STRIKEAGAINSTTHEWARFaculty React to Cambodiaj Page Five EditorialPage Eight FOTA FestivitiesPage TwoTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 55 The University of Chicago Tuesday, May 5, 1970Steve AokIAnti-War Strike StartsBy Mitch BobkinA student strike of all University classes,protesting President Nixon’s recent deci¬sions concerning Southeast Asia, co-spon¬sored by 12 different student organizationsand co-ordinated with similar strikes at col¬leges and universities throughout the nation,began today following turbulent events yes¬terday in the strike’s planning meetings.Three glass doors and one leaded windowin Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House, a na¬tional monument at 58th Street and Wood-lawn Avenue were kicked in as demonstra¬tors numbering over 150 marched on theAdlai Stevenson Institute for InternationalAffairs which is currently housed in RobieHouse. No discipline is planned followingthe incident, dean of students CharlesO’Connell said, but he added that therecould be disciplinary action taken in thenear future.The student strike, planned over theweekend by eight of the twelve studentgroups, demands that all United Statesarmed forces be withdrawn from SoutheastAsia, that all political prisoners within theUnited States be freed, and that no military or war research be conducted on universitycampuses.Cobb hall and Harper library are the onlytwo buildings that will be picketed at theonset of the strike. The strike’s steeringcommittee at a meeting yesterday at 5 pmin Ida Noyes hall decided that it would bebest to begin the strike with these twobuildings and to expand to others as morestudents volunteered to picket.Picketers are to be stationed at entrancesto the main quads and at Cobb and Harperdoors. Both groups will try to dissuade stu¬dents from entering classes and to encour¬age them to attend a mass meeting to beheld in Quantrell auditorium at 7:30 pmtonight to discuss continuation of the strike.Members of the steering committee empha¬sized that picketers would remain non-mili¬tant throughout the strike.The mass meeting tonight will discuss thesuccess of today’s strike and the strategyfor upcoming days. A strike committee willalso be elected at that time.Many members of the steering com¬mittee said that the success of the strikeand continued action depend partially uponthe result of a College faculty meeting to day at 4 pm in Quantrell that will considermaking a statement on President Nixon’swar policy.Plans for the strike began over the week¬end when eight student groups, the new uni¬versity conference (NUC), the morato¬rium committee, the union of students, thescience organizing committee, student gov¬ernment (SG), the progressive labor party(PL), students for a democratic society(SDS) and the young people’s socialistleague (VPSL) met to consider possible ac¬tions to take in response to President Nix¬on’s decision to send troops in Cambodiaand to resume bombing in North Vietnam.Because many Eastern colleges were plan¬ning on going out on strike for this week inopposition to Nixon’s policy, these groupsdecided late Sunday that they would call astrike against University classes to begintoday and that they would hold a rally atnoon yesterday to gather student supportfor their decision. They also decided to holdan organizational meeting at 3 pm yester¬day to plan the strike. Leaflets were dis¬tributed and announcements were made totell students of the rally.Over 500 students gathered on the admin¬ istration building steps at noon yesterday tohear speakers from the eight groups spon¬soring the strike describe possible actionsthat students could take during the strike.Mike Fowler of the moratorium com¬mittee opened the rally by saying “Nixonhas deceived us into believing he is com¬mitted to a slow, steady withdrawal.’’ Hesaid that students should support the na¬tionwide strike and should work together tomake changes.Viv Ravdin, leader of the rally nextcalled on Bob Ivano, of the science organ¬izing committee who said “The US is a vile,murderous, obscene nation. That nationmust be stopped.” He called for the elimi¬nation of scientific support of the military.Larry Lambert of the union of students,the next scheduled speaker, was inter¬rupted by five witches who came on to thesteps amid cheers and proceeded to reciteincantations “for the people burned, beatenand bombed, in the streets of Chicago andVietnam.” The witches, condemned inverse the imperialistic and repressive na¬ture of the federal government and askedContinued on Pago ThreedFOTA Opens; SVNA Distributes SuckersDancing, singing, drinking, and frolickingin and with the grass marked opening MayDay festivities for the 1970 Festival of theArts (FOTA).Calling everyone to “come, follow, followfollow,” the University musical society’smadrigal group sang for 30 minutes outsideHarper library. The group and members ofthe Society for Creative Anachronism laterjoined in the traditional May Pole dance.Costumes flapping in the breeze, mem¬bers of various University folk dancegroups performed several dances includingan intricate stick dance. As a finale theyinvited everyone to join them in dance. Arecorder group also performed.Throughout the afternoon Students forViolent Nonaction (SVNA) supplied free“purple lightning” punch — a mixture ofKool Aid and reagent grade pure ethanol.Students, faculty, administrators, under¬cover cops, and neighborhood dandiesdipped their cups into the great green plas¬tic trash can of foaming brew.Proclaiming “we just want everybody tobe happy,” Frank Malbranche initiated theUniversity’s celebration of National DrugAbuse Day by passing out over 200 “tastylittle suckers.”Most participants found them so tastyand sucked on them so avidly that theywere gone in a few minutes. James Vice,assistant dean of students, was offered a“sucker” but declined, indicating that hedidn’t smoke.MAY DAY: University folk dance groups perform by maypole in FOTA festivities.Hefner Women's Lib NemesisToday’s issue of the Hyde Park-KenwoodVoices carries a story about Hugh Hefner’sinteroffice memo on his Playboy maga¬zine’s recent article on women’s liberation.With the permission of Don Rose, Voiceseditor, we reprint the story here for ourreaders.By Don RoseCopyright 1970 Voices PressChief Playboob Hugh M. Hefner calls thefeminist movement his “natural enemy”and ordered an article on the women’s lib¬eration movement to “do battle with them... in a devastating way.”The final article, titled “Up Against theWall, Male Chauvinist Pig,” appears in theMay issue of Playboy, written by MortonHunt.According to an interoffice memo frompublisher Hefner to his second-in-com¬mand, A. C. Spectorsky, dated Jan. 6, themagazine first had “a well-balanced ‘objec¬tive’ article” but Hefner called instead for“a devastating piece that takes the militantfeminists apart.”“It is now up to us to do a really expert,personal demolition job on the subject,”said the memo obtained from inside Hef¬ner’s offices by VOICES.“Clearly if you analyze all of the mostbasic premises of the extreme new form offeminism, you will find them unalterablyopposed to the romantic boy-girl societythat PLAYBOY promotes,” Hefner de¬clared in the document.The word “devastate” appears threetimes in the three-page memo outlining theapproach the article should take.Hefner said “doing a rather neutral pieceon the pros and cons of feminism strikesme as being rather pointless for PLAY¬BOY. What I’m interested in is the highlyirrational, emotional, kookie trend that fe¬minism has taken in the last couple ofyears. These chicks are our natural enemy— and there is, incidentally, nothing, thatwe can say in the pages of PLAYBOY thatwill convince them that we are not.”The blurb on the published article re¬flects Hefner’s approach: “Militant man-haters do their level worst to distort thedistinctions between male and female andto discredit the legitimate grievances ofAmerican women.”But Hunt’s revised draft is not quite asraunchy as the blurb. It does, however, af¬ter paying lip-service to what Hefner ac¬cepts as “legitimate” female grievances, focus on out-of-context quotes from a hand¬ful of the most radical feminist thinkers.Hefner said “The only subject related tofeminism that is worth doing is on this newmilitant phenomena and the only properPLAYBOY approach is one that devastatesit.”The published version follows the line setdown in Hefner’s memo to Spectorsky,charging that the women’s movement is“rejecting the overall roles that men andwomen play in our society — the notionthat there should be any differences be¬tween the sexes whatever other than thephysiological ones.”“Now this,” says Hefner, “is somethingclearly to which we are unalterably op¬posed and I think we should say so in anentertaining but highly convincing way.”As it appears in print, the final versionpegs many feminists as ravaging lesbiansout to geld every man in sight with a pairof hedge clippers.In paying tribute to the “legitimate” as¬pects of women’s liberation, Hefner says inhis interoffice memo:“We certainly agree that a woman’splace is not in the home, that a womanshould enjoy a career, that she should notbe limited with many of the old-fashioned,traditional notions relative to a double stan¬dard in sex, etc. etc. But the militant fe¬minist wants much more than this — essen¬tially she wants to play a role exactly com¬parable to the male’s — to compete withhim not simply in a business world, butemotionally — and in every other way. It isan extremely anti-sexual, unnatural thingthey are reaching for.”Hefner and Playboy have several timesbeen the target of feminist protest — mostrecently on Moratorium Day last month.If there is any doubt as to why the “Play¬boy philosophy” as it appears in the maga¬zine is repugnant to women, the internalHefner memo should provide a more clear-cut answer.' In ordering a one-sided “devastation” ofthe women’s movement, Hefner took issuewith his own managing editor, Jack J. Kes-sie, who advocated a balanced approach.It is noteworthy that Spectorsky’s ownwife, Theo Frederick, is personnel directorfor the organization and one of the highestranking women in the Hefner empire.Hefner’s memo also notes with dis¬pleasure that the magazine is late in com¬ing out with an article on feminism for “a great deal has appeared in the popularpress on the subject within the last fewweeks.”Noting that he wanted such an articleseveral months ago, he lamented the factthat he “could have beat many other publi¬cations” if the magazine had a faster meth¬od of coming up with story ideas and ready¬ing them for publication.Finally, Hefner’s views about women andhis philosophical approach apparently arebecoming more obvious, even without ac¬cess to his internal memoranda.In reviewing Hefner’s Playboy televisionprogram, New York Times TV critic JackGould last month wrote that the head bun¬ny-boy comes off like “an aging anti-femin¬ist.” The Rennaisance Players presented anoutdoor rendition of The Play of Robin andMarion in Swift Courtyard. Its traditionalold English broad humor was well appre¬ciated by more than 100 onlookers.At 3 pm Dean of the College Roger Hilde¬brand spoke on the meaning of festival, thenature of science, and other weighty mat¬ters. He was assisted with his numerousvisual aids by Virgil Burnett, associate pro¬fessor of art and director of the BergmanGallery.Saturday night’s Beaux Arts Ball fea¬tured three bands and a continuous lightshow. Several hundred people attended thedance, one of the few FOTA events that isnot free.-Flowers that were to be dropped oncampus from a plane were postponed Fri¬day due to the high winds and poor weath¬er. Several hundred multicolored daisies in¬termittently showered the main quads be¬tween 12:30 and 1 pm Monday to the delightof those who escaped direct hits on thehead.WHY IS THIS MAN SMILING?2/Thw Chfcag* Mcrowo/ May.$* 1?70Doors Smashed at RobieRALLY: Students demonstrate at noon prior to agreeing to calling a strike on classes for today.Continued from Page Onethe crowd for their verdict. “Guilty” camethe shouted reply.Biology professor Richard Lewontinspoke following the witches and told therally of the planned College faculty meetingthat would consider passing a resolutioncondemning Nixon’s war policy. Lewontinsaid “it’s not a student strike, but a strikeof all of us who are just as much con¬cerned.”Lucy Moore of NUC called for the Uni¬versity to declare immediately that itwould support the three demands thatwere later adopted by the strike com¬mittee. “Nobody is neutral, not even theUniversity of Chicago,” she said.Lambert and Connie Maravell, SG presi¬dent, spoke next and both said that actionmust continue and that the strike should becontinued past one day.Rosario Levins said “It’s about time weused the brains that brought us here to findways to smash the state and to free politi¬cal prisoners” speaking as a women’s liber¬ation spokesman. This was greeted withcheers of “Free Bobby!” referring to Bob¬by Seale who faces trial in New Haven andChicago in the near future.A speaker from PL next called for vio¬lence for “that’s the only way.” She calledon the crowd to march on the Adlai Steven¬son Institute after the rally, claiming thatpro-war and anti-third world research isconducted there. Her remarks were metwith loud shouts of “Right on!”During her remarks, the American flagwas taken down the flagpole and raisedagain upside-down. The wind was strongenough on the quads that the flag wrappedaround the pole and remained bunched upthroughout the rest of the rally. Also at thattime, a plane flew very low over the quadsand started to drop daisies from the air. Itwas quickly surmized by most of the stu¬dents in the crowd that these daisies werethe same ones that weren’t dropped at fes¬tival of the arts (FOTA) May Day eventsdue to strong winds.Mike Dunlap of SDS, the next speaker,supported the PL speaker’s remarks andadded that “We’ve been protesting foryears and we thought we had friends inWashington ... It’s not a ‘we’ anymore —it’s them and us.” He, too, called for amarch on the Adlai Stevenson Institute toprotest the University’s affiliation with thewar machine.David Bensman of YPSL called fora Loop march and a mass movement toWashington over the weekend, but addedthat it also would be effective for studentsto let their pro-war senators and congress¬men know that they were planning on work¬ ing against them in their November re-elec¬tion campaigns.Bensman’s speech was greeted with loudhisses and boos, but he said that studentsfrom the back of the crowd should get in¬volved in the rally instead of letting thosein the front dominate it and decide whataction the group would take.The mike was then opened to speechesfrom the crowd and a number of speakersgave remarks stating that “we should getangry,” “we should be tired of being liedat” and that “we should close down theOuter Drive.” These speeches were largelyignored by the crowd and a large majorityof the 500 students at the rally began todepart, leaving less than 200 at the rally.Speeches continued until close to 1:30when SDS members picked up a large ban¬ner and walked to the ad building steps.The rally stopped at this point and SDS be¬gan to walk to Robie House with 150 follow¬ers. Chants and yells of “Off the Pig” couldbe heard two blocks from the marchers.A sign on the locked administration build¬ing read “please use the west door on theEllis Avenue side.At Robie House, one speaker said the al¬ternatives were to “chant outside and dis¬rupt those inside, making it impossible forthem to do work or to kick the doors downand go in.” It was reported that Marvin Zonis, a fel¬low of the Institute was present; demon-straters asked him to speak. Zonis did notspeak.At 1:40 pm, about 20 demonstrators mil¬led around the lower doors of the Institute,and kicked in both the outer and innerdoors. Proceeding up to the balcony, agroup of demonstrators kicked in the twodoors on the left side of the balcony and oneleaded window. Moving to the front of thebalcony, members of SDS addressed thecrowd.Three students earned over the flag fromthe quads and tried to prevent cameramenfrom television stations from filming theactivities by putting the flag in their line ofvision. One woman screamed that the stu¬dents should not have broken the doors, andseveral students shouted up at the demon¬strators that they had made a mistake andwould not be successful in their strike.Some of the supporters of the kickers-insaid that they should go into the buildingfor some files, shouting “There are someinteresting files inside.”Rory Donnelley, graduate student in Eng¬lish, said “The people here aren’t with us,”and urged the crowd to march back to thead building. People cried from the grass,“Save the building,” and “It’s their minds,not the building,” referring to the researchgoing on in the building.One student, commenting on the dis¬orders by saying “This is all like a fuckingGodard film.”Following the speech from the balcony,the SDS people let persons from the grassspeak including one ten year old boy whocalled for the movement to “get it togeth¬er.”SDS distributed a statement following therally disavowing all claim to planning thewindow smashing and calling on all stu¬dents to help kick the Adlai Stevenson In-stitue off campus. Their statement is print¬ed in today’s Maroon.One unidentified University official saidyesterday that it is possible that federalcharges could be brought against those whodamaged Robie House, a national monu¬ment.The demonstrators could not get a con¬sensus of opinion on action at Robie Housefollowing the windows incident, so all theparticipants marched back to the quads toawait the 3 pm organizational meeting.Marvin Zonis, contacted following thedemonstration, said both Nixon and thedemonstrators are “outrageous.” He calledNixon’s action “the cheapest kind ofdemagoguery” and added that the lumpingtogether of all foreign affairs people intoone category as SDS does is “unsophisti¬cated.”Charles O’Connell said last night that hedid not have enough information con¬cerning the actual damage at Robie House to consider asking the committee of thecouncil to start disciplinary actions. Hesaid that if those who broke the windowscould be identified, discipline was a possi¬bility.O’Connell also said that if the picketersat the strike today became militant andprevented students who wanted to go toclass from attending, discipline could bebrought against them.The organizational rally at 3 pm, againchaired by Miss Ravd'n, decided on thethree demands that are now given by thestrike committee. These demands are thesame ones that Eastern universities arecalling on their universities to support andwere worked out at weekend meetings atColumbia and University of Pennsylvania.The 75 people at the meeting also formedleafletting, picketing and canvassing com¬mittees to prepare for today’s strike. Asteering committee was also chosen withone member of each co-sponsoring groupallowed to have one seat on the committee.Students for violent non-action (SVJYA), thenational student association (NSA), the newdemocratic coalition (NDC), and the wom¬en’s liberation union (WLU) all came out infavor of the strike at that meeting and wereallowed representation on the steering com¬mittee.The steering committee met in Ida Noyesat 5 pm and made the plans listed earlier intoday’s strike. At the meeting it was de¬cided to place a table in the quads in frontof the ad building to be a strike headquar¬ters and financial arrangements to prolongthe strike were discussed.Following the steering committee meet¬ing, six of the groups present released thefollowing statement:Monday afternoon a majority of the elev¬en organizations making up the strike coali¬tion announced that they no longer consid¬ered the students for a democratic societyor the progressive labor party part of thecoalition. The action came after a violentSDS demonstration at the Adlai StevensonInstitute early Monday afternoon.The groups disassociating themselvesfrom the violent demonstration and SDSare: student government, Vietnam morato¬rium committee, national student associ¬ation, young people’s socialist league, unionof students, and new democratic coalition.According to Michael Barnett, a vigilwill be held at the National Guard armoryto commemorate the four prople killed atKent State University Monday.He said that interested persons wouldgather at 1 pm on the quadrangles tomarch over to the armory on CottageGrove Ave.A meeting sponsored by the New Mobili¬zation committee to end the war in Viet¬nam and SG will be held at the Universityof Illinois, Circle Campus at 7:30 tonight toplan a united front in the strike.M VfTO/ftt* €h*4feKMk#OOrf/tf \ -1ROBIE HOUSE: Door kicked In during violent demonstration Monday.AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYThis is one of the photographs in CHICAGO PORTFOLIO, a section of yearBox. The pictures will beprinted in a 150-line screen, on heavy, glossy paper-reproduced about as well as photographs can.Reserve a yearBox now by sending $5 to yearBox, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637.Namp, Add ress., .City, State. SHORELAND HOTELSpodal Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyW eekiy and monthly rates on requestRooms avoilable forparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call H. FingerhutPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring casha University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call me_today?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,One North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602 Others by Appt.FR 2-2390 — 798-0470SI IN 1 .IFF, f )F CANADA.Maravell OptimisticConstance Maravell president of the Uni¬versity of Chicago Student Government, an¬nounced Monday that she expects a major¬ity of college students at ChicagoUniversity to take part in a campus strikeTuesday to protest the American invasionof Cambodia.“Nixon is trampling on the Constitution,”Maravell said. “Our strike is not only di¬rected at the illegal Cambodian war but weare also demanding a return to Con¬stitutional government here at home. Con¬gress did not declare war. Our soldiers arein Cambodia in violation of the Con¬stitution.Monday afternoon a majority of the elev¬en organizations making up the strike coali¬tion announced that they no longer consid¬ered the Students for a Democratic Societyor the Progressive Labor Party part of thecoalition. The action came after a violentSDS demonstration at the Adlai StevensonInstitute early Monday afternoon.The groups disassociating themselvesfrom the violent demonstration and SDSare Student Government, Vietnam Mora¬torium Committee, National Student Asso¬ciation, Young People’s Socialist League,Union of Students, Campus Americans forDemocratic Action, New Democratic Coali¬tion.Cake-inStudents for Violent Nonaction (SVNA)will hold a “cake in” Wednesday startingat noon on the main quads. A spokesmanfor the group urged everyone to bring theirown cake and promised SVNA would supplysome of their famous purple lightningpunch.The cake in is being held to celebrate thebirthdays of Frank Malbranche, HermanHoover, Mao Tse Tung, and John QuincyAdams. Tasty little suckers are welcome. jeopardy as first year students are requiredto live in dormitory housing.Dutchess and Cat are not the only ani¬mals that reside in Woodward Court. Thereare numerous other cats, a dog, mice, andseveral birds who are in co-residence withstudents. The pet owners have not yet re¬ceived a letter from Mr Turkington but arewaiting with “baited breath” to see the re¬sults of a petition that has been passedaround, asking to let the pets remain.The pet owners are cognizant of the factthat a rule exists against having pets inrooms. They question the rule and wonderwhy, since they have had the pets all yearnothing has been said until the last fiveweeks of the quarter.According to Fein, owner of the pedi¬greed Siamese Dutchess, “We do not con¬test the rule itself; rather, we feel that therevival of an overtly ignored regulation solate in the year is unfair to students withpets. We condemn the tactic of threateningonly two students in the Court with evictionwhen the existence of many more pets isknown to the Housing Office. All we arerequesting is an extension until the end ofthe year.The petition, which has been posted in thecentral unit of Woodward Court, has al¬ready received 200 signatures, and the in¬volved students would like those who havenot yet signed to do so before noon Tuesdaywhen the petition is brought to Turkington.Cat Evictions SDS' RobieSDS had no plan to damage Robie Houseat yesterday’s rally. We believe that wecan only act effectively to stop counter¬insurgency and war research on campuswhen most of the people on campus aremoving with us to oppose such research atUC.SDS called the rally against the Steven¬son Institute because we feel that fightingthis imperialist brain-trust is the most ef¬fective way people can oppose US South¬east Asian policies on campus. We can con¬cretely support the people of Vietnam,Cambodia and Laos by getting rid of anInstitute that studies and plans the oppres¬sion of other people around the world.(For documentation, see the pamphlet“Pahlavi, Friend or Foe” being circulatedthis week on campus) AILEEN HERNANDEZPresident of NOWHernandez SpeaksA major address on “Women in Revolt”by Aileen Hernandez, president of the Na¬tional Organization for Women (NOW), willconclude the University Women’s Associ¬ation’s series of educational programswhich began last fall with orientation. TheUWA-sponsored event will be held in Kent107 Thursday at 8 pm.Hernandez was an original member ofthe US, Equal Employment OpportunityCommission (EEOC) who resigned in 1966after an effort to protect the employmentrights of airline stewardesses who wereStatementThe University administration and otherswill say, predictably, that we are a violentand anarchist organization bent upon de¬structive self-gratification (In this case, thedefamation of Robie House).This is a lie. From the beginning of thecampaign against the Pahlavi Institute, wehave demanded that Robie House be con¬verted to a child care center for the chil¬dren of workers and students. We don’twant to destroy that building! We thinkthat it should be made to serve the peopleof the University community as a childcare center.But we think that the Institute it housesnow, the Adlai Stevenson Institute, must bedriven from this campus, and it will takeall of us, standing united, to do this.Dutchess and Cat are being evicted fromtheir homes, or else Josh Fein, ’73, andKen Zweibel, ’71 will be asked to leavetheir rooms in Flint House in WoodwardCourt.The respective cat owners each receiveda letter from Ed Turkington, director ofstudent housing, Thursday informing themof the consequences if their cats have notfound a new home outside the dormitorysystem by May 6. Besides losing his room,Fein’s status as a registered student is in then forced to retire at age 32 or when theygot married.While serving on the Commission for 18months, Hernandez described herself asEEOC’s triple token — one person who waschosen to represent women, black peopleand also Spanish-Americans.Accused of conflicts of interest for herassociations with NOW while serving on theCommission, Hernandez was elected vice-president of the feminist organization afterresigning from EEOC. She was recentlyelected to succeed Betty Friedan as nation¬al president of NOW.The new NOW leader resides in SanFrancisco and serves the National Com¬mittee Against Discrimination in Housingas consultant and Western Representative.She worked as education director for thewestern region of the International LadiesGarment Workers Union for a number ofyears.Hernandez travels widely and appearsfrequently on radio and television, speakingon civil rights, equal employment opportun¬ity, open housing, the liberation of womenand the trade union movement.BULLETINTuesday, May 5EARTH PEOPLE'S PARK: A meeting for all thoseinterested in developing an earth people's park.First Unitarian Church, 57th and Woodlawn. 8 pm.OUTING CLUB: Spring slide-ln and beer test. IdaNoyes Hall, 8 pm.LECTURE: Michael Polyani, "Genius in Science,"Kent 107, 8 pm.CONCERT: Edward Mondello at the organ, DonaldDoig, tenor, in a program of classical music.Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: A.D.H. Bivar, from the School of Orientaland African Studies of the University of Londontalks on "The Sasanian Persian and ByzantineCavalry During the Early Middle Ages". SS 122,4 pm.WOMEN'S LIB: Meeting. INH library, UC chapter ofChicago's Wemen's Lib Union, 8 pm.STUDS TERKEL: Brought to you by FOTA. Law SchoolAuditorium. 8 pm.DOC FILMS: "Chance Meeting," Joseph Losey, SS 122,8 pm.Wednesday, May 6NUDE SWIM: Another SVNA extravaganza. Ida NoyesPool, 7:30 to 10 pm.SCAF: Discussion of freedom and capitalism. SocialScience Lounge, 4:30 pm.SWAMI CHINMOY: He speaks on the Bhagvat Gitaat Ida Noyes Hall at 8:30 pm.CONCERT: FOTA. Susanne Block, Medieval andRenaissance music. Lutheran School of Theology,8:30 pm.Thursday, May 7BLACK HUMANITIES LECTURE: Professor MercerCook of Howard University will speak on "Negritude." Rosenwald 2, 8 pm.BIOLOGY LECTURE SERIES: Professor Garrett Har-din on "Euthanasia", Quantrell Auditorium, 4 pm.GEORGE WALD: Harvard's Nobel Laureate speaksat Quantrell at 8 pm. 'lI1Many Faculty Oppose Wars SpreadBy Allen FriedmanFaculty reaction to President RichardNixon’s decision to send American troopsinto Cambodia has, with notable ex¬ceptions, been one of strong disapproval. Intelephone interviews with members of thefaculty Monday, several sides of the issuewere raised.Associate professor of political scienceTheodore Lowi condemned the President’smove as “completely unconstitutional,” aswas “the original effort” (Vietnam). Headded that “there is a logic to the thing.”Referring to last Friday’s Maroon inter¬view with political science professor Mor¬ton Kaplan, Lowi said, “If you take Kap¬lan’s position, we must do what we’redoing.”“The problem (of deepening US in¬volvement in hostilities in Southeast Asia)is inevitable unless we change our prem¬ises, which have not changed since 1965,”Lowi said. He emphasized that “Nixon isnot a madman — the premise is,” thatpremis being "the whole anti-Communist,‘domino theory’” philosophy.Lowi doubted the ability of Congress toreverse the military action. “Their officialpower is extremely limited,” he said. Ex¬cept for unofficial political pressure, hedoesn’t see any likely legislative influence.He sees Nixon remaining firm “exceptfor an unambiguous defeat.” Lowi advisedthat “we should be demonstrating againstthe unconstitutionality of the situation” andwarned that if the premise isn’t changed,“all the king’s horses couldn’t help.”Professor of economics Milton Friedman,though critical of America’s Vietnam pol¬icy, approved of Nixon’s decision. “It madea good deal of sense and took a lot of cour¬age,” he said. His analysis of the situationis that “either we pull them (armed forces)out immediately or allow them to defendthemselves.”Friedman did not believe that the move THEODORE LOWI"Nixon is not a madman . . "would have “negative consequences for thepolitical negotiations since they are alreadyat a standstill.” “Of course, he added, “theCambodian action may not have a positiveeffect either, but I don’t see how it canhurt.” He expressed his disapproval withthe original decision for military in¬volvement in Vietnam...Political science professor Leonard Bind¬er called Nixon’s move “deplorable.” Hesaid that it will have “far more serious ef¬fects domestically” than in Southeast Asia,where “in the long run, it will have almostno meaning.”In a personal evaluation he said he “can¬not justify for myself” the costs in terms ofpolitical damage with possible 'militarygains. One good which may come from themove, he felt, is that disorganized moder¬ ate elements may now reorganize.“I reluctantly find myself in the positionof favoring a strike by the University com¬munity,” Binder said. Concerning the ques¬tion of university neutrality in a con¬troversy he said, “Neutrality overlooks theissue.’ It is hiding behind the issue whenthere is a need to express ourselves.”Morris Janowitz, chairman of the depart¬ment of sociology, criticized the militarysoundness of the Cambodian action. “Itseems ill-advised,” he observed, “and re¬turns to a search and destroy operationwhich doesn’t work, from a purely militarypoint of view.”“On a larger view,” he continued, “thismove will slow up the process of dis¬engagement and interferes with the futurecourse of political negotiations.”Janowitz said that since “under our con¬stitutional system the President has adominant role in foreign affairs,” it is up tothe Congress to apply political pressure ofan informal sort.The professor of sociology also calledupon students to mobilize, “as they did in1968 in New Hampshire’ (when EugeneMcCarthy upset President Lyndon Johnsonin the presidential primary) to apply pres¬sure on Nixon.Janowitz did not believe that the movewill expand the war greatly. That, he feels,occurred when Prince Norodom Sihanouk,former Cambodian chief of state, wasousted by the military junta now in power.His analysis of attempts to settle the Viet¬namese war is that “we’ve not yet begun tonegotiate seriously.”Jerome McGann, associate professor ofEnglish, hopes that the new turn in thecourse of the war will consolidate opposi¬tion to it “in a very strong way.” Hebelieves that the military action will fail,and hopes that Congress will step in beforethe eight-week period, which Secretary ofState William Rogers has spoken of as lim¬iting the venture, has passed. LEONARD BINDER"Neutrality overlooks the issue . . "Anthropology professor Clifford Geertzagreed with Hie consensus of the facultyinterviewed, saying that he found the movemight end in “disaster.” “One thing thatbothers me very much,” he added, “is theharm it will do to the country.”Commenting on the demonstration at theAdlai Stevenson Institute yesterday, duringwhich four windows of Robie house (wherethe ASI is housed) were broken, he said, “Idon’t see the connection between the actionin Cambodia and the Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute.”Geertz favored the expression of dis¬approval with Nixon’s policy by membersof the faculty, both individually and ingroups, but felt that the University as “acorporate body should not take a positionas such. It would be unwise of it to do so.”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 ChicagoiNfr Ar minij msm . * ,t. -£•Regenstein Library: A Sneak PreviewPhotographs by David Rosenbush8 Hungarian Filmsmay 7-10See 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 NarthSheridan Road. munPresented by The Chicago International Film Festival.6/The Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970 deleincollege Imported Caroff 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‘KAAtW MtefTy»/wu»yowr jSycMFour Killed In Anti-War Activities At KentBy Paul BernsteinDemonstrations and class strikes are un¬derway on many major college campusesto protest the recent widening of UnitedStates involvement in Southeast Asia.The most violent anti-war demonstrationstook place at Kent State University, wherefour students were reported killed in sqir-mishes between protesters and NationalGuardsmen.Over 300 students had gathered on theCommons area in defiance of an order pro¬hibiting their assembly. Violence broke outwhen guardsmen attempted to disperse thecrowd with tear gas and rifles, while sev¬eral demonstrators threw rocks and bricksBy Gordon KatzAlthough student opinion Monday ap¬peared to be mixed regarding today’sstrike against classes, students seem unitedin opposition to the United States’ moveinto Cambodia.Typical of responses in favor of the strikeThe college faculty will meet in Quantrellauditorium today at 4 pm to discuss a reso¬lution condemning the escalation of theVietnamese war into Cambodia.The meeting was called by Roger Hilde¬brand, dean of the College, in response to aletter from 32 faculty requesting the meet¬ing.“It has often been asserted that it is im¬proper for academic groups to adopt posi¬tions on political questions unrelated totheir professional concerns. To this we re¬ply that we can conceive of no issue moreintimately and tragically related to ourfunction as college teachers than the In¬dochinese war,” the letter reads in part.Hildebrand said Monday night that themeeting is for faculty members only; nostudents will be allowed. The meeting hasbeen cleared with the secretary of the fac¬ulties.Members of the faculty group requestingthe meeting met with Hildebrand Mondayto settle on a time and location for themeeting. College faculty were notified Mon¬day of the meeting and were sent copies ofthe letter. at them.The four fatalities, two boys and twogirls, apparently occurred when protestersfound themselves trapped on top of anearby hill. The Adjutant General of theOhio National Guard admitted that hismen fired the fatal shots. He said, how¬ever, that they were fired on first bysnipers. Guardsmen were ordered to fireinto the air. It is still unclear who orderedthe firing of the shots.On Sunday night, students burned downthe University’s Army Reserve OfficersTraining Corps building (ROTC), in protestof the expansion of the Vietnam war intoCambodia.was that of divinity student Mike Pierce.“The strike is a definite must,” he said.“Something must be done to show the dis¬satisfaction of this part of the population.It’s too bad that it involves the University,but this is where this faction of the popu¬lation exists.”Paul Sally, associate professor of math¬ematics and one of the signers of the letterrequesting the meeting, said that they ap¬proached the College faculty because theyhave a better chance of passing an anti-warresolution than through the faculty senate.“There has been considerable supportfrom the College faculty for the letter,”said Sally.The faculty sponsors of the meeting metlast night to write up a resolution to presentto the meeting today of the College faculty.“The hang-up of the passage of the reso¬lution will be on suitability,” said SallyMonday afternoon. He said that the resolu¬tion will be short and concise.He added that he was optimistic that itwill pass.“A larger effect of the resolution will beto communicate to congressmen,” said Sal¬ly. He said that US Representative AbnerMikva will enter the resolution into theCongressional record if it is passed.Signers of the letter included professorsin every collegiate division. A spokesman for the National Student As¬sociation (NSA) said yesterday that classstrikes would be held at over 200 collegesand universities today.Student newspapers at 11 major Easterncolleges, including seven Ivy Leagueschools, ran a common editorial yesterdaycalling for a nation-wide university strike,to allow students to participate in anti-waractivities.The edtoral, printed in today’s Maroon,accuses President Nixon of ignoring “theconstitutional prerogatives of Congress” bysending combat forces into Cambodia andresuming the bombing of North Vietnam. Itcalls for the immediate withdrawal of allA third-year student in the College, whosaid she would “probably not po” to classTuesday, supported the idea of the Univer¬sity as a whole backing opposition to theCambodian invasion. She cited the recentfor “institutionalized resolutions.”Calling the incident at Robie House wheresome windows were broken “stupid,” an¬other junior remarked, “Nixon sucks andthe strike is good.” A fourth-year studentsaid, “I don’t think the strike will be effec¬tive, but it has to be done.”Jeffrey Quilter 72 felt that the “strikewill be useless unless it is followed up.” Hecalled for actions which might mobilize alarge number of people such as a generalstrike. Quilter also said that he thought themost effective action would be a march onWashington “where you have a high con¬centration of people in one spot.”Among those polled there was no dissentto dissatisfaction with the Cambodian in¬vasion itself. Chad Friedman 72 termedthe events of the past few days “a furtherextension of the damn war that we shouldbe getting out of.” Friedman shares thesentiments of many of those questioned. “Idon’t think the strike will be effective ... Idont’ know if I’ll take part,” he said.Miriam Kalichman 73 said she was“definitely against Cambodia” but thoughtthat the “strike demands were too ne¬bulous.” “I don’t see the point of a strikeagainst the University,” she said.Another first-year student voiced similarreservations concerning the effectiveness ofthe strike. “I feel so strongly about it(Cambodia), but I don’t think the strikewill do any good,” she said. United States troops from Southeast Asia,as well as an end to the suppression of po¬litical dissidents.The statement also emphasizes that theproposed strike is not directed against uhi-versities. “The strike,” it says, “is neces¬sary to free the academic community fromactivities of secondary importance andopen them up to the primary task of build¬ing renewed opposition to the war.”The New Mobilization Committee to Endthe War in Vietnam has called for a massverally in Washington Saturday to demandthe immediate withdrawal of all Americantroops from Southeast Asia.In Washington, a national strike com¬mittee is being convened from delegates ofall striking schools. The group is scheduledto hold a meeting at George WashingtonUniversity tonight in order to coordinatepolicy.Class strikes have already begun at sev¬eral Eastern colleges, and plans to prolongthem are being discussed.At Yale University, where students havebeen on strike for three weeks in protest ofthe Black Panther trial in New Haven, acall to withdraw all American troops fromSoutheast Asia has been incorporated intothe original strike demands.National Guardsmen left the Yalecampus early Sunday, after a week-end ral¬ly in support of Black Panther defendantsin which no major incidents of violencewere reported.At Columbia University, students votedoverwhelmingly to endorse the strike. Thefaculty of the college is scheduled to meetto vote on the action. Columbia’s businessand law faculty have endorsed the strike.At Princeton University, a group of about2300 students and faculty met last Thursdaynight and voted 3 to 1 in favor of a classstrike. Faculty will meet today to discusssupport of the strike and the question ofpenalties for students striking,. A spokes¬man for the Daily Princetonian, the studentnewspaper, estimated that 80 percent of thestudent body had stayed away from class.At Rutgers University, Livingston Col¬lege, an experimental coeducated school,and Douglass College for women were bothclosed down by strikes. Douglass canceledall exams scheduled for this week.About 200 Rutgers students sat in theschool’s administration building in an ac¬tion protesting the war.Other schools on strike include the Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania, Sarah Lawrenceand Bryn Mawr.Student Views Differ on Strike IssueFaculty To Meet on CambodiaDavid Currie Heading Anti-Pollution UnitBy Christine FroulaThe law school is losing a professor, butthe people of Illinois are gaining hope forbreathable air and drinkable water. DavidP. Currie, last month*appointed state coor¬dinator of environmental quality by Gover¬nor Ogilvie, has spent the first month at hisnew job formulating ideas toward pollutioncontrol, and beginning to implement themby helping to draft anti-pollution legislationnow before the state legislature.“I feel very hopeful that we can makeconsiderable progress,” says the 34-year-old Georgian. “The Governor is committedand the people are concerned. Of course,we won’t make Chicago as clean as thehigh Sierras overnight. We have to be care¬ful that the things we’re doing are notbandaids, dealing with symptoms ratherthan causes.”Currie has long been interested in thelawyer’s role in controlling the quality ofthe environment. “It’s a way of combiningmy personal and professional interests,” hesays.The city of Chicago, Currie points out,has had an ordinance limiting visiblesmoke and particulate matter since the19th century. Illinois passed an air pollutioncontrol law in 1963. Later, the federal gov¬ernment allocated money for researchgrants for environmental control, and tosupport pollution control programs.The state now has a sanitary waterboard, an air pollution control board, and the department of public health as pollutioncontrol agencies. One of the features of thegovernor’s bill now before the state legisla¬ture, which is scheduled to be acted uponbefore the end of May, is the combinationof these into a single pollution control boardto issue orders against pollution of allkinds. “That way,” explains Currie, “it willno longer be possible to solve an air pollu¬tion problem by dumping the pollutants intothe water.”The proposed law would also abolish theprovision that any city with an adequatepollution control program of its own is ex¬empt from state control. “I think it’s muchsafer for the public to have more than onepollution agency, and it’s not right for thestate to abdicate its responsibility for pro¬tecting people in the cities. We’re not tryingto tell Chicago it’s got to go out of business.If the new bill is adopted, any city thatwants to continue pollution control mea¬sures still can.”The new bill would also establish a prose¬cuting agency independent of the pollutioncontrol board, and would provide that itsmembers be paid. It would set up an envi¬ronmental quality institution to organizeand direct applied research into environ¬mental problems; create an enforcementagency, and give additional powers to theagency and Board to protect the environ¬ment, such as the power to impose emis¬sion, or effluent charges, the paymentbeing based on an assessment of the dam¬ age done or the cost of cleaning up.There is also a section of the bill to theeffect that every citizen has a guaranteedright to a healthy environment. It wouldincrease public participation in pollutioncontrol by providing every individual withthe right to sue any project, government orprivate, that interferes with the environ¬ment. “The burden of proof would be on thedefendant to show that the benefits of hisactivity justify the harm he is doing,” saysCurrie.With regard to technological devel¬opments for controlling pollution emissions,Currie says, ‘"niere are well-developed,longstanding techniques to take out'of thewater as much of the obnoxious material asyou want — it’s just a question of cost. TheMetropolitan sanitary board practices sec¬ondary treatment on all its sewage, remov¬ing 85-90 percent of all the suspended sol¬ids.“For preventing the emission of dust andsmoke into the air, there are a variety ofdevices in practice, such as filters, elec¬trostatic precipitators, and scrubbers,which remove dust by passing the airthrough water, Most cleaning devices aredesigned for large installations — con¬sequently, we have a problem with smalleroperations, such as the burning of coal forresidential heating.“One possible solution is to outlaw theuse of coal, as London did in the fifties,shortly after a smog killed 4000 people.”He continues, “The coal industry will scream that it’s being put out of business,but I think it is not in serious trouble in thelong run. There are devices in' variousstages of development for removing sulfurdioxide from smoke after coal has beenburned and converting it to useful products,like elemental sulfur or sulfuric acid.”Currie called the devices being put on au¬tomobile exhausts “not very effective. Theyfail to remove enough hydrocarbons andcarbon monoxide to solve the problem, andat the same time increase emission of otherpollutants.“Possible solutions include developingsteam cars, developing catalytic convertors(which can operate only-when lead is re¬moved from the gasoline), requiring theanti-pollution device to be put on old carsand to be checked regularly. Or, the statecould ban all private cars from the Loop, orinstitute tolls.”At present, Currie added, federal lawprevents states from making any regu¬lations which specifically concern emis¬sions from auto exhausts.Concerning industrial pollution, Curriesays, “The state has the power to order acorporation to stop polluting. In manycases the best way to bring industry intocompliance is to bring a lawsuit. I heartilyagree with Attorney General Scott that it’snecessary to bring a few people to court inorder to make it clear that the law is thereto be obeyed.”Asked whether personal wants could beContinued on Pago ElevenMay 5,1970/Tko Chicago Maroon/7EDITORIALSStrike against the warFollowing is the editorial run by 11 Eastern colleges yesterday,' calling for a nation-wide university strike.President Nixon’s unwarranted and illigitimate decision tosend American combat forces into Cambodia and to resume thebombing of North Vietnam demands a militant, immediate, andcontinued opposition from all Americans.Through his unilateral executive move, the President hasplaced our country in a state of emergency. He has ignored theconstitutional prerogatives of Congress and has revealed the shamof his policy of Vietnamization, a policy which, through a torturousprocess of inner logic, demands that we escalate the war in orderto enable American troops to withdraw. He has demonstrated thatAmerican foreign policy still dictates the sacrifice of Americanlives to ravish independent countries and to squander our resourcesand energy.The President has tragically misgauged the mood of the coun¬try. The anti-war movement, which has marched and protested foryears in a vain effort to reverse the United States role in SoutheastAsia, has finally resurfaced in new and larger numbers. With Nixon’slies finally exposed, the immoral hypocrisy of our government’saction has been exposed for all to see.The need for action has never been so great or so urgent.We therefore call on the entire academic community of thiscountry to engage in a nationwide university strike. We must ceasebusiness as usual in order to allow the universities to lead and joinin a collective strike to protest America’s escalation of the war.We do not call for a strike of students against the university,but a strike by the entire university — faculty, students, staff, andadministrators alike.The reasons for such a strike are manifold. First, it is a drama¬tic symbol of our opposition to a corrupt and immoral war. Itdemonstrates clearly our priorities, for the significance of classesand examinations pales before the greater problems outside theclassroom. Moreover, it recognizes the fact that within the societyThe War in IndochinaWhat do you when there’s a war?First you decide whether it’s just. In the immediate case, that’sno great problem any more. If you thought Vietnam was bad, you’lljust loathe the brand new version next door to it.Then you decide if it’s worth making a fuss about. Maybe youthink about those two or three guys you barely knew in high school,and never would have thought of again if your mother hadn’t sentyou the clippings from the home-town newspaper telling you thatthey were killed in Vietnam. Maybe you have the misfortune to hearMr Nixon make one of his addresses to the American people, inwhich his oily earnestness and shabby logic show the full measureof his contemptuous underestimate of the intelligence of Americans.Maybe you just have gotten sick of manifest destiny, or making theworld safe for democracy, or whatever is the reigning catch phrase.Then you think up something to do about it, and that’s wherethe trouble starts. You write letters to your congressman, or youmarch somewhere, or you throw a rock. Nothing seems to do muchgood, and usually it just doesn’t seem worth it. This feeling ofdespair is what many of us feel in relation to today’s strike. Whatgood will it do, who cares about it, what does it mean?The answers to those questions are bound to be unsatisfactory;there is little the strike can do, the people who care have all madeup their minds already, and the strike means a disturbingly widerange of things to a broad spectrum of groups, including thosewho want to see it as an act against the University, not the war.So you don’t do much of anything about it, and the war goes on.That’s the trouble with taking sanctimonious positions againstuncertain tactics like today’s strike: the war goes on. So with allits failings, all its ineffectualness, all its openness to exploitation by- ?. vw/'lu'-j}.'. . .•./ ,y , .y.‘ /8/The Chicago Maroon/May 5, 19^/0 so permeated with inequality, immorality, and destruction, a class¬room education becomes a meaningless and hollow exercise.But the necessity of a strike extends far beyond these reasons.The strike is necessary to free the acadmic community from activi- *ties of secondary importance and to open it up to the primary taskof building renewed opposition to the war. It is necessary to con¬vince the academic community to first solidify its own opposition,and to then act immediately to extend this opposition beyond thecampuses.We ask the entire academic community to use this opportunityto go the people and to bring home to the entire nation the mean¬ing of the President’s action. A massive unprecedented display ofdissent is required.We urge that this strike be directed toward bringing about thefollowing changes:1. Immediate withdrawal of all American forces from South¬east Asia.2. Passage of a Senate amendment, to the defense appropria¬tions bill to deny all aid for our military and political adventuresin Southeast Asia.3. The mobilization of public support for anti-war candidatesin the upcoming primary and general elections.4. The end of political repression at home, in particular thegovernment’s systematic attempt to eliminate the Black Pantherparty and other political dissidents.5. A reallocation of America’s resources from military involve¬ment abroad to domestic problems, in particular the problems ofour beleagured cities.6. The building of support for a massive demonstration inWashington May 9 to bring our opposition to the nation’s capitalin unprecedented numbers.The stage has been set, the issues clearly drawn, the need ap¬parent. It is now time to act.various groups, we must support today’s strike as the only weaponavailable to us now in an important struggle. Saturday there willbe a march on Washington, and we think this may be a more effec¬tive means of protesting the war, but today’s strike deserves oursupport too. Students across the nation are out on strike today,and we should show our solidarity with them.Behind all the rhetoric, all the threats and demands, there isa war, a fact we like to forget. We must do all we can to stop thewar, and if the strike is aimed at doing that, it has our support.Robie HouseThe demonstration yesterday afternoon which resulted in thebreaking of four windows at the Adlai Stevenson Institute was bothirresponsible and meaningless.It is not clear to us that the Adlai Stevenson Institute, housedin the Robie House, is a legitimate symbol of protest for studentsconcerned over American involvement in Southeast Asia. TheInstitute has been charged with involvement in research for theState Department, but further investigation is in order.The Institute, if it is involved in the American war plan, shouldbe exposed. But the demonstration yesterday was not thought out.Even to a majority of the demonstrators the guilt of the Institutewas not proved. We have heard only the side of SDS. There wasno confrontation, no discussion of the issues. It was an act of passionwithout a mandate of any sort.The window-breakers face possible disciplinary action from theUniversity. No decision has yet been made whether to press charges.The Robie house is a national landmark and defacing it is a federaloffense. We hope that if there is punishment, it does not exceedthe damage done. Nonetheless, it was a senseless act.Y"/ /-r. i- rii'i , UfM' I •• f .'ft >»•letters to the editors of the maroonMolbranche on FOTAThis letter is a put-down of a fine ideathat has been turned into a rotten in¬stitution. The Festival of the Arts should(and has) brought to mind many wonderfulexperiences that will forever sit well on thememory. But a sickness has set in this yearthat may well warp all future FOTAS. Tolaunch an operation as vast as FOTA, alarge amount of money is needed. It is anunfortunate fact that somewhere, someonemust pay for the fun. It is even more un¬fortunate when the concept of fun to thepeople is lost to the desire of the FOTAheads to amass and dispense great quan¬tities of green just for the pure power of it.It’s just that the pregnant expectations ofwonder and delight have been still-born.Money, the ever-present midwife, has madea botch of the operation. There is a point atwhich the dough goes out and nothingcomes in. There is a time when the onlypeople who have fun are the impressarioswho zip off to New York in dubious searchfor big-name talent that can’t be had any¬how. Eventually the only delight that is ex¬tracted from the affair is the joy of thechairman as he rattles off impressive ex¬penditures.The costs are high. It costs a lot to printa schedule of events in several colors. Itcosts well over $2,000. Think how much itwould have cost if the schedule had beenaccurate and complete in its listings. Thinkhow much less it would have cost if it hadjust listed the events, instead of publishingwhole letters by die chairman.Who gives a simple shit about pompous,bad publicity? Who cares if all of this mon¬ey is flushed down the unclean toilet of egosatisfaction? A lot of people do. The peoplewho thought that Cold Blood sucked, thepeople who expected not names, but enter¬tainment.The impresario-like posture of FOTA’schairman has been a Kiss of Death to toomuch that could have happened. FOTA isan attempt to break the back of academicboredom for a few weeks. It is not an at¬tempt at breaking the bank. Its successshould be measured in smiles and not indollars. A wise man thinks long on how toevoke smiles, a fool figures out how muchthe thing costs.Love,Frank MalbrancheP S. It’s just that so many more thingscould be done on that budget. I guess I’mthinking too much of money myself. I oughtto watch it.Black Student RespondsIt is interesting, though typical of middle-class whites, that the Maroon respondededitorially (Apr 28) to the complaint ofsome Black students about reporting on theDick Gregory lecture, by blaming blackstudents for not being part of the news¬paper staff.I fail to see how a news staff that consid¬ers itself able adequately to report on awide range of issues which cut across race,class and all other lines, is at a loss, dead¬line not withstanding, to do a decent jobwhere this Black man was concerned. Onthe other hand, since most whites in theaudience failed to understand what Grego¬ry was saying, judging by their silence fol¬lowing some of his most salient satiricalremarks, one could hardly expect a decentarticle from the Maroon. But more impor¬tant than the issue raised about the Grego¬ry story, is the slight of Black students im¬plied by the April 28 editorial.It is no accident that the maroon, likemany other activities on campus, remainslily-white — the collective attitude of theMaroon is such that any real integration ofthe staff is effectively precluded. Certainlythe attitude of the editor as refletted in theeditorial precludes any Black studentsworking on the Maroon. Black students willnot be part of an activity which exudes anmr of white elitist snobbery as the Maroondoes.The editorial call for Black students par¬ ticipation on the news staff is nothing morethan a ploy, calculated to silence any fur¬ther criticism of the Gregory story. If theMaroon was truly interested in gainingsome balance on the staff, they would startby evaluating and changing the attitudes ofpresent staff members, creating an atmos¬phere of welcome in their offices, and takeother actions which would let Blacks knowthat they can remain individuals and stillbe part of the Maroon.Carl V. Stovall, 71AnalysisThe editorial in the April 7 Maroon is thefirst attempt I have seen to analyse theproblems of the University student body. Iflife at the University is unbearable it ismostly due to the failings of student organi¬zations, governmental and other.A student organization to create interestand participation must be responsive to stu¬dent needs and feelings: communication isa two-way process — student to student or¬ganization and vice versa. The major stu¬dent organization on this campus conductsits meetings in a vacuum; it does not usual¬ly approach students for their opinions be¬fore action is taken and it rarely informsthem of the results of these. Occasionallywe hear or read a smattering — when theorganization has a success or a miserablefailure. How can we question or mandateour ‘representatives?’ I am sure the major¬ity of students don’t even know who theyare!While student organizations should op¬pose the administration on some mattersthis opposition should be reasoned, showingthe way to change, rather than being ster¬ile. Perhaps, because the student body feelslife at the University is bitter and depress¬ing, student organizations should cater tothese needs first since they cannot be curedmerely by changes in the administrativestructure.A start can be made by reducing thecommunications gap; perhaps once this hasoccurred changes in student governmentmay be needed to make the most of studentinterest, but an improvement in commu¬nication can do nothing but improve thepresent system.R CatchickBusiness SchoolMaster WegenerAs a 1969 graduate of the College in Ideas& Methods, I was quite interested to readthe illuminating articles on Charles Wege¬ner (pp. 1, 10) in the MayDay issue of theMaroon. Since Mr Wegener saw fit to referto my BA paper for I&M as an example ofthe program, I feel compelled to commentupon both of these articles in an effort tocorrect the inaccurate pictures of both MrWegener and of the College program inIdeas and Methods.First, regarding the program as estab¬lished by Mr Wegener. When I was a naivefirst year student, I read the same bullshitconcerning how Ideas & Methods was aprogram where one learned to analyze anydiscipline by means of a set of “intellectualtools.” I was impressed — no other majorin the College pretends to have a toolbox ofuniversally applicable tools. I applied (veryelitist, this program) and was accepted.One and a half years later, during themiddle of my third year, while readingAristotle’s Rhetoric and Poetics for thefourth time, I awoke. I came to the realiza¬tion that a grand fraud had been per¬petrated. That Ideas & Methods was notwhat it had been advertised as. It certainlygave one a set of universally valid tools.But they were useless tools. Just as a logi¬cian who should be able to recognize speci¬ous arguments, I&M gives one a set oftools for performing intellectual analysis.But this set of tools is useless for doing anykind of job in which anything new is dis¬covered. It is like the bead game in Magis-ter Ludi — a charming way to take a set ofelements and play games forming recombi¬nants. One can do quite a good job of pour¬ing over what so-and-so said about such- and-such — but one can never say anythingnew. As is immediately clear from an in¬spection of the I&M books in the bookstore,the only elements which are seriously con¬sidered by the faculty of this program arethose of the classical philosophers. As faras assistance, encouragement, or advicefrom the faculty, one had better forget itunless one is thinking about a bead gameinvolving Kant, Hegel, Plato and or Cicero.This brings me to the point of Mr Wege¬ner represented as a “warm and in¬tellectually tough” professor. Bullshit. I re¬member the trips to his office only to findthat “Mr Wegener won’t be in for a coupleof days” — or he was busy in his confer¬ences of all of his committees. I rememberhis most important criticism of my “juniorpaper” — “The typing and proofreadingcould certainly be improved.” I rememberspending an immense effort on a bachelor’spaper, the analysis and criticism of whichconsisted of the statement “If it is all rightwith the other reader, it is all right withme.” This, after having been told by a fel¬low I&M student not to worry about Wege¬ner’s criticism of my paper — ” he didn’teven read my paper — I tried to discuss itwith him and he said he hadn’t had time tolook at it yet” — and this comment madeonly a week before the student was to grad¬uate and long after approval had to bemade. What would have happened, I won¬der, if the student’s paper had been whatMr Wegener would have considered bull¬shit.In summary of my feelings about the ar¬ticles about Mr Wegener, I must say that Ido not picture him, as a result of my ex¬periences with him, as the ideal scholar thearticles pictured him as. I am forced tosay, after reading the same two booksthree times in courses with him, that he islacking in the intellectual curiosity and in¬terest to seriously discuss or consider anysubject which he has not been throughmany times before. Regarding the pro¬gram, I regard the descriptions given inFriday’s Maroon article and given in otherplaces, to be highly misleading and in¬accurate. It is only in a most allegoricalmanner in which the program resembles itsdescription. But then, the description isprobably a result of the bead game played.It is for the reasons of feeling guilty about,and sorry for, future naive first studentsbeing misled by the glowing descriptionsthat I must most strenuously object to thedescriptions used and to the use of mybachelor’s paper, which was written des¬pite Mr Wegener and I&M, in their descrip¬tions.Jerrold SchwaberCommittee on Mathematical BiologyTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editors: Mitch Bobkin, Con HitchcockNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociators: Stove Cook (News), Chris Froula(Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Olazer, PeteGood sell, Gordon Katz, Susan Leff, GerardLeval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, JanetPine, Audrey Shalinsky, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Monty Futch,Jesse Krakauer, Bruce Rabe, David Rosen-bush, Leslie Strauss.Founded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students 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. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 50437. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and In theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mall $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. Union of StudentsSupporters of the Students Union like tojustify their organization by drawing a par¬allel between it and a trade union. Such aparallel is untenable, for while a tradeunion derives its strength from the willing¬ness of a majority of workers to go onstrike indefinitely, University students (atleast males) cannot walk off the campusindefinitely because of the draft; if theywithhold their tuition fees as a means ofprotest, the University will deny them reg¬istration and thereby de facto suspendthem.F'na'ly. th° Sfudent Union could never at¬tract a majority of the 8,000 students hereinto its ranks, in view of their notoriouslethargy: after actively seeking membersfor over four weeks, the Union has not evenattracted five percent of the students.Only a truly representative student orga¬nization, composed of an elite which repre¬sents all 8,000 students, could bring aboutmore student power in dealing with theUniversity. Student Government (SG), dueto its long existence and electoral policies,is the only such organization on thiscampus.However, to be effective in dealing withthe University, SG must really be a “gov¬ernment,” i.e., it must demonstrate that ithas the active support of a real politicalcommunity: the students. Up until aboutfour years ago, SG was able to fulfill thisrole. Since then, a succession of in¬competent, visionless people have seizedcontrol of SG, and have reduced it to itspresent moribund state, in which over 50percent of the members have been expelledfor absenteeism and the quorum is setat 17.It is not surprising that many of these SGleaders have become organizers of the Stu¬dent Union. Hopefully, the upcoming SGelections will produce more competentleaders who will realize that the futileUnion runs directly counter to SG andhence student power, and will try to winback the Union’s 300-odd members.Stan Goumas 71Rudolf on Poli SciDavid Clark, in a letter published in theMaroon of April 28, 1970, states that “thenumber of courses (in political science) hasbeen declining to a lot of twelve this year”and that the prospects for next year (1970-71) are “grim.”Actually, the number of “regular” (i.e.200 level courses not devoted to individualor small group education) offered this yeartotal 16, four in the fall quarter, seven inthe winter quarter and five in the springquarter. Last year (1968-69) the number ofcourses totalled 19 (fall quarter, six; winterquarter, seven; spring quarter, 6). Theprospect for next year is that 17 “regular”200 level political science courses will beoffered.When these figures are compared withprevious years (1966-67) — 14 courses, 1967-68 — 15 courses) a plausible case can bemade that the trend line is up, not down.In addition to “regular” 200 levelcourses, undergraduates interested in polit¬ical science, particularly majors in theirjunior or senior years, also have had avail¬able in recent years a substantial numberof 300 (and higher) level courses. In 1967-68,when an effort was first made in this direc¬tion, 31 such courses were open to under¬graduates with the consent of the instructorand 66 undergraduate political science ma¬jors took such courses.Over the past two years new opportu¬nities for individual or small group instruc¬tion have been added. These include (be¬side the well-established PS 299 readingcourse) PS 293, independent study; PS 294-5-6, faculty group tutorial; PS 297, ex¬perimental tutorial; and PS 298, honors es¬say supervision. Last year two seniorsgraduated with honors in political science,this year I anticipate at least twice thatnumber will do so.Other recent changes include the organi¬zation in 1968-69 of an undergraduate politi¬cal science association; the appointment ofa secretary for student affairs (presentlyContinued on Page 13>1 * • * * *4 i \ A > * * < May 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9le $6.00'55-6712make a promising career as a computerspecialist.We have the only program that's exclu¬sively for college graduates And becausewe make computer equipment, we'reparticularly well-qualified to teach youwhat computers are all about.This could be your big chance. Pounceon it.Classes are now forming. Send thecoupon today.Set your sights on this: The computerindustry is only fifteen years old andalready there is 15 billion dollars worth ofcomputer equipment in useBy 1975. that will‘double. producingsubstantial new computer benefits forbusiness and the community. And creat¬ing more than 500.000 new computer-related jobsHoneywell can prepare you for this brightfuture. You'll be able to apply computertechnology to your chosen field. Or you can Adm.ko-u’ii Off “.jjfg-aO va:e Sf..<l c.•I v eywell Inst fufe o* Inf.vmatior, Scien.eT20 S Riverside Plaza Chicago 'll 606C6Phone: (3121 782-7335□ I would like additional information on your ;,iog’e-».□ I would like to arrange an interview on idat?.at (time) Honey .veil willcall you to confirm this date and timeCollege:—College AddressPhoneHeine AddressAoproved by the Office of the Superintendent ofPublic Instruction State of IllinoisThe Other Computer CompanyHoneywell Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.Bu t the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. 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FREE DELIVERYV»»eeeeeeee10/The Chicago Merobn/May 5/ 1970 I ' 1 ' 1 ' 1 ' 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 ' IT_ CHARTS/GRAPHS.- Leroy lettering— (Near campus)- 363-1288Yon 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 CRANE238-0971sentryJITINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals OrganizationStrikers Should Remember MoratoriaBy Con HitchcockStudents will strike their classes at over200 universities today. They will be protest¬ing US involvement in Cambodia, trying toreverse the President’s policies in South¬east Asia.In all probability, they will be unsuccess¬ful. For a student strike is at best a sym¬bolic action, at worst a futile gesture.Both ways, it is ineffective. And this willprobably be particularly true at the Univer¬sity of Chicago, where last year the ex¬pulsion and suspension of 123 studentsaroused students only to the degree thatthey were willing to give up one or twodays of classes to protest this action. Is there any reason to believe that on an issueas impersonal as Cambodia (comparedwith the fact of having friends being thrownout) will arouse massive support?On a broader scale, there is little possi¬bility that a student strike will be effective,be it on 200 or 2000 campuses. It will dem¬onstrate to the President only that studentsare upset over his decision to enter Cam¬bodia, something which should be obviousto any discerning observer already.Even if many students are likely to wantto demonstrate for one or two days only toshow their discontent with Cambodia, twoquestions are raised.The first concerns students who want togo to class. Inevitably there will be stu-Currie Believes All Must HelpContinued from Pago Sevenlegislated for environmental control, Curriesaid, “People have limited rights to haveand use things which exploit the environ¬ment. There’s a political problem in tryingto change people’s attitudes. It’s a problemof education: people must learn that theycan’t have their cake and eat it too, that ifthey all insist on driving cars to the Loopwith one person in each car, they will makean impossible mess of the traffic, the park¬ing, and the air.“It’s not just industry that causes theproblems of pollution, so it’s not just in¬dustry that should be expected to makesacrifices to alleviate pollution,” he ex¬plains. “Laws can help a great deal. If allare told not to drive cars in the Loop, or notto drive cars over 150 hp, then all make asacrifice and all benefit from it.”Currie says that a number of suits havebeen filed by the state of Illinois againstpollutors. US Steel is charged with violatingthe water pollution standards set by thefederal government, with polluting LakeMichigan, and with polluting a body of wa¬ter that is the source of drinking water.Other suits include one against the NorthShore sanitary district, “whose operationshave been disgraceful. The richest area inthe county is unwilling to spend money toprovide even secondary treatment for theirsewage.” Since the Attorney General wasgiven independent statutory power only last summer, few suits have been filed in thepast, so that it is “too early to tell about thesuccess of the suits.”Currie stated that a court injunction is apotent weapon, since the violation of it ispunishable by fines and imprisonment.“The court doesn’t always phrase the in¬junction so as to stop immediately all pollu¬tion,” adds Currie, “because it recognizesthe hardships to employees to continue re¬ceiving their pay while the plant is closed.”Currie added that the right to a healthyenvironment is not an absolute one, mean¬ing that no one can do anything to degradethe environment. “I think it has to be thatway,” he says. “I don’t think it’s desirableto stamp out a billion dollar benefit for atwenty cent degradation.“The burden is a heavy one, and I’m notsure that in applying the balancing test weshould look exclusively to indications ofloss or gain that can be assessed in themarketplace. I think basic esthetic and psy¬chological values are undervalued in anysuch process. It’s hard to assess the valueof a sunset.”Currie is a 1957 graduate of the Univer¬sity of Chicago and received his law degreefrom Harvard in 1960. He was an editor ofthe Harvard Law Review, and has taughtat the Law school here since 1963. He willtake an indefinite leave of absence from theUniversity to devote full time to his positionas advisor to the governor beginning July 1.BEND OVERHERE WE CAMBODIA,COME! OVE RLAND EXPEDITIONTO INDIAleaves London late June.Details EncounterOverland23 Manor House Drive,London, NW6CARPET BARNWAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants aid Rail EndsOriental ReprednetiensAntique French WilttnFur Ruffs & Fur CoatsInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Days Tues.-thru Sat. 9-41228 W. Kinzie 243-2271MAH. YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th SI., Chicago, 60637dates to runname, address, phoneCHARGE: 50s per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There ore 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. AIL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $ 1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre<*. dents who want to go to class during thewhole of the strike, and breaking of picketlines will be equated with support of thewar by strikers. This is almost always aspecious argument.But beyond this, there is the problem inthat by adopting this tactic, strikers whotiaim they are not striking against the Uni¬versity but rather against the war are infact contradicting themselves, for theirattack goes right to the heart of the Uni¬versity and its role in society.The University is essentially an educa¬tional institution, designed for the exami¬nation of knowledge. It is not a politicalorganization, required to come out with aposition on every major social issue. Norshould it be. Similarly, should students whofail to see how cutting a class will end thewar be deprived of this opportunity or, atbest, face a struggle every time they wantto enter a building? Each individual mustmake his own decision about whether hewishes to participate in a strike, and hischoice must be respected by his peers.Thus it would be hoped that reason wouldprevail in this strike, with the rights of theindividual respected and no student whoreally wants to go to class deprived of theopportunity.Tactically speaking, the nationwide strikerepresents a major turning point in the re¬cent history of liberal, anti-war demonstra¬tions. At the heart of the matter is natural¬ly the effect the strike will have on President Nixon in forcing him to changehis policy towards Cambodia, the desiredend.One is forced to reflect on the history ofpast demonstrations and conclude, espe¬cially in light of the past three moratoria,that it is becoming difficult to mount ananti-war protest.In October over one million people turnedout across America to protest the war pol¬icies, making for the most successful dem¬onstration in American history. In Novem¬ber, the number of participants declined,although the March on Washington was animpressive display. By .January it wasalmost dead, unable to continue at theprior pace or level of support.In April, in the last public demonstrationbefore the Moratorium committee closedits doors, rallies staged across the UnitedStates were broken up and disrupted bysmall groups of radicals who in some casesrefused to allow speakers to address theaudience.The lesson should be apparent to all stri¬kers. Given the ineffectiveness almost in¬herent in a student strike, those desiring tomake an “effective” protest will be forcedinto more militant action, and here the vio¬lent radicals will take over, as they did inApril.What happened yesterday at Robie Houseshould serve as an example to all. For un¬less liberal, anti-war groups can find a wayto demonstrate and protest peacably andmeaningfully, they will find the radicalstaking over the bulk of their movement,and discrediting the left, thereby doing whatAgnew has been trying to do for two years.Con Hitchcock, ’72, is the Maroon’s man¬aging editor.TheUniversityof ChicagoDowntownCenter65 E. South Water St.Chicago, Ill. 60601FI 6-8300Please send meinformation aboutSummer EveningCourses forUndergraduateCredit.Principal fieldof interest:□ Social Sciences□ Humanitiesname & address:The Strike: Rallies on Quads, at Robie House* '*. . ’12/The Chicago Maroon/May 5,1970It' vc iVV J, y*V.LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page NineMrs. Watson in Gates-Blake 414, ex. 2779);the provision of an office (Gates-Blake 432)for the program chairman where I hold ad¬ditional office hours on Fridays, 1-2 p.m.(Regular hours, Foster 416,1:30-5:00 T, Th;call ex. 4331 for appointment.)By associating political science with psy¬chology in his letter, Mr. Clark implied thatthe class size problem in the political sci¬ence program might be of the same orderas he says it is in psychology. The data donot, in my view, bear him out. Major para¬meters for class size are enrollments andnumber of courses. In the fall quarter of1968. 200 level enrollment in “regular”courses totalled 205, course offerings equal¬led 6, and average class size came to 34. Inthe winter quarter, 1969, the figures wereenrollment, 231; offerings, 7; average size,31. (I do not have at hand data for springquarter 1969.) In the fall quarter of thisyear (1969), enrollment was 212, offerings4. average size 53 (more below on this).For winter quarter, 1970, the figures were210 enrolled, 7 courses offered, average size30. I suspect the figures for this quarter(spring, 1970) are going to produce an aver¬age size closer to the winter than to the fall quarter.The problem of class size is not only aresult of the number of courses offered. Forexample, an analysis of data for “regular”200 level courses offered in the fall quarter1968 and the winter quarter 1969 shows that38 and 25 percent of the 205 and 231 stu¬dents enrolled were graduate students. Ofthe undergraduates enrolled, 27 percent inthe fall quarter 1968 and 60 percent in thewinter quarter of 1969 were not political sci¬ence majors.The fall quarter of this year is, I suspect,one of the sources of such discontent asexists among political science con¬centrators. Of the total enrollment of 212 inregular 200 level courses, 25 percent weregraduate students. Among the under¬graduates, (n-158), 76 or 48 percent werenon-political science majors. Under¬graduate non-political scientists and gradu¬ate students together accounted for 61 per¬cent of the enrollment.This does not in my view call for a policyof autarchy within the College nor does itmean that the College is being exploited bythe graduate division. To adopt a policy ofpolitical science for political scientistswould contradict an important condition for a liberal arts college. The presence of grad¬uates in undergraduates courses is in partbalanced by the presence of under¬graduates in graduate courses. More im¬portantly, the majority of those offering 200level courses in the College are divisionalfaculty carried on the social sciences divi¬sion budget. By my rough estimate, of 73regular 200 level courses offered over thepast four years (1966-1970), the Collegebudget carried roughly 23 or 32 percent.Finally, there remains the question of thecontent and quality, the educational value,of what is offered. What to teach as politi¬cal science is a many-sided and historicallyconditioned subject; there is, I am con¬vinced, no answer that will satisfy all rele¬vant constituencies and interested parties.Having taught for five years a frequentlyvaried introductory course at Harvard, Iam convinced that a three quarter in¬troductory sequence would raise as manyproblems as it would solve. At the moment,the College political science program as¬sumes that majors will be “introduced” tothe social sciences by one of the in¬troductory social science sequences andthat most will also be able to draw onknowledge acquired in western and non¬ western civilization courses. From there,our distribution rule (just changed to readthat of the nine required political sciencecourses, not more than three can be takenin any one of the five sub-fields) is designedto insure that students gain substantive,conceptual and methodological knowledgeabout political science in a majority of theestablished sub-fields. Talks with soph¬omore political science majors this year in¬dicate that they at least did not experiencedifficulties or problems with their first (in¬troductory) political science courses. Mostimportant for the program as a whole is thefact that college political science coursesare taught by outstanding scholars andteachers, probably the best guarantee ofgood education. Although very few collegesin the country have done as well, I trustthat the social science collegiate division(including its council), the department ofpolitical science and the undergraduate po¬litical science association will continue towork together toward remedying defi¬ciencies and building on existing strengths.Lloyd I. RudolphAssociate ProfessorChairman, CollegePolitical Science ProgramADVERTISERS!of all students on0>L this campus read/O The Maroonevery week.80% read every issue!Want details? Here are the fullresults from a marketing researchstudy we did:newspaperMaroonVoicesHP HeraldC TribuneDaily NewsChicago TodayC Sun TimesNY TimesUniversityRecordWall St. J.Barron's everyissue once perweek once permonth rarely80% 12% 4% i%13% N/A 23% 22%13% 6% 13% 23%2% 12% 4% 20%30% 27% 6% 14%3% 6% 8% 20%41% 31% 7% 10%12% 36% 14% 15%15% N/A 74% 29%4% 4% 1% 13%2% 1% 0.6% 0.6% never40% (monthly)42% (weekly)59% (daily)21% (6 per week)62% (daily)11% (daily)21% (daily)48% (monthly)78% (5 per week)90% (weekly) PlAyCCri ALL-NIGHT SHOWPERFORMANCES FRIDAY l SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREMay 8Peter Fonda - S— StrashoifTHE TRIP May 9IFMay 15ItrhKvIeff nOm May 16DRACULAt FRANKENSTEIN RATTLE OF ALGIERSMay 22 May 23Rw Ario GuthrieMAGIC CHRISTIAN ALICE'S RESTAURANTMay 29Sheree Tate in Remee Pilenita's wOe May 30Mmi Fvrtw • kkm Cissiv iti sFEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS ROSEMARY'S BABYJune 5 June 6Itlfft WiyM - Qlm (n^kallTHE DIRTY DOZEN TRUE GRITTICKETS SI SOStraight Talk:Your diamond is at...FINE jfWflflS I OR 59 YEARS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZAMALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER’S LICENSEAPPLY NOW FOR SUMMER WORKDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA5-6692 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.May 5,1970/The Chicago Maroon/13Kissinger Seen As A DisappointmentBy Larry ThorsonLast week three of us from the UC Com¬mittee on International Relations went toWashington to do our foreign policy thing ina structured sort of way. In the process wegot to see Henry Kissinger do his thing, andit was most illuminating.The occasion was a national student con¬ference on US foreign policy put on by theSchool of Advanced International Studies ofThe Johns Hopkins University.Peter Lomhoff, Hideo Sato, and I joinedstudents from about 30 graduate schoolsaround the country for two and a half daysto discuss US foreign policy and its study.Henry Kissinger was listed on the sched¬ule as delivering a keynote address on thesecond night of the conference. His positionas chief foreign policy adviser to the Nixonadministration made his appearance a verypolitical thing.There was a struggle in the seminars andplenary sessions between two viewpointsthat York Times (Stricken Apollo Speeding To¬ward Earth, Pentagon Doubles Arms Aid toAthens Despite Restrictions, Malik saysNew Geneva Talks Could Bring Solution)while thinking of the sticky questions Iwould ask Kissinger about the Nam.Kissinger came in and followed the stu¬dent chairman to the modest podium. Hewas shorter than you would expect a presi¬dential adviser to be, wearing a San Cle¬mente-Key Biscayne tan and a presidential-ly gray suit.There was a long pause while a bunch ofconferees upstairs got the word to comedownstairs. The chairman whispered toKissinger about the guff he could expect totake although he had already been toldthere would be harsh questions, but no dis¬ruption or demonstration.When the upstairs people came down¬stairs the chairman gave Kissinger a per¬functory introduction, told us he had noprepared speech and that he would acceptquestions and that the entire session wasoff the record.• The conference was supposed to dis¬cuss the study of foreign policy and• The conference could make an impres¬sion on Henry Kissinger.The problem was discussed at greatlength, at least in the seminar group I at¬tended, and it was not difficult to see thatbasic disagreements about the business ofstudying foreign policy would make it im¬possible to decide what kind of an impres¬sion to make on Kissinger.Since no group decision could be made,the inevitable petitions were circulated —first one which judged Kissinger guilty ofwar crimes for his participation in the wareffort, and a second which did the samething, except without the flamboyant lan¬guage of the first.The second petition was circulated as anantidote to the first, it got more signatures,so it was agreed that it would be read toKissinger as soon as possible.The moment came. The conferees andsome SAIS students gathered in a small au¬ditorium. I pretended to read a stale New Kissinger managed to get halfway out ofhis chair when a man from Cornell roseand read the milder of the two petitions.Most of the conferees stood while it wasread, then sat down quietly.A conservative rose and denounced thecondemnatory statement and praisedKissinger briefly for his contributions tothe study of international relations.He rose again and stood behind the lec¬tern, in front of a quiet audience. He saidsomething on the order of: “Thank you forthis warm reception.” (I thought — here iswhat we have heard about — the wit of theHarvard professor gifted at repartee.)“First question, please.”Slight pause. A student from Claremontstood up and asked the bomb: “Do you con¬sider yourself a war criminal?”Kissinger’s tan seemed to become a sun¬burn. He turned to the chairman and said,“Get your people under control.” And hewalked off the stage and out of the audito¬rium.MUSICRAFTCARTRIDGE SPECIALSECOND TO ONE!MODEL M91EHI-TRACK ELLIPTICALVa to IV2 grams trackingFrequency Response: From 20 to20,000 HzOptimized design parameters for trackability secondonly to the incomparable V-15 Type II.Regular $49.95NOW 1/2 PRICEONLY- $24”SAVE ON ALL BRANDSLOWEST PRICES•MmiXkaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-415014'/Th* 'Ch'fc*go 'Marobn’/May 4/1 kit/' 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500 GADFLYMild alarums, shouts of “Now you’vedone it” and “I want to hear him answerthe question.” Then a man went to see ifKissinger would come back, and underwhat conditions. His report was: “He’sgone, left the building.”Alarums within and without. The meetingwas adjourned amid much shouting. Thepeople quickly broke up into small groupsrapping on different viewpoints.—What an insult, especially to a GermanJew.—He could have just said, ‘No, next ques¬tion.’—He was told this was coming, why didhe even come if he couldn’t take it?—This is the man in charge of our foreignpolicy?—He must have had a hard day today.—Maybe he had a date he wanted to getto.—How can you start a dialogue with aquestion like that? I was inclined toward the view that Kis¬singer’s reaction was not what I would liketo see in a man who has to deal with inter¬national crises. It was also not a very swiftthing for a man to do who had agreed totalk to a bunch of graduate students andhad himself decided on the question-and-answer format. Did he expect us to throwbouquets at him?I was disappointed that a valuable sourceof information had dried itself up so quick¬ly, and in the face of a reasonably-phrasedassault. The only judgement I could takeaway was that I should be even more dis-trubed about the course of US foreign pol¬icy. —Get your people under control, in¬deed!!On the long drive back to Chicago I wassoothed by the rocky hills of Maryland, theclouds and the wind. We saw three deer bythe side of the tollway in Indiana.Larry Thorson is a second year studentin International Relations.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevant to the University Com¬munity. The opinions of the guest column¬ists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit¬ting columns should contact the editor.jMH the beginning, there was^r William Rainey Harper.^ 2. From the swirling depths of ignrance, a beacon^ shone forth; a lighthouse shining through the sea ofeducational darkness.3. Harper called the lighthouse, ‘The University ofChicago,’ and the darkness he called, ‘the real world.’4. And Harper saw that it was good.5. And Harper said, ‘Let there be the Midway andCobb Hall, and Gates-Blake, Anatomy, Zoology, Botany,Culver, Kent, Jones, Ryerson, Eckert, Business East,Classics, Beecher, Swift, Green, Foster, Social Sciences,and all the other gothic beasts that prey on the landand in the air.6. And so it was.7. And Harper said, ‘Let there be a Department ofPhysical Culture and Athletics, henceforth and forever.’8. And Harper reached out to the heartland of theeastern establishment, to Yale, and he snatched AmosAlonzo Stagg to the intellectual Mecca of the midwest;to mold the department of Physical Culture andAthletics in his own image.9. And the evening and the morning were the sixthday.-From “The Year of the Pigskin” by Mitch Kahn. Only in yearBox.NameAddressCity, State, ZipYearBox will be published around May 15,1970. To reserve yourcopy send $5 to: yearBox, 1212 E. 59th, Chicago, Ill. 60637.(Maroon Classified Ads)the winking gospelsSCENESThe Marx Brothers are Coming!,,70 is An Elation Year. Campaignn the Californian Sunshine. FlyThere On American Airlines, ANon-Partisan Airline (Neither Dem¬ocrats Nor Republicans Fly It). CallJim Sack 684-6667 For Info.Alter Ronald Reagan, What? AileenHernandez, urged to be California'sfirst woman governor. Hear herThursday, 8:00 p.m. Kent 107.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.Admission to Marx Brothers FilmOrgy, Part 1 only $1.Chicken? Chicken Shit? No-No!Southern Fried Chicken at theBANDERSNATCH FOREVER!!!CRAFT CO-OP now open Mon.-Frl.1-5, 3rd fl. Blue Gargoyle.Pssst. The EEOC discriminates!Hear Aileen Hernandez, former Com¬missioner tell why she resigned.Thursday, 8:00pm Kent 107. FOOL — FOOL — FOOL — FOOLMelted Cheese Sandwiches at Book¬store and C-Shop are made inadvance (cold, stale) and areAmerican Cheese (Cheap) and cost.4011 The BANDERSNATCH Cheesesandwiches are made to order ofexpensive SWISS & cost only ,25<!WISE UP EAT BANDERSNATCHS.Ask Your Friends About Sweetlife.Mandel Hall Fri & Sat.Sweetlife — An Original Rock Musi¬cal Comedy. Mandel This Weekend.Dance, Sunday May 10th 8PM atBonhoeffer House, 5554 S. Woodlawn.Rock & Soul Band & Booze.Is medieval and/or classical musicyour bag? Work out with SusanneBlock at 3:30 pm in the Ida NoyesLibrary on May 6.Don't miss Senaka Senanayke's ex¬hibit at the Bergman. He is oneof Celon's major artists and hasinternational repute.FOTA is free.Fear of losing things, of property,is one legacy of the Thirties. Thus,In severe cases, they will fight,even kill, to protect their things.The young fail to diagnose thisillness because of their innocenceconcerning the Depression.3 killed, 15 wounded.Interested in meeting WFMT inter¬viewer and author? Come hearStuds Terkel today at 8:00 in theLaw School. 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.Refrig Wanted. Call 493-7218.PEOPLE WANTEDWaitress or Waiter Exp. 11AM-5PM.No Sunday, Good Income. Gordon'sRestaurant. 1321 E 57th St. 752-9251.HELP WANTEDUndergraduate Psychology programLarge Student faculty ratio. EliteMidwestern University. Small butshrinking college. Reply Green 108.No Experience Necessary.BABY SITTER Needed July 27-Aug10 Martha's Vineyard 684-0048LOADERS4 sturdy men to load household fur¬nishings on Hertz van June 12.$4/hr. 548-2066.DRIVERJune 12, to help load and driveHertz truck to Syracuse, N.Y. $4/hr.548-2066. Share lakeside apt with couple; pribath & bedroom; reasonable; exceltransp; call 955-7068 after 6PM.Live in Friederika's Famous Build¬ing. Now, June, and October. Near¬by unfurn 2, 3 Rm Apts. *95 up.Free Utils. Stm. Ht. Quiet. Light.Pvt Ba. 4-6PM. 6043 Woodlawn. 955-9209.CO-OP HOUSE has vacancies be¬ginning Sept, for grad students inBio. 8. Phy. Sci. — A Block forQuadrangles — Rents $30 to *42per mo. — Call PL 2-9708 evenings.Sublet w/Opt for Next Yr 1400 E57. *65. Call 288-6357 Air-Cond.Fern Rmmate Wanted: 56 & UnivNext Yr; 3 BR, *66. Call HollyMl 3-0800 Ext 260 Rm 28. „1 Bedroom Available in Quiet, Air-Conditioned 3 Bedroom and 2 BathApt. *67/Month. 5114 S. Harper.752-1469.CAMBRIDGE MASS APT.Furn. 10 min to Hvd Sq. 3 Bdrms*300/Mo, renewable. C. Meyer, 18Leonard Ave 02139. 617-491-4772.SUMMER SUBLET4Vi Rms 54 8. Wdlwn 133 Mo Sumor Year Couples Call 752-7415.For Summer 4-Bedroom Apt Air-Cond, Lake View, Swimming PoolDoorman *165 Call 288-0790. Need One Male to Sublet 3rd Placein Huge Furnished 3-Bdrm Apt 5517Univ *50/Mo. PL2-7715.Sum Sub incredible furn 2 persspacious 5330 Harper 684-3026. Anew concept in living for sure.4 rms June 20-Sept 1. *200 total.Ideal for Couple. 684-0753 Eves.Sublet 6/15 to 9/15. Own rm. inlarge, supernice Apt nr. Lake.Dishwshr, Plants. Sun. Fern pref.667-4526, eves.SUM SUBLET 6rm Sbedrms *135.Completely Furnished. Maryland nr57th St. 643-0749.Wanted: Summer Subletters for 3-bedroom apartment close to Kim-bark Plaza, June 15-Sept 13. *179.Call 684-8412.SUM SUBLET 57 8. Harper. IdealFor Couple *140 or Nego. Call Cindy667-3099 or Ted 288-3453.Summer sublet w/option for Sep.53-Ker»wood 4 rooms 324-4457.SUMMER: PEOPLE NEEDED FOR6'/z 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. Do you buy Playboy? If so, don'thear Aileen Hernandez Thursday8:00pm in Kent 107 or you'll giveyour money to women's liberationto buy off your guilty conscience.Marx Brothers Film Orgy startsthis Sunday at Mandel Hall 7PM.Tell Your Friends About Sweet¬life. Mandel Hall This Weekend.Film Orgy Part 1 this Sunday atMandel Hall: Horse Feathers andMonkey Business; 7PM.TO PAM: TELL IT TO THE COPSAT 3:30. YOU'RE 20 NOW.Ride (or hitching partner) wantedto Berkely area AS SOON AS POS¬SIBLE. Share driving and expenses.Call Linda 324-4043.Is medieval. Renaissance or earlybaroque music your bag? Come toconcert at 8:30, Lutheran School ofTheology, 55th 8< University May10 — tomorrow.Are You Thinking About Sweet¬life? Avoid Long Lines and BuyYour Tickets Today at the MandelBox Office. Ext 3580.Don't miss Senaka Senanayke's ex¬hibit at the Bergman. He is oneof Celon's major artists and hasinternational repute.FOTA is free.Does Division Street America inter¬est you? Come hear Studs Terkelat 8:00 in the Law School.In this 30,000 word account, he re¬constructs the massacre itself, thefailure of high military officials toreport the truth, and the reactionto the murders in America and else¬where. Hersch examines the back¬grounds of the men and officersinvolved in the murder of, ac¬cording to his estimates, between450 and 500 civilians — mostlywomen and children — of thehamlet's population of 700.Phonographic Literature Free! 11Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8, Tape Decks Save***on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.Is UC sexist? Hear Aileen Her¬nandez, Thursday, 8:00pm Kent 107.Chicken? Whose Chicken; Where?Air-Conditioned Chicken at theBANDERSNATCH BANDERSNATCHWriters' Workshop (PL 2-8377).Marco Polo Travel. 2268 S. KingDrive. Chicago, III. 60616.Hat Dinner at the~BANDERSNATCHAir-Conditioned; Southern FriedChicken a la Cliffe.Win fame, fortune and notorietywithout really trying. Find out howto be a triple token, from AileenHernandez, who was one. Thursday8 00pm Kent 107.It's the first detailed report to ap-pear in print. A Special supplement7m£IS mor|tb'S HARPER'S MAGA¬ZINE, America's First Monthly. Onsale now.^ARX BROTHERS FILM ORGYC0rries to UC on May 10 and 18.FOTA IS free.OR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 Horse Feathers and Monkey Busi¬ness, Sunday, 7PM at Mandel Only*1 for two Marx flicks.Come hear the assistant concert-master of the Chicago symphony to¬night in a program of music forviolin and piano, 8:30 Mandel.FOT/TtOMay 5Contest Day 1-3PM Main QuadsStuds Terkel 8PMLaw School 1111 E 60th StEvening of Music For Violin andPiano Francis Itkos 8. EloisePolk.May 5-16 Bergman GalleryStudent Art ExhibitSenaka Sehanayake ExhibitMay 6U.C. Concert Band Performance12Noon Hutchinson CtSuzanne Block3:30 Workshop in classical andmedieval musicianIda Noyes Library8:30 Concert LutheranSchool of Theology55th and UniversityHamlet 8:00 QuantrellMay 7Folk Dancing noon main quadsNelson Algren 8PMBreasted Hall 58th and UnivLake Country String Band8:30PM Woodward CtMay 8Student Faculty MusicalRecital 3:30 Ida Noyes LibrMixed Media Happening8:30 Bergman GalleryCEF PRESENTSThe Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,Saturday May 9 Cobb Hall andIn the Heat of the Night on Satur¬day May 16 Cobb Hall.OLD MUSIC FOR FREEallegro conspirito will sing madri¬gals and other moldy music. BondChapel, May 12, 8:30. Free. IBM-Exec.Qualified Typistwanted. Average lOhrs/wk. Appli¬cant's conven. when/where to work.643-4335, Mrs. Deutsch.WANTED FOR NEXT YEARMAROON ASSTBUS MANAGERMUSICIANSPEPPERBAND'S Mayday perform¬ance will be presented May 8 at5:47PM in Woodward Court. Sincereapologies to the devoted followerswho had to be disappointed by theInclement weather which made asterling performance impossible. AllPepper to the people! The PEPPER-BANDE will more than return itsdues to the people. Peace. Need Inspired, Creative, But Indus¬trious and Mercenary Individual,willing to assume some responsibil¬ity for running the Maroon. Applyfor Assistant Business Manager. CallDon or Joel At x3263 for the chanceof a lifetime. Masochists Welcome.SERVICESRadios looked at Free, Fixed Cheap.Call 684-6340 Evenings.TYPING-STENO-THESES-PL 2-4280.Rm. 508. *l/page for theses.FOR SALEYOU DON'T OWE ANYONE 14WEEKS Of Sweat This Summer.Get Your Tan in June in Mexico,Arizona, or California. Get Thereon American Airlines. Call Jim Sack684-6667 For Details.63 Chrys Convert New Tires GdCondition Dependable 643-6551.Mustang 67 Lovecar exc 8cyl, radio,2 snow tire. *1400. Call 674-3679.SALE!! Shure M91E Cartridge Reg*50 Now Only *25 With Trade ATMUSICRAFT. For Lowest Priceson all Components. Call CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 Save $$*.65 Sunbeam Tiger V' Good Cond.Roll Bar-Snow Tires. Must Sell*1100 — Best Offer. 815-729-0747.Must Sell 63 Corvair. Good Motor.Need Muffler *125 or Best Offer.Call 955-0076 Eve Ex2711 Day Larry.Dresser/Mirror, Desk, Carpet. MustSell. Best Offer. 667-5428.HOUSE FOR SALE4 bedrooms 2 full baths 2 car ga¬rage large garden. 955-5916.SPACEHP Apt Wanted as of June 4Rms*135-50. Call Marc Eves 2264310. l'/jrm bsmt appt furn bright sepentrance nr univ, 288-3197.SUMMER SUBLET. 2 BEDRMS, 4RM Apt. *115/Mo. Call 684-1187.Large 2'/2rm bsmt appt furnished54th 8< Woodlawn, SllO/mo. Juneoccupancy, call 752-4098.Wanted: Summer Sublet E. HydePk 2 Br or More Furnished 752-0316.5rm, 3 bdrm apartment avail, inJune, thru Sept. Opt thereafter *200per mo. 684-1474, nights.Sum Sub Jun thru Sep own roomin spacious furnished 6-room apt 2roommates 54 8. Dorch'r phoneJohn or Brian 667-7086.3Vi Rms. South Shore Nr Lake 8.Campus Bus. Reas. June or July.Call 375-1452.Fern rmmt summer own rm aircond 1400 E 57 667-3531.Subl Air Cond 1400 E 57 for 3. AlsoSpace Nxt Yr! 667-6977.Summer Sublet: 2 Br, 5Vi LargeRm Furn Apt in Lovely MadisonPark (Kenwood) 4 Blks Fm Beach:*170/Mo. L. Preston: 285-5209.Summer Sublet 3 Bedrm Apt NearCampus Shopping 363-3990.Fern rmmate wanted beg. May-July. Summer Only or longer.LOVELY E. Hyde Park. *70, furn,own rm. Pref grad stud, or workinggirl. MI3-0800, x3891, ask for Martha.Summer Sublet 8 Rooms + Sun-porch. 752-5416.Apt to Sublet 2 Bedrooms, Dr Kit¬chen, Foyer Windows Furniture 8iPrch 53 8> Kenwood *135/Mo 324-3623.Sublet. June-Sept. Great apart 57th8> Drexel. Two females wanted for3-person apart. Own rooms. *57.50/person. 955-2582.3 Room Apt Hyde Park Air CondClean Modern Safe Call 955-9515.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.493-3018.55th 8> Univ furn 5rms+2 SunprchJune-Sept. $160/Mo. 493-0143. Roommate WantedFor Apartment 2 Blocks From MainQuad. From June and Thru NextYear. Call 955-8155 After 6PM.Rmmts wntd smr and/or fall qtraircond nr campus 493-8041.Air Conditioned Apt, Near Point,7 Rooms, June to Sept. 643-6607 orex 2845.SUM SUBLET: Breezy 7-rm. apt.in ideal loc: 53 and Woodlawn. 3-4bedrms. Sunporch. Mid-June to Mid-Sept. $179. Call 684-8412.NEED NEW HOMESWild Cat's Kittens 624-5957.LOST AND FOUNDGrey Tame Cocatoo w/OrangeCheeks Owner Call x3759.PERSONALWhy are women revolting? Findout Thursday, 8:00pm Kent 107.Mike Young loves Macaroni, Don'tyou Mike?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 3634555.To Me: Keep up the gaunt work.Next Week it's COUW. This weekit's NOW. Hear Aileen Hernandez,successor to Betty Friedan, Thurs¬day, 8:00pm, Kent 107.NUDIST TRAVEL CLUB for singlewomen, etc, describe yourself, send35t, MYW CLUB, P.O. Box 1342,Aurora, III.Come hear the assistant concert-master of the Chicago Symphonytonight in a program of music forviolin and piano, 8:30 Mandel.Announcing — Premier — First!!!The Bandersnatch proudly: NOTE:as of May 4 Monday we will haveSOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN.Is medieval and/or classical musicyour bag? Work out with SusanneBlock at 3:30 pm in the Ida NoyesLibrary May 6.Hear Aileen Hernandez, the formertriple token of the Equal Employ-men t Opportunity Commission,Thursday 8:00pm Kent 107. Interested in meeting WFMT inter¬viewer and author? Come hear StudsTerkel today at 8:00 in the LawSchool.Francis Akos plays violin tonightat 8:30 in Mandel.I'm just like Job's turkey,I can't do nothing but gobble,I'm so poor, baby,I have to lean against the fenceto gabble.Yeah, now, baby, I believeI'll change town,Lord, I'm so low down, baby,I declare I'm looking up at down.The men in the mine, baby,They all looking down at me ...Does Division Street America inter¬est you? Come hear Studs Terkelat 8:00 in the Law School.Is medieval. Renaissance or earlybaroque music your bag? Come toconcert at 8:30, Lutheran School ofTheology, 55th 8c University, May10 — Tomorrow.Don't miss Senaka Senanayke's ex¬hibit at the Bergman. He is one ofCelon's major artists and has inter¬national repute.Come hear the assistant concert-master of the Chicago symphony to¬night in a program of music forviolin and piano, 8:30 Mandel.SEXUAL FREEDOMLEAGUE, INCChicago Area ChapterFor SFL QuarterlyMagazine, enclose $1.00For information write to:SFLP.O. Box 9252Chicago, Illinois 60690Or call: 333-5515iAWTALIStS OEHEkALLV ACT HARMOkiOtliiY and in concert to fleece theLincoln, boarded boy politician, 783/♦♦♦♦i♦♦♦\♦♦I♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦t♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦i♦♦♦ FOTA EVENTSMay 5 - May 9May 51-3 P.M.Main Quads8 P.M.Law SchoolnilL60thSt.8:30 P.M.MandelMay 5-16Bergman GalleryMay 5-16Bergman GalleryMay 612 noonHutchinson Ct.3:30 P.M.Ida Noyes Library8:00 P.M.Quantrell8:30 P.M.Lutheran School of Theology55th & UniversityMay 712 noonMain Quads8:00 P.M.Breasted Hall58th & Univ.8:30 P.M.Woodward Ct. Contest DayStuds Terkelauthor of: Division Street America Hard Times; WFMT interviewer Topic: Joy Street” co-sponsoredby Salisbury HouseEvening of Music for Violin and PianoFrancis Akos, violin and Eloise Polk, piano. Francis Akos is the Assistant Concertmaster of theChicago Symphony and Conductor of the Chicago StringsStudent Art Exhibitphotography, ceramics, painting, graphics, sculptureSenaka Senanayakeone of Celon's major artists will exhibit paintings. Among his credits are paintings in the UnitedNations and a mural at Expo 70 since purchased by CanadaU.C. Concert Band PerformanceSusanne Block Workshop.Miss Block is distinguished classical and medieval musician who has toured the United States andEurope, and who has performed with Bernstein and Ormandy"Hamlet"with Lawrance Olivier co-sponsored by Contemporary European FilmsA Program of Medieval, Renaissance and Early Boroque Musicwith SUSANNE BLOCK see above for creditsFolk DancingU.C. Folk Dancing SocietyNelson Algrenauthor of: Man With a Golden Arm, A Walk on The Wild Side and Chicago: City on the MakeLake Country String BandOutdoor Performance Co-sponsored by Woodward Ct. HousesStudent - Faculty Musical RecitalMay 83:30Ida Noyes Library8:30Bergman GalleryMay 8,9,10,118:30Rockefeller ChapelMay 8,9,10,16,17,18Chicago Theological Seminary58th and UniversityCricket MatchA Mixed Media HappeningPaint-In, Light Show, McKinley Jazz TrioWilliam Blake's: The Marriage of Heaven and Hellpresented by the^CaniOo. co-sponsored by the University Theater ticket price to be announced"They Shall Not Pass"adaptation of a play about the Spanish Civil War, Chris Lyons, directorMay 9noon-5:30 P.M.North Field8:30Bond Chapel U.C. Salisbury C.C. —vs— Winnetka C.C.A Concert of Bach ChoralsU.C. Musical SocietyTHIS IS THE OFFICIAL, UP-TO-DATE LIST: ALL EVENTSFREE UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED16/The Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970