THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 58 The University of Chicago * Tuesday, May 12, 197ftStrike To Continue through SaturdayMelvyn SterlingAT THE ELLIPSE: Students demonstrate within sight of the White House Saturday.The Washington Monument is visible in the rear.Demonstrators Meet in CapitalBy Nancy ChismanIt could have been College Day, or a gi¬ant peace and love rock festival, exceptthere was no rah-rah. The only bandspresent were Hare Krishna drum and bellchanters and an impromptu kazoo march¬ing band.The hundred thousand demonstratorscame from everywhere — there were teeshirts from every major university andmany schools few people had ever heard of.They had come to confront the presidentwith Cambodia and Kent State, the Panthertrials and Vietnam.They came, as two Cornell studentssaid,” to make a showing” and ‘‘to becounted.” They were angry. Behind themlay closed schools, banished and burnedROTC’s, “radicalized” faculties, and as oneRutgers student put it, “greater participa¬ tion than ever before.”In Washington, May 9, in the bus-ringedellipse in front of the White House, thethousands gathered.Contingents of students in buses and carsjammed the routes to the capital Fridaynight and early Saturday morning. The lonebus from the University of Chicago encoun¬tered a dozen other busses at road stopsalong the way ■*— five from Youngstown,two from Oberlin, others from Springfield,Cleveland and Pittsburgh. By Saturdaynoon, Washington seemed to be all protes¬ters and policemen.Only at 11:30 were all the marches lead¬ing in the same direction — toward thelarge area between the White House andthe Washington Monument. Hundreds ofsweating marshals guided the crowds, urg¬ing non-violence. One said that the mar- By Paul BernsteinSome 1200 students attending a massmeeting in Mandel hall Monday nightvoted to continue the anti-war strike ofclasses through at least this Saturday andto encourage University students, facultyand staff to use the remainder of the quar¬ter to engage in political activity.The body extended the strike by passingtwo proposals dealing with its objectivesand its duration.The first, submitted by the strike steer¬ing committee, encourages the Universitycommunity “to use the remainder of thespring quarter 1970 to political ends,” andendorses the three national strike demands.It also states that “any student, graduateor undergraduate, who wishes to partici¬pate in political activity must be permitteda ‘P’ for his spring quarter work todate.”The proposal calls for the suspension ofnormal academic activities “for the twoweeks preceding the fall elections in orderto permit students to engage in politicalactivity.”'The second proposal, submitted by MikeFowler and Debbie LeVeen, is similar tothe first and calls for a continuation ofnon-militant picketing of classroom build¬ings this week.The body defeated a proposal made byInternational Socialists (IS) which de¬manded that the University cease all itsacademic activities for the remainder ofthe school year “in protest of its role inaiding imperialism and repression athome.”shals were prepared to section off trouble¬makers if violence began.Legal observers were there to report po¬tential violence. Some 1,000 lawyers andlaw students, predominantly from the eyistcoast, circulated through the marchers. Amiddle-aged lawyer from New York ex¬plained, “If it gets out of hand, we’ll haverecords of who was inciting who.” He saidthat the night fall could bring “anything.”Eight hundred medics hurried throughthe crowd and manned 35 first aid stationstreating heat prostration in the 90 degreeweather, and were prepared to treat vic-Continued on Page Two Although voting on proposals for the im¬plementation of strike demands was ori¬ginally scheduled on the agenda, the bodymoved to adjourn the meeting and to voteon such proposals at a mass meeting to beheld tonight at 7:30 pm in Mandel Hall.Proposals include support for Wednesdayand Friday’s nationwide “sick-ins”; a de¬mand for the creation of a “Right-On-Training Center” (ROTC) on campus,which would hold liberation classes, pro¬vide child care facilities, and serve “as asanctuary for potential political prisoners;”a demand for open admission to the Uni¬versity; and the providing of free healthcare.Other proposals involve organizing agroup of trained students and faculty totalk to workers about “the war machine,”attending at least one class to discuss thestrike with faculty members; opening upIda Noyes Hall to the community, the evic¬tion of the Adlai Stevenson Institute fromRobie House and a boycott of the bookstoreand cafeterias.These proposals will be debated at work¬shops today. There will also be a radicalcaucus at 11 am today in Reynold’s ClubNorth Lounge.The meeting began with reports on strikeactions, including Saturday’s Washingtonrally, yesterday morning’s action at theinduction center downtown, the Hyde ParkCommunity work stoppage and strike ac¬tivities at the Social Service Administra¬tion (SSA) school.A representative from the Black Stu¬dents’ Association (BSA) told the crowdthat that group would favor a continuationof the strike, bu.t would not “be a part ofthe petty bullshit that has gone on in thepast. We cannot be on strike if we try toextract from faculty promises of passinggrades.”He called for “action to eradicate racismfrom this country, action that knows nocompromise.”A student organizer from Belgium alsospoke to the crowd. He said that demon¬strations would take place in Europeancapitals to show solidarity with the strikein the United States.He emphasized building support for theanti-war cause among the working classand organizing anti-war universities. “Wemust show our force in the streets,” hesaid.Hildebrand Makes PlansTo Ease Grade SystemCollege students may receive grades of“P” and “R” this quarter under more lib¬eral rules adopted by the college faculty to“facilitiate each student’s discharge of hisresponsibilities both as student and also ascitizen seeking to affect national policy inthe present crisis.”The Council of the University Senate ap¬proved the action and President EdwardLevi announced “I hope that the facultiesof the Divisions and Schools will take sim¬ilar action,” in a letter to the Universitycommunity Monday.Students may receive a grade of P in anycourse “if the instructor deems him to havepresented sufficient evidence of satisfac¬tory work.” Courses not normally availablefor P grades and courses in a student’s ma¬jor are covered by the ruling for Springquarter only.Students may also be granted grades of R without question in any course by applyingto the Dean of Undergraduate Students byJune 4, or they may drop registration en¬tirely for a course if they prefer.Special arrangements with individualprofessors to complete work early, or tocomplete it at some later time and receivea grade of I are also allowed. Regularcourse grades are available as usual.While approving the new procedures, theCollege faculty emphasized that “academiccredit shall be given only for academicwork,” and Hildebrand, dean of the college,admonished “in extending ourselves nowwe should not detract from the academicaccomplishments of our students by aban¬doning our standards.”Hildebrand also expects all teachers “tomake whatever effort is required to fulfillyour responsibilities as teachers.” SteveMARCH: Students march downtown along the lake Saturday morning towardsa Civic Center rally.High School StrikersWant Facilities OpenDEMONSTRATION: Protestors rally in Grant Park Saturday to show their opposition to the war in Cambodia and the killing2/The Chicago Maroon/May 12, 1970 marched to a rally at the University afterhaving earlier thrown a picket line aroundtheir high school.Ricky Novar, a Kenwood senior, said“Our strike was surprisingly successful.” aclassroom count of the building, he saidshowed less than 100 people in the school.By 9 am the picket line had swelled toseveral hundred, extending the length ofthe block. The line included about 50 uni¬versity students and a few teachers. Stri¬kers chanted, “End the War, Free Bobby!”and “On Strike,” leafletted fellow students,and urged them not to enter the building.At 9 am the spirited demonstrator?marched to the University campus to attend a rally on the administration buildingsteps.Chris Nugent, teacher of current UnitedStates history at Kenwood, told the crowd,“This is the most beautiful scene I’ve seensince I’ve been here.” He warned the stu¬dents that June graduates would become“cannon fodder.”We can’t let these people go,” he said.“We have a hell of a lot of work to dobecause a lot of people aren’t with us. Someof these are my colleagues.”Nugent concluded by telling the highschool students that they have power, “thepower to shut down and open it up.”Several students discussed the opening ofuniversity facilities to the community. Onestudent said, “If the university won’t openthem for us, we’ll take them.”Eric Josephson, ’73, said “We’re in solidarity with you” and invited the students toa tour of “pig research” on the campus.The group marched to the Social ScienceBuilding, to Woodward Court (where theychanted “On strike, shut it down, join us”),and to Robie House (“On your right is thebeautiful Robie House which houses impe¬rialist research.”) There, an SDS memberled the group in chanting “Build a day-carecenter” and “Adlai Stevenson off campus.”Another SDS member urged the highschool students to return to the Quads and“show UC students how to be militant.”The students marched back to the centralQuads chanting and cheering, while the fewUniversity students there remained lounging on the grass.The most striking event of the morningwas the sudden appearance of about 200seventh and eighth graders from the RaySchool.They marched onto the quads enthusiasti¬cally chanting “Peace Now” and “We wantfreedom,” and gave the peace sign withtheir hands. One girl said the group had lefthe school following an assembly. A higlschool student spoke to them for a few min¬utes and urged them to march to KimbarkPlaza Shopping Center to demonstrate.Soon the children were walking at a fastpace out of the campus before most of theolder students could catch up with them.Quadrangles Blocked By PicketersMelvyn SterlingWASHINGTON: Overcome by 90-degree heat, demonstrators swim in reflectingpool at the Lincoln Monument Saturday. Some 75 Kenwood high school studentsentered Ida Noyes Monday afternoon in aneffort to open the facilities of the buildingto the community at large.A spokesman for the students, who identi¬fied himself as Nguyen Man Troi, said thatthe high school students will return todayat 3:30 pm to use the facilities again.He said that they will try the action forthree days this week and during the sum¬mer to keep the facilities open to the com¬munity.“It’s not a disruption, a sit-in, or a take¬over,” he said. “We’re just opening it up.”The demonstrators played basketball andswam in the pool for two hours before goinghome.Friday, about 400 Kenwood studentsAbout 100 people gathered to picket themain entrance to the quadrangles on 58 St.and University Ave early Friday morning.The group hoped to block all deliveries inan effort to “shut the University down.”The picketers were dispersed to the book¬store, computation center, loading docks,and other entrances to the campus.About an hour after the picketing started,an officer in an unmarked car stopped atthe intersection and stared a while. Heasked for a spokesman from the group andfinding they had none addressed himself tothe body in general. “I am uninformed my¬self, but I am in sympathy with you up to apoint. I want to know if you are interferingwith the normal University functions. Idon’t want anyone to get hurt. If it comesto that point I’d like to see you back off.”When asked how he thought the picketerscould get hurt, one replied, “Perhaps he thinks some militant truck driver will plowthrough us.”A plainclothesman then asked a Maroonreporter what everybody was doing be¬cause “I’m not interested in what’s happen¬ing. But the big boss sent me to get anintelligence report, and what the big bosssays ...”The cop then offered to join the picketline if the picketers paid him at which onepicketer yelled “go away.” He replied hehadn’t asked them to go away. “You’re acop, though.”“And you’re a human being.”By 10 a.m. all attempted deliveries hadbeen successfully thwarted and the pick¬eters tried to get the construction workerson 59th to join them in a strike.Friday evening, a rally chaired by Fair-inda West, aided by Diane Liff, a parlia¬mentarian from the law school, was held ina less than packed Mandel Hall at 7:30.Demonstrators Plunge In Pool;Slight Violence Saturday NightContinued from Page Onetims of a tear gas attack.At one point during the afternoonspeeches, a number of people at the edge ofthe crowd stood up, and looked around ner¬vously as noxious fumes drifted aroundthem. “It’s sulfur gas,” someone yelled,and many covered their faces with hand¬kerchiefs and began moving away.“It’s all right,” another voice called out.“It’s just the johns at the comfort station.”Many of the protesters became bored asthe afternoon speeches wore on, and theydrifted away from the Ellipse. Hundredssplashed in the pools near the monument ordumped water on each other from papercups and canteens. David Dellinger announced from the po¬dium that “we are not here for fun andgames,” when students were distributingcoke and food from a concessions standthey had “liberated.”The expected incidents of violence camein the evening. Several hundred studentsmarched from George Washington Univer¬sity up 21st street to K avenue, chanting“Free Bobby Seale.” Other student onlook¬ers followed behind. Sounds of breakingglass scared off the onlookers.Police arrived several minutes later, andthe demonstrators fled into Du pont Circle.Several jeeps filled with MP’s and 20 policeon motorcycles drove the students from thecircle. Miss West announced the meeting was tobe run by parliamentary procedure, andwas greeted by thunderous applause. Shethen explained the basic rules and an¬nounced the purpose of the meeting was tovote on the continuation of the strike and tomake several pertinent announcements.The first proposal offered to table thevote on continuation of the strike past Mon¬day inasmuch as nearly 500 students hadgone to Washington. The second motion wasto continue the strike through Monday.Both motions were carried.Between announcements, Elaine Wallerand Tom Luff, faculty members from KentState University described living conditionsin Kent as “police state.” Miss Waller toldof 170 students who had been busted, moston open charges, and that these studentsdid not have the money for legal aid. A hatwas passed through the assembled bodyand $200 was collected.Academic strike effectiveness weakenedMonday, as many students returned toclasses for the first time in a week.Activities begun last week, however, in¬cluding picketing outside class buildings, li¬braries, and delivery entrances; politicalaction discussion groups; canvassing fortelegrams and petition signatures; andphone calls to Washington and Springfieldlegislators, have continued following the of¬ficial University shutdown Friday.In community-wide anti-war action, anumber of Hyde Park businesses will re¬main closed between 9 and 10 am Tuesdayto protest US involvement in Cambodia. A 9am rally at the Hyde Park Coop will kickoff the hour-long community shutdown.Students working with the Hyde Parkcommunity strike committee canvassedmany Hyde Park businesses Monday to askthem to close during that hour. They havealso asked residents to wait until 10 ambefore sending their children to school, andContinued on Pago Five» - » S' f X «**.. $Thousands March to Grant Park RallyJesse KrakauerSERVICE: Students raise clenched fists following memorial service in RockefellerChapel Friday for four students killed at Kent State. In perhaps the largest anti-war demon¬stration to take place in Chicago, morethan 20,000 persons gathered Saturday af¬ternoon on the green expanse leading downfrom the statute of General Logan in GrantPark to protest events in Cambodia and atKent State.The demonstration was the climax of sev¬eral marches, one of which originated onthe main quad at 9 am Saturday morning.The eight mile trek to the Loop, which tookabout three hours to complete, was madeby 500 students, faculty, and members ofthe Hyde Park community..At noon a brief rally took place at theCivic Center. After 15 minutes, the marchresumed and moved down WashingtonStreet to the Federal Building. From therethe march to Grant Park began, winding itsway down Jackson Street and Michigan Av¬enue between columns of Chicago police.The chant, “peace now,” resounded offthe downtown buddings as the thousands ofmarchers neared Michigan Avenue. Turn¬ing right on Michigan, the march passedRoosevelt University where students hadstrung a sheet emblazoned with the word“Strike” and a clenched fist in a third-floorwindow.As demonstrators sang “all we are say-Organizers Plan Action ProjectsBy Wendy GlocknerFaculty and graduate students here haveorganized a broadly-based “campaign toend the war in Southeast Asia and to defendthe university community against politicaloppression and physical violence.”At their first meeting last Friday, spon¬sors of the Continuing Action Projects(CAP) organized workshops which will“generate immediate action as well as pre¬pare for a concerted electoral effort nextfall in conjunction with a moratorium onnormal activities.”Several organizers are suspendingclasses for this week in order to devote alltheir time to the project. Most hope to con¬tinue working on a part-time basis, in addi¬tion to normal academic activities, throughthe Congressional elections in November.Several faculty members and graduate stu¬ dents have also contributed part of theirsalaries or grants to the project.According to a CAP spokesman, the proj¬ect is organized so that “a large number ofpeople will be able to join.” The project istrying not to duplicate any activities whichhave started spontaneously, such as the SGtelegram and petition campaign to con¬gressmen, and will coordinate its activitieswith other groups interested in changingpolitical attitudes.Various activities have emerged from theparticular workshops, which began meetingover the weekend.For example, the workshop which is at¬tempting to “encourage political action byofficial university bodies” is circulatingtwo petitions to the faculty: one petition“calls for a two-week suspension of usualacademic activities in the fall of 1970 inTwo-Week Suspension AskedA petition calling for “a two week suspen¬sion of usual academic activities” duringthe fall 1970 was issued today by the stu¬dents and faculty on Continuing ActionProject Number 7, and immediately en¬dorsed by several prominent faculty mem¬bers.Professor Aristide Zolberg, chairman ofthe political science department and mem¬ber of the Project on Political Action byOfficial University Bodies, reported thatlarge numbers of students and faculty inother academic departments, includingmany who have circulated parallel peti¬ tions, have independently endorsed theCAP-7 statement.The petition calls for a suspension “in or¬der to enable members of the Universitycommunity to participate fully in demo¬cratic electoral processes.”Political Science professor Leonard Bind¬er indicated that he endorsed the petitionbecause it sought to maintain “an open in¬stitution and a vehicle for the suitable ex¬pression of students’ and faculty efforts.”The position of the Council of the Aca¬demic Senate on the petition is not yetknown. order to enable members of the universitycommunity to participate fully in demo¬cratic electoral processes.”The second petition calls for the facultysenate to convene in order to express itselfon the war in Southeast Asia and the re¬pression of political dissent in the UnitedStates and to support a “demonstrative in¬terruption of normal academic activities.”The “elections, lobbying and legislativeactivity” workshop has identified peacecandidates in strategic areas and needspeople who will campaign for them duringthe summer and through the Novembergeneral election.Several candidates suggested areDouglas La Follette of Wisconsin, SenatorVance Hartke of Indiana, Adlai StevensonIII, and Ed Warman (from the NorthShore.)The workshop also plans to lobby inWashington for the McGovern-Hatfield res¬olution which would withhold appropria¬tions .for military operations in Cambodiabeginning July 1.Organizers are coordinating their activ-ties with other universities in the country.The workshop which “evaluates the roleof experts,” role of research and the gener¬ation of counter-propaganda, plans to in¬vestigate black opinion of the war, govern¬ment finances and the university, the mis¬representation of peace talks by the mediaand the government, the economic con¬sequences of the war, and who and wherethe silent majority are. The group plans tolook at government grants for universityContinued on Pago Nino ing is give peace a chance,” the marchpassed the Conrad Hilton hotel, scene of theviolent demonstration of the 1968 Demo¬cratic National Convention. A group of menin business suits watched without reactionas the march moved past the Essex Inn.People began gathering in Grant park atabout 1:30. Some of the demonstratorsscaled the statue of General Logan and be¬gan to wave NLF flags. A scuffle ensuedwhen rally organizers, not wanting the VietCong flag to be seen on television, insistedthat an American flag also be flown.The rally began at 2 pm and was chairedby Jack Siegal, a trade unionist and amember of the Chicago Peace Council. Iimpressed with the large turnout, Siegal de¬clared, “Of all the lies that Nixon has triedto pull, there is only one of his campaignpromises that he has fulfilled; that is, hehelped to get us together.”Critical of the leadership of organized la¬bor, Siegal called AFL-CIO presidentGeorge Meany “a stooge who has corruptedand misled the working people.” Favoringthe continuation of the student strike andits expansion to a general workers and con¬sumers’ strike, Siegal added, “We can’tstop at mourning, we must, in the words ofJoe Hill, ‘organize.’ ”Among the speakers were two studentsfrom Kent State University, John Thomasand Debby Moreland. “Violence is the onlything this country understands ... peacefuldemonstrations, I think, are not really theanswer,” Miss Moreland said.Thomas added, “The only thing we weretrying to do at Kent was get it together,and what we got was bullets.” He called onstudents to be critical of the news mediaand to “ask your friends at other schools”for information on campus disorders.Carl Fennimore, a representative of theChicago Area Student Strike Council,voiced support for the three strike de¬mands. “We’re testimony that schools arefailing to whip up the war hysteria neces¬sary to keep the war going ... Now we aregoing to turn the schools into anti-war uni¬versities,” he said.“Black people have known for 500 yearswhat reality is like in America,” said EvaJefferson, president of the NorthwesternUniversity student body. Miss Jefferson,who received perhaps the best response ofthe day, said “we should close Americadown so the only person working is RichardNixon.”As the audience slowly started to streamout of the park on the muggy afternoon,Staughton Lynd, the radical historian, an¬nounced plans for the continuation of thecity-wide strike. “The strike is the heart ofour resistance to Cambodia; we can’t let itdie,” he said.As the afternoon proceeded and as thespeeches became more radical, the crowddwindled to less than one-third its originalsize. “Who was the man who sent advisersto Vietnam?” asked the editor of Rising Up-Angry, a radical Chicago undergroundnewspaper. “Kennedy,” he answered, “andMcGovern are of the same ilk.”>ur students at Kent State University. Photograph by Steve AokiMay 12, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3The University of Chicago Bookstoreannounces an unusual SALE. Every bookin stock is on sale at a 20% DISCOUNT.This includes textbooks, general books,and titles previously marked down to asale price. (This does NOT include specialorders.)In addition, many items in other de¬partments have been placed on sale atdiscounts as high as 65% from list price.This sale will end on Friday, May 15th.ALL SALES WILL BE FINAL20% DISCOUNT ONALL BOOKS IN STOCK.IHE BOOKSTORE1020 East 57th Street$IJb* Q\\c*ya. •Mfroon/May U$D******* ^■ *-<*• - • t y,wwMiow^>wvKr .r .•.•vi.'.\!.«er^v .■■:'r(-.•tfvr.’Nr;.i.-rswStudents ProtestSheriff's EvictionSteve AokiRALLY: An estimated 20,000 people marched downtown Saturday in Grant Parkto hear speakers criticize Nixon's Cambodian policy.Hyde Park Businesses CloseContinued from Page Fivehave requested that commuters stay in theneighborhood until then.Speakers at the 9 am rally at the Coopwill include Quentin Young, recently a can¬didate for Con-Con, and Alderman LeonDespres. A march will be held following therally.A list of the businesses closing today wasnot available at press time. Several Univer¬sity businesses, including the bookstore,University of Chicago press, and University Realty Management, will remain open.Eight professors and 35 graduate stu¬dents in the anthropology department votedMonday to support a “discontinuation offormal academic activity” through Friday.The purpose of this discontinuation is to en¬courage faculty to get out of classes towork or to have workshops on the war.The signatures represent nearly half ofthe anthropology faculty and two-thirds ofthe students. Friday afternoon following the memorialservice at Rockefeller Chapel, about 70 stu¬dents left the campus and drove to the westside to protest the eviction of a member ofthe Contract Buyers’ League (CBL). CBL isan organization of black homeowners whohave been forced to buy their houses oncontract without the option of a mortgage.They have been refused mortgages becauseoften they do not have enough money forlarge down payments and also “are badsecurity risks.” Buying on contract meansthat they usually have to pay about twiceas much as the purchase value of the housebecause of the interest rate. Furthermore,if they miss one payment they are evictedand the money they have already paid outis forfeited.CBL members have put money in escrowin order to show their good faith while theyare pressing lawsuits to declare illegal thediscriminatory nature of contract buying.Over 150 evictions have taken place by theorder of Sheriff Joseph Woods in responseto the withholding of this money.The students who showed up at a westside shopping center in a neighborhood ofcontract buyers’ houses had expected tomove furniture back into an evicted con¬tract buyer’s house. This type of action,which has received wide publicity in dra¬matizing CBL’s cause, has been met withtough police retaliation in the past.Students were disappointed, however,when Mr. Win Humphrey of South SideCBL asked for another kind of help. He ex¬plained that CBL was currently involved inlitigation, that they were participating in“the establishment’s little word games,”that they did not want to do anything illegalat this time to jeopardize their case. Heindicated that the threat from police wasstill strong by pointing to the four policecars on the corner. He asked the students to do something less “dramatic” and gofrom door to door to persuade contract buy¬ers who were not in the League to join theirmovement. What turned most of the stu¬dents against the project was Humphrey’sremarks that black homeowners would lis¬ten to “white faces” with more respectthan they would listen to black people. Agirl in the crowd shouted, “But that buildsracism, don’t you see?”Humphrey denied that CBL was racist inany way, but it was apparent that studentswere not willing to carry out the project.A black student told the group, “We’vecome for action, not for talking.” He sug¬gested that the group return to campus anddiscuss another strategy until CBL couldcome up with an action for students to par¬ticipate in. The group was getting ready toleave when Mr. Humphrey took the bull¬horn again and made a new proposal. “Wewant to do the thing that’s the best for themost people involved. Let’s make a demon¬stration at the place where it will do themost good. This is the realtor.”The group cheered at this suggestion andgot into cars to go to Newmann and Associ¬ates, Inc. at 7935 S. Cottage Grove. Humph¬rey wanted to put pressure on the realtor toprevent them from renting houses fromwhich families have been evicted. Accord¬ing to CBL, four realtors are involved inresale.When the group arrived, around 3 pm,they crowded into the small storefront of¬fice and spilled onto the street, whileHumphrey spoke to the office manager,Abraham Isaacson. Humphrey explainedthat it would be a “tragic situation” for twoblack families to have claims on one houseand asked that the realtor not resell houseswhile the contract buyers’ issue was stillbeing fought in the courts. He added that itContinued on Page EightFOTA EVENTSMay 13noonHutchinson Ct.3:30Quantrell7:30Foster Hall Lounge1130E. 59th St.8:30Hutchinson Ct.rain date: May 14 May 13-15U.C. Concert Band PerformanceEASLEY BIACKWOOP-Piono RecitalScrap Papers From Prison and Other StoriesBy Contemporary Iranian Authors A reading by Donald A. ShojaiKingston Mines Theater Company"The Serpent" by Jean Claude Van ItallieMay 14 Folk Dancingnoon U.C. Folk Dancersmain quads8:00 KEN KESSEYMandel author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's N*t and former head of the Merry PrankstersMay 15noonMain quads8:30Rockefeller Chapelrain date: May 17 Folk DancingU.C. Folk DancersGALA PERFORMANCE - Outdoor Aurol/visual ExtravaganzaRachmaninoff: Easier Sunday • carillon and brassHandel's: Royal Water Musk - carillon ^one other selection to be announcedGigantic Fireworks DisplayGALA PERFORMANCE - Concert of Jazz and Contemporary MusicChicago Arts Quartet co-sponsored by the Sears, Roebuck Foundation and Rockefeller ChapelWaiting for Godotdirected by Roger Dodds. Ticket price to be announced. Co-sponsored by University Theater9:30Midway ormain quadMay 14,15,16, 17Lutheran Theological Seminary1100E. 55th St.thru May 16 Student Art ExhibitBergman Gallerythru May 16 Senoka Senanayake ExhibitBergmann Gallery one of Ceylon's major paintersthru end of Student Computer ArtInstitute for ©utsideof Room C 113Computer ResearchThis is the official, up to date schedule: Al events free unless otherwise specifiedMay 168:30Bond Chapel U. of C. Musical Societypresents a concert of Bach CantatasThis has been rescheduled from last Saturday at the same time.May 12/ 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5EDITORIALSA Tactical ErrorLast night’s mass meeting decided to continue the strike onclasses through this week. The body turned down a clause in thesteering committee’s proposal which would call off the strike infavor of extending the week old class boycott.We feel the decision to extend the strike was a tactical error:• We fear the impetus of last week’s boycott is dying out hereand by the end of the week the strike may fizzle. The commitmentto continue the strike through the week may in fact bring on adefeat where it could have been avoided.• Extension of the strike prevents a more real commitmentto working for change outside the University. Last week mainte¬nance of the strike too often sapped energy from ongoing work out*side. It has been too easy to consider staying away from class tobe a real effort at working for the three demands.• It is becoming unclear whether the strike is directed at theUniversity. The extension clouds the issue. We believe that theUniversity is not a just target for anti-war activity.• One of the major reasons for last week’s strike — solidaritywith the national strike — is no longer a reason for its extension.Nixon has gotten the message. Extension, therefore, is reason¬able only if further rational support is pending. It doesn’t seem tobe the time for revolution and the strike is no end in itself.We cannot condemn those who go to class. We hope the situa¬tion can be saved by those groups and individuals looking beyondthe strike.Those Two Reports’ In the midst of truly momentous issues, namely the war andthe strike, certain normal affairs proceed, and attention shouldbe paid to them. Among them are the regular functions of theCouncil of the Faculty Senate, which has yet to decide how to im¬plement two very important committee reports: The Wegener com¬mittee report on discipline and the Neugarten committee reporton women.We do not understand why the Council has not yet voted onthe Wegener report. That report was submitted to them one monthlate, at the very end of the fall quarter. We stated our opinion solong ago that it’s probably been long forgotten. The report is nota satisfactory document; it simply does not accord students theirfull rights in controlling disciplinary proceedings, but it is betterthan the present system, which totally shuts students out of thedisciplinary process except as victims. We reluctantly gave oursupport to the report’s recommendations, recognizing that whilewe were disappointed, it was a big step forward for many conserva¬tive faculty members. We have been waiting for nearly half a yearnow to hear the Council’s decision.In the case of the Neugarten report on women, the longdelay has come from the report committee rather than the Council.This report was supposed to have been finished by December 1.It was submitted to the Council last week and still has not beenmade public. We expect to be seeing copies of it by the end ofthis week or hearing some pretty good excuses.We have warned before that students are not going to regardthe shortchanging or stalling of discussion on these importanttopics charitably. We fully realize that the Council has a lot ofwork these days, and that consideration of these reports will in¬volve a great deal of effort. We might be more sympathetic ifwe had not already experienced long delays with these reports,but considering how long overdue these reports are, we cannotaccept any excuses.Students have the right to have both of these reports fullydiscussed and decided on before the end of this quarter. TheCouncil should realize too that if they are not decided on verysoon, the ensuing curtailed discussion can represent itself to stu¬dents as nothing but an absence of good faith on the part of facultyconsidering these questions so important to us all.6/Ttw Chicago Maroon/ May 42, 1970 Backlash Possibility PredictedIf Colleges Close in NovemberBy an ObserverHave those who advocate closing downthe campuses so students will be free toelectioneer thought of the potential con¬sequences of their actions? James Restoncalculated this might make up to seventeenmillion people available for campaigning.The analogy with dismissing school tobring in the harvest has some merits: thestudents might harvest the votes for theircandidates, or the nation might reap thewhirlwind of such an action.A universal dismissal of classes beforethe fall elections is without precedent andcertainly would have dramatic con¬sequences. The least of them would prob¬ably be law suits by the YAF and othersagainst school administrations — whichmight be forced to reopen the classrooms.This would polarize the campus even fur¬ther.However, it is unlikely that Americawould come off so well. Of course a jere¬miad may be premature and unwarranted,everything might come off beautifully —racial tension, inflation, rising unemploy¬ment, social polarization might all come toan end along with the Indochina War. Butis this at all likely? Probably not.The country has changed considerablysince the 1968 “children’s crusade.” Theconsequences of unleashing the studentswould probably be totally undesirable andugly. The injection of any significant frac¬tion of the seventeen million freed by aclosing of the campuses into the electoralprocess wou’d certainly provoke a reaction.Those threatened by such a dramaticchange of the status quo can be expected torespond. Perhaps George Meany mighteven call a general strike of his millions ofAFL-CIO members to campaign for twoweeks to support the Indochina War. MayorDaley and his type might stop the function¬ing of municipal administration to releaseworkers to canvass for votes full time. Anynumber of coalitions can be projected tobalance the seventeen million campuspeople.The students would then really find outwhat confrontation politics is all about. TheElysian sanctuary of the campus would bereplaced by the raw violence of the street.Professors usually can endure taunts andother forms of harrassment, administratorshardly react when their buildings are fired.But is this the response of the street?Hardly. Construction workers are delightedto beat up students, businessmen have noqualms asking the mayor to order the po¬lice “to shoot to kill.”Unquestionably there will be massiveconfrontations if the campuses formally en-THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editors: Mitch Bobkin, Can HitchcockNews Editor: Suo LothPhoto Editor: Stovo AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociators: Stove Cook (News), Chris Froula(Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PateGood sell, Gordon Katz, Susan Loft, GerardLaval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, JanetPino, Audrey Shalinsky, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Monty Futch,Jesso 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. 5»thSt., Chicago, III. 60437. Phone Midway 3-0000,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mall $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. GADFLYter the electoral lists. The “moderates”will probably be unable to keep control oftheir student constituency. While “politicsof civility” may be the rule at the Univer¬sity of Chicago, this is not true elsewhere.Here there is a sense of near-unanimity,on other campuses violence grows out ofstrong feelings of opposition and frustra¬tion. Certainly the non-UofC climate is thenorm and expectations for the electioncampaign should be programmed accord¬ing to reality.Recent history provides some clues as towhat we can expect from a closing of thecampuses for political purposes. Mao Tse-tung used the students of China as a weap¬on in his cultural revolution. While all anal¬ogies are imperfect and this one well maybe atrocious, it does present an exampleworth looking at for possible human les¬sons.Those engineering the future should beaware of the alternatives. At first the RedGuards got their way, but other elementstired of the bullying and the rampage andresisted. Chaos ensued. Mao had to curtailthe Red Guard “excesses” by crushingthem with the workers and the army —who seem to have been delighted to oblige.In the process there was no school fortwo years, libraries were burned, terrorismwas rampant, much of the economy ofChina was shattered. The students were ba¬nished to the countryside.Americans wanting to harness the stu¬dents’ energy are not Mao and AmericanContinued on Page EightBULLETINTuesday, May 12ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello, University organ¬ist, Rockefeller Chapel, 12:30 pm.MEETING: University Council, Business East 106, 3:40pm.COLLOQUIUM: E A Stern, professor of physics, Uni¬versity of Washington, Seattle, “The Fermi Surfaceof Noble Metal Alloys," Research Institute 480,4:15 pm. *FLICK: "The Big Night," DOC films, Cobb, 8 pm.CONCERT: Allegro Conspirito, madrigals and old Eng¬lish music, Bond Chapel, 8 pm.Wednesday, May 13MEETING: Election continuing action project, Plan¬ning, Ida Noyes West Lounge, 10 am.ACTION: Meeting to plan independent acti. n bygraduating students at Commencement, ReynoldsClub South, 11 am. , „CARILLON RECITAL: Robert Londine, RockefellerChapel, 12:30 pm.SEMINAR: Robert Mulliken, Ernest DeWitt Burtondistinguished service professor emeritus of physicsand chemistry, "The Spectra and Excited Statesof Rare Gas Molecules," Kent 103, 4 pm.LECTURE: James Jamieson, Rockefeller University,"Transport and Discharge of Secretary Proteins inthe Exorlne Pancreas," Abbott 101, 4 pm.SEMINAR: Om Prakash, department of history, DemiUniversity, "Some Economic Implication of tneMansabdari System," Foster Lounge, 4:10 pm-REHEARSAL: Orchestra, Mandel Hall, strings-6: Ju,McKinley-7:30, Dvorak-8:30 pm. „ _FLICK: "Born to Be Bad," DOC films, 7:15 and 9 j5.™;MEETING: SCAF with Milton Friedman, JudsonLounge, 7:30 pm. ,, ...(hFILM SERIES: "The Pursuit of Happiness,century music, architecture and classicism), »Sci 122, 8 pm. „ _COUNTRY DANCERS: British Isles, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.LECTURE: Donald Hansen, professor, Institute wFine Arts, NYU, "Excavations at Al-Hiba Iraq,Breasted Hall, 8:30 pm.Thursday, May 14ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello, RockefellerChapel, 12:30 pm. . ,LECTURE; Garrett Hardin, Willett visiting pro wso-"Impediments to Eugenics," Biology CoilegiDivision, Cobb 209, 4 pm. . , ...COLLOQUIUM: Peter Fowler, professor of phy*'”'University of Bristol, "Ultra Heavy Nuclei of 'neCosmic Radiation," Eckhart 133, 4:30 pmMEETING: Humanities division, Classics 10, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: Adelheid Heimann, University of London,"The Last Copy of the Utrecht Psalter,' art De¬partment, Cobb 403, 4:30 pm.Friday, May 15COLLEGE FORUM: Roger Hildebrand, dean ofICollege; Margaret Rosenheim, SSA; Ralph Shap y-professor of music, "The Lives I Live, swmCommons, 3:30 pm.SEMINAR: Susan Lowey, Children's Cancer ResearcnFoundation, Boston, Research Institutes 480, 4 p -CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS WOODWINPQUINTET: Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm. dSPEECH: Hamish Fraser, international iournalist anoformer communist revolutionary on the AmentaRevolution, Reynold's CI«A> South, 7:30 pm.t * *VandalismI was dismayed to see the headline,“Vandals Raid Robie House, Files,” placedby the Marcon over my article in Friday’sissue. A “vandal” is defined in Webster’sNew Collegiate Dictionary as “one whowillfully or ignorantly destroys, damages,or defaces property belonging to another orto the public.”The use of the term in this story obscuresthe significance of the SDS action, becauseit implies that destruction was carried outfor its own sake. There is a much moreserious meaning behind the act. Whether ornot one agrees with their tactic, or view¬point, it is important to understand whatthe people win raided Robie House weresaying: that property is less important thanhuman life, that the United States govern¬ment is destroying human life in our owncountry and overseas and that since, inSDS’s view, the Adlai Stevenson Institute isimplicated in this large scale killing, it wasan appropriate symbolic object of attack.SDS spokesmen reiterated before and af¬ter the action that their purpose was not todestroy the building but to evict the furni¬ture, thereby making a point about the con¬nection they see between the ASI, US impe¬rialism and the war in Cambodia. Part ofthe damage was done in the process of tak¬ing out the furniture and getting to thefiles: the three glass doors smashed andthe two wooden doors axed down.The reason for the rest of the damage —a broken Xerox machine, damaged furni¬ture, smashed pictures is less clear. It mayhave occurred in the process of throwingthings violently into the street or it may bethe result of vandalism by individuals.Obviously vandalism may very well havetypified some of the destruction but it doesnot explain the overall tone of the event,which from the discussion in Reynolds Clubto the statements issued afterwards empha¬sized that the purpose was not to smashwindows.The kind of headline that was used in Fri¬day’s Maroon only continues the kind of in¬accuracy and confusion which character¬ized the Robie House stories in some Chi¬cago papers. The Maroon has never beenrenowned for accuracy, but at least itsproximity to the University should allow itto report such events with more under¬standing than newspapers who can only seethem in the context of mindless destruction.Sarah Glazer 72Maroon reporterThanksWe wish to thank Dr. Edward Deutsch ofthe chemistry department for donatingmedic supplies for last Saturday’s marchdowntown.Judy Papish 73Esther Greenfield 73Chris Odell 73Carol Weinberg 73Preserve RuinI would like to bring it to the attention ofthis scholarly community just how irration¬al is the nature of the anti-war protestswhich have recently been in vogue. A per¬fect example of the effects of divorcing ra¬tional thought from moral convictions canbe seen in the actions of SVNA last week.While digging their trenches to ward offthe so-called “rifle-carrying guardsmen,”they came across what has since been con¬cluded to be the remnants of the originaldwelling of the first settler of Hyde Park.(He is famous for his remark of, “God¬damn wild savages.” on first viewing thenatives of the area.)Instead of thinking about what it reallywas that they had uncovered, the diggerswere heard to remark rashly, “Oh boy,bricks” and “Now we can build a realwall.” The people there proceeded to dojust that, and as a result destroyed foreverone of the most valuable clues to the pastthat has ever been uncovered from the dirtat this University.When are people going to learn that any action carried out without thorough re¬search and consideration can only result inunnecessary and avoidable losses to man¬kind. Let this be a lesson?The University of Chicago SocietyFor the Preservation of Ruin'On Holiday'Professor Milton Friedman’s answer toRay Page, blaming the faculties of univer¬sities and exonerating presidents as thecause of present campus unrest, is an ex¬ample of a man who has gained virtuosityin his own specialty and exploits his repu¬tation in a field in which he is obviously ona holiday.There was no need for Professor Fried¬man to say anything, but since he has, andwhat 'he has said is so obviously mere¬tricious, attention should be called to thatfact, as well as to the fact that ProfessorFriedman has consistently shown himselfinsensitive to the phenomenon of social andpolitical injustice, and seems to be actingon the “principle” that his economist’s biasis justice and that conformity to that bias isthe only virtue, though the world perish.Herbert LammProfessorPhilosophy and history of ideas Advise and ConsentThe issue central to the current campusparoxysms in this country has not sig¬nificantly' changed in nearly 10 years. Siz¬eable American involvement in Indochinadates from at least 1962. Is it not time toput the fundamental issue here to the ques¬tion, quile apart from local issues or per¬sonalities?I wish to suggest that a national referen¬dum be held on the question of the adviceand consent of the people of the UnitedStates to continue involvement of thearmed forces of their country in SoutheastAsia.My proposal has the advantage of puttingthe central issue to the test. Mr Nixon be¬lieves that a vast silent majority of Ameri¬cans are behind his policy, so let themspeak. The students believe otherwise, solet them vote and solicit the votes and opin¬ions of others. If federal or state govern¬ments were unable to arrange such a refer¬endum for November, it could possibly berun by an independent unbiased group orcompany — I am sure funds could beraised for such a purpose.I can think of no more positive action, asyet untried, to give the young and old ofthis great nation a focus for their support or dissent on this issue. I am not aware ofprecedents for such a referendum, exceptfor France, but is this not a time for prece¬dents? The first amendment to the Con¬stitution, on the right to petition, shouldprovide sufficient justification.Charles L. CoulterAssistant professor, AnatomyDOC Closes DownThe Documentary Film Group is closingdown for the reminder of this quarter. Thisin effect means that all public showings af¬ter that of May 13 are cancelled.There are two basic reasons for this deci¬sion. First, shutting down for the rest of thequarter expresses our basic sympathy withthe strike and its goals. Second, shuttingdown will allow many of our members toparticipate in political activities.To make it as clear as possible I will listthpse of our showings that will continue:Tuesday May 12 — The Big Night, Wednes¬day May 13 — Born To Be Bad and MildredPierce. — The first showing that will becancelled is that of Friday, May 15. —Line of Demarcation.James Jubak 72ChairmanDocumentary Film GroupOpen LineThe open line to Washington that allowsstudents to call their US representatives orsenators will remain open today until 4:30pm in Ida Noyes hall.Friday, mare than 100 students used thetelephone service provided by the Univer¬sity’s office of public information to callgovernment officials including Senators Ja¬cob Javits, (R-NY); Ralph Smith (R-Ill);Russell Long (D-La) and Richard Schwei-Ker (R-Pa).Appointments have been set up todaywith a number of government officials whowill be available to students on the openline. Senator Hugh Scott (R-Pa) can be con¬tacted through his legislative assistant,Kenneth Davis after 2 pm. Senator DanielInouye (D-Hawaii) will be available al¬though an exact time hasn’t been set up.Sen Herman Talmadge (D-Ga) will be inhis office after 9 am. Rep Roman Pucinskifrom the north side will be in after 10:30am and Rep Archer Nelson (D-Minn) willbe in between 3:30 and 4 pm.Law TestsProspective law school applicants whowill not be on campus this summer andwho wish to take law boards on Saturday,October 17, 1970 must write for Law SchoolAdmission Test application forms in earlyAugust. Applications are due three weeksbefore the testing date, so students will notbe back in the fall in time to pick appli¬cations up on campus.Students should write for applications toLAW SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST, Educa¬tion Testing Service, Box 944, Princeton,New Jersey. 08540.TTie test will be given as early as October17 in order to encourage law school appli¬cants to apply for admission early in theyear. Students are advised however, to takethe exam as early as July 25, 1970, if pos¬sible.The next LSAT exam after the one onOctober 17 will be offered December 19,1970; that date is too late for law schoolshowever.Peace CommencementThe National Peace CommencementFind, an organization initiated by a groupof students from Yale, would like to raiseone million dollars to support peace candi¬dates in the next Congressional elections. Steve AoklWE SERVE AND PROTECT: Policeman onduty during Saturday march.Some of the people sponsoring this orga¬nization are William Sloan Coffin, formerchaplain of Yale; Sam Brown, head of the *New Mobe; Ramsey Clark, ex-AttorneyGeneral; Bishop Paul Moore, EpiscopalBishop of New York; and Charles Palmer,head of the National Student Association(NSA).One of the suggested plans of action is forgraduating students not to wear caps andgowns to graduations and donate the rentalmoney to the fund. All donations may besent to The Peace Commencement Fund,3111 Yale Station, New Haven, 06520.For information call Larry Edwards, 491-1593 Evanston.Rugby WinsThe most violent clash at the strike-rid¬den University of Wisconsin campus Sun¬day was die meeting of two of the top mid¬west rugby teams. The Chicago Maroonscame from behind to defeat WisconsinBadgers, 11-6. The victory was number 16 in 18 gamesfor the Chicago squad, with two ties and nodefeats, as the best record in seven yearsof University rugby continues to grow.Last week’s elimination of Chicago fromthe midwest tournament was officiallyrecorded as a tie according to midwestunion regulations. The innovative seven-a-side sudden death device employed inthat game does not count as a loss becauseit is in fact a different game from rugby.On Saturday the Maroons will wrap uptheir season against the consistently strongPalmer College team, which defeated Wis¬consin 16-6 last Saturday. The game willtake place on Palmer’s home ground in Da¬venport, Iowa.SnakebirdOwl and Serpent, the University’s men’shonor society, has elected its 1970-71 mem¬bers, including Caroline Heck, ’71, as theirpresident for the coming year.In its first and last meeting of the yearMay 4, at the Eagle pub, Michael Fowler,’71, was elected vice-president, DouglasKissel, ’71, treasurer, and Jerry Webman,’71, secretary.Miss Heck is editor of the Maroon, Fow¬ler is vice-president of Student Government(SG), Kissel is chairman of the Festival ofthe Arts (FOTA), and Webman is pastpresident of Inter-House Council (IHC).Also elected were Steve Brandt, JohnBryant, Steve Cook, David Chase, HollyHartstone, Marty Marcus, Ronald McAdow,Gary Nakarado, Eric Rubin, Larry Seidel,John Turner, and Bill Wallace. All are thirdyear students in the College.Members of the society also elected anadvisory board to help them in their activi¬ties for next year. Notables selected to thisboard include Gary Ahrens, Mark Ashin,Karl Bemesderfer, Jay Berwanger, Mi¬chael Claffey, Louis Crane, Elliott Crick,Ginger Fish, Steve Freer, Walter Jeschkeand Morton Kaplan.Also Skip Landt, Edward Levi, HowieMachtinger, Frank Malhranche, ChetMcGraw, John Moscow, John Mottier, Nor¬man Nachtrieb, Charles O’Connell, GeorgePlaye, Peter Ratner, Arnold Ravin, Tim¬othy School, John Siefert, Amos AlonzoStagg, Sally Stein, James Vice, FairindaWest, Alice Williams, and Fairfax Cone.Ratner was selected as chairman, Mos¬cow as vice-chairman, Mottier as secre¬tary, and Machtinger as treasurer. Conewill be public relations director.May 12>. WOffHa-CWcago.Maroon/7Demonstrations Are Remote From PoliticsBy Steve CookIf anything, the downtown march in Chi¬cago and the massive rally in Washingtonover the weekend showed the futility ofsuch actions.The more that such activities take on theaura of parties and parades, the more theyturn off the people who are tired of therhetoric and want to get something done.The annual Chicago peace march was al¬ways a fun time for the Vets for Peace andthe Peace Council to do their thing, andnobody minded much. The Tribune and theSun-Times bickered over the head count,Continued from Page Fivewas an explosive situation — as the man¬ager could tell from the rowdy crowd insideand outside his office. Humphrey inter¬spersed his explanation with the remark,“Let us reason together; this is our posi¬tion.”The manager said he understood the situ¬ation and would call Mr. Humphrey thatafternoon. Humphrey said, “We’ll wait.”Meanwhile students had moved severalpieces of furniture out of the office andwere chanting, “We support CBL.” Whenthey moved a picture out of the officeHumphrey stepped out and asked the stu¬dents not to evict the realtor, because thatwould be “taking pressure off of him. Nowhe knows he can be evicted ... Your pres¬ence, I’m quite sure, will expedite mat¬ters.”Humphrey came back inside and ex¬plained over the mounting noise to the twoblack women employees, “When we getthese revolutionaries together you have toexpect a little noise.”He told the women “We don’t believe indealing with the system in a fair and equi- which usually turned out to be the mostimportant result of such events.For the last two years, the Chicago Po¬lice Department has carefully avoided an¬other convention-type confrontation. Whenthey do their thing these days, it’s usuallylate at night when the press isn’t watching.Like Fred Hampton.The strike, which is dying fast as a politi¬cal action, has also reached a point wherethe people really interested about doingsomething and the fair-weather activistswill go their separate ways. The actionslast week on campuses across the countrytable manner, because they haven’t dealtwith us in a fair and equitable manner.We’re talking about changing the system,about changing laws like contract buying.Contract buying is wrong.”One of the women told Humphrey thatUniversal Builders told the realtor whichhouses to rent, and that the realty office didnot know that these houses had belonged toevicted families.The crowd was becoming more and ifioreimpatient. A CBL member told them an an¬nouncement would be forthcoming in aboutfive minutes. People shouted “We’re goingto burn the building down!” Already theyhad tom the four pictures of houses for salefrom the window and were burning them inthe ashtray.About 3:30 Humphrey announced to thecrowd, “The office has pledged not to sellor rent any houses which belong to CBLuntil the court litigation is settled. It willnotify the family that has moved in andrefund their money immediately.” Peopleshouted that he should get the pledge inwriting, and one of the secretaries typed itup. There was some argument about wheth- ANALYSISwere an emotional response to Cambodiaand Kent State. Summer vacation is com¬ing up, and people do not have to worryabout free time to do some political work.It is time to think of next November, andthe congressional elections. It is not a timefor back-patting; nil we have done is makeer the pledge was legal and binding withoutnotarization. Two individuals offered to bewitnesses. Police Sergeant Sherwood Wil¬liams, who had been standing smiling inthe doorway throught the demonstration,said he would not be a witness, but theycould subpoena him if necessary. Humph¬rey took him at his word and wrote downhis badge number.Continued from Page Sixstudents are not (yet) Red Guards, but thefrightened response of the non-intellectualsand those “over thirty” to student powerwith real muscle may well create a resultclose to that experienced by China. Prob¬ably a majority of Americans approved ofthe Kent State massacre. America is al¬ready a juvenocracy in most spheres, butnot in politics — even voting by 18 year oldsis not yet the law. All signs indicate that“the silent majority” is not ready for thetriumph of the juvenocracy. The workersare ready to beat up the students, the po¬lice and troops are willing to gas, bayonet, Nixon lose a night of sleep. The universitieshave been upset, but the clear message toNixon is unity of faculty and studentsagainst him.The continuing action project, an attemptto move beyond the strike, is the spearheadhere of continuing the fervor of the strikethroughout the quarter and into the sum¬mer. The project has no particular ideolo¬gy; it includes electoral politics andcritiques of the cold war ideologies of thepolitical science department.The week of hoopla is over, the importantwork is to be started. We must move out ofthe campus to the people. Students alonecannot achieve anything more than theclosing of universities and the calling out ofthe guard.We are fortunate to have avoided the in¬tervention on campus of police or armyunits. The University of Illinois Circlecampus and Southern Illinois University, tomention two local schools, are occupied bythe guard. Students there are primarily in¬volved in getting the guard off campus. Wedo not have to waste time and energy inthose actions. It is time for the students ofthe University of Chicago to think about theworld beyond the gothic walls.and shoot them.Students should participate in politics.However, this can be done without the for¬mal provocation to the non-student major¬ity which a closing of the universities wouldrepresent. An institutionalization of studentpower at this time will certainly evoke oth¬er institutions which will crush the studentvoice.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevant to the University Com¬munity. The opinions of the guest column¬ists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit¬ting columns should contact the editor.Contract Buyers League Finds SupportJuvenocracy Controls AmericaCarillon and brassRachmaninoff and HandelEaster Sunday” and “Royal Water MusicGigantic Fireworks Displayat theFOT4 70ala Performanceand aConcert of Jazz and Contemporary Musicby the Chicago Arts Quartetoutside Rockefeller ChaoelMay 15,-8:30Co-sponsored by Sears, Roebuck Foundation and Rockefeller ChapelStudents Should Work for NC DriveBy Carl SunshineAfter 16 months of promises, the Nixonregime has finally come through for Amer¬ica’s youth. He has gotten us together — orat least begun to.Remember the good old days when CleanGenes were stomping the precincts forMcCarthy?Well, America didn’t listen, andMcCarthy went bust, and the pig and theWar came down heavy on all our heads. Itwas frustration, depression, apathy, vio¬lence, and what can we do but try to forgetit or bum it.It looked like the peace movement wasout for ten, but Nixon thought hard andcame up with a double strength pep uptonic, with Spiro T. thrown in for flavor.American students at hundreds of univer¬sities drank it down, sat up, and lookedaround to spot their adversary, some ofthem for the first time.A national electoral reform program,backed by community canvassing and or¬ganizing, appeals to influential members ofthe community, and fund raising, is begin¬ning to get off the ground.The Movement for a New Congress (NC)originated at Princeton last week and al¬ready h„s chapters forming at dozens ofcampuses, so far mostly in the East.r" NC plans to compile information on Con¬gressional voting records and on relativefeasability of winning Congressional racesall over America. It has already beenpromised unlimited time on Pnnceton’scomputers to keep track of where studentsare at school and in the summer, to usethem efficiently. The biggest push willcome in the two weeks before elections inFall when many schools have scheduledrecesses.Should 200,000 students working hardthrough the summer and fall in 30 or 40 keyraces scare Hawks? Fifty percent of Ameri¬cans often don’t vote and a few thousandstudents getting out the peace vote in a dis¬ trict can make the difference.In their latest handout, International So¬cialists claims students have reacted “byfighting back with the only weapons theyhave — they have demonstrated and usedviolence to make their power felt in theonly institutions where it can be applied,the universities.” Well, IS and groups thatshare this view are not where it’s at. MostAmericans today have it too good and want to keep it too bad; the Revolution is notgoing to come from AFL-CIO or UAW.The only way to change American policyis to change America’s policy makers. Nix¬on has listened, he says, but he knows best.We can fill Congress with men who knoweven better.NC on campus is operating through thePeace 70 Committee of the Continuing Ac¬tion Projects (CAP). Most of CAP’S groupsare getting out of the University and work¬ing to hit American where it has always• counted —'' by throwing out the bums andputting our own in instead. Can you think ofa better more painless way to stop the war?Peace ’70’s numbers are 3273 and 3274.CAP Workshop To Provide SpeakersContinued from Page Threeresearch and the uses which the universitymakes of the grants.Members of the workshop which hope to“influence public opinion” plan to bothspeak and provide speakers for communityorganizations and high schools.Another group will try to reach in¬fluential members of the community and1YearBox is coming!YearBox arrives two weeks from today-May 26. The strike tyis distracted usa little, but now everything is in production. We are making 2000 yearBoxes,but at the rate we are going now, they will all be sold by May 26. Reserve yourBox today, so you don’t miss: the fantastic University of Chicago game, the32-page Hyde Park Cook Book, the 16-page section about the year and thestrike, The Red Herring Statement (the authorized manifesto of S.V.NA,the beautiful photography portfolio, Little Lester’s funky version of MackThe Knifer the senior stamps, the bust of Mr. Levi, and all the rest. Send $5toyearBox, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Tell your frinds!Name.Address .City, State, Zip jRON O'NEIL'S SSmm»!?!« *!•!« 1 »55« »I*!i »51» »!•!« »!*!«&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 The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.But the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL 326-2550- * r-e* * - T7Trr7TT"rTSL persuade them to endorse statementsagainst the war. Most immediately, a largegroup will canvas Chicago to get people tolisten to Senator George McGovern (D., So.Dakota) who will speak against the war onnational TV Tuesday at 7:30 pm. Groupswill leave from Ida Noyes at 2:30 pm Tues¬day.Following is an incomplete list of work¬shops and impending meeting times andplaces. For additional information, call theCAP coordinating office at ext. 2995.• Elections, lobbying and legislative ac¬tivity (Group 1)Secondary plenary session: Wednesday,May 13, Ida Noyes West Lounge, 10 am.Washington Lobby Action Project:Wednesday, Ida Noyes West Lounge, 4 pm.Subgroup on Movement for a New Con¬gress: Tuesday, Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 4pm. Also, meeting with representatives ofIllinois campuses, Friday, Ida Noyes WestLounge, 1 pm.• Influencing public opinion (Group 2)Subgroup meetings:Speakers bureau: Tues. evening, FosterLounge, after McGovern speech.Reaching people through the massmedia: Tuesday, 1 pm, 5482 Greenwood,Apt. 404.# Cornell ^7foriS t$ 1645 E. 55th STREETCHICAGO, ILL. 606152 Rhone: FA 4-1651H!Sl«Pp5r5MC5F3lt5F5F! MODERN DANCE .CUSSES430 to MOOrganizational work: call CAP coordina¬ting office.Leafletting for McGovern speech: callCAP coordinating office.• Evaluating role of “experts,” war re¬search, etc. (Group 3)Subgroup meetings —Financing of academic research: Tues¬day, Cobb 106,11:30 am.Vietnam foreign policy: Thursday, Soc.Sci. Lounge, 3:30 pm.Evaluating domestic effects of the war:(economic effects) — Tuesday, Soc. Sci.Lounge, 2 pm; (social effects) — Tuesday,Woodward Court, 5 pm.Academic colonialism: Wednesday, Cobb101, 8 pm (in conjunction with SoutheastAsian students and faculty).• Judicial action (Group 4)Wednesday, Ida Noyes Library, 9 am.• Research and action to limit govern¬ment repression of university-based dissent(Group 5)Wednesday, Hutchinson Commons, noon.• Encouraging political actions by offi¬cial university bodies (Group 7)Tuesday, Social Sciences 114, 9:30 am.• SSA Community Social Action (Group10)Wednesday, SSA Lobby, 3 pm.PIZZA 1»—Monday - Saturday*•*, Rock A Jan tough*Allison Theater Dance Center PiAmnjRoom 1902332-9923 Piizo, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsSENATOR!! CONGRESSMAN!!Earn extra money in your spare time.Simply reverse your position on TheIndo-China War and within two weeksyou will receive postpaid, $2,000 in aplain envelope.U.C. Committee forEffective Political Action.ideas I Compare the Price!FOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,One North LoSolie St., Chic. 60602 Others by Appt.FR 2-2390 — 798-0*70 III |11460 E. 53rd 643-28001I WE DELIVER IImported Carof theYearRoad Test MagazineShouldn't youconsiderToyota Corona?Consider the no-cost extras. Like re¬clining bucket seats, nylon carpeting,vinyl upholstery. Consider the per¬formance. 0-to-60 in 16 seconds. Atop speed of 90 mph. Consider thequality control. Over 700 tests andinspections. Then consider the price.$1950*COMPETITION MOTORS, INC7722 & 7756 Stony IslandChicago, Illinois374-4555TIOlYlOTflAl"POE price. White sidewall tires, acces¬sories, options, freight and taxes extra.UTfitfF CAEifl&U*. ^ ua1Cvl* .ili . .Aj \v 'Ton don't needinsuranceprotectionfor your car(if von liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’llwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971sentry.iTINSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization Are you tired of Playing The Same OldGames?Get with the "Now Generation" that'splayingTELEPATHYa new game testing your ability to com¬municate by using the Power of yourMind.IKON Corporation, Box 183, Ankeny, la. 50021Enclosed Find check or Money order for $3.95(Iowa residents please include 3% sales tax) ForTELEPATHY,NameAddressCity State ZipDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644PLATCCrj ALL-NIGHT SHOWPf»K»«CN<[S IBIOAT I UfUBOAT fOUOWING UST BtGUUB MAIUGI TAKCAM-YMtCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUN DAYS AN D HOLI DAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out $The Umveratty Theatre andPeativel Of The Arts preeent%a 8^QookStMey K15 tS A17 8 30 pmLutheran School of Yheotogyat The University of ChicagoMOO East 66th StreetTickets 6200. on sal# atThe Reynolds Club Desk,ot cell Ml 3 0800 eat 3682Five nights a week Randy Morrisoncompetes with the likes of Dick Cavett, Merv Griffin,Johnny Carson and the late movies.Randy Morrison presents progressive sounds.Weeknights from 7 ’til midnight.Catch it when you can.WISFM Fight air pollution.SIB®} 947May 8P«tar Fonda - Sens StresfcorfTHE TRIP May 9ly yMcDmtllMay 15Isis Ufssi - laris KarloffMACULA i FRANKENSTEIN May 16BATTLE Of ALGIERSMay 22Pder Sellers • Map SlsrrMAGIC CHRISTIAN May 23AHs GarishALKE'S RESTAURANTMay 29SImh-m Tat# is Romm Potanin'sHARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS May 30Mia Farrow-John CassavetesROSEMARY'S BAITJune 5looMarvin-Jin BrowsTHE DIRTY DOZEN June 6John Wsyso - Gtas CespkoNTRUE GRITTICKETS SI.SOPLAYBOYtheater Y],- Qt M8o»k PM^tat 44 <4 >4MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOW FOR SUMMER WORKDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.BAV“l LOVE YOU”with a diamond frot»»NI ifWftfRS 'i 39 YEARS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA10/The Chicago Maroon/May 12, 1970(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS).. NOT SO VIOLENTLYTricia NixonSCENESEasley Blackwood Piano Recital3:30 May 13 Quantrell.At O'Hare, American Lets Stand-Bys Go Right To Their Gates. NoWaiting in Some Silly "Youth Cen¬ter" Manned by Incoherent Per--«nnel. Start Your Vacation In aDecent Frame ot Mind. Fly Ameri¬can Airlines. Call Campus Rep.Jim Sack 6*4-4667 For Info.FOTA 70 Presents THEY SHALLNOT PASS, Student Adaptation OfA Federal Street Theatre PlayAbout The Spanish Civil War 8:30PM Fri, Sat, Sun CTS Quadrangle5757 Univ. FREE.Plan Ahead. TRUE GRIT May 30.UC Yavneh is Sponsoring A KosherFood Program Next Year AnyoneInterested Contact Bob Upbin x3769or Pick Up Form At Hillel 5715Woodlawn.Israeli Independence*, Day Celebra¬tion Postponed To Thur May 147:30-9:00PM Hillel House 5715 Wood-lawn. Live Music, Falafel Studentsfor Israel.Outdoor theater — Kingston Mines"The Serpent" May 13, 8:30 Hutch.CRAFT CO-OP now open Mon.-Fri.1-5, 3rd fl. Blue Gargoyle.Marco Polo Travel. 2268 S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.Tiext Monday, Part 2 of MarxBrothers Film Orgy - only $1.Phonographic Literature Free! 11Good Sound tor Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8, Tape Decks Save$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.LIVE FELAFEL: lTvE MUSICTHUR. May 14 HILLEL HOUSE7:30-9:00PM.Kessey 8:00 Mandet May 14.Kosher Food Feasibility Survey ForNext Year Being Undertaken Ques¬tionnaire Available at Hillel.John Wayne Does His Thing InTRUE GRIT Sat May 30 COMEIIIBring the power to the people!Join the campaign to get peopleto send telegrams and sign peti¬tions to protest the war in south¬east Asia. Come to IDA NOYESHALL 2nd floor; Rm 217.Carillon and bras Rachmaninoff andHandel, fireworks at the GalaPerformance.Easley Blackwood Piano Recital3:30 May 13 QuantrellScrap Papers from Prison andother stories by ContemporaryIranian Authors — A reading byDonald A Shoiai 7:30 May 13.Foster Hall, 1130 E 59th.Outdoor theater — Kingston Mines"The Serpent" May 13, 8:30 HutchCt.The convassing campaign needsmoney. Come to INH Rm 217 withmoney or fundraising ideas.A Day At the RacesBig StoreGo WestMARX BROS. FILM ORGY-Part 2Mon. May 18 7PM, Mandel HallNEW PEACE GROUPIf you feel rallies, strikes, and thelike don't effect gov't at all orfast enough, phone 955-9505. We areforming a new group based on asystematic fight of money againstmoney: Cash in U.S. Series EBonds. There are over 44 billiondollars worth. This group will havean effect far beyond its member¬ship size. Call for information andmeeting, 955-9505 after 5.FOTA 70Kessey 8:00 Mandel May 14Carillon and brass, Rachmaninoffand Handel, fireworks at the GalaPerformance.Kessey 8:00 Mandel May 14Carillon and brass, Rachmaninoffand Handel, fireworks at the GalaPerformance.Kessey 8:00 Mandel May 14Carillon and brass, Rachmaninoffand Handel, fireworks at the GalaPerformance.OLDE ENGLISH MUSIKEallegro conspirito will sing Madri¬gals, Rounds, and Other GoodeMusike in Bond Chapel, May 8, at8 00 PM. FREE.for saleThere is No Cheaper Fare To Cali-fornia Than Stand-By. And No OneHandles Stand-Bys Better ThanAmerican Airlines. Get All YourInformation From Campus Rep.Jim Sack 684-6667.CANOE TRIPS£t0 Quehco-Superior Wilderness,an an exciting canoe trip for theignpoint of your summer vacation!Rates you can afford. For in¬formation write or call BILL ROM'S"HUMS. Ely, Minnesota.218—365-4046. Furniture — Sotas, Chairs, Bed,Rug, Etc., Ect. 752-7689.SALEM Shure M91E Cartridge Reg$50 Now Only *25 With Trade ATMUSICRAFT. For Lowest Priceson all Components. Call CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 Save $$$.Mercedes — 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.FOR SALE: OUR ENVIRONMENT.Will technology and "progress"make ALASKA another ecologicalgraveyard? Lewis Lapham reportson Alaska's struggle between itsconscience and $900 million worthof oil leases. Also — MarshallFrady on HILTON HEAD, SouthCarolina. A "test case" that provespeople can and will unite to fightagainst "growth-for-growth's sake"if the price is pollution. And thatone valuable by-product of the bat¬tle is a new understanding amongthe young and old, black and white,rich and poor — now joined forthe common cause. Read this spe¬cial double feature, ENVIRON¬MENT CRISIS, in this month's Is¬sue Of HARPER'S MAGAZINE,America's First Monthly. On salenow.Pentax Photo Equipment Displayby Factory Rep. Sat, May 23.Model Camera. 55th 8< Kenwood.AM-FM Stereo-Casette Portable: USRetail-$190, But From the TokyoWholesale Mart-$100. Will Haggle.J. Unger 955-6330 Evenings.Furniture for Sale: Din Table + 6Chairs, Double Bed (Simmons Mat¬tress) + Matching Dresser plusMirror, Elec Fan, etc. Eliz. x3865or 684-0774.Regretfully must sell my 1960 Mer¬cedes 220Sb. Leather interior; bodyvery good, to fair in spots; mechan¬ically excellent. *700. 324-9358.WANTEDNeed 1 Airconditioner For CasementWindow. Should Be RelativelyCheap. Call Joel at x3263.1 Bedroom Available for male InQuiet, Air-Conditioned 3 Bedroomand 2 Bath Apt. $67/Month. 5114S. Harper. 752-1469. Avail June -September.Fern rmmate wanted beg. May-Juty. Summer Only or longer.LOVELY, E. Hyde Park. $70, turn,own rm. Pref grad stud or workinggirl. Ml 3-0800, x3891, ask forMartha.Fern Rmmtes Wanted for Huge HPApt Own Room and Bath $62.50 perMo. Call 684-2452.Roommate WantedFor Apartment 2 Blocks From MainQuad. From June and Thru NextYear. Call 955-8155 After 6PM.F. RMT.Wd. 56&Drr.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.Pvt Room for Female in LargeHyde Park Apt. Available June 1.$50/Mo. Call 324-0093.Rmmt 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.Furnished Rm. 493-3328.Lge Light 4 Rm Apt Jun 1 or 15Nr Coop. Lease Prob Optl. $155.Call Ex 3933 or 363-0432.Photo of Court theatre. Call R.Nelson, x3591.SUMMER SUBLETSpacious 4 rm. apt.. Harper &54th. Sublet July 1, option to re¬new $150. Call 493-2942 aft 8. evetill 1.SUBLET: IVi rm nicely turn apt.54 & Woodlawn. $92/mo. Mid-June-mid Sept. Call: 752-4219.Large 2 bedroom apt furnished$150/month June 7-Sept 1. Ml 3-0142.SBLT 6/15-4/30? For 2-5 RoomsllOMo 57th & Blkstn Basement.Call BU 8-6610 xl318 or x2121. -l'/irm bsmt appt furn bright sepentrance nr univ, 288-3197.Sum Sub Jun thru Sep own roomin spacious furnished 6-room apt 2roommates 54 & Dorch'r phoneJohn or Brian 667-7086.Large 2'/2rm bsmt appt furnished54th & Woodlawn, $110/mo. Juneoccupancy, call 752-4098.Wanted: Summer Sublet E. HydePk 2 Br or More Furnished 752-0316.Wanted: Summer Subletters for 3-bedroom apartment close to Kim-toark Plaza, June 15-Sept 15. $179.Call 684-8412. SUM SUBLET: Breezy 7-rm. apt.in ideal loc: 53 and Woodlawn. 3-4bedrms. Sunporch. Mid-June to Mid-Sept. $179. Call 684-8412.Spacious 4Vt 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.Beautiful Apt to Sublet 2 Bedrooms,Kitchen, LR, and Foyer 53rd&Ken-wood June Thru Sept $135/Mo 324-3623 Windows, Porch Etc.3'/2 Rm Apt from June 15 to Sept15 Cool, Cheap, Furnished, 58th &Blackstone: 643-3088, eves.Summer Rmmt(s) Wanted to ShareLarge, Inexpensive Hyde Park Apt.3 Bedrooms. June-Sept. 643-7219Eves.5'/2 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. Possoption for Next Year 493-3037.3 Bedrooms 2 Bathrooms, Sunporch,Furniture, 4 Blcks From Campus$150/Mo. Possible Fall Option, 363-3436, 53rd8iGreenwood.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.Male Grad Rmmt Wanted. Own RmLarge Furn Townhouse, Nr CampusSummer 8,/Or '70-71. $50/Mo. 955-7436. HOUSE FOR SALE4 bedrooms 2 full baths 2 car ga¬rage large garden. 955-5916.PEOPLE WANTEDWaitress or Waiter. 3 eves weeklyfrom 5-8:30 PM. Expd. Gordon'sRestaurant. 1321 E 57th St. 752-9251.BABYSITTER NEEDED FORThursdays. 1 Child My Home. 667-6251.Student with automatic shift car togive about 10 hours brush-up driv¬ing lessons to student, $2/hr. Call363-4300, ext. 301.STUDENTS, STAFF. Participate inan experiment on the perceptionof speech. $1.50 for an hour's work.On campus. Call X4710 for an ap¬pointment.Baby Sitter Needped For HalfdayWednesdays 8> Fridays. Two SmallChildren. Call 643-8169. MUSICIANS PERSONALRACHEL 9 mos needs a babysitterthis summer June 22-Sept 4 Yourhome 731-4709 eves.Legal Aid Secretary, full time. Call684-2727, Personnel Dept.HELP WANTED: SUAAMER STU¬DENT. T.V. Attendant for Hospitalin Area. No T.V. Knowledge Ne¬cessary. Part Time Four Days aWeek. Approximately 3 Hours aDay. Call Mr. Eastman 676-2226After 5:00.The Waltham Group, a student runand staffed volunteer social actionorganization at Brandeis Universityneeds a full time administratorwith creativity and demonstratedorganizational talents to coordinate10 programs including: tutoring andrecreation, a community newspaper,community organizing, and othersocial action programs in the com¬munity of Waltham. To start assoon after July as possible Salary$7000/year. Interested? Write toJulia Waldman, Brandeis, Waltham,Mass. $2154. Announcing: PHIL ft THE FAST-BACKS, The Latest Discovery inthe World of Great Enterainment.They Sound Old and Greasy ButYou Can Be Sure They're IvoryPure. Watch For Them Soon InConcert To Eclipse Their MayWoodward Court Debut. Call 288-6610 X3121 or 3202 For Information.The LEGENDARY PEPPERBANDEand Revue Sincerely Thanks TheirBeautiful People For Everything.The PEPPERBANDE is Still Avail¬able For Revolutionary Causes. Bi¬zet, Beehoven, Beatles, Square-dance, Hymns, and Mickey MouseFor the People. PEPPERPEACE.288-6610 X3216 or 3202 to book.LAKE COUNTRY STRING BANDget us while still cheap. Bluegrass& country. Suitable for all occa¬sions. HY 3-3508.MAROON NEEDSASST. BUS. MGR-The Maroon is searching thecountryside for an enlightened in¬dividual to dedicate his or her lifefor one year (or at least from Sept.'70-June '71) to the paper, in ex¬change for monetary gain andspiritual fulfillment.The job would allow a student toattend a couple of classes and stillhave enough time to properly fillthis important role.The ability to type and handlesome simple bookkeeping choreswould be of definite value althoughwe can train you.For more information call theMaroon office, x3263 and ask forDon or Joel.Applicants should submit a re¬sume to the office in Ida NoyesHall.LOST AND FOUNDLost, Strayed, or Borowed — 3Plate-sized Gongs From UC Orch¬estra. Calf 955-2845 or X2615. RE¬WARD. No Pasaran-They Shall Not Pass.Felafel is Back!! Eat Enjoy DanceSing. Hillel Thurs.Why was there so little destructionhere as opposed to other campuses?We would like to think part of thereason was that we sacrificed con¬cern for profit and gave you in-depth coverage of all events, fast,as they happened, so that the ac¬tions taken were based on FACT,and not rumor. We absolutely cannot do that kind of coverage againwithout advertising support. Buy abigger ad than normal — even Ifit's only a classified. Every littlebit helps. Thank you.Revolutionary Theatre Comes ToCampus: They Shall Not Pass 8:30PM Fri, Sat, Sun CTS Quad. FREEFREE FREE FREE FREE FREESome 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.Viva Israel Viva Felafel ThurMay 14 7:30PM Hillel House.NUDIST TRAVEL CLUB for singlewomen, etc, describe yourself, send35C, MYW CLUB, P.O. Box 1342,Aurora, III.Interested in Sailing and Learningto Sail? Call Paul 324-1683.WE NEEDADVERTISING! TO PRESIDENT NIXON: The nexttime my son gets hit by a rock, Iam going to give him a gun andtell him to shoot the child whothrew it. This is The AmericanWay.Flight N.Y. — Tel. Aviv. Sept 1 —Return Sept. 23. $360. Less if morepeople. Call Blythe. YO 6-9445.The canvassing campaign needs of¬fice supplies of all kinds. Anythingyou can contribute bring to INHRm 217.Easley Blackwood Piano Recital3:30 May 13 QuantrellSublet — 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/ cheap 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.Sublet Clean, Safe, 2Vi Room: STU¬DIO. Avail June 15-Opt. Oct 1, $113.mo. Near Lake. Call Jackie. 363^9580.To Sublet June 20-Sep 15, Vh Rm.Apt Furn 51st 8. Dorchester, $116per month. Call 955-3022.Summer sublet: 5 rm (3 bdrm) apt54 St. 8, University Av $120/mo.Call 288-8665 evenings.1 Bedroom in 3 bedroom, Quiet AirConditioned Apt. Male Pref 6/10 to9/25 $67/Mo. 5114 S. Harper, 752-1469. Free Room + Board in ExchangeFor Evening Babysitting — StartJune — Female Only — 684-1369.What do you know about Chicago?If you know about Chicago neigh¬borhoods or politics the canvassingcampaign needs you. Come to INHRm 217.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. We want to cover all strike activi¬ties, as well as all other news asextensively as we did last week.Contrary to popular opinion, we arenot enormously wealthy. In fact,we will end the year in the redif we aren't careful. If you wishto get publicity for strike activitiesas well as normal news coverage,we would greatly appreciate it ifyou would buy an ad so we can.NEED NEW HOMESKITTENS: 5 beautiful intelligentlitter trained 6-wk kittens!! 324-9358.FREE BUNNIES MED STUDENTSNEED NOT APPLY 955-4457 After 6.9 mo/old Lab-terrier; Board til midJune or give new home NOW!! 288-1093 leave message. Scrap Papers from Prison and otherstories by Contemporary IranianAuthors — A reading by Donald AShojai 7:30 May 13, Foster Hall1130 E 59th.Outdoor theater — Kingston Mines"The Serpent" May 13 8:30 HutchCt.Kessey 8:00 Mandel May 14Carillon and brass Rachmaninoffand Mandel, fireworks at the GalaPerformance.A new national magazine—written,edited, and published entirely bystudents—is trying to get off theground. We need help typesettingthe first issue, most of which willbe about the strike. If you can typeand want to help, please call:955-4706. We can pay just a little.■ i111 i1 r i11 1 i 'H111 i. CHARTS/GRAPHS.Leroy lettering(Near campus)363-1288 SH0RELAHD HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available forparties, banquets, anddances for 10- 500. Please call H. FingerhutPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive Judith Sagan presentsHarper Dance Festivalin cooperation with the-lllinois Arts Council andThe National Endowmentfor the ArtsGIANTS OF THE DANCENIKOLAIS DANCE THEATRESet., Riley 9, at 1:30 P JR.Sees., Illley 10, at 2:30 end 7J0P.NLPAUL TAYLOR Dance CompanyTues., May 12; Thurs., May 14;Fri., May 15; Sat., May 16, at8:30 P.M. Sun., May 17, at2:30and 7:30P.M.Harper Theater - WM™5238 S. Harper tiomotop-dMay 12, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/11TRAVEL-TEXTS-BESTSELLERS-POORSELLERS-CLASSICS-COOKBOOKS SALE20% DISCOUNTEvery Book in StockToday through Friday, May 15ALL SALES FINALThis is our post-fire, post-moving, pre¬moving, post-strike (?), pre-returns, andannual spring sale. Every title in stock willbe discounted 20% from marked price,including books previously marked downto a sale price.the BOOKSTORE1020 East 57th Street12/The Chicago Maroon/May 12, 1970 SCIENCEFICTIONART-MEDICAL-LAW-REFERENCE-FICTION-POETRY