THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 64 The University of Chicago Friday, June 5, 1970UniVer3itY Archive3Harper The StrikeA Special Issue: - »e tt• • 7yv''lTl7« -* * • ** *.Steve Aoki' 111Letter from the Editor on the StrikeThe train of events set off by President Nixon’s deci¬sion to enter Cambodia are still continuing; it is too earlyto assess their effect. But in the nation’s colleges anduniversities, a national student strike which affected over400 schools showed a quick and clear reaction to the Cam¬bodian decision, the Kent State killings, and the use ofNational Guardsmen to “control” political dissent oncampus.Many think that the response here to these nationalevents was not sufficient; that others are happy that weavoided the burnings and military rule of the police orNational Guard. Yet to many the strike was apparentlyshort-lived, and a myth has permeated this place that it isbusiness as usual.Actually, there is much now going on here, and that isthe major reason for devoting the last Maroon of the yearto the strike. A serious effort to influence public opinion isjust beginning. Many groups, such as Continuing ActionProjects, Movement for a New Congress, and the ROTCworkshops grew directly out of the strike, and are contin¬uing their work throughout the end of the quarter and intothe summer.The first half of the issue documents the strike here.The chronology is gathered from Maroon stories of thequarter.Two articles by faculty in the first section are writtenby individuals intensely involved in the strike. Peter Nov-ick was instrumental in the birth of CAP, the passage ofthe “P” grading resolution passed by the committee of the council. He discusses faculty attitudes during the strike.Many students were not aware of faculty restraint to in¬stitutional commitment.Fairinda West, a member of the strike steering com¬mittee and the New University Conference, chaired manyof the memorable mass meetings in Mandel.Her article is an argument for greater militancy di¬rected at serveral popular ideas about the nature ofcampus politics. Many of her points are only historicalnow, but. beneath her argument is a general radical ori¬entation which is very different from the civil liber¬tarianism of the moderates. Her argument is one for tac¬tics, not motives.Con Hitchcock, the Maroon’s managing editor, dis¬cusses the anti-war movement over the past two yearsand the impact of the strike on national politics.The second half of the issue, “Beyond the Strike” con¬centrates on on-going projects which grew out of the fer¬vor of the time. Aristide Zolberg’s article on the contin¬uing action project charts roots in the political sciencefaculty. He was one of the early organizers of the project.The article by Len Radinsky and Jo Ann Greenberg isa report of the first research results of a ROTC workshopon military involvement on campus. They centered on thework of sociologist Morris Janowitz; in a separate articleMr. Janowitz responds to the charges of the ROTC group.Larry Sherman, a campus organizer of the Movementfor a New Congress, has written a history of the Prince¬ton-based movement on this campus for the issue, and he discussed the relevance of such an action in anti-war pro-test.Finally, we have an incomplete calendar of activitiesplanned by political groups for the rest of the quarter andthe summer. Activities are in the planning stages in manycases, but information will be available later by contact¬ing the group.It is important that we work this summer to maintainthe momentum of protest begun with the strike. If you arestaying in Chicago, the trial of Black Panther party chair¬man Bobby Seale in the Federal building beginning June 8will be a major confrontation. Seale is being tried for hispart in the 1968 democratic convention “conspiracy”. Hiscase was severed from the Chicago 7 last fall when heresisted trial without his counsel.In this issue, we have given several conflicting viewsa forum. We have tried to be representative, yet we havede-emphasize certain activities, notably the Adlai Steven¬son Institute dispute which was heavily covered during thequarter.It is time to re-examine the arguments for action anduse the most effective means to implement the demandsof the strike. Those demands remain unsatisfied. The opin¬ions offered here center on tactics toward their implemen¬tation.So as you leave for a summer back in the realitythe world outside the campus, think about it. The questionremains, how do we gain power?Steve CookBulletin of EventsTHE MAROONEditors: Steve Cook and Con HitchcockPhotography Editor: Steve AokiTenth week issue staff: Paul Bernstein, AudreyShalinsky, Judy Alsofrom.Business staff: Emmet Gonder, Joel Pondelik,Maggie Maroon, Don Ratner.Publisher: Merrill Printing Company, Hinsdale,Illinois.Founded in 1892. Published by University of Chicago students daily duringrevolutions, on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer, except during examination per¬iods. Offices in Rooms 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.,Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3263. Distributed on campusand in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail$8 per year in the U.S. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service.All photographs by Steve Aoki except: page eight:Jesse Krakauer (flag lowering and Guard commander atArmory), page nine: David Travis (mass meeting), pageten: David Rosenbush (Kent State memorial wreath),page 11: David Rosenbush (demonstrators in the wadingpool), page 12: David Travis (archway), page 15: LloydSaunders (Aristide Zolberg), page 20: Paul Stelter, (Mor¬ris Janowitz).2/The Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970 The continuing action projects and the ROTC researchgroups plan to continue activities over the summer. TheMovement for a New Congress (MNC) will try to keep itsoffice open all summer. General information about allCAP and MNC projects will be available at x2994.Continuing Action ProjectsBoth the electoral politics and the canvassing groupswill work during the summer on a voter-registration proj¬ect based in South Shore. Anyone interested should contactMike Fowler. Office help and canvassers are needed.Complete information is available in the SG office, can¬vassing kits are available there on a self-service basis.Washington lobby coordinator David Lawrence urgesstudents to stop by Washington and visit their congress¬man on their way home. CAP has information for lobbyinggroups on request.Members of the research group on Vietnam foreignpolicy will be working over the summer on background-information papers.ROTC WorkshopsThe ROTC group one, whose first report appears inthis issue, will be continuing research on military re¬search on campus. For information call 752-6851.Other ROTC groups will be meeting over the summer.Call the strike office at x 2312 for specific information.Labor MovementThe Southside Labor Committee will be working thissummer toward building rank and file support for opposi¬tion to the war. They will be leafletting factories in Chi¬cago and downstate this summer. For more informationcall Strike Central (x2312).Upcoming EventsMonday June 8Rally: “Free Bobby Seale” demonstration at the Federalbuilding at noon. The Black Panther party chairman’sconspiracy trial will not be there; he is still in New Havenon trial for the killing of Alex Rackley. The demonstra¬ tion, scheduled to coincide with the opening of Seale’strial, will take place anyway. Speakers include BobbyRush, David Hilliard, and David Dellinger. Sponsored bythe Panthers and the campus Committee to defend thePanthers.Speech: Bill Hampton and Jerry Rubin will talk oncampus Monday evening in Mandel Hall at 8 pm. Dona¬tions of $1.50 for the Chicago 15 draft resisters.Saturday, June 13Counter-convocation: William Kunstler will address thegraduating class in Mandel Hall at noon, after the regularcommencement.Thursday, June 26Convention: The Movement for a New Congress plans tohold a state-wide organizing convention on campus. Chap¬ters from over 20 Illinois schools will be represented.IndexThe University and the StrikePeter Novick on faculty attitudes Page 3Fairinda West on tactics Page 5Con Hitchcock on the anti-war movement . .Page 7A pictoral chronology of the strike Page 8Beyond the StrikeArtistide Zolberg on ContiuingAction Projects Page 15Larry Sherman on the Movement for aNew Congress Page i7Leonard Radinsky and Jo-Ann GreenbergOn war research Pa8e IjjMorris Janowitz on war research Page 20» * • 1Class Interest Prejudiced FacultyBy Peter Novick“Today's campus extremists are violent and disruptive in oppos■ing militarism and racism.”When I was asked to do a piece for The Maroon on thestrike, I assumed that it would be a more-or-less academ¬ic, analytic job, so I started thinking about it that way,and even made some notes toward an explanation of whyit was such a bust, concentrating on the analysis of facul¬ty attitudes.The most important thing about faculty attitudes dur¬ing the strike was the almost rehgious commitment of somany of the faculty here to “institutional neutrality” andthe accompanying phobic reaction to “politicization.” Ofcourse these attitudes exist elsewhere, but nowhere, Ithink, are they held as deeply and as broadly as at theUniversity of Chicago.I thought up some swell theories to account for thespecial characteristics of the faculty culture on the Mid-,way: historical theories, having to do with the Teutoniccum Thomist traditions of UC; psycho-geographical theo¬ries, having to do with the seige-mentality associated withliving behind Gothic battlements shielding us from theghetto; institutional theories, having to do with the struc¬tures providing for faculty (non) involvement in decision¬making. It would have been a pretty good article, but I’mnot going to write it.The more I thought about it, the more it became clearto me that the most important thing about the response ofmany of my colleagues’ to student protest, and the accom¬panying-rhetoric about “institutional neutrality,” is whatit reveals- about their values about the extent to whichthey respond to events in terrps of their professed huma¬nistic principles, or, alternatively, in terms of the narro¬west, most parochial professional or class interest. Sothat’s what I’m going to write about.Nazism — SDSOne of the things that’s bothered me for a long time isthe fashion — particularly prevalent among German-Jew-ish emigre intellectuals — of drawing pointed analogiesbetween militant student demonstrators today and theNazi youth movement in the 1920s and 1930s. I am both¬ered not by what this tells me about today’s demonstra¬tors (it tells me nothing useful); nor am I bothered aboutwhat it says about the analogizers’ attitude toward con¬temporary militants (I already knew what that was —they hate and fear them). What bothers me is what theanalogy revepls about the feelings toward Nazism of thosewho make the analogy.The Nazis were violent and disruptive in the service ofmilitarism and racism; today’s campus extremists areviolent and disruptive in opposing militarism and racism.By the fact that they find the similarity in form of greatersignificance than the utter dissimilarity of content, themakers of the analogy strongly suggest that what was ofover-riding importance to them about Nazism was that itwas disorderly — a threat to their hitherto securebourgeois existence.I do not say that these people were insincere in their“principled” oppostion to Nazism, or that they were notopposed to the content of the Nazi program as well as itsform. Still ... in deciding that the Storm Trooper-SDS anal¬ogy is legitimate rather than meretricious, they make ithard to avoid the conclusion that for them it is classinterest rather than political principle which was — and is— decisive. This makes me sad, because I have affectionand respect for many of them.A Long Hard LookTwo years ago at Columbia, and a few weeks ago at Stanford, unknown persons destroyed the irreplaceable re¬search notes of scholars. The*incidents were sickening:stupid, wanton acts of inexcusable cruelty. But almostequally distressing have been some — and I underline theword "some” — of the impassioned cries of outrage fromacademics. Fof a great many of the loudest protestorsconcenvng the Columbia-Stanford events have come fromthose who have been part of the “silent majority” on thestupid, wanton, inexcusable cruelty of Indochinese War.I am not saying that because the destruction of re¬search notes is a lesser crime than genocide, it is there¬fore to be condoned. What I am saying is that we areentitled to take a long hard look at the values of those whoare deeply moved and loudly ind;gnant when scholarly“The most important thingabout faculty attitudes duringthe strike was the almost reli¬gious commitment to 6institu¬tional neutrality? ”activity is threatened, but are stoical and silent at theslaughter and maiming of anonymous Indochinese andAmerican blacks. I have taken such a look, and I am nothappy at what I have found.Escalation and SelfishnessTwo weeks ago the New York Timss published a letter-on the Cambodian escalation signed by several leadinghistorians, including the man who is responsible for myhaving become an historian, and others whose writings have profoundly affected by thinking and my work. I wasaccordingly pleased to see these men add their names tothe chorus of protest, but my pleasure turned to dismaywhen I saw the grounds of their distress.My colleagues’ principal objection to the escalationwas that it would “further undermine the already shakenfaith of many ... young Americans in the efficacy of thedemocratic process” and would “give destructive mili¬tants the greatest possible boost — precisely at a timewhen the wave of senseless campus violence seemed onthe wane.”Considering that the escalation of the war in SoutheastAsia means, at a minimum, the escalation of the slaughterof Indochinese, the escalation of repression at home, andthe continued diversion of resources from urgent domesticneeds — considering all these things it is hard to conceivea more selfish or parochial “anti-war” position than thattaken by my esteemed colleagues, or one which morepitilessly exposes their deepest values!Unspeakable UglinessJust last week, I received a mimeographed manifestofrom seven of my colleagues. It was an impassioned pleafor “institutional neutrality” and against “politicization.”The authors tell us that “the suggestion that there can beany purpose or objective for which a university is moreuseful to society when -shut down than when operating” is,for them, “terrifying in.its implications.” And they go onto assert that “perhaps the ugliest image in history is theclosing of the universities.”It is hard to know what to say about a statement likethat: a statement made by comfortable, secure, privilegedAmerican academics living in a world filled to overflowingwith the unspeakable ugliness 6f Song My, of jellied gaso¬line poured on children from the air, of students blownapart by the bullets of National Guardsmen and StatePolice, of ghetto children devoured in their cradles* byrats. “Perhaps the ugliest image in history is the closingof the universities.” There’s nothing you can say about.it— the words speak for themselves, and; I suppose, fortheir authors.Faculty FastidiousnessIn all of these instances I have made inferences ffomthe explicit language and implicit assumptions of thestatements of my colleagues. Perhaps — as doubtlessmany of them would claim — they don’t really mean thatcampus protest is more to be deplored than the napaimingof children, or that the closing of universities is “uglier”than shooting down unarmed students.Am I being unfair in taking literally the language theyuse, and rigorously following up the logical implications oftheir imagery? Perhaps ... but we are not speaking here ofslips-of-the-tongue on the part of men who are customarilysloppy in their speech. Rather we are speaking of theconsidered statements of men who choose their words withexquisite care and great sensitivity to nuance. (Anyonewho has ever approached faculty members to solicit theirsignatures on a petition can testify to the enormous fastid¬iousness they display in refusing to associate themselveswith loose or misleading forms of expression.) and so,while I would like to believe that I am mistaken in myconclusions about my colleagues’ values, I cannot drawgreat comfort from the possibility. I fear that I am right.“It is hard to conceive of a more selfish or parochial anti-warposition than that taken by my esteemed colleagues.” Peter Novick is an associate professor of history and anorganizer of the Continuing Action Projects.June 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3DON'TBE...BUGGEDby CAR REPAIRS!Switch to...BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO REPAIRS, INC.4401 S. 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GE0FFCR0SSQUINTET and...BLIMRWORKS BANDSATURDAY, JUNE 13, 2:00KENWOOO HIGH AUDITORIUM5045 Bladtston*TICKETS SOU)IN ADVANCE AT:Hyde Port:The Native Shop 2606 E. 79PROCEEDS TO Chicago Peace Council,an onti-wor, anti-repression coalition.Reynolds Club South LoungeFriday, June 12,19708:45 PM South Shore is where its happening, South Shore is the seventiesCome to South Shore anddiscover a quality of life youthought impossible in the city.Come to South Shore anddiscover you CAN afford toown your own home. Comeand ejnoy suburban-spaciousliving with the convenience ofthe city. Come and stroll asandy beach only five minutesfrom home. South Shore is variety. Va¬riety in people, variety in ar¬chitecture and variety of ex¬perience. South Shore is find¬ing a parking space right out¬side your front door. SouthShore is finding a six roomapartment for $150. SouthShore is a yard big enoughfor kids and small enough tomow yourself. South Shore iswhere its happening.SOUTH SHORE OPENHOUSE TOURS SUNDAY,JUNE 7Come and see for yourself.Come with us on a freeescorted tour through se¬lected homes, apartmentsand gardens. Come andsee our Art and Photo Ex¬hibits. Shop vour AntiqueSale and Flea Market.Meet us between 1:00 and4:00 P.M. at the Beth AmTemple, 7133 South Coles.You are cordially invited.Edward Albee'sBOX and QUOTATIONSFROMCHAIRMANMAO TSE-TUNGDirector: Ken PiercePlayers: Barbara Bernstein, Ken¬neth Northcott, Jeanne WilderPerformance will be followed by discussion withthe play's company and Marvin Mirsky, chair¬man of the Fine Arts Program.ADMISSION FREESponsored by The Alumni Association come to Jouth Jhore andArtificial Chasm Divides Moderates, RadicalsBy Fairinda WestThe outrage which united us all against the war, repr¬ession and university complicity was soon overshadowedon this campus and others by a division within the strikeitself. It is clear that the political and tactical differencesbetween the moderates and radicals have substance.But there are misunderstandings and rhetorical pos¬tures which widen the chasm, and these are often aggra¬vated by the media and those who want us divided. As acontribution toward bridging that artificial chasm, I wouldlike to examine some commonly heard statements aboutthe strike, here and elsewhere.“It is undemocratic to demand that School be closed ifmost students want to attend. Therefore, we should have areferendum first, to decide if a strike should be called.”In the first place, we should remember that it is not“undemocratic” to demand anything. The right of minor¬ities to make demands is what American democracyclaims to be about. Should the anti-war movement conducta referendum of the nation before it demands an end tothe war? Should poor people conduct a referendum beforethey demand an end to hunger? Should under paid cafe¬teria workers have to conduct a referendum of studentswho eat at the cafeteria before going ons trike for decentwages? Of course not — and it is quite proper for mem¬bers of a university to go on strike against a school whoseoperation assists war and repression: and it is quite prop¬er for them to demand that the school be shut down untilits policies change.We might ask why we must call a referendum beforecommitting the university to the anti-war struggle, whilethe administration daily accedes to the demands of aboard of trustees who are responsible to no one in theuniversity community. Did the administration require areferendum before putting military research on campus?Did it require a referendum when it raised tuition, ap¬pointed its president and department heads, implementedits urban renewal plans and set its admissions require¬ments? *“We have no right to prevent someone who wants togo to ordinary classes from doing so.”This assertion stems from a mistaken notion of what a“right” is. People do not have the “right” in a democracyto do anything they want. They only have a “right” to dothose things which advance the common good or, at worst,do not harm it. This is not to say that there should not beformal rights, like the right to “freedom of speech;” butsuch a right has always been justified because, in the longrun, if everyone has free speech, we’ll all be better off.There is no abstract permanent and inviolable right togo to class under any and all conditions. In a period ofnational crisis, when thousands of American soldiers, Viet¬namese, Cambodians and black Americans are beingmaimed and killed with no end in sight, if a “business as “Will the people understand thetactic and its necessity?”cult moral and political problems of deciding what tacticsto use when. The cliche is so popular precisely because itkeeps us from having to think.We can all imagine cases where minor violence canstop much greater violence. The general case is the ex¬ample cited above, of the person who worcefully interfereswith an attempted murder. Had students at the Universityof Chicago exploded a firebomb in Stagg Field in 1943, thedevelopment of the atom bomb might have been delayedand the killing of innocent Japanese prevented. Had Har¬vard students destroyed the laoratory where napalm wasfirst developed, innocent Greek, Vietnamese, Laotian,Cambodian, and Latin American lives might have beensaved.Obviously, separate acts of interference cannot bythemselves permanently prevent the development of weap¬ons technology, any more than closing down one or twoROTC buildings will end the war in Vietnam. But in anystruggle against forces with great power — whether thatof students against guardsmen, ghetto blacks against po¬lice, or guerillas against heavily armed soldiers — de¬fense must sometimes consist of raising the cost of carry¬ing out criminal policy by many small assaults.It is true that defensive violence sometimes interferes who now praise King refused to negotiate with him in hislifetime because, they then charged, he was “violent” andthus illegitimate.Students and faculty who use similar tactics of sit-in,march, disruption and occupation to interfere with col¬leges whose policies sanction war, racism and repressionare not being violent, however forceful they may be inattempting to expose and prevent those crimes.It is difficult to decide if destruction of property is“violent” or if the term would be most useful if onlyapplied to the injury of persons. Whatever the use of theterm, the destruction of property is on a continuum withother tactics described above. There is some propertywhich should not exist and whose use might at times beprevented by forceful means if necessary. Obvious exam¬ples of such illegitimate property are Hitler’s gas ovens,draft files, ROTC buildings, corporate offices of DowChemical (maker of napalm) or real estate offices whichoperate ghetto housing inadequate for human beings.Injury to persons, even further on this continuum oftactics, must be considered gravely by any movementcommitted to life, liberty and happiness for all. But thestruggle for life, liberty and happiness for all may de¬mand action not only against institutions but also againstpeople carrying out policies of war and repression. Armedpolice who assault students and blacks, American pilotswho drop napalm (and the politicians who order thoseassaults and bombs), slumlords who profit from the ghetto— these people cannot always be granted absolute safetyby a demand for the non-violence they themselves activelydestroy. If those with repressive power do not listen toreasonable argument and massive protest, and continue toslaughter innocent human beings, their forceful restraintwould seem to be entirely appropriate.There is nothing in the American experience to in¬dicate that movements which attempt to accomplish fun¬damental changes by restricting themselves to petitionand polite dialogue can ever expect to be listened to. Ifthe US Senate should this spring succeed in limiting theIndochinese War, it will not be the result of piles of let¬ters, but of Senatorial fear inspired by uprisings at hun¬dreds of American campuses.“Violence is self-defeating.”To say that any of these tactics are self-defeating usu¬ally means that their use brings on a repressive reactionwhich leaves us further from our political goals than be¬fore. However, such a result is not inevitable; it dependson the balance of political forces in a particular situation.There are times when the use of forceful tactics provokesrepressive political groups to show their true colors; thiswas the case in the civil rights movement and in the earlyanti-war movement, particularly when the Chicago policeexposed the naked force behind Humphrey’s smile.There are other times when forceful tactics will pro¬voke such repression that many demonstrators will behurt and the movement as a whole will be set back. Al¬though this has not usually been the case in the 1960’s and70’s, it is a possibility about which those who proposemilitant tactics must be extremely cautious. At timesthose who advocate indiscriminate militancy when politi¬cal conditions are premature and police agents provaca-teurs, trying to set the movement up for a bust.“The ruling forces in America are extremely flexible and canusually overcome disruption of their normal processes more eas¬ily than the movement can disrupt ”usual” university helps these crimes to continue withoutdisruption, it is perfectly proper to withdraw the “right togo to class” — either by administrative rule or by demon¬stration, picket line, etc.We will understand this better when we reflect thatwhen black students demand open admissions to schoolswhich have denied them entrance, administrators tell usthat college education is a privilege. But when studentsdemand that colleges close normal operations and trans¬form themselves into instruments of struggle against warand repression, administrators tell us that college educa¬tion is a right. In truth, college education is neither aright nor a privilege but an instrument of the commongood which must be corrected when it strays from thatpurpose.Nobody has a right to take ROTC, or do military re¬search, or displace black people from their homes by uni¬versity urban renewal, or to refuse to hire blacks or wom¬en. On the contrary, when someone is about to commitmurder, we have a right and obligation to interfere, force¬fully if necessary. This is not to say that force shouldalways be used to prevent people from doing anythingthey have no right to do; but clearly force must be used ifthere is no other way of topping the offender before ter¬rible harm is done.“We are. all against the war in Indochina, the mas¬sacre of innocent students, and the police campaignagainst the Black Panther Party, but you can’t use vio¬lence to stop violence.”This cliche muddles our thinking by presenting a judg¬ment about the validity of a tactic as though it were afactual statement of that tactic’s unworkability. In sodoing, it prevents us from thinking through the very diffi- with the normal rights of some, but it is also true thatdefensive violence is sometimes the only recourse for theprotection of the people’s rights. Vietnamese who shootdown American bombers are most obviously protectingtheir rights. So were the American brothers and sisterswho interfered with troop trains in California in 1965 orthose who burned draft files in 1968. American blackshave won what few rights they have in the last 10 yearsby sit-ins and by urban uprisings which damaged propertydirectly related to the people’s oppression.“We will be listened to only if we avoid the use ofviolence.”If we thought for a minute, most of us could probablyagree that picket lines, sit-ins, shouting and name callingare not “violent,” however noisy and unpleasant they mayoccasionally be. The mentality which equates as “vio¬lence” the actions of a President who orders the destruc¬tion of a village with that of a student who calls thatPresident “pig” has made the term “violence” uselessand meaningless. We ought to remember that those whocall students “violent” when they disrupt a university bysitting-in, milling around, or shouting at a speaker, arealso those who termed the Cambodian invasion a “peacemarch.”In American political life, the right to define “vio¬lence” is a very powerful weapon. Many establishmentleaders have lately become fond of citing to us the non¬violent example of Martin Luther King, Jr. Of course,King’s non-violence was composed of the use of forcefultactics (sit-ins which closed down institutions or blockadedstreets, demonstrations against police order and withoutpermits, disruption of racist institutions and organiza¬tions) which often led to confrontations with police andresulted in police violence against demonstrators. Those The ruling forces in America are extremely flexible,and can usually overcome disruption of their normal pro¬cesses more easily than the movement can disrupt. It isclear that the disruption of Dow Chemical recruiting andthe destruction of its computer by anti-war activists re¬sulted primarily in the government’s granting the napalmcontract to a different corporation. Thus, the test of amilitant tactic must go beyond whether it disrupts or de¬stroys property and institutions which are criminal in be¬havior.Much more important is whether the political pre¬conditions for militant tactics exist: will the people (orother students at a school) understand the tactic and itsnecessity so that they will not support massive repression?Tactics must be judged in large part by whether they winor lose support for our demands. On the other hand, tac¬tics which too easily win support are equally dangerous,for they do not force people to choose sides. An anti-wardemonstration so moderate that even Nixon can attendclearly cannot force a change in war policy.Our tolerance of racism and war has brutalized usalready. In our present situation, the ability to make diffi¬cult tactical decisions in the struggle against war, repres¬sion and racism is the essence of humanity.We cannot make the struggle against comrades withwhom we have tactical differences take precedence overthe struggle against American power. However we maydisagree, those who petition and those who sabotage areour brothers and sisters in the ultimate struggle againstAmerican repression in Cambodia, Kent and New Haven.Fairinda West, a member of the strike steering com¬mittee, is an assistant processor of English and a mem¬ber of the New University Conference./ 3umc5,< 1970/Th* CHleigo M4i*oon/5BALLOT COUNTS IN NOVEMBER COULD STOP BODY COUNTS BY JANUARYThe MOVEMENT FOR A NEW CONGRESS needs your help, no matter where you arethis summer. Mail this form through faculty exchange to 422 Eckert.j BOOK SALE■ 20% OFF on all Books• PLUS REBATE for Members.| CASH ONLY• June 5, 8 - 12. 11 am - 4pm• SEMINARY CO-OPERATIVE; BOOKSTORE5757 S. 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Add a see-through body shirt, $16, andour Landowners straw hat, $8.95, for the completelook.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings6/The Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970Moving Away from Demonstrations WiseBy Con Hitchcock“Prior demonstrations had been uniformly unsuccessful inchanging war policies• In fact they were counterproductive”The student strike, which paralyzed hundreds of cam¬puses and for a while seemed to bring the nation to thebrink of disaster, was the turning point in the anti-warmovement, for it marked the moment when college stu¬dents, after several days of often violent confrontationsturned away from this type of protest as a means ofachieving reform and began to look to the electoral pro¬cess as one way of ending the war.It was a significant change of attitude. The McCarthycampaign of 1968 represented the first shift in this direc¬tion, as students outraged at the war poured into NewHampshire, Wisconsin, Oregon, and California to work forthe Senator. Their attempts were unsuccessful, granted,but challenging a machine and a party in power is alwaysdifficult, particularly when the office is that of the Presi¬dency.The demonstrations in the streets of Chicago tended todiscredit the peace movement, as “hippies” and “peace¬niks” were denounced while the police were praised. Inaddition, the triumph of Humphrey and the old politicsalienated many of McCarthy's student backers, and theyvirtually withdrew from the rest of the campaign as seedsof cynicism were engendered in them.Up From ColumbiaBut 1968 was not just the year that Nixon won andMcCarthy lost. It was also the year of Columbia, the yearin which universities across the nation experienced a mas¬sive jolt as students, no longer complacent, no longer pas¬sive, began to seize buildings, to strike their classes inorder to press their demands for more power. Politicalactivity moved from pushing doorbells to being pushedaround by police.In most demonstrations, there was assuredly a “hardcore” of radicals who played a prominent role in the dis¬turbances in their organization and leadership. But mostconfrontations, whether led by radicals or liberals, wereon the whole unsuccessful in achieving demands the dem¬onstrators wanted — one survey showed 69 percent of alldemonstration demands were not granted in demonstra¬tions held in 1969.A good number of McCarthy’s workers were involved(at least marginally) in confrontations last year, perhapsout of a residue of frustration, a cyncism which needed anoutlet which could be provided only by a demonstration.They tended to eschew the SDS and violence that oc¬curred, but they often supported the aims of many of theprotests.Stumping NewsweekBut this year was different. There was little out¬pouring of anything but studying. Newsweek couldn’t fig¬ure it out. Neither could most college presidents. And thenthe President moved troops into Cambodia. And then fourstudents were killed by the National Guard at Kent State.A shock wave tore through the campuses, as studentssuddenly moved out of their classrooms and into thestreets, striking hundreds of universities and engaging inviolent confrontations with police and National Guard asbuildings were burned and people injured. It was totallyunexpected. How could these students, so apathetic for thelast .six months, have come to life so suddenly and soforcefully?Students still felt outrage over the war this year, buttheir feelings were not articulated by visible protest. Thiswas quickly misinterpreted as apathy and disinterest. But,as the strike all too clearly pointed out, there was anundercurrent of protest, of resistance beneath student in¬activity this year.Frustrated by a war that went on with no end in sight,frustrated by universities which they felt were unrespon¬sive to change, students were no less outraged this yearthan last. The difference is that this year they withdrewfrom politics, leading lives of quiet desperation, casting acynical eye towards the American political system, surethat nothing they said or did would change it.The excursion into Cambodia and the Kent Stateshootings served as catalysts to rouse the sleeping giant ofunrest. University upon university shut down. Militancyand .violence grew and threatened to explode into morebloodshed in Washington. The fact that this demonstrationwas peaceful precluded the possibility of further violence,especially in light of the raft of dire predictions precedingit. Demonstrators isolated the radicals and rendered themimpotent, as they were beginning to do on individualcampuses.The Sleeping Giant AwakensThis was another major shift in anti-war protest, sinceonly one month earlier radicals shouted down speakers in moratorium rallies, refusing them the right to mount thepodium in several cases and used the forum to spout theirdiatribes.Perhaps the strike finally set liberals to thinking —prior demonstrations had been uniformly unsuccessful inchanging war policies. In fact they had been counter-pro¬ductive. In his November 3, 1969, speech to the nation,President Nixon attacked anti-war protesters, and for thefirst time his “silent majority” began to make itself felt.Nixon, with Agnew paving the way with earlier denun¬ciations of effete snobs and the Eastern media, began hisattempts to isolate his war critics and to build support forhis policies in direct proportion to the amount of protestagainst the war. And he was generally successful.While many of the “silent majority” opposed the war,they were willing to stick by the President and go alongwith his decision, reasoning he had more knowledge thanthey or that the President must have the support of thenation. After all, the logic went, he was withdrawingtroops — for that he was to be supported, and noisy bandsof demonstrators only hurt him and the United States.The Hardhats ReactThe demonstrations of the hardhats in New York re¬veals to many the possibilities if protest is carried too far.There is a swelling undercurrent of discontent among low¬er-middle class Americans — the very groups from whomWallace got his support in 1968 and which Nixon is tryingto forge into his emerging Republican majority.With continued protests, they may come to him, hewill not have to campaign specially to get their vote. Buta large group of Americans is now ready to support thePresident vigorously, and prompting by militant protes¬ters can only push them further into his arms. And asMargaret Chase Smith so eloquently warned on the floorof the Senate this week, “Extremism bent upon polariza¬tion of our people is increasingly forcing upon the Ameri¬can people the narrow choice between anarchy and re¬pression ... if that narrow choice has to be made, theAmerican people, even with reluctance and misgiving willchoose repression.” Senator Charles Percy points out thatin fact the silent majority is built on a distaste for vio¬lence.Somehow (there were no national leaders in the move¬ment) student and faculty began to move away from thesedemonstrations, which previously they had regarded asends in themselves for achieving change. People had beenmarching for five years against the war, with less effecteach time.Demonstrations are at best an emotional outlet forrage and dissent. National policy is not determined in theCivic Center plaza or in Grant Park. The moratoria re¬vealed that there massive discontent, but failed be¬cause the energies of the participants could not be chan¬neled into productive areas, such as canvassing andworking for peace candidates. But the strike was unlike that. People were in thesame mood of discontent and outrage over Cambodia andKent State. And there were demonstrations. But thesewere not the end of it, and then back to business as usual.With some exceptional organizing in a short period oftime, projects got off the ground — students gatheredpetitions in train stations, the suburbs were blanketed withcanvassing, hundreds of students left for Washington tolobby their representatives for various anti-war legisla¬tion, movements to elect a dovish congress got underway.Perhaps it was spontaneous, as people realized rallieswould not unseat Nixon nor withdraw troops, but that anopposition Congress could. In any event it is the only vi¬able means available.Towards a Conservative Majority?There is fundamentally a more important question inthis time of uncertainty and transition in America. Like itor not Kevin Phillips may be right when he argues thatthere is an emerging Republican majority, George Wall¬ace notwithstanding. The failure of liberalism and of theDemocratic party in toe 1960’s caused many Americansto re-think their basic political philosophy. Outraged in1968 nearly 10 million voted for Wallace, most of themDemocrats up to that time. It is quite possible that Nixoncan garner a good number of these voters, who are asupset with the state of things in America today as aremany protesters. Like protesters, they showed their dis¬satisfaction with the two-party system in 1968 and sup¬ported a candidate who was far and away different fromthe other two.But they did not want to reject the system entirely —a President who was able to give them what they wantedwould be likely to get their loyal support for years tocojne. And there are ample signs that such massive up¬heavals are taking place in key areas — the South, North¬ern workers, the suburbs — which would coalesce into aformidable power bloc for toe Republican party and makefor a more conservative government in the next fewyears.If this is the case, the obvious question that must beasked is the role of liberalism and the Democratic partyduring this period. The anti-war bloc in Congress has beenan effective gadfly for the past five years, focusing dis¬content over the war, contributing to the retirement of onePresident, avoiding the possibility of a much wider warwhich General Westmoreland wanted in 1968, as well asmake his successor realize that the United States mustwithdraw troops.The question that divides America now is not whethertroops should be withdrawn, but how fast. The Presidenthas support for his policies, and in the end he may beproven right. Only time will tell.But one thing remains certain. Liberalism is threat¬ened with extinction, attacked by both left and right asunresponsive to the needs of today. And not without justcause. Unless liberals can stop mouthing solutions of the1930’s, solutions which are inadequate, they will find them¬selves a small, divided minority which will be ineffectivein the political system.Con Hitchcock, managing editor of the Maroon, is a sec¬ond year student in toe College, majoring in history.“Before the strike students withdrew from the political system,leading lives of quiet desperation as they cast a cynical eye towardthe American political system ”June 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7Monday, May 4Representatives of eight student political groups decide to organize a strike ofclasses in response to the sending of American troops into Cambodia.Following a noon rally on the administration building steps, 150 students march onthe Adlai Stevenson Institute for International Affairs, located in Robie House, toprotest its alleged war and counter-insurgency research. Some 20 of them, mostly members of SDS, kick in three glass doors and one window.A pro-tern strike steering committee votes to support three national strike de¬mands: withdrawal of all US troops from Indochina, freeing of all political prisoners,and an end to war research on campus.During disturbances at Kent State University in Ohio, National Guard troops shootand kill four students.Tuesday, May 5The class strike is over 75 percent effective, with picketers at most buildings on themain quads. Law school students vote to strike for one week. SVNA members begindigging trenches to prepare for “enemy attack.”Some 700 students march to the Illinois National Guard Armory at 53rd St. andCottage Grove Ave to protest the Kent State killings. They persuade the commanderthere to lower the flag to half-staff in commemoration of the four students.8/Tha Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970 Faculty in the College pass resolutions demanding an immediate halt to the war inIndochina and condemning the use of violent repression on campus.At the first mass meeting at Mandel Hall, 1200 students vote overwhelmingly tocontinue the strike through Friday, and to continue support of the three national de¬mands. An 18 member steering committee is elected, which includes Fairinda West,Richard Levins, and Jerry McGann.Wednesday, May 6kW • mjT ..l - ■ 4 * % '4 k' igfjThe strike remains over 75 per cent effective. Other activities include canvassing,workshops, and a panel discussion on the war.The second mass meeting, which lasts nearly 5 hours, is marked by confusion andfactionalism. Some 1200 students first vote to submit the question of continuing thestrike to a University-wide referendum, then reverse that decision and demand asuspension of classes for the rest of the quarter. A group of 200 radical students led by Jeff Mazo walk out of the meeting to planimmediate action with members of the Black Students Association. The group evictsfurniture from Robie House, smashing glass in the process, and takes files from theStevenson Institute. Several Woodward Court residents put back the furniture andsweep up the glass.June 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9Thursday, May 7IK fg§gf VPhH§v;, . 11e,1gg§l§ _ i W ~ .Students from the medical school, the business school, and the school of socialservice administration vote to boycott classes. Library workers also vote to support thestrike by not showing up for work on Friday. Students sell anti-war telegrams through¬out Chicago area neighborhoods, and gather signatures on anti-war petitions.A radical caucus in Reynolds Club moves to the Center for Continuing Education toconfront a supposed meeting of the board of trustees. Upon arriving there, the crowd of over 200 students learns that no such meeting is taking place, but that the Council ofthe University Senate is meeting instead.The Council approves a measure that permits a student in the College to receivethe grade of ‘P’ for all work through May 4 that his professor considers satisfactory,and to receive an ‘R’ unconditionally. The stated purpose of the action is to allowstudents and faculty to engage in political activity.Friday, May 8President Edward Levi cancels all University classes to allow for a day of mourn¬ing fcr the students killed at Kent State. A memorial service is held in RockefellerChapel.Several faculty members and graduate students begin sponsoring the ContinuingAction Projects (CAP). These projects organize lobbying and legislative activity, workto influence public opinion through speaker appearances, discuss the role of war re¬search, and encourage political action by official University bodies. Some 70 students go10/Tha Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970 to the West side to protest the eviction of a member of the Contract Buyers’ League(CBL). About 100 students picket the main entrance to the quadrangles to block alldeliveries to the University. At Northwestern in Evanston, demonstrators set up barri¬cades along Sheridan Rd.At an unusually short meeting run by parliamentary procedure, students vote tocontinue the strike through Monday.About 100,000 demonstrators from universities all over the country gather at theellipse m front of the White House to protest the war. Many listen to speeches, then cooloff in nearby pools. There are no major incidents of violence. In Chicago, 500 persons from the University and Hyde Park march to a rally at theCivic Center, then to the Federal Building, and finally to Logan statue in Grant Park,where 20,000 demonstrators are gathered. The march is peaceful.Saturday, May 9Juno 5, 1970/Tho Chicago Maroon/11 ^Monday, May 11The strike of classes is less effective, with many students returning to class for thefirst time in a week. Other activities continue, however, including action projects,canvassing of neighborhoods, and telephone calls to Senators and Congressmen on anopen line to Washington and Springfield. Seventy-five students from nearby high schoolsenter Ida Noyes Hall, use the basketball court and swimming pool, and demand thatthe building’s facilities be open to the community. At another mass meeting, 1200 students vote to continue picketing of classesthrough Saturday and to encourage the University community to use the remainder ofthe quarter to political ends. They also ask for a suspension of classes during the twoweeks preceding the November elections to allow for political activity. The Council ofthe University Senate later recommends this recess.Tuesday, May 12Many Hyde Park businesses, including the Hyde Park shopping center, close forone hour in an anti-war action organized by the Hyde Park — Kenwood CommunityConference. A crowd of 500 attends a rally at the shopping center and marches to themain quads.Students continue to return to class, and all of the professional schools vote to endtheir strike with the exception of the school of social service administration. A Univer¬sity chapter of the Movement for a New Congress (MNC) is founded; it aims to organize campaigning for peace candidates over the summer and fall and to initiatechapters at other midwest schools.Only 250 students attend a mass meeting discussing implementation of strike de¬mands, and no voting is held. Proposals include continued canvassing and petitioning,support for a child care center on campus, the opening of Ida Noyes to the community,and a demonstration to protest the killing of six blacks by police during demonstrationin Augusta, Georgia.Thursday, May 14Picketing of classroom buildings ends, while students and faculty continue to par¬ticipate in CAP workshops and in the MNC movement to recruit campaign volunteers.Representatives of “Peace Legislation and Peace Candidates 70’ present anti-war peti¬tions with over 20,000 signatures to Senator Charles Percy at the downtown ChicagoClub.The new grading system is not implemented uniformly throughout the College. With12/The Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970'V many arrangements still to be made, it is learned that some teachers are requiringstudents to complete a full quarter’s work before receiving a ‘P’ and that others areencouraging students to receive letter graeds.Police gunfire outside a women’s dormitory at Jackson State College in Mississippikills two black students and rounds nine others.President Levi asks that all University activities scheduled for Friday night andSaturday morning be cancelled as a memorial for the students killed at JacksonState. MNC representatives plan visits to other midwest schools, with 600 Universitystudents having already signed up to work for peace candidates during the summer andfall. A CAP lobbying project plans to go to Washington to compile an information filethat would help future lobbying efforts.Monday, May 18 Some 200 students attend a University memorial service in Rockefeller Chapel forthe students killed at Jackson State.Over 600 anti-war protesters, including three busloads of University students, attendan Armed Forces Day demonstration in North Chicago’s Foss Park and force theclosing of Great Lakes Naval Training Center, one of 21 military bases in the countryforced to close.Gay Liberation holds a dance in Ida Noyes at which students refuse to show theirUniversity ID to gain admission. After the dance, members of the New UniversityConference (NUC) organize a sit-in in support of the demand that the facilities of thebuilding, which NUC renames “The Fred Hampton Memorial Community Center,” beopen to the community. NUC also plans the establishment of a Right On TrainingCenter (ROTC) in the building which would hold liberation classes directed towardsongoing political action. The 60 demonstrators all leave by 8 am Sunday.Friday, May 15A week of liberation classes begins at the ROTC in Ida Noyes. Among them is adiscussion on Panther Defense, aimed at organizing the South Side around the trial ofBobby Seale. Students and faculty at the Lutheran Theological Seminary vote to strikein protest of the Jackson State killings. At the last mass meeting in Mandel Hall, 75 students endorse the transformation ofIda Noyes into a center for the implementation of strike demands and declare them¬selves on strike for the rest of the quarter.June 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/13*UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS BUS SERVICESUMMER BUS SERVICEJune 15, 1970, through September 18, 1970Bus service as covered in the following printed routes andschedules will be provided for the Summer starting June 15th.Fold up maps and schedules showing the routes in color for theNorth-South, East-West, South Shore and Evening schedules may bepicked up at the 7 ticket selling locations.Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS." Upon signal from a patron, buses will stop to takeon or discharge passengers at any intersection or University Building.Buses will operate as stated below, Monday through Friday, except on official University holidays. Schedules aresubject to change without notice.Because of legal restrictions, use of this transportation serviceis limited to members of the University faculty, staff, and stu¬dents. Passfengers will be admitted to the vehicle upon surren¬dering a ticket to the driver except on the "C" Bus where Univer¬sity iderttification must be presented. The driver will not be per¬mitted to accept cash or to sell tickets. Identification as a stu¬dent, faculty member, or employee will be required when pur¬chasing tickets. One-ride tickets at 15 cents each and Monthly WHO MAY RIDECommutation tickets at $4.50 each for the "N" & "E" routesand at 25 cents each ride or Monthly Commutation rate of $7.50each for the "S" route are sold at the following Locations:Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E. 59th St.)University Bookstore (1020 E. 57th St.)Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th St.)ROUTES AND SCHEDULES International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th St.)Maps ard Schedules available at the above locations.(NO refunds on lost or unused commutation tickets. "S" routetickets are accepted on all routes).NOTE: The "C" Combined Evening Route servjce is Free.(E) EAST-WEST-BROADVIEW(15 cent tickets)Approximately 30 minutes round tripMonday through Friday except onUniversity HolidaysUpon signal from patron, Buses will stop totake on or discharge passengers at any inter¬section or University Building on the route.ROUTEStarting at 59th and Stony, bus proceedsWest to Cottage Grove,- North to 57th St.;East to Stony Island; North to 56th St.; Westto Lake Park; North to East Hyde Park Boule¬vard; East to South Hyde Park Boulevard;South to 57th Park Drive,- West on 57th ParkDrive to Stony Island; South on Stony Islandto 59th St.; the Starting Point.A.M.6:156.457:157:458:158:45P.M.4:054:355:055:35 SCHEDULEStarts at 59th & Stony Island(Ends at 59th & Ellis about 9:15 A.M.)Starts at 59th & Stony Island(Ends at Broadview about 5:55 P.M.) (N) NORTH-SOUTH(15 cent tickets)Approximately 30 minute' round tripMonday through Friday except onUniversity HolidaysUpon signal from patron, Buses will stop totake on or discharge passengers at any inter¬section or University Building on the route.ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 48th and Greenwood, pro¬ceeds East on 48th to Dorchester; South on Dor¬chester to 53rd; East on 53rd to Harper; Southon Harper to 54th Place; West on 54th Place toDorchester; South on Dorchester to 56th St.; Easton 56th to Lake Park; South on Lake Park to 57thSt.; West on 57th to Dorchester; South to 58th;West to Kimbark; South to 59th & Kimbark (TheP.M. Starting Point), then West on 59th to Ellis;South on Ellis to 60th; East on 60th to Wood-lawn; North on Woodlawn to Westbound MidwayDrive; West to Ellis; North to 57th; East to Uni¬versity; North to E. Hyde Park Blvd.; East toWoodlawn; North to 49th; West to Greenwood; (C) COMBINED EVENINGROUTEApproximately 25 minutes round trip undernormal driving conditions.Monday through Fridgy except onUniversity HolidaysNOTE: This service is FREE to University ofChicago Students, Faculty and Staffupon presentation of University iden¬tification.Stops at all intersections upon signal from,patron.ROUTEStarting at 59th & Dorchester, bus proceedsWest to Cottage Grove Ave.; South to 60thStreet; East on 60th Street to Woodlawn Ave¬nue; North to Westbound Midway Drive;-Midway Drive to Ellis Avenue; North to 57thSt.; East on 57th Street to University; Northto Hyde Park Blvd.; East on Hyde Park Blvd.to Dorchester; South to 53rd Street; East onand North to 48th St., the A.M. Starting Point. 53rd Street to Harper Avenue; South to 54thNOTE: P.M. Buses start at 59th and Kimbark but Place; West on 54th Place to Dorchester;run the same route. South to 55th Street; East on 55th Street toSCHEDULE S. Hyde Park Blvd.; South to 56th Street;A.M. Starts at 51st & University West on 56th Street to Lake Park Avenue,-7:30 South to 57th Street; West on 57th Street to8:00 Dorchester; South to 59th & Dorchester, the8:30 Starting Point.9:00 (Last trip ends at 57th & University SCHEDULEabout 9:25 A.MJ P.M.MID-DAY (June 29 thru August 7 only.) 6:05 Starts at 59th12:00 Starts at 59th & Kimbark & Dorchester 9:5512:30 6:30 10:201:00 (Ends at 57th & Dorchester about 6:55 10:451:25 P.M.) 7:20 11:10P.M. Starts at 59th & Kimbark 7:45 11:354:00 5:00 8:10 12:00 (Last trip ends4:30 5:30 (Ends at 57 & 8:35 at 57th & Dor¬Dorchester 9:05 chester aboutabout 5:55 P.M.) No 9:30 Run 12:20 A.M.) (S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTHCAMPUS(25 cent tickets)Approximately 45 minutes round trip undernormal driving conditions.Monday through Friday except onUniversity HolidaysStops at all intersections upon signal frompatron.ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery andproceeds South on Jeffery to 76th Street;East on 76th Street to Coles Avenue; NorthWest on Coles to 73rd Street; West on 73rdStreet to Luella Avenue,- North on Luellathrough 71st St. onto Crandon, then North onCrandon to 68th Street; West on 68th Streetto Stony Island; North on Stony Islandthrough Jackson Park Drive to 59th and StonyIsland; West on 59th Street to Ellis Avenue,-South on Ellis Avenue to 60th Street; East on60th Street to Stony Island; then South Eastthrough Jackson Park Drive to 67th and Jef¬fery, the Starting Point.A.M.7:057:508:35 SCHEDULEStarts at 67th & Jeffery(Ends at 60th & Stony Island about9:15 A.M.)MID-DAY12:30 P.M. Starts at 59th & Stony Island(This Run will be made fromJune 29 through August 7only.)P.M.4:305:156:00 Starts at 59th & Stony Island(Ends at 68th & Stony Island about6:40 P.M.)Further information may be obtained from the Plant Department, 960 East 58th Street, Mr. A. Herbster, Midway 3-0800, Extension 3082. E. L. MILLER. Director, Plant Operations14/Th* Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970CAP Works to End War9 Defend UniversitiesBy Aristide R. ZolbergAs the Chicago Sun Times concluded in its May 18editorial praising the university’s conduct during the re¬cent crisis, “In other words, the U. of C. acted instead ofbeing acted upon.” The several hundred undergraduates,graduate students, and faculty members who brought tolife the loosely coordinated movement known as “contin¬uing action projects” contributed significantly to this out¬standing response.The movement was launched by a group of facultymembers and graduate students, mostly in political sci¬ence, who shared the convictions that led to the call for anation-wide university strike.On the night of Wednesday, May 6, following theirannual departmental dinner, several faculty members ofthe department of political science gathered to considerappropriate means of action within the university in re¬sponse to the crisis triggered off by the war and its do¬mestic consequences. The next morning, at a meeting withconcerned students and additional faculty from other de¬partments, a statement was drafted calling upon col¬leagues to join in a “demonstrative interruption of normalactivities” and proposing the organization of “peace andfreedom action workshops designed to equip students andfaculty to act effectively in the political arena.” Thatstatement, signed by nineteen professors and students,was then read by Kenneth Prewitt, professor of politicalscience, at a strike rally on the steps of the administrationbuilding Thursday noon. It was also announced that politi¬cal science students had scheduled an organizationalmeeting in Reynolds on Friday. 66These activities were designed to generate immediate action aswell as to prepare for a major electoral action next fall”all who wished to participate. Some funds were quicklyraised among faculty and student participants to reim¬burse the university for expenses incurred by the variousprojects. No attempt was made to interfere with facultymembers and students who wished to conduuct businessas usual in spite of the crisis.Towards Immediate ActionBy Monday, May 11, approximately twenty activitieswere under way, organized into ten “continuing actionprojects” scattered throughout the campus. Although sev¬eral of them were led by members of the initial group,others soon joined in to benefit from the coordinating vac-ilities established by CAP. Half of the workshops wereoriented towards immediate action.Cap No. 1 was concerned primarily with electoralcampaigns and lobbying; it also established contacts withthe Princeton-based “Movement for a New Congress” inpreparation for the fall elections.Directed toward influencing public opinion, Cap No. 2concentrated on obtaining signatures for petitions support¬ing the McGovern amendment pending before Congress;on organizing a speakers’ bureau to provide informedspeakers to high schools and civic groups throughout theChicago area; and on contacting the mass media con¬cerning CAP activities. CAP No. 10 prepared students tocarry these activities to their hometowns during the sum¬mer, while CAP No. 6 dealt with draft counselling, civildisobedience, and other nonviolent actions.CAP No. 7 was directed toward continuing action with¬in the university itself. Anticipating a meeting of theCouncil of the University Senate, they launched a petitionon May 11 in order to demonstrate that there was exten¬sive support among the faculty as well as the students fora change of schedule in the fall to enable members of theuniversity community to participate fully in democraticelectoral processes. Members of the workshop also de¬cided to contact University trustees in order to encouragethem to take individual and collective positions in relationto the national crisis.Research and DiscussionOther workshops focused on research or on the dis¬cussion of significant issues. CAP No. 3 prepared positionpapers on aspects of foreign policy, on domestic effects ofthe war, and on the role of government research at theUniversity of Chicago. Similarly, CAP No. 4 initiatedmemoranda on judicial action and CAP No. 5 investigatedrepression of campus dissent. The results will be madepublic and will be available to the other workshops for usein their own activities. CAP No. 9 discussed the complexrelationships between “politics, scholars, and the univer¬sity,” while CAP No. 10 looked “beyond dissent.” Al¬though it is difficult to estimate how many participated inthese various projects, there is no doubt that they con¬stituted the most salient focus of university activity duringthe crisis of May.Operating from Soc Sci 119 (ext 2994), CAP continuesto coordinate urgent activities at issues currently pendingbefore Congress. Research reports are being completed aswell. Increasingly, however, CAP is reorienting its atten¬tion toward the fall electoral campaign. A skeleton oper¬ation will be maintained during the summer months inorder to enable returning faculty and students to max¬imize their effectiveness during the anticipated suspensionof normal university activities prior to the elections.Known as “Peace 70,” this project is currently en¬ gaged in fund raising within and outside the universitycommunity; in coordination of Chicago-based activitieswith other campaign projects throughout the country; andin serious research on immediately relevant aspects of theelectoral process.“End the war and preserve the open university!” readone appeal offering the shutting down of universities. Buthow is this to be done? For many of us, a suspensionof normal activities in order to devote ourselves to imme¬diate action as university citizens was the appropriate re¬sponse in May 1970. How often is such an interruptionwarranted? Under what circumstances is it proper to de¬part from the detachment that is vital to the life of theliberal university?For those who are committed both to a significantchange in the national course and to the life of the mind,the central issue concerns the limits of that detachment:under what circumstances does detachment become anabdication of responsibility?Off the GroundOver one hundred copies of the announcement weredistributed throughout the university on Thursday after¬noon, gathering numerous additional signatures and en¬dorsements from students and faculty. The organizerswere particularly concerned to reach members of the Col-6In other words, th e U. of C.acted instead being acted upon?-The Sun TimesArtistide R. Zolberg is professor and chairman of the po¬litical science department. He is an organizer of theContinuing Action Projects. He is writing here as anindividual and not a spokesman for the political sciencedepartment.6Under what circumstances doesdetachment become an indica¬tion of responsibility?”June 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/15. • ♦ * • * t • • • • ' ' ‘ l! I<lege Council who were about to gather to consider appro¬priate action in response to the crisis. Knowledge of theavailability of the workshops undoubtedly made it possiblefor many Council members to vote on behalf of specialgrading procedures for the Spring quarter.Meanwhile, the organizing group sat in Soc Sci 302 toprepare a schedule of activities for presentation at theFriday meeting. They agreed to have it chaired by a“troika” consisting of David Easton, professor of politicalscience, Peter Novick, associate professor of history, andDebbie LeVeen, graduated student in political science. Da¬vid Greenstone, associate professor of political science,took charge of a task force which would work out furtherdetails.Approximately eight hundred members of the univer¬sity community showed up at the meeting on Friday, May8. After moving to Mandel, the troika presented proposalsrelated to two themes: political strategies for ending thewar and strategies in defense of the university commu¬nity. These activities were designed to generate imme¬diate action as well as to prepare for a major electoraleffort next fall in concert with a moratorium on normaluniversity activities. Specific topics were suggested by theassembled body as well.At the end of the meeting, many signed up for thevarious activities scheduled to begin over the week-end.Thanks to the cooperation of WHPK and of the Maroon,the workshops were well publicized and hence available toAristide R. ZolbergA MEMORANDUMTO: STUDENT AND FACULTY WIVESRE: UNIVERSITY EMPLOYMENT (An Invitation)At The University of Chicago, wives of students, faculty, residents and interns, constitute a highly appreciated groupamong the several thousand people employed on the regular staff.Despite tradition, University SALARIES are fully competitive these days, with provision for regular merit increases andfrequent pay range improvements.University regular employment BENEFITS are better than competitive, including 3 WEEKS VACATION, PAID SICKLEAVE, REDUCED TUITION for University courses, FREE BLUE CROSS - BLUE SHIELD and many others. Employees alsoparticipate in the University's many activities and functions. •There is a great variety of employment opportunity at the University. Typical positions include:Technical positions in research and clinical laboratories for those with experience or with courses inchemistry, biology, microbiology, etc.Office positions of many kinds for those with typing, shorthand, bookkeeping or related skills. Also someclerical positions which do not require special skills or background.Administrative or professional positions for those whose experience or specialized field of trainingqualifies them. »Although we have some openings for part-time workers, the greatest choice of employment is for those who can workfulltime, and who plan to work for a year or more.You are invited to explore your employment opportunities by contacting the University Personnel Office at 956 E. 58thStreet; hours 8:30 to 5:00, Monday through Friday. Or call Midway 3-0800, Extension 4440.Of course the University is an equal opportunity employer.MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Week• for your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.Business as usual during the interimand during summer.quarter.10-6 Monday-Friday12-6 Saturday. (only campus bookstore open Satyrday) •We buy used books & we sell books &records.Student Co-opx3561 Reynolds Club57th & University If you are going to move,think of Peterson. It is aquick solution to a trouble¬some problem.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 SOUTH DOTY AVENUE 646-4411After graduation, the Alumni Association will be your direct link with the University and your classmates.Membership is free and automatic. You'll also get a complimentary subscription to the award-winningUniversity of Chicago Magazine published by the Association since 1907 for alumni and faculty.The Association will keep you informed of faculty lectures, cultural events, alumni programs, and otherUniversity-sponsored activities taking place near you home. The Association will assist you in locatingclassmates and will act as your representative on campus. And the Magazine will bring you news of theUniversity, the faculty, and alumni, plus stimulating Articles on everything from student affairs to newachievements on the frontiers of science and scholarship.The University of Chicago Alumni Association5733 UNIVERSITY AVENUE / CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60637 / TELEPHONE (312 ) 643-0800 EXT. 4291 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 i PizZA :PLATTER;• Pizza, Fried Chicken |j Italian Foods jI Compare the Price! J11460 E. 53rd 643-2800|I WE DELIVER *.1 I 1 i 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 I r TrT1 CHARTS/GRAPHS.- Leroy lettering(Near campus)1 363-128816/The Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970lEa n it r a b * * * r. « * a » * USfiElectoral Process Provides Means for ChangeBy Larry Sherman“Right On’!” we shouted for the thousandth time, suf¬focating in cigarette smoke and dodging paper airplanesin the balcony of Mandel. As the second mass dragged on,it became apparent that the unity of action shown at Yalethe previous weekend could not be repeated at Chicago.Cambodians and Ohioans were dying, and we were sittingthere making “points of order.” Frustration soon over¬came bedlam.Since mass action was impossible here, we decided toattempt something m Washington on .an individual basis.Driven to the capital by a converted — left Goldwatersupporter, we made our views known to a few congress¬men and a score of legislative assistants. In spite of the ' ’excitement of the Saturday march, we returned to Chicagoon Sunday with the old feeling that our efforts were use¬less.With that same kind of feeling, some students and fa¬culty in political science had gotten together over thatweekend. They wanted to channel the great emotionalenergy of the moment into useful activities which wouldcontinue after the smoke had cleared. A variety of Contin¬uing Action Projects (CAP) were organized, including tothe November elections.Ending the UproarAs I sat through the Monday morning meef:ng of theelections project, the obvious slowly dawned on me. Forfive years the peace movement had screamed its protestswith virtually no effect. Endless numbers of speeches,marches, sit-ins, hunger strikes, draft-card turn-ins, win¬dow-breakings, and flag-burnings had not stopped the war.The uproar had become intense enough to bring sometroops back home, but that was aimed more at ending theuproar than at ending the war. The closest the peacemovement came to ending the war was the 1968 presiden¬tial election. Competition between two doves managed tofoul up even that effort.In the present state of student activism, it appearsthat a great deal of energy may still be wasted. Withoutevaluating the “system,” it seems fairly clear that it willnot be destroyed in the near future. Efforts to do so willbe unsuccessful, at least in the short run. Passing theHatfield-McGovern bill is the way in which Congress canend the war. The present Congress is not likely to do so,though, no matter how many petitions, telegrams, andletters they receive. The most efficient use of studentenergy is quite clearly working for “peace” candidates inthe November elections.Even in electoral activity, though, a great deal ofwasted effort is possible. Many incumbent doves are vir¬tually assured of reelection. Many insurgent doves don’thave a chance. The critical need for student workers is inthe marginal races, where canvassing and getting the voteout can make a real difference.Identifying the marginal races and sending students tothem will be a very difficult task, requiring a great dealof organization. In the absence of the unifying national “MNC poses enough of a threatto worry the White House”focus on a presidential candidate, there must be an orga¬nization devoted to electing as many peace candidates aspossible.MNC Comes to the MidwayI awoke from these musings at that first CAP meetingto hear a passably unobnoxious Princeton man describingthe Movement for a New Congress. The computer tabula¬tion of interested students and the research on congres¬sional races which Princeton’s MNC offered were per¬suasive selling points. We called Princeton that afternoonand became a bona fide chapter. We were also persuadedto become the midwest organizing center.Though the steering committee had accepted the mid¬west job with reluctance, the whole group took on the jobwith enthusiasm. Within a week thirty of them had estab¬lished more than 70 MNC chapters in Nebraska, Iowa,Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana,and Illinois. At almost every school, groups similarly frus¬trated with useless efforts greeted the MNC idea enthu¬siastically.JESSELSOH’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 -1340 E. 53rd5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHUITZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRYJimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHUTZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWN GET ftSUB FORTHESUMMER* Cornett jtoriil ** 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *^ Phone: PA 4-1651 ^ BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMENT STOREPL 2-47441150 E. 63rd St. While the University of Chicago organized the mid¬west, it also organized the University. One thousand re¬cruitment forms are being keypunched to go to Princetoncomputers. Hoping to get even more peace workers, weraised money to buy a recruitment ad in today’s Maroon.Our Midwest-Illinois-Chicago University office has beenstaffed virtually every hour that Ida Noyes Hall has beenopen. Research is in progress on every congressional racein Illinois.Beyond all of the initial fervor for a catchy, simplisticidea, MNC is now attempting to prepare for a very com¬plex operation next fall. The national headquarters in NewJersey has slowly evolved a more sophisticated approach.For example, each state had originally been encouragedto publicly endorse a slate of MNC “peace” candidates.Realizing that such an endorsement can hurt more thanhelp some candidates, it now seems more advisable todeemphasize the fanfare. Other, more logistical questionsare still being examined.Threat from the IRSIn the meantime, the organization is solidifying itsfoundations. Follow-up organizers are going out to thestate centers and local chapters to provide technical assis¬tance. A state-wide meeting will held at the University ofChicago in June to choose the most critical races and todiscuss liaison methods with the candidates. MNC’s initialefforts in Pennsylvania, and New Jersey primaries havebeen unsuccessful, largely through lack of preparation.Hopefully, Illinois MNC will prepare itself over the sum¬mer enough to win this fall.Despite the recent East Coast failures, MNC posesenough of a threat to worry the White House. Varioussources in Washington indicate that the Internal RevenueService may revoke the tax exempt status of schools withMNC chapters. The prohibition against legislation and elec¬tion-related activity has been ignored for years, with goodreason. * ^Strict enforcement of the terms of the IRS code (sec¬tion 501) would clearly mean that Young Republicans andYoung Democrats would be forced off campus. It wouldalso mean that social sciences would be forced offcampus, since the code prohibits any research whichcould be used in a political campaign.The ironic aspect of this move would be that only themoderates would be hurt. Radical groups (such as SDSand YAF) which don’t care about elections would stillenjoy their ivory tower privileges. In spite of all the rhe¬toric about “working through the system,” it seems thatthe administration is deathly afraid that students mightjust take that advice. On campus or off, the MovementFor a New Congress hopes to justify those fears.Larry Sherman is a graduate student in urban studies anda member of the Movement for a New Congress.IdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SI IN 1.1FE OF CANADAMODERN DANCE CLASSES4,30 to 6:00Monday - SaturdayftalWt, Rock & Jazz taught.Allison Theater Dante Centert7 N. Star#Stevens BuildingRoom 1902332-9923OR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 For That Special Gift,Select a GraphicfromWaller Gallery5300 Blackstone 363-7446 RIGHT ON CAMPUSFOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE ORSMALL - AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAIL-MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY" AD” BUILDINGTEL Ml 3-0800,EXT. 2301, 2302, 2303NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICESEXCEPT NOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETSJun* 5, 1970/Th* Gucogo Maroon/17SHORELAND 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 DriveWE'D LIKE YOU TO IGET FROCKEDJOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITH AS ANORX>AJMeX> MINISTER °WITH A RANK OFo pOCTOR Of= E>I\J1KlfTVWe want men and women of all ages, who believe as we do, to join us inthe holy search for Truth. We believe that all men should seek Truth byall just means. As one of our ministers you can:- 1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for exemption from propertyand other taxes.3. Perform marriages end exercise all other ecclesiastic powers.4. Get sizeable cash grants for doing our missionary work.5. Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries. We cantell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, theaters, etc., give reducedrates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinity and I.D. card,we'll send you 12 blank forms to use when you wish to ordain others.Your ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere in this country.Your money back without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send your Ordination andD.D. Certificates beautifully framed and glassed.SEND TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHBox 1393, Dept. 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TO 3 A.M.Vt Chicken MENU(Tax Included)80Chicken Sandwich .. 1.45Order of Gizzards 1.25 Small Order of Livers 90HAROLD’SCHICKEN SHACK No. 14It's still not too late to order yourRENAULTfor delivery in Europein July(or August, or September, or ... as a matterof fact, we might even swing late June if youcan take delivery in Paris.)IS$1414 $1915base price* base price(‘This price is for a U.S. model and includes most items which mightbe charged extra on other cars; such as a heater, 4 doors, discbrakes and many other features. Full cost including preparation,registration and 1 month's insurance $1502 for the Renault 10 and$2007 for the Renault 16 delivered in Paris.)We'll be happy to answer your questions, handle allthe paperwork and arrange your shipping.oCedly imports, J)nc.2235 SO. MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, 111. TEL. 326-2550 Come in andROADTEST THERENAULT 16 SE¬DAN-WAGON.We'll give you aKodak Hawkeye in-stamatic cameraFREE.Conditions? Be a li¬censed driver,- onecamera to a customerwhile supplies last.(We've got a goodsupply.)oCesiuimports,nc.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550Yon don't needInsuranceprotectionfor your car(if von livetinner 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.^INSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals OrganizationTAKCAM-VMlCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI | A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders co take outEastbard^MU^I^13 &18/The Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970 up: Military Research Does Exist on CampusBy Leonard Radinskyand Jo-Ann GreenbergResearch Group I is an on-going Right On Training[Center i ROTC) workshop that originated during the striketo implement the third national strike demand: militaryiff campus. Although the University of Chicago as an in¬stitution will not accept classified research grants and hasno army ROTC program on campus, there are suggestionsthat the University is involved in somewhat more subtlebut no less significant ways in aiding the mission of theUS military.The aims of our group are to determine the natureland extent of campus colloboration with the military andto expose it to the community so that all of us togethermay bring it to an end. We feel that a thorough analysisof the situation at an apparently “clean” institution likethe University of Chicago is especially important for in¬creasing understanding of the widespread phenomenon ofthe military-university complex.We started our investigation with a survey of all Uni¬versity defense department grants (almost $1,800,000worth) and several suggestions from students and move¬ment publications. Besides the obvious areas of researchrelevant to weapons development, we are also examiningi such questions as the relevance of social science researchto counter-insurgency techniques and to the control of do¬mestic disorders, the validity of the concept of “value-neutral” research, and the ethical issues raised by accept¬ing defense department money for research. We beganwith a few of the faculty whose past or present militaryMr. Janowitz replies on the following page.I affiliations have been openly acknowledged, by readingI their published works, interviewing students and faculty§ familiar with their research, and finally, by interviewingI the subjects themselves.Our preliminary survey revealed that the University isI involved in many ways and at several different levels inflj facilitating the work of the US military machine. We feelthat the involvement is significant enough to warrant amajor investigative effort and campus-wide consideration, “The University is involved inaiding the mission of the mili¬tary”and we invite all those interested to help us gather infor¬mation. We will present, over the next several months, aseries of reports on the results of our investigation.We begin in this article with the account of one profes¬sor’s collaboration with the US war machine. We haveselected a case which illustrates several kinds of com¬plicity, and which includes some previously unknown factswhich we feel require immediate campus consideration.Morris Janowitz, chairman of the sociology depart¬ment, has made a career of studying and advising themilitary. His 1960 book, The Professional Soldier, is astandard text for training US Army officers. His 1964book, The Military in the Political Development of NewNations, is an apologia for third world military dictator¬ships, for it argues that they are a salutary, positiveforce, acting as ‘professionalizing and disciplining’ agentsin the development of new nations. Besides working onand with the military, Janowitz also consults for and aidslocal law and order forces, including the Chicago police force. His 1968 police manual, The Social Control of Esca¬lated Riots, advises on how to put down ghetto riots.In addition to his published works Janowitz has pro¬vided secret aid to the military. He told us in an interviewthat he attends “selectively open” conferences at the Pen¬tagon, but said he doesn’t do classified work. However, welearned from other sources about a secret conference heheld in October, 1968, at the Center for Continuing Educa¬tion. Present were two generals, one Navy captain, sev¬eral lower ranking officers, a green beret stenographer,and a few civilian consultants. The purpose of the confer¬ence was to advise the military on how to minimize theimpact of anti-war and anti-draft protests on the efficientfunctioning of the war machine.Besides research, Janowitz also teaches to aid the mil¬itary. In cooperation with the Pentagon he has a majorfor the year program which trains a US army major eachyear at UC in military sociology.Janowitz also recruits students to serve the purposesof the military. He approached at least one graduate stu¬dent here with the proposition that he study the impact ofsaturation bombing on Vietnamese peasants for his PhDthesis.Thus Morris Janowitz serves the military in severalways — through his professional publications, with openand secret counseling, in teaching military personnel, andby recruiting others, including students, to serve the samecause. By increasing military efficiency he is directlyaiding the US war and counter-insurgency efforts abroadand control of dissident elements at home.We oppose the role the US military is playing in theworld today and believe that it should not be supported onour campus or anywhere. It must be ended everywhere.Given the power structure of our society few of us havemuch leverage in affecting the changes we seek. Thecampus community is one arena in which we do havepower, and the campus provides significant aid to themilitary. A campaign against faculty participation in warand counter-insurgency efforts will have major impact.Join us in realizing the strike demands; military off-campus.Leonard Radinsky and Jo-Ann Greenberg are membersof Right-On Training Center project number one.llllllllllllllllllllllMIIIMIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllflillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllllllllllltlABB IE HOFFMANJERRY RUBINMONDAY JUNE 8 MANDEL 8:00 P.M.'$1.50TOGETHER!YS iiiiiiiimiiimiiniiiiii♦ CARPET CITY *♦ 6740 STONY ISLAND <♦ 324-7998 <♦IHos what you need from a $10Juved 9 x 12 Rug, to o custom▼carpet Specializing in Remnants^▼ & Mill returns at o fraction of the^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad* FREE DELIVERYBe ready for Grad¬uation and Father'sDay with a Card andGift from our store.Lamps, Pins, Puzzles,Tennis Balls, PhotoAlbums, AutographBooks, AdditionalBooks, and of course,Books, books, booksand books.Summer HoursOpen Daily9:00 to 6:00Closed SundaysWOODWORTH'SBOOKSTORE1311 E. 57th St.Chicago, III. 60637Tel. 363-4800-4801 All proceeds to go to honorarium; honorarium to go to Chicago >5 Defense FundSponsored by Strike CommitteeiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiinmiiiiHimimiimiiiHiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimisr?i»Dj be SAFE (jjjFHave your car checked on ournew Electronic DiagnosticEquipment before you leavefor the summer.We check 130 different items for*10.95 Afterwards, we will give youa detailed itemized estimate of neededrepairs.The Diagnostic Check is free if we do anyneeded repair work, but you are welcome toonly pay for the diagnosis and have your carrepaired by your own mechanic.We will give you 500 S&Hstamps as an introductory of¬fer: (stamp offer expires August 1, 1970)Also, if you are concerned about airpollution, try MOCO lead-free gaso¬line.Call 288-9644 for diag¬nostic appointment todaybefore you leave on va¬cation, or for the summer.Lake Park Standard52nd & Lake ParkJune 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/19Sociologist Responds toBy Morris JanowitzAt the University of Chicago, there is complete free¬dom for students and faculty in the choice of research andthis obviously includes research on military institutions.Like other types of research, faculty and students asmembers of the University community should not engagein secret and classified resear jh, they must be able topursue their research efforts without arbitrary restraint,and they should publish their findings within a reasonabletime. Research should seek to contribute to our generalknowledge, and in sociology, this implies a theoreticalframework. The mere collection of descriptive and factualdata for administrative purposes of government or privateagencies is not academic research.Research on military institutions should be encour¬aged on university campuses because of the importance ofthe topic and because in a university setting vigorous de¬bate improves research progress. Investigations into themilitary have not been pressed by faculty and students inthe past, with unfortunate results for public discussion anddebate. However, I am pleased that contemporary gradu-'Morris Janowitz ate students are more interested. I am participating in atleast three doctoral dissertations on these topics and dur¬ing this year, I have had an increased number of highquality term papers and reports.My own research on armed forces and society is sup¬ported by funds from the Social Science Research Counciland the Russell Sage Foundation, and is conducted in con¬junction with the Inter-University seminar on ArmedForces and Society, a group which links together sociolo¬gists, political scientists, historians and others.The report of Research Group I presents gross dis¬tortions and inaccuracise of my interests and activities.• “The Professional Soldier” and “The Military inthe Political Development of New Nations” were under¬taken for purely academic interests and without any sup¬port, control or interference by any military formationanywhere in the world. The fact that “The ProfessionalSoldier” is on many military reading lists and on manymore civilian college reading lists tells one nothing aboutits research contribution or even its policy implications,which happen to be critical of American military policy.The book deals with the social recruitment of the military,its authority system, its skill base and the like; as a pieceof research it has been widely subject to evaluation andhas stimulated additional research. At a university, thebasic issue is its continued scrutiny as a contribution toour own general understanding of the condition in whichthe nation finds itself. To summarize my book on themilitary in the new nations as arguing that “They aresalutary, positive force acting as ‘professionalizing anddisciplining’ agents” is to completely reverse the argu¬ment and to make a mockery of the profound politicalissues these nations face.• I do not serve the military as a consultant becauseof my long standing opposition to American military oper¬ations in Indochina. However, I believe that faculty per¬sonnel can, by their own choice and as individuals, serveas consultants, provided it does not interfere with theirteaching responsibilities and provided it does not becomeprimarily a money making enterprise. Regarding the ref¬erence to a “selectively open conference” at the Penta¬gon, the facts are as follows. About three years ago,Judge Howard Bennett, the well known Black jurist oncivil rights of Black military personnel, held such a con- Charges ofference. If such a conference were held at the Pentagonagain the auspices of anyone like Judge Bennett — al¬though under the present administration it would not be -I would attend.• I have never participated in a secret conference toadvise the military to “minimize the impact of anti-warand antidraft protests.” I have participated in the Univer¬sity of Chicago conference on modifying the draft and Ihave testified before various commissions and congres¬sional bodies on draft reform.• I find it noteworthy that, although the two peoplewho wrote the report for Research Group I were informedof my single current government consultantship, theyfailed to mention it. Faculty members have a responsi¬bility to make their dissent and negative views known asconsultants to government and private agencies, but these“I do not serve the military as aconsultant because of my long¬standing opposition to Ameri¬can military operations in Indo¬china”are matters of personal preference and individual judg¬ment.I.am a member of the Social Science Advisory Boardof the United States Arms Control Agency, since I preferto work on arms control. Copies of my reports to thisagency are public and available. I also informed the wom¬en students that along with other faculty members such asHans Morgenthau, I lecture before military officers at thestaff schools. The contents of these lectures are public andthe military make a special point to state in writing that Iwill have complete academic freedom. In addition to myanalysis of the changing character of international rela¬tions under nuclear weapons, I present my critique ofAmerican military policy.iWe finally made it. It was damned hassle after another,but it is here now, and you can go over to Ida Noyes at4:00 and get one.This is the list of the stuff that is in yearBox:Chicago Portfolio. Forty-two fine photographs byDavid Travis, Steve Aoki, Chris Honeynan, Phil Lathrop,Doug Munson, Marc PoKempner, Randy Primm, andLeslie Strauss. Each picture is on its own 12 x 12 sheet,cropped the way the photographer cropped it, the size thephotographer made it. They are all put in a large por¬tfolio. We are very proud of this section; it cost a greatdeal, but it is absolutely worth it.The Good Old Hyde Park Game. Don Palumbothought up this game, and Amy Schutz spent weeksdrawing it out. It is beautiful to look at, and is probablythe best and funniest comment ever made on the Uni¬versity of Chicago. Like the Real Thing it is outrageouslycomplicated. And cnee you start playing you may neverstop.2Q/Tho Chicago Maroon/May 5, 1970 Mack the Knife/Blue Greens and Beans. This isthe record (genuine 45, not one of your cardboardtear-outs). It was recorded in a studio, by a number of UCstudents (Little Lester and the Rednecks) mixed with allthe tracks and over-dubs and everything, and is reallygreat, kind of blues-jazz. You have to hear it. We aregoing to send a copy over to WHPK and ask Shelley toplay it on his show tonight.The Hyde Park Cook Book. Leslie Strauss testedthese recipes, put the cook book together, and actually setit in type. There are 32 pages, with all different colors ofpaper. The recipes are easy, cheap to make, delicious.1970: The Year and the Strike. A sixteen-pagemagazine with photographs of the year and the strike, andsome reflections on both.A Poster. The famous “Why, Nixon?” poster madeby a collaborative of student artists working during thestrike at the Art Institute School. The Inflatable Bust of Edward Levi. In case you .have visions of a stand-up rubber thing that you canpractice boxing on, we hurry to tell you that the bust is infact a balloon with the image of our president printed onit. (We tried to get a fancier, face-shaped balloon, but theballoon-companies, like everyone else were on strike.)Still it is quite an object. We have supplied a bow-tiestand that you can put the bust on. It is also a lot of funto blow it up, and let go.The Senior Stamps. Rea) stamps of all the seniorswho got their pictures taken (about 150), the stamps are,of course, gummtd and perforated, and we used a screenthat makes them look like they were engraved.The Red Herring Statement. The galley proofs ofthe founding statement of SVNA, leaked to yearBox Byone of the factions (REAM 1 or REAM II) in the recent,heavy, ideological split.Military Complicity by ROTC Group^ T bauo npupr raprilitaH In comm Ibn nnmArnn r\C iUa <n . i n . . - .. _ „I have never recruited to serve the purposes of themilitary in Indochina. As mentioned above, students arefree to choose to do research on military institutions and Iam free to advise them about researchable topics.• The Department of Sociology does not apply politi¬cal and occupational criteria in the selection of students.Employees of various governmental and private agenciesare admitted on the same basis as students directly fromundergraduate study, and an important minority of ourstudents come from these sources.Over the last ten years, two military officers haveapplied to the department and have completed their de¬gree work according to the same curriculum and require¬ments as other students. I did not recruit them, but I amopposed to using political and background criteria of se¬lection. On the other hand, I believe that extensive civilianeducation is an essential aspect of civilian control. I donot believe that two or three military officers will under¬mine the attitudes of the civilian student body. I wonder ifthe opposition to having military officers as students is thedesire to have a truly ivory tower campus. backgrounds, we are committed to the belief that worldorder can be assisted by such intellectual enterprises. Thedocuments of this conference are being assembled in myoffice, and will supply the basis for much discussion in thecoming year.There is much research that needs to be done on theimpact of the Vietnam war on society. For example, weneed to explore the position of the Black veteran, a sub¬ject for which funds are not now available. We need toknow the impact of the war on the life of the campuses,but it will take harder digging than the research report ofResearch Group I. for the military, I believe it appropriate to indicate mypersonal position on military affairs, although it is wellknown in the University community and will be consideredby some faculty and students as electioneering. In theearly 1960’s, together withother faculty members. I ex¬pressed my criticism and opposition to our military policyin Indochina and we distinguished these policies fromthose in Western Europe.I have been engaged in organized off-campus politics,since only by elections can we really change foreignp ol-icy. In the spring of 1968, I actively worked first for Rob¬ert Kennedy and,after his assassination, for McGovern of“I am deeply troubled by the concept the report offers about know-ledge and action. Social science is not an engineering science; itdoes not supply specific answers to specific problems. The very• “The Social Control of Escalated Riots and the ex¬panded analysis, “Changing Patterns of Racial Violence,published by the National Commission on the Causes andPrevention of Violence, is not a police manual. Those whohave read it have seen that it is an analysis of the chang¬ing patterns of racial violence from the 1920’s to 1970., andan examination of the role of police and National Guard inprovoking and exacerbating violence, since racial violenceis influenced by the system of controls. The findings wereincorporated into the report of the Kerner Commissionrecommendations for changing police practice. fact that we have studies of poverty and crime for at least fiftyyears answers that question. Instead social science knowledgeis an expression of the human struggle for general enlighten¬ment”I have given a few lectures to the police academywhen O. W. Wilson was superintendent, on matters of ur¬ban sociology and race prejudice, in the same vein that Iwould before student and community groups.I will travel in September to Varna, Bulgaria, to theSeventy World Congress of Sociology as chairman of thesection on armed forces and society, which will take theform of a seven day sociology Pugwash conference. Underthe auspices of UNESCO, some fifty scholars will examineon a comparative basis the military profession and mili¬tarism. Representatives will be present from the Sovietbloc, Western Europe, Latin America, Africa, and SouthAsia. I will be accompanied by an American contingent,including representatives from the University of Chicago.Although we have widely different cultural and political My concern is not with the inaccuracies of the reportwhich are obvious. There is a deeper question, a philo¬sophical question, if you will. I am deeply troubled by theconcept the report offers about knowledge and action. So¬cial science is not an engineering science; it does notsupply specific answers to specific problems. The veryfact that we have studies of poverty and crime for at leastfifty years answers that question. Instead, social scienceknowledge is an expression of the human struggle for gen¬eral enlightenment. It is an effort to increase under¬standing so that each individual can formulate his ideasand opinions and have a more rational basis for guidinghis own decisions.Since the research claims to report what I have done President, who still remains my favorite candidate. Fortwo years, I have served as chairman of a group of facul¬ty merpbers actively assisting Congressman Abner Mikva.I have supported Mikva’s efforts at across-the-boardreduction in military expenditures, Milton Friedman’s pro¬posal to send only volunteers to Vietnam, and the Hatfield-McGovern resolution. But I believe that the appropriateformula is that recommended by General Matthew Rid-gway, namely meaningful political negotiation leading toan immediate cease fire.Morris Janowitz is professor and chairman of the depart¬ment of sociology.IS HERE !The Hyde Park Bar Tour. Setting out on a tour ofthe bars of Hyde Park seems as promising an adventure assetting out to see the sights of Odessa, Texas, and youmav wonder why we did it. There is a long answer,starting with our initial plan to have a guide to life onHyde Park in the box, as a sort of advertising gimmick.Well, no one wanted to write such a guide, and no onewas selling any ads, so we aba loned the idea. We had,however, spent $40 doing field work in the bars, so wewrote up a bar guide, printed it as cheaply as possible andput it in.IThe Year of the Pigskin. (Bv Mitch Kahn.) Ahilarious review of the Maroon’s first football season in30 years. This section doubles as a poster; and there is agood reproduction of an old sepia-tint photograph of oneof the UC football teams when Amos Alonzo Stagg wasthe captain.The Box Itself. The box for yearBox is made out ofcorrugated cardboard. It is 14 x 14 x 3, and very strong (you can actually stand on them, if you care to). For thecover, Cameron Poulter, the production chief over at thePress, suggested that we try to get some waste sheets fromone of our printers. Waste sheets are the sheets they useto get the press started, and they use them several times,piling up images. We got the waste sheets from AmericanPublisher’s Press, and most of them are from four-colorjackets of UC Press paperbacks.Well, that is yearBox. Everything in it is original. Youcan’t get anv of it anywhere else.If you go over to Ida Noyes (1212 East 59th) at 4, youcan see one. We will have a few hundred made up bythen.If you are willing to come over at noon, or tonight, andwork for three hours helping put the Boxes together, wewill give you one free.W'e will be selling them on campus all next week, or atleast until we run out.If you ordered a Box, and haven’t picked it up by theend of next week, we will send you a letter asking whereyou want us to mail it. YearBox has been a long time coming, but it has beenworth it. W'e are very happy with it, and we think you willbe,too.I Beautiful. !_ I would like a yearBox. _I □ Here is $5. Hold one for me until I can get gI over to Ida Noyes and pick it up. (If you get this |* coupon into the mail or fac ex by Monday, there ■I should be no trouble reserving a Box for you.) pI □ Here is $5.50. Please mail one to the address |■ below. ■■ Name _m Address g| City, State, Zip __ I1 After June 14. yearBoi will «wt *6. plu« SO poitagr. If you ordered a bo« ■| before June 4 end ere unable to pick it up. we will null it to you without eitra §■ charge. Write ua (tiring the addre .1 eou want yearBoi lent to. g■ 1212 East 59th Street jjP Chicago, Illinois 60615 gI MI 3-0800 ext. 3579 |June 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/21» f » > /v .» ♦ < »«•»♦«■««»•**►«»*»m»**»«• 4. * 4ft m m *• u <*• 6. 4. it* VV*.WKWVVt umh nrrw * *t ** * •* -b(Maroon Classified Ads)WE ARE STARDUST, WE ARE GOLDEN,BAD TASTEfm*m*m * uwThe business staff ofthe Maroon wish todedicate this page toall those wonderfulpeople who made itall possible.SCENESMinnette's Custom Salon 493-9713Alterations, millinery, dress, mak¬ing; clothes copied & designed.CRAFT CO-OP now open Mon.-Fri.1-5, 3rd fl. Blue Gargoyle.Marco Polo Travel. 2268 S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.Writers' Workshop PL 2-8377.MODELS FOR NUDE PHOTOG.(No exp. Needed) Schultz, 363-7171,8-12PM.Jukes Records - Hyde Park's lowestprices ^ 53 8. Lake Park, Under 1C.NEW CONGRESS Has A ProcessFor Turning Books Into Bread. WeNeed The Raw Material. Any AndAll Can Be Dropped Off At TheStudent Coop or Ida Noyes 306.Bach is coming, June 7allegro conspirito.Counter-Convocation means WilliamKuhtsler and Richard Levins onJune 13th in Mandel at noon. William Kuntsler is returning tocampus, this time to speed the grad¬uates on their way to the real world.June 13th at noon in Mandel.For the first time before you gradu¬ate, hear something that is "rele¬vant" at the University of Chicago-campus. William Kuntsler and Rich¬ard Levins June 13th in Mandel.atnoon.Abbie Hoffman Jerry Rubin Speak¬ing at Mandel and Donating TheirHonorium To The Chicago 15 — AllTicket Money •Goes To Their Honor¬arium — Confusing, Isn't it? Mandel• June 8 8:00 Tickets at The Door,$1.50.Final Musical Society Concert: Sat.June 6, Lexington Studio, 8:30 PM.Country Joe Who?Free all political prisoners.Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin doit for the Chicago 15 — be thereMandel June 8, 8:00, $1.50.A Counter-Convocation is for every¬body, students and non-students,graduates and non-graduates ...IZ DIS A SEESTIM? You ShouldCome Dance • Yes? Israeli FolkDancing Wed 7:30 - 11:00 Hillel.WILLIAM KUNTSLER, MANDELHALL, JUNE 13th, NOON.Abbie Hoffman Jerry Rubin Speak¬ing at Mandel And Donating TheirHonorarium To The Chicaao 15 —All Ticket Money Goes To ThierHonorarium — Confusing, Isn't It?Mandel June 8 8:00 Tickets At TheDoor, $1.50.Country Joe McDonald is Coming.Hear Country Joe Saturday June 13.2PM at Kenwood High and GetTickets at Insanity South NOW.GAY LIBERATIONHelp us replace the bushes aroundthe playground in East End Park —every Wed-Fri — 10 PMDance Sat 6-6 Chgo Circle Center750 S Halsted 9 PM We are our¬selves every Sun at FREE CITYMUSIC — Lincoln Park. N. of La¬Salle Dr. — Have we rattled yourcloset door. Want to talk? 955-7433 or472-6557. GAY PRIDE WEEK 6-20,All woman Dance — 6-21. BoatCruise 6-27. Really — BughouseSq —6-28 DANCE Aaragon Ball¬room $2 — info 528-8716.SENSITIVITY TRAINING"Turn On" with Dr. Jack Gibb,June 12, 7:30'PM to June 14, 4>00PM. Student-Faculty Dialogue AndWays to Turn On Without Drugs.Tuition: $35. and $25 for students.684-1122 24 hours.FEED THE LIFEOF THE BODYThe mind distorts — but the'bodydoes not lie. Experience continuity:mediate in motion. T'ai Chi. Inter¬national House, Sat at 10.MAROON SALE!Selling rejected books and recordswhich will benefit only The Maroon.$1.00 each, cash and carry, no returns, i.all sales final, strictly picked over junkthat has been played and looked at1’and rejected by the staff. Also, oneiPitney-Bowes addressing machine,hand-operated, $50.00 cash.I Also 10-year-old clippings in somewhat(dusty semblence of order - $15 for4-filing cabinets full -- you carry themlaway!JUNE 8 - JUNE 12, 1970 ONLY METAMORPHOSIS955-9347, 5638 S. Woodlawn.PEOPLE WANTEDSTAFF, STUDENTS participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech $1.50 for an hours work. Oncampus Call ext 4710 for an appt.9 Mo Old Baby Needs Loving andResponsible Babysitter SummerThrough Sept. Mornings and SeveralAft.-Wk. My Home $1.00-Hr. Call667-7512 Eves.Female Student Room in exchangefor babysitting. Tel 363-0053.Wanted Young Men for Eves. DeskWork. Weekdays, begin fall. 288-3500.Summer employment, full & part-time, $5-hr. guarantee if you quali¬fy. Educational field. 288-1420 or 656-1545 (days).Need Average Typist for Small Man¬uscripts on Completely FlexibleBasis at Hyde Park Residence Mu¬tually Convenient Hours any Days,Call Ml 3-8435 or JU 3-4050 Ext 235.University of Chicago Students WhoTried the Humble Beginning on littleMoney. Jo Our Truck Driver. DoDoctorate In Pschology.Nancy Selling in our shop NO Doc¬torate in Anthropology. •And Paul A Real guy worked forus Five years through his bachelor.Masters and Doctorate in Business.Now $30,000 A Year Man at BoiseCascade.JOBS NOW OPENDelivery man w-drivers license —Sales 8< office girlsScandanavian Import Systems5300 S Lake Park. 667-4040.Asst to Hickory camping outfitters,free room & comm. Ideal for sum¬mer student or resident. x2381. For Rent 4'/j Rooms Clean, BrightRoomy, Avail June 15 with OptionFor Nxt Yr Some Furn. For Sale5454 S. Cornell, 752-1437.Rmmt wntd-5'/2 rm duplex w tv idark room, nr 1C & Harper Ct. $45mo. avail 6/1 with opt for fall. Call324-1768.Lease or summer sublet 5 rm apt5708 S. Kirrvbark $155 mo, availJune 13, ph 955-9608. Boss ass apt to Seot 15-Cheap 2/3bed. dynamite balcony Prime loca¬tion. Like new. 955-3971.4 Rm Unf. apt near, pking, 1C,Coop, available June 15, 955-9498. Summer Sublet Large 4 Room Apt1 Blk To Campus, Near LawSchool, Clean, Can Have Vi or All,Rent Negotable, 667-4309.1 Bedrm Apt, Air-Cond. Conven. to1C. U of C. 55th 8. Blackst. SubletJuly-Sepf or new lease 955-4977 eve¬nings.2 Roommates Wanted for Summer—With Option to Stay Next YearHyde Park (Tel. 373-7153).Roommates Wtd for 2 East HPApts. (1 Each) Larry, 493-2822. Must Sblt 2Vi Rm Unfurn Apt, UtlInc. — $100. Ph: X3955, 493-3643.Fern Rm-mate wanted, 23 or olderown room, $57.50, 54th 8. Dor. 493-0196.Very Nice Large So Shore Apt 1-2persons. $95. 374-8832.Need One for 3 man apt in HyPkFurn $50/mo. Eves: 684-3644.So. Shore very.nice 1 8, 2 BedrmsPrefer grad married students, $130-145. RE 4-0450. Sublet 3 rms — Monthly rent $35,40, 50. Share clean air apt w/ J.LIPSCH. 5511 S. Univ. 363-3292.Summer Sublet Available Now AnyCombination up to 3 Rms. 54th 8,Kimbark, 493-0156. S46/mo.Cool basement Furn 2J rm. $95.June 15-Sept 15 near Uni. Tel 624-3679.Share SS House. 1st FI Front. Nr.Beach, Bus. 978-0954. $50/mo.Sunny brezzy 3'/2 room apartmentfor rent. 54th and Blackstone.Avaialble July 1. Call 643-5991 any¬time. * 5708 Drexel 6/15-9/15. 3rd Fern$57.50/mo.' Negot. Ex 260. #5.Rmmfes wanted for large apt. MidJune to mid Sept. Call 368-3997.Fern Roommate Start Sept OwnRoom 57 8< Dorchester 493-3284.Apartment to Share, $46,Room, 58 8t Kenwood, 667-6639. OwnLight roomy one bedroom apt. Over¬looking treetops. Elevator.. Will bepainted for you. Jazzy 'op' wallpa¬per in john. New Fridge, new vinylin kitch. One cat ok. Near 1C,campus bus $125 (cheap!>731-4145.5405 S. Woodlawn Furn. 2 8i3 rms.util. incl. Ml 3-2760, or 667-5746. Spend the Summer in VictorianSplendor 3rd Floor Apt Near 56thon Blapkstone 200 yr old Brass BedOriental Rugs 7 Large Rooms. Com¬pletely furnished Lovely BackPorch with View of The Lake Wash¬er plus Dryer, TV, Library. Idealfor married couple or 2 or 3 girls.6/10-9/10. $200/mo. 955-5882.Grad Fern for large 4-room apt54th & Kimbark $65. Summer 8i/orfall. Jan 493-8685.Option for Fall Lease, Sublet Forthe Summer, 5Vz Rms, 2-3 bed. 53rd8. Woodlawn, Call Phyllis 643-8677after'6.CORSOThe Committee On Recognized Student Organizationsrequests that any student organization requesting funds forthe coming academic year (70-71) submit eighty) copies oftheir 69-70 budget and eight (8) copies of their proposed70-71 budget to the student activities office by-Friday, July 3.The name and address of a representative of the or¬ganization who can be contacted over the summer regardingthe budget should be included.SUMMER JOBSNO FEESWe have several good jobs availablefor college and university students.For info call Student PlacementManager, 642-4210.SERVICES 57 81 Maryland; 7 Rooms, 4 bedrmsRent All Or Part-Rent negotiable.Call 288-4303.BARGAIN! 2 rm $85 furn., "tilsincld. Quiet Light 5-6pm 6043 S.Woodlawn 955-9209 or WA 2-8411 c311.WHO NEEDS HELP? June Grad¬uate Seeks Part-Time Summer Job.June-July Project? Research? In¬terviewing? Children? Translation?Manuscripts? x4121 Day Kathy-Mes-sages. Eves 493-2663.Student's Wife Babysits In HerHome. 5107 Blackstone, 288-7319.Will Do Typing, 684-3242.Will English paper, thesis. Any field.Also tutor. Call BU 8-5631.3rd Yr Undergrad Math Major, Pro¬gramming Skills — Wants SummerJob — Call Al 667-5012.MUSICIANSRenaissance/Baroque Music foryour wedding. 643-6317 or 363-5926.HAPPY TRAILS TO YOU . . . PEP-PERBANDE ... KEEP SMILINGUNTIL THEN . . .PHIL AND THE EASTBACKS WILLRETURN To UC In The Fall AndContinue Their Campaign For Truthand Beauty And Grease. SummerAddress For Booking Info: Write:PHIL, — Apt. 402, 1400 E. 57th, Chi¬cago 60637. OOOP-SHOOP-A-LAND-A-DING-A-BOP!PIANO TUNINGBOOKS Are Money For The NEWCONGRESS COM. Leave What YouCan Spare At Student Coop or IdaNoyes 306.A REAL TREAT TO END THEQUARTER: ‘'Turn on With JackGibb" — Chance of a Lifetime: $35and $25 for Students. 684-1122 anyhour.Israel Dances. So It. Wed June 107:30 - 11:00 Hillel.Plant Your Seed in East End Pk.Allegro conspirito will presentBach's MAGNIFICAT, Josquin Depr-es' MISSA PANCELINGUA, and oth¬er sacred music by Depres, Croft,Tallis, and Vaet. Church of the Dis¬ciples (The Blue Gargoyle), Sun.,June 7. FREE.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING WedJune 10 7:30 - 11:00 RefreshmentsHillel 5715 Woodlawn. ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE Professional Tuning. 363-6585.DEBATABLE? PERHAPS. ButLynda Martin and Steven WestonDon't Think So. And So Today, Fri¬day at 5 PM they Plan to ExchangeThose Ol' Cosmic Vows in the Court¬yard of the Chicago TheologicalSeminary. That's Right They'reDoin' It Up .Vght and Legal. WhatMore Can You Ask? To Be Invitedto Share in the Joy, and Peace andLove and All You're Invited — IfYou Think You Can Consider ThemYour Friends. PS — Reception Fol-low$. Bring Food — 752-0739.PPS —See You There.CEF PRESENTSThe 2 last films of the quarterGoodbye Columbus on Friday andRosemary's Baby on Saturday. Bothat Cobb. Both at 7 8< 9:15. Have agood summer. SPACE3Vj Rms 54th 8i Ellis. Mid-June,option on lease. Nice. 955-7014.Furnished Rm. 493-3328.Fern. Roommate to share largesunny luxurious apt. own rm +bath $55. Summer w. opt. fall. 752-0316.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, or WA 2-8411, ext. 311.Apt for Immediate Occupancy ForSummer, Option on Lease in Sept.$195/month for 3 or 4. 493-0499.Roommate wanted for room inlarge apt with piano, near campus.Call 955-7352. Good deal. FEM Rmmte Wanted Grad Stud orWorking Girl Only Own Rm Nr 55 8,Univ 493-3896 Belsky, Murray.• ■Roommate Wanted for Apt. 2 Blocksfrom Main Quad. Reasonable Rent.Call 9555-8155.Space Available in South ‘ShoreHouse. Share Facilities, Responsi¬bilities and Expenses. Call Eveningsafter 6. 731-4675.Own Room in Lg Apt With 3 GradStudents (Male) 58 8. Kenwood, $57-month, 684-7449.Rmmt wanted — female — largeapt good location — lake breezes —opt for fall 667-6130.4'/jRm. Apt. 6757 Chappel 1C 8i Lake3 blk. Camp Bus 10'ft. $140-mth 324-3779 Avail 6-15.Three room Apartment Near Lake,1C and Campus Bus.'Privacy And AWell Maintained Building AvailableJuly 1, $115 pr mo. Call 731-8324.2 Bdrm Apt $45 — 52nd Cornell CallX4207.3 Br 2 Ba E. Hyde Park Apt $195 x4477 Or 288-7248 Keep Trying.Male Spacious Room South ShoreApts Rent 47.50-Mo. Call 955-7177 Af¬ter 6:00PMDeluxe Highrise 1 Bdrm Apts. From$130.00 Parquet Floors. See Mrs. Ha¬ley. MU 4-7964.SUMMER SUBLETFurnished, 3V4 Rooms, June-Sept.Near Coop, Near Campus, 667-3105.Summer Sublet: 3Vi Fine Rooms,54th & Woodlawn. Cheap. 955-2176.Apt. Avail. June 15 to Oct. 1.Furnished, Near Campus $85. Util¬ities Included. 955-9209.To Sublet June 20-Sep 15, 2Vz RmApt Furn 51st 8t Dorchester, $100Per Month. Call 955-3022.EXCEPTIONAL APARTMENTSpacious absolutely modern air con¬ditioned 4 bedroom sunny apt. nextto International House to sublet SeptPhone 667-3521. Summer Sublet with fall option. 56thand* Blackstone, 2 bdrm. 288-1608eves.Sublet June, Opt This Fall, 53 &Woodlawn, 7Vi Rms, 493-4782.Summer Sublet Fern Grad Pref.1400 E 57. Own room Air Cond.Phone 363-5609.Sum. Sublet. 3 Furn Rms. Close toCmpus. 5100-Mo. 643-7984.Fern Rmt Wanted June 15. AirCond. 1400 E. 57 . 324-6786. 65-Mo.SUMMER ROO MATES wated forspacious apt. at 57th & KenwoodCall 667-0771.Summer Roommates Wanted ToShare Large So Shore Apt LakeView Own Rm $60 Mo 221-7021.2 Female Grad Roommates WantedPrivate Bedroom, Near 55th andLake, Summer Sublet and-or FallOption. 955-0390.Apt Room: about $40. 493-8056.Woman For Snpr Own Room In LgSo Shore Apt; Campus Bus 1 BlkRainbow Bch 4 Blks; Highly Recom¬mended 221-4255 Aft 7PM.Summer special sublet with opt fur¬nished 6 rm, 3 bdrm, big apt rentnegotiable 195-150-mo. 493 2881, 6945Merrill, av. immed.Summer sublet, own room, June 15-Sept 15, $60-Mo, 53rd 8r Kenwood,493-9265.4Vi Rm AptSublet July 1st with option to renew.54th and Harper 493-2942.Lrg 3rm apt in MSH, mostly fur¬nished, rugs, secrty grd, storageJune 10, CHEAP: 955-8578 (eve).Sublet 3 rms mo rent $35, 40, 50.Share Clean airy apt J. Lipsch 5511S. Univ. 363-3293.June - 21st Sept 1st — $200. Subt.furn. apt. 21 rooms. Eve 363-9043.3 RM Air Cond Apt 110-Mo July-AugHyde Pk 8i Dorch 493-2748.Graduating? Sublease 1 br apt inNW Suburb, Near Train, Lake RunApt., Indoor-Outdoor Pool Sauna,Tennis July 1, 541-1538.Room with Private bath for rent$10-week. Near Campus. DO 3-2521., *1Summer Rental. June 23-Sept 20 AirConditioned. 2 bedrooms. 2 Baths.$153.00. Call Morning or Evening —955-2099. Days — 939-6427. 2'/j rm apt 55 8. Evrtt w on* nOnly $85 Call Terr ?55 UM. PSublet June 15 - Sept 15-4 rms Slid,mo. 54th 8< Woodlawn. 667-3136.Sublf — 3 bedrms l’/j baths available in lg furnished apt — 56th anrtBikstone Convenient Rent NegotiableCall 288-6694 Anytime.3Bdrm House Complete with Furniture. Appliances, Books, PlantsCats, Weedy Yard 5 Min to CampiFamily or Commune $200-mo Som'mer Sublet. 752-4579.Cool — Cheap Fern Sublet — OwnRoom and Bath, 1156 56th St 7533896.Sunny, spacious 4 rms plus porchJune through Sept, possible option$96 mo. 955-6232.4Rm Frn Apt Nr Lake AirCondpking for 1 or 2, 6/18- to 9/11 $135/mo. 955-6094. Af?r 5PMSummer sublet 3 bdrm FurnishedPoss opt to lease Near North RentNegotiable. Call 472-0329.Sumr Sblt 3 Rooms Furn and TVHalf Block From Campus, 955-1022.Sublet — 3 bedrm; apt June 14-Sept. 15. TV — Call 684-1759. Price$140/mo.Sublet large 3 rm apt $105, or justone room. Hyde Pk. option for fallCall Estelle: 538-5599, 288-3946, or548-1535.2 Fern Rmtes. Sum/Nxt Yr. OwnRm Nr U.C. Sheila X3458 or 324-0441.Sublet 59 8, Harper 6 rms $40/ea.4 people 955-0707 great place.SPACE WANTEDREWARD for info leading to acqui¬sition of 2 or 3 bedrm apt. Vicm.55th to 59th best. 324-6048 eves.5Room Apartmentto share.Hyde ParkGraduate StudentDecorating AllowanceAvailable. Continuable throughnext year.Good Parking493-9259 days— —I —. 955-2099, pays — 939-6427. Ca(| A| 493-9259 cSUMMER ISSUES. June 25, July 9,RmMt — Summer w option nextfall $40/mo. 2bl. from campus, 643-9894.2 Rmmates Wntd for Summer OwnBdrm., Larg Apt Near UC & ShopCntr. $49 ea. 955-0076 Frnshed.Female roommate wanted for sum¬mer. $52.50/Mo. Air Conditioned.Call Margaret 363-0715.4rms. to sublet June 25-Aug 2$(approx) 5 min from campus. $110/mo. 493-2829 eves.3 grad students (m8,f) NEED ONE(m or f) to share luxurious houseon 54th 8t Blacxstone for summer.Own room $50/month. Call Barbara752-0505 eves.Sublet w option nxt yr, 4 LargeRms, July 1 Avail, 548-7905, 51 &Wdlwn.4 Room Apartment w-Balcony 5649Dorchester Call 684-5941.2 fern grads to rent fac. house —apt — 9-12 mos beg Sept-Oct. 667-2530.Summer Sublet Begins July 1 StudioApt 55th and Kenwood Price Nego¬tiable 752-0316.Summer Sublet 1400 E 57 65-Mo AirCdnd 752-4039.Completely furnished 5 rm apt Jun15-Sep 15 $100 mo 667-7009.LOVELY SUMMER SUBLET Ele¬gant 4 rm. Suite on lake 10th floorview. Every convenience 2 bathsfully air cond. Short walk tocampus. Prefer couple 288-6704.5 Room Apt Por Summer Sublet OneBlk. From Campus 5718 S. Drexel667-7221 Or Univ. Ext 3725 $160.00-Month. Terry Turner.Apt for sublet Jun 15 - Sep 1 or Sep15. 4 lg rms Harper 8. 54th Near 1C8. coop. Nice. $150. Call Linda orDebbie at 363-5207.Summer Room $50-Mo. 57 Drexel.752-5207.7 Rm Furn Apt 2 Bedr Clean. Airy.With washer-dryer. 1 Blk from NewLibrary. Avail. July. 363-1353. $155Mo.Fem Grad Wanted for Two PersonApt $55. Sunny Bedrooms. 643-1820.Summer sublet one room $50-mo.Clean airy 5511 Univ. 363-3292.APARTMENT FOR LEASESafe new air-cond. hi-rise; on*-block to lake avail. June 15. 6700S. Oglesby apt. 507 evening call288-1920; days—324-4343. Sublet &/orlease $161 /mo.IGNORE OTHER ADSYes; ignore other ads, and shar®apt near campus, summer and-ornext year. Bob 493-6527.22/The Chicago Maroon/June 5, 1970' *■ »! »-£*>• i ^ |H. «i M M • «f ¥*4* *% * k- 4 ft • **•**♦*-*•**.* 1(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)AND WE'VE GOT TO GET OURSELVES, BACK TO THE GARDENSUBLET AVAILABLEJune to Sept 53 Greenwood 3 bedrms $35 each beautiful colors 324-1077 or x354l no. 2, eves.for saleMisc. furniture, incl. TV, bed sofa,bookcase, tables, chairs, dressers,etc. Cheap. 955-7014.Cheap TV, V* bed, dishes, pots,fan, coffee table, lamp, bookcases.Good condition. 288-8369.Air Conditioner. 955-2607.SALEH Shure M91E Cartridge Reg$50 Now Only $25 With Trade ATMUSICRAFT. For Lowest Priceson all Components. Call CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 Save $$$.Must Sell by June 10: Toyota Coro¬na 4 dr, Stck. GREAT Carl! Ask$950, take? 955-8578.FOR SALE:Girls' Robin Hood bike. Very goodcondition. $30 — Will bargain. Call955-7014.For Sale: Bike, Bookcases, Fan &Others. Call 324-5355, 6-7PM.KLH 20 W. AM. AM-FM-StereoPhono. Complete W. Spkrs. Cost$440 Perf. $325. 684-8412 Eves.'64 Ford Gal — leaving countrymust sell — good cond. 643-9870.HONDA 305 extras $325 . 643-8210.Portable Typewriter, small manual$5, 548-7905.Furniture, Rugs, Cheap 548-7905.Furniture, Shelves, TV, 2 Good AC's*4477 or 288-7248 Keep Trying.Raleight Bicycle—3 speed excellentcondition. $40. 752-5207.3x5 ft dark wood dining roomtable—Call 752-5207.CAMPING TRAILER. Ideal foryoung couple. Small, -light, weight,comp, w-stove, refrig., toilet, sink.In exc. cond. WILL SACRIFICE.Best offer. 667-5778.VW 63 R8.H Fair Cond $300 Or OF¬FER 6-7PM. 324-5355.Rambler 62 Wagon; new brakes,clutch, carb. w pump, etc, excellentrunning order. $375. Emerson, extn.1548-9,eves 288-5478.Good Condition—Sofa-bed, table,desk, lamps, dresser, carpet In¬expensive 493-1094.1966 VW lo mileage $1000.FOR SALE: Bed, Chest, Steel DeskChr. 288-5149 Anytime.Beautifully styled bookcase, goodfold leaf table 684-4119.1967 VW, Red, Sun-Roof, Radio,Bumper Guards, Rear-Opening Win¬dows; Good Condition, $1200 Or BestOffer. Call 747-5395 After 5.Sewing Machine $50. 624-5957.Norton 750cc $700 543-8210.One Used Military Sociologist68 Suzuki 120cc $200 Phone Tom*3564.Seat Available UC Charter FlightCall Ext 3598.Few Places Have Opened Up Onhe UC Charter N.Y.-London-NYJune 26-Sept 11. $189. X3598.Contax IIA With 50 MM F-2 Sonnarlens 324-3005.lecord Player — Portable $50 andsed Records $1.50. 955-5497.NOW! I! Lucite Rings & Pipes —$2.50-4.00 Marilyn 955-5497!!!'ged Jewish Divinity Student Wish¬es to SeU A 1 Owner 1965 RamblerAmerican 220, 1 door Sedan. An'qua Dream. Rebuilt Engine. AllOptions, ww, body Must Be Seen To3e Believed. Good Tires. Back SeatSlightly Soiled. Versatile 2nd Car.135 00 or offer. Call 731-8324.Stereo System: 20 Watt Amp Turn-able AM-Fm Radio Etc. $60 Or&est Offer. Call 955-7103.furniture — Couch, rug, rocker,Utility tables, incl. Misc. Kitchenterns. Ph. 324-7058 After 6.urniture Sale: Couch, Desk8>Chrmchair. Kit Table&Chairs, Bedipt to Sublet 5455 S Hyde Park Car°r Sale 1963 Chevll $125!! Call 493-»48 Apt is $90-Mo.96i VW runs fine and all fxed (byhe) inside — outside not so pretty- Oh well $225 Ann 5382815.heap furniture, TV, fur coat, bulle-ln brd, sunlamp. 752-7415.iynak SCA-35 Amplifier Exc CondSmall Desk, 3 Armchairs: 2 Old 1Modern 493-2942.°ur Channel Stereo Walnut ColorJr9an $75. Mike 493-4713.'ortable stereo $25. Man's bicycle>?• 493-2862 after 5. Will Rent Cycle, Summer 752-5207.Watson 66 bulk film loaders Uni¬drum 8, Unicolor chemical Chem¬icals in stock. Model Camera. 55thKenwood. 493-6700.For Rent: Sleeping Bags — Tents —Stoves — Lanterns — Call HICK¬ORY Ex 2381 or 324-1499.BARGAIN1967 Cougar — P.S.Automatic, good condition. MustSell. Asking $1300 but will talk.Call Don x3263 or 288-2859.ORGAN FOR SALETeischord G transistor 61 key stereoorgan with rich, heavy sound;Checkmate 50 dual channel 100 wattamp with special features; Check¬mate 215 dual 15" heavy-duty speak¬ers — all cases, pedals, 8. acces¬sories — for $650. Organ retails $800— yours $400. Amp retails $340 —yours $175. Speakers retail $210 —yours $110. Also vintage GIBSON co¬classic guitar (acoustic) — worthover $200 — yours for $125. I mustsell so any reasonable offer wins.Call Michael at 752-2707.THIS FURNITUREWORKS!!!Sturdy wooden desks, tables, dresserfor sale c[ie?p. The drawers don'tstick, slats don't fall out. Verycheap, if you move it. Call 643-6803.WANTEDWanted: 1 or 2 male grd stds oryg prof men 2 share 2 bdrm aptSept 1 Abt $85/mo. Eves: 324-6459.Small refrigerator wanted - in goodshape, call BU 8-6610 X3426.Small good car, phone 667-3521.Summer Apt Wanted: 2-3 bedroomsmust be willing to negotiate $ Hitch¬cock 27 — Leave Message.Grad Student W-Strong Stomach ToStudy Impact Saturation BombingVietnam Cal! Morris x2968.Wanted For Summer 1 Rmmate 55thCornell Starting 6-16 50-Mon 324-7148ev.Wanted fern Rmmt — Sum w-opfall Ige apt $65 mo 55 Univ. 667-2530.WANTED: Extra Tickets for theConvocation. Please! 363-1352 fHOUSING NEEDED — Spare bedsCouches, Floors — June 24-28. ForOut-of-Town People Coming For In¬ternational Specialist Convention —643-3350 — Iv. message.Young College teacher and wifefrom N. Y. need furnished apt. orhouse in Hyde Park only. June-Sept1. Call Ml 3-7582.ALLAN BLOOM LIVES!!!Friends Are Invited To Drop By OrCall When In the D. C. Area AlanBloomApartment 201307 N Frederick AveGaithersburg, MarylandNEED NEW HOMESThink About How Much You WouldLike A Furry, Half Siamese KittenIn the Middle of July For YouBrave All-The-Year-Around Hyde-Parkers, We Have 2 Kittens WhoWill Be Old Enough To LeaveMama About July 10. Reserve YourKitten Now Call 955-0348 AroundDinner-Time.CAT FOR SUMMERAll the joys of cat ownership withnone of the long-term disadvantages.Take care of my female cat thissummer at my expense. Call 955-1881.More baby gerbils, free, 493-9265.FABULOUS FELINEHere's your chance to own an exotictwo-year old beauty. A black. Black,BLACK cat with aristocratic orientalheritage. She's just had a litter ofkittens. There's only one like her sodon't miss your chance. 363-1352.July 23, HELP! HENRY FORD!Or anyone who has a spare car for3-4 days next week. Will pay forhelping us to escape the Chicagogrey for a while. 363-1352:For Sale: 1965 CHEVY II stationwagon, 41,000 miles, Radio; orig. RIDESowner, lovingly cared for; WILLHAGGLE MUST SELL Call 643-0800,ext. 4548 days, 548-4196 eve. Driving to LA Share Expenses anddriving — 262-0398.Two used 16 mm bolex in stock. SeeAl Gorman. Model Camera. 55th 8>Kenwood. 493-6700.Sweet Sounds for $40 — a BogenManual Turntable, 12 watt HeathkitMono Amplifier 15" speaker inlarge Karlson reflex inclosure. By¬ron Good. 493-6828.N.Y. — London Jet $250 June17—Sept. 2 one seat Call 643-1691.Furniture — get it while it lasts!Bed, couch, bureau, living roomchairs, lamps, mirror, a TV, tworecord players: GE Model 200 and aWebcor, Rugs etc. etc. Late Sept (Min 21st) Need RideFrom Calif (S.F. Pref'd) to ChiShare Costs, Driving. 493-4830.Ride to NY Around June 15 to 22Share Expenses 643-0140.Going to Nova Scotia and Want toGet as Close as Possible — Montrealor Boston will do. Need room formy ficycle (comes apart) and pack.Share driving expenses, etc. Leaveabout June 14. Jerry, 324-9358. Lost Green 9 x 12 Folder WithAdding Machine Tapes, AccountingPaper. Very Important. $10 Reward.Call Laura After 10 PM. 324-2858 or752-3205.COMMUNAL WOMANThree of us (2 guys 8< 1 girl) havea communal family blossoming in ahuge Hyde Park house that we rent.We want another female to sharethis house and life with us for thenext year (til 6-71). We are begin¬ning to get into. Open, honest com¬munication, game-free trust 8, sup¬port, Getting our heads 8< bodieswell 8< reconnected. Moving back tothe land & to good people. Ex¬pression thru crafts, art 8> music,Eastern thought 8> meditation, Com¬munity — anthing that helps us togrow. If you can feel to grow withus call Michael at 752-2707. PERSONALSDavid Riesman (in letter) to ADW:"I wish your book were in paper¬back.' (Answer: 'D8accord! InSpades.') Hardcover available allleading Chicago bookstores.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.A Sale every weekend at Jukes.David Riesman (in letter) to ADW:"I wish your book were in paper¬back." (Answer: "D8accord! InSpades') Hardcover available allleading Chicago bookstores.Some Sound AdviceSave $ On Stereo Components atMUSICRAFT. Save $20.00 On Ga-rard; Save $170 on Scott Receiver;Save $50 on AR 3A Spkr. OnCampus Bob Tebor 363-4555.^illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU=CAMPING EQIUPMENT =ATLASTnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimilllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllERide Wanted to Grand Rapids Mich.After June 9. Call Kathy Rm 309 atEx 3757.RIDE WANTED: To Boston. Any¬time from Thursday to Sunday(preferably Sunday so I can hearWilliam Kunstler.) 493-2540.Help Drive Driveaway Car ToMiami or S Fla. FA 4-9500 Rm 1303.Riders to Denver or Phoenix ToLeave July 1 Call 225-2510.Ride Wanted to Toronoto Or Mon¬treal 324-6390.Driver-rider wanted to Seattle abtJune 10-13. 752-7415.LAST CHANCE — To Baltimore!!Dep. Tomorrow Sat. Andy 752-9708.Ride Wanted New Yawk! on June18th or 19th. Will drive and shareexpenses. 363-1352.MEMORIES WE KNEWAND LOVED!A shouted "EAT SHIT" on the cor¬ner of Walton and Michigan; the ex¬ploits of the Chartreuse Goose in thesummer quarter; calls at 1 am and7 am ffom our friend from Rippey;a drunken orgy at 5732 S. Marylandwith associates being freaked out;"I could be out making money."; Ahassled Joel shouting "Could youkeep it down to a roar,"; Con¬fronting Ed Levi in the basement ofCCE; a broken down computer atMerrill; the last issue of the GCJ;a well-known put-up job; listening tothe announcements of the bus driverin Hyde Park; when the dime didn'tregister at the toll; falling asleep atthe wheel; not knowing where re¬verse is and running out of gas; thevisit from the Ruskies; grabbing theboxes as they come in the mail;Maggie getting busted the day be¬fore the last one of the year; a pop¬corn party in 1207; writing the highclass guide at 1 in the morning; thefamous NCD article; and "Free atlast, free at last, thank God I'm(we're?) free at last."If you are interested in camping inthe Canadian Rockies this summer,call Frank 493-4148.LOST AND FOUNDLost: gold, wire rim, bifocal glasses.643-8210. TRAVELING COMPANION A Sale every weekend at Jukes.I'm splitting Chgo by car about July1st for 2-3 months — maybe to Annarbor, San Francisco, the moun¬tains, western Canada the S.W. com¬mune scene, Esalen, festivals, Flor¬ida, etc. Very fluid. I Want to seethe land people, play some music, &get myself together. I meditate,study karate, lead encounter groups,8< write music. We'll camp andcrash with friends 8. communes. Ifyou'd like to go this western scene,split costs & can drive — Call Mi¬chael at 752-2707. This city is insane. Abbie Hoffman Abbie Hoffman JerryRubin Jerry Rubin June 8 Monday8:30 Mandel $1.50 — tickets at thedoor.HOW DID MORRIS CHOOSE HISMAJORJune 8 — See Bobby Seale SprayPaint His Way Out of Jail — F.M.MORRIS IS COMMITTING JANO-CIDEMORRIS TRAINS CHICAGO PIGS SENSITIVITY TRAINING WITH AREAL PRO — For Both In¬experienced and Advanced. "TurnOn With Jack Gibb." $35 and $25 forStudents. 684-1122 any hour.Abbie Hoffman Jerry Rubin June 8Monday 8:30 Mandel $1.50 — ticketsat the door.All undergraduate courses are beingevaluated this quarter. Pick upBlank Forms In Gates-Blake 132 ifyour course was skipped.THE POWER OF THE PEOPLE ISGREATER THAN THE MAN'S SO¬CIOLOGYMORRIS HELPS KILL VIETNAM-ESEGay Lib Beautification Now.ABBiE HOFFMAN JERRY RUBINSpeaking at Mandel and DonatingTheir Honorarium To The Chicago15 — All Ticket Money Goes ToTheir Honorarium — Confusing,Isn't It? Mandel June 8, 8:00 TicketsAt The Door, $1.50.Pick Up Course Evaluation Forms— GATES BLAKE 132.BURN BABIES NOT DRAFTCARDS JOIN IN THE JANOCIDEBRIGADENOTICE: You may notice some adsreferring to "Morris" and "Jano-cide," and similar studd scatteredaround the classifieds today. Judg¬ing from past experience, there willundoubtedly be some reaction tothese ads, and to the man they referto. They are all paid ads, and weare not going to tell anybody whoput them in, because we do not be¬lieve it material to the issue. Jona¬than Swift used to do this kind ofthing and we all chuckle over hisanonymously sly play on words. Oth¬er sensitive souls will get bent outof shape. The man in question maybe upset, but very few people havedone everything right in everybody'seyes. The only reason I've includedthis diatribe is that this is the lastissue of the quarter, thereby verycleverly curtailing any chance forrebuttal — a tactic students accusethe administration of using. In theinterestes of irony, I say, "touche."Emmet GonderBusiness ManagerABBIE HOFFMAN AND JERRYRUBINDo It For The Chicago 15 — BeThere Mandel June 8, 8:00, $1.50.This being our last rag of the year,we thought, hhhmmm, that youmight like to know that 90 of thepeople in Hyde Park read the Ma¬roon.This means that advertising in theMaroon gives you more for yourmoney. As the Chartreuse Goosewould put it, hhhmmm, "You onlyget what you pay for."And now,BUSINESS MANAGER BECOMESTURKEY FARMER.That'r right, you'r good old crack¬er-barrel wit is leaving to return tothe land ! love. This means, thatthere are many more opportunities,open only to students naturally,since I won't be able to keep upwith my commitments here. So itsback to Rippey for me and maygesome good old Ruskie cash for you.As they say back home, "A goodtime was had by all ' 'HHHHHMMMMMMEmmet GonderShuttle busses to O'Hare — leavimevery 3 hours on Wed, Thurs, amFri after exams. Cost: $3.00. CalSG for more info.WHAT WILL ALL YOUR FRIENDS BE DOING NEXT YEAR?In touch with a Maroon subscription for only $8. This sendsall summer issues and all issues for the academic year.CHICAGO MAROON 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637Name...,IAddress.Zip.August 6, AugustJune 5, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/23you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booxc.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails luncheon dinner late snack*5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933 Clarki * r . l r renjoy ourspecial studentrateJC C ^jy timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double feature^daily• open 7 :30 a.m.-lateshow midnight• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 85‘little gal lery for galsonly• clark park mg-1 oeorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly program2nd AnnualAtlanta Internationalis going to happenJULY 3-4-5P.O.Box 7844 Atlanta, Ga. 30309WATCH FOR ANNOUNCEMENTS!MIDDLE GEORGIA RACEWAYI-75 SOUTH TO BYRON EXIT.One hour drive from Atlanta. Theatre First, Inc.presents"THE SOUND OF MUSIC"By Rodgers and HammersteinDirected by Jerry EppersonOne of the "Greats" in Musical ComedyFriday-Saturday-Sunday PerformancesJune 5 through June 21(Curtain 8:30 p.m.; Sun., 7:30)STUDENT DISCOUNT WITH ID - $1.25(Regular Admission, $2.00)AT THE ATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport - 463-3099GOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM - 2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM-9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)ADVERTISERSDon't Miss Out on our Summer Issues June25, July 9( July 23, August 6, August 20.Contact the Maroon Office for more in¬formation x 3263. UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARIS1proprietorCEF PRESENTS(at Cobb)Goodbye, ColumbusRosemary's Baby Fri.7 & 9:15Sat.7 & 9:15 tjADVERTISERSWe will send out bills about June 15 for thisissue plus all of May, net due within 30 days,i.e., before July 15. I'm going to be aroundthis summer, and so is our blood-thirsty col¬lection agency, so please pay fast so I canclose up my books and graduate this summer.Last thing I want to do is spend Augustpounding the pavement in pursuit of overduebills.It's been a fun year. Please support mysuccessor, Don Ratner, at least as well as youhave me. Again, thanks.Emmet Gonder,Business ManagerDownMadison AvePUTNEYSWOPEThe Truth and Soul Movie24/The Chicago Maroon/June 5, 1970