DAILY MAROON1969 1970OF FILMPLEASE REWIND06i *STARTUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOSEPH REGENSTEIN LIBRARYPHOTODUPLICATION DEPARTMENTDAILY MAROON1970 -11971INCOMPLETE OR IMPERFECTAT THE TIME OF FILMING THIS WAS THEMOST COMPLETE FILE THAT COULD BELOCATED.IF AN IMPERFECT OR MISSING SECTION ISSUBSEQUENTLY LOCATED IT WILL BEFOUND AT THE END OF THIS REEL.7THE CHICAGO MAROONVI >* r Volume 79, Number 1 The University of Chicago Thursday, June 25, 1970Law says UC cannot help candidatesChris HoneymanCOUNTER-CONVOCATION: William Kunstler speaks at Blue Gargoyle. In his speechhe compared the US today to Germany in m? and said dissenters were threatenedby a “reign of terrorism.” By SUE LOTHOn-campus political campaigning groupssuch as the Movement for a New Congress(MNC) may be threatening the University’stax-exempt status.President Edward Levi has appointedfive faculty to a 10-member faculty-stu¬dent committee, charged by politicalscience chairman Aristide Zolberg, tostudy problems relating to tax exemptionand political activities.Controversy developed in Washington,DC recently over a section of the 1969 In¬ternal Revenue Code which prohibits tax-exempt corporations such as private uni¬versities from substantially “carrying onpropaganda, or otherwise attempting, toinfluencing legislation.”The section also states that tax-exemptinstitutions may “not participate in, orintervene in . . . any political campaign”for a candidate for public office.During the May strike of classes theUniversity provided office space for boththe MNC, in an Ida Noyes office usuallyoccupied by Charter Flights, and for theClark, Kunstler speak on turmoilBy CON HITCHCOCKAmericans must “learn to love turbu¬lence,” Ramsey Clark, former US AttorneyGeneral, told the graduating students at theCollege convocation on Saturday, June 13.After the convocation, a “counter-con¬vocation” was held in the Blue Gargoylewhere William Kunstler, chief defense at¬torney for the Conspiracy 7 told the packedhouse that an “unchecked reign of terror”was growing in the United States and thatthe “system” was promoting non-protectionof dissenters.There was no disruption of the con¬vocation, and Clark received a standingovation at the end of his talk. About 15 per¬cent of the graduates wore the traditionalcap and gown.Others contributed rental costs to suchorganizations as Operation Breadbasketand Movement for a New Congress. About250 out of a class of 400 were present inRockefeller Chapel to receive their de¬grees, some staying away in protest.Clark said that turbulence is an indicatorof a “spirit of change” which was affectingall institutions in American life and quotedPresident Kennedy who said, “Those whomake peaceful revolution impossible makeviolent revolution inevitable.”He urged the graduates to work towards peace, but one which “insures no morewars, unlike Vietnaminzation;” an im¬proved quality of life in fields such ashealth, education, and housing; and humandignity, the “central issue of our time.”He received a round of applause when hejoked, “It’s very gratifying to be asked tospeak in the city of Chicago.” He stressedthe need for purging “violence, racism andselfishness” from the national character.Other speakers were Roger Hildebrand,dean of the College, and Deborah Cahn, 70.Hildebrand spoke of the way in which thewar distorts the role of institutions such asuniversities. He noted that to some, in¬tellectual inquiry is a threat and that it isthe task of the graduates to preserve it.Miss Cahn spoke of the student outrageover problems such as the war and racismand said students realize that strikes anddemonstrations were “symbolic gestures”to show this feeling.At the counter-convocation, a haggardKunstler compared the United States toGermany prior to the Nazi takeover, sayingthat “we are not at the final stage yet” butthat America was moving towards it.He saiw he felt it was possible to bringabout a “reformation in our society” withinthe system, but, he added, “If it cannot bedone within the system, there must be de¬ struction of one system to give a new one achance.”He was critical of factionalism which di¬vides groups left of center, saying “Weshould not put ourselves in defensive pos¬tures to explain broken windows to peoplewho are destroying whole villages. How canwe equate broken windows with brokenbodies?”Kunstler, delayed one hour when he wasbumped from his flight in Pittsburgh, wasContinued on Page 10 politically oriented Strike Committee andthe Panther Defense Committee, in Rey¬nolds Club North Lounge.No other campus political organizations,such as SDS, the Young People’s SocialistLeague, or the moribund Young Republi¬cans and Young Democrats, received freeUniversity space or supplies during theyear, according to student ombudsmanSteve -Cope.To continue operating during interim,MNC moved from Ida Noyes to SocialSciences 119, an office lent by assistantpolitical science professor Norman Nie.At the beginning of summer quarter,according to MNC coordinator Larry Sher¬man 70, director of student activities Dan(Skip) Landt told the group it could notmove back into Ida Noyes without consult¬ing Dean of Students Charles O’Connell,who is out of town through tomorrow.“There is a question of equity; somecommunity groups want the space,” saidSherman. “The crucial question will behow the University stands about our usingfaculty offices.”According to Nie, who as a senior studydirector for the National Opinion ResearchCenter (NORC) bas another office at6030 Ellis, “Until the University indicatesotherwise, they (MNC) are welcome to usemy office.”The American Council on Education(ACE) released last week a statement ofguidelines relating to the controversy.In the four-age statement, which InternalRevenue Service Commissioner RandolphThrower lauded as “fair and reasonable”and which Sherman scoffed as “vague andambiguous,” ACE noted:• The tax-exempt status shouldn’t bethreatened if colleges and universities re¬arrange their calendars to permit volun-Continued on Page 6Cummings gives moneyfor new biology buildingDonnelley is named chairmanby trustees at annual meetingGaylord Donnelley, chairman of the boardof RR Donnelley & Sons printing company,has been elected chairman of the board oftrustees of the University. Donnelley re¬places Fairfax M Cone, who has served aschairman of the board since 1963. Cone willremain as a member of the board oftrustees.Donnelley’s election became effective June 11 at the regular annual meeting ofthe trustees; he is the eighth chairman ofthe board. He has been a member of theboard since 1947.Donnelley is also a trustee of the New¬berry library, Sarah Lawrence college, anda member of the development board atYale.Donnelley is a member of the visitingcommittee on the humanities, the visitingcommittee of the college, and the visitingcommittee of the divinity school.He has been associated with the RR Don¬nelley & Sons printing company since 1932.His grandfather, Richard Donnelley, found¬ed the company.Donnelley’s father, the late Thomas EDonnelley, was a trustee of the Universityfrom 1909 to 1938.GAYLORD DONNELLEYNew chairman of the board of trustees Fairfax Cone, former chairman of theboard, was formerly a top executive inFoote, Cone, & Belding, an advertisingagency. He has been a trustee of the Uni¬versity since 1950. He is also author of therecent book on advertising. With All ItsFaults.The board of trustees has 48 active mem¬bers; there are 23 life trustees. Prominent industrialist Nathan Cum¬mings has contributed 2.7 million dollarsto assist construction of an 11-story build¬ing for biological teaching and research.President Edward Levi announcedWednesday the gift by the Nathan Cum¬mings family of Chicago.Construction began this month on the newbuilding, located on 58th St between Ellisand Drexel, which will be named the Cum¬mings Life Science Center.Dr Leon O Jacobson, dean and professorof the division of the biological sciences andthe Pritzker school of medicine said, “Thebuilding will be a major center for academ¬ic pursuit in the basic sciences. We havelong had within our faculty some of theworld’s most distinguished teachers andscientists in basic research. This centerwill help give them the facilities they needand will attract outstanding students andscholars in these vital areas.”The building will house 36 laboratoryunits and complete supporting facilities forthe departments of biochemistry, biophys¬ics, and microbiology. It will cost approxi¬mately 12 million dollars. Remaining fundswill come from a combination of othersources, including a Ford Foundation facil¬ities grant and an anticipated grant fromthe federal government.Dr Jacobson said, “The Center will facil¬itate the broad interdisciplinary programsthat involve both the biological and physi¬cal sciences. It will provide the Universitywith the laboratories, men, and technologycapable of keeping pace with the almostunbelievable frontiers in biochemistray,biophysics, and microbiology.”Many of these findings relate directly toclinical activities at University Hospitalsand Clinics and Michael Reese Hospital.Nathan Cummings is the founder, formerchairman of th*> hoard, and now 2 directorand chairman of the executive committeeof the Consolidated Foods Corporation. Heis also involved *.i a number of other busi¬ ness enterprises.Born in St. John, New Brunswick, Ca¬nada, Cummings now lives and has hisheadquarters in New York.He is a governing life member of the ArtInstitute and a life governor of Jewish Gen¬eral Hospital in Montreal, Canada.Cummings, an internationally recognizedphilanthropist and well known patron ofboth the fine and performing arts, wasrecently named honorary trustee of theMetropolitan Museum of New York.The Cummings Life Science Center willbe part of a broader planned science com¬plex which will include the existing biolog¬ical and physical science facilities of theUniversity and new facilities.CUMMINGS LIFE SCIENCE CENTER:Now under construction. IfACatch-22' overproduced and unfunnyBy CHARLES FLYNNIt is Catch-22’s misfortune to come to us as an eventrather than a movie. Heralded by a cover story in Timeand photo spreads in Life and Show, the media Estab¬lishment has taken pains to avoid being caught with itscritical pants down as it was on Nichols’ previous film,The Graduate. But the early critical consensus is not atall favorable.Joseph Heller’s wildly overrated novel was publishedin 1961, and the novel is extremely interesting, not as awork of art but as a final expression of the whole 1950’s —Eisenhower weltanschschauung.The book is about the misadventures of a bomber pilotstationed in Italy during World War II, and the hero’s bigrealization at the end is that War Is Bad, and So Is Capi¬talism. Capitalism is represented both in the book and thefilm by the activities of one Milo Minderbender (played inthe film by Jon Voight), who operates a sort of super¬black market and eventually arranges to have his ownbase destroyed as part of a business deal.Much of the problem with the film lies with BuckHenry’s screenplay, which transposes the book’s blanksimplemindedness more or less intact. The lack of anycoherent overall structure in the screenplay is aggravatedby Nichols’ direction. That the film cost somewhere be¬tween 10 and 15 million dollars is the least relvant con¬sideration in making an aesthetic judgment of it, but Nich¬ols has clearly been swamped by the massive productionlogistics.Catch-22 is definitely overproduced and underdirected.What there is of the direction is a feeble series of at¬tempted, overlong and unfunny vaudeville sketches. Once again, Nichols has created a veritable dictionary of “cine¬matic technique” for people who have no notion of what“cinematic technique” is or how it can be used.The movie isn’t offensive, but a lot of it is irritating(such as Jack Gilford running around shouting “Catch22!” and the thrice-repeated sequence of Yossirian (AlanArkin) attempting to help a wounded man in his cockpit).And there is a massive hypocrisy implicit in the wholeproject: a film which ostensibly is against war and forlife, but in which the director’s visual style turns thepeople into cretins we can’t care about.The scene between Art Garfunkel and Marcel Dalio inthe Italian whorehouse (Garfunkel tells 107-year-old Daliothat he’ll soon be 20. “If you live,” Dalio replies.) is justabout the only scene in the whole movie in which we careabout any of the characters. An artist must display eitheremotional commitment or intellectual conviction (or both)if he is to communicate any sort of meaning or feeling,but Nichols’ grasp of the film medium and the materialhe’s working with is far too weak to do anything effectiveat all.Nor is the movie particularly successful as entertain¬ment. Cut from roadshow length (3 hours) to 121 minutes,it seems to have lost almost all of its wit and humor in theprocess. Except for Richard Benjamin’s speech to thebomber pilots in the opening sequence, all of the intendedhumor falls embarrassingly flat.If you are even slightly into movies, you'll probablysee Catch-22 (it opened at the United Artists Theatre inthe Loop yesterday), and there are several reasons whyyou should. The cast is one of the more impressive of thelast few years. Jon Voight, Peter Bonerz, Paula Prentiss,5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRY Martin Balsam, Garfunkel, Dalio (the charming and un¬forgettable host in Rneoir’s Rules of the Game), AnthonyPerkins, and Martin Sheen are all very good. Alan Arkinhas the lead as Yossiran.Poor Orson Welles has only two or three minutes ofscreen time, which he doesn’t make maximum use of (butof course the spectacle of this very great director beingdirected by a nonentity is nothing nqw), and Buck Henry'sego has demanded that he play a large part.One other reason to see the film is the brilliant colorcinematography by David Watkin (a British cameramanwho also shot The Knack, Help! and How I Won the War).Watkin’s considerable talent behind the lens makes thiscrude farrago look much, much better than it should. i »|HAROLD'SCHICKEN SHACK No. 141364 EAST 53rd STREET 667-9835OPEN SUNDAY THRU FRIDAY12:00 P.M. TO 2:00 A.M.SAT.—12 P.M. TO 3 A.M.MENU(Tax Included)1 ? Chicken $1.25Chicken Sandwich 80Order of Gizzards 1.25 Small Order of Gizzards 80Order of Livers 1.45Small Order of Livers 90Straight Talk:Your diamond is at...ShlJhmsb"Nf 59 vfAtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN RIAZA MODERN DANCEAT LEHNHOFF Schoolof MUSIC & DANCE1438 E. 57th ST.INSTRUCTOR BU 8-3500JOANNA HALLreturning from concerttour in Norway. «IJESSELSON’S♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ DYLAN7.58LOWE’S RECORDS1444 L 57th StMU 4-1505Hours 12-8 Monday-Friday10-6 Saturday12-5 Sunday ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ 757-7870,752-8190, 363-9186-1340 E. 53rdCHAIRS FORSUMMER COMFORTINDOOR OR OUTDOORCaliph Chairwith Canvas SlingReg. $19.95CAMPUS SPECIAL $ 15.95ACCENT SHOP, INC.1437 E. 53rd St., 53rd & BlackstoneMl 3-74002/The Chicago Maroon/June 25, 1970Clark urges participation in politicsi v “I’m going to get ,a new Attorney GeneralRichardNixon promised the Republican national convention in1968. The object of his wrath was Ramsey Clark, whomNixon felt had been lax in law enforcement and prose¬cution of criminals.The 42 year old Texan, appointed to the post by Presi¬dent Johnson in 1967, received his MA and JD degrees at* the University and was the main speaker at the Collegeconvocation on June 13.After Nixon’s election, Clark moved to New York Citywhere he has been active in the Peace CommencementFund, a group of lawyers lobbying for anti-war legislation,and campaigning for a peace candidate for Congress inBrooklyn.After his speech Clark rode out to Midway airport tocatch a plane back to New York. On the way he talkedwith Con Hitchcock, the Maroon managing editor, aboutwhat he feels <America needs today, the war, and theclass recess. t• What do you see as the most important problem whichmust be faced in the United States today?We have to create new institutions, and we have to bevery quick about it. You’ve got to seek needs, and you’ve# got to diffuse power — to give people the chance to helpthemselves because the frustrations, and worse than thefrustrations, the actual damage done by powerlessness to¬day is over-whelming. David TravisWhat ways are there of diffusing this power?I think there are a whole range of ways — power is of anumber of varieties, but an essential one is economic pow¬er. We have to move very quickly toward a guaranteedannual income, as some call it. We are totally inter¬dependent and you can’t survive in our society if you can’tfind a job, if you’re not able to hold a job, if you can’twork, if you don’t have money. We have to provide for allthose people — you can’t gather berries, you know, orhunt and fish anymore. If they’re going to survive in theurban slums for instance without an income, it’s going to"be a struggle. So that type dispersion of new economicpower will be helpful.In terms of political power, we have to participate. Thisidea of participatory democracy, like most ideas, is moth¬ered by necessity. People have to be involved.Just think at the grand level, the Presidential election,47 million Americans who were qualified didn’t vote in1963. That's 16 million more than voted for the man whowon. No President has ever won by such a plurality.Who was it who didn’t vote? It was poor people, it was To many of the people in theNixon administration, the glori¬ous years were the 1950's, andessentially they were years ofdoing nothing."young people, who are generally poor and powerless,blacks, Mexican-Americans, Puerto Ricans, urban andrural poor both, women — who never have learned toparticipate to the dimension of their proportion of the pop¬ulation in the political process. If they are in there, itchanges the system in many ways. Politicians then haveto be responsive to their wants, because they have politi¬cal power, they’re participating.And then, when you get right down to the urban area,an individual has to have some power to affect the qualityof his schools, the quality of the garbage collection, thequality of the police protection he gets, or he’s utterlyhelpless. This means that we’ve got to involve commu¬nities in political power action and we’ve got to do it on whatever basis is necessary for the subject you’re talkingabout. There has to be effective community action at apolitical level.In the area of ideas, which are a major source of powerin America, we’ve got to give ventilation to ideas, createnew ways to escalate ideas where they can be seen andheard. These are some of the ways that you distributepower.Do you support the President’s proposed welfare re¬forms as a step towards getting this type of economicpower to people?I support the concept, I think the step is so timid as tobe self-defeating. There’s no question that welfare as wepractice it today, which was revolutionary 40 years ago,demeans human dignity — it breaks up families, damagespeople. And we’ve got to change that quickly, we’ve got tochange it with techniques that don’t have these qualities.We’ve got to give people the financial income and secur¬ity needed to maintain a decent life-style in our society,and $1600 won’t begin to do it. It varies from one region toanother, but it’s got to be in the region of $6,000 rightaway, and more than that, we’ve got to give people thechance to fulfill themselves.We’ve got to release the energies of the people of thisnation. We don’t release half of the energies. You go toNew York City where you’ve got a million on welfarealone there. They’re people who could make an immensecontribution — they really could. If society would examinethe problem and give them the chance to make that con¬tribution, not only would it benefit by their product, what¬ever it is, whether it’s homes or music or beauty in parksor whatever it may be, their lives would be fulfilled, andwe and society wouldn’t suffer their frustrations and sharein their violence. So it’s essential that we do that.I think we need to make our most important science thescience of institutional change, how to make institutionsvery sensitive to the needs and the techniques of changeso that they’re disinvolved from the past. But we have tobe flexible.Take the police world, where f’ve worked. There are40,000 police jurisdictions in the United States, and that’sutterly irrational. It’s a product of a capricious historythat has no relevance to what we need today. And I thinkthat for both liberty and effectiveness, the police have tobe in local control. You can take single counties in theUnited States that have over 100 distinct police jurisdic¬tions. That just means that you can’t be effective.It also means that you’re so fragmented that the Weak-Continued on Page 9Kunstler discusses Seale, Rap BrownRadical lawyer William Kunstler arrived an hour lateat O'Hare for his counter-convocation address in the BlueGargoyle. In the car to Hyde Park with Kunstler. Marooneditor Steve Cook and photographer Chris Honeyman in¬terviewed the SCLd attorney.Kunstler was tired and upset at arriving late for hisspeech. He had been bumped off a plane in Pittsburghbecause the airline had oversold the plane’s seats.Since the Chicago Conspiracy trial, where Kunstlergained nation-wide prominence as defense attorney for theChicago seven, he has spoken at 119 colleges. During thattime he also defended black leader H Rap Brown inMaryland, and worked on the contempt citations imposedon the Conspiracy defendants and their two lawyers,Kunstler and Leonard Weinglass.Two warrants were sworn out for his arrest Tuesdayin Toronto. After a speech at the University of TorontoMonday night, he was interrupted by right-wing hecklersand the meeting turned into a brawl. According to theSun-Times, plaintiffs for the private warrants for Kunts-ler’s arrest were members of the Edmund Burke Society,a right-wing campus orgnization. Kunstler’s presentwhereabouts are unknown.Following is the interview, taken just before he spokeon campus June 13:What do you think is going to happen to Black Pantherparty chairman Bobby Seale? (Seale is presently in jail inConnecticut awaiting the continuance of his murder trial.)I think that he is going to be convicted, unless the“streetwork” is of such ,a nature that New Haven is afraidto give him the unfair trial that he is presently scheduledto get. If New Haven is afraid of doing that, then I thinkthat Bobby has a fighting chance.• Jean1 Genet, in the latest Ramparts, suggests that Bob¬by’s trial is the best chance white radicals will have tosupport the black movement in America. He says thatthey simply must get Bobby out lof jail. How can white% fodicals help JBobby .now?I think that the Seale trial, which will take place in NewHaven in the early fall, must be accompanied by suchmassive action that the New Haven establishment is con-4 vinced that people are not going to let him die.I think there is an opportunity for radicals to go toNew Haven and to join in that action in every way pos¬sible, and I think that if it is solid, and I don’t necessarily% mean violence.If there Is overriding it the absolute determination to "I am confident the contempt charges will be reversed. Chris Honeyman//save his life then I think that you will find that there willbe yielding on the part of whoever makes the wheels goaround in Connecticut and New Haven, as well as on anational level.Seale still faces conspiracy charges m Chicago and thecontempt citations handed down by Judge Julius Hoffman.Do you foresee any chance that JSeale will get off those?Yes, I think that the conspiracy charges are ridiculousand I don’t think that they will ever come to trial. Sinceall of the other co-conspirators have been acquitted of con¬spiracy, it’s really hard to imagine how Bobby Seale couldhave conspired with himself.I guess the government will try to claim that he con¬spired with the unindicted co-conspirators, but it seemsrather foolish at this stage of the game to continue thatmasquerade — and it was always a masquerade. He(Seale) was included onlv because of the happenstance ofhis having come to Chicago as a replacement for Eldridge Cleaver to make a speech in Lincoln Park.Now as far as the contempt charges are concerned, Iam confident that they will be reversed. I cannot see howany court with even a pretence of fair-mindedness couldpossibly convict a man who struggled to represent himselfwhen this judge arbitrarily and unconstitutionally refusedto give the court a six week adjournment so that his illattorney could be here.I think that that alone calls for a reversal of thatcontempt conviction. I also think that the amount involved— four years — without a jury trial and by a judge whowas directly interested in the case violates every preceptof due process.Do you know what happened to jRap Brown? Where ishe now?I wish I did. Everybody in America asks me the same-question, and I simply do nui know, i thought for a longContinued on Page 7June 25, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3 /\ n,»;«»:«»;< »>-« >>:« »>:« *’jz* »:•:« »;&;« ►:&:< »a‘ ^ ^ ^ ^ >;»;< >>:« >i»y »:«i< ►:*;« »i»> « * yjy ^ Kti* iisi* *jsj' ^« »5!i »!3!i »!5!i ►!•!« »5!i »!^« »>*i »!5!i »5!i »5Ii »5!i »3mM DEUTSCHGRAMMOPHONGESELLSCHAFTNOW$3.79 EACHSKL Series $2.69 Per RecordArchive ConcludedLOWE’S RECORDS1444 E. 57th St.MU 4-1505Hours 12 - 8 Monday-Friday10 - 6 Saturday12 - 5 Sunday • TiW I't > mHKMm..¥MM¥§7MZ'Py9MMttMMMMHHmMmMHMiS»f,4HMrtMMMffl¥Mwmmni«MMHMHKftM>:£Hftfto:’♦«$0*5%mfj.!«?‘i;* *>;< *^4 »%»;< »;<■* • •*=*• r~,,35, * *«&* *j5»* ‘it;* ‘^4 *&4 **S»‘ *ag« *'a'* ‘a:* S£i‘*£' *.*.• *.i.‘ ».«.* »;*;« »:•:* *;•:< *;•;< »^;**ai*4/The Chicago Maroon/Jane 25, L97If y « » » t » * l t « « « 9 » l t • t « • 'VViffivtfytvv* ► • . 'fptfi??* »..♦ .♦ *?? r ? r* r r f ?? ft t r * *-*.*-’CULTURE VULTUREI never realized how valuable my vulturous wingswere until I flew into Hyde Park Monday for the summerand discovered that summer culture here at UC.is prac¬tically nonexistent.The one outstanding exception is Court Theatre, in itssixteenth season. Other than that however, better findsome wings of your own and head north to find action. (Orpay the newly-upped IC rates, if you’re afraid of heights.)Court Theatre’s first presentation will be Brecht’s ThreePenny Opera, Friday July 3 through Sunday July 19, 8:30at Hutch court. Specific dates of production are July 3, 4,By MYRON MEISELIn response to the new “youth” audience, Hollywoodhas given us a new genre, perhaps not as classically pureas the Western or crime film, but with its own set ofrapidly developing conventions. Penelope Gillia has dub¬bed them “tear gas romances,” and that implied fusion ofEasy Rider and Doctor Zhivago isn’t far off the track.Instant synthesis, Hollywood style.Actually, the ritualising of the so-called “youth” picture isa good thing for artists and audiences alike: genres havealways placed formal restrictions on method that makeprecise and elevated expression possible.Anyway, two new films that ostensibly deal with campusunrest are Richard Rush’s Getting Straight (Columbia)and Stuart Hagmann’s The Strawberry Statement (MGM).They are both of immediate interest as cultural sociology(rebellion marketed in varying degrees of predigestion).Getting Straight is a serious attempt to render a per¬sonal moral statement, set in the university, but the scriptis weak and the attempted formalism, although admir¬able, is unsuccessful. The Srawberry Statement, on theother hand, is the ultimate proof that the director is thedecisive artistic creator of a film.•■vArmed with solid actors and the most brilliantly con¬ceived script in years (by playwright Israel Horovitz ofThe Indian Wants the Bronx), director Hagmann (trainedat Mission: Impossible and Mannix) fails completely torender the complex interplay of individuals and their vari¬ous social groups (crew team, sit-inners, pigs, outsideworld) in anything but the most hackneyed and mean¬ingless visual terms. Everywhere the genius of the con¬ception is audible; never is it at all observable.Getting Straight deals with the degeneration of HarryBailey (Elliott Gould), Viet vet in for his Master’s in edu¬cation, who, under the tremendous multiple pressure soharrowingly familiar, freaks out his oral examiners andopts for rebellion. The film deals with issues of moralityand intent with only a tenuous relation to modern youth.Part of the peripheral interest of Getting Straight liesin the dialogue. We have heard almost every other form ofspeech rendered into Hollywoodese; now we can finallyhear our own. It’s basically good, smooth, funny banter¬ing, but naturally it has very little relation to reality. Butthat’s basically unimportant, because director Rush (who 5, 9, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 19. Productions will be moved toMandel Hall in inclement weather. ,Court Theatre will also present The Bank Dick, a W CFields movie, Wednesday July 8, Hutch Court, at 7:15 and9:30.Music ElsewhereGrant Park features FREE CONCERTS all summerlong! Wednesday, Fridays, Saturdays, at 8 pm. Sundays at7 pm. Friday, June 26, offers conductor Irwin Hoffman,with piano concerto in G major by Ravel and symphonyNo. 2 by Brahms. Saturday — Sunday, June 27-8, Hoffmanmade Hell’s Angels on Wheels, a good rep undergroundcycle pic) is less concerned with physical than moral“reality.”Much of Getting Straight is undiluted fantasy grat¬ification. Harry casually makes rad chicks, disarms blackmilitants with easy wit, and cons landladies too. Holly¬wood once only soothed the daydreams of Middle Ameri¬can housewives and hardhats; this is one of the first filmsdesigned to do the same for the intellectual male chauvin¬ist.For Rush, the only way to triumph over the estab¬lishment, or ego-trippers, is to be right and moral.The cross-cutting here is unremittingly impersonal;the shots of high angles reject Harry’s subterfuges; he isconsitently framed by the austere lines in the severearchitecture of the set. Rush’s use of the library room inthis masterly sequence rivals the best of Antonioini.However, I have always been uneasy of visual criti¬cism that establishes one-to-one correspondences betweenstyle and meaning. I love the expressive possibilities ofthe movie too much for such easy tricks.The film contains a well-photographed but largelygratuitous riot, in which the police are clearly seen to beat fault (right on, but tear gas, clubs and hoses?). (Harrygreets his blood-stained paramour with the observationthat demonstrations are “sexy.”)An intriguing master’s oral where Harry blows hiscool over a sweating prof’s personal view of The GreatGatsby (Fitz was a closet queen) is overdrawn and laststoo long, and the finale, with the young lovers approachingone another amid cracking heads to make love during ariot, puts a final seal of censure by the director on Har¬ry’s unreal attitudes.A lot of people share this kind of vapue, misdirectedconcern, they want a little revolution now and again, butaren’t mentally or morally ready for it themselves. Theirdilemma is real, but Getting Straight is too diluted in itsverbal and visual rhetoric to make a meaningful state¬ment on these characters.Still, in its attempt to wreak discipline on both aninfant genre and a budding revolution, Rush’s new filmcommands respect. It’s just good enough and just badenough to make you really mad. It’s also fun. Running atthe Esquire. will conduct an all Beethoven program: “Coriolan” Over¬ture, Fantasia for Piano, Chorus and Orchestra, and Massin C major. Wednesday—Friday, July 1 and 3 will offerconductor Brian Priestman: Suite from “Water Music” byHandel; Suite in B minor for flute and strings by Bach;Overture and “Cruda sorte” from “L’ltaliana in Algeri”by Rossini; Cantata No. 54 “Widerstehe doch der Suende”by Bach; Mad Scene from “Hercules” by Handel; con¬certo in D major by Stoelzel. Saturday—Sunday, July 4-5features Skitch Henderson in an all Gershwin program.Wednesday July 8 offers Symphonies of Wind Instrumentsby Stravinsky; Violin Concerto by Sibelius; and SymphonyNo. 9 by Schubert.Triangle Productions, Inc., features Isaac Hayes andBrook Benton on Saturday June 27 at the Auditoriumtheatre. The Who will perform at the same theatreWednesday and Saturday, July 1 and 4. And, making upfor their May cancellation, Crosby Stills, Nash and Youngwill perform Sunday and Monday, July 5 and 6 at theAuditorium.Art ElsewhereMuseum of Contemporary Art will present a retro¬spective exhibition of Andy Warhol’s paintings July 4through September 8. The exhibition concentrates on War¬hol’s Campbell soup cans, Portraits, Disaster’ series,Brillo boxes and Flowers.Films ElsewhereAirport (Oriental) George Seaton’s film (partially di¬rected by Henry Hathaway) has been blasted because it’sso obviously aimed at the Silent Majority, but it’s a mar¬velously funny and campy piece of Kitsch.Beneath the Planet of the Apes (Roosevelt) Ted Postdirects the sequel to the excellent 1968 success. An oddand not entirely successful satire on present-day politics,but not as bad as reported.Catch-22 (United Artists) Reviewed.Cherry, Harry and Raquel (Loop) Russ Meyer’s latestskinflick is witty, tasteless and honestly erotic. Done up inMeyer’s whackiest offbeat style.Cotton Comes to Harlem (Woods) Ossie Davis directs anall-black cast in a private-eye comedy set in Harlem.Shaping up as the surprise hit of 1970.Fellini Satyricon (Carnegie) A “con” it is. If you must.Fidel (Three Penny) A documentary on the Cuban lead¬er and Cuba today.Getting Straight (Esquire) ReviewedMyra Breckinridge (State-Lake) Opened too late for re¬view, but Michael (Joanna) Same’s film of Gore Vidal’scamp epic stars two great Hollywood queens, RaquelWelch and Mae West. On the basis of the considerabletalent Same showed in Joanna, film is a definite must-see,despite reported studio interference.Patton (Bismarck) Franklin Schaffner has made an en¬tertaining, moving and intelligent film about the con¬troversial WWII general.Too Late the Hero (Chicago) Robert Aldrich attempts afollow-up to his Dirty Dozen. Resulting film is quirky andsympathetic, despite (or perhaps because of) great struc¬tural unevenness. Great performance by Denholm Elliott.Z (Cinema) Costa-Gavras’ “political thriller” starringYves Montand has been vastly overrated.Youth groove on tear gas romanceCourt Theatre to open with Three PennyHREE PENNY OPERA: From left, beggar, Mr Peachum (Don Swanton), Ginny;nny (Pauline Brailsford), Vixen (Helen Wilbur). Curtain goes up July 3.By WENDY GLOCKNER‘‘Chicago’s oldest outdoor summertheatre,” Court Theatre, will open its six¬teenth season on Friday, July 3, with a pre¬sentation of Brecht’s The Three Penny Op¬era. “Court Theatre will provide the onlyopportunity to see The Three Penny Operathis season," asserted director JamesO’Reilly in an interview Tuesday.Several of the leads in this presentationalso appeared in the University Theatreproduction of The Three Penny Opera lastspring. Bob Keefe, school teacher and vet¬eran Court Theatre actor, will again appearas Macheath. Keefe starred in last year’sproduction of Country Wife.Pauline Brailsford will return for herthird season to Court Theatre in the role ofGinny Jenny. She appeared in the samerole in the production last spring. MissBrailsford played Queen Margerate inRichard III last season, and recentlyplayed opposite Hermione Gingold in aNoel Coward play at the Pheasant RunPlayhouse.Other actors who will appear in the pro¬duction, who also appeared in the spring,are Patrick Billingsley, Patricia Prinz,Donald Swanton, and Edrene Heiss.“The production is growing,” commentedO’Reilly. Since this production is the secondfor many of the actors, they are “becomingmore mature” in their roles. Also, the casthas increased from 19 to 30 actors.Joel Cope will be the music directoragain; in fact, according to O’Reilly. ThreePtimy is Court Theatre’s “first musical in modern memory.” The last musical waspresented in 1958. Cope is organizing asmall orchestra for the production.This season Court Theatre will alsopresent Dylan Thomas’ Under Milkwoodand Shakespeare’s Falstaff. Under Milk-wood will he directed hv D Nicholas Rudall,who directed Court Theatre’s production two years ago of Tis Pity She’s a Whoreand starred in last year’s production ofRichard III. Rudall is also a member ofCain Company and directed the Marriageof Heaven and Hell last year.Veteran Court Theatre actors who willappear in Under Milkwood arc Joel Cope,Nate Davis, Beth Guzman-Barron, and Marge Kotlisky. Falstaff will star LeonardKraft, Roger Dodds and James O’Reilly.“Court Theatre is a community theatre”stresses O’Reilly. “Our casts are not justfrom the University community.” CourtTheatre attracts actors from surroundingcolleges and other community theatres. Infact, “only nine of the 73 man company areUniversity theatre people.” Court audi¬tioned 131 actors.O’Reilly commented that Court Theatre’sadvantage over University theatre lies inthe fact that Court actors are of “com¬parable age to their parts.” This advantagegives Court a spirit of “professionalism asan artistic venture.” In another sense how¬ever, Court actors are “ameteurs;” theyact “out of love, without salary.”The directors of Court Theatre try tochoose plays which “others might not do.”This year, O’Reilly also chose plays whichhe thought were “interesting reflections onour immediate times.” “Set in entirely dif¬ferent eras,” he commented, “the plays arestill timely.”Court Theatre attracts an audience ofabout 10,000 in a season. Most of the au¬diences are from either Hyde Park, thenear north, or northern suburbs. In the pastfew years, the size of the audiences hasdropped because “north siders are afraid tocome to the south side. But we are all stillhere living peacefully,” commentedO’Reilly. In past years. audiences averaged18,000.All Court productions begin at 8:30 pm.June 25, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5EDITORIALPeace and taxes:the squelch is onSomeone, somewhere high up in the Nixon administration hasdecided upon a new strategy to squelch any efforts toward electingpeace candidates next fall.Due to a clause in the 1954 Internal Revenue Act, tax-exemptinstitutions (ie, universities) cannot support groups directly in¬volved in political campaigning (ie, Movement for a New Congress)without losing this status. In other words, an obscure, vague law isbeing enforced against a political threat to those in power.The two week recess before elections next fall, which wasofficially announced two weeks ago by President Levi, might alsofall into the category of diverting assets to political campaigningand the interpretation of the statute involved will not be decideduntil it reaches the courts.MNC has been using free office space on campus as well asUniversity phones to conduct their business. The fall recess and theMNC on campus could very well jeopardize the tax-exempt statusof the University.The crisis, which could be a classic academia versus govern¬ment confrontation, is clouded by several considerations. MNC isprepared to move off campus, and such a move will not destroy thepeace candidates’ effort. The two-week vacation will probably notmake much difference to any political campaigns. Any last-minuteefforts by politicians are usually most effective through TV or themedia; canvassing, the forte of student helpers and the hallmarkof Senator Eugene McCarthy’s campaign for President, should bedone long before then.Thus, the University is in some jeopardy of losing its tax-exempt status by taking a stand that would not particularly benefitthe peace groups.Loss of tax-exempt status would mean the loss of grants byindividuals and foundations, as these donors would then be forcedto pay tax on gifts, which they do not have to when they give totax-exempt organizations. Under such circumstances, the Univer¬sity could not continue, since many donors would be deterred bythis situation.Though it is possible that such a situation might result, it isimprobable that the University would commit institutional suicidefor the sake of MNC. More likely, MNC will be forced off campusand guidelines for future such groups drawn up protecting theUniversity against any recriminations from the government in thefuture.In response to the situation, the University administration hasacted in a predictable way; President Levi has appointed five fa¬culty members to a committee to investigate the matter to bechaired by Aristide Zolberg. Five students will soon be appointedto fill out the committee, and they will report to Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell.We hope that the committee will take into account the pre¬viously unquestioned existence of Young Democrats and YoungRepublicans on campus, and if they recommend that MNC bemoved off campus, they recommend the same for the other poli¬tical groups.The clear enemy is the Nixon administration in its heavy-handed use of the law. This is the face of political repression inAmerica, and it has come home to the university. We would hopethat those who defend academic freedom against the disruptionsof radical groups take a close look at the meddling of the Nixonadministration into the affairs of the academic community. Themere threat of losing tax-exempt status is enough to make univer¬sity administrators quake in their shoes, especially in this timeof economic recession.We are awaiting the selection of students for the Zolberg com¬mittee and we hope that they take into account the interests ofstudents interested in political work, as well as the welfare of theUniversity. University tax-exempt statusnecessary for financial survivalContinued from Page 1tary campaigning without shortening thetotal academic schedule.• To the extent that partisan politicalgroups “extend their activities beyond thecampus,” an institution should make andcollect “proper and appropriate charges... for all facilities and services provid¬ed.”• Although all have the right to partici¬pate in election activities, no one should“speak or act in the name of the institu¬tion in a political campaign.”• Institutions may also be subject to theCorrupt Practices Act, which forbids cor¬porations and labor unions from contribut¬ing directly or indirectly to political cam¬paigns.Sherman said of the ACE statement,“That is an attack upon the first amend¬ment freedoms of the university, the uni¬versity which is supposed to be open toall kinds of ideas. That is definitely clos¬ing up one approach to members of theuniversity.”Sherman said that the guidelines wereironical since they applied only to private,tax-exempt universities, and not to suchtax-supported institutions as public schools.“They also throw off campus people interrested in electoral politics,” he said.If the University’s tax-exempt statuswere to be revoked the institution would not have to begin paying taxes, since itruns at a deficit annually. The consequentdecrease of tax-deductible contributionsand private gifts, however, would cut offthe school’s financial lifeline.Committee chairman Zolberg said of thepossible revocation, “I think this is acause for concern. Whether there is dangerin terms of an immediate threat, I don’tknow.”Though hesitant to speak for the com¬mittee before it is fully appointed (Leviwill appoint five students from a list re¬commended by the committee), Zolbergsaid the group would primarily adviseDean O’Connell on the use of Universityfacilities.“If some group is endangering the Uni¬versity’s tax-exempt status, Zolberg said,the committee might facilitate moving thatgroup without jeopardizing its activities.In addition to Zolberg, other facultymembers of the committee are Robert Ha-selkorn, professor and chairman of bio¬physics; Harry Kalven, professor of law;Paul Sally, assistant professor of math¬ematics; and Lorna Straus, assistant pro¬fessor of anatomy.Ex officio members of the committeeare Karl Bemesderfer, assistant to thePresident, and Dean O’Connell.The MNC will sponsor a fund raisingbook sale today and tomorrow from 9 amto 5 pm in the Mandel hall corridor.ABOUT THE MIDWAYNobel laureate letter is the target of a lease-burning protesttomorrow.Forty-three Nobel laureates in the UnitedStates have sent a joint letter to PresidentRichard Nixon urging a rapid end to thewar in Southeast Asia.Among the signers are the three Nobellaureates on the faculty of the University:• George Beadle, Wrather distinguishedservice professor of biology and formerPresident of the University;• Robert Mulliken, Burton distinguishedservice professor of physics and chemistryand• Dr Charles Huggins, Ogden dis¬tinguished service professor of urology inthe department of surgery.The letter said the Nobel laureates wishto add their voice “to the urgent warningsof the young whom we have helped to edu¬cate.“We agree with the stand of many thatthe health of this nation depends on a swiftdisengagement from war in Southeast Asia,although the violent tactics used by some toexpress this are repugnant to us.”Lease burningMcKey & Pogue, Inc., one of the largestreal estate brokerage firms in the city,THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Steve CookBusiness Manager: Don RatnerManaging Editor: Con HitchcockExecutive Editor: Sue LothCulture Editor: Wendy GlocknerPhoto Editor: David TravisParis Bureau Chief: Paul BernsteinAssociate Managing Editor: Judy AlsofromAssistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60437. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and In theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Residents of two buildings located at 53rdand Kenwood will burn their leases after arent strike campaign to force the realtorsto sign contracts with their tenants.The demonstration is scheduled for noonin front of the McKey & Pogue office on57th street. Saturday, the tenants willmarch from the Kimbark Plaza shoppingcenter to McKey & Pogue’s offices.“We invite other lease-holding tenants toread their leases between now and Fri¬day,” said Victoria Haas, spokesman forthe Kenwood Tenant Union, which is spon¬soring the demonstrations. “If you don’t un¬derstand your lease, come to our lease-burning demonstration and we will explainit to you,” she added.Playboy chanvinismThere will be an all-male demonstrationat the Playboy club Saturday to “confrontthe sexploiters” at 8 pm.A group called MAC is sponsoring the ac¬tion. In a leaflet, the group calls for an all¬male demonstration against Playboy be¬cause it “exploits women by presenting asthe ideal woman one who is the willingplaything of the playboy.”“We deplore Playboy for the image itpresents men of themselves, the leafletadds, “The Playboy image is unattainablefor all but a few, and it is undesirable forany man.”New fall calendarFollowing is the revised fall quarterschedule:Entering freshmen andtransfers arrive Wed, Sept 26Undergraduate registrationbegins Wed, Sept 23Graduate registrationbegins Thurs, Sept 24Registration for undergrad¬uates and graduates indivisions endsProfessional schoolregistration endsInterim; no classesThanksgiving, a holidayAutumn convocationQuarter ends Fri, Sept 25Tues, Sept 29Sat, Oct 24throughTues, Nov 3Thurs, Nov 26Tues, Dec 22Tues, Dec 22b/ lfie Chicago Maroon/June 25, 1970Kunstler decries Chicago 15 trialContinued from Page 3time that he was dead, that he had been either blown upin the car in Maryland or that he had been taken from thecar and destroyed.Now I feel that he is not dead, but alive somewherebut underground. I think that if he ever emerges, it willbe in a country he considers to be a secure country forhim, such as North Korea, Cuba, North Vietnam, Guinea,Algeria, or perhaps Tanzania.During the beginning of Rap Brown's trial, the estab¬lishment press implied that the bombing of the courhousein Maryland and the bombing of the car were done byleftists. Do you have any information of who did it andwhy it was done?None whatsoever. I think that it was not just the es¬tablishment press, but that this was a theory promulgatedby the governor of Maryland and joined in by the FederalButeau of Investigation. The state of Maryland has nowadmitted that it cannot prove how or why that explosiontook place. The original theory was that they were goingto Bel Air (Maryland), in the car to dynamite the court¬house in Bel Air. However, when the bomb exploded, theywere outside of Bel Air headed south, away from thecourthouse. There is no evidence to show that a bomb wasput in there by another party, or dropped in, or thrown in.So, it’s all inconclusive.What I objected to the most was the immediate resortto the media by authorities in Maryland and by federalauthorities to prove that this was done by leftists, byFeatherstone and Che Pane (the victims of the car bomb¬ing), in their terroristic attempt to bomb the courthouse inBel Air. I think that this was doing a disservice to every¬one concerned, and at this point no one knows how theexplosion occurred.Then you don't believe that Rap Brown will ever betried for the inciting to riot charges?Only if he is caught.EL TACOMEXICAN AMERICAN RESTAURANT1607 E. 53rd St.Carta Blanca beer issold here - plus otherfine drinks• HUACAMOLE• ENCHILADAS•TOSTADAS•MANY OTHER DISHES• TACOS• TAMALES• CHILI•CARRY OUT SERVICEOpen 7 days a week11:30 AM.- 12:30 A.M.HOES, APARTMENTS, MERCHANDISEMaroon classifiedsDownMadison AvePUTNEYSWOPE"The Truth and Soul MovieHYDE PARKTheatreHELD OVERONE MOREWEEK In Chicago recently, the Chicago 15 trial; a trial ofdraft resisters who burned files on the south side lastyear, resulted in sentences against 10 of the 15. Manyleftists criticized the 10 for staying to stand trial andserving the sentence. Do you think they should havestayed and gone to trial or tried to escape?I don’t think we ought to criticize any members of themovement who make a political decision whether to leaveor to stand trial. I think that is a political decision that isup to the individuals concerned to make. Some of themmade a political decision to split, some of them made apolitical decision to stand trial.As far as the trial itself was concerned, I think that itwas a totally unfair trial. The sentences were atrocious,and the judge (Judge Edwin Robson) issued proclamationswhich were totally unconstitutional as to the right of de¬fendants and lawyers to talk to the press about pendingcase and the right of a Catholic priest, who is a lawyer, toappear in clerical garb in the courtroom. This was anatrocious ruling by this judge, something that violated hisoath of office.I’ve read that order of his, which mentions me aswell, and I think that this judge owes an apology to everydefendant, to every citizen, and to the judiciary at large. Ithought it was a horrible order, and that the sentencesindicated the type of man we have sitting on the federalbench today.What are you going to do in the movement in thefuture?I have come to the conclusion that my best role is toplay the role I’m playing, in essence, as a legal gadfly. Iam someone available to the movement to do what has tobe done in these courts, and to fulfill in some way thepolitical ends which the movement hopes to achieve in thecourts or outside.I want to stay practicing law, I want to continue doingniiTHEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New Directions .Most Paperback LinesI01 > Student Ihsamnt on Qualityl*aperhncks A Hardcovers15401. 55th St.-Ml 3-7511 i PIZZApLATTERiPizza, Fried ChickenItalian Foodsi Compare the Price! Sl I11460 E 53rd 643-28001WE DELIVER . ICARPET CITY0 6740 STONY ISLANDt 324-7998^Hos what you need from a SIO^▼used 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnantst* Mill returns at a fraction of the A^original cost. (tDecoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad 3I FREE DELIVERY* Cornell florist #* 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 ][2 Phone. FA 4-1651 2 CHECKERTAXIIS NOWHIRING18,19,20 YR. OLDSTODRIVE FULL TIMETHISSUMMERAPPLY NOWFORJOB OPENINGSEFFECTIVE 7-1-70MALE OR FEMALEAPPLY845 WASHINGTON8:00 to 4:30 DAILY8:00 to 11:00 SAT.CALL 421-1314MODERN DANCE CLASSES# 4:30 to 6:00Monday - SaturdayBaUot. Rock t Jazz taught.Allison Theater Dance Center17 N. StateStevens BuildingRoom 1902332 9923ACADEMY AWARDWINNERCinema TheatreBmIt * far steicet |rup rates call: WH 4-5SS7 David Travis"My best role is as a legal gad¬fly."these things and yet at the same time keep talking topeople via the medium of the college campus. My life isdivided, essentially, into two compartments — the court¬room and the college campus.fMNMnnCiMSCNnMWIlUSICMMMlIHUMmK warnsAMIKENICHOLS FILMMARTIN BALSAM, RICHARD BENJAMIN. ARTHUR GAREUNKEL. JACK GILFORD, Dli i HENRY. BOD NEWHART,ANTHONY PERKINS. PAULA PRENTISS, MARTIN SHEEN, JON VOIGHT S QRSON WELLES w OREEOLESCREENPLAY BY BUCK HENRY PRODUCED BY JOHN CAUEY G MARTIN RANSOHOf F OtRECTED BY MIKE NICHOLSwznMium «a»inwWHUrni«BWMfa*a«Kn* « Mr/aMswrnmuaMmExclusive Engagement—Continuous PerformancesSee it downtownat the V* WttftUNITED ARTISTS„ WAN DO. PH A' 0 f A 0 h i J W NJune 25, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7UNIVERSITY 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. Passengers will be admitted to the vehicle upon surren¬dering a ticket to the driver except on the "C" Bus where Univer¬sity identification 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.) 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 and 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 service is Free.ROUTES AND SCHEDULES(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 Universi y 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 Islandlo 59th St.; the Starting Point.SCHEDULEA.M.6:15 Starts at 59th & Stony Island6:457:157:458:158:45 (Ends at 59th & Ellis about 9:15 A.M.)P.M.4:05 Starts at 59th & Stony Island4:355.055:35 (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 48rh 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;and North to 48th St., the A.M. Starting Point.NOTE: P.M. Buses start at 59th and Kimbark butrun the same route.SCHEDULEA.M. Starts at 51st & University7:308:008:309.00 (Last trip ends at 57th & Universityabout 9:25 A.M.)MID-DAY (June 29 thru August 7 only.)12:00 Starts at 59th & Kimbark12:301:00 (Ends at 57th & Dorchester about1:25 P.M.)P.M. Starts at 59th & Kimbark4:00 5:004:30 5:30 (Ends at 57 &Dorchesterabout 1:55 P.M.) (C) COMBINED EVENINGROUTEApproximately 25 minutes round trip undernormal driving conditions.Monday through Friday 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 frompatron.ROUTEStarting at 59th & Dorchester, bus proceedsWest to Cottage Grove Ave.; South to 60thStreet; East on 60th Sfreet 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 on53rd Street to Harper Avenue; South to 54thPlace; West on 54th Place to Dorchester;South to 55th Street; East on 55th Street toS. Hyde Park Blvd.; South to 56th Street;West on 56th Street to Lake Park Avenue;South to 57th Street; West on 57th Street toDorchester; South to 59th & Dorchester, theStarting Point.SCHEDULEP.M.6:05 Starts at 59th& Dorchester 9:556:30 10:206:55 10:457:20 11:107:45 11:358:10 12:00 (Last trip ends8:35 at 57th & Dor-9:05 Chester aboutNo 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.SCHEDULEA.M.7:05 Starts at 67th & Jeffery7:508:35 (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.4:30 Starts at 59th & Stony Island5.156:00 (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 Operations «*09*9908/The Chicago Maroou/June 25, 1978^ -■■■naHMi--- l*_VXVT-*KVV '• nVttV."WVV»' VV*, V' * ’V.V • • V." •. •Change institutions to diffuse power: ClarkContinued from Page 3nesses and failures of one jurisdiction affect all — ifthere’s gambling permitted in one, prostitution and narcot¬ics pedding in another — others will suffer —you’re all in there together. We’ve got to consolidate thesethings.But you’ve got to look at the specifics. They vary fromone part of the country to another in terms of needs, butinstitutions just cling to what they have because it’s them,and they identify with it and it offers some temporarysecurity because that security will prove to be of shorterand shorter duration in the years ahead.Speaking of diffusing power among students and youngpeople, do you feel that strikes against classes, demon¬strations, rallies are effective means of bring aboutchange? Or are canvassing, campaigning, lobbying moreeffective, or should both techniques be used in this area?It’s very clear to me that we have what I’ve been call¬ing an all-fronts need. There’s no single technique — Idon’t think Henry George had it when he proposed thesingle tax idea becauses our life is much more com¬plicated, and you have to have a constant pressure forchange on all fronts.Lobbying for the McGovem-Hatfield resolution is impor¬tant. Campaigning for peace candidates is critically im¬portant. Creating an awareness in the most sensitive anddecent and gentle way that you can in university adminis¬trations and faculty is importat.We really have to be awfully careful about our human¬ness. We de-humanize ourselves. The mere numbers ofour lives, the technology is de-humanizing. We’ve got torevere life, to be gentle, and we’ve got to enjoy life. Ithink that those things that try to use force and power andviolence are wrong.The University of \Chicago has agreed to a recess ofclasses for ten days before the November elections to al¬low students to work for anti-uar candidates. Do you sup¬port this policy?Yes, I do. I think it’s very valuable from many stand¬points. It’s hard to be a bystander today. You are affectedby these things directly, and any expectation you mayhave for your future or your children’s future is directlyClarken|oy ourspecial studentrateiC C at^0 timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officeI • different double featuredaily• open 7 30 a.m.-late■ show midnight■ • Sunday film guild■ • every wed and tri. isladies day -all gals 85*" tittle gal lery for gals■ only• dark parking-1 door»uth■ 4 hrs. 95c after 5 p m• e.rite for your freemonthly programClark & mad non fr 2-2843] EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbork Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372rr~r~\ • nm ' t 1 r '"i rCHARTS/GRAPHS.Leroy lettering(Near campus)363-1288CARPET BARN WAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur CoatsInexpensive Antique FurnitureOpen 5 Days Tues.-thru Sat. 9-41228 W. Kinzie 243-2271IdeasFOR 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 me'I today?Bnlnl, j VVoasS, jiCLu Office nows v io j Mondays,One North lo So lie St , Chic 60602 Others by ApptFR 2 2390 - 798-0470SIJN LIFE OFCANADAJ affected. So to the extent that they can make a differenceis very helpful.But more than that, it’s valuable if you believe in cursystem of government. If I had to arrange a list of prior¬ities of things we have to learn, it’s what this system isAnd the average American never gets in the political pro¬cess really. He barely votes, much less sees candidates,sees how campaigns work, how policy positions are taken,what a man’s made of and what he stands for, and thatexperience is invaluable.I think they’ll take that on with them along with a fu¬ture political awareness that will help involve others inthe system and help make the system work. The systemwill work if we give it a chance and if we apply ourenergies to it. It won’t work in the summer. This is goingto take a long hard effort, and it’s going to take a com¬prehensive effort.I can see the possibility of some “backlash” againstcollege students, as happened in a recent Congressionalrace in New Jersey in which the anti-war candidate lost tothe incumbent. But I don’t see that there’s an acceptablealternative.If the implication is “do nothing,” then I say that’s thereason we’re where we are now. And if the Americanpeople react that way, then let’s find out about it.I’ve been deeply involved in the New York 14th Congres¬sional District where John J Rooney is the incumbentCongressman, and he’s the chairman of the appropriationssubcommittee for Justice and State, among otheragencies.I feel an obligation to say what I thought I saw in theDepartment of Justice for eight years, to say that our ef¬fectiveness in civil rights, in criminal justice was limitedby him as an individual.There’s a young peace candidate named Peter Eikenber-ry involved, who sees peace as a first requisite of ourtime. He came into the civil rights movement from a WallSt law firm and then he went into the problems of theslums as general counsel for the Bedford-StuyvesantCorp., and he’s a concerned young man, and I’m for him.We’ve got hundreds of students there working. Mr Rooneyhas really made them the issue, calling them“wild-eyedradicals and bomb-throwers,” saying “Who are thesealiens in .our midst?”FREE FLYING LESSONS GIVEN WITHTHE PURCHASE OF ANY NEWTOYOTA* FROMTHE COROLLASEDAN$1924”ON WESTERN INC.6941 SO WESTERN-776-4016* GIVEN BY STASIU SCHLEPKOWSKI, FAMED POLISH KAMI KAXIPILOT, VETERAN OF OVER 500 MISSIONS2nd WEEK!!'iutiCtfiOKAN INTIMATE STORY THAT WILLTURN YOU ON. . . .PLUS** The All New A Spicy !IANYBODY, ANYWAYWlf.ILfdWj LE IMAGE 750 NCLARK337-2113 Let’s just see what the people think. We can’t walkaway from it. It would be a bad mistake to believe youcan do this in the course of ten days, and you’re a timidperson and just sunshine soldier if you get disillusionedbecause in ten days you couldn’t change the course of thecampaign or the course of the nation.To what degree is the current administration reacting tothe need for institutional change?I’m very disturbed about the way they react. It’s almostas if they didn’t think these problems were real. Theythink that somehow you can finesse them, that you cantinker around — a little more here, a little less here. Wehave to make some massive, major efforts. On schooldesegration, for example, we have got to integrate ourschools. We tortured ourselves with the difficulties andanxieties of it, and we need to move on, right on, as theysay.I fear that people are affected by their history, and tomany of the people in the Nixon administration, theglorious years were the 1950’s, the Eisenhower years, andessentially they were years of doing nothing, an accumula¬tion of problems that were unsolved.I’m afraid they think we can return to those days. Wecan’t return to those days — these are problems, verydifficult problems, and we have to address ourselves mas¬sively to them.When you look at the alienation that resulted from theirschool integration policy, it’s tragic. When you look at thealienation that resulted from the nominations they madeto the Supreme Court, that’s tragic. We know we have tobuild millions of housing units and we have this immenseneed in housing, so we know there’s turbulence ahead, andwe’ve got to face up.Going to Europe or toMIDDLE EAST OR EVENTO FAR EAST....DON'T DO ANY PLANNINGJUST CALL MR. SOMAY ATSt. Charles TravelBureauWE'LL DO THE REST955-5151Xaide ‘fcxrfi s Tl6vSf and QTlf1‘Restaurant franca isSa Grenouille8*35 . £ Hyde Pee'K A*Cwill have a trip through the historic provinces ofFranceEVER Y MONO A Y EVENINGat the special prix fixe of $4.50June 29La Saudie GastronomiqueCreme <f Ementale(sweet cheese soup)Omble Chei'alier a’ Tancienne(troup sauted with mushrooms,white wine & lemon juice)Legumes gra pin Savoyard cafeRochers du mont blancJuly 6Le Perigordpotage cultivateurSaladePoulet saute perigordine(boneless breast of chicken sauted with foie gras and trussels)Pomme Saladoise CafeSabovon de framboise(Rasberry Sabovon)U e are open every day with a menue a la carte, or completedinner. Lunch served daily. Closed TuesdayFOR RESERVATIONSCALL RENE684-4050June 25, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9University grants degrees, Quantrell awardsContinued from Page 1preceded by Richard Lewontin, Block pro¬fessor of biological sciences and chairmanof the committee on evolutionary biology.Lewontin explained that a convocation“represents the way a university re-in-forces the values that it stands for. We’reholding a counter-convocation becausemany of us believe that a university issomething different from these values.”He criticized the university’s self-imageof “dispassionate seeking of non-partisanknowledge. Knowledge is power, and it canbe used by all.”The Quantrell awards for excellence inundergraduate teaching were awarded toEasley Blackwood, professor of music; Jo¬seph Cropsey, associate professor of politi¬cal science; Stuart Rice, Block professor ofchemistry; and Loma Straus, assistant pro¬fessor of anatomy. Nearly 1450 degrees were awarded duringthe three convocations held on June 12 and13, graduate and professional degrees beingawarded in the first two. Allison Davis,Dewey distinguished service professor ofeducation spoke at both.In the second session, the Rosenbergermedal for distinguished achievementthrough research was awarded to EdwardPendleton Herring, director of the jointcommittee of the social science researchcouncil and the American council oflearned societies foreign area fellowshipprogram.Honorary degrees were also awarded atthat session. Recipients were• Jule Gregory Charney, professor ofmeteorology at MIT• Hugh Lloyd-Jones, fellow of the BritishAcademy and Regius professor of Greek atOxfordTAhSAM-Y&NCHINESE-AM ERIC ANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Order S loAc OUV I SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Ratos forStudents and RelativesSingle teems Item $10.00 dailyTwin & doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on request_ ... * Mease coll H. FingerhutRooms QVQtiQOi# for 2-1000parties banqu^ond 5454 South Share Drivedances for 10 - 500.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRAISK PARIS1proprietorFAR EAST KITCHENCHINESE & AMERICANFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen daily 10-10Fri. & Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd955-2229 PLArCCy’S ALL-NIGHT JHCWPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREJune 19LA PRISONNIiRI June 20Liza MinnelliSTERILE CUCKOOJune 26AMERICAN REVOLUTION II June 27MEDIUM COOLJuly 3CRAZY WORLD OF LAURELHARDYW.C FIELDS FESTIVAL twOaSW. July 4Charlie ChaplinCIRCUSJuly 10OH WHAT A LOVELY WAR wQaSlv July 11Fellini'sIV*TICKETS 1.50Hey you among thetrees and grass,bicycling gives you apiece of mindCheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh. Robin Hood, Falcott;Peugeot. Citane, Merrier,Coppi and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. I sedbieveles spasmodically.Flv-bv-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8Alice D. Toe Clips told hereDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Cift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.681 6856 VVJ Owners !i/\\Ts -V- - // / J LlsaMf otdL 4rapby CAR REPAIRS? 'Switch to...BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO SERVICE4401 S. ARCHER AVE."For Satisfaction in Service"CAU NOW254-3840254-5071254-5072And join the REVOLUTION of low cost auto service. We don't talkabout INFLATION. We're doing something about it.The money you save will be yours!Why should you pay for the fancy showrooms!Take advantage of our 1CW...LOW... Prices!M PORT HU TMUH Wl Wf V MVVICI TMM!\11/The Chicago Maroon/June 25, lf7t David TravisCOUNTER-CONVOCATION: Professor Richard Lewontin speaks prior to arrival ofWilliam Kunstler.• Sol Spiegelman, director of the In¬stitute of Cancer Research at Columbia• Henry Stommel, profes. t of ocean¬ography at MIT • Richard Titmuss, professor and chair¬man of the social science and adminis¬tration department at the London School ofEconomics.Screenplay by ROBERT KAUFMAN • Based on the n0Wi by KEN KOLB • Music b, KONAi DSTfciN • Produced and directed by RICHARD RUSH • COLORA WALTER READE THEATREn» tSQUIRE5« E. OAK ST.^ OE 7-1117The whole world is watching, the whole world is watching.GULUMHIA rlUTURco presanttELLIOTT GOULD-CANDICE BERGENGETTING STRAIGHTarae—K* ^< il FAR OUT FOR SURESCENESNUDIST TRAVEL CLUB for singlewomen, etc, transportation furn¬ished, describe yourself, send 35c,MYW CLUB, P.O. Box 1342, Au¬rora, 111. The Bank Dick: WC Field's fun¬niest. 7:15 & 9:30 Hutch, Wed.July 7.Sun., June 28, 5:30 p.m. BarbecueSupper at Calvert House. 5735 Uni¬versity. Party at 7. $1 for both, 50cparty only.TELLERSCLERK — TYPISTFULL TIME TELLER needed by Southside Bank. Experience desired butnot necessary. Previous experience in related areas such as cash¬iering or sales helpful.PART TIME TELLER desired for late afternoon hours. We will train.Some related experience preferred.CLERK — TYPIST position available for a girl with good typing skillsand clerical experience.ATTRACTIVE SALARIES BASED ON EXPERIENCE. EXCELLENTFRINGE BENEFITS INCLUDING EMPLOYEE CAFETERIA, PARKING,AND FREE BANKING SERVICE TO EMPLOYEES.Call Personnel Department752-4600HYDE PARK BANK53rd at Lake Park YOGA EXERCISE CONCENTR.BREATH. MEDITATN. SRI NE-RODE, HY 3-7454.The Bank Dick. w. C. Fields fun¬niest. Tues, July 7 — 7:30 8. 9:15.Hutchinson Commons.SENSITIVITY TRAININGThere will be a 3 day sensitivitytraining workshop on July 17-19Given by the U of C counselingcenter staff. The Lab will be resi¬dential — out in the country,woods, swimming pool. Fees $25plus $25 for room & board. Formore information call x2360 orx2366. We suggest that you applyfairly early as we could not takeall the applicants for our lastworkshop.FOR SALEMinolta SRT 101 SLR f:1.7 w/cNew. $135. 353-4300 ext. 501.COP A BEAUT. Suzuki T500 RunWith Tender Loving Care SinceNew 8/69. Super Cond. Lo Mil. plusExtrs. Dig It for $825 Before WeChg Mind 8, Take W/Us to Calif.345-5191. Maywood.KITTENS!!Playful, half-siamese kitten needsnew home. Six weeks old. Free!Cute! Call Wendy at 955-0348. Leavemessage.StudentDiscountModel f“"Camera1342 E. 55thHY 3-9259Most complete photo shopon South sideMay I have aFrench winewith TurkishKilich ShishWhy not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EfiatdlRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake Park955-5151 WE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTERwith a rank ofDOCTOR OF DIVINITY"And ye shall know the truth and the truthshall make you free"John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who believe as wedo, to join us in the holy search for Truth. We believe thatall men should seek Truth by all just means. As one of ourministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for ex¬emption from property and other taxes,3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ec¬clesiastic powers.4. Seek draft exemption as one of our workingmissionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, the¬aters, etc., give reduced rates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinityand I.D. card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use whenyou wish to ordain others. Your ordination is completelylegal and valid anywhere in this country. Your moneyback without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send yourOrdination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND NOW TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHP.O. Box 1393, Dept. 66Evanston, Illinois 60204Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHLITZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNMAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE Mi1212 E. 59fh St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75‘ perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Solos, etc.) are fre*;.r—f— —i— —T mf — —T— MM r—i— n:hi — — | * 1 —.r —1——j «. — — f -1 * ’ * -4- —H i—— H T t • t--'j i ; , T ^4- H —- +i —i— —,—1 1—H 1 * ♦—III, i L 1J’1 Ml — r 4--1 r ij— |LJ 1 :r di—1 i rmL L. — . J CAMPING ECNUPMENTFor Rent: Sleeping Bags — Tents— Stoves — Lanterns — Pads. CallHICKORY 324-1499.SPPACE4 8, 5 Bdrm. Apts For RentNow ORFALL: Nr 57th + CottageCALLParker Holsman HY 3-2525.Roomate Wanted for spacious aptat 57th and Kenwood. 667-0071.Need FML“to Share attr. Apt. OwnRm. A/C Contmp. Furn. 53, Harperbal. $55/Mo. PL 2-7267.Room for girl in private home.Near lake, 1C. Share bath withone other girl. No cooking. $40 mo.MU 4-5076 8-10 AM 6-9 PM.DELUXE HIGHRISE 1 BDRM.Apts. From $130.00 Parquet Floors.See Mrs. Haley. MU 4-7964.Need One For 3 Man Apt in HyPk. $50/Mo. Call Eves, 684-3644.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 Woodiawn. 955-9209, or WA 2-8411, ext. 311.Roommate wntd. 52nd 8. Kenwood.$62.50. Grad stud pref. 643-2738.Quiet, clean: bedrm, kitchen, study.One or couple. 752-2986.You don't need(insuranceprotectionfor your, car(if you liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’llwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971SENTRY®^INSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization PEOPLE WANTEDWanted — Young Man for EveningDesk Work Weekdays. BeginningFatl. Apply Maroon 1212 E. 59th St.Need Fml for Soc Sci Litor Rsch20 Hr Wk $100Mo, Room PL 2-7267.Leisurely Ride Needed to L.A. OrVicinity. Will Share Costs, Tent.Interested but no wheels — HelpDo a Driveway. 374-0677.MANAGER NEEDEDTHE VERSAILLESAPARTMENTSAn 80 story hi-rise elevator build¬ing at 53rd and Dorchester. Willtrain married woman/or facultywife. Fine salary plus 3 bedroomapartment with dishwasher. Won¬derful opportunity to supplementfamily income.IRMCO HOTELS CORP.Call Miss Moran 348-8300PEOPLEFORSALENeed your manuscript typed pro¬fessionally? fast? Call E. Lauritis.684-2743 days; PU 2-3800 eves.Will English paper, thesis. Anyfield. Also tutor. Call BU 8-5631.LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA-TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALL236-1423 9-5.ON THE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO?"Of all that is written I loveonly what a man has written withhis blood. Write with blood, andyou will experience that blood isspirit.It is not easily possible to under¬stand the blood of another: I hatereading idlers. Whoever knows thereader will henceforth do nothingfor the reader. Another century ofreaders — and the spirit itselfwill stink.That everyone may learn to read. in the long run corrupts not onlywriting but also thinking. Once thespirit was God, then he becameman, and now he even becomesrabble . .—Nietzsche"On Reading and Writing"Thus Spoke ZarathustraPERSONALEASY CASH: Need to Rent CarAug 15-Sept 14. Price is Right. Call374-0677.Moving to the West Coast? WillDrive Your Car, Leave ChicagoMid-August. Call 374-0677, 7PM.FREE Room for Summer thru SeptIdeal for Grad Student 324-1499.See The Bank Dick — W.C. Fieldsfunniest flick. Tues., July 7 — 7:30& 9:15. Hutch Commons.Support your local oppressed group.Buy books from MNC today andtomorrow in Mandel.Send down the pick-up ads nexttime, dammit.Denver, Vermont, Connecticut:where are you when we ned youYour JUNE 27 forecast: freedom.Beef jerky still goes at $4.74 apound wholesale.Confidential to JS: News flash!John D Rockefeller just bought 20shares of LNS (Well, folks . . .)Hark, hark the Clark left us inthe dark.Steve's having a party tomorrownight; can you dig it? As they sayback on the farm. "A good timewill be had by all."Greendoor Bookshop1450 E. 57th St.Quality PaperbacksMedical TextsChildren's BooksNoon - MidnightTHE STUDENT COOP ANNOUNCESANOTHER SALENOW THRU JULY 3NEW RECORDS10% OFFOUR USUALLOW PRICES ON BOTHAVAILABLE STOCK ANDSPECIAL ORDERSUSUAL SALELIST PRICE PRICE4.98 3.29 2.965.98 3.99 3.596.98 4.49 4.04MON. STUDENT COOPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENTFRI. 10 A.M. - 6 P.M. SAT. NOON - 6 P.M.<i]June 25, 1270/The Chicago Maroon/llBRECHT-WE1LTHE THREE PENNY OPERADirected by James O’ReillyDirector of COURT THEATRE & UniversityTheatreMusic by Kurt Vt eill DYLAN THOMASUNDER M1LKWOODDirected by D. Nickolas RudallBritish Actor, DirectorAssistant Professor of ClassicsThur Fri Sat WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE ~FALSTAFF: Henry IV part 2Directed by James O’ReillySunTh u r Fri Sat Sun July 24 25 26JulyJuly 9 310 411 512 Julv/Aug 30 31 1 2July 16 17 18 19 Aug 6 "7 8 9 Thur Fri Sat SunAug 14 15 16Aug 20 21 22 23Aug 27 28 29 30Sept 3 r 4 5 6STARTING TIME 8:30 P.M. FOR ALL PLAYSSinglesSeries for further information callMI 3-0800 x3581Thur Fri Sat Sun$2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $2.50$5.50 $6.50 $7.50 * $5.'50On individual tickets there is a.50 discount for all students and faculty members excepting SaturdaysUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCourt Theatre12/The Chicago Maroon/June 25, 1970