53rd & Kenwood. Phone Mr.Stoll DO 3-6200 or Steve FA 4-0342.Summer Sublet 3 Bedrm Apt NearCampus Shopping 363-3990.Sublet 3 Bedrooms June-Oct $150/Mo. Sunporch Call 363-3436.Rmmt wntd own rm in Lg SS Hse$44/Mo 8. Util. 978-0954 Eve.$45 Reward for information leadingresponsible grad stud 8< wife torental or 2 bedroom or large 1bedroom Hyde Pk apt. Elevatorbldng, rent under $165/Mo re¬quired. May or June occ. 955-7517.Not a typical Hyde Park rat trap:Roomy, sunny, airy 6-rm. apt. withpiano, near campus, for sublet. Call955-7352.Fern Roommates wntd. Now 8./orSummer 8</or 1970-71. 1400 E 57Air Cond, Own Room, 667-5124.2 Working Girls Need Perm Rm-mate May 1 (June O.K.) 5433 Cor¬nell Call 493-2896.Summer Sublet.. Own Room nearCampus. Room for 1, 2, or 3. 324-6389.Fern Rmmate Wanted: 56 8, UniverSum 8. or nt Yr; 3 Bedrm; $66.Call Holly Ml 3-0800 Ext 260. Rm28, Leave mes if I'm not in.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637dates to runname, address, phoneCHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75‘ perline, 60c per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^.. Room for Rent Mid-June thru Sept$45. Margot, 955-5756.10 Room House for rent May 15-Sept 15 maybe longer. 363-5810.Sublet 6/15-9/1, 3 bdrm apt, well-furn, light, 1 bdrm air-cond, nrshopping & playgd, l</2 blks frmcampus. PL 2-8391.WANTED - FOR JUNE — 1 or 2Room ARpt on Dorchester, Black-stone, or Harper Between 57th 8<59th. Attic Type Room Suitable —Leave Phone Number at x239, FA 4-8200.Sum Sublet w/opt Next Year 3VaRms, Furniture for Sale, 5461 Ingle-side 955-1486 Eves.Apt Subl or Lease 2V2 Rm FurnNear 1C, Coop, and Bus $115 MoIncl Util 493-1012 Eves.Apt. to share in H.P. w/Grad Stu¬dent. 288-3182.FOR SALESuzuki X-6 Hustler, 250 cc 6-Speedlty7, $400. 324-2279 eves.Dyna SCA-35 Amp $95; KLH Model703 Spkr $18. BJ 347, 643-6000.New Shipment of bell bottom jeansjust arrived. John's Mens Wear.1459 E 53rd.65 Chevy, 2dr, Impala, Delux vinylinterior 8, top, like new tires, lowmileage, exceptional conditions.$975. PL 2-6933.SCM Portable elec, typewriter. Exc.Cond. 288-9010. Rm. 111.BEAST BSA 650, $500, 643-8210.PORSCHE '65 Convert., Brown, LowMileage, Mint Cond. $2800. 536-2182.1964 VESPA, RED, 90CC, 1700 miles.Best reasonable offer. 684-5739 after5:30.Stereo Components at DiscountsSave on Dyna, AR, Scott, ADC,Up to 25%. Sherwood 8. SANSUIUP to 40% at MUSICRAFT CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 and Save$$ZOOM! Honda 337, $385, 643-8210.For Sale: Double bed and springsand dining room table — CHEAP-After 5. 667-0988.CAMPING EQUIPMENTFor Rent: Sleeping Bags - Tents -Stoves - Lanterns - Call HICKORYEx 2381 or 324-1499.PEOPLE FOR SALEThird YearUndergraduate in Political ScienceNeeds Summer Employment. WouldLike to Do Either Research orClerical Work, Full Time. PleaseCall Wendy at 955-0348, Leave Mes¬sage.Need your manuscript typed profes¬sionally? fast? Call E. Lauritis 684-2743 days. PL2-3800 eves.TYPING-STENO-THESES-PL 2-4280.Rm. 508.PIANO TUNINGProfessional tuning, 363-6585.PEOPLE WANTEDNeed help writing major paper fora M. E. degree. Call 667-5958 —Valerie.Research Subjects Wanted. Femaleswith Color-Blind Fathers Wtd forColor Vision Testing (We Will AlsoNeed to Test the Father for onehour) $1.75 per hour with minimumof 12 hrs work. Call X6039.OPPORTUNITY, sparetime, address¬ing envelopes and circulars! Make$27,090 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.Interesting Interviewing on Or NearCampus. Call Now. x2974.Want to Spend Aug. On Martha'sVineyard? We Need Someone toLive in and Help with Babysitting.Room, Board, $20/Wk. Call 624-8363Eves.Wanted, ambitious applicants for alowing-paying, exciting position ina new experimental college. A Fel¬low is draft deferrable. B.A. min¬imum. Contact Daniel Clock, Thom¬as Jefferson College, G.V.S.C., Al¬lendale, Michigan 49401. MONEY — Do you need it, want itor just like it? Be your own boss,adapt to own schedule, work fromown residence. Ideal for couples.Call 538-6671.HATCHET 8. HAMMERMEN TOBUILD BLACKFRIARS SET ANY¬TIME SAT MANDEL HALL.HlJlHigh Quality Stereo System 15 Mo.Old AR Turntable, 2 AR-4x Sks.Shure VI 5-Type II Cartridge, Lafa¬yette 1500T. Receiver $400.00 Orig.$580. Call 493-5750 Eves.INTERVIEWING/MONEYEarn $2.50/hour interviewing on ornear campus in May. Hours flexi¬ble. Ext 2974 Now! EQUAL OPPOR¬TUNITY EMPLOYMENT.DUCKS??????2 healthy happy 5 wk old ducksfree to good home only. Will notseparate also free food giant box,etc. Call Harold Hitchcock 62.MUSICIANSALL PEPPER TO THE THE PEO¬PLE. The Pepperbande CelebratesMay Day in Woodward Court. May-pole Crowned. Pepper Love for All.RENAISSANCE/BAROQUEfor your wedding. 643-6317. musicBlack Musicians will Play Dances,Concerts Floorshows etc. Blues Bo-sa Nova Boogaloo Pop. Reasonable.224-4557.LOST AND FOUND2 Keys Lost on 58th Street BetweenWoodlawn and University. PleaseCall Ml 3-0800 x3061. REWARD.WANTED: RALPH NADERTYPE LAW STUDENTRemember the classified ad we'verun lately asking about VW serv¬ice? We received many replies (andwould like more) and one shopshowed up with such frequency andwith such serious complaints, wefeel that some sort of noisy actionis warranted, but we have neithertime nor talent to really pursuethis like it should be done. Sooo,law students, here's your chance towin some glory being another RalphNader. Cali or write The ‘Maroontoday.GAY BIRTHDAY BIG ALPERSONALSU of C has friend at CHASE MAN-HATTEN - David Rockefeller."Ye are the fruits of one tree, theLeaves of one branch, the flowersof one garden."—Baha'u'LlahSTANDARD OIL New Jersey has afriend at Chase Manhatten —DAVID ROCKEFELLER.SWEETLIFE — Blackfriars.U of C has a friend on Wall Street— STANDARD OIL N.J.SWEETLIFE, A Steel At Any Price.$2.00 8. $2.50 seats w/student andgroup discounts.SICK OF PENAL DORMITORYMEALS Then take a Spring Walkover to the BANDSNATCH-5:30-12.STANDARD OIL has a friend in Uof C — $26 million worth for whichugly sins was JOHN D. repentingwith ROCKFELLER Chapel. Where are all those dances?Steve Cook breaks promise as oneof first official acts as Marooneditor.Days of Splendor.Quietly during the last severalweeks, the Plant Department hasbeen infiltrating Ida Noyes EastLounge with wild, newly recoveredversions of the traditional Ida furn¬iture. BEWARE! It looks great,but is only another attempt by thedevious Plant Department-CentralAdministration Conspiracy to bringback the old, repressive Days ofSplendor at the University. (Be¬sides, how will people stay awakeat meetings with all the lumps outof the chairs?)Nature - we turn our back on herat our peril, and we embrace thetechnologies that destroy. Biggercities, bigger industries, bigger ar¬mament, bigger wars . . . Are therealternatives to technology as sour¬ces of community? Here Prof. Ed¬ward Goerner at the Sick EarthConference.Sick Earth Conference Part 4. Mon¬day April 27, 7:30-9:30 P.M. Kent107.Sick Earth Conference Part 4. Mon¬day April 27, 7:30-9:30 P.M. Kent107.I"r"TT 11 11 'TPT1 CHARTS/GRAPHS.Leroy lettering(Neor campus)363-1288Have a SWEETLIFE.Make the Scene with Good SoundBe Our Stereo Type and Save$$$On Stereo Components at Musicraft.On Campus Bob Tabor at 363-4555All Brands Low Prices.Never underestimate the power ofthe people — see SWEETLIFE.Watch next week as NUC SMASHESthe CORPORATE MONSTER —Standard Oil, Univ. of Chicago."Conservation and environment arenot so simple. There are ways oflife, and there are fundamentals ofliving, that also need conserving ...More than air and water and soilare at stake . . Sick Earth Con¬ference Part 4.THINKING ABOUT SWEETLIFE?ME? WELL, I'M LIVING IT!REGIMENITION is for Dorm-typeFreaks — Discover Time-Space atthe BANDERSNATCH. Hold upyour local gasstation.It you’ve got a hit ot larcenv inyour heart,you’ll love theRenault 10.'lou see, it gets 55 miles to thegallon.And as tar as gas stations areconcerned, that’s highway robbery.So don’t K; tix> harsh when thebovs at your local gas station acta little grumpy.In fact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo huy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suggest they get one forthemselves.After all, they might have a hitot larcenv injjtheir heartstix>.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILLTEL 326-2550AMIAKAHISM Huey P. Long, 19356120 S. WESTERNBE 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. * Cornett 3torii[ ** 1645 E. 55th STREEV ** CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *Phone: FA 4-1651 JWhat’s good forTurin Bicycle Co-opis good the U.S.A. 4 speedsynchromeshstick shiftstandard onthe Fiat 850Sedan$1685people build a be/fVQ"'9>42 The Equitable Lite Assurance Society of the Un>ted States. New York. N Y. 1970 An Equal Opportunity Employer, M /f THE EQUITABLEFor a free 18 ' x 24" poster of this advertisement, write: The Equitable, Dept. C, G.P.O. Box 1170, New York, N Y. 1000112/The Chicago Maroon/April 24, 1970 Black is beautiful.Red is beautiful.White is beautiful.Yellow is beautiful.Cheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh, Robin Hood, Falcon,Peugeot, Gitane, \lereier,Coppi and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. I sedoieycles spas mod ica 11 v.Flv-bv-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8 SEE THE NEW HONDA 350 AT AIRPORT HONDAFELLOWSHIPSto the Ph.D inEDUCATIONAL RESEARCHforPersons with high academicqualifications, who areinterested in improvingeducation through researchcontactCommittee on Educational ResearchSchool of EducationUniversity of South CarolinaColumbia, South Carolina 29208 Phone:767-2070 Phone:767 2070AIRPORT CYCLE SALES4520 W. 63rd ST.CHICAGOPrices from $169.00 Open Daily to 9 P M. Sat to 4 P M.SEXUAL FREEDOMLEAGUE, INCChicago Area ChapterFor SFL QuarterlyMagazine, enclose $1.00For information write to:SFLP.0. Box 9252Chicago, Illinois 60690Or call: 333-5515 CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Jhoj what you need from a $10 jYused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants'9* Mill returns at a froction of the (^original cost.9Decoration Colors and Qualities9Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad.FREE DELIVERYThis car has a secret: a sports car"feel" in a quick response floorstick shift. And so economical itlowers the cost of being young!£o>GoodHumorRESERVE 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.)• WORK SAT. & 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.(Ftp!GoodHumor^•BASED ON 10 WEEKS EMPLOYMENT ON ACOMMISSION BASIS OF 20-22%.