THE MAROONVolum* 78, Number 57 The University of Chicago Friday, May 8, 1970as a day of mourning for the students killedat Kent State, Roger Hildebrand, Dean of theCollege announced late last.night. Hildebrandalso announced that the College council adopt¬ed a motion that was reaffirmed by the Coun-cil of the Faculty Senate to relax the normalrules using grades as ‘P’ andThe details of the plan arest“out, but should be announced *• The resolution stated in patPB,/ had a great appreciation of theof outrage of the war and thedent§ at Kent State, Hildeorar dents' sensesity is extrenjbly impartan£ -. j*£e Coun'ciI wanted to permit students-andfaculty engaged m constructive acts to parti-dpate in such activities. The intention is toextend the activities of students as citizens in h-..f * :fty mp5Steve AoklSTRIKE: Pickets talk with student trying to enter Harper library, in an attempt topersuade him to observe the strike* Emotions ConfuseAssembly DecisionBy Ellen CassedyA mass meeting of 1200 students Wednes¬day night voted to demand a suspension ofclasses for the rest of the quarter. Themove reversed an earlier decision to sub¬mit the matter to a University-wide refer¬endum. Confusion and strong emotionmarked the rally in Mandel Hall, and bothmajor decisions won by slim margins. Themeeting ended when 100 students walkedout to plan the subsequent raid on the AdlaiStevenson Institute for International Affairsin the Robie House.At the beginning of the meeting, FairindaWest, assistant professor of English and amember of the New University Conference(NUC), presented the business at hand, theproposal of the steering committee electedTuesday. It reads: “We propose that theimmediate objective is to be suspension ofall academic activities, i.e., classes andexams, in order to free students for politi¬cal activity focused upon the three politicaldemands. These are:“• Immediate withdrawal of the UnitedStates from Southeast Asia.“• Free Bobby Seale and free all politi¬cal prisoners. “• End political repression and end uni¬versity involvement with the military.”The statements also suggest that “AHstudents will receive grades as of May 4,the last day of classes. Students workingfor degrees will be permitted to continue ontheir own. All University facilities will re¬main open for the remainder of the strike.All University employees will remain intheir present positions without reprisal forpolitical activites.”Of 15 proposed amendments submitted inwriting to the chair, two were approved.The first specifies the duration of the strikeas “the rest of spring quarter.” The secondadds a demand that the University of Chi¬cago follow a Princeton University decisionto adjourn next fall during the two weekspreceding Congressional elections. The re¬jected amendments dealt with alternativegrading arrangements and with consid¬erations that were dismissed as tacticaland hence inappropriate in the proposal.A series of steering committee memberschaired the meeting. A bomb scare early inthe evening held up the meeting for half anhour, as everyone had to leave the halltemporarily.200 March on Council MeetingBy Gordon KatzAn impromptu mass meeting developedlast night as the radical caucus of thestrike marched from Reynolds Club to theCenter for Continuing Education with theexpectation of confronting a supposedneeting of the board of trustees.The meeting began at 7:30 in the southlounge of Reynolds’ Club. After an hour ofdiscussion, the strikers, some 50 strong,marched around the quads, down 58thstreet, turning right on Woodlawn, acrossthe Midway, and down 60th street to theCenter.Chanting “On strike, shut it down,” theprocession paraded past Hitchcock-SnellUniversity President Edward H Levi wasone of eight university presidents to meetwith President Nixon yesterday for a dis¬cussion of campus disorders and the war inSoutheast Asia.According to White House sources, Nixontold the group that his administrationwould refrain from making hostile remarksabout college students.All eight presidents are representativesof the Association of American Universitieswho met with Nixon recently to discuss theadministration’s legislative proposals forligher education.Besides Levi, they included MalcolmMoos, University of Minnesota;. WilliamFriday, University of North Carolina; FredHarrington, University of Wisconsin; Alex¬ander Heard, Vanderbilt; Charles Hitch,University of California; Nathan Pusey,Harvard University; and Allen Wallis, Uni¬versity of Rochester, NY.According to a White house spokesman,the group was summoned to discuss “thewhole situation unfolding this week, in¬volving the community of young AmericansCorrectionTuesday’s Maroon reported thatMarvin Zonis, assistant professor inthe social sciences collegiate divi¬sion, is a fellow of the Adlai Steven¬son Institute. Zonis is not a fellow ofthe institute, nor has ever been con¬nected with the institute. hoping to enlist additional marchers. Pick¬ing up a few followers, the throng movedtoward Cobb hall where Nobel LaureateGeorge Wald was speaking to a packedhouse.One girl was heard saying, “whether yousee it as a riot or a Friday night frolic, doit.” Moving towards Woodward Court, themarch picked up 200 to 250 additionalmarchers.It had been rumored at the meeting atReynolds’ Club that the trustees were hold¬ing a meeting in the cafeteria of the Center.Finding the opportunity to attack a Rock-'efeller or a Kennedy irresistible, the crowdswelled into the lobby of the Center.and the actions the President has felt itnecessary to take in Southeast Asia.”Levi could not be reached to comment onthe meeting. According to a reliable source,however, he told the President not to referto student protesters as “bums.” After a thorough search, it was learnedthat the trustees were not holding a meet¬ing in the Center. Instead, a group of highschool teachers were meeting to discuss“Perspectives of Sex Education In the In¬ner City.” In the cafeteria was the Councilof the University Senate discussing gradesfor the rest of the quarter.Although a few students tried to ply thefortress-hke door of the cafeteria open, noreal attempt was made to confront the fac¬ulty Council. “It’s more important that weget a strike going than we see EdwardLevi,” said Rosario Levins, a strike orga¬nizer.Ann Hack, of SDS, chaired the meeting ofnearly 200 that subsequently transpired inthe main lobby of the Center. It was de¬cided that a rally would be held at 7. amthis morning near the tennis courts at 58thand University.Strikers would have the options of picket¬ing the entrances to the quads, Harper li¬brary, the computer center, or truck portsleading to University buildings. They wouldalso be able to decide whether to assistKenwood High School students in theirstrike or help move a Contract Buyers’League member back into her house. Shouts of “Point of order!”, “Point of in¬formation!”, Point of procedure!” inter¬rupted nearly every speaker. From time totime a chanted chorus of “On strike! Shutit down!” drowned out the debate. Thestage was occupied by about 50 people, andstudents sat in the aisles as well as fillingall the seats.Judy Feinberg of the steering committeewas among those who repeatedly urged stu¬dents to “get up off your asses.” She askedwhy such “reactionary” schools as the Uni¬versity of Utah and that of New Mexicowere taking more forthright action than the“sophisticated” University of Chicago.Those in favor of referendum urged test¬ing support for the strike before imposingthe will of a minority. Ed Meltzer deploredthe steering committee’s “oligarchic” tenorand warned the group not to try to rule theUniversity by itself.The group split almost evenly over thequestion. At 10 pm, after two hpurs of de¬bate, it resolved, 453-447, to hold a referen¬dum Friday.The group spent over an hour voting onamendments to the proposal and decidingwhen the referendum would be held andwho would vote in it. But shortly after 11Peter Ratner interrupted with a series ofbulletins from the East Coast. 258 schoolswere reported on strike.At this point there was a call from thefloor that the group reconsider its decisionto hold a referendum. Gene Goldberg andothers insisted repeatedly that by parlia¬mentary procedure passage of such a mo¬tion required a two-thirds majority. Voicesrang out telling Goldberg to “Shut up!”Dick Levins, who had assumed the chairafter Carlos Debecies relinquished it, ruledthat “this is an important political decisionand we are not going to get stuck on proce¬dure.” A simple majority revoked the ref¬erendum, 375-354.Houston Stevens, the original chairman,returned briefly to the stage with a mes¬sage from Black Student Association. Hecharged that racism had driven him off thestage and prevented him from conductingthe meeting. “Black students are going tofight,” he said, “and we are going to fightwith those who are willing to struggle andnot just fuck around.” He led a small con¬tingent of blacks out of the room to planconcrete action.At 12:15 Jeff Maso, expelled, led an ex¬odus to the North Lounge for “those whowant to fight.” “Those who want to play,”he said, “can stay behind.” Those whowalked out eventually planned and carriedout the Robie House raid.Levins adjourned the Mandel Hall meet¬ing.Steve AokiCLEAN-UP: Students from Woodlawn Court clean up Robie House Wednesday,following the ransacking of the building by SDS.Levi Meets With NixonOn Nation-Wide Strike2/The Chicago Maroon/May 8, 1970Actions Highlight Strikes Third Day■'•s.Strike action Thursday was highlightedby a noon rally on the quads, a second ina series of SVNA-sponsored trench parties,and Moratorium-sponsored canvassing ofChicago area neighborhoods.Dean of the College, Roger Hildebrandwas a featured speaker at yesterday’s rallyon the ad building steps. Speaking of theresolutions passed by the College facultyearlier this week, the dean said, “What1 and my colleagues have passed so farhas been inadequate, but significant. Thisis the first that the faculty of the Collegehas expressed itself as a body on issuesof this kind.”Later, at the 100-foot trench front at 58thand Woodlawn, rock bands provided musicfor over 500 strikers.*"Some 150 to 200 students worked throughseveral Chicago area neighborhoods yester¬day, selling at least 500 anti-war telegramsto residents, which were then sent to UnitedStates Senators and Congressmen.The students worked in groups of two tofive, and will continue today. The neighbor¬hoods canvassed included Hyde Park,South Shore, the Loop, and suburban com¬munity shopping-centers. Each telegramhad a maximum of 15 words, and was soldfor $1.Students also obtained 1300 campus sig¬natures on a petition sent to Illinois Sena¬tors Charles Percy and Ralph Smith, whichreads as follows: “We the undersigned citi¬zens of Illinois demand that you voteagainst appropriations for the maintenanceand extension of United States military op¬erations in Southeast Asia and vote to reas¬sert congressional control over foreign pol¬icy.”Today students will canvass for supportof Illinois Representative Robert Mann’sbill stating that no Illinois resident can bemade to fight in an undeclared war. Theywill leave from Billings student lounge at 9am.According to David Bensman, member ofthe Young People’s Socialist League(UPSL), the University has granted stu¬dents an open line to Washington orSpringfield to allow them to talk to Sena¬tors and Congressmen about the Vietnamwar.Students wishing to use the line shouldgather in the Cloister Club in Ida NoyesHail starting at 11 am. Groups of five per¬sons should make the call, which will bepaid for by the University.Steve AokiJAMMED MEETING: A view from the stage of Mandel hall during Wednesday's mass meeting.Vandals Raid Robie House, FilesWeekend Strike Attractionslumped together with the warmakers andthe imperialists.” He said that SDS hadmade the institute “a symbol of some kindof war and imperialism when in fact it’snot. It supports the work of people who areinterested in real change.” Rubenstein said“I have been very frank with people fromSDS and they have repeated stuff whichI’ve showed them is wrong. Virtually noth¬ing they’ve written can be believed.”Rubenstein described the Institute as“vulnerable” and dependent on the supportof students and the University communityfor continued operation. He said that nei¬ther the Institute nor the University in¬tended to press charges against the van¬dals.The action at Robie House was decidedupon at a meeting in Reynolds Club in¬itiated at the close of the mass meetingwhen Jeff Mazo, expelled ’69, said “peoplewho want to fight should go. I’m going.”About 200 students followed into ReynoldsClub after midnight to hear proposals for“direct action.” Most of them had been sit¬ting in Mandel Hall for almost five hourswhile strike proposals were debated duringa turbulent meeting. The meeting in Rey¬nolds Club had originally been suggested byRory Donnelly, ’70, of SDS for those whohad voted against a campus-wide referen¬dum on the strike and wanted to organizeplans for immediate action.Standing on a table in the Reynolds NorthLounge, Mazo, in a three-piece suit, openedthe meeting by saying “Our black brothersand sisters are going to find out whetherthey can trust us.” The statement referredto the criticism made by black studentswho had walked out of the mass meetingearlier, that the white students were mere¬ly talking and not “taking action.”There were proposals made that the Uni¬versity be shut down, that Morton Kaplan,professor of political science, be evictedfrom his office, that trucks coming into thecity be obstructed, and that University key¬holes be filled with epoxy. Houston Stevens,’71, member of the steering committee, andone of the black students who walked out,proposed that “we go evict people from theAdlai Stevenson Institute.” When membersof the meeting shouted there were nopeople in the building now, he proposedthat “we evict the furniture like CBL (Con¬tract Buyers League). He agreed withsomeone’s suggestion that “we’re moving furniture out and then we’re going home tosleep.”During the ten minutes allowed for dis¬cussion on Stevens’ discussion, several stu¬dents objected to the tactic and cautionedagainst smashing windows. Steve Kindred,’70, urged that there be “no unnecessarydestruction ... Personally I think it’s anice house.” Members of International So¬cialists expressed “misgivings” about theaction’s effect. The move was voted on andpassed. Before the group left Stevens said,“This may be irrational, but all actions areirrational.”Continued on Page TenActivities for today and tomorrowinclude:• 9 am and 3 pm today — First aidcourse sponsored by the medicalschool strike committee on the es¬sentials of riot medical assistance,Billings P-117• 9:30 am today — Divinity stu¬dents begin a meeting to discussfurther strike action• Noon today — Memorial servicecommemorating the death of studentsat Kent State University, RockefellerMemorial chapel• 1:30 pm today — The CambodianLegion will attack the SVNA trenchestoday with water pistols, woodenswords, and water ballons.According to a member of thelegion, if the trendies are liberatedthey will be restored to a legitimateauthority, for instance, PresidentLevi. Tlie legion will assemble onthe ad building steps at 1 pm.General Frank Malbranche, com¬mander of the SVNA forces said theholders of the trenches will protectthem with light weapons.• 1:30 pm today — Political work¬shops run by political science facultymembers to help students participatein political action, Reynolds clubsouth lounge• 2 pm today — A meeting forthose who want to close down theUniversity for two weeks prior to theCongressional elections in November,Ida Noyes west loungeBy Sarah GlazerA brief furniture eviction accompaniedby glass smashing and some damage tofurniture was carried out by about 30 stu¬dents at Robie House Wednesday night.An SDS pamphlet distributed yesterdaycalled the action “symbolic.” “Large scaleviolence was not intended or perpetrated.The action was a protest against the largescale bloodshed and exploitation, not mere¬ly property damage, that is perpetrated bythe complex of which the Stevenson In¬stitute is an integral part.” The flyer con¬centrated on Contract Buyer League evic¬tions in Chicago as the analogy for theiraction.Richard Rubenstein, assistant director ofthe Adlai Stevenson Institute of Inter¬national Affairs (housed in Robie House)said he was “personally heartbroken be¬cause I feel that the strikers are my broth¬ers and sisters, but we are somehow beingSteve AokiROBIE DAMAGE: Papers from files linethe stairs following student attack. • 4:30 pm today — Buses leave forWashington from Ida Noyes Hall• 7:30 pm today — Mandel hallmass meeting to decide furtherstrike activities• 10:30 pm today — SVNA rallyfollowing the mass meeting at theKent Park at 58th and Woodlawnwith speakers from the Young Lordsand Black Panthers. A band, punchand other surprises are promised• 8:30 am tomorrow — Strikecommittee march to the Loop for therally, assemble on the quads for a9 am departure• Noon tomorrow — Rally at theCivic Center, followed by a 1 pmmarch to the Federal Building anda 2 pm march to the Logan statue.May 8, .1970/The Chicago Maroon/3Grad Schools VoteTo Support StrikeStudents, faculty and staff at the SocialServices Administration (SS) voted Thurs¬day to strike from regularly scheduledclasses for the rest of the spring quarter.The University’s business, medical andlaw students have voted to continue theirstrike of classes through today. Other grad¬uate students boycotted classes in an unof¬ficial strike.At the SSA meeting, the motion for astrike carried by three-quarters of the 300people present. They agreed to terminateall classes and count grades as of May 7 asfinal ones.Those present adopted a statement read¬ing “As of today SSA is on strike from theregularly scheduled academic classes forthe rest of this quarter.“This institution, while on strike frombusiness as usual, will stay open as an in¬stitution of learning and will not submit tofascistic pressures to close.”Students of the business school voted 126-82 to strike until Monday, May 11, in ameeting Thursday afternoon. Business stu¬dents will meet again Monday to decide onfurther action.A resolution passed by a third of the stu¬dent body who attended the meeting read:“Whereas we deplore the senselessdeaths of four innocent students at KentState University and lament the emotionalclimate that caused those deaths;“Whereas we deplore the use of NationalGuard discipline which perpetrated thosedisturbances, rather than settle them;“Whereas we believe that the war inSoutheast Asia interferes with rational for¬eign policy and contributes senseless esca¬lation of this war through American mili¬tary intervention in Cambodia;“Therefore, we, students of the Univer¬sity of Chicago graduate school of business,hereby resolve to observe a solemn morato¬rium of classes to last at least until noonMonday, May 11, 1970; that the contents of this declaration be prepared for the signa¬tures of the GSB students and sent to thePresident of the United States; and to takeany further non-violent action that isdeemed necessary.”Medical students of the University arestriking until Sunday night, May 10, atwhich time another meeting will be held.The decision was passed by a four to oneratio at a mass meeting held in Billingshospital yesterday at noon. That meetingwas preceded by a meeting of first yearmedical students who as a group decided tosupport the strike.The students pledged support and areproviding money for organizing GI resis¬tance; they will canvass for the Mann billwhich declares the sending of Illinois ser¬vicemen to Vietnam unconstitutional; andwill leaflet to doctors and patients in thehospital.The fourth plan will back up Saturday’smass anti-war march in the Loop. The Med¬ical School Strike Committee is offering abasic first aid course in the essentials ofriot medical assistance today. The course isbeing held in room P-117 in Billings Hospi¬tal at 9 am and 3 pm.The faculty of the division of biologicalsciences which includes the medical alsopassed a resolution at noon Thursday sup¬porting the strike of medical students:“The faculty of the division of biologicalsciences joins the students in the strikeagainst the war in Southeast Asia and therepression of non-violent dissent at homeby cancelling classes not essential to thecare of patients. The cancellation will notextend beyond Sunday, May 10, without re¬newal by the faculty.”Four students from the Law School are inWashington today lobbying with Congress¬men for the anti-war resolution passed bystudents in the Law School on Wednesday.The resolution, passed by a large major-Continued on Page TenRobert RedfordKatharine RossRobert BlakeSusan ClarkTell Them Willie Boy Is HereCOSTABRiNGI - Written tor the Screen and Directed by ABRAHAM POLONSKY - A JENNINGS LANG PresentationA PHILIP A.WAXMAN Production A Universal Picture Technicolor* Panavision* |GP|**+2424 N. LincolnFree ParkingTel.: 528-9126 3S» Student Rate$1. 50at all timesJOHN ROSSEN & THE STAFFof theTHREE PENNY CINEMAmourn the martyrednew patriots of the /Kent State MassacreThis outrage by the troops of the new George III will be theConcord, the Lexington of a new American Revolution. HARPER LIBRARY: Library employees voted to strike on Friday in support of thestudent strike.Workers Vote To CloseHarper Library TodayLibrary workers voted Wednesday tostrike today in support of the student strikeon campus.Some 100 workers met Wednesday after¬noon in the Ida Noyes cloister club. Themeeting was called by the strike steeringcommittee. The chairman reported that as¬sociate director of libraries James Rileyhad told her that library workers whostayed off the job would not be fired, butwould lose pay for the time they missed.Another proposal, that library workersstrike Thursday and Friday, was voteddown at the meeting.In order to build support for thestrike today, library workers circulated twopetitions yesterday. The first calls for Pres¬ident Edward Levi to close down the Uni¬versity in support of the three national stu¬dent strike demands. The second petitionasks library staff to support the strike to¬day. Stanley E. Gwynn, associate director forservices in department libraries, saidThursday that, losing pay during the strikedepends on whether a staff member hasfringe benefits. Fulltime workers are grant¬ed paid vacation time. Part time workerswill lose pay if they strike.“There is a general feeling of sympathyand empathy in the library on the situ¬ation in Cambodia and Kent State,” saidGwynn. “The library will remain open un¬less the university closes down. We willhave to wait and see what happens.”During the week of the strike, some stu¬dent library workers have stayed out ofwork in support of the strike. Gwynn hadno statistics on the numbers of staff off thejob, though he said that Tuesday, half ofthe circulation workers were absent.The main entrances to Harper libraryhave been picketed during the week.THE MORRIS FISIIBEIN CENTERfor the Study of theHISTORY OF SCIENCE AND MEDICINEThe University of ChicagoAN INAUGURAL SERIES OF FOUR LECTURESto be held in frank Billings Auditorium (PI 17), The University of Chicago Hospitalsand Clinics, 950 East 59th St.4:30 • May 11, 1970—The Individual and the World of Numbers-—The Rise of aStatistical Point of \ icw with Respect to Man, Science, and Society.. A leclure by I. BERNARD COHEN, Professor of the Historv of Science, Harvard University:President of (lie International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science.3:30 • May 18, 19<0—Biomedical Science in Medical Education-Some Contempo¬rary Problems.A lecture by JAMES A. SHANNON. M.D.. Professor at Rockefeller University and Assistant tothe President of the University: Former Director of the National Institutes of Health.4:30 May 25,1970—Hippocrates and the Enigma of Life.A lecture by M. D. CRMEK. M.D.. Scientific Collaborator at the National Center of ScientificResearch in Paris, France: Editor of Lijecnicl.i I'jesnil. and the Archives Internationalesd'Histoirc des Sciences.4:30 • June 1, 1970—Dcsiderius Erasmus: The Spirit and the Flesh.A lecture hv C. D. O MALI-EY, I-ate Professor of the History of Medicine. UCLA, and President ofthe International Academe of the History of Medicine. This lecture was completed for this Seriesshortly before Professor O'Malley's death on April 7. It will he read by ALLEN G. DEBUS. Pro¬fessor of the History of Science. The University of Chicago.These lectures will be open to the public without ticket and without charge.4/The Chicago Maroon/May 8,1970Stevenson Institute Target of SDSSteve AokiMODERATES IN ROBIE: Following the radical action at Robie House Wednesday night, moderates cleaned up and held ameeting.By Allen FriedmanBefore last week, few students knewmore about the Adlai Stevenson Institutefor International Affairs than that FrankLloyd Wright designed the national land¬mark in which it is housed.Yet it has been the institute, rather thanRobie House, which has twice come underattack from SDS - connected groups, whodecry it as an “imperial brain trust.”Smashed windows, a broken Xerox ma¬chine, and Wednesday night’s “eviction” offurniture and files onto Woodlawn Ave tes¬tify to the strength of dissidents’ conviction_ or frustration.But the nature of research conducted atthe institute remains hazy.Debate renewed Thursday when thecampus SDS announced it had liberated anuncirculated paper from the Peru Projectconference sponsored by the institute thisyear.Thursday, director William Polk and fel¬lows Richard Rubenstein, Ronald Grzy-winski, and Thomas Boodell, discussed theInstitute and some of the changes leveledat it.Polk called the general interest of the in¬stitute, the disparity of wealth and powerbetween nations. According to Rubenstein,the Institute’s international focus is placedon the “third world” nations; domestically,it is concerned with the “cities, blacks, stu¬dents, and universities.”The institute finances studies conductedby Stephenson fellows. Money for the stud¬ies comes from the institute treasury,which is funded by individuals, foundationsand universities.Most of the money is unrestricted, nocontract grants are accepted, and dona¬tions from business corporations are in¬frequent. “We never accept money,” Ru¬benstein said, “from someone who comesin and says, ‘I’ll give you $50,000 if youstudy something.’ ”If a proposal submitted is accepted, thefellow is awarded a stipend approximatingwhat his salary had been before. Studiesare accepted on a general consensus of thefellows.Rubenstein characterized the con¬troversial Peru Project as a “series ofmass meetings of all parties interested inPeru and US — Peruvian relations.” Headded that besides US governmental offi¬cials, and businessmen, members of thePeruvian junta and its left also attended.“The conference,” said Rubenstein,“gave Peruvians a chance to make theircase.” Polk said, “The total cost of the con¬ference is on the order of a professor’ssalary for a year.”The “liberated” uncirculated paper fromthe conference titled “Diplomatic Protec¬tion of United States Businesses in Peru”by Charles D Goodsell, department of gov¬ ernment at Southern Illinois university atCarbondale, was shown to a Maroon report¬er by Jerry Harris, suspended 73, a mem¬ber of SDS. The paper described ways toupdate American diplomacy to be of great¬er assistance in helping US business inter¬ests in Peru.The report discussed three methods of di¬plomacy:• The Good Offices model, stressing in¬formality, courtesy and negotiation on thepart of the diplomat.• The forceful Interposition model, whichemphasizes “threats, direct or implied, orthe actual invocation of sanctions.”• The Self Preservation model, “encour¬aging firms to take steps on their own in¬itiative that would lead to their own politi¬cal self-preservation.”The report stressed the unworkability offorceful interposition in Peru during thecrisis caused by nationalization of a sub-'sidiary of Standard Oil, Inc.; “the inherentobjective of diplomatic protection —serving the vital interests of American in¬terests abroad — was not ultimately met.”In referring to the Good Offices model,the report stated that “nice guy inter¬vention will seldom help a company that isin deep trouble with a foreign government”and called for use of the Self Preservationmodel. The report called this method “apositive, assisting relationship that would encourage business behavior that would, inthe long run, serve the foreign investor’sown interests.”As an example of such action, it sug¬gested that American fishing compamespay Peru’s “nominal” fishing fees, and get¬ting Congress to reimburse them, possibleunder the 1968 Fisherman’s Protection Act.The Peru issue is one of several dis¬cussed in an SDS position paper, “Pahlavi-Friend or Foe?” The Pahlavi Center forMid East Studies, scheduled to be builtacross the street from Robie House at58th and Woodlawn, will also help housethe 3-year old Institute.The paper discusses the origin of thePahlavi study center and what SDS claimsits purpose will be. It also criticizes otherstudies conducted by Institute fellows.Polk, who directed the University’s Mid¬dle Eastern Studies Center until last May,explained that when he first came to theUniversity of Chicago, there were no fundsavailable for Mid East studies. He wentto see Shah Pahlavi of Iran to ask about,funding a study program. Polk asked theShah to “give up one fighter plane,” cost¬ing three million dollars, and .use themoney to fund two chairs and pay for abuilding.In another issue mentioned in the SDSpaper, Grzywinski’s ‘black capitalism’program, it was charged that the HydePark bank, by loaning 1.3 million dollarsto black-owned business acquired over fourmillion dollars in corporate deposits touse for their own profit.Grzywinski pointed out that the bank isthe second in the country to have insti¬tuted such a program, and its programis still the second largest. Loans have in¬creased to 2.4 million dollars, and the pro¬grams directors, Milton Davis and JamesFletcher, have been very active in theCongress on Racial Equality, the Officeof Economic Opportunity and the civilrights movement, he said.“If you go to any black leader in theblack community, they will tell you with¬out reservation that the program has beena valuable and constructive one,” Grzywin¬ski said. He added that the program onlytries to break even financially, and thatlast year it made “about 100 dollars.”A conference on violence sponsored bythe Institute and held in Hanover, NewHampshire in July 1969 was another objectof criticism by SDS. According to Polk,the paper completely misrepresented thetenor of the meeting, whose purpose was“to get different perspectives on whatconstitutes violence and what things arebeing done about it in society today.”The paper said that members of the Chi¬cago police department attended, but itdid not say, according to Polk, that thoseattending were from the Afro-American Patrolmen’s League.Harris explained that he found objection¬able one working paper of the conference,Henry Bienan’s “Violence and SocialChange” and its concern with the lack ofuseful theory in the area investigating waysthat elites could use violence. He expres¬sed concern with why studies should bemade in how governments could stay inpower using violence, interpreting that tobe the implication of the report.Rubenstein said that the prevailing at¬mosphere at the Hanover conference “wasone of confrontation.” He said that “thereason for the conference was so thatvarious government officials could hearwhat they ordinarily wouldn’t have paidto hear.”“We told them that violence couldn’t besuppressed without revolutionary changesin society,” Rubenstein said, “and to stopkilling people needlessly.”Rubenstein explained why he felt liberalresearch conducted by some fellows isoften irrelevant, and said that “the lib¬erals can’t stop the revolution.” But heemphasized the value of the institute asa place where researchers could get to¬gether to discuss and argue without coer¬cion. “I do exactly as I want,” he said,“and the idea that anyone is using meis ridiculous.” Boodel, who has been help¬ing the Contract Buyers’ League in theirlegal action, agreed. “I’ve had completeand total freedom,” he said.Polk expressed surprise at the Pahlavipaper. He said that before the paper wasissued, members of the SDS had talkedwith him and the other fellows and theyhad pointed out and demonstrated manyfalsities in the original draft of the paper,only to find many of those same errorsin the circulated edition.Harris said that Rubenstein had goneover the paper with SDS members pointby point for several hours. At that time,according to Harris, Rubenstein expressedagreement with the substance of the cri¬ticisms of Institute programs.The question of what the Adlai StevensonInstitute does is apparently still unresolvedfor many people. SDS members want toexamine the files of the institute, whichare not public, to see if the Institute isreally as “clean” as it claims to be.The fellows of the Institute claim thatit is “the freeest place in the country” toconduct independent research. They pointout that one of their fellows, Paul Booth,was a founder and national secretary ofSDS.The fellows of the Institute seem to haveanswered the charges against them in thePahlavi paper, but some new evidence al¬ways seems to turn up, such as the un¬circulated paper, which bring about newdoubts and questions.May 8, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5f»RST RALLY: Students outside Robie House Monday afternoon.msic“Sweetlife”: Not Quite RockJimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHUTZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNJESSEISON’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 -13401.53rdideasFOR YOUR CHILDREN S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Rolph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LoSolie St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE OF CANADAWEETLIFE, THE CURRENT BLACKFRIARS product¬ion, opened last weekend and will be presented againonight and tomorrow at 8:30 pm in Mandel Hall.This offering is billed as a rock musical, but would benore appropriately characterized as the traditional Black-riars fare with a few pebbles strewn along the way. I willrankly admit disappointment at not finding the cast clam¬oring around the proscenium before showtime — the or-:hestra’s warmup was a treat, however. As the action:ommenced, I realized that the hand that cradles the rockloes not necessarily stone the cast first. Hair this is not,ilthough a suggestion of sideburns is occasionallyichieved.Sweetlife takes its story line from The Marriage ofFigaro, which you may remember as revolving around theittempts of one Count Almaviva to seduce Suzanna, theCountess’ maid, who is bethrothed to his valet Figaro,otherwise known (in another opera) as the Barber of Se¬nile, and who is the confidante of Cherubino, a page in-roduced to have enough candidates for mistaken identityand sung by a female just to really compound the con-usion), who himself (herself) is being busted for, among>ther offenses, being “found alone” with Barbarina, thegardener’s daughter. You can see the possibilities, andhis cat W.A. Mozart wrote the music and audiences havejooved on it ever since.So here comes Dean Lindsy Sweetlife, with eyes foriis secretary Suzy, who is engaged to Sam Barber, anassistant Dean who has his hands full coping with thetntics of campus radical Che Rubin and his friends. I wishcould say that “A University Campus” where all this iset is cleverly reminiscent of you know what great Mid¬western University, but I saw no resemblance.The portrayal of Che Rubin by Eric Josephson is quitelonvincing (and will you tell the audience, Mr. J., whatwou do in real life?), and provides fitting contrast for theinctious Sweetlife of Andrew Gallant. David Weber aslam Barber is appropriately straight-but-understanding,ilthough I couldn’t help thinking at times that he wholesitates too much loses his audience. Anyway, I like tohink this whole bunch had redeeming qualities perceivediy Suzy, played most fetchingly by Susan Bosworth. I•ecently had the privilege (shared with alas all too few) oflearing Miss Bosworth recite some nonsense about Jum-ilies at one of the Victorian festival events, and on the>asis of these two appearances would like to cast a voteor more Bosworth.In lesser roles Mary Connors as Sweetlife’s wife Rosemd Annette Jaffe as Rubin’s girlfriend Barby served theirunction commendably, and Louis Janus was believable ashe chairman who takes over the meeting when Rubinjets too entangled in his own rhetoric. Particularlyloteworthy were the cameo performances of Marcia Edi-»n and Joan Reisman as two scrubladies (grave-liggers?), who brought real style to the rendition of anusical commentary on the contemporary campus con- tertemps, “who can possibly win but the National Guardand the Board of Trustees?”Which brings us to the music, a strange mixture ofrock and traditional musicomedy style. I am not so opti¬mistic that I expect to understand lyrics delivered in thecontemporary mode the first time out, but I got very littleevent of the traditional presentation, perhaps partly be¬cause I was sitting at the side of the hall. (Note to housemanagers of amateur theatricals: if you suspect that yourpiece might be attended by a reviewer, be sure to havethat good pair of seats on the center aisle reserved even ifyou don’t remember hearing from The Maroon.) Thesongs get better in the second act, and the productionnumber “Teenage Dean,” where Sweetlife fantasizes him¬self as a rock idol, is faintly reminiscent of the memo¬rable number “I Pledge Allegiance” from the Blackfriars’Sing Out Sweet Rock of several years ago. The dancing isnicely choreographed and reasonably well drilled, but onefelt that choreographer Adrienne Becker (who also per¬formed charmingly as dance soloist) was at a dis¬advantage due to the aforementioned ambiguity of musicalstyle. The orchestra, under the hand of composer Reb-han (who some may recall seeing recently as the virtuosoof the tinkling waterglasses) performs creditably, but pre¬dictably comes across better when doing their own thingthan when accompanying the singers.The book, by Seth Masia, is of the conventional aim-for-laughs variety, and while some of the words were 1970, the lines were for the most part pre-1950. Some of thebook’s deficiencies could have been overcome by incisivepacing, but director Sydney Bendix has not succeeded indoing much along this line. Technical aspects of the pro¬duction are in general handled competently, and the over¬all result is a pleasant and amusing stage farce, whichfalls short of achieving its satirical potential.It is the latter point on which I feel some real regrets.The opportunity was here to do something really neat, inthe contemporary spirit. The author has an ear for thekind of fatuous dialogue emanating from both sides of thecurrent confrontation situation, but does not succeed ingetting across the real heart of either. And as for the rockstyle, which is presumably everyday familiar to those in¬volved, I think we would have been much better served ifsome recruits from Kenwood High School had been addedto the company. I am reminded of the skit in which a 27-year-old unemployed actor with a sick wife and starvingchildren communicates his condition to a producer in animpassioned plea for a job, but when given a chance toread stumbles dismally over the identical lines spoken bythe character of a 27-year-old unemployed actor, etc. etc.During intermission I talked to a truelife Dean, whodid not feel at all threatened, and a grownup lady whowas sad at the total lack of perception evidenced as towhat the feelings of dissenters and counterdissenters real¬ly are. I felt sad too.Robert L. AshenhurstORSON WELLES AS THE VENIAL PIRATE-MERCHANT OF MACAO ANDJEANNE MOREAU AS THE AGING WHORE STAR INOrson Wfelles’THE IMMORTAL STORYSaint and devil, naked crone and lush seductress, grotesque dwarf andhandless murderer people the surealistic world of floating coffins inLuis BunuelsSIMON OF THE DESERTDOC FILMS SUNDAY MAY 10 BOTH AT 7:15 & 9:30 COBB HALL $1.00/Grey City Jonraal/May 8,1970Steve AokiCHICAGO STRIKERS: Students from DePaul University march in protest of thekilling of four students at Kent State University in Ohio. By Carl SunshineChicago area students, who have beendemonstrating against the war and Kentdisorders all week, will culminate protestswith a demonstration noon Saturday at theCivic Center. A march will proceed to theFederal building at 1 pm and then to theLogan statue in Grant Park for an after¬noon rally.Sponsored by the City Wide Strike Coun¬cil of Student Mobilization members fromall nearby campuses, the demonstration ex¬pands an earlier planned Chicago PeaceCouncil rally. Permits are being secured. Amass turnout of high school and college stu¬dents and peace people from a 50 mile re¬gion is expected.The University Strike Steering committeeis sponsoring a march to the Loop rallySaturday. Marchers should assemble at8:30 am on the main quads. The march willstart at 9 am, proceeding up UniversityAve to 57th st, east to Lake Shore Drive,and then along the drive to the Loop.The City Wide Strike Council has adoptedthe three national demands for the rally:total withdrawal of all troops from South¬east Asia, an end of campus complicitywith the military, and an end to politicalsuppress:on. The City Wide Council hasspecifically demanded “no troops or copson campus ever.”At the University of Illinois Circlecampus mass meetings have been heldsince Tuesday and over half the Univer¬sity’s 16,000 students have attended. Classboycotts have been 70 to 80 percent effec¬tive. Their strike’s aim has been “massivenonviolent demonstrations,” but Wednes¬day night about 300 students marched tothe campus ROTC building and seized it.After being asked to disperse by police,over half did while police arrested 44 ofthose remaining. Little damage was done tothe building.People continue to leaflet classes todayand two demands in addition to the nationalprogram have been added: that the admin¬istration drop all tresspass charges againstROTC demonstrators arrested, and that theCircle Center be kept open 24 hours a dayfor coordinating the strike. The second de¬mand has been granted.Strikers March On WashingtonBy Gordon KatzIn a move “to confront the President andto protest his policies of non-consultation,”the New Mobilization to End the War inVietnam is sponsoring a march on Wash¬ington Saturday.Barbara Neal, a spokesman for the NewMobe in Washington, said the rally in thenation’s capital will protest “the violencedone to blacks at home and to students atKent State” as well as the President’s deci¬sion to escalate the war into Cambodia.Wednesday Justice department officialsintervened to allow permits for marchers torally in an area near the Washington monu¬ment. This was made necessary in view ofa lengthy, mandatory waiting period beforethe issuance of permits to use federal prop¬erty.Mobe leaders, however, have rejected theWashington Monument site and insist uponstaging the demonstration in LafayettePark which is located across the streetfrom the White House. According to MissNeal, “if they can waive the permit for theWashington Monument, they can waive thepermit for Lafayette Park.” Negotiationsfor Lafayette Park were being held lateyesterday.Tentative speakers for tomorrow’s rallyare Mrs. John Tillman, of the National Wel¬fare Rights Organization, Jane Fonda, Ben¬jamin Spock, David Dellinger, RennieDavis, and David Hillard, among others.Congressman Abner Mikva, who representsHyde Park, is asking members of the Con¬gress to attend tomorrow’s demonstration.In a preliminary to Saturday’s march al¬most the entire student body, faculty, andadministration of Haverford College inPhiladelphia rode chartered buses to Wash¬ ington Thursday to meet with members ofCongress.Observers in Washington report that thePresident no longer views the student moodon the war as a matter of politics; he nowconsiders it a cnsis.Since Wednesday President Nixon hasbeen conferring almost exclusively withstudents, faculty, and administrators of thenations’ universities. It was reported thatthe President has been deluged with lettersand telegrams protesting the events inCambodia and at Kent State. He has alsoreportedly received a letter from the facul¬ty of Harvard University asking for the res¬ignation of foreign affairs advisor HenryKissinger, a' former Harvard professor.As of Thursday there were more than 120student strikes in progress with an added340 campuses holding some sort of anti-waractivity.At Harvard University the dean of thecollege has proposed the closing of theschool for the remainder of the year withexams to be held next fall. The universityis almost, totally shut-down inasmuch asmost of the employees were either pre¬viously on strike or have joined the strikesince Tuesday.A meeting of over 40,000 Cambridge stu¬dents is scheduled for today in HarvardStadium despite the fact that Harvard ad¬ministrators have termed the dwelling “un¬stable” for that number of people.“I’ve never seen anything like this atNYU,” said a staff member of the NewYork University Journal. Six under¬graduate schools at NYU have voted to sus¬pend classes for the rest of the year. Yes¬terday, students at New York Universityended their three day occupation of theCourant Institute of Mathematical Science, a building which houses a computer worththree and one-half million dollars.In New Haven there are “very few stu¬dents attending class,” according to theYale Daily News. Some students at Yalehave organized a Peace CommencementFund. This organization, which hopes toreach all high school and college graduatesthroughout the nation, plans to encouragegraduates to take the money they wouldordinarily spend on caps and gowns andcontribute the amount to a national fundthat would go to aid anti-war candidatesnext November. The group has set a goal of$1 million.At Columbia University classes have notbeen officially cancelled, but with the ex¬ception of a few classes held outside, therehas been virtually no break in the strike.Yesterday a group of Columbia studentsmarched to the West Side Highway alongHudson River, and blockaded it at rushhour. Eight were arrested.In California, Governor Ronald Reaganhas cancelled classes at all branches ofthat state’s school system. All offices wereclosed at UCLA yesterday, and the mainswitchboard at Berkely was not answeringincoming calls. Stanford University hasbeen closed since last Friday. Whittier Col¬lege, the alma mater of President Nixonwas boycotted by about 250 studentsWednesday.New Mexico University has been closedindefinitely by the Governor David Cargoand the President of the University. Thiscame after a violent confrontation sparkedby the lowering of a flag to half-mast inmemory of the students who were killed atKent State. Three NMU students werestabbed as a fight erupted between con¬servative and radical elements. At Northern Illinois University in DeKalb37 arrests followed student demonstrationswhich damaged several businesses and theROTC building in Dekalb Tuesday night.Mayor Jesse Chamberlain asked for a na¬tional guard unit that had been alerted butnot sent into the streets, but a special rep¬resentative from the governor stationedwith the guard refused.Wednesday night over 12,000 people (halfof a 23,500 student body) marched peace¬fully “to show students could protest Viet¬nam peacefully”. After massive studentsupport, the College Council agreed to sus¬pend classes Thursday and Friday. Thetraditional homecoming May Fete has alsobeen cancelled.The University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana a strike has been 25-50 percent ef¬fective since Wednesday. Twenty studentswere arrested Wednesday in various in¬cidents, one blocking a garbage truck froincrossing picket lines around the studentunion. Forty-seven more students were ar¬rested for violation of the 8 pm curfew im¬posed by the mayor.Five hundred national guard stationed intheir armory all Wednesday emergedThursday afternoon and swept s'udentsfrom streets back onto the University quad¬rangles where police were trying to keepthem. Guardsmen had blank ammunfonwith bayonets and gas masks on their belts.The university announced their appearance“to prevent further interference” withnormal functions, but an observer at thestudent newspaper was at a loss to explaintheir appearance at that particular time. Astate wide rally is scheduled at Champaign-Urbana for Saturday.At Northwestern University the adminis¬tration has closed all University functionsincluding science labs and the computercenter through Friday. Wednesday studentslined up 15 feet apart for a mile along thesides of Sheridan Rd, US 42, leafletting mo¬torists at rush hour.The ensuing traffic jam caused police toreroute traffic away from the main arteryleading to the northern suburbs, and stu¬dents seized the road, building two barri¬cades. They sp^nt the night at the barri¬cades, burning some of them to keep warm,and as yet police have taken no action toremove them. Plans to leaflet along the re¬route a ve being discussed with police.Campis itself has been quiet. The ROILbuilding is completely occupied by police.In addit on to the three national demandsNU students have asked for campus secur¬ity to be disarmed, an open university stockportfolio with no war company holdings,conversion of the ROTC building to a daycare center, and student activity to reachpeople throughout Evanston.After a noon rally Thursday at Universityof Wisconsin, students marched past Bas-cam hall, the ROTC building and to the Ag¬riculture Campus. There they clashed withsome of the 1900 national guard troops thathave been called on campus. Gas was usedand 60 were arrested and 20 injured. Threehundred professors have cancelled theirclasses until the guard is off campus and“the college is empty” according to aspokesman for the United Front coalition ofradical groups.Neugarfen ReportTo Be Made PublicNorman Nachtrieb, spokesman for thecommittee of the Council, said yesterday,that the Neugarten Report on the positionof women in the University should be pub¬lished by the middle of next week.Nachtrieb received a copy of the reportlast weekend and xerox copies are cur¬rently being distributed among members ofthe Council. Since Tuesday, “the Councilhas been taking immediate steps to publishin complete form the report, according toNachtrieb.Dean of Students Charles O Connell saidthat at present the Council’s action on thereport would not be held up by the strike.“It all depends on the next five days,” hesaid.May 8, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7Radicalism“On strike; shut it down!”If you shout it loud enough and long enough, with enoughpeople chanting in unison, you get a feeling of immense solidarity,and that something momentous is going to happen. You get upfrom your seat, take a deep breath, run into the street, and findthere — nothing: quiet tree-lined streets and other exhiliratedpeople with nothing to do.The frustration mounts and eventually erupts in cynical de¬pression, or in mindless action. We had a distasteful example ofthis the other night when students broke into the Adlai StevensonInstitute for International Affairs and tossed furniture into thestreet.We see little point in indulging here in the standard anti-vio¬lence editorial, clucking our tongues at the misguided radicals whogot carried away. The full measure of the stupidity and meaning¬lessness of violence can be easily seen in this case, which has noinjured persons to lend a touch of serious tragedy to the basicfoolishness of the action.Some students threw furniture in the street and twenty min¬utes later other students put it back and vacuumed up the brokenglass. We find the analogy between the “eviction” of Adlai Steven¬son Institute furniture and recent evictions of Contract BuyerLeague members to be not only fallacious but insulting to the Con¬tract Buyers League.What is important about Wednesday night’s action is that itgrew directly out of the five hour mass meeting that preceded it,feeding on the anger and frustration that anyone who attended thatmeeting felt. The meeting was an exhausting and agonizing ordeal,and is the product of a strike that urges students to stay awayfrom classes to end the war without giving them the slightest in¬dication of how cause and effect are to be linked in this case.The number of students who walked out when the speakercalled for “less talk, more action,” is a measure of the failure of *this strike. The attitude of the students who raided Robie House(“let’s discuss whether we want to hit Adlai Stevenson Institutefor ten minutes before we go over there and do it”) reflectedthe anguish that many students feel, that something must be done.Yesterday’s strike activities were slightly better organizedthan Wednesday’s and Tuesday’s — cars were organized to leafletshopping centers — and we hope that the strike’s organizers aregetting the idea that effective action does not materialize out ofcheers and slogans.We find it infuriating, however, that strikers are calling fora strike until the end of the quarter and offering no concrete sug¬gestions of what to do during this time to end the war in SoutheastAsia. Yes, we know we’re supposed to use this time to “shut theUniversity down,” but somehow this doesn’t represent to us away of ending the war. It’s very fine and stirring at a meeting tohear about the capitalist-imperialist war machine operating on cam¬pus, but how many students really believe that a strike directedagainst the University is going to help end the War?The rhetoric about shutting down the University stirs theblood only so long. The painful truth of the matter is that most ofthe students on this campus are liberals and are ashamed to ad¬mit it. We play at being “more radical than thou,” but stand onthe other side of the street and shake our heads when the furnitureflies out the Robie House windows.It’s about time we faced up to the responsibilities of ourwords. If we don’t really believe that Adlai Stevenson Institute’sfurniture belongs in the middle of the street, or that the President’shouse should be burned, we have no business chanting “on strike,shut it down” or applauding wildly after radical statements toshow our neighbors how hip we are. It is worse than useless, it isirresponsible.The strike that most students here want is a constructiveone, aimed at the war. The point of it is not to close the universities,but to free our time for action aimed at ending the war.S/The Chicago Maroon/May 8, 1970 AnalysesBy Steve CookThe strike has been ireandering along fora week now. It is growing quickly in thegraduate schools. Workers at the compu¬tation center and the library have voted tojoin the strike in support of the students.Faculty groups in the College and the grad¬uate schools have voted various resolutionscondemning the expansion of the war andthe murder of the Kent students.The impetus for the expansion is comingnot from the steering committee it¬self, however, but from individuals andexisting organizations upset over the na¬tional situation. The steering committee,after the fiasco Wednesday night in Mandelhall, seems to have lost much ability tolead the strike.Their proposal, that the University beshut down for the duration of the quarter,was acceptable to the whole body. Themeeting never did successfully resolve thequestion of whether the proposal should bepresented in the form of a referendum orimmediately implemented by the strikecommittee.The result of the super-hassle was thatthe steering committee lost a substantialamount of support from the the action-ori¬ented radicals and the moderates inter¬ested in building greater campus supportfrom the strike.Thursday, after the exhausting five hourmeeting the night before, a cloud of pur¬poselessness descended on the campus. Af¬ter the strike, what?The strike is no goal in itself, that muchis clear. Nixon is not going to end the war ifwe shut down for the quarter. Perhaps it isimportant to join in the national collegeprotest, but that is a much more significantevent if students across the country decideto do something more important than stay¬ing out of classes.There is a sentiment here to shut downthe University because it is a part of the"The best reason forstriking is that it freesstudents and faculty toconvince the nation toend the war and the re¬pression."war machine. At best, that is a difficultpoint to prove. Certainly, the University isinvolved in government-related research.Yet, we have no ROTC, we are out of IDA,Levi has signed the statement against thewar presented Tuesday to Nixon. Will shut¬ting down the University do anything initself to end the war?It is a time for a more meaningful com¬mitment than staying away from classes. Ifpeople are truly serious about ending thewar, and about changing the basic natureof our society, there are things to do. Thebest reason for striking is that it frees stu¬dents and faculty to convince the nation toend the war and the repression.The strike committee apparently is notable to provide direction beyond extendingthe strike. Various groups have on theirown been canvassing neighborhoods in thecity. A telegram petition is now flooding theoffices of congressmen and administrationofficials in Washington and Springfield.Law students and medical students areworking to build support for the Mann billin Illinois.Perhaps those efforts won’t work. Theyhave been tried for the last five years ofthe war and certainly they haven’t hadmuch effect. But the growing frustrationover what to do when there are no easyalternatives must not be allowed to developinto senseless self-destructive actions. It istime to think hard, and a time for com¬mitment.Let’s move beyond the strike. The strikeis only a vacation if more substantial workis not done to end the war.Steve Cook, 71, is the Maroon’s associatenews editor. THE STRIKE: Students deat Kent State Universitytors, mass meetings werement of violence occurredby residents of nearby dot"fated their dissatisfaction with US milit?.XgdVforetei^|,rams to Congressmen and Sena-iTy ways this week. Signatures were. s.,. memory of the dead students. The only mo-if) discuss strategy, and a' vigil was> House. Damage was cleaned upfnesday night when members of SDS ransacked(Photographs by Steve Aoki, Jess By Mitch BobkinThe building of a student movementagainst President Nixon’s recent decisionsconcerning Southeast Asia and the incidentinvolving National Guard troops oncampuses all over the country is a necessi¬ty. Most campuses throughout the countryare already sponsoring effective and mean¬ingful actions that conceivably will have alarge effect on the possibility of federalgovernmental reform.These actions have taken many forms,both violent and nonviolent, but all havesucceeded in focusing the attention of therest of the country upon the three (nowfour) national demands — an immediatehalt to all military actions in SoutheastAsia, the freeing of all political prisoners,the end of military research on the nation’scampuses and the affirmation of the sancti¬ty of the nation’s campuses from NationalGuard troops.However, here at the University of Chi¬cago, action has thus far been futile andmeaningless. The strike has been partiallysuccessful, but the movement is breedingthe seeds of its own destruction throughfactionalism and disorganization.Coalitions are usually impossible groupsto control, especially when the groups with¬in the coalition have very divergent view¬points. Currently there are 12 groups in thecoalition that is planning the activities onour campus and their viewpoints rangefrom the often violent tactics of SDS andPL to the much more moderate groups likestudent government and the moratoriumcommittee.Obviously, these groups cannot be ex¬pected to agree on everything, nor can theybe expected to silence themselves totallyfor the good of the coalition. But whensome groups within the coalition begin toput their own beliefs, plans and suggestionsbefore the wishes of the majority of theother groups within the coalition, the coali¬tion itself begins to fall.This is the situation that now confrontsus. Most of the groups within the coalitionare in favor of nonviolent actions that willspread the cause of the student movementand make a long-range, effective actionpossible. However, SDS, IS and PL do notsupport this position and have tried withinthe last few days to push their viewpointupon the rest of the students on campus.The steering committee voted for a resolu¬tion and plan that was the consensus of thegroups within the coalition.However, many students thought that areferendum would be a better plan for theimplementation of the proposal. When thegroups who supported immediate actionsaw that there was no possibility of gettingwhat they wanted out of the mass meetingWednesday night, they walked out to formtheir own meeting and do what they wanted— specifically, the attack on Robie Houseearly Thursday morning. The specific ac¬tion taken by this group was nowhere nearas destructive as their boycott of the massmeeting.When groups that have committed them¬selves to a decision to act as a coalitionbreak away from that coalition becausethey can’t get done what they want to seedone, they can only be regarded as dishon¬est and unprincipled. How can unity everbe regained in such a coalition now?The morality of the SDS, PL and IS posi¬tion is also debatable. Many students feelvery strongly about Cambodia, Kent Stateand Nixon. Campus feeling is probablystronger on these issues than they havebeen on anything else for a number ofyears.All throughout this year, SDS, IS and PLhave been trying to focus campus attentionupon the Adlai Stevenson Institute, the ba¬sic imperialism of the University and theracist nature of the University, all to verylimited success. However, now that peoplefeel strongly about something, these groupsare hoping to divert that anger and frustra¬tion for their own ends. An action such asthis reeks of opportunism.If the factionalism on this campus is notenough to kill the strike and all further ac¬tion, the disorganization probably will. Any-Continued on Page ElevenMay t, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9 (*./ •Morgenthau Criticizes US Vietnam Policy“The problem is not in Vietnam; theproblem is in Washington,” said Hans Mor-ganthau, University professor of politicalscience to over 1000 students and facultymembers assembled in Mandel HallWednesday, the second day of the strikeagainst the escalation of the war in South¬east Asia.Morganthau and the other panelists, Ro¬ger Hilsman, former assistant US Secre¬tary of State for Foreign Affairs; HaroldHinton, professor of international relationsat George Washington University; andMorton Kaplan, University professor of po¬litical science, were heckled by some 25members of the Students for a DemocraticSociety (SDS), the Progressive labor party(PL) and the International Socialists (IS).The University Extension sponsored themeeting.The discussion was called to analyze thegrowth of US involvement in SoutheastAsia, and members of SDS, IS and PL saidthe night before the meeting that theyplanned on “having some action” at thediscussion.“The war is not only a mistake, but afailure,” leadoff speaker Hilsman said.He attacked President Nixon’s stand onthe Communist sanctuaries in Cambodia,noting that the US has sanctuaries inHawaii, Thailand and Okinawa and that a call for attacks on communist sancturieswas also a call for communist attacks onUS bases.“The war has been-a nationalist move¬ment feeding on needs for social reform,whose leaders happen to be communists.Military force is useless against nation¬alism,” he said.“Mr Nixon has rejected negotiations.Vietnamization is a decision to continue thewar, not to end it,” Hilsman added.Hilsman’s major point was that “thecommunist side is offering to the UnitedStates a settlement perfectly acceptable tothe American people, if only Mr Nixon willsend a high ranking representative toParis.”Hinton, who spoke next, said “A degreeof support for the Lon Nol government (thecurrent Cambodian regime) was necessaryunder the circumstances.”Hinton criticized the student strike,charging that students were “taking theline of least resistance by taking actionagainst faculties and administrators.”Asking “How many governments can we'let go down?” Hinton noted that the reasonsbehind Nixon’s decision were probably that“there were North Vietnamese in Cam¬bodia, and a meeting with Sihanouk by thecommunists under Chinese sponsorship.”Kaplan, who had been recently attacked by students because of his statements sup¬porting President Nixon’s policy in a Ma¬roon story last Friday, received the loudestheckling of the day.The longest sustained jeering againstKaplan came when he declared, “The dan¬gers the domino theory refers to are real.”Kaplan argued that not only does thethreat of communist take-overs exist inSoutheast Asia, but also that the Americaninvestment in Vietnam is already so highthat “it would be irresponsible for anyAmerican president to throw this in¬vestment away.”Morganthau, whose speech was greetedby standing ovations and loud applause,said that President Nixon’s speech an¬nouncing the entrance into Cambodia was“extraordinary” because it mentioned nei¬ ther the political situation ol Cambodia norPrince Sihanouk, the recently deposedCambodia ruler.“It’s not a question of preventing ourbeing humiliated; we are being humiliatedevery day in our own eyes because we be¬tray our moral principles,” Morganthausaid to cheers.“The issue is who shall govern SouthVietnam. Successive administrations haverejected the idea of a Vietnam governed bythe Viet Cong. The question is not failure orvictory, but how do we minimize our loss¬es?” he added.Questions and answers followed the pre¬sentations with questions asking about tac¬tics, imperialism and war research of mostimportance. The meeting was chaired by CRanlet Lincoln, dean of the University Ex¬tension.Cleanup Crew Replaces FilesGrads Differ on Strike RoleContinued from Page Fourity of law students, condemns PresidentNixon’s decision to send troops into Cam¬bodia and calls for Congress to requirewithdrawal of American military forcesand material from Cambodia within thirtydays and from Southeast Asia within eightmonths, and the denial of appropriationsfor military operations in Southeast Asiaafter December 31,1970.In the graduate school of education,classes have not been shut down. Howeverstudents are circulating petitions similar tothe anti-war resolutions passed by the fac¬ulty of the College within the school. TheMAT program voted not to support thestrike but plans to issue brochures con¬cerning “instruction in the world” to teach¬ers and the public. Students in the divisionwill participate in the mass march in theLoop on Saturday.WE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTERwith a rank ofDOCTOR OF DIVINITY"And ye shall know the truth and the truthshall make you free"John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who believe as wedo, to join us in the holy search for Truth. We believe thatall men should seek Truth by all just means. As one of ourministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for ex¬emption from property and other taxes,3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ec¬clesiastic powers.4. Seek draft exemption as one of our workingmissionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, the¬aters, etc., give reduced rates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinityand I.D. card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use whenyou wish to ordain others. Your ordination is completelylegal and valid anywhere in this country. Your moneyback without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send yourOrdination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND NOW TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHP.O. Box 1393, Dept. 66Evanston, Illinois 60204*:♦;« >>;< >i«;i >>;«>>:< »;♦;« »;«.;< »%»-« ft.;) >:»!•!« i!S!i >!5!i »!•!« tKi 1R1 »5>!i »!•!< t!TO/Ttrer Chicago Maroon/May &,'1970 There has been no cancellation of classesin the graduate Library School. Decisionsconcerning the strike have been left up toindividual instructors and students.Fifty students in the Divinity school,which has been effectively on strike formost of this week, met yesterday and votedto support the strike. The 50 decided to livein Swift hall over the weekend in what aspokesman for the “unrepresentativegroup” called “the beginning of a contin¬uous meeting to decide what our responseto the strike is.”A mass meeting of divinity school stu¬dents was called for this morning and a*student-faculty meeting will be held in thedivinity school Monday to decide furtheraction. Twenty-eight members of the divin¬ity school faculty have signed the petitioncondemning the Cambodian action.* Corned 3Lri7\1645 E. 55th STREET fs* CHICAGO, ILL 60615S Phone: FA 4-165? Continued from Page ThreeAfter the vote SDS members ran into thestreet shouting “Let’s go.” People startedtowards Kobie House, some running, somestraggling behind. Students arrived to hearthe crash of glass and see furniture beingthrown onto the street along with books andpapers. Most students looked on, some tell¬ing kids to “take it easy,” others stood bysilently. Less than five minutes after thefirst glass had been smashed, someoneshouted that the cops were coming from 57St; the crowd took flight and ran towardsthe quadrangles, but only one campus se¬curity car appeared, cruising slowly pastthe Robie House. Standing in a circle in themiddle of the Quads an impromptu SDSmeeting discussed what had happened.Meanwhile, moderate students from thestrike meeting and residents of Woodwardhad started moving the furniture back intothe building and sweeping up broken glass.By about 2:30 am, all the furniture was re¬stored. Sheldon Sacks, ’71, was leading a meetingon the first floor of about 20 students whohad helped clean up, while dean of the Col¬lege Roger Hildebrand stood by. The groupvoted not to let anyone into the buildingexcept security guards, administrators andpress in order to prevent further destruc¬tion. About 10 students and two securityguards spent the night in the building.Ted Rosner of SDS told the noon rallyyesterday that he had obtained two con¬fidential Rand Corporation reports on pros¬pects for oil in the mideast and prospectson agriculture in the Mideast and a reportentitled “Diplomatic Protection for USBusiness Operations in Peru.”A1 Weisman, public relations representa¬tive of ASI said “nothing is secret and noth¬ing is classified information at the In¬stitute.” He asserted that though this re¬port might support American interventionin Peru, he answered that the Institute alsopublished opposite views.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 Cohn A Stemahum Sc (danurosShopSEE THE NEW HONDA 350 AT AIRPORT HONDAPhone:767- 2070 Phone:767-2070AIRPORT CYCLE SALES4520 W. 63rd ST.CHICAGOPrices from $169.00 - Open Daily to 9 P.M. Sat to 4 P.M.r —.--1GEORGE WEIN Presents the 17th AnnualmvpoiT mumJuly 10,11, 12, 1970• We’ve changed the dates but not the concept •At Festival Field • Newport, Rhode IslandCannonball Adderley, Louis Armstrong, Don Cherry, MilesDavis, Vic Dickenson, Drum Workshop, Ella Fitzgerald, RobertaFlack, Pete Fountain, Dizzy Gillespie, Stephane Grapelly, BobbyHackctt, Chico Hamilton, Mahalia Jackson, Barney Kessel, AlbertKing, Herbie Mann, Les McCann/Eddie Harris, Punch Miller,Joe Newman, Jean-Luc Ponty, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, BuddyRich, Sonny Rollins, Nina Simone, Clark Terry, Leon Thomas,Ike & Tina Turner, Joe Venuti, Tony Williams and others.For information and ticket order formsWrite . . Newport J.v/ Festival, P.O. Box 329Newport. Rhode Island 02K 10 <* Whatever you do ... do it in style,in a Palm BeachChances are your favorite warm weather suit will bea Palm Beach. They put more tailoring savvy intolightweight fabrics than anyone else. Witness thissuit of 100% Dacron in blue cord. Regular, short &long sizes, $75.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsScholars Sponsor Seminar on Changing AsiaP An a a«*«i a/I A niAM aa««1 J i. _ i « _The Committee of Concerned AsianScholars (CCAS) will sponsor Teachers In¬stitute on “Teaching about Asia at the Sec¬ondary Level” May 8 and 9 at the LutheranSchool of Theology, 1100 E 56 St.CCAS was founded two years ago at themeeting of a national organization, the As¬sociation of Asian Studies. According to aCCAS member at the University, SandySturdevant, graduate student in the historydepartment, the association refused to takea stand against the US involvement in Viet¬nam. “They said they were concerned but could not take a political stand. We said‘bullshit,’ and formed CCAS.”The group has members at majorcampuses where professional training anddegree work is given. On the west coast,CCAS is working on combating the illegalthreats of deportation of Japanese and Chi¬nese by the government and against warshipments to Vietnam.The University group consists of gradu¬ate students, junior faculty, and one seniorfaculty member. Undergraduates havehelped in planning the conference and it is hoped that more will become active nextyear, Sturdevant said.The conference, also sponsored by theChicago Council on Foreign Relation andthe Cook County Board of Education willhold a registration period tonight at 7 pm atthe Lutheran School of Theology.Following registration, Dr Akira Iriye,professor of history at the University willlecture on “Asian-American Relations.” Aquestion and answer period will concludethe introductory meeting.The session on Saturday will feature aFaculty Members Call For ExtensionA proposal calling for the extension of thestrike through next week and for the orga¬nization of workshops has been presented tofaculty members of the College Council.Although the Council did not discuss theproposal, several professors have addedtheir support to that of the original 19 co¬sponsors.The proposal was first presented at thenoon rally by Kenneth Prewitt, assistantprofessor in the department of political sci¬ence.Peter Novick, assistant professor in thedepartment of history said that other facul¬ty signatures will be solicited.Besides calling for continuation of thestrike and workshops next week, the state¬ment also allows for further discussion oflengthening the strike through this quarterand for cancellation of classes for twoweeks next fall to allow time for campaign¬ing for peace candidates.No Changes inRegistrationAccording to dean of undergraduate stu¬dents George Playe, the College does notcontemplate making any changes in pre¬registration procedures because of the cur¬rent anti-war strike on campus.Playe said that students will have threeweeks in which to pre-register, and a fourthweek in exceptional cases, adding that theymay do so at any time during that periodthey wish.Applicants for a BA degree in historymust file for it in Gates-Blake 206 byWednesday. They are also required to takeon exam May 20, from 1:30 to 4 pm. The statement reads, “The present crisisrequires knowledge and action that will re¬pudiate the Nixon administration’s policiesof war abroad and repression at home.“We abhor the wanton destructiveness ofthe undeclared war in Indochina and weare alarmed at the consequence that warhas for our domestic political life. Thebankruptcy of the war policy is directlylinked to the increasing corruption of ourconstitutional procedures and consultativeprocesses.“The media have been intimidated, stu¬dents have been slandered, beaten andkilled. Academic freedom has been dan¬gerously narrowed. University scholars andadministrators have been denounced andgovernmental pressure has been brought tobear on University trustees and regents.“Universities have been among the firstinstitutions attacked because their studentshave been in the forefront of the protestagainst these things.”According to the plan two types of work¬shops will be held. The first, politicalstrategies for ending the war, will includeselection and election of peace candidates;introducing anti-war resolutions on city andstate ballots; building up anti-war opinionamong the general public; challenging theconstitutionality of the war; criteria forevaluating the testimony of experts; use ofmass media to influence anti-war senti¬ment; identifying and pressuring key offi¬cials; role of research in sustaining or com¬bating the war.The second type of workshop, strategiesin defense of the university community,will include: analysis of legislation affect¬ing surveillance on campuses and exam¬ination of techniques being used to stiflestudent dissent; appropriate action toebminate the use of physical force oncampuses; use of government funding of higher education as a method of inducingpolitical quiescence; impact of current po¬litical leadership in creating a contestwhich sustains political acts against univer¬sities and intellectuals in general.Political science students have organizeda meeting today at 1:30 pm to consider theproposal. series of concurrent panel discussions onChina, Japan, India and Southeast Asia.The afternoon panels will focus on impe¬rialism, communism, modernization andnationalization.Concluding the program will be a generalmethodology workshop dealing with the in¬troduction of Chinese, Japanese, Indian andSoutheast Asian studies at the high schoollevel.CCAS here is concerned with the creationof the Center for Vietnamese Studies andPrograms at Southern Illinois University.According to Sturdevant all research at thecenter is conducted at the request of theAgency for International Development(AID) which finances the center. “Aca¬demically the center is lousy and its thrustis immoral,” Sturdevant said.The center is recruiting students who areveterans of the Vietnam conflict togetherwith South Vietnamese for “post war re¬construction.” “That means Americans willbe around after the war which must meanwe are going for a military victory,”Sturdevant said.Movement Future JeopardizedBy Factionalism and DisorderContinued from Page Nineone who has sat through any of the massmeetings or rallies held so far deserves amedal for service above and beyond thecall of duty. Never have their been suchpoorly organized, disjointed, boring ralliesand meetings. These activities, instead ofpromoting student enthusiasm and interest,only turn off large numbers of people.The mass meetings so far have been per¬fect examples of how not to run a meeting.When a crowd of over 1000 meets, parlia¬mentary procedure is the only way to runthings. However, neither of the mass meet¬ings so far have had chairman who seem tobe at all familiar with strict parliamentaryprocedure. Because of this, disorder hasreigned. At one point Wednesday night,there were over seven motions on the floorat the same time and the chairman calledfor a vote without specifying what wasbeing voted upon. How can any meaningfulaction come out of such a situation? Howcan anything at all get done?Also, small cliques seem to be trying tocontrol all of the meeting through annoyingtactics. Wednesday night, there were over50 people on the stage at all times. Becauseof this, many who did not agree with these people politically were hesitant before ap¬proaching the stage.Also, heckling and shouting have beenvery frequently used at these meetingswithout the chair making it clear that orderand quiet must be maintained. Wednesdaynight, one student called every speakerwhom he disagreed with a “pig” and a“bastard.” His remarks were audible tomost of the audience and many consideredthem to be in bad taste, but not one wordwas said to try to silence him.If the meetings and rallies are not betterorganized soon, many people are going tostop coming to them out of sheer boredom.After all, five hours of “bullshit” can onlybe tolerated once or twice.The future of the strike, further campusactions, and the entire movement at thisUniversity are now in jeopardy. Unless thefactionalism and disorder stops and stopsranks of the “quiet schools” that we all areso glad we didn’t go to; this will happen notout of choice, but it will become an inevita¬bility.Mitch Bobkin, ’72 is the Maroon’s man-aging editor.Rightful Dissent Must Be Expressed: PercyContinued from Page SixBut I wouldn’t want this used in any way to cam-ouflauge, to cover up or suppress rightful dissent, whichmust be articulated and must be expressed.It has been said that the University of Chicago doesnot prepare its graduates for public life but rather for anacademic life. How would you react to this statement?And how did the University influence you towards politics?My predecessor, Paul Douglas, was from the Univer¬sity of Chicago, and on the faculty, so the last two Sena¬tors occupying this seat have been both University of Chi¬cago men.I think probably even more difficult was my entry intobusiness because the school has, for many years in thepast, been dominated by people who have gone on in aca¬demic life and professional life.I do not believe that my experience at the Universityof Chicago necessarily acclimated me towards politics.I don’t ever recall engaging in campus politics assuch, or actively getting into politics until after I returnedfrom the Navy in World War II. It was another experienceentirely that brought me into politics, not my academiccareer.You must realize that at the time I went to the Uni¬versity students couldn’t care less about what was goingon. We were the product of a deep depression, we were inthe midst of that depression still, economics dominated.Self-survival was the primary thing. I waited tables atBurton-Judson eight hours a day, three meals a day my first year, and when you’re doing that, you’re not muchconcerned about political affairs.What motivated you to go from business into politics?I became more concerned as to how relevant thethings that I was doing in business were to the primaryinterest that I had and to the problems of our time.As a businessman, I found more and more of my timegoing into civic affairs, into voluntary assignments in theEisenhower administration, both in government as well aspoltics, and my interest gradually turned.I soon found myself reading international news, do¬mestic news, political columns ahead of the business col¬umns, and I realized that I had to have a complete changein life in order to have a sense of being where I felt theaction really was.And after all, I had been with one company for 25years, and I felt I was getting into a rut.What aspect of your undergraduate life here im¬pressed you most about the University?I was there in the Hutchins regime. I had the Hut-chins-Adler original course directly under the two men.The greatest impression the University had on me wasthe survey courses and scholars who led the courses: thegreats of our time, whether it was Gideons or whether itwas the top people in the fields of mathematics or physi¬ology, such as Anton J Carlton, all taught College courses,and this of course deeply impressed me when you canhave contact with and study under the men who wrote thetexts you were working with. Steve AoklSenator Percy ponders a question during conferencewith students Tuesday.May 8, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/11iiiiLETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONStanford FireThe undersigned are the only two Univer¬sity of Chicago faculty in residence thisyear at the Center for Advanced Study inthe Behavioral Sciences, and the latest ofmany University of Chicago faculty whohave profited from similar experience. Wewould like our colleagues and students toknow that the following statement wassigned by all the Fellows in residence.At dawn on Friday, April 24, 1970, a cal¬culated attempt was made to burn to theground the Center for Advanced Study inthe Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, Cali¬fornia. Fires were set at four differentsites; had they all taken hold, most of theCenter would have disappeared, along withthe lives of two college students asleep in acaretaker’s cottage. Good fortune, timelydiscovery, and expert firefighting pre¬vented the worst. But the actuality was badenough: to speak only of measurable loss¬es, ten studies were completely burned —one-fifth of the total — with varying de¬struction to the work of as many Fellows.The worst losses were suffered by a dis¬tinguished Indian scholar; a major portionof his anthropological field notes, accumu¬lated over a professional lifetime, was de¬stroyed.The Center is both a place and an idea.As a place, it sits on a hillside, overlookingthe campus of Stanford University. It isbuilt on Stanford land, but has no other con¬nection with Stanford or any other in¬stitution. As an idea, it has had a vital andenduring impact on the work of more than700 scholars from the United States andplaces in all parts of the world who havehad the opportunity to spend a year there,45 at a time, in independent study and re¬search. Established in 1954 with the aid of aFord Foundation grant, the Center has of¬fered Fellowships to social scientists andhumanists — sociologists, psychologists, ■anthropologists, philosophers, political sci¬entists, students of history, of literatureand of language, to name just a few — whoare concerned, each in his own way, withthe behavior of man and society. The Cen¬ter enables each scholar to pursue his cho¬sen field of study, in the company of col¬leagues, without constraints of any kind.The Center indeed, has come to epitomizethe free search for truth in the study ofman, the best traditions of scholarly com¬munity, interchange and dialogue.We do not know whose hands set thesefires; we do not know whether the Centerwas a singular target, or a symbolic one, ormerely a target of opportunity. What isclear is that the destruction at the Centertook place in an atmosphere where physicalviolence, with cumulative effects, has in¬creasingly become an accepted instrumentof political and social action. The burned-out studies and charred remains of booksand papers at the Center bear witness thatthe consequences of violence are perverse,uncontrollable, and destructive of the life ofthe mind. Edward C Dimock, Jr.Professor, South Asian LanguagesSol TaxProfessor, AnthropologyElection TacticsJudging from the Tuesday night meetingin Mandel Hall and the Wednesday noonpanel “discussion,” the bulk of Universitystudents reject efforts to engage in violentor destructive activities. Basically theywant some means to express their disgustwith the immorality of Nixon’s SoutheastAsian policy and his ligitimization of vio¬lent repression of political dissent and thesubsequent murders that resulted at KentState.This is an election year. Every represen¬tative and one third of the senators are vul¬nerable to political pressure. These politi-ocos de read their mail and do act inaccord with what they think public opinionis. In other words, they want votes and ifthey know that they cannot be re-electedand thus lose their power, they will act toget your votes by voting the way you tellthem to.There are five million college students inAmerica with, roughly speaking, 10 million12/The Chicago Maroon/May 8, 1970 parents. If just half were to write to theirhome district US representative and theirtwo senators, the volume of mail wouldgreatly reduce the influence of right-wing,pro-war letters. Tell your congressman thatyou will not vote for him in the upcomingelection and that you will work actively forhis defeat if he does not act immediately toensure US withdrawal from a) SoutheastAsia, b) Cambodia, or c) Vietnam (yourchoice) before the November election.Write your parents and ask them to do thesame. Total cost: in time, 30 minutes; inmoney 24 cents for stamps.At the Tuesday night rally in MandelHall, only about 30 people said they hadwritten their congressmen about the South¬east Asian War. Apparently the other 98per cent of the people there haven’t eventried this tactic yet. Obviously you cannotsay it won’t work based on past experience.It hasn’t even been tried on a massivescale.Riots, closing down the University, killingpeople will not help the anti-war cause. The“working class” at this point would likenothing more than an excuse to break theheads of university students and their “in¬tellectual” professors. To further alienatean increasing proportion of the Americanelectorate from the anti-war, anti-Nixon-Agnew cause, is in the long and short run,suicidal.We need a massive outpouring ofmail to our representatives and senatorsshowing that most Americans oppose theSoutheast Asian War and the currentlypracticed treatment of peaceful demonstra¬tors and that we will withhold our supportat the polls if they will not work to end thiswar immediately. Such a mailing muststart somewhere. The University of Chi¬cago is as good a place as any. So writethose four letters today. Come to the massstrategy meetings and help get this sort ofproposal adopted and carried out. Let’s getstarted now.Dan Lauber, 70"Work Together"Many people within and outside the Uni¬versity community share the piercing out¬rage and grief felt by students on this andother campuses in the turn of recentevents. Everyone concerned is wracked byhis emotions and torn by frustration in thesearch for effective action — action thatwill express feeling and stem the ruinousresults of irresponsible foreign policy andirresponsible repression of dissent at home.There can be no certainty about the effi¬ciency of action, but inaction guaranteesthe continued unresponsiveness of the gov¬ernment to its citizenry. There are, how¬ever, grave dangers to just causes in ran¬dom, mindless, and irrelevant actions.Random actions are clearly symptomatic ofweakness. Mindless, brute actions turn offthe message behind them. Irrelevantactions alienate potential, thoughtful adhe¬rents because the lapse in reason is as per¬ilous, in its way, as the open use of vio¬lence, in its way. Extravagant, plainlyimpossible demands upon government aresure to be ineffective because they can bedismissed as the work of “bums,” “kooks,”and other assorted wild life on today’scampuses. Such demands are also in¬effectual because there is no realistic wayfor us to impose sanctions if demands arenot met.The time for “doing one’s thing” is past.The shock of mass demonstrations is nolonger poignant, except for the partici¬pants. We are all in this together and wemust learn to work together for the restora¬tion of democracy to our country.The humane society envisioned by theradicals of our campuses must be based onan abiding and deep belief in the potentialfor reason and for good that is in everyman. Without this belief the ideal is a taw¬dry and hollow sham.Words and actions must be relevant tothe content — manifest and latent — of thecrises. The manifest content is, obviously,war abroad and repression at home. Thelatent content is the unresponsiveness ofthe government, based upon the myth ofthe “silent majority” — the deliberate ero¬ sion of democracy and the democratic pro¬cesses.What is needed is a massive, continuous,and actual teach-in-and-learn-in to recap¬ture and revitalize the voice of the peopleand government by and for the people.What is needed is a massive, unremittingappeal to the decency and responsibilitywithin us. Protest should be shaped so thatit also is a clear expression of the will ofthe citizens.One simple, unsophisticated beginningmight be patterned after voter registrationactions, the positive fruits of which aregradually becoming apparent. A nation¬wide coalition of students and like-mindedothers could undertake a door-to-door cam¬paign in communities all over the countryto help and to urge citizens to make theirvoices known to the President, Vice-Presi¬dent, and Congress. People should be en¬couraged to undertake an unremitting pres¬sure on all branches of the government inrelation to all aspects of our crises. Theseexpressions can be in the usual form of let¬ters and telegrams to the people involved,visits to appropriate representatives in gov¬ernment, or the exercise of any kind of po¬litical, social, or economic clout. Whateverthe form of this pressure, help can be of¬ fered to carry it out by the clear, unclut¬tered identification of the issues at stake,by models of ways to express opinions, bysimple information about who should bereached. This can be the use of educationand intellectual and personal discipline inthe Hutchins’ tradition.Students are particularly suited to thiskind of action. Their profound dedication tothe ideal of the humane society, combined,as it frequently is, with sweetness and com¬passion, is moving and inspiring. Whenradical and pseudoradical rhetoric isturned off, true communication is quicklyachieved, for there are many concernedpeople who want what students want andwho are searching for decent ways to maketheir wants known. Let us all find ways towork together within and outside the Uni¬versity to make our voices count.Bernece K SimonProfessor, School ofSocial Service Administration"Manipulation"As some who attended the mass meetingWednesday night, we were shocked by theContinued on Page 14TWOMONTHSFREE30 extra absorbentplaytexself-adjustingtampons: 9>(l Xtf iWe’ll send you the $1.69 size of Playtex1first-day™ tampons for only 504.You get more than two months’ supply free.rhere’s no other tampon like3laytex. Outside, soft and silky,not cardboardy. Inside, so extraabsorbent, it even protects on/our first day. That’s why wePali it the first-day tampon.In every lab test against theaid cardboardy kind, the Playtex tampon was alwaysmore absorbent. Actually 45%more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regulartampon because of the uniqueway it’s made. Actually adjuststo you. Flowers out, fluffs out,protects every inside inch of you.Once you try it, we thinkyou’ll love it. That’s why we’remaking you this special “twomonths free” offer.So go ahead. Use the couponand get more than two months’supply free.'Based on the average woman's use of ten tampons p**r — o^th.Here's 50p for my more than two months’ supply of Playtex tampons.Send in a plain brown wrapper, please.□ Regular □ SuperName.(please print)Address.City. .State. -Zip.Mail coupon to: International Playtex Corporation, Dept. 550, P.O.Box 2205, Wilmington, Delaware 19899. Offer expires August 31,1970. Please allow four weeks for delivery. ^tPlaylex is the trademark of International Playtex Corp., Dover, Del. C 1969 International Playtex Corp.Studs Terkel Links Life Past and PresentBy Carl SunshineDelving into h;<? experience with people,Studs Terkel mused about the present andits relation to the past Tuesday night in theLaw School auditorium.Long time master of a daily interviewprogram on local radio, and author of twobooks on the depression, Terkel presentedsome excerpts from his taped interviewsand many insights into famous and not sofamous characters.Describing President Nixon as “a sleezyused car dealer mental midget,” Terkelcommented on the killing of student demon¬strators at Kent University: “If human lifeis of no value in a rice paddy or in a blackghetto, of what value is it at Kent?”Terkel attended law school at the Univer¬sity in 1931, but didn’t finish, explaining he “went to law school dreaming of ClarenceDarrow and woke up to see Julius Hoff¬man.” Nevertheless, he feels the youth oftoday have learned a great deal frompeople like Judge Hoffman and Mayor Da¬ley in his 1968 Democratic convention.“These two did not spare the rod and hencespoil the child —” except for the few whohave totally “flipped out” under their harshschooling.Feeling that the present can only be un¬derstood through a good knowledge of thepast, Terkel described several incidentsfrom the depression. Those in power now,he said, are a product of the depression’suncertainties. Hence their great concernfor material things, security, law and orderaccording to him. He has greater hopes fortoday’s youth, raised in an environment of relative plenty and concern for the morespiritual qualities of life.“How many young steelworkers knowtheir own history today when they condemnpeople in the ghetto for not making it ontheir own?” Describing the 1937 shooting inthe back of ten union organizers by Chicagopolice and other violent union con¬frontations, Terkel pointed out that no onetoday has made it on his own.“The American dream has always beendream and nightmare at the same time.”From genocide against Indians, to brokefarmers using rifles against their mortgageholders in the draught days, to poorpeople’s protests in the depression, Ameri¬can society has always been marked byviolence and protest. The difference, atleast in the depression was that thenHarpo, Chico...Hitchcock dormitory, as part of its cul¬tural program is presenting “Horse Feath¬ers” and “Monkey Business” Sunday, May10 at 7 pm at Mandel hall. Tickets, $1, willbe sold at the door. On Monday, May 18 at 7pm two more Marx Brothers films will beshown, titles yet to be announced.Proceeds from the film festival will gotowards a planned free rock concert some¬time this quarter.SoftballThe strike reached the softball fieldThursday when Shorey House refused to de¬fend its share of the college house redleague title.Although rated as three to one underdogsby local odds makers, Shorey had alreadybeaten the team it was to play, Tufts North,earlier in the regular season, 10-3. CaptainSteve Brandt of Shorey explained that if themembers of the team were willing to strikeclasses to protest American involvement insoutheast Asia, they ought to, and indeedwere, not going to play softball in the Uni¬versity’s intramural program.Shorey’s refusal to play gives Tufts, lastyear’s college house champions, the rightto advance to the quarter final round in thecollege championship. Tufts plays Hitch¬cock Monday, the winner playing Flint IInext Wednesday for the right to face thefraternity champions.The fraternity championship is as yet farfrom being decided. Psi U has four gamesto play between today and Tuesday. Threeleagues have ended their regular play. Thedivinity school, Bramblebushers and Math¬ews teams have advanced to the finals. Ka-rass and the Penguins have to play off fortheir league title.TennisThe tennis team extended its winningstreak to three, easily defeating HarperJunior college 7-2 Saturday. Singles vic¬tories by Darius Baer (6-2, 6-4), FrankDrobbot (6-0, 6-0), Allen Friedman (6-1,6-2) and John Rosenbloom (6-2, 6-1) led theway to the team’s seventh victory of theyear against two losses.Captain Tom McCroskey suffered hisfirst loss of the season, bowing 6-4, 6-4 toBill Von Boekman. The Harper captain is aformer Illinois state high school doubleschampion. The slow surface seemed to holdback many of McCroskey’s hard serves,and Boekman put his ability in hitting off-spead and spin shots to good advantage.In its previous two matches the team de¬feated Marquette 5-4 and upset tennis pow¬er DePaul 7-2. Playing at Milwaukee, thenetmen had to forfeit two matches becauseof illnesses but still came out on top. AlexTerras pulled an arm muscle in the secondset of his singles match but came backstrongly to take the third set 6-1, winningthe deciding match.The team had a surprising easy timeagainst DePaul at Stagg Field Wednesday,April 30. McCroskey led the way with athree set victory in singles and teamed with Drobbot to crush their opponents 6-1, 6-1.Friedman clinched the meet with a come¬back victory in singles. After splitting thefirst two sets, he fell behind 3-0, then finallyrighting himself to sweep the next sixgames to take the set and the match.Baer continued undefeated in singles,winning 9-7, 6-0. Rosenbloom also won insingles and teamed with high school team¬mate Dan Rosenhouse to take their doublesmatch.DePaul, coached by all-time internationaldoubles champion George Latt, has tenplayers on tennis scholarships, but did notappear to be nearly as strong as last year’ssquad.The team’s next match is tomorrow atStagg field against IIT at 10 am.RugbyThe University rugby team was knockedout of the mid-America cup tournamentSaturday by the Illinois Valley team, 6-3.Regulation time ended in a 3-3 tie, but awinner was needed according to tourneyrules, and the Valley team scored first in asudden-death, “seven-a-side” playoff.Seven-a-side, or “sevens,” is a variationof the game played with seven men insteadof the usual 15. It is fast and wide open, andthe scoring usually comes quickly. The Uni¬versity team will have to improve its sev¬ens play before May 24. At that time theywill host the first Midwest sevens tourna¬ment on Stagg Field.The tourney loss was the first since lastspring, and was, according to one teammember, “appropriately suffered at thehands of a rural club which Chicago hadEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editors: Mitch Bobkin, Con HitchcockNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociators: Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula(Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondellkSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Gl«*r> P«J*Good sell, Gordon Katz, Susan Left, 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 daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices In Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60*37. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, lit. Subscribersto College Press Service. both helped somewhat to learn the gameand had brought into the Midwest Union.”Meigs and MannA massive statewide campaign in supportof a new state bill that tests the con¬stitutionality of wars in Vietnam, Cam¬bodia, and other undeclared wars was an¬nounced Wednesday at a news conferenceat Meigs Field.A delegation of Illinois businessmen willact as spokesmen for the ad hoc campaigncommittee before flying to Springfield in aneffort to meet with Governor Ogilvie to en¬list his support of the bi-partisan bill, whichprovides that no Illinois serviceman “shallbe required” to serve abroad in an armedhostility that is not declared a war by Con¬gress.Appearing at the Meigs Field news con¬ference were John Tittle, senior partner,Stein, Rose and Famham; Howard Conant,president, Interstate Steel Company; AlanSaks, president, Sax-on Paint SupermartInc.; and Pen Pekin, president, Ben PekinCorp.The bill, introduced by State Representa¬tive Robqrt E Mann, is similar to a lawrecently enacted in Massachusetts andsigned by the State’s Republican governor.The Mann Bill is co-sponsored by nine otherrepresentatives.«Business ShutdownA day-long Hyde Park business shut¬down is being organized for Wednesday,May 13, to demonstrate businessmens’ op¬position to the expansion of the war.Students will canvass store owners andbusinessmen for participation in the strike.The area affected will extend from CottageGrove to Lake Park and from Hyde ParkBlvd. to 59th Street.Students willing to work for the shutdownshould report to the table on the quads la¬beled “Hyde Park Business Shut-Down” orcall 645-0800 ext. 3755 and leave their name. “people were not afraid of the ragged men,because there were so many ragged men.”Terkel sees the job of the University “torelate the book and life. I’m not puttingdown Melville, or Joyce, or Dostoyevsky,but knowledge is not a one way street —there’s the book and the street.” Affirmingthat teachers must learn from their stu¬dents as well as visa versa, he said “thereis top down knowledge and bottom up.”In response to a question whether modemtimes were worse than ever before, Terkelanswered, “I’m amazed and astonished bythe young — the most ethical, the most hu¬mane, ever.” The gap between the goodguys and the bad is “not of the calendar,but of the spirit. The old and the young arebeautiful. It’s the flacid middle” where theproblem lies.Just as Galileo moved the Earth from thecenter of the Universe, Terkel analogized,“we’ve come to a time when no one societycan be the center of the Universe.” Withthe splitting of the supposedly unsplittableatom, all aspects of man and society havesplit, and we have to decide if we’re goingto put them back together in a bomb or anew peaceful combination. “The time hascome for a coalition — of everyone.”In the face of “the horrible waste of our¬selves, of our energies,” in Vietnam, andthe recent escalation Terkel still expresseda basic optimism grounded in his years ofexperience with people from street gangs toworld leaders. “Everyone has his own wayof talking — the crazy poet in him” thatonly needs understanding and respect tobring out the best in each of us.Terkel’s interview program may beheard every weekday at 10 am on WFMTradio.STUDS TERKELWFMT Announcer ExtraordinaireFriday, May 8 Sunday, May 10HILLEL: "Traditional Jewish Law and Conscien¬tious Objection to War," Hillel House, 8:30 pm.FLICK: "Toni," Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:30pm.PLAY: "Marriage of Heaven and Hell," RockefellerChapel, 8:30 pm.THEATER: "Waiting for Godot," Lutheran Theo¬logical Seminary Auditorium, 55th and University,8:30 pm.LECTURE: Joseph Burchfield, 'The reaction ofcontemporary geologist to Kelvin's ideas on the ageof the earth," Hins Laboratory room 101, 4 pm.LEAFLETTING: Those interested in leaflettingworking class factories and communities against warand imperialism meet in front of Kent Hall, 2 pm.PROTEST: Against Indo-China War sponsored byHPKCC, St. Paul's Church, 50th and Dorchester,8 pm.BLUEGRASS: Balfa Brothers Cajun Band, Quan-trell, 8:15 pm, students $1.LECTURE: "Resistance to Imperialism in WesternUganda," by Edward Steinhart, BE 102, 3:30 pm. RELIGIOUS SERVICE: "Fear and Faith," Rev.Parsons, Rockefeller Chapel, 11 am.RIDING: UC horseback riding club on Sundays,for info call Laura, x3259 or 667-1862.MARX (BROTHERS): "Horse Feathers," and"Monkey Business," sponsored by Hitchcock dorm,Mandle, 7 pm, $1.PLAY: "Marriage of Heaven and Hell," see above.THEATER: "Waiting for Godot," see above.FLICK: "Simon of the Desert" and 'The ImmortalStory," Cobb, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.HILLEL: Israel Independence Day celebration,4 pm; "The Israeli Writer in a Time of War,"7:30 pm.Monday, May 11Saturday, May 9 PLAY: "Marriage of Heaven and Hell," see above.DISCUSSION: UC Baha'i Fellowship, Ida Noyes,7:30 pm.PLAY: "Marriage of Heaven and Hell," see above.THEATER: "Waiting for Godot," see above.BACH: All Bach concert sponsored by MusicalSociety and Fota, Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm. Tuesday, May 12DOCUMENTARY: "Shadows on the Mirror," pre¬sented by the Educational Psychology Student Associa¬tion, 126 Judd Hall, 11:30 am.May 8, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/13LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page Twelveextreme resemblance to the lamentedDemocratic Convention.A bloc of extreme elements were con¬sistently trying to maneuver and railroadthe body of students and high-handedly en¬trench themselves in control of the meet¬ing; they did their best to limit discussionon the undemocratic premise that if every¬thing is handled by the steering committeethere is less confusion, and they reiteratedthe ploy that procedure and rules (in¬cluding free discussion) “obscure basic is¬sues.”One of the key issues was that of a refer¬endum (as opposed to several hundred de¬ciding for the University community), andAFTER THE CHAIR HAD JUDGED ITPASSED, the matter was dragged out andskirted by a small group on the podiumuntil another eventual vote (a squeaker ac¬cording to the official count)! This was another obvious ploy, an effortto wait for the opposition to trickle away —on the premise that whatever clique isaround may make a decision overruling aprevious vote. The disgraceful procedurewas accompanied by misleading “ex¬planations” from a biased chair.We are truly pained that the more ex¬treme components of the New Left exhibitsuch open contempt and mistrust of theirfellow students, and hypocrisy which en¬ables them to self-righteously trample thedemocratic rights of other individuals; onthe other hand we are encouraged by thefact that so many students refused to ac¬quiesce to such opportunistic abuse of pow¬er and overt obstructionism.At about 11:27 pm, the remnants had thegall to take A THIRD VOTE ON THE REF¬ERENDUM, changing the rules as theywent along. That is the typical tantrum ofthe infant who doesn’t get his bottle, and sufficiently exposes the disregard and fa¬naticism of worthy successors to the HitlerJugend. Edmund Meltzer 72Bill Parker 72Stephen Froikin 73David Kandel 73Tomio Anderson 72Ann Rae Heitland 72Wegener DefendedAs a graduate student on Ideas and Meth¬ods and a student of Mr Wegener, I wouldlike to respond to Jerrold Schwaber’s let¬ter.Regarding Mr Wegener, my experiencehas been the opposite. He has been avail¬able on short notice. I have found that hiscriticism shows a complete understandingof my program.I know that he has thought about what Ihave been doing and that he has been very helpful providing direction in my researchI think that he will be a great Master.Concerning the Committee, I think thatMr Schwaber has been making himself outto be an unsuspecting dupe. No one on theCommittee has ever told me that the basicsequence of courses which Mr Schwaber re¬ferred to would solve life’s problems.I have on the contrary been remindedagain and again that new problems, prob¬lems of inquiry, demand new solutions. Thetools for analysis which are present are notwhat is read which Mr Schwaber seems tothink.The tools are suggested by the reading,and Mr. Wegener and the other members ofthe Committee are always quick to remindthat “this is only one way of doing it.” Ithink that Mr Schwaber’s expectationswould be out of size for any intellectual en¬deavor.John GubbinsSUMMER INBERKELEYSpend your summer vacationwhere it ail started, picking up somecredits or just grooving on the cli¬mate, the people, the Bay, and theCity (San Francisco).Cal offers two six-week ses¬sions for credit, beginning June 23.We offer super-low-cost, co¬ed, co-op housing, owned and op¬erated by students, for students.Room and board $112/session,if you share the work; $159/session,if you don't.write for more information:UNIVERSITY STUDENTS'CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION2424 RIOGE ROADBERKELEY, CALIFORNIA 94709BERTONEBODYFiat balances new engine,independent suspension, radialtires, superb handling to make thisthe Pace Car for the 70's!Fiat 850Sport RacerannaRECRN6120 S. WESTERNOPEN SUNDAY471-0900 You don't needinsuranceprotectionfor your car(if you liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’ IIwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971sentryjTINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization14/The Chicago Maroon/May 8, 1970' od.r.e'Xt x The time has cometo take a realistic lookat yourself...If you’re about to get your degree, it’s time toask yourself some penetrating questions —thekind of questions many people never reallyface up to.Are you more interested in people, in things orin abstract ideas? Are you willing to make mean¬ingful commitments to other people as well as toyourself?It is worth thinking about. We at InternationalHarvester also continue to critically examine oureconomic and social responsibilities. We are grow¬ing in the United States and in 166 other coun¬tries because IH products are making an impor¬tant contribution to a better life.Trucks — from the scout utility vehicle to giantoff-highway specialized vehicles.Farm & Industrial Equipment —from gardenand farm tractors to loader-backhoes.Construction Equipment—from in-plant load¬ers to powerful eartli scrapers.Iron & Steel—from cold-finished bars to specialalloy steels.Gas Turbines—from stationary generators tomobile power units.Aerospace — from specialized space vehicle com¬ponents to complete systems.To help you plan your future, we invite you tostop in at your College Placement Office for a freecopy of our book, "Your World ot Opportunity.INTERNATIONAL HARVESTERAn equal opportunity employer.Jits»•£»« -■*«£#*:(Maroon Classified Ads)I DON'T MEAN TO FRIGHTEN YOU, BUT THEY MEAN TO KILL US ALLSCENESCANDLELIGHT is Nice; Jazz byCANDLELIGHT at the NIGHT¬CLUB.The Green-Door has the N.Y.Times!P^ceeds from Marx Brothers FilmOrgy pay for hig name band atFREE outdoor dance May 30 spon¬sored by Hitchcock.You Can Meet Anyone on AnAmerican Airlines Astrojet . . .Senators, Noble Prize Winners, TheNew York Mets, And Perhaps,Northwestern Co-eds. Do You NeedAny More Reason To Fly American?If so, Call Campus Rep Jim Sack684-4667 And He'll Give You Some.See Choreography By AdrienneBecker. Broadway Wanted her ButBlacktriars has her.BALFA BROTHERS CAJUN BAND!Fri. May 8, Cobb Hall, 8:15 p.m.$1.50. Students, *1.00.Plan Ahead. TRUE GRIT May 30.UC Yavneh is Sponsoring A KosherFood Program Next Year AnyoneInterested Contact Bob Uptoin x3769or Pick Up Form At Hillel 5715Woodlawn.Horse Feathers — Sunday TPM. Bach Cantatas 8:30 May 9 Bond.A good IDEA!! After the FlicksJazz Alive or how you take it;By CANDLELIGHT with EGGROLLS.Chamber Concert 3:30 May 10 Quan-trell.Marx Brothers Film Orgy startsthis Sunday at Mandel Hall 7PM.Student-Faculty Recital 3:30 May 8Mandel FOTA.Don't miss Senaka Senanayke's ex¬hibit at the Bergman. He is oneof Celon's major artists and hasInternational repute.Chicken? Whose Chicken; Where?Air-Conditioned Chicken at theBANDERSNATCH BANDERSNATCHWriters' Workshop (PL 2-8377).Marco Polo Travel. 2268 S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.Eat Dinner at the BANDERSNATCHAir-Conditioned; Southern FriedChicken a la Cliffs.Monkey Business — Sunday 7PM.Dance, Sunday May 10th 8PM atBonhoeffer House, 5554 S. Woodlawn.Rock 8< Soul Band 8< Booze. WANTEDJohn Wayne Does His Thing InTRUE GRIT Sat May 30 COME!!!Kosher Food Feasibility Survey ForNext Year Being Undertaken Ques¬tionnaire Available at Hillel.Minnette's Custom Salon 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress mak¬ing; clothes copied A designed.See Choreography By AdrienneBecker. Broadway Wanted her. ButBlackfriars has her.Groucho, Chico, Harpo, Zeppo. Sun¬day May 10 at 7PM in Mandel.' CRAFT CO-OP now open Mon.-Frl.1-5, 3rd fl. Blue Gargoyle.FOTA 70May 8Student Faculty MusicalRecital 3:30 Ida Noyes LibrMixed Media Happening8:30 Bergman GalleryFOTA FREES THE MIND.Notice: To all those who feel Cheapdigging the music and scene atTHE NIGHTCLUB because they'repaying only .15! Note: Eat More-Buy More—Pay More!!Bach Cantatas 8:30 May 9 Bond.Student Faculty Recital 3:30 May 8Mandel FOTA.Phonographic Literature Free! 11Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8< Tape Decks Save***on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.Sensitivity Training with The MasterPro-Dr. Jack Gibb — June 12-14 —$25 . 684-1122 or 643-8538.Bach Cantatas 8:30 May 9 Bond.Chamber Concert 3:30 May 10 Quan-trell.Don't miss Senaka Senanayke's ex-hibit at the Bergman. He Is oneof Celon's major artists and hasinternational repute.A complete Khayal and perhapsShort thumic will be sung In theevening of Classical Indian vocalMusic at 7:30 outside Bond ChapelFOTA '70.World Unity is the goal TowardWhich a Harassed Humanity IsStriving. Will you Help? UC Baha'i Fellowship. Ida Noyes, Monday,7:30PM. POSTPONED UNTIL MAY 12:Paint-in light show, jazz trio inmixed media happening at BergmanGallery.OLDE ENGUSH MUSIKEallegro oonspirito will sing Madri¬gals, Rounds, and Other GoodeMusike in Bond Chapel, May 8, at8:00 PM. FREE.FOR SALEMercedes — 1959; model 150, stillruns — not too hot but fun forcar freak. Will separate. Cheap.Call HY3-3508.1963 MG Midget H.T.-Covt. Excl.Cond. *500.00 Call 523-6255 or SeeOfficer R. Greig Ida Noyes Between5:30 and 11:30.Mustang '66; Excellent ConditionAlrcondition, *880 Call 288-0790.TANDBERG 64X Stereo Tape Decklike new. *300. 955-2187.CANON "7" 35mm camera. F 1.4like new. *200. 955-2187.Golf Clubs — Wilson Staff, Woods,Irons — $125 Call 363-6170.Furniture — Sofas, Chairs, Bed,Rug, Etc., Etc. 752-7689.The Green Door has the NY Times.SALEH Shure M91E Cartridge Reg*50 Now Only *25 With Trade ATMUSICRAFT. For Lowest Priceson all Components. Call CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 Save $**.65 Sunbeam Tiger V' Good Cond.Roll Bar-Snow Tires. Must Sell*1100 — Best Offer. 815-729-0747.Our thing is your ring -$htkm*b••Nf ’fWfttftS »Ot JO TfAtS119 N. Wabash at Washington(NOLKWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA Need 1 Airconditioner For CasementWindow. Should Be RelativelyCheap. Call Joel at x3263.Refrig Wanted. Call 493-7218.HOUSE FOR SALE4 bedrooms 2 full baths 2 car ga¬rage large garden. 955-5916.SPACERmmt wntd Big Apt near Lakeon 53rd Own rm & bath 65/mAval June-Sept 30 + opt. 363-3546.REWARD for info leading to ac¬quisition of 2- or 3-bdrm apt. be¬tween 55th and 59th best. Call324-6048 eves.Rmmates for Ig HOUSE. Own roomNear campus. Next yr and/or Sumsublet. *50/mo. 493-3721.Fern, roommate wanted, to shareapt with 2 girls at 53rd 8i Dor¬chester. *45. 324-6536.5405 Woodlawn, turn, 2Vi rms, 1person, utils incl, MI3-2760 or 667-5746.Pvt Room for Female In LargeHyde Park Apt. Available June 1.*50/Mo. Call 324-0093.For a lady: Large art-nouveauishsittlng-bedrm., huge closet, wklymaid A linen ser. Share bath withme. Alas no cooking. $15. Call 643-2814 8-10p.m.Male Grad Wanted. Sum A Nxt YrLarge, clean apt. *55 752-6151.F. RMT.Wd. 568iDrr.AnyLengthTimeAskForSylvia667-5695 Own Room.FEM RMMT WNTD^*59/mo. 643-3224.Roommate WantedFor Apartment 2 Blocks From MainQuad. From June and Thru NextYear. Call 955-8155 After 6PM.Fern Rmmate Wanted: 56 8, UnivNext Yr; 3 BR, *66. Call HollyMl 3-0800 Ext 260 Rm 28.l Bedroom Available in Quiet, Air-Conditioned 3 Bedroom and 2 BathApt. *67/Month. 5114 S. Harper.752-1469.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.HP Apt Wanted as of June 4Rms*135-50. Call Marc Eves 226-3310.SUMMER SUBLETMale Grad Rmmt Wanted. Own RmLarge Furn Townhouse, Nr CampusSummer 8,/Or '70-71. *50/Mo. 955-7436.Sublet — 4 rms, $150/Mo„ nearcampus 8< Shopping; option for nextyear; selling furniture. Call HY3-3508.Bossass apt. sublet thru Sept 3bed prime location balcony likenew/ chMP 955-3971.Sublet Beautiful Aircondit. Apt June15-Sept 15 Call 324-0794.Summer Rental to ResponsibleCouple 6/17 to 9/5/70. Washer, Dry¬er, Air Cond. Parking, Small Gar¬den — Care for Our Cat. $250mPayable in Advance Plus Utilities.667-5688.—Teachers Wanted-SOUTHWEST TEACHERSAGENCY1303 Central N.E.Albuquerque, N.M. 87106Our 94th year serving SouthwestEntire West and AlaskaMember N.A.T.A, FREE RegistrationI 1 I 1 I ’f ’ I ■ I ‘ I ' I ' I 1 I1 CHARTS/GRAPHS.Leroy lettering(Near campus)363-1288MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNname, address, phoneCHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre<j.... —. —H1—> H— —r—.J - 1.. . 3 Bedrooms 2 Bathrooms, Sunporch,Furniture, 4 Blcks From Campus*150/Mo. Possible Fall Option, 363-3436, 53rd8<Greenwood.Summer Sublet: Spacious, cleanfurnished four room apartment.Various goodies (e.g. air condi¬tioner, television . . .) Near shop¬ping, campus. Call 493-5858.Summer Sublet Two Bedrooms FullyFurnished, Including T.V. and Stereo.Very bright with large Sun porch.Very reasonable Rent. 1370 E. 53rdCall 955-7759.Summer sublet for 4 with stainedglass windows. Two blocks fromcampus. 324-1999.Summer Rmmt(s) Wanted to ShareLarge, Inexpensive Hyde Park Apt.3 Bedrooms. June-Sept. 643-7219Eves.5Vi Bright cool large rms: newlydecor. 2 bdrm sunporch. *145/mo6/15-9/15. 52-Univ: 324-7731.Ideal Summer Apt l or 2 PeopleMid-June-Sept Balcony Stereo TVNear Campus $100 643-0140.Roommate Wanted for Summer Sub¬let. Mid-June to Mid Sept. One Blkfrom Campus Own Room. Fossoption for Next Year 493-3037.3Vi Rm Apt from June 15 to Sept15 Cool, Cheap, Furnished, 58th 8>Blackstone: 643-3088, eves.HAPPYBIRTHDAYMOM!!Beautiful Apt to Sublet 2 Bedrooms,Kitchen, LR, and Foyer 53rd&Ken-wood June Thru Sept *135/Mo 324-3623 Windows, Porch Etc.Apt to Sublet Summer 8 Rooms SiSunporch 51 8. Kimbark *200/Mo752-5416.Spacious 4'/2 Rms Air-Cond *150/Mo6-15 to 9-15 Must like plants: 643-3987 after 6pm 54th 8, Harper.SMRSBLT 3 Rooms Furn TV 1 BlkFrom Campus 955-1022 Weekdays.For Summer 1 Bedroom Apt. Air-Cond, Lake View. Swimming PoolDoorman *165 Call 288-0790.SUMMER SUBLET, 6/18-9/3 6rmapt, 57th 8< Kimbard, 1 blk frmcampus, shopping, playgd. 3 bdrms.<1 air-cond) dn rm. Ivng rm, etc.Well-Furn, Sunny, encl grassy backyard. PL2-8391.Sublet June 15-Sept. 4 Rm FurnApt 5 Blks From Univ. Aircond inSedrm. *117/Mon or $250 For Sum¬mer. Call 493-0862 After 5.Beautifully Furn. 3Vi Large RmsCanpted, Freezer, Cool. 363-4555.Great for Married Students.Fern Rmmate Wanted: 56 8, UnivSum/or Next Yr; 3 BR, *66. CallHolly Ml 3-0800 Ext 260 Rm28.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.Summer sublet w/option for Sep.53-Kenwood 4 rooms 324-4457.Wanted: Summer Subletters for 3-bedroom apartment close to Kim¬bark Plaza, June 15-Sept 15. *179.Call 684-8412.4 rms June 20-Sept 1. $200 total.Ideal for Couple. 684-0753 Eves.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 8i/or '70-71. *67/Mo.493-3018.55th 8< Univ furn 5rms+2 SunprchJune-Sept. *160/Mo. 493-0143.EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 SiAtet. June-Sept. Great apart 57th8, Drexel. Two females wanted for3-person apart. Own rooms. *57.50/person. 955-2582.Fern rmmate wanted beg. May-July. Summer Only or longer.LOVELY E. Hyde Park. *70, furn,own rm. Pref grad stud, or workinggirl. M13-0800, x3891, ask for Martha.Subl Air Cond 1400 E 57 for 3. AlsoSpace Nxt Yr! 667-6977.Large 2'/»rm bsmt appt furnished54th 8i Woodlawn, $110/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 & Dorch'r phoneJohn or Brian 667-7086.3'/j Rms. South Shore Nr Lake ACampus Bus. Reas. June or July.Cell 375-1452.l'/jrm bsmt appt furn bright sepentrance nr univ, 288-3197.PEOPLE WANTEDRACHEL 9 mos needs a babysitterthis summer June 22-Sept 4 Yourhome 731-4709 eves.MUSICIANSLAKE COUNTRY STRING BANDget us while still cheap. Bluegrass8. country. Suitable for all occa¬sions. HY3-3508.Now is your opportunity to hearthe fabled PEPPERBANDE in con¬cert. Beethoven, Beatles, Square¬dancing, pie and water fights, peace,love, happiness, and more. 5:47pm,today, in Woodward Court. PEPPERTO THE PEOPLE.SERVICESStudent Wife Babysits in her home,5107 Blackstone, 288-7319.3rd year undergrad in generalstudies in humanities needs summeremployment. Would like to do re-serch Call x3777 Room 501 Pleaseleave Message.Radios looked at Free, Fixed Cheap.Call 684-6340 Evenings.TYPING-STENO-THESES-PL 2-4280.Rm. 508. Sl/page for theses.LOADERS4 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.IBM-Exec.Qualified Typistwanted. Average lOhrs/wk. Appli¬cant's conven. when/where to work.643-4335, Mrs. Deutsch.WANTED FOR NEXT YEARMAROON ASSTBUS MANAGERNeed Inspired, Creative, But Indus¬trious and Mercenary Individual,wilting 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. NEED NEW HOMES6 week old kittens — free 324-9358.CAT Must Go To Animal WelfareIf no takers. PLEASE!! CALL BU8-6610 x2216. Leave Message.Wild Cat's Kittens 624-5957.LOST AND FOUNDGrey Tame Cocatoo w/OnangeCheeks Owner Call x3759.PERSONALInterested in Sailing and Learningto Sail? Call Paul 324-1683.About those notes that dude fredhas been leaving in Ida Noyes 8,Elsewhere. Forget it — false 8<misleading advertising.BACH AT BOND: SECOND AN¬NUAL All Bach concert. Sat. May 98:30 PM. FREE.American Does Not Fly To Skokieor Las Vegas, But If Your SummerVacation Plans include Spots OtherThan These Dens of InternationalSin, Call Campus Rep. Jim Sack684-6667 For Info.NUDIST TRAVEL CLUB for singlewomen, etc, describe yourself, send35f, MYW CLUB, P.O. Box 1342,Aurora, III.The Green Door has the N.Y. Times.Give a mother to Groucho-HorseFeathers 8< Monkey Business.BACH AT BOND: With Judith Nel¬son, Robert Heinrickson, Dale Mac-urdy, Martha Haney, Bill Wallace,Beth Hagens, Dan Golden, Lindaand Alan McConnel, Judy McKay,Jerry Karnow, Ron Wilson, JudyGray, Carla Bak.Wor« over a mom with the MarxBrothers Sun. 7PM Mandel $1.BACH AT BOND, corrt: Bill Cav-ney, Kathy Bailey, Tammy Lovell,Sheldon Pine, Margaret Murata, Nor¬ma Barsky, Ellen Harris, JerryTroyer, Wendy Rickert, Wes Ward,Bob Holst.Relieve the tensions of the strike —AAARX BROTHERS FILM ORGY —5/10, Mandel Hall $1.See Choreography By AdrienneBecker. Broadway Wanted Her ButBlackfriars has Her.Only *1 for TWO Marx BrothersFilms — Sun, 5/10 Mandel 7PM.Some Sound AdviceSave $ On Stereo Components atMUSICRAFT. Save $20.00 On Gar¬rard; Save *170 on Scott Receiver;Save *50 on AR 3A Spkr. On Cam¬pus Bob Tabor 363-4555.To Me: Keep up the gaunt work.A complete Khayall and perhapsshort Thumic will be sung in theevening of Classical Indian VocalMusic at 7:30 outside Bond Chapel.FOTA '70.Chamber Concert 3:30 May 10 Quan-trell: FOTA.See how Groucho runs a collegeHorse Feathers — 7PM SundayThe only way to describe HorseFeathers is that its Monkey Busi¬ness — 7PM Mandel 5/10.POSTPONED UNTIL MAY 12:Paint-in light Show, jazz trio inmixed media happening at Berg¬man Gallery.Don't miss Senaka Senanayke's ex¬hibit at the Bergman. He is oneof Celon's major artists and hasinternational repute.Marx Brothers on Mothers Day.FOTA FREES THE MIND.MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.SH0RELAND HOTELSpadal Rates lorStudent* and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available forparlies, bonquefs, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call H. FingerhutPI 2-10005454 South Shore DriveMay 8, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/15Hold upyour local gasstation.It you've got n hit of larceny inyour heart, you’ll love theRenault 10.You see, tt yets 35 miles to thegallon.And as tar as gas stations areconcerned, that's highw ay robbery.So don't be too harsh when theboys at your local gas station acta little grumpy.In tact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suggest they get one forthemselves.After all, they might have a bitof larceny intheir heartstoo.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 giant-size fall-color postersby Americas #1 graphic artistThe first and only book ot poster* by the master of today's exoticand eclectic New Art. Included also is a concise biography, a sur¬vey of his work and a clarifying statement about the nature, quality,and significance of his art, and his astounding artistic vision. Thebinding of this giant 12" x 17" book is so arranged that any posteror posters, reproduced with complete fidelity under the artist'ssupervision, can be removed for framing without damaging thebook. 24 giant-size, full-color posters for $3.95 is a stone groove.Pick up on it... now. $3.95, soft cover; $9.95, clothbound. Limitededition of 100 copies, signed and numbered, $100. Now at yourbookstore. CROWN 419 Park Ave. South, New York 10016ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900CARPET BARNWAREHOUSENfw and Isrd CarprtsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs &. 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Illinois 60201or PHONE COLLECT 312/491-1740Choice Summer Departures Filling Fast!Should UCt have a kosher jfood service?Yavnehthinks so!Contact:Robert Upbin at X3769or Hillel - 5715 WoodlawntmtomxtMtoym&ymcmKymf-ymcmK'ymcmKi16/The Chicago Maroon/May 8, 1970 Imported Carof theYearRoad Test MagazineShouldn't youconsiderToyota Corona?Consider the no-cost extras. Like re¬clining bucket seats, nylon carpeting,vinyl upholstery. Consider the per¬formance. 0-to-60 in 16 seconds. Atop speed of 90 mph. Consider thequality control. Over 700 tests andinspections. Then consider the price.$1950*C0MPHITI0N MOTORS, INC.7722 & 7756 Stony IslandChicago, Illinois374-4555T1Q|Y|0|T1AJ MALE OR FEMALEIf you're sold IF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEon a Volvo, APPLY NOW FOR SUMMER WORKDRIVE A YELLOWwell sell you one. Just telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.1 [Wtfilkl II 5 Hour Service■ Bl imports i 16120 S. WESTERN I Furs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured Storagej Shirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-6933L 7:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRY•POE price. White sidewall tires, acces¬sories, options, freight and taxes extra.Number 24 Friday, May 8, 197The University and the Octopus* * ^*. . . and this is our urban renewal”The Case AgainstStandard Oilof New JerseyThis article was prepared by the New University Con¬ference, a national organization of radical graduate stu¬dents, faculty and staff who work in, around and in spiteof institutions of higher learning.DURING THE PAST WEEK, the New University Confer¬ence has been circulating petitions on campus protestingagainst the University of Chicago's involvement with theRockefeller-controlltd corporation, Standard Oil of NewJersey (SONJ). Now, with the invasion of Cambodia, thiscampaign takes on even greater significance since thewidening of the war means increased profits for SONJ.This petition campaign represents the first in a series ofactions by the People’s Coalition Against Standard Oil, acoalition including the Poor People’s Coaltion, the HealthCollective, CITIZENS Revolt Against Pollution, the BlackCoalition, the Chicago Women’s Liberation Union, theBlack Caucus of Standard Oil, the Chicago Fifteen, theNew University Conference and Chicago area students.Standard of New Jersey was selected as a target notsimply because of its visibility as the world’s second larg¬est corporation, not simply because of some “revolution¬ary romanticism” which strikes out at any available tar¬get. Rather, the Coalition has drawn up a detailed in-lictment of Standard Oil on the basis of extensive re¬search into the social, economic and political implicationsof “business as usual” at home and abroad. On the basisof these charges which demonstrate the social destruc¬tiveness of the profit-seeking corporate interest by Stan¬dard Oil, the New University Conference demands that theCouncil of the Faculty Senate urge the trustees to turnover the proxies for its 288,000 shares of Standard Oilcommon stock to the People’s Coalition for use againstStandard Oil’s imperialist and oppressive policies ifl timefor the stockholders’ meeting on May 13. A refusal to meetthis demand will constitute a continuation of Universitycomplicity in Standard’s exploitation of peoples at homeand abroad, a complicity which has already gone too farand must be stopped now.As the world’s largest overseas investor, with oper-j•“Daddy, what is eternity?”“Well, it’s the least amount of time necessary for Essoto leave.” ations in over 100 nations, Standard Oil of New Jerseysystematically plunders the resources and exploits the *peoples of the Third World. 82% of its raw materials and48% of its earnings come from foreign nations, locatedprimarily in Latin America and the Middle East. For ex¬ample, in Venezuela, the world’s largest oil exporter, Jer¬sey owns 37% of the oil reserves through its subsidiary,Creole Petroleum. At the rate the oil industry is extra¬cting oil, it will deplete Venezuela’s estimated resourceswithin thirteen years. The country’s dependence on oilrevenues (93% of export earnings, 63% of the govern¬ment’s revenue) in no way insures that the benefits fromthis plundering of resources is passed on to the Venezue¬lan people. The Creole Oil Company employs an in¬finitesimal percentage of the native population, having cutits native work force in half (from 9000 to 5000) in recentyears even as it increased its production. The high unem¬ployment rate, coupled with grotesquely distorted dis¬tribution of income, means that the people whose naturalresources are being exploited bear the corporation ontheir backs.Economic imperialism need not be direct; sometimesthe indirect forms do equally serious damage to those wholabor under its chains. Witness the effects of the Inter¬national Basic Economy Corporation (IBEC) linked toStandard Oil of New Jersey through their mutual domi¬nance by the Rockefeller elite. IBEC was set up afterWorld War II by Nelson Rockefeller to help “develop”Latin American economies (for whose benefit?). Its aimappears to be to gain a controlling interest in many sec¬tors of Latin American economies. In the case of Vene¬zuela, we find that IBEC used imported milk to lowerprices and force local competitors out of business. Oncethey gained control of the dairy industry, they raisedprices to 40% above the US price for the same product. Inthe name of “developing” local industry, this Standard-affiliated corporation has managed to stifle local business¬es and line its own pockets.Economic imperialism cannot stand alone but mustrely upon the protective military might of the state. In¬sofar as Jersey plays a major role in the US economy,and insofar as there exists an interlocking of elites be¬tween Standard Oil and the United States government inthe persons of Nelson and Winthrop Rockefeller, to nametwo obvious examples, the economic interests of Jerseybecome the military interests of the United States govern¬ment. Nationalist movements represent a major threat to Jersey’s interests, for nationalism leads to nationalizatioand anti-imperialist economic policies whch destroy pr:vate profits and threaten investments. Thus, by its natureJersey is interested in supporting governments friendly tUS businessmen which, in turn, tend to be reactionary an*repressive rather than nationalist and anti-imperialist. 1benefits directly from US military intervention in the pclitcal lfe of a foreign country, interventions aimed aleading or upholding repressive coups. Peru and Venezuela in 1948, and Iran in 1953 are excellent cases in pointJersey was a major beneficiary economically. But let inot be said that Standard Oil is ungrateful; it feeds th<hand upon which it, in turn, feeds. In 1965, it aided tinPeruvian government in making napalm to be use< ’against revolutionary guerillas. AND IN SOUTHEASTASIA IT IS THE SINGLE LARGEST SUPPLIER OIAVIATION FUEL FOR THE INDOCHINESE WAR. Ii1969 alone, it received through its subsidiary Humble Oiand Refining Company $291 million worth of defense contracts.In a statement by its recently retired Chairman of th<Board, Standard Oil of New Jersey went on record ai •being committed to creating a “salutary social environment.” All things in this world being relative, perhaps th(company’s definition of “salutary” would differ from tha’put forth by those who are its employees or by those wh<contribute to its profits by buying its products. Our idea oia “salutary social environment” for the American con¬sumer hardly calls for the type of “conspiracy to fixprices” for which Standard was convicted in 1969 alongwith seven other oil companies! Nor would the citizens oiSanta Barbara agree after the blow-out of the rig off-shorelast year which fouled their beaches and killed all formsof wildlife. Nonetheless, Standard is the single largest op¬erator off the coast at Santa Barbara ($217 million tolease 47 tracts) and was one of the first companies toresume drilling after the government had completed itsgeological survey. The chairman of its Humble subsidiaryhas vigorously protested even a suggestion by the govern¬ment that the oil companies be made to face absolute andunlimited pollution liability.Jersey’s participation in the co-operative endeavor tobuild an 800-mile pipeilne across Alaska is only anothersign of its persistent social irresponsibility. Ecologistshave argued that the heat from the pipes would causecatastrophic perma frost melting and upset the delicateContinued on Page Eleven wThestoryof therelationshipbetweenfoursensualpeople... An AIKRTO GRIMA1DI KndUl.n“FELLINI SATYRICCMScaoRbv&w ban/msion" [R}<gS&> United At listsLARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEN present KEN RUSSELL'S Nm ofD. H. LAWRENCE’S"WOMEN M LOVE"M COLOR by Deluxe UmtadArtafsA Chicagoland Showcase Presentation COMPLETELY RENOVATEDTHMTftf COAST TO COAST170 N. Dearborn St., mi-mm Tickets now by moil orat all Ticketron outletsincluding Ticket Central,Marshall Field andMontgomery Ward StoresDial T l-C-K-E-T-S forinformation.TheBustBook A step-by-step explanation of theprocess of arrest and detention:what will take place between theperson arrested and the policeofficer, practical ways of respond¬ing to the officer, various strategiesfor handling the case. This book isnot a substitute for a lawyer; it islegal first aid. $1.00The LittleRed Whiteand BlueBook A primer of protest, this shortbook of patriotic and revolutionaryquotations was written by C.Wright Mills, Huey Newton, Frank¬lin D. Roosevelt, H. Rap Brown,Abraham Lincoln, and HelenKeller, among many others. $1.00The GreatRebelCHE GUEVARAIN BOLIVIA By LUIS J. GONZALEZ and •GUSTAVO A. SANCHEZ SALAZAR.The first historical account of thedrama played out in South Amer¬ica, from the moment Che first setfoot on Bolivian soil in 1966 untilthe last of his guerrilla band fled inFebruary 1968. "A diamond-edgedaccount... penetrating and just.”—N. Y. Times Book Review $1.45PentagonismA SUBSTITUTEFOR IMPERIALISM By JUAN BOSCH. The formerPresident of the Dominican Re¬public documents a frighteningnew phase of American imperial¬ism now in progress, in which themother country exploits not hercolonies, but her own people in aneffort to perpetuate war. ‘‘A smash¬ing indictment that names namesand speaks bluntly... Bosch offersfacts worth pondering.”—Publish¬ers’ Weekly $1.25FidelCastroSpeaks Edited by MARTIN KENNER andJAMES PETRAS. A collection ofspeeches which the editors feelmost clearly define the Cuban"road to communism”. Thespeeches range from the one oncounterrevolution, given on Octo¬ber 26, 1959, to the 26th of Julyspeech of 1968. An introductionand individual notes help thereader to understand the circum¬stances under which each speechwas given. $1.45Now at your bookstore • GROVE PRESSPLArDCr’S ALL-NIGHT SHCWPERFORMANCES ERtOAT t SATUR0AT KXlOWING LAST BIGUIAR UATU6EMay 8 _Polar Ftadi - Swson Strata?THE TRIP May 9 IMalcolm McDoimIIIFMay 15 May 16Bala layosi • Baris K«bHDRAGILA & FRANKENSTEIN BATTLE OF ALGIERSMay 22Petor Sailors • Rian Starr May 23AriaGntfcriaMAGIC CHRISTIAN ALICE'S RESTAURANTMay 29 May 30Shm Tata m R—i Prioariu's ■Mw Mia Farrow-JohnCassavotasFEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS ROSEMARY'S BABY|June 5 June 6Laa Marvin - Am Brawn v* ^^WWa rrllynR m vital V.wT^RlvllTiff DIRTY DOZEN TRUE GRIT CINESTAGE EDENS 2 UA CINEMA 150641-5860 635-4445 . 325-5150 RESERVED PERFORMANCES — SEATS GUARANTEEDMONDAY THRU FRI. SATURDAY & SUNDAYAT 2:00, 7:00. 9:45 AT 2. 4:30, 7. 9:45You own the sunChild of Aquarius. Sun worshiper...Coppertone takes you back to nature with adeeper, darker, richer tan... faster.And there's a Coppertone tan that's justnaturally right for you. Eleven fabulousblends. Make Coppertone a part ofyour bag...beachbag, that is.Products of Plough. IncCoppertoneP.S./For a totally different sunexperience try new CoppertoneTanning Butter (cocoa butter andcoconut oil). Wild!2/Grey City Journal/May 8,1970* * •, T ijtheatreAll the World's a Swimming Poolencountered these in the last week, not to say the lastdecade.Once again Mr. Krieglstein, the director of the highlyexciting and creative production of Don Carlos earlier thisyear, has given us an imaginative and entirely originalpiece of theatre. In his decision to place his three men ona raft in the pool rather than on a stage, he has avoidedthe dangers and limitations of stylization through a mas¬terstroke of self-mocking “realism;” and if the “cleanaudience” which Mr. Krieglstein demanded ended up asweaty, sodden mass, this discomfort was more than com¬pensated for by the discovery of the truly extraordinaryacoustical properties of the room enclosing the pool. Theacting of the three principals — James Miller, Steve Chat-zky, and Lee Strucker — ranged on an individual basisfrom excellent to something better than adequate, withMr. Miller easily taking the honors; collectively the trioworked well in their pacing (only occasionally a littleslow), their gestures and mannerisms, and their ex¬changes.We are indebted to Mr. Krieglstein and the cast forintroducing us to Slawomir Mrozek.Marvin MirskyContributorsRobert Ashenhurst is a professor in the graduateschool of business and committee chairman of the inform¬ational sciences.Arthur Hochberg is a former student in the college.Marvin Mirsky is assistant of humanities in the college.Karen Nnssbaum is a former student in the college.Ted Rosner is a former student in the college.hgreyCITYjournslHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaffCulture VultureT. C. FoxC. F. Z. HitchcockFrank MalbrancheThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroThe Grey City Journal, published-weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, Invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.Godot Next Weekend“WAITING FOR GODOT,” Samuel Beckett’s triumph ofthe theatre of the absurd, will be presented to the campusby University Theatre next Thursday, Friday, Saturday,and Sunday (May 14, 15, 16, 17 at 8:30 pm in the audito¬rium of the Lutheran School of Theology. 55th and Univer¬sity.Directed by Roger Dodds, a fourth-year graduate stu¬dent and veteran actor and director in University produc¬tions, Godot is the major UT production of the springquarter. Refuge from the still-unrefurbished ReynoldsClub Theatre has been found in the Lutheran School,whose auditorium boasts an arena arrangement and ahydraulic stage as well as comfortable seats and carpet¬ing. The set was designed by Marylin Milberger andGregory Ferguson, the costumes by Sally Banes.The play concerns two tramps, Vladimir and Estragon,who are waiting for a man named Godot who promised tomeet them “by the tree.” Why they are waiting for himand what he is supposed to bring are both unclear, andbecome more unclear as the play goes on. The audience isabsorbed into the experience of waiting and develops akeen perception of the absurdity of the whole human en¬deavor. This absurdity is expressed in the play by varyingdegrees of humor.Acting the part of Vladimir is Bell Reddy, a graduatestudent in History, and Steve Mencher (seen recently asHenderson in We Bombed in New Haven and heardrecently as the piano player in the Wikler-Bernstein Cir¬cuit Vaudeville Show) plays Estragon. Lenny Kraft, ateacher at Kenwood High School, plays Pozzo, the masterof Lucky (Jim Miller — recently seen in the Bartlett GymPool). Danny Greenwald, a fifth-grade student at the LabSchool, plays the Boy.Dodd’s production of Godot had had two “preview” per¬formances, one at Mendel High School and one today atthe Lab School. Tickets for the campus production areavailable at the Reynolds Club Desk and cost $2.00.EVENTS DURING THE PAST WEEK would seem tomake a review of a play somewhat superfluous. However,the play in question — Slawomir Mrozek’s Out at Sea,directed by Werner Krieglstein, and performed twice inthe Bartlett Gym swimming pool — proved to be morethan a little relevant. Indeed, it is a parable for our times.On the evidence of this work, Slawomir Mrozek is acontemporary Polish playwright of considerable talent.His play is a classic satire in the form of a parable. Threemen are on a raft somewhere in the middle of the ocean,they have consumed their last reserves of food, and theyare hungry. How they got there is never considered; as sooften in life, it is a somewhat irrelevant question. Theproblem is what they will do about it. As “Fat,” the domi¬nant figure, succinctly puts it: “The question is not whatwe will eat, but whom!”The play is devoted to the resolution of this question.Mrozek deals with the problem by creating a metaphorwhich on one level is a portrait of, and an attack on, thePolish (and every) bureaucracy; on another level it is aparadigm of the totalitarian state; and on still a thirdlevel it is a compendium of social, institutional, and psy¬chological techniques and formulas for deceiving and per¬verting the populace — “brainwashing,” self-sacrifice forillusory social ideals, the political leader’s cynical manipu¬lation of the individual, the Orwellian processes #of“double-think” and sloganeering, the perversion of demo¬cratic principles (e.g., a secret ballot on who shall beeaten, preceded by electioneering and caucusing), and thecreation (in the name of morality) of a general state ofmoral anesthesia.Throughout, Mrozek lightens and enlivens his parablewith deft touches, puns and situational gags, comic char¬acterization, and the repeated intrusion of the absurd.Thus, at one point a mailman — swum by Jean Wiklercomes swimming up to deliver a telegram, then after abrief exchange turns around and presumably swims backto Poland. This scene brilliantly incarnates and commentson the peculiar “efficiency” and ultimate irrelevancy ofgreat social institutions and the civil servants which aretheir spawn. (At the same time, the scene demonstratesthe aptness and effectiveness of the set used in this pro¬duction.)Mrozek uses three characters in his play: “Fat,” thecynical, self-serving leader; “Medium,” the eternal pimp,cunning and weasel-like, who will sell his fellow for anyreason, and who confuses (or identifies) self-aggrandize¬ment with self-preservation; and “Thin,” variably theidealist, the intellectual, and the common man, whoseoriginal pragmatic humanism slowly disintegrates into areversal of values and finally into a desire for self-immo¬lation. Together the three clearly are intended as bothTHB1TRE political archetypes and representatives of the humanspectrum.The black humor of the ending not only sums up thesituation of the play but extends well beyond its confines:“Thin,” having been led or directed to the conviction thathis highest duty and the highest morality is to offer him¬self to be eaten by the others, insists that he be eatenwhen some question arises as to its any longer being nec¬essary. “Medium,” having discovered that there is, afterall, some canned food left which he would prefer to humanflesh, conveys this information quietly to -“Fat,” whopoints to “Thin’s” ecstatic readiness for immolation; hepatiently explains that now that “Thin” has reached thisstate it would be cruel and immoral to frustrate his read¬iness to be destroyed.The themes of the play: the brainwashing and mani¬pulation of the populace by its leaders; the priority ac¬corded ideology over human values; the “moral anes¬thesia” (Norman Mailer’s term in his novel Why Are WeIn Vietnam?); the irrelevance of society’s institutions tohuman needs; and the sense of helplessness in the face ofa runaway society which seems to have its own momen¬tum, its own demands and compulsions — where have weMay 8,1976/Grey City Jonrnal/3f♦♦♦i♦\tt♦t♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦|♦♦♦♦♦♦f♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ FOTA EVENTSMay 8 - May 12May 83:30Mandei8:30May 8,9,10,118:30Rockefeller ChapelS 8,9,10,16,17,18Chicogo Theological Seminary58th and University Student - Faculty Musical RecitalMixed Media HappeningBergman Gallery Paint-In, Light Show, McKinley Jazz Trio Postponed to Tues., May 12.William Blake's: The Marriage of Heaven and Hellpresented by the Cain Co. 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 Held8:30Bond ChapelMay 103:30 P.M.Quantrell9:00 P.M.Bond ChapelMay 117:30 P.M.outside Bond Chapel8:00Quantrellthru May 16Bergman Gallerythru end of quarterInstitute forComputer Research sM^^^^sfc********************* aMcJlcsMc*Cricket MatchU.C. Salisbury C.C. —vs— Winnetka C.C.A Concert of Bach ChoralsU.C. Musical SocietyAn Afternoon of Music For Woodwinds and KeyboardChamber Music Concert by U.C. MusiciansAn Evening of Organ and BrassThe University of Chicago Brass Ensemble and Larry Mendes, organAn Evening of Classical Indian Vocal MusicMrs. Saman Nodkami, vocalist. Suresh Borker, tabla. A complete khayal will be sung and perhapsa short thumic as well. Ptrsented by the U.C. Asian Arts Committee.'Macbeth'by Orson Wells, co-sponsored by Contemporary European FilmsStudent Art ExhibitSenaka Senanayake - one of Celon's major paintersStudent Computer Artoutside of Room C 113THIS IS THE OFFICIAL, UP-TO-DATE LIST: ALL EVENTSFREE UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIEDLOWREY PRIZE$25 FOR POETRYAND SHORT PROSEFor information contact Paul Preston(11026) or Jim Jubak(llOOl) pierce.Deadline -- May 15, 1970 MODERN DANCE CLASSESASOtofcOOMondoy * SotvrdoyBaWet, Rock A Joss fought.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. Sfot.Room 1902332 9923CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998‘aHoi what you need from o Sio]Tused 9x12 Rug, to a custom *▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants4f & Mill returns at a fraction of the1^original cost.J Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with thist FREE DELIVERY You don't have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip”. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦>Mum4/Grey City Jooraal/May 8,1878May Day: Report from New HavenDefendant Bobby Seale and attorney Charles GarryWHAT’S HAPPENING NOW in New Haven, Connecticut,is one concrete example of the repression coming down onthe Black Panther Party all across the country. In May1969, eight leading New Haven Panthers, plus NationalChairman Bobby Seale, were charged by police with mur¬dering Panther Alex Rackley. The police claim that Rack-ley was killed because he was suspected of being a policeagent; the Panthers affirm that he was a member in goodstanding killed by the police themselves in order to framethem. Bobby Seale was indicted on the basis of a one-dayappearance in New Haven, in which he gave one speech(similar to his one-day appearance at the Democratic Na¬tional Convention which led to indictment in the ChicagoConspiracy trial). For the past year the accused Panthershave been held without bail and have been brutallytreated in prison — one of the Panther women, who waspregnant, was beaten unconscious in her cell for saying"All power to the people.”For the past two years the Panthers have been organ¬izing control of police, free breakfast for children pro¬grams, and free medical care. They have concentrated onorganizing rent strikes and other actions to stop NewHaven’s urban renewal program and the forcible removalof blacks from their homes. This has brought themdirectly in opposition to the Yale University corporation,which has engineered the local Model Cities program toprovide a suitable surrounding for the University. For ex¬ample, New Haven recently built an expressway runningright between the black community and the Yale campusand, in the process, dislocating many black families.When the trial started last month there was strongsupport in the black community of New Haven and sev¬eral demonstrations outside the courthouse, despite policeharassment and a ban on demonstrations within 500 feet ofthe court building. Then in late April, Panther nationalofficers David Hilliard and Emory Douglas were arrestedin the courtroom for reading a message smuggled out tothem by Bobby Seale and summarily sentenced to sixmonths in jail for contempt of court. The Panthers re¬sponded by threatening Yale and its board of trustees(including New York Mayor Lindsay, instrumental in theframe-up of 21 Panthers in New York; McGeorge Bundy;William McChesney Martin, Chairman of the Federal Re¬serve Board; and numerous corporation presidents anddirectors) with violent retaliations. At this point the Yalefaculty, fearful of the black community and of the weap¬ons which it was known to possess, called for a morato¬rium on classes and a university-wide discussion of thePanther trial. At the same time (and while about 8,000Americans were being moved into Cambodia) convoyscame into New Haven carrying 10,000 troops — Army,Navy, Marines, Coast Guard, and National Guard.Out of fear of the black community and the upcomingMay Day demonstration called by the Panthers to protestthe trial, Hilliard and Douglas were summarily released,and Kingman Brewster, the President of Yale, came outwith a public statement expressing his anxious questionsabout the fairness of American justice for black revolu¬tionaries. After his release, Hilliard came to speak to theYale students, who expected him to thank them for theirstrike against the trial and their demand that the Univer¬sity turn over $500,000 to the Panther defense fund. In¬stead, Hilliard lambasted them for their hypocrisy, their( )BY ORDER OFTHE SUPERIOR COURTTHERE SHALL BE HODEMONSTRATIONS. PICKETS,PARADES OR THE LIKEIH THE COURTHOUSE121 ELM STREETHEW HAVEN,OR WITHINFIVE HUNDRED FEETIN ANY DIRECTIONOF THE COURTHOUSE J previous apathy, and their elitism — in effect, their rac¬ism. Hilliard told the white students that it was about timethat they came to realize and fight against the oppressionof black people in this country and Third World peopleabroad. Whereupon New Haven became more uptight thanever — half of the Yale student body left the campus forthe suburbs and businessmen began boarding up theirstores and calling for the Guard to protect them.It was in this context of fear and military intimidation(and as a result of the long history of conflict between theblack community and Yale) that the demonstration tookplace last Friday and Saturday. The foremost question inpeople’s minds at the demonstration was one the role ofviolence. Inherent in that was the question of the relation¬ship of white radicals and revolutionaries to the blackliberation struggle; in particular, the role that they shouldplay in a demonstration called by the Panthers to, as theysaw it, save the lives of their National Chairman and eightParty members.In effect, the May Day demonstration was a cross-section of the most militant whites in the country. Theword that went around before the demonstration was thatit would be another Chicago, only bigger, and people cameprepared for a confrontation more violent than Chicago.But they were unclear about how the Panthers wantedthem to act. Each of the speeches was a call to militancy,yet each also called for non-violence at the May Day dem¬onstration. Hilliard and Big Man from the Panthers andDave Dellinger from the Conspiracy all spoke of the needfor the white movement to become more militant anddisciplined, but ended by saying that discipline had to beimposed in New Haven to keep the demonstration non¬violent. The people there were confused —they had cometo New Haven to fight and then were told by their leadersto keep May Day peaceful. It seemed as if the leadersmay have been calling for a peaceful demonstration inorder to protect themselves in court and that the demon¬strators should have taken their cue instead from the mili¬tant tone of the speeches and the pre-demonstration pub¬licity.The only way out of this dilemma was to analyze thepolitical situation in New Haven. The government wantedviolence and went out of its way, through its show offorce, to provoke it. It hoped that a violent demonstrationin New Haven would take the public’s attention off of theviolence in Cambodia and set off a "strong jingoistic reac¬tion in support of the administration. Newspapers like theNew York Times warned in advance that violence wasbeing planned, thereby scaring a lot of people away fromthe demonstration and making New Haven more uptightabout it. It also served the purpose of encouraging thepublic to see strong repression as a justified defensivereaction to the demonstrators’ violence. In preparation forthe demonstration, thousands of troops were brought intoNew Haven to make sure that any violence quickly be¬came a massacre.But the Panthers and the black community of NewHaven were opposed to violence. They saw the possibilitythat a violent demonstration would provide an excuse forthe state to crush the black community and, by linking thenine defendants with the violence, to legally murder them. And tactically, an open confrontation would have beeisuicide.What violence there was came after a provacateuiinterrupted Jerry Rubin’s speech on Friday night, falseljclaiming that he was a Panther and that several otheiPanthers had just been arrested. Before and during Rubin’s speech other provocateurs moved through the crowdtelling people to be ready to move out soon to the Greeiand trash the area. When people did move out, they wenquickly pushed back by tons of tear gas and machinegunson the courthouse steps. Some people moved into the NevHaven business district in small groups, but found themselves outnumbered by National Guardsmen ringing althe major stores. By 1 am everyone had returned to therelative safety of the Yale campus.By Saturday everyone understood that the Pantherswere right about non-violence at the demonstration, espedally after realizing that it had been a provocateur whthad incited the violence of Friday. The energy people fellinside of them spontaneously turned to the organizationwork of planning the national student strike, which wa<proposed in a workshop on Saturday afternoon and became the focus for the demonstration. People felt tha'they had learned a lot in those two days about the relathe need to center the strike around attacking racismtionship between white and black revolutionaries and savwith the key demands being immediate US withdrawalfrom Indochina and freedom for all political prisonersparticularly Bobby Seale and the Panthers.The rocus on racism has been lost in the wake of thtmurders at Kent State. But this kind of murder has always gone on with impunity in the black communities othis country and in the Third World. If outrage is felt onljat the deaths of white students, then implicit in that outrage is racism.People left New Haven with a sense of victory — isense that a deeper political understanding had beeradded to their newly discovered militancy. People felt thathey didn’t have to flex their muscles at every demonstration they went to in order to prove their militancy — thattheir militancy was inherent in their politics. They sawthemselves as part of a national movement that’s growrand fighting and can’t be stopped.Eldridge Cleaver, Minister of Information of the BlaclPanther Party has said:We live today in a system that is in the last stagesof the protracted process of breaking up on a world-widebasis. The rulers of this system have their hands full.Injustice is being challenged at every turn and on everylevel. The rulers perceive the greatest threat to be thenational liberation movements around the world, parti¬cularly in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. In order forthem to wage wars of suppression against these nationalliberation movements abroad, they must have peace andstability and unanimity of purpose at home. But at homethere is a Trojan Horse, a Black Trojan Horse that hasbecome aware of itself and is now struggling to get on itsfeet. It, too, demands liberation.Arthur HochbergKaren NussbaumTed RosnerMay 8, 1970/Grey City Journal/5J b* ftr * *Interview with Senator Charles Percywould be fewer forces in Vietnam than even in Korea.How effective do you believe the current student strikewill be in changing the President’s policies on the In¬dochina war?To end the escalation, I think Congressional and citi¬zen and student protest can be effective if they are peace¬ful. No administration can fail to be impressed by thelarge meetings being held all over the country accom¬panied by private and public appeals by large numbers ofSenators and Representatives.However, nothing turns off this administration morethan violence and intemperate protest. In fact the admin¬istration builds its silent majority on distaste for violence.Gene McCarthy’s campaign prospered in New Hamp¬shire when his student campaigners were “neat and cleanfor Gene” and worked diligently within the system to winthe primary election. Had they burned down a building orcalled “Pigs” at the police, Gene McCarthy would havebeen defeated in New Hampshire.You have been criticizedt by members of your ownparty for failure to back the* President on, for example,his war policies and his Supreme Court nominees. Whattype of situation does this create for you?It does present some difficulties, but it would presentfurther difficulties for me to support positions or pro¬grams or appointments with which I disagree, just for thesake of party loyalty.I have no trouble living with myself if I vote myconscience and vote my own judgment regardless of theamount of opposition, but this is not a new experience forme.I was in business for many years and took, while inbusiness, positions that were unpopular with my businesscolleagues, such as the espousal of Fair EmploymentPractices Commissions which I fought for in the state ofIllinois; open occupancy; the policy of freer trade withoutquotas in a highly protective industry; sponsoring a publicservice telecast for the first time in the history of thecompany, commercially sponsored, in prime night time.These were highly controversial subjects whichbrought a deluge of hate mail on the company, but wecontinued that program for many years, and the con¬troversy in the end did not seem to hurt the company.How has your position towards the administrationchanged now that there is a Republican President ratherthan a Democratic one?It is always easier to criticize the opposition party.That’s the natural role of the loyal opposition in a politicalsystem. It’s more uncomfortable to criticize the adminis¬tration now, but I feel I would be untrue to the responsi¬bilities that I have if I felt they were wrong, and I did notcriticize them.I have freely done so in the Cambodian incursion, withthe appointments of Haynsworth and Carswell, with themoney voted for the ABM that I fought against and thevoting rights registration bill — I could not possibly sup¬port the administration bill, and we decisively defeatedthe administration’s position.What is your position on President Nixon’s Vietnam-ization program?I support the general thrust of it. I put my entireemphasis on speeding it up. I don’t think we’ll ever findour way out and they’ll ever assume in South Vietnam theburden of their own defense unless we simply give thatresponsibility to them. \ It’s like pulling a bandage off — it’s more painfulreally if you do it more slowly than if you just take theaction at the swiftest possible time, and I support thedirection of the President.He fias reversed the process that had been nothing butescalation under the two previous Presidents, and I ad¬mire him for that.I urged that we step up the process of de-escalation,and I am deeply concerned that the incursions into Cam¬bodia will delay this process.Do you believe we should set a deadline by which wewill have all troops out of Southeast Asia?The President has set a timetable that would havevirtually all of our combat forces out by a year from now,and I want to be certain that we maintain that timetableas a minimum.You voted against confirmation of both Judges Hayns¬worth and Carswell to the Supreme Court. What are yourviews on Judge Blackmun and the President’s attemptsto appoint strict constructionists to the Court?I believe that the Supreme Court requires balance. Itshould be representative of a spectrum of thought, and Ihave no objections to a so-called strict constructionist,providing that that man is a man who has wisdom, judg¬ment, understanding and compassion, who has an unblem¬ished record of preserving the right of every man, regard¬less of* race, color, or creed, to stand equal before the law,is a man of legal distinction, and of legal scholarship.So far as I can see, Judge Blackmun meets these testswhich I feel are essential requirements for an AssociateJustice.If the student strike appears to be having little effecton the President and the more violent factions came intocontrol of the strike leadership, which is what happenedbriefly Monday at Robie House, how will this affect thestrike and similar protests?There’s always the possibility that if society is unres-ponsible to peaceful protest carried out in accordance withthe best traditions of our Constitutional rights, such asassembly and free speech, that the hand of the extremistswill be strengthened.I urge, that in the light of today’s climate and atmos¬phere, the best way to bring about change and respsponsi-veness is to use the mechanisms provided for us by theConstitution and not to resort to violence, to riots, whichwill only turn off the country against the movement andset back every movement that might well be a right¬eous movement and a constructive criticism of society.How is it possible for protesters to avoid this violence,which discredits the anti-war movements?I think it would be important that the leadership try tokeep those that may come in from outside who have nointent and purpose other than using as tools the con¬structively discontent, and use them for their own end pur¬poses: to shut down universities, shut down the processesof government, to really ultimately wreck society, havingin mind the imposition of their particular form of tyranny,rather than improving and changing, modifying and mak¬ing more responsive the present form of government wehave.Certainly they can identify and isolate those peopleand clearly point them out to the campus.I think also they have to be careful of the kind ofleadership they follow and understand and know whoseleadership they are following.Continued on Page ElevenSenator Charles Percy, one of the leading Republicanliberals in the Senate, spoke to a number of students inthe Center for Continuing Education Tuesday morning,gathering student feelings about the President’s decisionto send US troops into Cambodia.A 1941 graduate of the College, the 50 year old seniorSenator from Illinois is currently studying the nation-widestudent strike in an effort to determine the level of feelingon the Cambodia situation.President of Bell & Howell at the age of 29, Percy ranfor governor in 1964, losing to Otto Kemer. Running forthe Senate in 1966, he was successful in his race againstthree-term incumbent Paul Douglas, his former economicsprofessor.En route to Midway Airport to catch a plane back toWashington, Percy spoke with Con Hitchcock, Maroonmanaging editor, about the war, the student strike, andhis impressions of the University.Senator you are on the record as being opposed to theinvasion of Cambodia by American troops. What action doyou intend to take to try to remove these troops fromCambodia and the whole of Southeast Asia?The first action that any individual Senator can take isto express his own opinions. And immediately after thePresident’s message last week I indicated my dis¬agreement with the decision, and my feelings and hopesthat we could withdraw those troops at the earliest pos¬sible moment, consistant with the safety of Americanforces.Secondly I believe the Senate should undertake theresolution which would repeal the Gulf of Tonkin resolu¬tion which was the basic authority under which PresidentJohnson began the massive escalation of the war in Viet¬nam and our participation in it. I think this would be apositive action.Third, that we will give consideration to what pendingmilitary affairs bills could be used as a means of seeingwhether it would be practical for funds to be cut off.How effective would repeal of this resolution be, inlight of the remark by Secretary of State Rogers thatrepeal of the Tonkin resolution would not prohibit the USfrom maintaining the war effort in Indochina?President Johnson seemed to rely on it a great deal,even though Secretary Rogers has indicated that therewould be other authority for the President to continue withthis program.I think that authority would be challenged if it was noteminently clear that we were back on the track in de-escalating the war and withdrawing forces and narrowingits confines rather than broadening it.Do you believe the President will withdraw all troopsfrom Vietnam?6/The Chicago Maroon/May 8, 1970The administration is on record as saying that it iscommitted to the withdrawal of all American forces there.The question was put to the Secretary of Defense as towhether that means we would even draw our forces downto less American forces than still reside in and are sta¬tioned in Korea.He said that in his judgment it did mean that thereCorman: A Bloody DisappointmentAS CRITICS BEGAN reevaluating the work of filmmakerssuch as Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, John Ford, and OttoPreminger, they began to see that the Amencan cinemaas a whole needed a thorough reexamination. Works usu¬ally consigned to the second half of a double bill, minorwesterns, detective stories, and melodrama were finallylooked at with serious critical consideration and were of¬ten found to have a great deal of artistic merit. As thenumber of director oriented film critics increased, and asthe articles started pouring in, more and more obscurematerial was unearthed and treated to analysis. Anyonewith a definite recognizable style became the subject of astudy and a retrospective showing. In general, this is ahealthy attitude.Unfortunately, this phenomenon has had its bad sideeffects. The most perfect illustration of this for me isRoger Corman. With the choice of Corman’s The WildAngela as the opener for the 1966 Venice Film Festival,Corman became a respected and interviewed director.Corman was ripe for the role. He has been, both beforeand after the accolade, one of the few active Hollywoodproducer-directors to give not only encouragement but fi¬nancial assistance, in the form of feature assignments, toyoung filmmakers. The one thing Corman would demandof a young director (besides talent) was that he follow anestablished pattern that would bring back the money paidinto the film. (It said that Frances Ford Coppola, whowent on to make You’re A Big Boy Now and Finian’sRainbow, received the same telegram each week after therushes for his first feature, Dementia 13, were screenedby Corman. It read: “More sex and violence, more sexand violence. Roger Corman.”Corman has always seemed to me a minor talent. Certain of his films, such as The Masque of the Red Deathand The Little Shop of Horrors, are not merely visuallyexciting but strangely disquieting in their effect. How¬ever, the problem with these works is that if their themat¬ic material and/or imagery is pushed to its logical exten¬sions the work begins to evaporate. Themes and imageryare,present all right, but they are simply not discussed.Even in as mature a work as Tomb of Ligea, admirable inthat both theme and style art expanded together in theirlogical direction, Corman can’t seem to decide what hefeels about his characters. If his heroine dies, one set ofmoral values must follow. If she lives, the direct oppositesystem must be implied. Corman has her both die and liveand in the process destroys the integrity of the film (ifsucceeding in thoroughly confusing his audience).All this brings us to Bloody Mama, Corman’s latestpicture, now playing at the McVickers Theatre. I think Iwould have enjoyed Bloody Mama a great deal more if Ihad not approached it with such high expectations. Thereare several reasons for these expectations. For one thing,this is Corman’s first picture in three years. It is obviousthat he is taking more time with his material than he waswont to in the past (Little Shop was reputedly shot in twoand a half days). Also, Bloody Mama is graced with asuperb cast. With Corman this is most important, sincehis rather laissez-faire attitude in directing actors leavesthe performances entirely up to the abilities of the actors.Shelly Winters, who is making all her admirers gor intohiding over her Jewish mama in Minnie’s Boys on Broad¬way, is perfect as Ma Barker. The scene between her andPat Hingle is one of the finest moments of screen acting Ihave seen this year.From the moment of its conception (a shot of a fourteenDISKATP: A Hard Day’s Night”SINCE THE KINETIC PLAYGROUND burned on Novem¬ber 1, Chicago has been a virtual wasteland for rock music.The Auditorium Theatre has had a few good shows and theOpera House did have the Band and Laura Nyro, but nei¬ther of these halls have atmosphere that rock concertsreally need to succeed. It is hard to grQove to such musicwhen seated in the ornate splenJor of the Opera House.Now, into this desert has come an oasis of sorts: AmericanTribal Productions (ATP).ATP is sponsoring rock shows every weekend at theAragon Ballroom, 1106 W. Lawrence. Their season beganFriday night with the appearance of the Second City Play¬ers, One Man’s Family (former members of Spanky andOur Gang), Bangor Flying Circus, A1 Kooper and theByrds. All of the shows will feature five acts, which maybe a bigger problem than an advantage, because moretime is spent during the six hour show in setting up than inperforming. Records played between sets might have pre¬vented the whispering and general undertone that kept upduring all the performances. If ATP can work out thesebugs though, their shows should be quite good.Friday’s draw was the Byrds. The place was filledearly and the first two acts, the Rangor Flying Circus andOne Man’s Family were barely tolerated. Both acts gotlittle applause and less attention. Bangor Flying Circuswas adequate, but nothing really special. One Man’s Fami¬ly, however, played a very good set. Unlike most groupsthat night, they put a lot of energy into their vocals,usingthe same technique that made Spanky and Our Gang fa¬mous. The group did a few old Spanky and Our Gangsongs, but seemed to get their best response from a fewcountry tunes and their version of Laura Nyro’s “StoneyEnd.” The worst part of their set was the ridiculous patterbetween songs and the fake acting that members of thegroup partook in. They should cut out the theatrics andstick to their music.After a very long delay, the Byrds finally came on. Itwas surprising that the big draw would come out in themiddle, but many were happy that they did; if anotherboring group had come out at that point, many peoplewould have left. The appearance of the Byrds kept every¬one there, even if they weren’t particularly attentive. Thegeneral hum and undertone that had existed in the Aragonthe entire night didn’t disappear until the Byrds were morethan half way through their set.I have liked the Byrds for years; I even liked themwhen they played at Mandel Hall in the fall, but Fridaythey lacked the spark of excitement that has always dis¬tinguished them. The best part of the Byrds sound hasalways been their vocal harmony and the strangely effec¬tive vocal style of Roger McGuinn, the only original Byrdstill in the group. Friday McGuinn tried to imitate Dylan’sstyle in many songs and he wasn’t too successful.,However, the new Byrds are the best instrumentalistsin the group’s history. In the Byrds’ early days, they werejust competent musicians; today, McGuinn is an excellentguitarist and the other, newer members of the group make“P instrumental^ what they lack vocally. It will take some The Byrdstime to get used to the de-vocalized, newly instrumentalByrd sound.Following the Byrds two encores, we left the Aragonbefore seeing A1 Kooper or Second City. It was 12:45 amalready and we were exhausted.The Aragon is easily accessible to UC students. TheHoward Street El stops at Lawrence Avenue (4800 North)and the Aragon is less than a block away. The ATP sched¬ule is as follows: May 8: The Rascals, Charlie Musselw-hite, SRC, Truth and Roxy; May 15: Delaney and Bonnieand Friends, Smith, Flying Burrito Brothers, White Light¬ning and Jessie; May 22: Mountain, Litter, Bog Seeger,Stooges and Blood Rock; May 29 and 30 (Triangle RockFest): the Kinks, Lee Michaels, Frigid Pink, Jessie andNed; June 5: To be announced, Sha-Na-Na, Crow, To beannounced and Uncle Dirty; June 12 and 13: To be an¬nounced, Pacific Gas and Electric, Shocking Blue, AmboyDukes, and Ambergris; June 19: Traffic with Stevie Win-wood, SRC, To be announced, Bloomsbury People, and Ed¬monds and Curlye; June 26 and 27: Ten Years After, B. B.King, To be announced, Motta Hoople, and To be an¬nounced; and July 3 and 4: Grateful Dead, It’s a BeautifulDay, Aum, Rare Bird, and To be announced. Shows willontinue throughout July and August.Mitch Bobkin year old girl, breasts beginning to bud, running through agreen woods against.a blueberry-popsicle colored sky),Bloody Mama is a Corman picture. (If we weren’t clued inon this fact in the first shot, we certainly must be by therest of the sequence: a girl being raped by her father withthe aid of her brothers). Corman maintains the imagery ofthe first scene throughout. The green of the woods is thedominant color of the film, and the blue background reap¬pears in a day-for-night sequence when “the boys” bury ayoung girl who has been the victim of the film’s most-,vicious murder. We remember the young girl’s breasts aswell when Diana Arsi is introduced, her taut nipplesstrategically (although not overbearingly) placed in theframe.The problem is that Bloody Mama has no thematicframework to hold it together. Part of this is due to Rob¬ert Thom’s pretentious screenplay. Thom, who has al¬ready demonstrated his talents as an equivocator with hisscript for Wild in the Streets, keeps throwing in lines like“They say this is a free country but you know that if youain’t rich you ain’t free” in a film which is basicallyestablishment in orientation. (The most sympathetic char¬acter in the film is millionaire Hingle, who is so sympa¬thetic he even manages to wm over the Barker boys.)However, I can’t help feeling that Corman approved ofthese pretensions. Worst of all are the period film clipsthrown in to give social commentary to the piece. Theseseem gratuitous and often exploitative.But what bothers me most about Bloody Mama is thatthe recognition he has been awarded seems to have affect¬ed Corman in a way that is clearly detrimental. This filmhas all the earmarks of a work that is transitional instyle. Where tracking shots (the camera moving along atrack has it surveys a scene — ed.) were predominant inthe earlier films, panning (the camera surveying a scenefront one central axis — ed.) is now used. While the twoeffects are similar in their content, they are completelydifferent in feel. Where long takes were the rule, quickcutting seems to be playing a more important part. Mostsurprisingly of all, the extreme separation of characterfrom background that was Corman’s trademark has en¬tirely disappeared.tfhese changes may have been caused by economicreasons as well as artistic ones. For example, long takesare cheaper than repeated short ones, so Corman’s stylechange may here represent the fact that he has moremoney. On the other hand, the use of the film clips in¬dicates that Corman thought he was saying somethingabout the Barkers and their society (he wasn’t), and thusartistically it would make no sense to separate them fromtheir background. However, since the money has been in¬creased at least in part because Corman now has a wideraudience (and thus can be expected to win back morefunds than before), the style change stems from criticalrecognition as well as from economic factors.Style change per se is not a bad thing. In (he case ofBloody Mama it is debilitating because the new style is onthe whole neither interesting nor related to theme. BloodyMama has its moments. Besides the sequences alreadydescribed there is the final shoot-out and an incrediblezoom out from a car in motion during a chase sequence.But on the whole Bloody Mama is lacking the one qualitythat gave Corman films their essential value — a sense ofunified style, so clearly distinguishable and so often ver¬ging on the surreal. If Corman wasn’t deep, at least hewas fun. In Bloody Mama he is neither.Terry Curtis FoxminiNo PasaraoA WELL KNOWN SLOGAN of the Spanish Civil War revo¬lutionaries — “They Shall Not Pass” — is the title androughly the theme of an experimental, multi-media pro¬duction to be presented this weekend and next in thecourtyard of the Chicago Theological Seminary, 58th andUniversity Avenue. The production, adapted from an oldFederal Theatre script, is the cooperative effort of agroup of seven actors called The Collective who began asan improvisational theatre group on campus.They Shall Not Pass is the story of revolution, a con¬glomerate of material from newspapers, books, speeches,and other sources as well as the original script. Ultimate¬ly, however, the main interest of The Collective is to pro¬duce a piece of theatre, with political material as a frame¬work. Contributing to the theatrical effects of theproduction will be music by Buzz White, films by T.C. Fox,and photographs by Ann Beckerman.The seven actors comprising The Collective areChristopher Lyon, Lee Strucker, Annette Fern, GerryFisher, Linda Gossen, Dave Cole, and David Chase. Thereis no “director” as such, although Lyon is mainly respon¬sible for coordinating the production. Admission to TheyShall Not Pass is free for every performance.May 8, 1970/Grey City Journal/7Contemporary European Films Presents -The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie7:00 & 9:15 P.M., Saturday, May 9 COBB HALLJWuiiOiaft Special PurchaseGarrardRecord ChangerComplete WithPICKERINGDIAMOND CARTRIDGEAnd BASEONLY- son95$39REG. $5995 FEATURES:Synchro-Lab Motor, Pickering V-15 AT-3Cartridge, Diamond Stylus♦*»»»»»»»»»$»»*»»***{SAVE - $20|]afca|HMEJMc$$£ *♦ a|e3|ea|c9|ea|ea|c9|c j|cAlu&iOiaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St —DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St —779-6500 What'syourexcuse?You could have gone water ski¬ing or swimming or to a danceat night. Instead you've spentthe entire day moping aroundthe house feeling sorry foryourself. And why? Just be¬cause it was one of those diffi¬cult times? How silly. A lot ofgirls are out there enjoyingthemselves under the same cir¬cumstances. They use Tampaxtampons.Tampax tampons are worninternally so you can swim ordance or do most anything youplease. There are no bulky padsor telltale odor to give youaway. Tampax tampons are soeasy to use. Yes, even the firsttime. Just follow the instruc¬tions inside each package. Sogo on out and enjoy yourself./Vith Tampax tampons younave no excuse.* * *XJ^-^ DCVCL.OPCO BY A oocroBTAMPAX® TAMPONS ARE MADE °NLV °VTAMPAX INCORPORATED. PALMER.8/Grey City Joarnal/May 8,1170CULTURE VULTUREOf Greece, Haiti, and the Red SquadTHE NEWS IS a pretty depressing business these days.You’d think sitting up in ray nest behind a gargoyle, I’d beable to escape the news. But, Chicago being the windy cityit is, an afternoon doesn’t go by when a newspaper doesn’tfly up to me or some masochistic student doesn’t go bywith a radio listening to the news. What with Nixon for¬mally bringing troops into still another part of Indochina.What about the news about bringing in the glassboothsinto the New Haven trial to lock the Panthers in duringthe proceedings. And you can’t go to a demonstration herewithout being in the camera range (moving and still) ofsome Red Squad guy (they must have interesting homemovies.) Sometimes it makes you feel like moving tosome quiet Greek island (Greece?) or maybe some nicetropical Caribbean island (like the Dominican Republic orHaiti).CAMPUSFilmTonight Doc Films presents Jean Renoir’s Toni. Madein 1934 it tells of the horrible lives of French coal miners— times haven’t changed much I guess. In Soc. Sci 122 it7:15 and 9:30 for 75c.Saturday, CEF presents The Prime of Miss JeanBrodie which you all remember won a couple of Oscars.Pretty soon CEF will be competing with Loop theatresand having ushers and pop corn. It’s about (if you don’tknow) a nonconformist schoolteacher (Maggie Smith) andthe effect she has on her students. In Cobb at 7 and 9:15for $1.Sunday, the Brothers Marx (minus Gummo who wentinto the cloak and suit business and Karl who got involvedin other things) will be involved in a film orgy. HitchcockFilms is presenting Horse Feathers and Monkey Business.The first presents life at a university where they can’tdecide which is more important — football or education.(It has one of Groucho’s greatest puns about waxing roth.)The second takes place aboard a luxury liner and has thefamous Maurice Chevalier scene. In Mandel at 7 and “youget a both, boss,” for $1.Monday CEF is sponsoring Orson Welles’ Macbeth. Ialways noticed a similarity between Macbeth and WilliamRandolph Hearst. In Cobb at 8 and it’s FREE.Tuesday brings Joseph Losey’s The Big Night whichwas Losey’s last American film before he was blacklisted.It tells of a timid victim of fellow adolescents who runs offto obtain revenbe. In Cobb at 8 for 75c.Wednesday Doc Films brings Nicholas Ray’s Born tobe Bad and Michael Curtiz’ Mildred Pierce. The former,with Joan Fontaine as a horribly ruthless woman, is bythe director of Rebel Without a Cause. The latter is withAnn Blyth as a horribly bitchy 1940’s teenager. JoanCrawford plays her suffering mother. The first at 7:15, thesecond at 9; both for 75c in Cobb.If you missed the two Hungarian films that the Chi¬cago International Film Festival has been showing atMundelein College, there’s still a chance to see the sixothers which they are showing. Most of them have neverbeen shown in the US and are going straight back toHungary after the showing. There are two tonight, twotomorrow and two Sunday (one each at 7 and 10.) Eachfilm is $. The Mundelein Auditorium is at 6339 N. SheridanRoad.The Spoleto Festival of Two Worlds’ film section islooking for films. 16 mm optical sound or 35 mm opticalsound in color or black and white is what they’re inter-MUSIC ested in. There is no entry fee. Send films to The ChicagoInternational Film Festival, 12 East Grand Avenue, Room301, Chicago, Illinois, 60611.TheatreThis week-end is a great theatre week-end.First is the Cain Company’s production of WilliamBLAKE'S The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. (Don’t be putoff by our printer’s mess-up job of Virgil Burnett’s draw¬ing.) It is a theatrical transposition of Blake’s poem-prosecreation. Innate in it is a lot of Blake’s revolutionary(especially for the 19th century) philosophy. Directed byNick Rudall, it stars Jerry McGann, Rob Allen and DavidTardy. It’s in Rockefeller Chapel tonight, tomorrow, Sun¬day, Monday and Tuesday at 8:30.Next is They Shall Not Pass. This originally was adrama about the Spanish Civil War done by the FederalTheatre in the ’30’s (when the government was financingtheatres). The cast, directed by Chris Lyon, have used theplay as a jumping-off place and have applied improvisa-tional techniques to it as well as mixed media. It starsDavid Chase, David Cole, Annette Fern, Gerry Fisher,Lind Gossen, Chris Lyon and Lee Strucker. Its tonight,Saturday and Sunday and next weekend in the ChicagoTheological Seminary Cloisters (58th and University) at 8.Blackfriars is continuing its run of its original mus-cal, SWEETLIFE — the hilarious misadventures of a uni¬versity going through a sit-in. It stars Eric Josephson, SueBosworth, Andy Gallant, David Webers and Mary Con¬nors. Book and lyrics are by Seth Masia and music byJim Rebhan and directed by Sydney Bendix. It’s tonightand tomorrow at 8:30 in Mandel.Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot is starting its runon Thursday night (to be continued through next weekend, but that’s next week already.) The very first play tobe designated Theatre of the Absurd, it stars Bill Reddy,Steve Mencher, Lenny Kraft, and Jim Miller and DannyGreenwald. It’s at the Lutheran School of Theology Am¬phitheatre (55th and University) at 8:30.MusicTonight, the Folklore Society, is presenting the BalfaBrothers Cajun Band who appeared at the highly success-'ful Folk Festival. They are a group of Louisiana French¬men who play their region’s music. They’re in Cdbb at8:15.Tomorrow, the Musical Society and FOTA present anall-Bach concert. Performing will be members of the Uni¬versity and the Collegium Musicum in two cantatas.Soloists are Judith Nelson, Robert Heinrickson, Dale Ma-curdy and Linda McConnell. It’s in Bond Chapel at 8:30.This Week at die GargoyleFridayWomen’s Lib Rap Session at noon.South Side Dance Workshop rehearsal at 7.MondayGay Lib and Women’s Lib Rap Sessions at 12.NUC meeting at 8.TuesdayCrafts Workshop 3:30-5:30.WednesdayFolk song get-together at 8.ThursdayGay Liberation Rap Session at 12.U. High Student-Teacher Coalition at 8.Poetry Group at 9.Cajun: The Swamp Soundthe BALFA BROTHERS CAJUN BAND with Nathan Ab-shire will once again appear at the University of Chicago.They recently performed at several concerts and work¬shops at the UC Folk Festival and were enthusiasticallyreceived.Cajun (short for Acadian) music today is playedthroughout southwest Louisiana on radio stations and atdances in French speaking rural sections. Very old Cajuntraditional music is played on violin accompanied bytriangle, and is derived from 17th century folk songs.The Cajun people settled in Louisiana after they wereexiled from Acadia, Canada by the British in the late 17thcentury. In Louisiana, Cajun music has been influenced byblues, Spanish, and early white country music. In¬strumentation has changed and now includes accordionand guitar.Musically, Cajun music is unique in the Western hemi¬sphere in that it uses a pentatonic scale and also includessemi-sharp notes which are not usually found in the stan¬dard Western scale. Although Cajun songs seem joyful andryhthmically alive, they often express deep tragedy andloneliness.The Balfa Brothers Cajun Band will be appearing inQuantrell Auditorium in Cobb Hall on Friday, May 8, at8:15 pm. Tickets will be sold at the door at $1.50 and $1.00for students. WHPKMondayThe Threepenny Opera at 7:15-9.TuesdayFOTA event of the Week 7:30-10Hie University and Fire Johathan Klein studies Il¬linois Fire Regulations and refuses to discuss how easy itis to burn the place downThursdayEdgar Allen Poe’s Morelia at 8.The Debutante Hour has as its guest Irv Kupcinet at 9ELSEWHEREFilmThey Shoot Horses Don’t They has been raved aboutin many quarters. It looks at American society throughthe metaphor of t. marathon dance in the 30’s. It starsJane Fonda, Michael Sarrazin and Gig Young. At StateLake Theatre.Z is a film of political suspence and intrigue. Whocould be more intriguing than Yves Montand? Very topicaland contemporary, it takes place in present-day FascistGreece. At Cinema Theatre, Chicago and Michigan.M*A’S*H is a bitterly cynical look at war which justtears it to shreds. It stars Elliot Gould and Donald Suther¬land. At the United Artists, Randolph and Dearborn.The Boys In the Band is the film version of theplaywhich seemed to break the ice in the subject of homose¬xuality on Broadway. At the Carnegie at Rush and State.I Am Curious (Yellow) has caused a lot of furor be¬cause of what the people are doing but the picture isreally about what the people are thinking. At the Playboy,1204 N. Dearborn.Cul-de-Sac by Roman Polanski and Brian De Palma’sGreetings are sharing a double bill. The former is about acouple who live in an isolated castle who are invaded bygangsters fleeing from the law. The latter is a dissectionof the draft, sex, computer dating, the Kennedy assassina¬tion and the Great American Dream. At the Festival, 2912N. Sheridan Rd.Eisenstein’s Ten Days that Shook the World has beenrestored and has new music by Shostakovich. It is anEisenstein which isn’t shown as much as the others but ishis epic documentation of the Russian Revolution. Alsoplaying with it is a partially restored copy of one of hismissing films, Bezhin Meadow. At the Festival, 3912 N.Sheridan.Fantasia — Disney’s classic featuring Night on BaldMountain — great for heads. At the Esquire, 50 E. Oak St.The Virgin President is a satirical political comedyabout an inept president. It stars Severn Darden of SecondCity fame. At the Threepenny Cinema, 2424 N. Lincoln.TheatreThe People Vs. Ranchman is the name of Megan Ter¬ry’s new play (she wrote Viet-Rock.) As you can guess it’spolitical and includes a lynching. It’s at the Kingston ’MINES Theatre, 2356 N. Lincoln, weekends at 8:30.Justice Is Done or Oh! Cal Coolidge is the newest ofthe famous Second City revues. Second City, 1616 N.Wells, Tuesdays through Thursday and Sunday, Friday at8:30 and 11, Saturday at 8:30,11 and 1.Police — an interesting title is the Chicago premiereof Slawomire Mrozek’s futuristic drama. At the Playhouse,315 W. North. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30. Students, $2.Adaptation-Next is two one-act plays, one by old Chi¬cagoan Elaine May and one by Terance McNally. At theHappy Medium, 901 N. Rush St. Tuesday — Thursday at8:30, Friday and Saturday at 8 and 11. Sunday at 7:30.The Parson in the Cupboard is the newest of PaulSills’ story theatre. Body Politic, 2259 N. Lincoln Tuesdaythrough Thursday at 8:30, Friday and Saturday at 8:30and 10:30 and Sunday at 7:30. Theatre games Sunday at 3.An Evening with Bill Lederer includes 3 one-actors bythis Chicago playwright. At the Hullhouse PlaywrightsCenter, 222 W .North, Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Lady of Larkspur Loffon and The Happy Journeyfrom Trenton to Camden are two plays by Tennessee Wil¬liams and Thornton Wilder respectively. Cafe TOPA, 904W. Belmont. Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at7:30.Theater in Media is multi-media works in television,film and radio. The Theatre of Phynance, 2261 N. LincolnMondays at 8 and 10.The Fourth Force improvisational farces and work-in¬progress, 4715 Broadway, Monday and Saturday at 8:30.The Epiphany Theatre Company presents three one-act plays with the intriguing titles of Sand, Antigone andSomeone. They’re at the Jane Adams Center of HullHouse, 3212 N. Broadway on Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Organic Theatre’s adaptation of Animal Farm isbeing shown Thursdays and Fridays at 8 pm and Satur¬days at 8 and 10:30. The theatre is located at 952 W.Diversey, 477-1977, and tickets are $2.50 except on Thurs¬days when students can get in for a buck.The Dance Troup of Columbia College Center of DancePresents Journeys, a multi-media dance performance. Atthe performing Arts Center, 1725 N. Wells.To the Induction Center is an original drama per-Continued on Page ElevenMay 8,197t/Grey City JmbrmI/9TRUE GRITCome And SeeSar., May 30Pierce Tower Cinemayou can hear yourself think ,want to think, there's good boose.Bass ale and Schlitx beer on tapand if you don'tfla>h|aP&9 LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337-2113 1654 E. 53rd955-2229 THE EAGLEcocktails luncheon dinner late snacksA DRAMATIC ADAPTATION OF THE POEM BY WILLIAM BLAKEPRESENTED BY CAIN S COMPANY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL FIFTY NINTH AT WOODLAWNMAY H 9 10 1112 830 PM TICKETS TWO DOLLARS AT THE BERGMAN GALLERY5811 ELLIS CHICAGO 60637 MI3 0800 X4137 \5311 BLACKSTONE! ROCKEFELLER >; MEMORIAL «'; CHAPEL jj Sunday, May 10 |! 11 a.m. !SermonFEAR andFAITHE. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the ChapelBE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc. BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933,Xajde ‘fcxrh s and OTllljfteslaurant ^irangai:Sa Grenouille(435 E Hvde fVK <A c.<will have a trip through the historic provinces ofFraneeEVERY MONO A Y EVENINGat the special prix fixe of $4.50THIS MONDAY’S MENCE (MAY 11)from the NORMAND Y COASTCOLD CREAM OF TOMATO SOUPFILLET OF SOLE NANTAU WITH LOBSTER TAILPILAW RICE AND VEGETABLEORBONELESS BREAST OF CHICKEN SAUTE IN ACREAMED CALVADOS SAUCE PILAW RICE ANDVEGETABLEDESERTSBEVERAGEUNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMENT STOREPL 2-47441150 E. 63rd St. We are open every day with a menue a la carte, or completedinner. Lunch served daily. Closed TuesdayFOR RESERVATIONSCALL RENE684-405010/Grey City Journal/May 8, 1970Standard Oil: Exploiter, Oppressor, PollutorContinued from Page Oneecological balance of the area. Jersey would probablycounter by citing its work in developing new techniques toremove most sulfur from crude oil during the refiningprocess. The question, however, remains as to who willfoot the cost of clean air — the company or the consumerin the form of higher oil prices?Jersey, moreover, has a hand in local waters as well.It recently acquired one of the world’s largest under¬ground coal mines in southern Illinois, and starting nextfall will start deliveries to our old friend, CommonwealthEdison of Chicago, Finally, by means of its Congressionallobby, Standard of Jersey, along with the other large oilcompanies, manages to keep domestic prices artificiallyhigh through import controls and tariffs. When domesticoil prices are not competitive on the world market, and oilimport controls are used to restrict the inflow of foreignoil, the American public loses and the oil companies growrich. A “salutary social environment” obviously has noth¬ing to do with the economic interests of the masses ofconsumers.For blacks, workers and women, the “salutary socialciiiiii mm*Still Another News BulletinContinued from Page Nineformed by the Actor’s workshop at the Unity, 656 W. Bar¬ry. Friday and Saturday at 8:30.The Elephant Calf and Ginger Anne are two plays byBertolot Brecht and Derio Washburn respectively. At theColumbia College Performing Arts Center, 1725 N. Wells.Thursdays at 8:30 and FREE.Naked Lunch is a drama made from the works ofWilliam Burroughs. At the Columbia College PerformingArts Center, 1725 N. Wells, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30and FREE.Blues and Soul PlacesSOUTH SIDE - Must be 21Burning Spear 55th and StateTurner’s 39th and IndianaPepper’s 43rd and VincennesTheresa’s 48th and IndianaI Spy 500 W. 63rdClub DeLisa’s 56th and StateBlue Flame Oakwood and Cottage GroveUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARIS1proprietor TAhffAVt-Y&NCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outmj^Ea5^3rd^JJ1U4rm^••*♦«*♦#»***«**«*♦*«♦***«*«»*♦*wor'tft Ca" S*e.M^9rices!v»V*°pmanee®.'BARBRA STREISAND OMAR SHARIF.FUNNYGIRL'-WOfr'j AW :. '“■".li'.ff-Hp -1 ' *" " *.*•' '*'»■*•**■** v * * * >, * I "®7 II Suggested lor! GENCRAl audiences •Suggested l<: GENCRAL iHYDE PARK THEATRE environment” is as much of a myth as it is for the Ameri¬can consumer. Standard’s newest refinery at Benecia, Cal¬ifornia, is non-unionized. Even unionized refinery workersm the oil industry in 1969 received only $166 weekly on theaverage; their non-union counterparts got only $138. Man¬agement :s dedicated to the proposition of fighting the oil-workers’ umon on a plant-by-plant basis and resisting anyattempts to impose an industrywide contract. None ofStandard’s field workers and none of those in its homeoffice are unionized. Workers have been further hurt bythe effects of automation and cybernation; Jersey’s do¬mestic labor force has dwindled from 42,000 to 30,500 inthe past ten years.For blacks and women in Standard, the position looksno better. In conjunction with NYU it aids in a program totrain underprivileged girls to be secretaries and stenogra¬phers; the Humble Oil Earn and Learn Program similarlyaids “underprivileged” girls in Houston and CorpusChristi to learn secretarial skills. At best such trainingcondemns women to male domination in menial positions;at worst they wind up with low-paying jobs with the par¬ent company (in Houston and Corpus Christi). Of the 505women in Jersey’s home office, about 80 per cent of them(415) are either secretarial or clerical personnel. None ofthe women employees are unionized, and starting salary formost of them is $5,400. For blacks, Standard primarilyoffers opportunities to acquire training for menial posi¬tions such as service-station operator. If one weighs thebenefits of such programs with what could be done withthe profits of a large corporation such as Standard Oil, itscontribution to “managing a social system” hardly repre¬sents a gospel of public welfare.It is the cliche of cliches on this campus that we areall here by the grace of old John D. It is equally in¬contestable, however, that the University never was nor is“his” university any more than it belongs to his heirs andthe corporations they control. But “control,” in the formof interlocking directorates (two Rockefellers, David andJohn D. IV are on the Board of Trustees) and financialinterdependence, is far more pervasive than most studentshere realize.‘The University of Chicago exists in an sym¬biotic relationship with a variety of Rockefeller-controlledbanks and corporations; the control it exercises in theform of its stock holdings is complimented by the grantswhich foundations and corporations make to the Univer¬sity in return.wmimmiT xxxz•FiinT'.-ire^is a student “deal” at theEMPIRER00M#...Dine! Dance! Enjoy Star Entertainment'Great idea tor that big date!The Price Is Right!$15 per person includes everything —Cover charge. Tax and all Gratuities,Plus a Complete Dinner.Choice of Broiled Sirloin Steak or Breast of Duckling.s12.50 per person includes everything-Cover charge. Tax and all Gratuities,Plus a Complete Dinner.Choice of Chicken Empire or Chopped Sirloin Steak.• April 30-May 13Jimmy Durante June 2- June 18-June 17 July 2The Lettermen John DavidsonFUN FARE “DEAL” available thru Thursday8:30 p.m. show or 11:30 p.m. showFriday and Saturday 11:30 p.m. show only.Bring your student identification to get the FUN FAREprice.Reservations/Call Fred/RA 6-7500Palmer House/Chicago/A Hilton Hotel From 1957 through 1967, the University received ap¬proximately $3.65 million from a variety of Rockefeller-controlled foundations and corporations, including ChinaMedical Board, Rockefeller Foundation, Council on Eco¬nomic and Cultural Affairs, Standard Oil of California,Indiana, and New Jersey, and the Population Council.Standard of Indiana gave an additional $1 million in anunrestricted Campaign gift. In the endowment, the Univer¬sity has 288,000 shares of common stock which are “dis¬posable” and for which it can vote proxies (figures accu¬rate as of 1968). It has an additional 106,200 shares ofStandard of California and Indiana for which it can voteproxies. THESE ARE THE PROXIES WE ARE DE¬MANDING!! They represent a considerable part of theUniversity’s wealth, the stocks and debentures of StandardOil of New Jersey alone being worth $20 million. Theshares of Standard of California and Indiana add an addi¬tional $6 million to $9 million to the endowment. The ag¬gregate yearly income from these holdings is $1.6 million,no small sum. The University’s “return” on these stocksis enormous, especially if we calculate income for 1968against the book value of the stock (meaning either whatthe University paid for it or what it was valued at whendonated). In one case, that of the 288,000 share block ofStandard of New Jersey, the actual cost to the Universitywas less than the yearly return on their investment ofover 100 per cent for the University’s claim that it does not“profit” by the antics of the corporations whose stock itholds is absurd.Having delivered our indictment of Standard Oil of NewJersey, and having established the links of the Universityof Chicago with the Standard Oil empire we demand thatthe Council of the Faculty Senate take a decisive standagainst the noxious and exploitative actions of this corpo¬ration by voting the University’s proxies in Jersey to thePeople’s Coalition. The University cannot remain silent inface of the crmies which this company has and still isperpetrating against the people of America, IndoChina andthe Third World in the name of increased profits and“salutary social conditions.” By remaining silent, the Uni¬versity admits complicity in these charges and denies stu¬dents and other people control of what is rightfully theirs,their destinies. POWER TO THE PEOPLE!Kickapoo Creek Outdoor Rock ConcertITlEinDRmii DHY canned heat . bb king .\HEEKEnD DELANEY & BONNIE & FRIENDS f |1ntHY 3D PAUL BUTTERFIELD BLUESHEYW0RTH, ILLINOIS BAND • SMITH • BACKSTREETONE-EYED JACKS • GUILD • BLOOMSBURY PEOPLENiCKLE BAG • FINCHLEY BOYS.REO SPEEDWAGONFOR DAYS & A NIGHT. EASY STREET . BLUESWEEDBUCKTOOTH .ESQUIRES .FEATHER TRAIN • ZEBRAPHOENIX « NIGHT PEOPLE • TRUTH * SEVEN • BLUECHALLENGERS • UNCLE MEAT . SPARE CHAYNGEGENESIS • ARROW MEMPHIS • GIDEONS BIBLEReserve YourPlace with the SunADMITTANCE CAN ONLYBE GUARANTEED WHILETICKET SUPPLY LASTSOrder tickets direct from:KICKAPOO CREEK INC.BOX 606, HEYW0RTH, ILLINOIS 61745NameAddressCity State Zip..School Age..I enclose $ for tickets.May 8, 1970/Grey City Journal/11r..--.———-----—LONDONRECORD SALESOLII, STONES, ETC.$5.98 list price, now $3.79$4.98 list price, now $2.991■Hours: {Monday-Friday 12-8 pm |Saturday 10 am-6 pm JSunday 12-5 pm ■L 1LOWE'S RECORD SHOPnow closer to campus at1444 E. 57th Street684-1505L—...12/Grey City Journal/May 8,1970