THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 54 The University of Chicago Friday, May 1, 1970Few Candidates Run In SG ElectionSG ONE YEAR AGO: Vicious elections and numerous candidates last year are amarked difference from this year's apathy.Strikers Schedule Rally at YaleBy Steve CookA program of May Day demonstrationstoday will cap a 10 day-long strike at YaleUniversity.National guard troops have been orderedinto New Haven for the demonstrations.The Yale administration is co-operatingwith the May Day Committee in supplyingfood, medical care, and facilities, accord¬ing to the Yale Daily News.Speakers for an afternoon rally includeBlack Panther leaders Artie Seale and Da¬vid Hilliard, attorney William Kunstler,Tom Hayden, John Froines, Jerry Rubin,Abbie Hoffman, and French playwrightJean Genet.The strike on classes called a week agoWednesday has been 70 to 80 percent effec¬tive, according to the strike committee andthe Yale Daily News.Demands of the strikers include:• Recognition of the political nature ofthe New Haven Panther nine trial by theYale Corporation, the university’s govern¬ing body• The establishment of three day-carecenters by the administration for Yale stu¬dents and employees• Halt construction of a social sciencesCenter• A workmen’s compensation agreementfor all Yale employees• Guarantees that Yale will give up allland it owns in the Hill area of New Haven;that the university will buy no more land inthat area, and that Yale build housing fortenants removed by Yale construction proj¬ects.A petition in reaction to Vice PresidentSpiro Agnew’s speech last week in Miamicalling for the resignation of Yale presidentKingman Brewster has received large-scalesupport on the New Haven campus.The petition supports Brewster’s state¬ment of last week, which said that he was“skeptical of the ability of black revolution¬aries to achieve a fair trial anywhere in theUnited States.” Another petition calling forAgnew’s dismissal was circulating oncampus Thursday.The purpose of the strike, according toStrike Committee spokesman Steve Estna-vik, is to “try and get the university to make a statement condemning the politicalnature of the New Haven trial”. He said thestrikers are not satisfied with Brewster’sstatement. The strike is now focusing onNew Haven issues such as day care centersand Yale expansion into the Hill neighbor¬hood, said a spokesman for the Yale DailyNews.Other events planned for the May Dayactivities include workshops and rock con¬certs in the morning and in the eveningafter the rally.“We do not expect much violence tomor¬row, said the Daily spokesman. “Yale willdo everything it can to keep it non-violent.”The trial of the nine Black Panthers inNew Haven has been postponed for twoweeks. It is expected to resume a weekfrom Monday. Defense attorney CharlesCharles Wegener has been appointedmaster of the New Collegiate Division andassociate dean of the College.The appointment, effective July 1, wasannounced by President Edward H. Levi.Wegener, a professor in the New andHumanities Collegiate Divisions and co-edi¬tor of Ethics, has been a faculty membersince 1950.He succeeds James Redfield, who wasappointed first master of the division in Au¬gust, 1965. Redfield, associate professorand chairman of the committee on socialthought, has been awarded a grant fromthe National Endowment for the Huma¬nities and will spend the coming year inFlorence, Italy. \Commenting on the appointment, Dean ofthe College Roger Hildebrand said:“Professor Wegener has that rare com¬bination of warmth and intellectual tough¬ness which the Mastership demands. Therespect he has earned from his colleaguesis well expressed in the following statementby Professor Joseph Schwab:“ ‘Mr. Wegener is, beyond all question,one of the most learned philosophers ex- Student government (SG) elections willtake place Tuesday, May 5 and Wednesday,May 6. Ballot boxes will be located through¬out the campus.Although there are 100 seats to be filledin the bicameral SG Assembly, only 40 peti¬tions of candidacies had been filed by Mon¬days’ deadline. Several party slates are tobe on the ballots, but none of these ispresenting a substantial number of candi¬dates.Jonathan Dean, a student in the lawschool, is in charge of the elections. He wasnamed acting chairman of SG’s electionand rules committee to succeed Cheak Yee,’70 who resigned last week.According to Dean most of the dormitoryconstituencies have few if any candidates.The graduate schools are in a similar situ¬ation with the exception of the physical sci¬ences. This is in contrast with last spring’selections when virtually every seat wascontested by members of either the reformalliance or the party of change.Among the parties that have submittedslates for this year’s elections are the Ac¬tion Coalition, which has fielded 24 candi¬dates, including a complete slate for theOther College Constituency. The federatedUndergraduate Christian — Kike Union(FUCK U) has a slate of five in the Bou¬cher constituency. The law school has aGarry requested the postponement; he wasneeded at another trial.Bobby Seale, chairman of the BlackPanther party is one of the nine defendants.Seale is charged conspiracy to commitmurder and murder in the slaying lastsummer of alleged police informer AlexRackley. The other eight defendants arealso charged with conspiracy to kidnap andkindnapping.The strike was called in direct responseto the trial, said the daily spokesman, butnow “the main issues are Yale’s relation¬ship to New Haven.”“We will strike until the demands aremet,” said Estnavik.Negotiations between the administrationand the strike committee have not yet beenannounced.tant. His learning in this field, moreover, isnot merely one of text, or meanings of text,but also of the systematic filiations and in¬terconnections of systems of solutions tophilosophic problems.He makes this learning freely availableto his colleagues and students. I know of noone in the United States who could replacehim in this respect even approximately.’ ”Schwab is the Harper professor of natu¬ral sciences and professor of education.Wegener, a native of Oak Park, Illinois,received a BA degree in 1942 and a PhDdegree in 1950, both from The University ofChicago.Following service in World War II, hewas an assistant in philosophy and a re¬search assistant in philosophy at the Uni¬versity.He joined the University faculty in 1950as an instructor in humanities. He was ap¬pointed a professor in 1968.In 1961 he was named associate editor ofEthics, an international journal of social,political, and legal philosophy, published byContinued on Page Four slate of four students who are running asthe Bullshit Party.Although there is an absence of contestsfor most seats, and more importantly anabsence of a full complement of candidates,Dean is optimistic about the elections. Theacting E & R Chairman remembers thatlast year “empty constituencies were filledby small write-in campaigns which includ¬ed very few people.”Significant constitutional issues will beraised if SG fails to fill its Assembly seats.Dean noting the danger stated, “I hope thatSG won’t die and I’m putting in this effortbecause I think that there is a need for anelected student representative body.”Elections for delegates to the nationalstudent association (NSA) will be run alongwith the SG elections. There are ten posi¬tions to be filled but thus far only five stu¬dents have filed petitions.Ballot boxes for the election will beplaced in the following locations at thetimes indicated Tuesday: Cobb hali mainentrance, 9 am - 4:30 pm; social sciences, 9am to 11:30 am; Mandel hall corridor, 11:30am to 2 pm; and Hitchcock-Snell, Pierceand Woodward, 5 to 7 pm.Wednesday: social service administrationand the business school, 9 to 11:30 am; thelaw school, Cobb hall and Mandel corridor,11:30 am to 2 pm; Harper library, 2 to 4:30pm; and Burton-Judson, Pierce and Wood¬ward, 5 to 7 pm.Following are the candidates running forSG and NSA with their party affiliations.Those without affiliation are running as in¬dependents.UNDERGRADUATE HOUSEDodd HouseRobert Swif tVincentLawrence RiceHendersonGerard LevalLower WallaceSophie CooperLower RickertChristine ChuteHitchcockJohn TrangensteinBoucherJohn Fenner (FUCK-U)Mark Brucker (FUCK-U)Mary Pener (FUCK-U)Jeff Perloff (FUCK-U)Steve Weinstein (FUCK-U)Continued on Page SevenCHARLES WEGENERNew NCD MasterWegener Appointed NCD MasterKaplan Praises NixonFor Cambodia PolicyBy Joseph MorrisThe American intervention in Cambodia“was a great act of political courage byPresident Nixon”, said political scienceprofessor Morton Kaplan in an interviewwith the Maroon Thursday.“Now,” he said, “I have no pipeline tothe President, but given the opposition inthe Senate and what happened to LyndonJohnson, Mr Nixon simply must be com¬mitted to what he is doing for him to takesuch risks.“The risk is that he stands a good chanceto lose the 72 election. He must have beenadvised that Cambodia and Laos were fall¬ing to the Communists and that if they fellit might put an end to Vietnamization,”Kaplan, who is the chairman of the com¬mittee on international relations, said.“What the President wants to do is with¬draw in a way that given some prospect tothe present government to maintain its in¬dependence. I tend to agree with the mili¬tary reasons behind” the intervention,Kaplan asserted. “The use of the Cam¬bodian sanctuary was something we couldlive with as long as it was under wraps. Butonce the Cambodians forced the issue bygetting rid of (former head of state Noro¬dom) Sihanouk, the way in which the VietCong and North Vietnamese simply tookover the bordering territory meant theywould have an even more dangerous sanc¬tuary.”“From an American viewpoint,” arguedKaplan, “the overthrow of Sihanouk wasunfortunate. Sihanouk, as chief of state, allowed the North Vietnamese to maintainthe fiction that they were not in Cambodiaat all. Forced into the open, they pose areal threat to the policy of Vietnam¬ization.”Concluded Kaplan, “I share the premisethat we ought to maintain the independenceof the present government at a reasonablecost. This first step in Cambodia has such areasonable cost. What comes after that, Idon’t know. Mr Nixon, in view of the oppo¬sition of the Senate and the lack of patienceof the American people, is walking a tight¬rope.”General campus opinion had not solidi¬fied oft the Cambodia issue. Many studentswere waiting to hear President Nixon’sspeech on the Cambodia issue last nightbefore they formed opinions. PROFESSOR MORTON KAPLAN: Political scientist takes stand on Cambodia.■Committee To Get Neugarten ReportThe report of the Neugarten committeeon the position of women in the Universitywill be completed and delivered to theCommittee of the Council of the UniversitySenate this weekend, according to BerniceNeugarten, professor in the committee onhuman development and chairman of thecommittee.The Committee of the Council must bringthe report before the whole Council whichnext meets on Tuesday, May 12, before thereport can be made public. According toone member of the women’s committee,some members have spent sleepless nightsCUT CLASSESThe Blueprint ForCounter EducationTopis —a book and three charts, create anew educational environment. Confront your¬self with ideas and issues that compel inter¬action — from political campaigns to movies,riots to communication, from what was to whatis to what should/may/will be.Marcuse, McLuhan, Eldridge Cleaver andJean-Luc Godard involve you.WALDEN BOOK STOREYorktown Shopping CenterLombard, III. EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbbrk Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 trying to finish the report this week.In a letter to the Committee of the Coun¬cil, the University chapter of the ChicagoWomen’s Liberation Union (CWLU) hasasked that the Neugarten committee’s re¬port be made public immediately.The Neugarten committee, created lastMay by the Committee of the Council, wascharged with investigating the situationand opportunities “presently enjoyed bywomen in the University community.” Itsreport was originally due last December 1.The letter said in part: “That the in¬vestigation’s report is long overdue seemsto be the result of either extensive findingsor perhaps the lack of feeling of the urgen¬ cy which the situation presents.“We are hopeful that the former is thecase, and we do not want to see the discus¬sion of the information quelled in the con¬fusion of the end of the quarter. Such amistake would be only too consistent withthe usual treatment of women’s problemshere at the University,”Twenty-two women faculty and staff senta similar letter to the Neugarten committeeearlier this week.The committee has not yet officially re- K.isponded to the first letter. Members of thecommittee have made it known though,that the report was forthcoming.SEXUAL FREEDOMLEAGUE, INCChicago Area ChapterFor SFL QuarterlyMagazine, enclose $1.00For information write to:SFLP.O.Box 9252Chicago, Illinois 60690Or call: 333-5515 Imported 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 IslandChicago, Illinois374-4555|T|p|Y10iT|Al•POE price. White sidewall tires, acres*soriet, options, freight and taxes extra. Cohn A Stem(Haunt Sc (EampufiWhere's the 3 largestwedding ring selection?1119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOPEVERGREEN PLAZAHktlLmtb‘-Nl <o* 5V SWABBY 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 evenings2/T*wr CHicego Maroon/May> 1,1l*7tJFloodingThunderstorms late Wednesday nightcaused floods in Harper stacks and in Clas¬sics Library reading room, as well as €obbHall Coffee Shop.According to a worker in Harper, a waterwell in the stacks on the basement-mezan-nine level filled with water, causing thewindow to explode. The water then flowedout into the hallway, damaging books onboth the basement and basement-mezan-nine levels.The water was mopped up ThursdayOpening ceremonies of the Festival of theArts (FOTA) will be held today.May day festivities begin at noon on themain quadrangle. They include the drop¬ping of daisies from an airplane, maypoledancing, and Madrigal singing. Also atnoon will be an outdoor brass concert bythe Chicago Brass Ensemble in HutchinsonCourt.At 1 pm, the Renaissance Players willTOTA: Last year's maypole dance morning, and as many as 500 wet bookswere moved out. No estimate on theamount of damage has yet been announced.About one inch of water flooded the mainaisle of Classics reading room, but no bookswere reported damaged.According to Wayne Elzey, manager ofCobb Hall coffee shop, about $125 worth ofmerchandise was damaged by floods. Thecoffee shop was closed Thursday, and willremain closed today.perform the Play of Robin and Marion atSwift Court. Then at 3 pm, Roger Hilde¬brand, dean of the College, will deliver theopening speech in Quantrell auditorium.A mystical procession dance on the mainquads is scheduled for 9 pm, as well as theopening of the outdoor sculpture exhibit onthe medical school quads.On Saturday, master classes in dancetechnique with members of the Jose LimonDance Company will be held in Ida Noyesgym at 1 pm. Students can register withMrs Elvi Moore in INH 201.The Beaux Arts and Masquerade Ball,scheduled for 8:30 pm in Bartlett gym, willfeature three bands and a light show. Tick¬ets are $3 and can be purchased at MandelHall box office.Sunday’s events will open with folk danc¬ing on the main quads by the tennis courts.All are invited to participate. At 7:30 pm,the Columbia College dance troup will per¬form in Ida Noyes Theater.Monday will feature a chalk-in at 11:30am in Hutchinson Court. Edward Albee willspeak at 8 pm in Mandel Hall on “ThePlaywright vs The Theater.”Tuesday, contest day, will include blow-i n g chewing gum bubbles, throwingfrisbees, and hula hooping from 1 to 3 pmon the main quadrangle. Studs Terkel, ra¬dio personality and author, will speak atthe Law School auditorium, at 8 pm. By Wendy GlocknerUndergraduates from here find it “prettyeasy to be admitted to graduate school butpretty hard to get aid,” according toGeorge Playe, dean of undergraduate stu¬dents.Although Playe doesn’t have formal sta¬tistics, he estimates that 80 to 85 percent ofa given graduating senior class will go onto graduate school.A general breakdown reveals that about60 percent go on to graduate school in theiracademic fields, 18 percent go to medicalschool, 14 percent go to law school, and ap-proixmately 8 percent go to businessschool.“It’s easier to get into graduate schoolthan undergraduate school,” said Playe inregard to graduate schools in specific pro¬fessional fields. Many students who get ac¬cepted however, do not go because of finan¬cial need, since most graduate schools basetheir grants on merit instead of need.Apparently, graduate schools are recep¬tive to applicants from here because ofgood experiences with students here in thepast and because of the general reputationof the University of Chicago.TV^n Pbve said that recommendationsand graduate record exam scores are takeninto .—.S-deration more than extra-curricu¬lar activities. He estimated that about 30percent of students going to grad school gohere; about 30 percent divide themselvesup between Stanford, Penn, Columbia, orCornell; about 10 percent go to Harvard;and about 10 percent scatter elsewhere.A myth has grown that graduate depart¬ments here discourage UC undergraduatesfrom applying here. According to DeanPlaye, only one or two departments prefertheir students to go graduate school else¬where.He mentioned however, that being an un¬dergraduate here and applying to graduateschool here “can work both ways.” Gradu¬ate admission committees have a greateropportunity of finding out more informationThe Reverend E Spencer Parsons hasbeen reappointed dean of Rockefeller me¬morial chapel for a second five-year term.Rev Parsons has been in the newsrecently because of his activities in the Chi¬cago area clergy consultation service onproblem pregnancies.This year Parsons has also allowed manycampus groups to hold their activities inthe chapel, including the moratorium con¬vocations and the Phil Ochs and Donovanconcerts.Dean Parsons, who was first appointeddean of Rockefeller memorial chapel in Oc¬tober, 1965, was born in Brockton, Mas¬sachusetts, February 16,1919. He was grad¬uated from Denison University, Granville,Ohio, with a Bachelor of Arts degree in1941. He received the Bachelor of Divinitydegree from the Andover Newton Theo¬logical School, Newton Centre, Massachu¬setts, in 1945, and also studied at the UnionTheological Seminary, New York, and Har¬vard University.He was Minister of Christian Educationand Assistant Minister in the First BaptistChurch, Newton Centre, Massachusetts,from 1943 to 1947.From 1947 to 1959, he was executive sec¬retary of the Baptist Student Foundation inMassachusetts and Baptist Minister to Stu¬dents at Harvard University, Wellesley Col¬lege, Radcliffe College, and MassachusettsInstitute of Technology. He became pastorof Hyde Park Union Church in 1959, servinguntil his appointment as Dean of Rockefel¬ler Memorial Chapel in 1965.Rev Parsons is the author of The Chris¬tian Yes — Or No and has contributed nu- about a student here than is in his appli¬cation.Playe sees a definite “change insofar asdiscrimination against women” applicantsto graduate schools. Women are finding iteasier to get into medical and law school;“change will be slow, but I think it’s takingplace,” he said.While graduate schools have not yettightened up on their admissions, medicalschools are becoming much more difficultto get into. Between 1963 and 1968, appli¬cants have nationally increased by 3500 andplaces have only increased by 1200.Last year, 21,000 students applied to medschool and approximately 9,800 were ac¬cepted. (Students have a choice between102 med schools at the present time.)Here, about 85 percent of applicants tomedical school are accepted; according toMrs. Sheila Jachues, pre-med school advi¬sor, a 3.0 grade average is essential, and a2.8 is minimum. She estimates that a medboard score of 600 on an 800 scale is alsoessential. Although grade point averagesare the most important criteria, personalinterviews and recommendations are alsoimportant. About 16 to 20 students fromhere go to medical school here each year;the rest are scattered elsewhere.The increase in number of medical schoolapplicants is partly due to the draft defer¬ment which goes along with becoming adoctor.According to Playe, “anyone from herewho wants to go to law school can.” Prob¬lems arise when students try to get intoschools for which they are not qualified anddon’t apply to a safety school which theyare sure of getting into. Law schools whichmost people attend from here are Stanford,Penn, Yale, Harvard, Columbia, and Cor¬nell.About 20 percent of the graduates don’tgo on to graduate school. Why not?” “I’msick of academia” said one student. “I’mnot sure what I’m going to do about thedraft.” “I don’t have enough money.” And:“I’m tired of studying.”merous articles and book reviews to theJournal of Religion, Foundations, and otherdenominational publications. He is the thirdman to hold the Chapel deanship.The Reverend Charles Gilkey, who likeDean Parsons was a minister of the HydePark Baptist Church, was the first dean,serving from 1928 to 1947. He was suc¬ceeded by the Reverend John B. Thompson,who served until 1958. The Reverend EwellJ. Reagin served as assistant dean from1958 to 1959. The Reverend W. BarnettBlakemore, Jr., dean of Disciples DivinityHouse, was associate dean of the Chapelfrom 1959 to 1965.E SPENCER PARSONSRockefeller DeanMay 1, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3FOTA Holds May Day Events Spencer Parsons Re-appointedAs Dean of Rockefeller ChapelUniversity Gets AidFor Science ResearchThe University has received $331,279from the National Science Foundation(NSF) to support graduate students study¬ing for advanced degrees in sciences andmathematics.The grants, made under the NSF’s gradu¬ate traineeship program, will enable theUniversity to appoint 61 students for gradu¬ate study during the academic year 1970-71Students RobbedAt Train StationSeveral attempted robberies of Univer¬sity students at the Garfield Blvd elevatedtrain (el) station during recent weeks havecalled attention to the dilemma studentsface trying to get home from the Loop lateat night.The Chicago police department claims anofficer is always on duty at the station fromnoon to 6 pm and usually until 2 am also.University security claimed no knowledgeof any such incidents but urged students totake the Illinois Central which stops inHyde Park rather than the L.Both No. 5 and No 1 Chicago Transit(CTA) buses from the Loop to Hyde Parkstop running after midnight. The No. 4 busdown Cottage Grove and the No. 55 fromthe Dan Ryan and L stations run at leastonce every half hour all night according tothe CTA, but users have found the No. 55schedule erratic.Illinois Central trains leave the Looparound 12:30 am and 2:30 am. Cab farefrom the Loop is about $4. and 6 graduate teaching assistants to studyin the summer. Of the 61 appointments forthe academic year, 23 are for new train¬eeships and 38 for continuing ones.The awards provide stipends for studentsand reimbursement to the University fortuition and fees or for allowances for costof education.Grants for the 1970 Graduate TraineeshipProgram nationally total 28.1 million dol¬lars to 224 institutions; last year’s grants inthe program totaled 28.7 million dollars.NSF graduate traineeships provide for 12months a basic stipend of $2,400 for stu¬dents in the first-year level of graduatestudy, $2,600 for study at the intermediatelevel, and $2,800 for the terminal year.They include an additonal allowance fordependents. The stipend for the summertraineeships is $50 to $85 a student week, asdetermined by the institution.All NSF graduate traineeship appoint¬ments are made by the academic in¬stitutions concerned.The University also expects word in thenear future from NSF concerning theawards for the next academic year. NSFfunds a great number of professors in thephysical, biological and physical sciences,and also supplies money to the Universitygeneral fund to pay for the general ex¬penses of those receiving their aid.Many at the University are awaiting noti¬fication with some reservations, as NSFhas been cutting back on their awards forthe last two years. These cutbacks havetaken a great deal of added revenue awayfrom the University and many fear thateven more cuts will come this year. Wegener Tells of NCD MeritContinued from Page Onethe University of Chicago Press. He be¬came co-editor in 1968.In 1955 he was awarded the University’sQuantrell Award for Excellence in Under¬graduate Teaching.Wegener is a member of the committeeon the analysis of ideas and the study ofmethods in the division of the humanities,an elected member of the council of theUniversity Senate, an appointed member ofthe college council, a justice of the student-faculty-administration court, and chairmanof the college curriculum committee.He recently was chairman of a specialsubcommittee of the Committee of theCouncil, appointed to review and make rec¬ommendations regarding University dis¬ciplinary procedures.He also has been active in faculty theatri¬cal affairs at the University. He is a mem¬ber of the American Philosophical Associ¬ation.Order a yearBox,while you haveany money left,while there are stillany yearBoxes left.OKAY!Here is my $5. for one yearBoxMamo — 1AddressCity, State' ■Zip-YearBox will be published around May 15.If you live in Hyde Park, Look for Posters,If outside of Hyde Park YearBox will besent to you.We can not guarantee you a YearBox if youI do Not order before May 8,1970, after thatI it's first come first served.^YearBox 1212 E 59 St. Chicago. We 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. 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ARCHER AVE. - 254-3840"For Satisfaction in Service"3rd Anniversary SaleATTENTION VOLKSWAGAN OWNERS!!!Complete clutch installed 1200-1300 V.W $48.001500-1600 V.W 60.00Shocks installed 1200-1300 V.W $7.50 ea.1500-1600 V.W 8.50 ea.Mufflers installed 1200-1300 V.W $28.00Mufflers installed transporter, 1500-1600 $32.00"Brake service with our modern machinery" all fourwheels 100% guarantee $38.00 on 1200-1300-1500V.W. sedan, transporter brakes $42.00King link pin replaced - Front wheels aligned $38.00TUNE-UP SPECIAL.. $16.00 (includes parts & labor)4/The Chicagp M<|roon/May 1, 1970AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYSummer WorkBeginning this summer, the Universitywill participate in the College Work-Studyprogram sponsored by the federal govern¬ment.Summer jobs in several parts of the coun¬try, including Boston, New York, San Fran¬cisco, Minneapolis and Chicago, and oncampus, will be available.Applications for these summer jobs maybe obtained from the office of admissionsand aid, 5737 University. They must be re¬turned to the aid office no later than May10.Both undergraduate and graduate stu¬dents are eligible to apply for the jobs. Be¬cause of federal regulations, however, onlyundergraduates who receive financial assis¬tance from the College should apply.Graduate students, even those who areentirely self-supporting, must submit withtheir application a confidential statement offinances from their parents. These formsare also available at the aid office. Stu¬dents who apply should not assume that aWork-Study job will be forthcoming sincethe number of openings will be limited.The Work-Study program will have spe¬cial appeal for those students who are in¬terested in working for social actionagencies. Since federal funds comprise 80percent of the students’ salaries, such■agencies find the program very attractive.Off-campus employers must be non-profitorganizations in order to qualify for theprogram.Get ShotThe student health clinic, located in Bil¬lings Hospital on the first floor (S-119) willadminister immunizations for travel to de¬pendents of students. A small fee will becharged for each injection, $2 plus the costof the vaccine unless it is supplied by theState Health Department.Registered students will continue to re¬ceive immunizations with no charge exceptfor gamma globulin.The International Certificates are avail¬able in the Clinic. Student health officialswill sign and validate them for you.Immunizations are administered betweenthe hours of 1 pm-4 pm Monday throughFriday. Who's Chauvinistic?Women seeking equality with men inhigher education have asked the federalgovernment to withhold billions of dollarsin contracts from colleges and universitiespracticing sex discrimination.The leader of a national women’s equaleducation rights group has filed chargesunder terms of presidential executive or¬ders forbidding government contractors todiscriminate by sex.“The orders never had been used thisway in the past,” said Mrs Bernice Sand¬ler, chairman of the Committee for FederalContract Compliance in Education, part ofthe Women’s Equity Action League.Mrs Sandler, a lecturer at the Universityof Maryland and the 42-year old marriedmother of two, said “Throughout the uni¬versity community there is discriminationin hiring, promotion, getting tenure and thelike, and women make substantially less insalary than their male counterparts.”Vietnam FilmsA medical student at the University hasreceived the first prize in the Vietnam cate¬gory of the 1969 Newsweek-Bolex Docu¬mentary Film Contest.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist Michael E. Sherlock, 27, a native of Hel¬ena, Montana, won the prize for his rapid-sequence, super-8 millimeter animated filmdealing with the war in Vietnam. He is afourth-year student in the University’sPritzker school of medicine.The six-minute film consists of thousandsof black and white and color still photo¬graphs illustrating the suffering of botharmy and civilian personnel in Vietnam.The film is silent but contains occasionallettered statements: headlines or UnitedStates government policy statements con¬tradicting the visuals. The still photos usedwere clipped by Sherlock from news maga¬zines and newspapers during a four-yearperiod. After gathering the clippings, helaid them under a pane of glass on a tableand photographed frame by frame. Totalcost of production was $25.“I knew I was going to make the filmeventually, but the final shape of the filmwas greatly influenced by my reaction tothe incident at My Lai,” Sherlock said.Sherlock entered the film contest afterputting the film together during the Christ¬mas holidays. He learned he had won firstprize in March.The prize consisted of approximately $1,-200 worth of film-making equipment, to beselected by the winner. The film was exhib¬ited at an April 15 press conference in NewYork at the Newsweek Building.Sherlock plans to enter the film May 1 atthe Cinematique film festival in Chicago.He also will enter it in festivals in Califor¬nia and Louisville, Kentucky, later thisspring.ExcavationExcavations by a team of archeologistsfrom three universities led by two OrientalInstitute scholars have thrown new lightupon prehistoric settlements in the Eu¬phrates Valley of Turkey.Tools and pottery unearthed in the areahave been identified with those of cities andvillages dating from 3000 BC to 800 BC.The new findings have been linked withfour definite occupations of an early site atKorucutepe, Turkey, one of eight majorprehistoric sites facing oblivion as a resultof the construction of a new dam at Kebanon the Euphrates River.Responding to the call of the Turkish gov¬ernment for help in unearthing the remainsof the early eras in that nation’s long his¬tory, the University, University of Califor¬nia at Los Angeles, and the University of Amsterdam, ’ Holland, have sponsored theexcavation of Korucutepe, whose long occu¬pation mirrors the many roles played by anancient Anatolian town in the course of itsexistence.Maurits N van Loon, Oriental Instituteassistant professor of Near Eastern Arch¬eology and Field Director of the EuphratesValley Expedition, and Hans G Guterbock,Blake distinguished service professor ofHittitology in the Oriental Institute, reportthat the discoveries reveal four occupa¬tions.• A village community, dating about 300BC to 2200 BC;• A military stronghold, dating about1750'BC to 1500 BC;• An administrative center, dating about1400 BC to 1200 BC; and• A lordly manor, dating about 1150 BCto 800 BC.Rugby WinsThe University rugby team scored itsfifth and sixth straight victories of thespring season last weekend against the Il¬linois Valley Rugby football club Saturdayand the University of Illinois Sunday onStagg Field.The University “B” side travelled withthe “A’s” on Saturday defeating the Valleyteam 6-0, but Sunday’s match against theU. of Illinois “B” side ended with the Ma¬roons down 10-3, their second loss in a 2-2-2season.Saturday’s match was a page out of Cen¬tral Illinois folk culture. Chicago was re¬turning to the scene of a 38-0 trouncingsuffered last spring at the hands of the Il¬linois Valley boys, a collection of mill worters and Vietnam veterans from the commu¬nities of LaSalle, Peru, Spring Valley, andDePue.The Valley folks were out in numbersagain, but the gang cut a swath through themidwest winning 11-5.Because of injuries, the Maroons fieldeda slightly different squad Sunday, but itwas much the same story: the Universityof Illinois team bowed 8-3. The Maroons arenow 6-0 for the spring season and 15-0-1 forthe school year.Public AffairsThere will be a meeting for all studentsinterested in joining the public affairs pro¬gram Monday at 1:30 in the South Loungeof Reynolds Club.David Greenstone, this year’s chairman,and several students will describe and dis¬cuss all aspects and offerings in public af¬fairs.Students interested in applying for admis¬sion to the program should pick up appli¬cation forms in Foster 316 this week. Theseare due by May 7. Call extension 2945 forany questions about the programs or appli¬cation procedures.Danforth AwardsThree seniors in the College have beenawarded Danforth Graduate Fellowshipsfor advanced study toward the PhD degree.They are David Barnard, David Bensmanand David Luban.The fellowships were awarded by theDanforth Foundation, St. Louis, Missouri.They provide tuition and living expensesfor up to four years of study in preparationfor a career in college teaching.More than 1,900 college seniors from col¬leges and universities throughout theUnited States competed for the 107 fellow¬ships awarded this year.SUMMER INIBEBKELETSpend your summer vacationwhere it ail started, picking up somecredits or just grooving on the cli¬mate, the people, the Bay, and theCity (San Francisco).Cal offers two six-week ses¬sions for credit, beginning June 23.We offer super-low-cost, co¬ed, co-op housing, owned and op¬erated by students, for students.Room and board $112/session,if you share the work; $159/session,if you don't.write for more information:UNIVERSITY STUDENTS'CO OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION2424 RIOGE ROADBERKELEY. CALIFORNIA 94709 eye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644CARPET BARNWAREHOUSEVw and Used CarpetsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur CoatsInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Da vs Tues.-thru Sat. 9-41228 W. kinzie 243-2271SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates for •Students and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call H. FingerhutPI 2-10005454 Sojtfi Shore Drive ADVERTISERS!92% of ail studentson thjscampusread The Maroonevery week.80% read EVERY issue!See next Tuesday s issue for more detailsMay 1, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5The Yale Strikeand 'Self-Examination'For the last week, the strike at Yale has dominated campus news.Several characteristics of the demonstration have set it apartfrom other like actions in the past four years. For one thing, 70percent of the undergraduate student body has stayed out of classesfor the last 10 days; that is perhaps the clearest showing of studentmajoritarian commitment since the strike at San Francisco StateCollege last Spring.The most unusual and positive aspect of the strike is the sup¬port given by Yale president Kingman Brewster to the position ofthe students. The strike is now focusing on local issues dealing withthe relationship of Yale to its surrounding community. The catalyz¬ing force for the action however, was the trial of nine Black Pan¬thers in New Haven.In a statement last week, Brewster said he is “skeptical ofthe ability of black revolutionaries to achieve a fair trial anywherein the United States.” The radicals are not quite satisfied withBrewster’s statement and are still pressing for university accept¬ance of their other demands."It is not out of order for the ad¬ministration of a large Universityto speak out on the issues of theday"Yet Brewster’s statement belies the myth that the only re¬sponse acceptable for the maintenance of University integrity isrepression. We remember the expulsions and suspensions of dem¬onstrators here last spring. At the time, Chicago’s “plan” for deal¬ing with dissenters was hailed in the national press as a logical andhumane alternative to the use of police. Evans and Novak, nation¬ally syndicated columnists, even wrote a column in March on theresult of the disciplinary activities, lauding the policy of the Uni¬versity for holding onto its power.The point is that Brewster has not relinquished his power,but added to it. Petitions supporting his stand received a hugeresponse on the Yale campus; one of them reportedly drew 1500signatures in one day. Vice-President Spiro Agnew added fuel tofire last week by asking Yale alumni to work for Brewster’s dis¬missal. Agnew’s reaction, the latest in a series of irresponsibleand demagogic statements, has added to Brewster’s support oncampus.It is not out of order for the administration of a large Uni¬versity to speak out on the issues of the day. Silence, rather thancommitment, is the thing to fear. Yet many universities are involvedin expansion into low-income areas and in the resulting relocationof residents without their support. Many are involved in researchfor the Defense department. Many are more concerned with theperpetration of a vague intellectual “mission” than with the press¬ing problems of our society. Too often they seem to be concernedwith self-preservation rather than self-examination.This year in Chicago has been one of bitterness and apathy.Certainly, the faculties and administration of the University haveheld tight to the reins of power. They have sacrificed possibilitiesfor the involvement of the student body. They have turned downa chance for redefining the mission. We could have entered societyas an institution committed to social change rather than retiringbehind Gothic walls.We hope that Yale can learn from Chicago. Perhaps they canavoid the bitterness and hopelessness that so often has dominatedour campus this year. Apparently they have a responsive presidentprepared to stand up to the intervention of the Agnews. NothingBrewster said was especially new or radical. It is most importantthat he has taken a stand. LETTERS TO THE EDITORSClark SupportedIn Tuesday’s Maroon there was a gadflywritten by Dave Clark about the under¬graduate psychology program. I am afourth year psychology student (a transfer,at that) and have been disappointed in thepsychology program since I came here lastyear.Last year when a “psychology club” wasformed under the sponsorship of S Maddiwe attempted to get some changes in thepsychology courses and general structureof the curriculum. We basically received noattention and could instill no interest in thepsychology department by professors orstudents. We separated after three months,defeated.This year a group of us tried again. A fewconcerned students and faculty membersbatted our heads against administrativebrick walls. An occasional professor hasshown concern for the undergraduates andhas offered to open his graduatecourses. But basically the psychology cur¬riculum lacks all the basics in psychology— we are not getting an education.Annette Jaffe, 70Letter CorrectionThe final sentences of my letter on howthe serious student may begin to thinkabout “pollution of the environment,”which you were kind enough to print on the24th, should have read:But it is more appropriate to the humanbeing that his primary emphasis should beon the understanding rather than on theuseful, even when the useful is directed tothe question of our physical well-being andour preservation.Is not that which makes our species dis¬tinctively worthy of preservation its capac¬ity to recognize and to address itself to themost serious and enduring questions aboutthe nature of things and, indeed, about thenature of nature?George AnastaploLecturer in the liberal artsWFMT RespondsJules Kamin, graduate student in eco¬nomics after reading letters that appearedin the Maroon concerning Diana’s, sentthem to WFMT asking them to readjusttheir restaurant guide. He received the fol¬lowing letter:Many thanks for the clippings on theDiana; we certainly intend to look into theallegations made — at least most of them.As far as pro-junta propaganda on thewalls goes, our evaluations are based pri¬marily on culinary excellence, not politicalviewpoints. (It is merely a happy coinci*THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sim LothPhoto Editor: Stovo AokiFoature Editor: Wondy Clock norAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PendelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Jody Alaefrem, Paul Bernstein, NancyChlsman, Allen Friedman, Sarah eiazer, PateGood sell, Gordon Katz, Susan Luff, GerardLaval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossherg, JanetPino, Audrey Shalinsky, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Monty Patch,Jesse Krakauor, Bruce Rabe, David Rosen-bush, Leslie Strauss.Founded In 1891. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students dally 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. 5»thSt., Chicago, III. 40637. Phone Midway 3-0000,Ext. 3243. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mall SO per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. denee that most of the Greek restaurantswe recommend are anti-junta. Most Greekbusinessmen in town, unfortunately, favorthe regime now in power.)Their alleged refusal to seat blackswould, out of hand, drop them from ourlistings, as would the discourteous treat¬ment of non-Greek customers.Please be assured we will investigate fur¬ther. Once again, thank you for bringingthese matters to our attention.Allen H KelsonEditor in ChiefThe WFMT GuideCollege Majorsf?)Dave Clark’s article on the deplorablestate of the undergraduate psychology pro¬gram pinpointed several pressing Collegeproblems. The inadequate number ofcourses and the large class size mean thatpsychology courses are out of the reach ofthe non-major. As a sociology major themore individualistic approach of psy¬chology would be a natural addition to myprogram. But I am not allowed to registerfor psychology courses because the coursesare already filled to the brim with psy¬chology majors. When I entered this Uni¬versity, I was under the impression that ithad a psychology department, but I wasmistaken.But the problem is not only class size.The lack of any coherent program of studythat conveys certain basic concepts is typi¬cal of most of the college concentrations.The College’s fetish about liberal educationhas meant that the concentrations haveremained in shambles. Concentrations likeanthropology, psychology, and political sci¬ence are makeshift, hodge podge programs.One can graduate knowing very little an¬thropology, psychology, or political science.Who is to blame for this situation? Thereis so much blame to go around that it isdifficult to remember all the people whodeserve it. First, the professors with purelygraduate appointments get as much blameas they can carry. There is no possible ex¬cuse for the psychology department only of¬fering six undergraduate courses when theyare offering thirty-nine (!) graduatecourses this quarter. There is no excuse forthe anthropolog'cal theory course beingtaught by a graduate student in a Univer¬sity that is supposed to have the best grad¬uate department in the country.Second on the list are the College pro¬gram chairman. Anthropology has hadthree College concentration chairmen thisyear. None of them have taken any respon¬sibility for making the program work. B.M. Smith and S. Maddi have been respon¬sible” for the psychology program thisyear. Smith solved the problem of the dis¬astrous college program by assigning it thelowest place in his priorities. And finally,Edward H Levi, John Wilson, and D GaleJohnson deserve blame for their lack ofleadership in this whole mess. Studentshave been fighting for a decent educationand they have not received support.What is to be done? First, concentrationmust take the responsibility of making areal effort at making the programs work¬able. Second, graduate faculty must teachundergraduate courses. They must do soeven if the College does not pay for theirsalary. Each psychology professor mustteach an undergraduate course rather thanthat extra seminar. They must do so be¬cause that is the only possible way thatthere will ever be a decent College psy¬chology program. This is our University,too.Josh Wiener, 71People's Park PartyTo celebrate the creation of “Peo¬ple’s Park”, the L-shaped lot on 57thSt between Kenwood and Dorchester,a party will be held Saturday fromnoon to midnight (or from when youget up to when you want to go tosleep). All are urged to come andbring flowers, food, drink, instru¬ments and whatever.6/The Chicago Maroon/May. 1,, 197ft vi A . iVi v eoxsAiE. vA Lv>..uH',q ,vbSB BEYCITTji UBHflL 1• Number 23 Friday, May 1,1370Fascism in BrazilIf you’ll notice, there is no byline to this article. Afteryou read the article you will understand why. All the des¬criptions and facts are taken from actual reports byBrazilian prisoners aid documents published in the Ameri¬can and European Press.Today, ex-congressman Marcio Alves will be here totalk about the torture and political repression in Brazil.He will be at the Crossroads Student Center, 5621 S. Black-stone at 8.For free literature on the present situation in Brazilwrite to the American Committee for information onBrazil: P. 0. Box 1091, New York, N.Y., 10027BRAZIL, 1970: 90 million people ruled by a military dicta¬torship. All political movements, parties, elections, andconstitutional rights abolished. Trade-unions and univer¬sities under military control. Censorship for all the meansof communication and for every literary or scientificwork. Protection of the Family, Tradition, and Property.30,000 political arrests since 1964 ; 5,000 prisoners beatenand mutilated; 100 dead from torture; 1,800 political ex¬iles; 4,300 persons deprived of political rights. Torture be¬comes a system of government. While Greece is the birth¬place of Western culture, Brazil is only the backyard of the American Empire: silence and oblivion. A false andmystified history in history books have made people cometo expect bloody political repression in the Continent as anatural phenomenon. But are murder and torture againsta Brazilian lesser a crime than against a Greek, aFrench, or an American citizen?Brazil, 1970 : 90 million people ruled by a military dic¬tatorship. The interrogation room is small and is dividedby a wooden wall over six and a half feet high. There areno chairs or tables, for the torturers stand up while work¬ing. In spite of the distance, the terrible screams of thosebeing tortured has no trouble in crossing the doors, walls,and the parking lot to the three common cells that holdten men each. It is hard to describe the sounds made bymen being tortured. They come out involuntarily, deepfrom the lungs. They cannot be reproduced, but one whohas heard them never forgets. It is also impossible to tellhow one feels while being tortured but it isn’t only pain.Brazil, 1970: when the prisoner arrives at the inter¬rogation room he is told, after a few blows and kicks, toundress. If he refuses, as has already happened, hisclothes are torn from his body. Naked, he is made to siton the floor, bent forward, hands around the ankles. Gen¬erally, blanket strips are attached to wrists and ankles,where ropes are to be placed, in order to prevent lastingscars. After being tied strongly, a steel pole is passedunder his knees and elbows. He is then lifted some fivefeet from the ground as the pole’s ends rest on two stools.In this position, one’s weight rests entirely on the kneeand elbow joints. It is then that the shock machine and therod are put to work.The professional Latin American Studies Associationissued a protest against the inhuman treatment of politicaldissidents. There are several types of shock machines, butthe most commonly used is an Army campaign telephone.It seems that it works with an alternating current of 90volts. A 110-volt machine is also used. Sometimes a partlydismantled TV set is employed and for the metal chair thewires come directly out of the wall.The Pope has recently received a complete dossier onthe Brazilian situation. If, as usual, a campaign telephoneis used, the two wires that come out of the little box areattached to the most sensitive parts of the body. Normallyone of the poles is connected to a finger or a toe while theother is often moved from the tongue to the penis, then tothe nose, the anus, the lips. The shock produces a terriblepain and violent muscular contraction. These contractionsare so strong that the body rises and sometimes almostcompletely turns over itself.US financial aid to Brazil amounted to more than $948million in loans from 1964 to 1968. When the machine stopsfor a moment, the muscles relax and the body goes backto its original position. The shocks are so intense that ifthe prisoner’s mouth is not stuffed with a piece of cloth,his tongue shrinks inside his mouth and he bites himself tosuch a degree that for several days he is unable to speakor eat. The muscular contractions and the position inwhich the victim is kept for hours make him lose controlover his bowels and bladder. While he is hanging from thesteel pole, he is also being beaten with sticks on the soles,buttocks, and back.In a speech at the University of Montana, SenatorEdward M. Kennedy said there should be a recommit¬ment, both in the United States and in Latin America, “tothe spirit of the Alliance for Progress — political freedom,social justice and economic progress.” After some time ofthis treatment, the victim is no longer able to feel legs orstomach, for all is reduced to a terribly painful mass thatno longer obeys any orders from the mind. In this stateone no longer thinks and very easily slips from semi¬consciousness to full unconsciousness. When this happens,the torturers try to bring back their victims by throwingwater on him and giving more shocks. Water has a tenfoldmultiplying effect on the shocks.Kennedy’s brother, the late President John F. Kenne¬dy, proposed the Alliance in 1961. A few weeks later, he also approved launching the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba.Last week, Edward Kennedy denounced torture “becauseBrazil has a government that we fully support with mon¬ey, arms, technical assistance, and the comfort of closediplomatic relations.” On October 8, a class was held atthe Special Police for a group of about 100 members of thethree armed forces, the majority with the rank of ser¬geant, to give instructions on interrogations. Before start¬ing, Mauricio, a student, was given electric shocks to seeif the apparatus was working well, as corporal M. said.While slides were projected to explain the type of torture,its characteristics and effects, six officials tortured theprisoners in front of the members of the class, as a livedemonstration of the various methods of tortures em¬ployed. Mauricio was given electric shocks, Zezinho, astudent was hung from the pau-de-arara, and Nilo, a stu¬dent was made to hold weights with his arms stretchedout.Le Monde declared last March that the average age ofthe 12,000 political prisoners being tortured is 22 years.The torture is generally carried out at the Political Policeheadquarters or of one of the intelligence services (Army,Navy or Air Force), or in prison. The methods of torturefollow a (pattern. Beatings: usually inflicted at the begin¬ning and during interrogation. Blows are given with clubs,metal bars, fits and feet. The face, ears, stomach, breastsand genitals are the most frequent targets of the beatings.Following the release of kidnapped US Ambassador C.Burke Ellbrick last September, over 5,000 persons — 2,000in Rio alone — have been held prisoners. Pau-de-arara(Aarara, a tropical bird’s pole): hands and feet are tiedtogether and a pole inserted between them. The ends ofthe pole are then supported on a table with the victimhung face down. He is often left in this position for severalhours while submitted to other tortures. In some docu¬ments it is reported that alcohol fires are lighted on thefloor below the victim’s face. Some individuals have beenincapacitated for long periods after this torture because ofthe traumas to their legs, arms and backs.Mr. Curtiss Cutter, American Consul in Porto Alegre(almost kidnapped last month) stated: “I like this place.The children got used to the weather. My wife has herhorse, her dog; she is happy.” Electric shocks: Current isgenerated by a field telephone or taken directly from wallsockets. Shocks are delivered to the hands, feet, tongue,ears, breasts and genitals. The victim is often soaked withwater in order to increase the effect of the shock. Thecurrent is frequently increased so as to cause the entirebody to become rigid or be contorted by muscularspasms.Continued'.on Page Four ' ^ fr.f' * ' ‘MUSIC'From England: McColl and SeegerON MAY 7 THE FOLKLORE SOCIETY will present EwanMacColl and Peggy Seeger in concert at the Cloister Club,Ida Noyes Hall, at 8:15. Admission is $1.50 foi UC stu¬dents, $2.50 for others.Mr. MacColl and Miss Seeger are the leading figuresin the folk song revival movement in Britain, and betweenthem have put out more than 40 LPs. They are also lead¬ers in the struggle for peace and social justice, and theirmusic and lives are infused with a sense of the dignityand worth of the common man. The series of six “radioballads”, each dealing with a different aspect of Britishworking class life, received very wide acclaim. One of theprograms, “Singing the Fishing”, was awarded the PrixItalia as the best radio program produced in Europe thatyear. Mr. MacColl was born in Auchterarder, Perthshire,Scotland, and learned many of his songs from his fatherand mother. At the age of fourteen he left school and forthe next ten years wandered and worked at odd jobs.While singing to a theatre queue in Manchester, he wasdiscovered by a B.B.C. producer and put on his first pro¬gram. He continued working as a “busker” or street sing¬er for quite a while, but other musicians found it difficultto accompany him, because he never sang a song thesame way twice. So he switched to acting and play-writ¬ing, and was associated with a kind of workers’ theatrethat produced its plays in the streets of the communities.He is the author of eight plays which have been translatedinto several languages and been well-received throughouteastern and western Europe and in much of the thirdTHEATRE’ world. In 1947, George Bernard Shaw said “Apart frommyself, MacColl is the only man of genius writing for thetheatre in England today.”Miss Seeger is a child of Charles and Ruth CrawfordSeeger, and the sister of Peter and Michael all well-known names in American folk music. She has used herextensive background in musical theory to great advan¬tage in devising appropriate styles for the accom¬paniment, on guitar and banjo, of the older British andAmerican folk songs, whose tunes usually do not fit intoconventional major or minor patterns. In the past fewyears she has married Mr. MacColl and become a Britishsubject, and she has just completed a concert tour whichtook her to Tunisia and Cuba, among other places.This is the first American tour by Mr. MacColl andMiss Seeger in about eight years, and is a very rareopportunity to enjoy two great artists.Raising Cain in Rockefellero THI MARRIAGE OF HEAVEN AND HEllfcyWilliam BlakeWilliam Blake's famous revolutionary poemThe Marriage of Haven and Hell has neverbeen adapted for the stage. This originalperformance will be presented by Cain'sCompany, of the University of Chicago, inthe Rockefeller Chapel on the universitycampus May 8 through 12, 1970.Blake's poem has had an enormous influenceupon 20th century culture. A revolutionarymanifesto of freedom, the poem attacks itsreaders with an extended senes ofsensational paradoxes and apocalypticmarvels which aim to "open the doors ofperception. " It both attacks and seeks tocure varieties of human blindness andhypocrisy--psychological, political,artistic.The poem's drastic insistence upon extendingthe boundaries of perception recommends anattempt to adapt the work for stageperformance. The present production isbased upon a severe design of multi-mediaeffects. This design, an incorporation ofdance, song, mime, and ritual and realisticacting in a setting of aggressive visual andaudial stimuli, aims to reproduce thefarrago of literary styles which Blakeachieved in his great original poem. Whilethe text of the play is basically the text ofThe Marriage of Heaven and Hell, itincorporates as well selections from Blake'sother prose and poetry. The adaptationincludes nothing which does not appear inBlake's own collected works.This is the third in the senes of productionsoffered annually by Cain's Company, agroup formed two years ago with theproduction of Lord Byron's Cain.“The Marriage of Heaven and Hell’Burnett. Drawn by Virgil LAST SUMMER Virgil Burnett was sitting reading Wil¬liam Blake’s The Marriage of Heaven and Hell and sud¬denly it hit him what a piece of theatre it would make.Now, ten months or so later, that vision that he had isbeing transformed into a theatrical event, to be presentedMay 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12.The original work is a mixture of prose, poetry, short¬hand notes, learned observations, songs, proverbs, andeven conversations. Not suprisingly enough the approachthat, is taken in this production is multi-media. There arescenes of only sound and no voices, masks — bothenormous and small, mime, dance, ritualized and realisticacting, projections and music.Blake’s poem has been called “a revolutionary mani¬festo of freedom” for culture in the 20th century. It statesBlake’s belief that a dialectical relationship of oppositesare necessary to understand truth (the literalization ofthat obviously is the marriage of heaven and hell.)There are three major actors: Blake, played by JerryMcGann, Angel, Rob Allen; and Devil, David Tardy, whoare directed by Nick Rudall. The choreography is by FredDe Vore and scenery by Virginio Ferrari.The marriage naturally will take place in RockefellerChapel at 8:30 pm. Tickets are on sale in the BergmanGallery.WE DON'T KNOW WHATHE'S GOING TO SAYWe challenged scientists of widely divergent disciplines to come up with fresh ways ofapproaching the solution of urban problems - of curing our sick cities. Several distinguishedscholars accepted our challenge. Students and faculty have been coming to QuantrellAuditorium each week to hear them. The final speaker is George Wald, biologist and holderof the Nobel Prize. We gave Wald carte blanche, so far as his cerebrations are concerned.We don't know what he's going to say, but he's not famous for being dull. Come and hearhim.A LECTURE BY GEORGE WALDHarvard UniversityQuantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall, 5811 S. Ellis Ave.8 p.m. THURSDAY, MAY 7Admission Free - No Tickets RequiredSponsored by the Center for Policy Study andby the Center for Urban Studies of the University of Chicago1111111=A Nlon-Brechtian ThreepennyIN 1970, THE DIRECTOR of Brecht’s Threepenny Operahas the choice of making the work a museum piece or ofre-thinking it in terms of our own day, in a society whichhas changed considerably since its first performanceabout forty years ago. The present production falls be¬tween these two stools. There were parts in which both ofthese aims were realized in full measure. Donald Swantonas Peachum must have come as close as possible to “au¬thenticity” as it is possible to do today. Barbara Bern¬stein, on the other hand, suggested the potential whichthe play has and which this production might have takenin the hands of a group of young Americans facing thework with their own cultural traditions and insights. Bern¬stein freed herself from the self (?) imposed “British”accents, which were anyway generally rather unsuccess¬ful, and created the illusion from which she alienated her¬self through her ability to come out of her context andlook critically at it.The main problem, and we must be frank, is that theplay revolves around Macheath, and our Macheath, whilegiving a pleasantly controlled and mannered performanceof a Restoration comic hero, was miles away from theBrechtian Macheath. Macheath is certainly no A1 Capone,but he is a petit-bourgeois-become-successful operator as aresult of his wits and his energies. We frankly couldn’t seethis Macheath robbing the local candy-store and certainlynot establishing a major banking concern on the proceedsof his robberies.Brecht is concerned with criticizing and ridiculing thecontent of bourgeois existence and the forms throughwhich this has been traditionally expressed. The presentproduction is heavily weighted towards the latter end andindeed one of the truly successful aspects of it was themusical parody of grand opera and its mannerism, but themusic was excellent throughout and a very full measureof praise goes to Joel Cope for his excellent work.The lesser characters somehow have little chance ifMacheath is so far off center, unless like Barbara Bern¬stein they take the law into their own hands. Mrs. Pea¬chum lacked the ability to sing (and the singing as awhole wasn’t really very good) against the text. There isno reason why this shouldn’t be done — Aretha Franklin,Nina Simone, some of the odder Dylan achieve it, and weshould not be ignoring the present problems of life in theUnited States in favor of the dusty, dated and tiresomeironies of 1928 Germany.The treatment of the whores was a case in point. Theylooked like Gibson girls, busty, clinched-in waists and allTHBIT88- ■ —Sweetlife!THIS WEEKEND AND NEXT, Blackfriars is presentingits new rock musical Sweetlife. While Blackfriars usuallyproduces a single, student written show yearly, Sweetlifeis their second production this year, being preceded byThe Fantasticks. In keeping with their recent practice ofdrawing from literary sources (Kafka and Tolstoy), thisyear’s production, written by Seth Masia, is based on TheMarriage of Figaro. However, with rock music by JimRebhan, the show promises to be full of surprises.The story has been updated and takes place on an alleg¬edly unknown university campus. Dean Sweetlife (AndrewGallant) is attempting to send assistant dean Sam Barber(Dave Weber) to northern Manitoba to recruit prospectivestudents, so that he can make greater progress with Bar¬ber’s fiancee Suzy (Suzy). Complications arise whencampus radical Che Rubin (Eric Josephson) begins a lib¬eration campaign. The mess is increased by Sweetlife’swife Rose (Mary Connors) and Che’s girl Barbara (An¬nette Jaffe).Directed by Sydney Bendix, the show promises to besatirical and raucous. Lest anyone should feel that there isnothing in it for them, it touches all areas of campus life.Sweetlife is replete with administrlators, students, work¬ers, a healthy dose of libs, a sit-in (what else), and asurprise audience-participation finale. Sweetlife will bepresented on May 1, 2, 8 and 9 at 8:30 at Mandel Hall.IONESCO Needs HelpHelp is needed behind the scenes of the first play to beproduced in French in recent UC history. Ionesco’s Jac¬ques, ou la Soumission, an absurd satire, or satirical ab¬surdity, will be presented in the original on May 29 and 30in the Lutheran School of Theology Auditorium. The direc¬tor, Michael Issacharoff, is seeking a public relations di¬rector as well as backstage volunteers. Knowledge ofFrench is not required for either of these positions. Inter¬ested persons should contact the director at GB 441, exten¬sion 2695. out of a stereotype, same dresses, same underwear, butthere is as much physical variation among whores asthere is in any other profession — and the pink light (!!),the irony of which just didn’t come across.The thieves never had a chance because of Macheath,but Ginny Jenny gave a splendidly harsh performancewhich proved once again how good an actress PaulineBrailsford really is.The sets were disappointing and the properties about which Brecht is so very particular were far from out¬standing.It is easy to be critical and the Reynolds Club theatrewas certainly no help to the actors or the director, exceptfrom the point of view of audibility. The work is beingprolonged for another week-end, and Brecht is generallyworth seeing when you have the chance.David BatkriekKenneth NorthcottsuetJose Limon & Co. at HarperJuan Antonio, Jennifer Muller and Louis Falco tn “Hue-scape” part of the Jose Limon Dance Company’s perform¬ances at The Harper TheatreContributorsDavid Bathrick is a doctoral candidate in the depart¬ment of Germanic Languages and Literatures and an in¬structor at St. Xavier’s College.Kenneth Northcott is a professor in the department ofGermanic Lanugages and Literature and one of the found¬ers of the Theatre Department in the Committee on Gen¬eral Studies in the Humanities.May 1, 1970/Grey City Journal/3THE HARPER THEATRE DANCE FESTIVALTuesday night with a long and varied program by the JoseLimon Dance Company. The first ballet they offered was,There Is a Time, with a Pulitzer prize winning score byNorman Dell Joio. It is based on a chapter in the Biblicalbook of Ecclesiastes and divided into 12 sections beginningwith “a time to be born, and a time to die.” (It beginswith the circle formation common to many of Limon’sworks and is symbolic of the cycle of life the dance por¬trays.In executing leaps and turns, the company as a wholedid not display the great technical ballet virtuousity, forwhich the choreography called. But the performances byJennifer Muller and Carla Maxwell did meet the needs oftheir particular parts.The second piece was Concerto Grosso in D Minor,with music by Vivaldi. The three dancers, Carla Maxwell,Chester Wolenski, and Jennifer Scanlon handled the small,slow movements very well in this short, romantic piece.From Vivaldi, the program jumped to a new piece,(1968) entitled Legend, a memorial to black patriots andmartyrs. It is set to slave chants increase the drama andintensity of this work involving a slave, his master, and adark angel danced respectively by Clyde Morgan, DanielLewis, and Edward Desoto. The choreography was inter¬esting and with many large dramatic gestures and move¬ments.Louis Falco’s Huescape was offered along with Li¬mon’s other works. Its continuous and flowing movementsdisplayed the technical virtuosity of Falco, Jennifer Mul¬ler, and Juan Antonio. It was an intimate piece, with eachmovement naturally responding to the preceding one andflowing into the next.The prugsam ended with the “Moor’s Pavane,” Limon’sballet masterpiece. A classic performed throughout theworld, the piece is taken from Shakespeare’s Othello withmusic by Purcell. The four characters dance formally,suggesting the stately Pavane, an elegant dance of Re¬naissance Venice. The piece was well done and well re¬ceived.The Limon Company will be performing through Sun¬day evening at the Harper Theater, 5238 S. Harper. Thereis a $2 discount for students.Paula Meinetz ShapiroU. S. Supported TortureContinued from Page OneRichard S. Winslow, Jr, a Foreign Service ReserveOfficer with the Agency for International Development de¬clared that during 1970 AID is spending “$451,000 on its‘public safety’ program in Brazil; $292,000 is now payingfor 13 US police specialists residing in Brazil and helpingto train thousands of Brazilian police in ‘counter-insur¬gency”. The telephone: sharp blows with the flat hand aredelivered simultaneously to both ears. This causes a lossof balance, impairment of hearing, as well as severe pain.In 1968, 16,000 Brazilian police were trained under theAID program, with the number increasing each successiveyear. Sexual abuse: in most cases the documents declarethat the prisoners are stripped of their clothes at the in¬itiation of the interrogation. Humiliation is an obvious ele¬ment in the psychological aspect of the torture. The gen¬itals of both men and women receive considerable atten¬tion in beatings and the administration of electric shiocks.Women prisoners are often violated by tortures or areturned over to police or soldiers of lower rank for theiramusement. Male prisoners are sometimes forced to wit¬ness the sexual abuse of their wives, children or fiancees.AID is spending $129,000 this year to bring 58 policeofficials to the US for an average of four months trainingin the latest police techniques. Simulated execution: pris¬oners have been taken from sessions of torture or awak¬ened during a brief respite and brought before a firingsquad armed with blanks or empty rifles. Others havebeen drowned in buckets of water and then revived. Andstill others have been hung and then cut down after losingconsciousness. This list is not a complete catalog of all thetortures described in the available documentation. It ishowever, a compilation of those mentioned mostfrequently by the victims.Torture is a word. It is easy to use it. It is convenientto sign petitions. It is interesting to discuss whether or notSaint Thomas Aquinas justified the use of violence to over¬come oppression. The word torture has lost its connotationof pain. Brazil is far removed, down in the map.Brazil, 1970: torture is pain covered with silence. Tor¬ture is a system of government. To read Marcuse is asubversive act. To leaflet in the cities is to risk one’s life. To admit suicide as an alternative is to start commit¬ting it.The dictator Garrastazu Medici stated last March: “Ishall try to reach development and security through theestablishment of a politically open society conciliating theneed for rapid development and the preservation of free¬dom.” A Brazilian university student said: “We have nofriends or allies anywhere in the world. We stand forjustice for all our people, freedom for all our people,against imperialism and military dictatorship. The Rus¬sians do nothing for us. The Chinese ignore us. Fidel justmakes propaganda. The American government helps themilitary dictatorship. American students and professorshave no sense of solidarity with us. Our own professorshave either run away or accomodated themselves. Ourparents don’t understand us and are afraid. We standalone.”We stand alone. Nobody can help Brazil: each one hasto fight for his own life. We are all guilty in a time of war.Our very silence is a crime. But the reign of death willpass. Passara. Are you ready for the next Viet Nam?ROBERT PETE WILLIAMS, one of the finest of countryblues musicians will perform in the Cloister Club tonight(Friday) at 8:15. Admission is $1.Mr. Williams was first recorded (by Harry Oster of •Louisiana State University) while he was an inmate of theAngola pennitentiary. The recordings received wide atten¬tion, since Mr. Williams is a highly creative and originalartist. As soon as he became eligible to travel outside ofLouisiana, he was invited to appear at the Newport andChicago folk festivals. Since then he has appeared in folkconcerts and clubs throughout the United States and Eu¬rope, his most recent appearance around here being at theBeloit Blues Festival.Mr. William’s imagination is very rich both musicallyand verbally, and he is constantly creating songs andtunes. The best notion of his relationship to his music can be found in his own words, as recorded in an interviewwith Dr. Oster.“Jest look like to me I can’t put music down. Time Igot hold of one guitar and I maybe sell it to somebody,well, music just come back and worry me so, I jest haveto go back and buy me another guitar.“All the music I play, I jest hear it in the air. You canhear the sound of it, cornin’ forth, soundin’ good. Well, allof my blues that I put out, that was made-up blues Imake up my own blues you see. Why, I may be walkinalong or ridin in a car and blues come to me, and I jestget it all in my head. Well, I come back and get my guitarand then I play it.”The songs that come from the air can be heard in theCloister Club tonight.MUSICR.P. Williams: La. Blues.4/Grey City Joornal/May 1, 1970BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMENT STOREPL 247441150 E. 63rd St. HUACAMOLE • TOSTADASTACOS • CHILIENCHILADAS • MANY OTHER DISHESTAMALES • CARRY OUT SERVICEOpen 7 days a week11:30 A.M.- 12:30 A.M."HOW TO RENEW THE CHURCHWITHOUT REALLY TRYING"EL TACOMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANTE. 53rd St.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL11 o'clockSunday, May 3, 1970PreacherWILL D. CAMPBELLExecutive Director of the Committeeof Southern Churchmen, Nashville, Tennessee SE-4663ERIC BURDON DECLARES WAR SE-4668 STZABRISKIE POINT/SOUND TRACKm . - s, mm mmFTS-3083ALLEN GINSBERG/WILLIAM BLAKESFS-6001STONEHENGE/RICHIE HAVENS1mm l1 * S|j|IIlturns WITHES—■ —The Real Weatherman ConspiracyTHERE IS SOMETHING about a muggy Chicago day thatreally gets you down — you feel like a rung-out old wash¬cloth. The atmosphere is so heavy that it feels like youare surrounded by one big sponge. Did you ever think thatmaybe we are? That when it’s humid like this a bigsponge comes down and innundates us or when it rains agigantic pail of water overturns its contents on us. Ofcourse this doesn’t presuppose there’s somebody spillingthe water or anything like that (what kind of religiousfanatic do you think I am?) Just because you learned inhigh school all that bull shit about cirrus and nimbusclouds, it doesn’t mean that it’s true. It’s just a big plot togive work to weathermen (I mean weather forecasters).After all you don’t sound very scientific (and thereforebelievable) if you say “The sponge will descend tomor¬row.” Be a little skeptical of the snow job (or rain job orsleet job) that the weather forecasters give you.CAMPUSFilmTonight Doc Films presents Children of Paradise byMarcel Carne. The children of paradise are not a group ofkids caught on a desert island, instead it is a sardonicdescription of the theatre patrons in the era of Charles Xof France. The film documents the tragic love of a mimefor a beggar. In Cobb for 75c at 8 only.Sunday, CEF presents Pretty Poison. This is known asa sleeper (which woke everybody in the movie-house up.)A psychological horror story, it involves 2 clean-cut kidsplayed by Tuesday Weld and Anthony Perkins (anyonewho has seen Psycho doubts how clean cut Anthony Per¬kins is.) In Cobb at 7 and 9:15 for $1.Monday CEF and FOTA present Julius Caesar withMarlon Brando, James Mason and others. Will Brandosucceed in mumbling Shakespeare too? — see the flick tofind out in Cobb at 8.For their Losey night, Tuesday, Doc Films presentsChance Meeting which has much to say about a societywhich covers up a sex-scandal and murder of a Britishdiplomat ..this is before Profumo.) In Soc. Sci. 122 at 8for 75c.Wednesday night again brings a Doc Films triple fea¬ture. Starting from the top is Radio Movie by none otherthan Andy Gurian, famous Doc Films projectionist, Mr. Uof C, and member of SVNA. People wander through anamusement park and open refrigerators all to the musicRECORDSBENEFIT by Jethro Tull (Reprise 6400):Jethro Tull first received attention because of theiruse of the flute, a rarity in pap music. Ian Anderson, themost violent flute player ever heard (you can actuallyhear him huffing and puffing), writes most of their songs,integrating the flute into their sound instead of just usingit as a background instrument.Most groups today can do some things quite well, butthey usually fall apart on one or two cuts per album.Jethro Tull is one of the exceptions. They are consistentlygood, being imaginative song after song. Part of this isthat fact that they operate totally as a group; none of thegroup members tries to stand out in the songs. Also, allthe members seem to know what each other will do at anysecond and they work to compliment not outdo each other.Guitar solos, long drum solos and the other ego grat¬ifications that other groups allow are totally foreign toJethro Tull.Vocal harmony is a commonly accepted forte for mostgroups today, but the harmonies being used by the variousgroups are usually quite similar. It seems that the Mamasand the Papas led the way to a very tight style of harmo¬ny that has since become the commonly accepted norm.Jethro Tull, however, might change all that. In mostgroups, the musical notes are very close together, result¬ing in a delicate interweaving. Tull, however, uses twovery different tunes and ties them together in an excitingharmony that is very disjointed and eerie.Naturally, none of this would be of interest if thesongs themselves weren’t any good, but Ian Andersonseems to know exactly what will work in his group. Tullplays a mixture of hard rock and jazz with folky lyrics.The result is a new style of music that Traffic was in¬strumental in creating, but which Jethro Tull is makingpopular. Best cuts on the album are “Nothing to Say,”"Inside,” “Teacher” and “Play in Time.”CRICKLEWOOD GREEN by Ten Years After (DeramDES 18038):CRICKLEWOOD GREEN is the fifth Ten Years Afteralbum, and it is the best in many ways. In the past, TenYears After has been too one sided, playing only hard loudbluesy-rock. Alvin Lee, the group leader, lead guitaristand vocalist, is, undoubtedly, the sexiest Englishman inrock, but in the past he often played this up and playeddown his amazingly good voice. On this album, he finallysings out on a few cuts. Also, the group seems to have of a blaring radio. Next is the famous Un Chien Andalouby Luis Bunel and Salvador Dali which I quote, “pileshorror on horror, deliberately avoiding anything thatmakes sense, gleefully flouting all conventions of asthet-ics, decency, and taste, aiming only to shock and perplex.It’s anarchic, sensual, egoistic, deliberately perverse.”The third and last feature is Harvey Hart’s Bus Riley’sBack in Town which studies life in a small midwesterntown when Bus Riley returns to pick up the girl he leftbehind only to find out she’s not waiting. At 7:15 and 9:30in Cobb for 75c.Also on Wednesday is Laurence Olivier’s Hamlet —what role hasn’t Olivier played — pretty soon he’ll beplaying Gertrude or Ophelia. It’s in Cobb at 8.The Chicago International Film Festival presents aHungarian Film Festival from May 7-10 at Mundelein Col¬lege. New films, like many of the other arts are in openrebellion against the established way of doing things. Allthe films have been made between 1966-69 and each arebeing shown either at 7 or 10 pm on the four days. Most ofthe films haven’t been shown in the US at all and arebeing shipped back directly to Budapest from their show¬ing here. Mundelein College is at 6340 N. Sheridan Road.TheatreToday at 1, Renaissance players is presenting a repeatperformance of their production of Robin and Marion — amedieval french musical. Starring such luminaries as JimMiller, Barbara Bernstein, Judith Nelson, Don Swanton,and Tom Busch. It’s at 1 in the courtyard behind Swift.The fantastically popular Threepenny Opera is backby popular demand The musical play returns to ReynoldsClub Theatre Saturday and Sunday nights at 8:30. It starsBob Keefe as Macheath, Pauline Brailsford as Jenny, PatPrinz as Polly Peachum, Don Swanton and Edrene Heissas Mr. and Mrs. Peachum and a cast of thousands.Also this weekend is Sweetlife the Blackfriars musicalfor this year. Based on The Marriage of Figaro it docu¬ments the tale of a University and a sit-in (how’s that fororiginality?) It stars Eric Josephson, Sue Bosworht, AndyGallant, David Weber, and Mary Connors. Book and lyricsis by Seth Masia and music by Jim Rebhan. It’s Fridayand Saturday at 8:30 in Mandel.MusicTonight the Folklore Society presents Robert Pete Wil¬liams, former penetentiary inmate from Louisiana who■&WTmm "1raERICCUOTVThis record will be reviewed next weekmellowed. They do not seem to be trying to prove thatthey can play faster and louder than anyone else. Byslowing down somewhat, they also make this record theirmost listenable and diverse. This diversity by an Englishrock group is a very welcome change and hopefully otherswill follow Ten Years After’s lead.To return to Alvin Lee, for he is the creative talent ofthe group (if you get the chance, go see his amazingperformance in the movie ‘Woodstock’, all of the songs onthe album are his compositions. He is writing some of thebest hard rock songs to be heard since the demise ofCream. “50,000 Miles Beneath My Brain” is a great songwith the group really cutting loose and playing extremelywell, especially Lee on lead guitar and Leo Lyons on bass.Lee does play amazingly fast, and he seems to be one ofthe few English guitarists who doesn’t seem to be in¬fluenced by the Eric Clapton style: Lee’s playing is moretoneful, less bluesy. Lee also wrote one country song forthe album, “Year 3000 Blues” and it is amusing to hearfour Englishmen play American funk so well.Ten Years After is a stage group though, and they aremuch better in person than they are on records, so if youhave the chance, go see them. But if you can’t, CRICKLE¬WOOD GREEN is a fine substitute.The Great Pumpkin started singing and playing in jail and even did somerecordings there (what a great sound studio.) He’ll play inthe Cloister Club in Ida Noyes at 8:15 for $1.Sunday is a concert in Memory of Dr. Martin LutherKing Jr. playing Mozart’s Requiem. The soloists are AnneReisig, Soprano; Dyce Lee, Alto; Joseph Brewer, Tenor;and Dale McUrdy, Baritone along with the Music Centerof the North Shore with orchestra. It’s at the LutheranSchool of Theology at Chicago, 1100 E. 55th St. It’s at 3:30and it’s FREE.Thursday, the Folklore Society (active group that itis) is presenting Ewan MacCal) and Peggy Seeger singingfolksongs of the British Isles and America. MacCall canlist among his fans and his admirers none other thanGeorge Bernard Shaw. Peggy Seeger, you guessed, is partof that great folk musical family. They’ll play in CloisterClub at 8:15. Tickets are $2.50,1.50 for students.MiscToday SVNA announces Drug Abuse Day, to be heldat noon on the quads responding to the national call forinstruction in drug abuse methods and techniques. High¬light of the presentation will be the consumption of 50gallons of Lame Duck punch by the crowd. SVNA willbring its stuff and the crowd is expected to bring theirs.Ex-congressman Marcio Alves of Brazil is here in Chi¬cago to spread the word on the atrocities which are beingcommitted in Brazil by the US-backed fascist regime. Notsurprisingly enough, the CIA is keeping very good taps onhis whereabouts. He will be speaking tonight at the Cross¬roads Student Center, 5621 S. Blackstone, at 8.Also tomorrow from 12 noon to 12 midnight, there willbe a party to celebrate the newly-created People’s Parkon 57th Street. By that time they expect to have a bar¬becue put made so bring food. At 6 there are expected tobe a number of bands including Wilderness Road.Who do you think is getting the Citizen of the YearAward at Kent Law School at IIT? — Marshall Field IV(or is it 5 or 6?) But guess who is presenting the award??— your friend and mine Thomas A. Foran (Of “freakingfag revolution fame” and other such examples of choicewit.) Well folks, Concerned Law Students of Kent aresponsoring a demonstration and some Yippie types aresponsoring a smoke-in. It’s 8 pm on Saturday night in theKent Law School Auditorium.WHPKMondayAllen Ginsberg at 7:15TuesdayThree Radical Women: Marlene Dixon, Joan Gray andMartha Shelly at 9.ThursdayEdgar Allen Poe’s Morelia at 8.The Debutante Hour ... to be announced.This Week At the GargoyleThe Craft Coop is every day from 12-6FridayWomen’s Lib rap session at 12.African Dances performed by Wala Wala Bascis (agroup from around here) at 8.SundayCadre Dinner for all who are interested are at 6:30.Bring your own food; coffee, milk and tea are provided.MondayGay Liberation rap session at noon.Women’s Lib. rap session would like to invite all wom¬en who have never attended before to come and talk, at12.TuesdayCrafts Workshop from 3:30-5:30.U High Student-Teacher Coalition at 8.WednesdayFolk Music at 8.Meeting for Union of Students to elect officers andSteering Committee and to discuss general policies anddirection at 8.ThursdayGay Liberation rap session at 12.Hyde Park Comer at 8.Poetry Workshop at 9.ELSEWHEREFilmThey Shoot Horses Don’t They has been raved aboutin many quarters. It looks at American society throughthe metaphor of a marathon dance in the 30’s. It starsJane Fonda, Michael Sarrazin and Gig Young. At StateLake Theatre.Z is a film of political suspence and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicaland contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, Chicago and Michigan.M*A*S*H is a bitterly cynical look at war which justtears it to shreds. It stars Elliot Gould and Donald Suther¬land. At the United Artists, Randolph and Dearborn.The Boys in the Band is the film version of the playwhich seemed to break the ice in the subject of homose¬xuality 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 isContinued on Page SevenMay 1, 1970/Grey City Journal/5Jethro and Cricklewoodi8 Hungarian Filmsmay 7-10 f t ■b bFAR EAST KITCHENCHINESE & AMERICANFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen daily 10 - 10Fri.&Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd955-2229See Hungary's young " New Wave" film makersrepresented in this first group showing in theUnited States. Two different films each eveningat 7 pm and 10 pm. All tickets are One dollar.Complete schedule of films titles and directorsavailable at the circulation desk of Mundelein'sLearning Resource Center Building, 6339 NorthSheridan Road.Presented by The Chicago International Film Festivalmunjndeleincolleae MENTIONTHEMAROONBuffySainte-MarieConcertSpringThingSat. May 2,1970I IT CampusTricycle race 2p.m.Concert 7p.m.Mixer 9:30p.m.Tickets $3.75 Race information:Diane Mika842-8970Tickets:Hermann Union3241 s. Federalca5-9600 ext. 364 NOW IN PAPERBACKH.RAPBROWNSexplosive politicalautobiography$1.95A DIAL PRESS PAPERBACKDistributed by DELL CANOE TRIPSInto Quetico-Superior Wilderness.Plan an Mating canoe trip for thehighpoint of your summer vocation!Ratos you can afford. For in¬formation writ* or call BILL ROM'SOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.218—365-4046. TAKCAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN OAILY11 A.H. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.K.Orders vo take outACADEMY AWARDWINNERELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900 rzsszn* 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *u Phone: FA 4-1651 m Cinema TheatreBaily • for state! imp rates call: WH 4-SSS7University of Chicago Blackfriars presentsAN ORIGINAL GGCr MUSICALHAY 1,2,8,9 8:3CPMMANGEL HALL 5714 S. UMVER/ITTTICKET/: S2.SC & S2.CC5CC STUDENT Cl/COUNTCPCIIP Cl/C CLINT / AVAILABLEMI3-€8COk358C1 r j*m6/drtfy’ City Jonriml/May 1, 1970 MARSHALL RICHEY will recreate his rolefrom the Emmy Award winning production of the play bySAMUEL BECKETTn, kt ' k%:, \^vi ' * Vvv*< ' .>*****.-■ . Jl 7\ \ ’vXiW ' 'vL'fW'! > ' 'T V \ ^ :».,"/ S \ , I jl'i'4^- / W's; //KRAPPSLAST TAPE< >.V,m vv\\ ..-i***1'- ''Vv'n\ \v * l\May 2.3 at 8:30 pmin the Bergman Gallery5811 Ellis, Chicago, MI 3-0800, x4137. Tickets: $1.00 / <h(knfCULTURE EB1TEREinstContinued from Page Fivereally about what the people are thinking. At the Playboy,1204 N. Dearborn.Cul-de-Sac by Roman Polanski and Briar De Palma’sGreetings are sharing a double bill. The former is about acouple who live in an isolated castle who are invaded bygangsters fleeing from the law. The latter is a dissectionof the draft, sex, computer dating, the Kennedy assassina¬tion and the Great American Dream. At the Festival, 3912N. Sheridan Rd.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 and 11, Saturday at 8:30,11 and 1.Police — an interesting title is the Chicago premiereof Slawomire Mrozek’s futuristic drama. At the Play¬house, 315 W. North. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 andSunday at 7:30. Students, $2.Adaptation-Next is two one-act plays, one by old Chi¬cagoan Elaine May and one by Terance McNally. At theHappy Medium, 901 N. Rush St. Tuesday — Thursday at8:30. Friday and Saturday at 8 and 11. Sunday at 7:30.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 3.An Evening with Bill Lederer includes 3 one-actors bythis Chicago playwright. ^|.tbe ljullhouse Playwrights Center, 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, 904.W Belmont. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30.Theater 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 952 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 byBertolot Brecht and Derio Washburn respectively. At theColumbia College Performing Arts Center, 1725 N. Wells.Thursdays 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. Madison Eddie Shaw’s Lounge 4423 W. MadisonL and A1422 S. PaulasklWalton’s Corner S. Roosevelt and .Washtenaw1815 Clu bAnnex 1815 W. RooseveltLicking Stick 1700 W. RooseveltSportsman’s Roosevelt and KedzieKey La rgoRoosevelt and DamenFlamingo 2500 W. Rooseveltsun_C 1T T. OPRNflLHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.1U 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 Wikler— :StaffCulture 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 person*should contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.COME TO THEBEAUX ARTSMASQUERADE BALLCOLD BLOOD, SIEGEL/SCHWALL, ANDJ.B. HUTTO BANDSSPECTACULAR LIGHT SHOWMAY 2BARTLETT GYM 8:30-1:30TICKETS AT MANDELFOTA '708/Grey City Joarwl/May 1* 1S7I>/ / (.VI •' if ^ aChairman Names4 Board MembersThe election of four new members to theboard of trustees has been announced byFairfax Cone, chairman of the board.They are:• Kingman Douglass, Jr, executive vice-president of Glore Forgan Staats, Inc, Chi¬cago;• Irving Harris, president of StandardShares, Inc, Chicago;• Norman Barker, Jr, president of theUnited California Bank, Los Angeles, and• John Neukom, managing director ofMcKinsey & Co, San Francisco.Douglass is a governor of the AmericanStock Exchange, and he is a director ofDun & Bradstreet, Inc, New York; VSI Cor¬poration, Pasadena, California; US Reduc¬tion Co, East Chicago, Indiana; AdmiralCorporation, Chicago; and W W Grainger, the United California Bank since May, 1968.He has been associated with the bank since1957, previously having worked with theAmerican Can Company and the HarrisTrust and Savings Bank, Chicago.Barker is a trustee of Occidental College,Los Angeles, a director of Western Bancor-poration and the Southern California Edi¬son Company, and a member of the associ¬ates at both UCLA and California Instituteof Technology.Neukom, a career consultant, has been amember of the McKinsey firm since he re¬ceived PhD degree from the University in1934 and has had responsibility for thefirm’s west coast practice since 1945. Hehas an honorary LLB degree from YanktonCollege, Yankton, SD.Neukom is also a trustee of Golden StateCollege in San Francisco. •% • |KL Wt \ 'CONNIE MARAVELL: current SG president who will lose position after election.GOODMANS EE-3388 Inch 2-way40-18,000 Hz-25 watts18" x 11" x 9"WAS - $49.95NOW - $29.95GOODMANS EE-126 Inch 2-way45-18,000 Hz-20 watts15" x 8" x 7"WAS - $29.95NOW-$19 95SCOTT S-11B12 Inch 3-way35-20.000 Hz-60 watts24" x 1414" x 1114"|WAS-$149.95NOW -$99.95GOODMANS EE-441010 Inch 2-way35-20,000 Hz-30 watts22" x 12%" x 914"WAS - $69.96NOW - $48.88 ADC 303A8 Inch 2-way35-20,000 Hz-60 watts23%" x 13" x 1134"WAS - $99.50NOW - $67.77FISHER XM5B15 Inch 3-way28-20,000 Hz-60 watts27" x 27" x-14%"WAS - $289.95NOW — $199.95FISHER XP-1212 Inch 3-way30-20,000 Hz-50 watts2214" x 24" x 1334"WAS-$219.95NOW - $149.95ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500• Maj ' Jedync.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550Inc, Chicago.He is president of the Illinois Committeefor Constitutional Convention, president ofthe Illinois Children’s Home and AidSociety, trustee of Presbyterian-St. Luke’sHospital, the Chicago Sunday Evening Cluband member of the Plan Commission ofLake Forest.Harris has been president of StandardShares, Inc, since 1963 and president of RJLevy, Harris, Inc since 1959. He has alsobeen associated with the Michael ReeseHospital and Medical Center, Science Re¬search Associates, the Toni Company andthe Gillette Safety Razor Company.Harris is chairman of the board of thePittway Corporation and is a director of theUS Reduction Co.Barker has been president and director of Candidates Listed for SG PositionsContinued from Page One5400 GreenwoodPaul BirnbergGene GoldbergBlackstoneVerne Culberson (AC)FraternitiesKarl MenningerCraig CookOther CollegeRick Shattuc (AC)Theodore Feinson (AC)Mike Rainey (AC)Marcia Edison (AC)Mike Fowler (AC) Rita Goldwasser (AC)John Siefert (AC)Dan Gray (AC)Vid Ravdin (AC)Mark Carey (AC)Charles Fuhrer (AC)Susan DeRousse (AC)Jerry Dahlke (AC)Thomas NooterStan GoumasPaul BarronGRADUATE HOUSELaw SchoolPeter N. Lauriat (Bullshit)Richard Hudlin (Bullshit) Ester Lardert (Bullshit)Judith Bernstein (Bullshit)Soc. Sci.David Bensman (AC)Nancy Foner (AC)Margaret Mackenzie (AC)Jerry Hyman (AC)Paul PeretzHumanitiesMichael Buckner (AC)NSA DELEGATIONMike Fowler (ACJohn Siefert (AC)Dave Bensman (AC)Michael Rainey (AC)Vern Culberson (AC)1 CHARTS/GRAPHS.Leroy lettering(Neor campus)363-1288Holdupyour local gasstation.If you’ve yot a bit of larceny inyour heart.you’ll love theRenault 10.You see. it Bets 35 miles to theBallon.Ansi as tar as >>as stations areconcerned, that’s highway robbery.So don’t he tix> harsh when theboys at your local Bas station acta little Brumpy.In tact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suBBc'st they .get one torthemselves.After all, they nu^ht have a hitot larceny injtheir heartstixx .BLACKFRIARSpresentsthe musical,SWEETLIFEMandel HallMay 1,2, 8, 98:30 p.m. Your car has five numberson the speedometer. Volvo has six.One could get the impressionthat the people who made your carlack a little confidence. WE'D LIKE YOU TOJOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITH AS ANORX>AJNffX> MJNISTEKWITH A RANK OFWe 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 cantell 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 others!Your 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 and glassed.SEND TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHBox 1393, Dept. G8, Evanston, III. 602046120 S. WESTERNState Zip _ SlOind.D(no frames)$20 end. □(deluxe frames)Tickets $2.00 and $2.50 with $.50student discount and $.25 per ticketdiscount for groups of ten and overadvertising courtesy of FOTA 70IdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic 60602FR 2-2390 — 798 0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE OF CANADA5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRY Via TWA VisitCOPENHAGEN - 2 NIGHTSBERLIN —2 NIGHTSMADRID - 2 NIGHTSROME - 3 NIGHTSVENICE - 2 NIGHTSLUCERNE - 2 NIGHTSPARIS-3 NIGHTSLONDON-2 NIGHTSIRELAND-2 NIGHTSALSO 1 DAY TRIP TO SWEDEN’889^.,FULL PRICEfrom ChicagoAll flights to, through and from Europe(no long, tiresome bus rides), carefullyselected hotels (AM rooms with privatebath), most meals, baggage handling,transfers, tips, sightseeing tours withmultilingual guides and tour manager toescort group through Europe A qualitytour run by eiperienced professionalsGROUPS DEPART CHICAGOEvery Two Weeks foru Next 12 MonthsSOME GROUPS LIMITED TO STUDENTSFree trip to teacherswho get 15 student reservationsAmerican International Tours612 Church Street, Suite c|6Evanston. Illinois 60201or PHONE COLLECT 312/491 1740Choice Summer Departures Falling Fast!You don’t have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip" Give yourcontact lensesa bathtonightIn order to keep your contact lenses ascomfortable and convenient as they weremeant to be, you have to take care ofthem. But until now you needed two ormore separate solutions to properlyprepare and maintain your contacts Notwith Lensine. lensme is the one lenssolution for complete contact lens careCleaning your contacts with Lensineretards the buildup of foreign deposits onthe lenses. And soaking your contacts inLensine overnight assures you of properlens hygiene. You get a free soaking caseon the bottom of every bottle of LensineIt has been demonstrated that improperstorage between wearmgs may result inthe growth of bacteria on the lensesThis is a sure cause of eye irritation andin some cases can endanger your visionBacteria cannot grow in Lensine which issterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.Just a drop or two of Lensine, before youinsert your lens, coats and lubricates itallowing the lens to float more freely inthe eye's fluids. That's becauseLensine is an "isotonic" solution,which means that it blends withthe natural fluids of the eyeLet your contacts be theconvenience they weremeant to be. Getsome Lensine, from theMurine Company, Inc.8/The Chicago Maroon/May 1, 1970Students To DesignTeaching EvaluationsEvaluations of all undergraduate coursesat the University will be prepared thisquarter by a student group.Questionnaires will be designed and pro¬cessed by students in the next two weeksand will be distributed in classes the lastweek of the quarter. Published analyseswill be available before classes begin inSeptember.First session to design the questionnaireswill be Monday at 7:30 pm in Cobb 101.Partly machine scorable and partly individ¬ually written answer sheets are envisionedby a group that has already been workingon the problem.This will allow processing of large num¬bers of forms, according to A1 Shpuntoff71, co-chairman of the group. Differenttypes of questions for different subjectsshould ensure detailed presentations, headded.The project has been encouraged andsupported by dean of the College Roger Hil¬debrand. Students wishing to create, dis¬ tribute, or process the questionnairesshould contact Shpuntoff at 667-5012 or Hol¬ly Hartstone 71 at 667-5124.Professors will be asked to allow 15 min¬utes of class time for filling out the ques¬tionnaires. Students should bring a No. 2pencil to class during tenth week to fill outthe machine scorable sections. Any stu¬dents in unscseduled courses should con¬tact the committee to add information ontheir teachers.The social sciences collegiate divisionstudent advisory council is currently pre¬paring an evaluation of social sciences col¬lege courses for the winter quarter.Under the direction of Lawrence Straus,71, the council is publishing results of ques¬tionnaires distributed in class last quarteralong with comments about the courses andinstructors.It is expected that this evaluation, alongwith evaluations for fall and spring quar¬ters will be ready in time for registrationon May 11. They can be picked up in Gates-Blake 428.Friday, May 1BLACK DAY: Lutheran School of Theology, 9:50 am.DISCUSSION: "Political Repression in Brazil," DrMarcio Alves, Brazilian journalist and member ofopposition congress, now in exile, Crossroads Stu¬dent Center, 8 pm.PLANNING: Training for supporting action for theChicago 15, Chicago Theological Seminary, beginsFriday night and continues through the weekend.CONCERT: Pete Williams, Louisiana Blues singer, IdaNoyes, $1.FLICK: Children of Paradise, DOC films, Cobb, • pm.BLACKFRIARS: Sweetlife, written and produced bystudents, Mandel, 8:30 pm., also Saturday night. PLAY: The Amen Corner, James Baldwin, benefit forthe Hyde Park free summer theatre project, Luth¬eran Auditorium, 1100 E 55th, 4 and 8 pm., dona¬tion of $2.THREE PENNY OPERA: Reynold's Club, 8:30 pm. $2,also Sunday night.NIGHTCLUB: Live jazz, food, 9 pm. to 2 am.Sunday, May 3Saturday, May 2 SERVICES: Will Campbell, committee of southernchurchmen. Rockefeller, 11 am.REHEARSAL: J. S. Bach's AAagnificant, Allegro Con-spirito. Disciples Church, 5655 University, 2 pm.MOZART REQUIEM: Memory of Martin Luther KingJr., Lutheran School of Theology, 3:30 pm.FLICK: Pretty Poison, CEF, Cobb, 7 and 9:15 pm.DISCUSSION: Richard Stern on his new book 1968 ata breakfast meeting. Quad Club, 10 am.PEOPLE'S PARK PARTY: noon to midnight.BASEBALL: Chicago State Teachers, Stagg Field,12:30 pm. Monday, May 4MEETING: The college teaching evaluation group,creation of the Soc Sci evaluation questionnaires,Cobb 101, 7:30 pm. THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10'/' Student Discount on QualityPaperbacks & Hardcovers1540E. SSth St. -Ml 3-7511CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998aHos whof you need from a $10*▼used 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom * ^▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants * >Mill returns at a fraction of the < I^original cost. ^ |^Decoration Colors and Qualities. * '▼Additional 10% Discount withJ FREE DELIVERYi4 speedsynchromeshstick shiftstandard onthe Fiat 850Sedan$1685This car has a secret: a sports carfeel'' in a quick response floorstick shift. And so economical itlowers the cost of being young! You 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 CRANE238-0971kSENTRYINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOW FOR SUMMER WORKDRIVE 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.CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN FILMSPRETTY POISONSUNDAY, MAY 3 COBB HALL 7& 9; 15 Kickapoo Creek Outdoor Rock ConcertITlEITIORLHh DHY CANNED HEAT • B B KING •UJEEKETID DELANEY & BONNIE & FRIENDSITLHY 30 PAUL BUTTERFIELD BLUESHEYWORTH, ILLINOIS BAND • SMITH • BACKSTREETONE-EyId JACKS • GUILD • BLOOMSBURY PEOPLENICKLE BAG • FINCHLEY BOYS .„REO SPEEDWAGONFOR DAYS S A NIGHT • EASY STREET • BLUES^'EEDBUCKTOOTH • ESQUIRES .FEATHER TRAIN • ZJ^pRAPHOENIX • NIGHT PEOPLE • TRUTH • SEVEN p BLUECHALLENGERS • UNCLE MEAT • SPARE CH&YNGEGENESIS • ARROW MEMPHIS • GIDEONS BIBLEReserve YourPlace with the SunADMITTANCE CAN ONLYBE GUARANTEED WHILETICKET SUPPLY LASTSOrder tickets direct from:KICKAPOO CREEK INC.BOX 606, HEYW0RTH, ILLINOIS 61745NameAddressCity State Zip..School Age...I enclose $ for tickets.L__ lSEE THE NEW HONDA 350 AT AIRPORT HONDAPhone:767 2070AIRPORT CYCLE SALES4520 W. 63rd ST.CHICAGOPrices from S 169.00 Open Daily to 9 P.M. Sat to 4 P M.A' May WtiSUXto m $wn/9T • ' . V*'Vt'. ’ -i ••*>;'» A V 1~.' t~T -' a < *"* * *3* >* *■ t *' l_ * * * * ».*.* *jJ-1 .■» >4> \'••*• >«•«***,<.. . v .Charles Wegener: Teach, Read, Think, TalkBy Christine FroulaYet another phase of Charles Wegener’slong association with the University of Chi¬cago comes into being with his appointmentas master of the new collegiate division.“Frankly, I think this is a very propitiousmoment in the history of the University andof the College to do some of the thingswe’ve always tried to do,” he said whenasked why he accepted a job which, hesays, “people hesitate to take because it’sextremely difficult to do anything else.”He adds, “It’s a good moment for a lot ofreasons, not the least of which is the factthat the University is very interested in theCollege.”Currently professor in the humanities andnew collegiate divisions, Wegener receivedhis AB and PhD in philosophy from theUniversity, and since 1950 has held succes¬sively positions of instructor, research as¬sistant, assistant professor, and associateprofessor. Wegener calls his University ca¬reer “atypical.”“Fundamentally, I am rather an old-fash¬ioned type of college teacher,” he says. “Iteach, read, think, talk to my colleagues. Ihave never attempted to make a career bypublishing, and my career is some quietand unspectacular testimony to the factthat one can still get away with this sort oftiling at ‘major’ university.”Wegener was reluctant to talk about hisplans for NCD, explaining that, although hehas been associated with NCD since its in¬ception in 1965, there are some aspects withwhich he is still unfamiliar. “Further,” headded, “I’d rather not get confined by any¬thing which I might say now.”Chairman of the College curriculum com¬mittee, he says that he thinks of this posi¬tion and his position as master as “a jointoperation. I’d like to get the College com¬mitted, one way or another, to a more inde¬pendent operation.“The idea behind NCD,” he says, “is that PROFILEthere ought to be at least one place in theUniversity which doesn’t depend uponwhat’s going on upstairs in the graduateschools. Its important characteristic is thatit is not associated with a graduate school,as are all the other divisions of the Col¬lege.”Wegener expressed a concern with “help¬ing to solve the difficult University problemof freshman courses.” Liberal Arts I, whichthe new collegiate division “took over acci¬dentally” when asked to administer it, willnot be taught after this year.Wegener teaches in the ideas and meth¬ods program of NCD. “I don’t think thatthe philosophy program and the I & M pro¬gram are trying to do the same thing atall,” he says. “We are trying to develop aparticular interest of a student, be it sci¬ence, the arts, or whatever, and give himthe intellectual tools with which he can re¬late it to other problems.“For example, one BA paper last yearpresented various models of brain and in¬telligence, utilizing biology, psychology,and biopsychology to relate different waysof attacking the problem. That student isnow in mathematical biology.“This year, I received a long paper onmathematics — what math is, with elabo¬rate arguments ending in a proposed math¬ematics curriculum. The point is that nei¬ther tiling could have come out of thephilosophy department, because there youdon’t devote much time to mathematicsand biology. It’s a difference of construc¬tion, nothing to fight about.”Wegener is co-editor of Ethics (“althoughI might have to quit that now”) and hisFOTANOTICEChangeEDWARD ALBEE WILL NOT APPEAR ON MAY 4;HE WILL COME TO MAN DEL ON MAY 11.May 23:00Ida NoyesTheater AdditionsRon Loewinson, poetco-sponsored by the Roy Gutman FundMay 4 will also include the following events:8:00 Chicago Contemporary Dance TheaterMandel with Maggie Kast8:00 Julius Caesar" with Marlon Brandonunn+rnll co-sponsored by Contemporarywamreii European Films. CHARLES WEGENER: Wegener, at left, with Skip Landt in the ad building duringthe sit-in.research includes translating. “I find trans¬lating very relaxing,” he says. “I can getabsorbed in it and forget everything else.The only problem is that some times I don’tunderstand it when I’ve finished.”Wegener is married and has three daugh¬ters. “We own a 230-acre farm near SpringGreen, Wisconsin,” he says, “on which wehave presently eight horses, one mule, three goats, and three Siamese cats and abig black dog. The horses are not particu¬larly distinguished, but we own two Mor¬gans — one a gelding named Henry and onewho rejoices in the name of BridlesweetDisraeli. I spend a lot of time trying tokeep the pasture open, fixing the fences,and admiring the oak trees which are slow¬ly growing.”i ; 1! The !j University J| of Chicago ji Downtown !j Center {j 65 E. South Water St. ij Chicago, Ill. 60601 jj FI 6-8300 ]I Please send me i, information about !j Summer Evening jI Courses for |j Undergraduate jI Credit. I| Principal field j| of interest: II □ Social Sciences |] □ Humanities jl name & address:i 110/The Chicago Maroon/May 1, 1970(Maroon Classified Ads) ‘ tNO MATTER HOW GREY, THE CHEESE STANDS ALONE. 'iSCENESCANDLELIGHT is Nice; Jazz byCANDLELIGHT at the NIGHT¬CLUB.summer Break Lasts 14 Weeks. DoYou Really Want to Work Thati ona’ Get a Vacation. Fly Some¬where - • • Anywhere On AMERI¬CAN AIRLINES. Call Campus Rep.jim Sack 684-6667 for Details.interested in Sailing and Learningto Sail? Call Paul 324-1683.After Their Sellout At Fillmore EastHpar pee|, Turn On with ColdBlood May 2 Bartlett FOTA '70Tickets in Mandel Corr.protest For Soviet Jewry-PicketSoviet Photo Exhibit — Museum ofScience and Industry Sun. May 3-1:30-4:00PM.The Marx Brothers are Coming!Dean Sweetlife Tries to Grab Ass:Will be Exposed; SWEETLIFE 8:30mandel.EUROFE. 70E Group Flight. TWASept 4 N.Y./London. Sept. 25. Lon¬don/N.Y. $205.EUROPE - $199.00 round trip (iet),Itkin, 1509 Vassar Kalamazoo, Mich.49ppl. (616) 349-7011.Protest Soviet Repression of JewishCulture and denial of rights ofJews to leave USSR Sun. May 3.Museum of Science and Industry—57th and the Lake. 1:30PM.FREE CHE RUBIN: FREE SAMBARBER: Oft the Dean. SeeSWEETLIFE 8:30 Mandel.MARX BROTHERS FILM ORGYcomes to UC on May 10 and 18.SVNA will bring out their legal(hah!) punch this noon; that's astart . . .Eat Dinner at the BANDERSNATCHAir-Conditioned; Southern FriedChicken a la Cliffe.HIGH NOON - QUADS mother na¬ture's home grown never smelt sosweet.Minnette's Custom Salon 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing; clothes copied & designed.Phonographic Literature FreelllGood Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8i Tape Decks Save$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.Masquerade Ball — Come to theBeaux Arts, May 2.Regimentation la for Dorm-typeFreaks — Discover Time-Space atthe BANDERSNATCH.“POLITICAL REPRESSION INBRAZIL" discussion by Marcio Al¬ves. ex-Brazilian Congressmen (Inexile). Fri, May 1, 8PM, 5621 Black-stone.A Natural High is the Best High.Transcendental Meditation. Frl.May l, 8pm. 107 Kent Hall.Marco Polo Travel. 2268S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.Turn on Naturally. TranscendentalMeditation Tues April 27, 8 PM.Ida Noyes.Come to the Beaux Arts BallMay 2 Bartlett GymWriters' Workshop (PL 2-8377).Notice: To all those who feel Cheapdigging the music and scene atTHE NIGHTCLUB because they'repaying only .15! Note: Eat More-Buy More—Pay Morel!Come to Beaux Arts BallMay 2 Bartlett Gym.CRAFT CO-OP now open Mon.-Frl.1-5, 3rd fl. Blue Gargoyle.HEAR YE! HEAR YE! HEAR YE ILet 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.Masquerade Ball — Come to theBeaux Arts, May 2.A good IDEA!! After the FlicksJazz Alive or how you take it;dL CANDLELiGHT with EGGNULLS.(Law Day - May Day) IsNAT L DRUG ABUSE DAYstomp on a compoz orr°ll one on the quads - noondon't bogart that joint,you fiendThe Brothers of Tazai speak onAn Ecumenical Religious Commu-nity 6:00 Sunday May 3. Bonhoef-ter House. Dinner Following. THE RITE OF SPRINGCold Blood Siegal Schwall BodyPainting J B Hutto. Sat May 2Bartlett 830. Tickets in Mandel —Due to Large Sales Volume WeMay Have None Left at Door.Edward Albee May 11 MandelFOTA 70.Chicken? Chicken Shit? No-No!Southern Fried Chicken at theBANDERSNATCH FOREVER!!!ANNOUNCEMENT: FIRST COM¬PLETE ACCOUNT OF MY LAIMASSACRE PUBLISHED IN MAYHARPER'S AAAGAZINE. SeymourHersch documents with eyewitnessaccounts the events before, duringand after the My Lai 4 Massacreon March 16, 1968. Hersch, thewriter who first broke the story,has interviewed military comman¬ders, investigators both in Vietnamand Washington, Vietnamese sur¬vivors, and more than 50 membersof Charlie Company.Chicago Contemporary Dance Thea¬ter with Maggie Kast 8:00 at Man-del.Chicken? Whose Chicken; Where?Air-Conditioned Chicken at theBANDERSNATCH BANDERSNATCHChicago Contemporary Dance TroupeMandel May 4 8PM. A Truly Ex¬citing Co.SENIOR NUDEDue to Ibe large turn out on Wed¬nesday the event has been re¬scheduled on Tues 5/5/70 at Mid¬way studios around 4:30PM. U ofC ID's required. Participate evenif you aren't a senior.FOTA 70Beaux Arts BallCold Blood, Siegal Schwall andJ. B. Hutto BandsSpectacular Light ShowMay 2 Bartlett Gym 8:30-1:30Tickets In Mandel Hall Box Office<3.May Day Festivities — May 112 noon opening ceremoniesMain Quads12 noon outdoor Brass ConcertRoof of Hutchinson Ct1PM Robbin and Marion-playRenaissance PlayersHarper Library Quad3PM Opening Speech-QuantrallDean HildebrandDusk—Mystical Procession DanceCampusFolk Dancing with Orchestra May3, 2:30. Main quads by tennis cts.Columbia College Dance TroupeMay 3, 7:30. Ida Noyes Cloister.Ron Loewinsohn, Poet May 2. 3:00Ida Noyes Theater.“Julius Caesar" with Marlon Brando8:00, May 4, Quantrell.Chicago Contemporary Dance TroupeMandel May 4 8PM. A Truly Ex¬citing Co.PUBLIC AFFAIRSPROGRAMMonday May 4, 1:30PM. ReynoldsClub South Lounge Meeting for AllStudents Interested in Joining theProgram. Students 8i Faculty WillDescribe Field Study and OtherAspects. ,PRETTY POISONSee Why Bowsley Crowther calledthis the "best American-made Filmof 1967." At Cobb Hall on Sunday.7 & 9:15. Shown by CEF.SANDRA DEESee Sandra Dee as a Sweet Inno¬cent Killer. Never Trust a Clean-Cut Kid. Cobb Hall May 3, 7 &9:15. CEF, The Culture People,Present PRETTY POISON.ZAPPA!The Mothers of Invention in coh-cert. Wednesday, May 6. Auditor¬ium Theatre 7 and 10PM. Tickets$3, $4, $5, $6. At the box office,all Ttcketron outlets, and all Ward,Field, and Crawford stores.MUSICIANSThe PEPPERBANOE AND REVUEHolds Forth Today at 5:47 PM inWoodward Court for a Celebrationof Mayday and the Sacred Ritesof the Pepper. See the May-PoleCrowned, Join in Lascivious PieFight, Sing, Dance, Laugh, Love,and Be Happy. Today! More Pep¬per to the People. Today!FOR SALE62 VW 2Yr Old Engine 2 New TiresNeeds Some Body Work $350. 671-8929 After 6PM.JESSELSON’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186- 1340 E. 53rd SALE!! Shure M91E Cartridge Reg$50 Now Only $25 With Trade ATMUSICRAFT. For Lowest Priceson all Components. Cali CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 Save $$$.Must Sell 63 Corvair. Good MotorNeed Muffler $125 or Best Offer.Call 955-0076 Eve Ex2711 Day Larry.Dresser/Mirror, Desk, Carpet. MustSell. Best Offer. 667-5428.Mustang 67 Lovecar exc 8cyl, radio,2 snow tire. $1400. Call 674-3679.Reindeer Skin Rug $50. Call Carol643-8548.BEAST BSA 650, $500, 643-8210.'61 Ford-Good Transportation, $175643-5209 After 6PM.65 Sunbeam Tiger V' Good Cond.Roll Bar-Snow Tires. Must Sell$1100 — Best Offer. 815-729-0747.Dyna SCA-35 Amp $89; KLH Model703 Spkr $18. 347 BJ, 643-6000.WANTEDNeed 2 Aircond But Will SettleFor 1. Should be 5500 BTU. orMore. Call Don or Joel at X3263 InAm or 288 2859 Eves. Should Berelatively Cheap.To Buy 67 or 68 Tempest or Simi¬larly Sized Auto. Preferably withAir Cond. Price Around $1200. CallDon at X3263 or 288-2859.CAMPING EQUIPMENTFor Rent: Sleoping Bags - Tents -Stoves - Lanterns - Call HICKORYEx 2381 or 324-1499.WANTED!!!!!!Someone to help run this rag. Weneed an assistant business managerfor next year. The only qualifica¬tions are a head on your shoulders.You would have to run the officeevery day from 9 to 5, answer thephone, fake ads, hassle with be-ligerant staff members, take careof our bread, and do all kinds ofother crap. You have to be ableto type and handle all kinds ofpeople. Except for that, the as¬sistant business manager has afree hand and hopefully a freemind. The pay is phenomenal andwe would like a former studentfrom this place or someone whocould handle the job and still goto school. If interested contact Donor Joel at the office, ext 3263, IdaNoyes 304..PEOPLE WANTEDBABY SITTER Needed July 27-Aug10 Martha's Vineyard 684-0048.HELP WANTEDUndergraduate Psychology programLarge Student faculty ratio. EliteMidwestern University. Small butshrinking college. Reply Green 108.No Experience Necessary.Babysitter Needed for ThursdayFor 2Vi Year Old Girl 667-6251.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.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.OPPORTUNITY, sparetime, address¬ing envelopes and circulars! Make$27,000 per thousand. Handwrittenor typed, in your home. Send just$2. for INSTRUCTIONS Plus LISTOF FIRMS using addressers. Satis¬faction Guaranteed! B8iV ENTER¬PRISES, Dept. 4-U, PO Box 1056,Yucaipa, Calif. 92399.Need help writing major paper fora M. E. degree. Call 667-5958 —Valerie.IMMORTALIZE YOUR INFANT 6MO.-l Yr. old! Linguist must rec¬ord for thesis. $1.50/hr. 643-3342.PEOPLE FOR SALEELEC. WIRING DONE REASON¬ABLY FIXRITE ELECTRIC. Ml »•5213.Craftsman will Build Your Harpsi¬chord-Clavichord From Hubbard orZuckerman Kits, to Your Specifica¬tions. Call 345-4631.TYPING-STENO-THESES-PL 2-4280.Rm. 508. $1/ page for theses.Third Year Undergrad in Gen Stu¬dies in Humanities Needs Full-TimeSummer Employment. Would Liketo Do Research. Call x3777 ChrisRoom 501. Leave Message.DRIVERPart-time - evenings. Independentcontractor has immediate openingsfor part-time driver four nights/week 9PM-1AM in university area.Will drive station wagon deliveringpassengers. Payrate $2.75/hr. Mustbe reliable and able to work duringsummer recess. Call Mr. Marfas at487-5600 day or 264-8005 eves. HOUSE FOR SALE4bedrooms 2 full baths 2 car ga¬rage large garden. 955-5916.SPACECO-OP HOUSE has vacancies be¬ginning Sept, for grad students inBio. & Phy. Sci. — A Block forQuadrangles — Rents $30 to $42per mo. — Call PL 2-9708 evenings.RMMT-2 Bdrm Apt-55th 8. Cornell-May on 69/Mo 955-5871 Eves &Wknd.1 Bdrm Apt Furn (inc piano). NearHarper Ct $65. 955-2583.Co-op 2’/j Rm Modern Apt for Sale.54th PI. and Dorch; Balcon; LgeYard. Excel, for one or Couple.955-3595 Eves.APARTMENTS AVAILABLE now—May 1 Studios-1 bedrm-2 bedrm-3bedrm. 53rd & Kenwood. Phone Mr.Stoll DO 3-6200 or Steve FA 4-0342.Fern. Roommate, Large SS Apt.$60. 721-4820.Rmmt wntd own rm in Lg SS Hse$50.00/Mo & Util. 978-0954 Eve.1 Bedroom Available in Quite, Air-Conditioned 3 Bedroom and 2 BathApt. $67/Month. 5114 S. Harper.752-1469.Large comfortable Kenwood homefor rent furnished for 1 year start¬ing Sept. 1. 538-0708.SUBLET5Rooms $135/Month — AvailableJune 13-with option for next year.Call 752-5207.Rmmts wntd smr and/or fall qfraircond nr campus 493-8041.m Rm Apt 54 8. Harp $99 FurnAvailable June 15 on 643-6772.Roommate WantedFor Apartment 2 Blocks From MainQuad. From June and Thru NextYear. Call 955-8155 After 6PM.SUM SUBLET 6rm Sbedrms $135.Completely Furnished. Maryland nr57th St. 643-0749.Fern Rmmate Wanted: 56 St UnivSum/or Next Yr; 3 BR, $66. CallHolly Ml 3-0800 Ext 260 Rm28.SMR SBLT 8. OPT TO RT In 70-71.Bg mid-June for fern rmmt. $65/mo 55th 8< Univ. Back Prch Swing.Lge-3 bedrm, 2 bath. 667-2530.SUM SUBLET — Beaut 5Rm Apt.$145/MO. 52 & Univ. 324-7731.Sublet June 15-Sept. 4 Rm FurnApt 5 Blks From Univ. Aircond inBedrm. S117/Mon or $250 for Sum¬mer. Call 493-0862 After 5.Sublet w/Opt for Next Yr 1400 E57. $65. Call 288-6357 Air-Cond.SUMMER: PEOPLE NEEDED FOR6Vi RM APT. 53 8. BLACKSTONE.CALL BU 8-6610. 1214 or 2202 LeaveNo.Gentle Sublet for Pleasure. 3 Beds,7 rooms, furnished. Yard. 2 blks1C bus beach golf. Rent cheap S.Shore. 324-8187 evening.3 Rm Mates need 4th to share apt.June-Aug. Kimbark nr 51 own Rm.$47.50/Mo. Call 324-6096.Beautifully Furn. 3Vi Large RmsCarpted, Freezer, Cool. 363-4555.Great for Married Students.SUMMER SUBLET: AIR-CONDI¬TIONED. S. Shore Studio with beau¬tiful lake view. Garage; pool; hi-fi;doorman. $150/Mo. 955-2187.Sublet 6015 to 9-15. Own rm. inlarge, supernice Apt nr. Lake.Dishwshr, Plants, Sun. Fern pref.667-4526, eves.Sum Sub Incredible Furn 2 PersSpacious .4330 Harper 684-3026. ANew Concept in Living for Sure.Wanted: Summer Subletters for 3-bedroom apartment close to Kim¬bark Plaza, June 15-Sept 15. $179.Call 684-8412.SUM SUBLET 57 St Harper. IdealFor Couple $140 or Nego. Call Cindy667-3099 or Ted 288-3453.Summer sublet w/option for Sep.53-Kenwood 4 rooms 324-4457.SUMMER SUBLET, 6/15-9/1. 6rmapt, 57fh St Kimbark, 1 blk frmcampus, shopping, playgd. 3 bdrms.(1 air-cond) dn rm. Ivng. rm, etc.Well-Furn, Sunny, end grassy backyd. PL 2-8391.Summer Sublet 3 Bedrm Apt NearCampus Shopping 363-3990.HP. Apt. Wanted 6/1 to 9/1.Will Pay $100/Mo. 667-1185.Sublet June 1 10 Sept. 1, hugefurnished apt for two people orcouple. $60 each with utl. andphone paid. Air conditioned, washerand dryer, backporch, lots of space.57 and Drexel. Have apt completelyto self in June and July and sharewith a third for August. 667-1565. Sublet for one person in June andJuly. Own room in large sevenroom apt, two blocks from campus.Only $37.50 a month! What a steal!Call Wendy or Laurie at 955-0348.Summer Sublet: Well-appointed,fully-furnished, spacious comfortableapartment. Own room. Fully furn¬ished. Room for 1, 2, or 3. 2 baths324-6389.SUMMER SUBLET. 2 BEDRMS, 4RM Apt. $115/Mo. Call 684-1187.HPK-Smr Sublt-Fall Option. 4Vh Rms$110. 643-5209 After 6.WANTED - FOR JUNE — 1 or 2Room ARpt on Dorchester, Black-stone, or Harper Between 57th 8i59th. Attic Type Room Suitable —Leave Phone Number at x239, FA 4-8200.Not a typical Hyde Park rat trap:Roomy, sunny, airy 6-rm. apt. withpiano, near campus, for sublet. Call955-7352.Wanted One Bedroom ApartmentTo Sublet for Summer-BeginningJune 1 Please Call 667-7451.6room apt for summer. 288-4234.Summer Sublet: June-Sept 3RmFurnished Apt. New Modern Bldg.Air Cond. Ideal Location Nr Cam¬pus St Shopping. Call Eve 493-9729Parking Space Too.Spacious 2 bed rm apt air cond.Near Univ. Sublet Jun 10 to MidSept. $130/Mo. 684-2008.Sublet, 6/15-9/1, 3 bdrm apt, well-furn, light, 1 bdrm air-cond, nrshopping & playgd, 1V4 blks frmcampus. PL 2-8391.5rm, 3 bdrm apartment avail, inJune, thru Sept. Opt thereafter $200per mo. 684-1474, nights.Fern rmmte wnted f sum, fatl aptown rm — 55 8> Kimb $66/mo. 493-4462.Wanted 1 or 2 Bedroom Furn Aptfor First Week of June for SummerSublet. Contact Immediate Sean,225-3881.Fern Grad Rmmt Wanted. Own RmFurnished apt, 2 blks from cam¬pus. Summer 8./or '70-71. $67/Mo.493-3018.Summer Sublet with option to Rentfor Year; Harper 8i 54th. Carpeted,4 Rooms; Elev Bid; Call 684-0016;June 1st Occupancy.Subl Air Cond 1400 E 57 for 3. AlsoSpace Nxt Yr! 667-6977.Summer Sublet: 2 Br, 5Vb LargeRm Furn Apt in Lovely MadisonPark (Kenwood) 4 Blks Fm Beach:$170/Mo. L. Preston: 285-5209.Apt to Sublet 8 Rooms & Sunporch$200/Mo. 51 & Kimbark, 752-5416.Beautiful Apt to Sublet June thruSept. 2 Bedrooms, Living Room,Kitchen, Larger Foyer Furnished,Windows, Porch, Sunny Etc. 53 &Kenwood $135/Mo. 324-3623.LOST AND FOUND2 Keys Lost on 58th Street BetweenWoodlawn and University. PleaseCall Ml 3-0800 X3061. Reward. CEF PRESENTSThe Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,Saturday May 9 Cobb Hall andIn the Heat of the Night on Satur¬day May 16 Cobb Hall.PERSONALSEdward Albee May 11 MandelFOTA 70.Sure All Your Friends Are Goingto Europe. Be Different. Fly toArizona or California Instead. As¬sert Your Independence. Besides,It's Cheaper. Call American Air¬lines Campus Rep. Jim Sack, 684-6667 For Details.NEVER GENERALIZE.Come to the Beaux Arts BallMay 2 Bartlett Gym.Some Sound AdviceSave $ On Stereo Components atMUSICRAFT. Save $20.00 On Gar¬rard; Save $170 on Scott Receiver;Save $50 on AR 3A Spkr. On Cam¬pus Bob Tabor 363-4555.Sit In, Don't Ya Know ItGive The School Just What YaOwe ItSweetlife Opens Tonight 8:30in Mandel.U of C is filled with pointy sticks.Watch Out; dangerous JL.Inhale something besides smog onthe quads this noon.Where will the Goose be when thesexual revolution comes? Out beat¬ing his swort into a plowshare,I guess.Masquerade Ball — Come to theBeaux Arts, May 2.Legalize fun - July 4, DC.The Occupation and Liberation Ofthe University Begins Tonight At8:30 In Mandel Hall. It ContinuesTomorrow As Well As Next Week¬end. SWEETLIFE.You always guessed that TuesdayWeld had murder- in her heart,didn't you. Your suspicions areconfirmed PRETTY POISON, Sun¬day, May 3, 7 & 8:15 PM. Cobb,CEF.Eat Dinner at the BANDERSNATCHAir Conditioned.Senior Nude for yearBox: the firstsenior picture where you don't haveto be a senior. Midway Studios5/5/70.Dean Sweetlife Gets the Respect.He deserves when He Dons AnAuthentic Sha-Na-Na Jacket To¬night, Tomorrow 8t Next Weekend.Announcing — Premier — First!!!The Bandersnatch proudly: NOTE:as of May 4 Monday we will haveSOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN.Chicago Contemporary Dance TroupeMandel May 4 8PM. A Truly Ex¬citing Co.Give Mom a Bigfffe earl/.And make Mother's Day last longer.Call or visit an FTD florist today. Andorder a BigHug Bouquet to arriveearly. He’ll send it across the street.Or country. A special arrangement.For a very special mother. Yours.Usually availableMO Cflat less than lG.UUThe FTD Bigfffe bouquet.#As an independent businessman, each FTD Member Florist sets his own prices.AS SOON AS THEY BEGIN TO SHOUT ABOUT FREE SPEECH' AND FREE PRESS' AND CIVILRIGHTS,' I KNOW THEY ARE COMMUNISTS' Frank Hague, New Jersey statesman, 1938' 1 r, J 97ft/Jto PWsW Jltoroog/. 11IIANGEL andIIIIIIIIIIIIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiL CAPITOLSALE2 $6.98 list price, now $4.54I $5.98 list price, now $3.79jI $4.98 list price, now $2.99I 1L Hours:Monday-Friday 12-8 pmSaturday 10 am-6 pmSunday 12-5 pmLOWE'S RECORD SHOPnow closer to campus at1444 E. 57th Street684-1505112/The Chicago Maroon/May 1, 1970 « M > IJI, nit t t Ifl