The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 33 The University of Chicago February 2,1971Abortions possiblethrough UC clinicsZuspan, chairman of obstetrics-gynecology.“It’s now up to lawyers of the Universityto decide,” Dr Zuspan said. Dr Zuspan wasone of the plaintiffs in the suit against thestate’s abortion law.“I interpret the (court) injunction tomean that we are free to do abortions up tothe first 12 weeks of pregnancy,” he added.Vacuum aspiration abortions will be doneon an outpatient basis for women less than10 weeks pregnant, he added. Women intheir 11th or 12th weeks will be hospi¬talized.Dr Zuspan said that the obstetrics clinicat Lying-In would be unable to performabortions for every woman requestingthem. “We already have a two-page list ofpeople who want abortions,” he said.“I feel an obligation first to the Univer¬sity of Chicago family, and that includesfaculty, students, and staff; next, to thepeople of Hyde Park, Kenwood, and Wood-lawn areas, and to people referred by theirphysicians. We may not be able to handleany more than that,” he said.“The main thing that I would like tostress is that we would like to have thepatient treated with dignity,” Dr Zuspanadded. “I hope our service will cover abroad range of reproductive functions, in¬cluding childbirth, permanent or tempora¬ry contraception, and family planning.”Dr James Burks, chief of the studenthealth gynecology clinic, said that the stu¬dent health clinic “will go along with thenew law.”Burks said that most abortions would bedone on an outpatient basis for women nomore than 10 weeks pregnant. Asked if stu¬dent health insurance would cover the costof an abortion, Burks said he did not know,but added, “I assume it does.”Director of University Health Services DrGeorge LeRoy said that no decision has yetbeen made as to whether abortion costswould be covered by student health insur¬ance.“The question is how much has the Uni¬versity to spend,” Dr LeRoy said. He spec¬ulated that “patients can legitimately bearor share the cost of (abortions).”Dr LeRoy estimated that abortions wouldcost from $100 to $250 on an outpatientbasis and $300 to $500 on an in-patientbasis.Before the court ruling, the Universityhospitals could justify performing abortionsonly to save the life of a woman. Since fewwomen were physically unable to carry thepregnancy to term, most had to consult atleast two psychiatrists who would attestthat they were psychologically endangered.One woman who qualified for a legalabortion at Billings last year said that sev¬eral days’ hospitalization, physician andContinued on page 7CHICAGO WEATHER: With the windsup to 30 mph, it seems there is only oneway to stand.Steve AokiRAMSEY CLARK — For interview, see page 3. By SUE LOTHAbortions will be performed at ChicagoLying-In Hospital and through the studenthealth service, physicians at the Universityhospitals disclosed this weekend.The changes followed the decision of athree-judge federal panel Friday. The pan¬el ruled unconstitutional Illinois’ 97-yearabortion law, which prohibited abortionexcept to save the life of the woman.Terming the law “vague” and an “intru¬sion” on women’s rights, Judges EdwinRobson and Luther Swygert concluded that“during the early stages,of pregnancy — atleast during the first trimester — the statemay not prohibit, restrict or otherwise lim¬it women’s access to abortion proceduresperformed by licensed physicians operatingin licensed facilities.”Meanwhile, local pro-abortion groupsare working to convince state legislators toenact laws consistent with or more liberalthan the court ruling.Chicago Lying-In hospital plans to per¬form abortions on a semi-ambulatory out¬patient basis, according to Dr FrederickLibrary workers may unionizethat recognition of the union is “a problemof University policy” and said, “I have nocomment to make at this time.”The organizing committee is holding anopen meeting for all library employeesThursday at 4:30 pm at the First UnitarianChurch, 5650 Woodlawn to discuss the is¬sues involved in the campaign.A1 Evanoff, organizing secretary of theNational Council of Distributive Workers ofAmerica (NCDWA), the national affiliate ofthe local union, will speak.According to a pamphlet issued by UC-LSOC, “Salaries at UC (libraries) are sub¬stantially lower than those offered in busi¬ness and industry, as well as at other li¬braries in the Chicago area.” The library union will negotiate for araise in the starting salary of professionalsto $9600 per year. The pamphlet states thatthe current starting salary for profession¬als in the library is $8000 per year, “$1600less than the starting salary in the union¬ized libraries of the City Colleges of Chi¬cago.”The union will also negotiate to have thestarting salary of most clerical jobs, whichthe organizing committee says is now un¬der $100 per week, raised to $120 per week,“and higher wages for others based on sen¬iority and level of responsibility.”Another union bargaining goal will be acost of living escalator clause in employeeContinued on page 5Lab school faculty seeksnew negotiating rightsBy KEITH PYLEAn organization of laboratory schoolteachers is seeking collective bargainingrights to negotiate a new master contractwith the University.Among the demands of the organizationare greater faculty involvement in adminis¬trative decisions, an increase in salary andfringe benefits, and tenure.The organization, the Faculty Associationof the University of Chicago LaboratorySchools, requested yesterday that an elec¬tion be held to determine if the facultywishes to be represented by the associationin negotiations with the University.In a meeting yesterday with laboratoryschool director Philip Jackson, Faculty As¬sociation president Richard Muelder for¬mally presented the association’s requestthat the election be held before the end ofthe current quarter.The association also requested that theadministration agree to negotiate a newmaster contract if the majority of the labschool teachers vote to be represented by.the association.Jackson responded that he understoodthe request, and promised a formal replvsoon.The association, recently affiliated withthe American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, has more than 60 members, orabout a third of the laboratory schools’ fac¬ulty.Muelder feels that the election has a goodchance for success, since most facultymembers appear to support the associ¬ation.Elaborating on the association’s de¬mands, Muelder said that the teachers feelthey should have a greater voice in decid¬ing such matters as changes in the educa¬tional programs, selection of departmentchairmen, and hiring of new faculty.“We’d also like to have a well-establishedgrievance procedure and binding arbi¬tration,” he said.Muelder also noted that annual salariesof lab school teachers are behind the localaverages for similar positions. Further¬more, lab schools teachers are employedonly under limited-term contracts, with noprovisions for tenure.If the administration of the lab schoolsdeclines the association’s request for anelection, the association has the option ofpetitionim* ? the National Labor RelationsBoard^(NLRB) to force the lab schools tohold the electionRecording to Muelder, the associationhas merely to show that at least 30 percentContinued on page 3HERMAN FUSSLERDirector of University librariesBy FRED WINSTONThe University of Chicago Library StaffOrganizing Committee (UC-LSOC), a groupof 15 University library employees, is seek¬ing to organize University library employ¬ees into a union to negotiate for higherwages, more fringe benefits and betterworking conditions.In a letter given to all library employeesFriday, the organizing committee stated,“We believe a union will help to improvethe quality and efficiency of the Library’sservices by securing for the employeeswages and working conditions more ade¬quate to their needs.”The formation of the union was madepossible by the “Cornell Decision” of theNational Labor Relations Board (NLRB) inJune 1970 which stated that NLRB has ju¬risdiction over private, non-profit univer¬sities and colleges because of their “mas¬sive impact” on interstate commerce.The NLRB required that 30 percent of theemployees express interest in unionizing bysigning membership cards. Afterwards, theUniversity can recognize the union. If itdoes not, the NLRB will order an electionto prove the employees’ desire to have aunion.Members of the organizing committeemet with director of University librariesHerman Fussier yesterday morning topresent him with their plan. Fussier notedBookstore open Saturdays despite petitionSteve AokiUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE: The pin striped workers will remain on the job Saturdaysdespite petition. By LESLIE LINTONNo action will be taken on a petition tokeep the University bookstore closed onSaturday mornings, according to RobertHeidrich, director of purchasing and aux¬iliary services.The bookstore has been open for the pasttwo Saturdays from 9 am to 1 pm, for thefirst time since the bookstore fire in Octo¬ber 1969.The petition, written and circulated bybookstore employees, said that the workerswould have to seek public transportation toand from campus for four hours work andwould be unable to care for their familieswith employee salaries.Since the University is virtually shutdown on Saturday “there is no need for thebookstore to remain open except on thefirst weekend of the quarter for textbooks,”the petition, signed by one fourth of theemployees, said.The petition was given to Bookstore Man¬ager Harlan Davidson, who then showed itto Heidrich. According to Heidrich, the de¬cision to keep the bookstore open was anadministrative one. Heidrich said that, “itwas thought the bookstore should be open on Saturday to improve the service to theUniversity community.”He and Davidson both say it is to beopened on a trial basis until the end ofspring quarter, at which time there will bea review of the financial aspects and com¬munity need.Davidson agreed that the bookstore losesmoney on Saturday or possibly breaks evenwith employee salaries. But he and Heid¬rich plan to have sales similar to the onelast weekend (25% off on all gifts) to boostsales.Only the book, gift, typewriter, and pho¬tographic departments will be open onweekends. The food, receiving, and requisi¬tion parts will be closed, but all employeesare required to work at least one weekendout of three at a time and a half pay rate.Some employees were hired for a 44 hourweek, but others, hired for 40 hour weeks,are being asked to adjust to the new sched¬ule or apply for a new job at the Universitypersonnel office.In a memo to employees dated January20, Davidson said that “If other suitablejobs are not available within the Univer¬sity, we reluctantly will accept two weeksnotice.”Despres sees major issue in housingBy FRED WINSTON“The overwhelming issue in the city ofChicago is the problem of subjugation, seg¬regation, and discrimination against blackChicagoans, patterns of housing segrega¬tion and everything that flows from there,”says Leon Despres, Hyde Park’s indepen¬dent alderman, now running for his fifthterm.“Chicago, residentially, is the most seg¬regated large city. We have more than amillion black Chicagoans who are pennedinto a reservation that because of the in¬voluntary housing market they find them¬selves in.”The leading liberal alderman for the past16 years, Despres was interviewed lastweek as he was driven through Hyde Parkvisiting precincts throughout his ward,which includes Woodlawn and SouthShore, as well as Hyde Park. 'The addition of South Shore, where Des¬pres is not well known in the recent reap¬portionment of the fifth ward does not seemto bother him.“I was quite satisfied for myself with theredistricting because I view it (SouthShore) as an interesting, challenging com¬munity and in general one that’s potentiallyfavorable.“The problems that it poses, however,are the problems of getting immediately toknow a new community and getting thenew community to know you.”Stopping momentarily to make a note ofa crooked street sign, Despres continued,2/The Chicago Maroon/February 2, 1971 “There is also the problem of getting a dol¬lar’s worth for a dollar spent, an issue thatis very important in a government that hasto depend on a regressive tax like the prop¬erty tax on residence.”He also cited city planning, quality andbehavior of the police, and pollution as city¬wide issues he is focusing on in his cam¬paign.An outspoken critic of Mayor RichardDaley, Despres said he would vote forRev. Jesse Jackson if he ran for mayor,explaining, “Mayor Daley’s main job is notbeing mayor of Chicago but as party chair¬man. His primary function is to serve themen and women who make money off poli¬tics.“He puts patronage first and then thecity. His strength is as head of a politicalorganization and he’s a skillfull leader. Heis not at all a good mayor, on basic issuesit’s the party first.”Despres is also focusing his campaign onthe issues of importance of personal safetyin the community and cooperation withcommunity organizations such as TheWoodlawn Organization and the HydePark-Kenwood Community Conference.Another issue Despres stressed stronglywas the importance of the independent al¬derman over a machine alderman.“A machine alderman is interested pri¬marily in patronage and prerequisites andan independent alderman doesn’t get any ofthat. But the independent alderman can de¬mand the performance by city government for its constituents. He’s responsible to hisconstituents, he has to deliver to them.”Despres faces two opponents in the Feb¬ruary 23 election: John Washington, ablack supporter of Mayor Daley who hascharged Despres with racism, and CynthiaBurke, candidate of the Socialist Worker’sParty.The local issue Despres emphasizedstrongly was community planning.“The most important issue is the qualityof the community as a good place to live inand to work in,” he said.“The communities have the same prob¬lems that the city has: problems of plan¬ning, problems arising out of the city’s seg¬regation policy, problems of working forthe future. Hyde Park needs replanning,South Shore urgently needs planning, andWoodlawn needs support for all it’s doing.”Despres, constantly leaving the car to en¬ter precinct locations and greet registrationworkers, had harsh criticism for the citytax hike and the anticipated rent hike.“The real estate tax on residential prop¬erty is an unconscionable tax. It’s an up¬side down way of collecting taxes becauseit falls most heavily on those least able topay — tenants and homeowners.“The city of Chicago budget and the oth¬er budgets, the county budgets, the boardof education budget, the park budget, areall enormous budgets, which increase theproperty tax.“And what’s unconscionable about themis that a substantial part of each one ofthose budgets is made up of the added costsof patronage. I would estimate that it siph¬ons $150 million out of the Chicago budget.“It is a fact that there is no ceiling on thereal estate tax in Chicago and the city hasthe power to continue to increase it. Themayor has done so and has used his controlof the city council to bring it about.”“The rent hike,” he continued, “is notremotely justified by the tax hike. I thinkthat the budget is unconscionable and thebudgets have increased taxes, but the renthikes are even greater than the amount ofthe tax increases. The budget increasesand the tax increases do not justify theamount of the rentage hikes.”What about tenant unions?“I think tenant unions are invaluable,”he said. “I think they’re a tremendous im¬portance. I’ve seen the difference in thefeeling that tenants have about a commu¬nity after they’re organized in a tenantunion..“I’ve seen the difference in the effective¬ness of housing code inspection after a ten¬ant union comes into effect. I’ve seen theprotection that tenant unions have given toindividual tenants who very often are pow¬erless without them. Especially they oper¬ate effectively in Hyde Park and SouthShore.”Despres believes that due to a scarcity ofvacant land in Hyde Park there is notmuch opportunity for more housing. HeHid hnwpvpr state a need for a new zoningordinance. At the present the employees who are op¬posed to the Saturday work are unsure oftheir next step. One said, “There is no feel¬ing of a dialogue situation between theworkers and the administration. But thereis also no worker solidarity. We’re not evensure of the position of many of them.“Our next step,” he added “will be to tryto get each bookstore employee to take astand on the Saturday work. Then maybewe can take a student and faculty survey ofthe actual need for Saturday hours and alsoleaflet the store on Saturday mornings.”Steve AofciBOOKSTORE EMPLOYEES. Some maygive notice because of extra day.Clark calls for unilateral arms de-escalationSteve AoklRAMSEY CLARK: The ex-attorney general spoke before a capacity crowd denouncingviolence as a panacea for world problems. By CON HITCHCOCKBefore a capacity crowd of 1000 in Man-del hall Sunday, Ramsey Clark denouncedviolence as a solution to world problemsand urged the establishment of a global po¬lice force to keep peace in the world.The attorney general under PresidentJohnson, he also called for a unilateralarms deescalation as well as a “releasingof the energies of our people” to do whatthey did best to improve this country andthe world.Clark, frequently mentioned as a possibleDemocratic Presidential candidate, admitsted in a interview with the Maroon afterthe speech that he would run if he “thoughtit was the thing to do” but hastily addedthat this was “not likely.”An outspoken civil libertarian who hadbeen criticized by FBI director J EdgarHoover as “soft as a jellyfish” and the“worst attorney general ever” expressedhis “anguish” with the current justice de¬partment for its handling of civil rights anddesegregation cases and its attitudetowards crime control, which includes theestablishment of such measures as “pre¬ventive detention” and “no-knock,” criti¬cized by many as an infringement of per¬sonal rights.Clark, 43, was critical of those who “stillseem to think we might win that war inIndochina. There is not much chance ofthis, and even if there was, it would be theworst possible result, as it would show howto win world peace, that people still try tosolve these situations by violence.”The guant Texan, speaking in clippedtones more reminiscent of a professor thana politician, also called containment of nu¬clear weapons a necessity.Stressing the impossibility that everyonecould agree on what has to be done to de-escalate, Clark said, “Why can’t we beginright now by turning around and dis¬mantling? It would be the first time thatthe world, especially the third world, wouldfollow this country for it is what they reallywant.”Calling for a strengthened United Nationsas a peace-keeping force, Clark said thatthis move could “build commitment in theRogers open, Nixon hostile to editorsEleven college editors, including a for¬mer editor of the Maroon, spoke for twohours in Washington Thursday with Secre¬tary of State William Rogers at the close ofa day long program at the State Depart¬ment that included a meeting with Presi¬dent Nixon.Maroon Senior Editor Caroline Heck 71,said of the meetings, “Our discussion withRogers was surprisingly candid and open,but the net effect of meeting Nixon was tokill any hopes that such an attitude of hon¬esty or sympathy toward students prevailswith the President.”During the day Vietnam, Cambodia, andthe Cooper-Church amendment (designedto limit US ground combat action in Cam¬bodia) were frequent topics of discussionand questioning by the students, who camefrom newspapers at schools includingNorthwestern, Colgate, Princeton, Wesleyan(Conn), Williams, Indiana University,Oberlin, Tulane, Vanderbilt, and New YorkUniversity.The day’s program was organized largelythrough the efforts of Tom O’Brien, the Col¬gate student, to secure an interview withRogers, an alumnus and trustee of thatschool.In addition to Rogers, students met withJoseph Sisco, Assistant Secretary for NearEastern and South Asian Affairs, WilliamMacomber Jr, Deputy Undersecretary forAdministration, William Sullivan, DeputyAssistant to the Secretary for East Asianand Pacific Affairs, and other high rankingState Department officials.Harper coffee shopThose students who are interested in ad¬vising the College Dean’s office on themanagement and services of the new Har¬per coffee lounge are invited to meet withMary Fisch, assistant dean of the collegeon Monday, Februtry 8, in Cobb B-23 at 9am. At one point during the day, a very highState Department officer said “I think thatthe war in Vietnam has sort of soured ev¬erything,” and that remark perhaps bestdescribed the day’s general tone.Indochina was continually brought up bythe students when talking to State Depart¬ment officials, Nixon, and Rogers, who hadtestified earlier that day to the Senate for¬eign relations committee on the Cooper-Church amendment.Despite numerous assurances, includinga statement by the President that “therehave been no violations” of the amend¬ment, it was clearly a point of dis¬agreement for the students, all but one ofwhom oppose the administration policy inIndochina.During their 25 minute White Housemeeting in the Oval Office, which was noton the original schedule, the Presidentspoke primarily on his revenue sharingplan. The students had hoped that Nixonwould speak to them about Indochina, buthad to be content with brief answers totheir interjected questions.It was in these answers that Nixon deniedviolating the Cooper-Church amendmentand said that he was committed to air ac¬tion that “is necessary to prevent the rees¬tablishment of the sanctuaries” in Cam¬bodia.Nixon also predicted that by May 1 inVietnam “our ground combat forces will bedown to about 40,000” out of approximately200,000 total troops. Ron Ziegler, the Presi¬dent’s press secretary, later denied the sec¬ond figure.Nixon put an end to the questioning byreturning to a discussion of revenue shar¬ing with John Ehrlichman, chief presiden¬tial adviser on domestic affairs. Nixon sig¬naled the end of the visit by picking up theboxes of pens that were distributed to thestudents.The students, Miss Heck felt, were clear¬ly nervous and distrustful at meeting thePresident.Few of them smiled at the small talk Nixon made as they shook hands, and whenNixon joked to the Princeton student, aMississippian, that the student was bring¬ing the Southern strategy north, the studentunsmilingly replied “Not yours.”Some of the student journalists later ex¬pressed disgust with the White House visit.“If he’d really wanted to see us in anybut a public relations move,” one studentsaid, “he would have been willing to listenand talk frankly during the brief timeabout what concerned us most: Indochina.He gives out good felt-tip pens, but that’sit.”At the State Department, discussions ofthe Indochina situation included a dialoguewith Rogers on a possible distinction be¬tween the letter and the spirit of the Coop¬er-Church amendment.Some students felt that even though theletter of the law may be unviolated, thetrust some people placed in the law to pre¬vent any further non-crisis intervention inCambodia has been betrayed.Rogers insisted that the Cooper-Churchamendment has been complied with, but heis known to sympathize with the view,stated by one State Department official,that Cooper-Church’s “intent differs de-Continued on page 7 people to strengthen governments. We haveto release energies and liberate some morepower to the people.”He was emphatic in his opposition to theVietnam war. “We could put the bomberson the ground this afternoon,” he declared.We could get out by May 1, and I meanreally get out, if we want to.”“We should tell the Vietnamese thatthere will be no aggressive action initiatedby American forces, that we will returnfire, but that’s it.”“There is no single easy solution. Wemust offer — without strings — to aid inthe rehabilitation and reclamation of theMekong delta. We owe it to them and tohumanity. Then we can redeem ourselvesin the world community as humanita¬rians.”Clark pointed out that the United States"We must give, not ex¬ploit, and we must helpother nations throughrough times, give to theextent we can, over¬come starvation, buildhomes and preserve en¬vironment..."comprises six percent of the world popu¬lation, yet consumes over half of the totalworld production, and urged this situationbe changed.“We must give, not exploit, and we musthelp other nations through rough times,give to the extent we can, overcome star¬vation, build homes, and preserve the envi¬ronment,” he said.Invoking the famous remark of PresidentKennedy, “Ask what you can do for yourcountry,” he noted that soon after Kenne¬dy’s inauguration, the justice departmentwas inundated with letters from people ask¬ing “What can I do?”“When you think about it, isn’t it ratherpathetic?” he asked. “Is there anyone outthere who can tell you what to do? Is therereally some formula?”He went on, “Never has there been apeople or a time in which the capacity tosolve all problems was so abundant if wehave the desire to do it. Hasn’t technologyliberated us from nature?“We must overcome violence in our char¬acter for the forces of change will over¬whelm us. You cannot fight down change.Change is good, a life force for somethingbetter.“We have got to get people acting inwhat they can do best. You have got to getin and make the difference, but don’t be¬lieve that Washington or something elsewill take you by the hand.”During a question and answer period,Clark, an alumnus of the law school, urgedhis audience to “relentlessly organize andshow our concern” about Indochina.He spoke of selfishness and racism aspoisonous national characteristics whichmust be eliminated from society.He praised Martin Luther King for hisuse of non-violence which King felt couldeffect the most change, coming frompeople who had been the object of the mostviolence in America.The speech, which one Student Govern¬ment member erroneously reported wasgoing to be on “Repression in America,”was sponsored by SG and not the NationalStudent Association, as first reported.NLRB may supervise electionContinued from page 1of the faculty members support the associ¬ation, and the NLRB will require an elec¬tion be held, under its supervision.In the past the NLRB had refused to as¬sert its jurisdiction in such cases involvingprivate, non-profit, educational institutions,citing the non-commercial nature of suchinstitutions.However, in a historic decision Iasi June,the NLRB decided that “... to carry out its educative functions, the university hasbecome involved in a host of activitieswhich are commercial in character.”Accordingly, the NLRB etxended its ju¬risdiction to include all private colleges anduniversities “whose operations have a sub¬stantial effect on commerce,” which theNLRB defined to be all schools with a grossannual revenue of at least $1 million. Thiswould include the University of Chicago,which had an operating budget iast yearof $151 million.February t, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/3The Chicago Maroon letters to the editorsSTEVE COOKEditor DON RATNERBusiness ManagerCON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorJUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, JIM HAEFEMEYER, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate EditorsRICK BALSAMO, USA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, ALLEN FRIEDMAN, FRANK GRUBER, ELSA HERSH,MITCH KAHN, BARRY KELLMAN, LESLIE LINTON, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE, KEITH PYLE,BRUCE RABE, FRED WINSTON.StaffCARL STOVALL CAROLINE HECK DIANA LEIFERContributing Editor Senior Editor Assistant Business ManagerFounded 'm 1992. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E 59th St, Chicago, III 60637. Phone 753-3263. Distributed oncampus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $6 per year in the U.S.Non-profit postage paid at Chiacgo, III.Right to organizeThis University, which in its classrooms teaches the most modernideas and most recent research findings, deals with a majority of itsemployees as if this were the nineteenth century. Until very recently,there has not been a single union of white collar workers on campus. Ef¬forts at unionizing in the past resulted in the intimidation of organizers.Like George Pullman or Henry Ford, the University would ratherdeal with these employees paternalistically and on an individual basisthan allow them the power of organization.The recent organization of two unions on campus — the libraryworkers and Laboratory school faculty — has important ramificationsfor white collar workers all over campus. The National Labor RelationsBoard, a federal agency, asserted jurisdiction over private, non-profituniversities because of their “massive impact” on interstate commercein the “Cornell” decision last June.Bookstore employees, hospital workers, instructors, lecturers, teach¬ing assistants, secretaries, and other unrepresented campus employeesall are in a like situation. They cannot bargain for wages, they have norecourse for grievances, they are paid what the traffic will bear. In theseways, they are worse off than the lowest paid union plumber in thecountry. We believe that every University employee deserves theadvantages of labor organization and collective bargaining,It is time the University enter the twentieth century. The admin¬istrators will howl about how poor the school is and how big the oper¬ating deficit is this year. But living costs certainly are not going down,and white collar raises in many cases have not kept up with inflation.When it feels the need to be competitive for top faculty, the Universityalways seems to be able to find the money. What about the people whoform the backbone of this institution?We urge the University recognize and bargain in good faith withthe library union and the Lab school faculty association. The librarylocal, affiliated with the National Council of Distributive Workers ofAmerica and the Alliance for Labor Action, and the Lab school faculty,affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers and the AFL-CIO,are responsible, democratic groups and we feel that their demands area reasonable attempt to represent the wishes of their constituencies.We feel that, in the long run, representative unions within theUniversity will result in a better University. Better working conditionsand better pay will keep good people and encourage better people tocome here. Or as one library employee put it, “You can’t eat prestige.” Lettuce againI find it refreshing to find a little humorin your letters department — a departmentthat is usually not too interesting, at leastin most newspapers. I allude, of course, tothe letter by Ray Tindel, in your January26 issue.By now we all know that the UnitedFarm Workers’ Organizing Committee hasbeen working to the limit of its abilities formore than five years to win justice for itsmembers, against powerlessness towardtheir wealthy, powerful employers, andagainst slavery.Mr. Tindel, in a ploy made famous by aguy called Hitler, has tried to turn thewhole thing around by laying the very realcrimes of the agri-business forces of Cali¬fornia, on “this movement,” which must bethe UFWOC.He is quite right that the farm workerswould have us believe that the employersare the enemy and the boycott is neces¬sary. The success of the grape boycottproved this amply.In case anyone doesn’t realize how MrTindel has employed his talents for humorand thinks some of what he states is thetruth, please permit me the space to brieflystate the facts, so we all can enjoy Mr Tin¬ders effort.In reality, the lettuce workers had theirunion since 1968, and were waiting at therequest of the rest of the UFWOC until thegrape growers signed contracts with theirworkers.They then claimed that UFWOC repre¬sented a majority of their (the lettucegrowers’) workers, and asked for a super¬vised, secret, binding election to prove it.The growers, according to their ownsworn - to testimony in court, invited thewestern conference of teamsters to sign“sweetheart” contracts with them.The teamsters were unable to resist thischance to harvest where they had not sewn— the harvest being composed of the duesof around 70,000 unwilling forced memberswho had their own union.The farm workers had to fight this be¬cause otherwise everywhere they becameready to ask for elections the wishes of theworkers would be similarly thwarted.The United Farm Workers have the sup¬port of 98 percent of the workers, as thevarious ranch elections prove. Mr Tindel’s‘‘probability’’ that more liberal in¬telligentsia support them than the numberof lettuce workers might be true.There are 70,000 lettuce workers, andthere should be 200 million supporters, al¬though some like Mr Tindel seem to preferto work for a return to the age of feudal¬ism. The boycott is not illegal, as Mr Tindelcalls it, and here is more humor, becauseeveryone that knows the farm worker situ¬ation realizes that California “law and or¬der” are almost invariably against theworkers. If it were illegal they’d be in jail.If Mr Tindel doesn’t know that he shouldn’tbe writing about it.The teamsters, not the UFWOC tried toforce the workers to join their union, andinsisted that the growers fire the workerswho refused to join a foreign union.Maybe Mr Tindel should tell us of whathe calls the blacklisting clause that he says“he” — this means the UFWOC — has“extorted” from the grape growers.(Aren’t semantics wonderful ) The truth isthat membership in the farm workers’ ownunion, the UFWOC, is not required in orderto work on the legitimate (union) ranches.The UFWOC is the first successful orga¬nization of farm workers in this country.Over 500 unions have been formed and bro¬ken by the powerful, wealthy corporategrowers in the past. Dow is selling severaltimes the normal amount of lettuce to theUS military as did the grape growers whenthe grape boycott was on.Another thing, I don’t think Mr Tindelshould tell jokes like his letter, becausesomeone that doesn’t know the score mightthink he is trying to “tell it like it is.”Fred DresserStaff, CaliforniaMigrant MinistryTuition bikeThe $150 tuition increase for next yearwill likely prove to be a decided error. Theadministration seems overly attached tothe assumption that an education at thisparticular university is saleable at anyprice.Working on this idea, tuition for this yearwas increased by 10 percent. To the amaze¬ment and outrage of the administration, en¬rollment decreased by a corresponding 10percent! ‘ . , . f, „I would suggest that there is a definiterelationship between these two events.Education is not economically unique. Likeany other commodity, it becomes less de¬sirable as its price increases beyond a cer¬tain point.The drop in enrollment indicates that wemay just have reached this point. More¬over, any additional increase in tuition willnot increase University income — it willsimply decrease the number of studentswilling to pay such extravagant prices!Perhaps it is time for the University torethink the rather arrogant assumptionthat it is an ivory tower and immune fromall economic events of the Real World.Barbara Kirshner ’70BULLETIN OF EVENTSAbortion Tuesday, February 2We are glad to see that Chicago Lying-in Hospital has reactedpromptly to last week’s heartening court decision to abolish legal res¬trictions on abortions up until the twelfth week of pregnancy. ChicagoLying-In appears to moving toward making a reality of the US districtcourt ruling for the many women who need and have a right to abortions.We hope that other area hospitals will follow suit, and we alsohope that Chicago Lying-In will use this occasion to start an equitableprogram that keeps in mind the financial status of the women who livenear the University. The recent merging of the separate and unequalobstetrics-gynecology clinics should set the tone here; we hope ChicagoLying-In will start off on the right foot.It’s always heartening when reform takes place on a subject thathas engendered as much protest and hard working opposition as theabortion statutes. These cruel and unconstitutional laws are beginningto crack now, but the fight isn’t over yet. Abortions must be made legalbeyond the twelfth week, and the laws must be combatted in otherstates. The announcement that abortions will be performed — legally— at Chicago Lying-In is good news; let’s keep up the fight.4 /The Chicago Maroon/February 2, 1971 ORGAN RECITAL: Ectward Mondello, University or¬ganist, Rockefeller Chapel, 12:15 pm.BIOCHEMISTRY OF CANCER LECTURE SERIES:Dr Busch. "Nucleic Acids of Cancer Cells, I," BillingsP 117. 3 pm.MEETING OF THE COLLEGE FACULTY: QuantrellAuditorium, 3:40 pm.FLICK: The Testament of Dr Mabuse, Quantrell, 8 pm.CONTEMPORARY JAZZ AND IMPROVISATION: Con¬cert Ensemble, Department of Music and alumniassociation. Roger Cooke, contrabass; Rufus Reid con¬trabass; W Thomas McKinley, electric piano; Rich¬ard Olderman, percussion; and Rodger Ryan, per¬cussion. Mandell Hall 8:45 pm.COLLOQUIUM: Pure Grammars and Pure Languages,Dr Armen Gabrielian, Department of applied analysisand computer science. University of Waterloo, Re¬search Institutes, C-113, 4 pm.OUTING CLUB MEETING: Trips will be discussed,Ida Noyes, 8 pm.SOUTH ASIA SEMINAR. Presents Michael Roberts,Lecturer in history. University of Ceylon; VisitingFulbright University of Chicago, "The IrrigationCivilization of Ancient Ceylon and Speculations onthe Reasons for the Relative Stasis in its Socio-Economic Structure," Foster Hall Lounge, 4:10 pm.FLICK: "Dead Birds," H D Proseminar, 5730 Wood-Hawn, Rm 304, 12 pm.Wednesday, February 3CARILLON TOUR AND RECITAL: Robert Lodine, Uni¬versity Carillonneur, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel,12 pm.INVITATION LECTURE SERIES: Graduate school ofbusiness, W G Barker, Jr., Sun Oil CompanyBusiness East 103, 1 pm.FLICK: Son of the Desert, (Laurel and Hardy), Cobb,7:15 and ?:M pm.LECTURE: Edward A Maser, Department of Art and the College. "Art and Artists of the Eighteenth Cen¬tury Venice." Classics 10, 8 pm.SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPLE: presents a discussionon human ecology, Claudia Carr, Dick Levins andDidk Lewontin, Soc Sii 122, 8 pm.LIBERATION LITERATURE SALE: Southern Africa,Mandel Hall Corridor 10:30 am.REHEARSAL: University Orchestra, Brass, 6:30, FullOrchestra, 7:30 pm, Mandel Hall.Thursday, February 4BIOCHEMISTRY OF CANCER LECTURE SERIES :DrBusch, "Nucleic Acids of Cancer Cells II," Dora DeLee Hall, 3 pm.NUC FILM: "The China Story-One-Fourth of Human¬ity," Cobb 7:15 and 9:30 pmUNION MEETING: First public meeting of the li¬brary workers union. Al Evanoff, organizing secretaryof NCDWA will speak. AH library workers urged toattend. 4:30 pm, First Unitarian Church, 5650 Wood-lawn.WORKSHOP /DISCUSSION: Herbert Thelen at BrentHouse, 5540 Wood lawn 8 pm.PRE-MED CLUB MEETING: Dr Frank P Stuart on"Transplantation Immunobiology," Billings M-137,m. .UIUM: "Transducing Automata and Formalges." Professor Johannes Martin, Computingi Department, University of Notre Dame, Re-Institutes, C-113, 4 pm. .E: "Political Economy of Pollution," EdwaroDartmouth College, Cobb 209, 1:30 pm.Killy, trip Information, 7:30 pm.OPEN NIGHT FOR WOMEN: VolleybaH, badminton,basketball. Ida Noyes Hall, 7-9 pm. ..GAY LIB PRESENTATION: The Harder They Fan,Quantrell, 1, 8 pm.SLUES. Ar villa G.o, «iii ..ing and rap.goyle, 9 pm.Bruce RabeEQBAL AHMAD: The arraignment of the Adlai Stevenson Institute fellow will beginMonday.project to tellAnthony Turkevich, Franck professor ofchemistry, is working on a project thatcould provide man with information aboutthe atmosphere of Mars and with the firstchemical analysis of the surface of thatplanet.Turkevich is designing a five-pound in¬strument, working on no more than fivewatts of power, which would relay data toEarth from Mars, over a distance of some100 million miles.Four years ago, Turkevich helped designa similar instrument which sent back in¬formation from the moon, and indicatedthat its surface resembled earthly basalt.This analysis has since been confirmed byhe results of the Apollo 11 and 12 and theLuna 16 missions.The instrument carried on the moonflights was a six inch cube emitting alphaparticles of known energy downwardstowards the lunar surface some threeinches away.The instrument carried on the moonflights was a six inch cube downward,toward the surface of the moon, aboutthree inches away.ANTHONY TURKEVICH[Frank professor of chemistry Most of these particles were simply bur¬ied, as expected, in the moon’s surface.However, some bounced back into the boxthrough special openings leading to detec¬tors.These detectors recorded the number andspeed of the returning particles; this infor¬mation, radioed to Earth, enabled Turkev¬ich and bis associates to analyze themoon’s surface. The analysis was possiblesince each chemical element gives a char¬acteristic response in the instrument.Current National Aeronautics and SpaceAdministration (NASA) plans call for thesoft-landing of an instrument package onMars in 1975 and Turkevich hopes that thealpha-scattering instrument will be addedto the presently approved payload. To mod¬ify the lunar instrument for Martian condi¬tions and develop a prototype for prelimi¬nary studies, Turkevich recently received agrant from NASA.A miniaturized prototype of the Mars in¬strument is being constructed in the Re¬search Institutes Building, which housesthe Laboratory for Astrophysics and SpaceResearch (LASR) and its staff, a groupwhich has helped place instrument pack¬ages aboard more than 20 satellite andspace probe missions.When completed, the instrument will betested under Martian conditions created inthe LASR. These conditions include a car¬bon dioxide atmosphere pressure of aboutone percent of the pressure on Earth andtemperature ranges expected on Mars:from 100 to minus 200 degrees Farenheit.Thanasis Economu, physicist in the En¬rico Fermi Institute and in the LASR and acolleague of Turkevich on the project, ex¬pects the the value of the information ob¬tained from Mars to be more importantthan that from the Moon. The instrumentwill be sensitive to most elements and willcontain only one moving part.“We would like to have no moving parts,as we did on the Surveyor flights,” EdBlume, instrument designer and a manwhu has worked on the alpha-scattering in- Ahmad suspects FBIagents in Robie raidThe arraignment of Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute fellow Eqbal Ahmad and six otherscharged in an alleged “Washington’s birth¬day conspiracy” will begin next Monday inHarrisburg, Pa. The trial is expected to be¬gin in August,No demonstrations have been planned lo¬cally.In a Maroon interview last Thursday Ah¬mad disclosed a suspicion that governmentagents may have served as “agents provo¬cateurs” in the late night raid on the Ste¬venson Institute offices in Robie House lastMay 7, and that these agents may havestolen his papers.A leader of the “trashing” has emphat¬ically denied that “agents provocateurs”caused the raid.But he said that he also had suspectedthat government agents infiltrated thegroup of raiders, and he speculated thatthey may have stolen the papers, since hecould not otherwise account for theirapparent disappearance.Ahmad’s disclosure came in the contextof the Maroon interview published last Fri¬day, but the segment dealing with the raidwas erroneously omitted.When asked about possible directions forthe peace movement, Ahmad said, “Gener¬ally it is my feeling that the anti-war ele¬ments must remain non-violent becauseviolence in this country at this stage by ananti-war group can only help the adminis¬tration — which is one reason why they areso keen to put agents provocateurs in radi¬cal groups.”He was then asked if he thought this wasthe case in the Robie house raid.“I suspect that this was the case in theAdlai Stevenson Institute attack,” Ahmadsaid, “because I was generally surprisedthat my papers were the only ones thatwere absolutely missing from the Adlai Ste¬venson Institute office.“I’m not saying that all the studentswere involved in it — by no means theyabout Marsstrument for eight years, said.“But, because the flight to Mars will be11 months long, the protective films in theinstrument must be preserved. After land¬ing, we will open shutters on the sourcesand it is this shutter mechanism which willbe the only moving part,” he explained.A further adaptation of the instrumentwill involve changing the geometry so as tofit much closer to the surface of Mars thanthe three or four inches which separatedthe bottom of the instrument from the sur¬face of the moon.Because the moon has no atmosphere,the alpha particles reacted only with thelunar surface. On Mars, however, the in¬strument will first analyze the atmospherebetween the bottom of the instrument andthe surface of the planet and then use thisinformation to get the correct analysis ofMars’ surface. were not FBI agents. I’m 100 per cent surethat a majority of them could not haveknown that they had been infiltrated.“But my own feeling is that my papers’disappearance was not unrelated to the factthat another two months later, or perhapsthe same month, my house was beingsearched in New York by the FBI, and sixmonths later I was being indicted on veryserious charges of conspiracy.”Ahmad emphasized that he was not spe¬cifically accusing any individuals in theraid.A leader of the raid dismissed the possi¬bility of “agent provocateurs.” He said thatthose who urged walkouts from a Mandelhall mass meeting to attack Robie housewere also people who had worked since theprevious spring break researching thepamphlet “Pahlavi: Friend or Foe,” whichaccused the Stevenson Institute of assistingneo-imperialism.He also said that he could account for theactivities of the instigators during the raid,and that all of them centered their attackon the third floor, around the offices of Wil¬liam Polk, Stevenson Institute director.“No one knew where Eqbal Ahmad’s of¬fice was — nobody knew anything aboutit.” He said raiders were not seeking any ofAhmad’s paper, though they had planned tosteal papers from other fellows, particular¬ly Polk.Ahmad said that his papers, consisting ofmanuscripts on Algeria, Bourguiba Habibben-Ali (a Tunisian leader) and Vietnamcontained in two pamphlet boxes, were sto¬len from a desk in an open area on theground floor.The leader said that he had thought Ah¬mad had a locked office. “None of thedoors were broken down in that area,” hesaid.However, the leader admitted, “It’s en¬tirely possible that there were FBI agentsin the raid — I’ve suspected that since lastspring. Robie House (a national landmark)is protected under federal law — there’s areason that they would be there.”He said his suspicions began soon afterthe raid when someone told him that hehad overheard a campus security guardsaying that there were “three policeagents” in the raid.The leader also said that someone ap¬proached him with a request to return Ah¬mad’s papers. At that time he askedaround among those involved in the raidfor the papers, but he could not locatethem.However, Ahmad said that he had re¬ceived a message saying that the paperswould be returned if he submitted to a po¬litical “interrogation.” He did not follow upthe message.The raid leader admitted the possibilitythat the papers could have been stolen byagents. “They must have known exactlywhat they wanted and went and got it whilethe rest of us were in another area,” hesaid.Library promotions ‘irrational1Continued from page 1cost of living, in addition to regular annualcontracts “to provide for periodic adjust¬ments in salary in relation to the rise in theincrements and merit raises”.The union wants salaries to be deter¬mined by length of employment, type ofemployment, competence and merit.The organizing committee nationally alsoaccused the University of lacking a rationalsystem of promotion and transfer, oftenfilling vacancies from the outside before at¬tempting to fill them from within.The union will seek a system whereby, infilling vacancies, preference will be givento current employees and any new employ¬ees must be paid the minimum startingsalary in that job classification.They will also seek, through union con¬tract, a provision that “no worker can bedischarged without cause” and that “dis¬charges will be subject to union grievancemachinery.” According to another pamphlet issued bythe organizing committee, all professionallibrarians at the University hold academicappointments which “are renewed annuallyand subject to termination at any time bythe University.”By giving tenure to the professional li¬brarians, the pamphlet says, the librarianswill be able to “apply themselves to theirduties in the proper spirit of disinterestedprofessionalism.”The union will also negotiate for a newinsurance plan which will give employeesincreased hospitalization, sick pay and doc¬tor benefits, and will increase the employ¬ees’ pension.Other issues the union will bargain forinclude a 50 percent tuition reduction forUniversity courses, a child care center foremployees’ pre-school children, increasedvacations, more holidays, and guaranteedleaves of absence under certain circum¬stances.February 2, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5Boucher community program rated successfulBy ELSA HEESHAlthough the opening of Boucher gym toneighborhood youth launched a flurry ofcontroversy, the University-sponsored com¬munity recreation program is now ratedgenerally successful.The year-round recreation program forneighborhood youth is an extension of the“Summer 70” program at Ida Noyes.Boucher residents support the program.One resident claimed that the participantswere “quite quiet” and did not bother him.Although several other residents wishedthat they had been fully informed of theprogram in advance, they do not mind theprogram’s use of Boucher’s gym facilities.They feel, however, that there should bemore than one guard to insure that the par¬ticipants do not run through the dorm, andto discharge possible vandalism.House President John Fenner 71, whotold the Maroon last quarter that “thehouse does not back it,” said Sunday that,as long as the program continues to have ahigh percentage of younger children, thereshould be no problems.“The younger ones are here for the fun,”he said. If there were a higher percentageof older youths, Fenner said, they mightwish to run through the dorm or be tempt¬ed to vandalize. However, he added so farthe participants are “well managed.”Herb Smith, program director, said thatthere have been no problems since the pro¬gram began January 8.A guard is stationed between the gymarea and the rest of the dorm, under strictorders to keep the youths away from theBoucher residents and vice-versa.In addition, the participants are not per¬mitted to enter and leave the building bythe main door, but must use a side en¬trance.At first, Smith stated this separation con¬fused some younger children, because theyhave connections with Boucher residentsthrough tutoring and other community ser¬vice programs.It was hard for some of them to under¬stand why they cannot enter the dormwhile the recreation program is in prog¬ress, although they can at other selectedtimes, he said.Fenner suggested that, although it isgood that Boucher’s facilities can serve theneighborhood, “there are non-Universityfacilities that can be used.” He referred ' Frank GruberBOUCHER GYM: These neighborhood youngsters can now enjoy the facilities of Boucher gym.specifically to the YMCA and the HydePark Neighborhood Club (HPNC).However, Smith noted, “Kids can’t paythe fee at other agencies.” The program’sparticipants confirmed this. One 16-yearold reported that this type of programwould cost him $20 at the “Y,” and Bou¬cher is closer.Although the University attempted tonegotiate with the “Y,” the HPNC, and oth¬er Hyde Park organizations to share costsand facilities, only the Unitarian churchand the Gargoyle responded favorably.Smith pointed out, “There was no reasonfor us to postpone meeting the recreationalneeds of community youth while we hassledat a higher level.”For this reason, he explained, the pro¬gram was started at Boucher, and the Uni¬ versity has not aggressively tried to gainsupport from other agencies.The program’s $15,000 cost, which doesnot include Smith’s salary, is financedthrough the general University fund.Over 150 neighborhood youths arepresently registered for the program, andthere is room for about 100 more. Smithstated that many of those already regis¬tered are “new” and did not participate inthe similar “Summer 70” program at IdaNoyes.These children stated that they had heardabout the program from friends, or from“Chuck,” who is an engineer at Boucher.Pat Turner, one of eight staff members,termed the participants “enthusiastic.”Her claim is supported by high attendance.One participant considered the program necessary to meet people, and added, ‘ Wehave fun here.”A 15-year old boy said that it was betterthan hanging around street corners, and hisfriend agreed. “It’s good for the people inthe neighborhood — it’s something to do.”Ninety-two of the children in the programare from 10 to 14 years old and the remain¬ing 87 are 15 and older. Program activitiesconsist of basketball, swimming, volleyball,and field trips, which are supervised by apaid staff and volunteers.The activities are co-ed, instructional,and recreational, and take place from 5 to 9pm on Fridays, and from 10 am to 4 pm onSaturdays. University students may par¬ticipate upon presentation of their studentID.ABOUT THE MIDWAYm jEJ® -■ . ■11 1i.gjrS j wn 11.I j# r |P Itr if ji.if f/.MTp6/The Chicago Maroon/February t, 1971 Reynolds club floodThe bursting of a water pipe on the sec¬ond floor of Reynolds club Saturday nightflooded the south lounge and damaged theceiling of the barber shop. There is no esti¬mate yet as to the extent of the damage.According to Reynolds club managerRobert Nelson, the barber shop will beclosed for about a week while a new ceilingis put in.The south lounge will also be closed fora week, for some painting and refinishing.The furniture and rugs are also soaked, al¬though there is no structural damage.Nelson added that $200 worth of ciga¬rettes stored in the basement were de¬stroyed.LasciviousnessThe second annual Lascivious CostumeBall, SVNA’s winter social extravaganza,will be held Saturday night February 13 atIda Noyes Hall.This year’s event, according to impre¬sario Frank Malbranche, promises to bemuch better than last year. SVNA has sub¬mitted a budget of almost five thousanddollars to CORSO to finance this year’s fes¬tivities.Among SVNA’s plans for the evening areperformances by a bona fide stripper, dem¬onstrations by various exotic dancers andtheir musical accompaniments, and abreath-taking exhibition of Greco-Romanwrestling by athletes drenched !n olive oil.Also among the affair’s highlights will bea pornographic film festival and music pro¬vided by as many bands as can be fittedinto the electrical outlets. • Last year’s LCB attracted nearly 1200persons.The Wash Prom, which has had difficultyin finding support, has been cancelled thisyear.Study skillsCollege advisor John Guegan is cur¬rently offering a not-for-credit courseaimed at helping students improve theirstudy skills. The seven week course meetseach Tuesday evening at seven thirty inCobb 115, and lasts for ninety minutes.The course, dubbed a Study Skills Prac-ticum, was developed over the past tenyears by the instructor and includes topicslike how to extend concentration and re¬duce distractions; organizing and develop¬ing extended writing assignments; and howto prepare for taking examinations.The course was initiated last quarter andwas attended by forty students, most ofwhom were freshmen. Interested studentsmay register for the course in Gates-Blake111 or at the class meeting.Pathology workshopPracticing pathologists are currentlyparticipating in a five-day intensive courseand workshop on tumors of the blood andblood-forming organs at the Center for Con¬tinuing Education.The presentations deal primarily with thediagnostic aspects and the clinical manage¬ment of leukemias and tumors of lymphnodes and spleen.They are expected to provide pathologistsand advanced senior residents with in-depth disrussimv! of the problems relatingto this area. The scientific director of the tutorial isDr Henry Rappaport, professor and direc¬tor of the division of surgical pathology.In the workshops, participants will exam¬ine slides that were discussed in the lectures. Those attending are invited to brinjdifficult cases from their own experienc*for consultation.All members of the tutorial staff are cur¬rent or past members of Dr Rappaport’straining program in neoplastic hematopathology which is supported by a traininggrant from the National Cancer Institute olthe United States Public Health Service.VaccinationsThe University health service is performing small-pox vaccinations and otheiimmunizations on weekdays between 1 ptfand 4 pm in room S 119 of Billings hospitalAll University faculty, students and staffas well as their dependents, are eligibleThere will be a charge of $4 per injectiorfor non-students.Routine immunization of small childrerand complete physical examinations annot available.WHPK guideCampus radio station WHPK-FM, 88.3has issued a program guide for winteiquarter.The station’s programming features locanews and music, including jazz, blues an<heavy rock. Tapes of important campusconcerts, lectures and other events wilalso be broadcast.Free program guides are available in tnidorms, the bookstore, WHPK, dim neigh¬borhood stores.Students learn US approval in 63 Viet coupContinued from page 3pending on which member of Congressyou’re talking to.”The two hour session with Rogers includ¬ed discussions of topics ranging from for¬eign affairs to the dismissal of former Sec¬retary of the Interior Walter Hickel to theuse of heroin.On the subject of Hickel, it is known thatRogers feels Nixon did not dismiss Hickelon the issue of pollution, but because ofincompatibility.Rogers is also known to feel that Hickelpractically asked to be dismissed throughcertain actions unusual for a governmentofficial.Rogers is known to be interested but per¬plexed by the college generation, particu¬larly its attitude toward drugs and towardprotest. After the session, one student re¬marked that Rogers had reminded him ofstudents’ parents: a nice man who did notunderstand.The students were interested and 1m-YOUR SAFE, LEGAL NEW YORKCAN BE DONE TOMORROW!(212) 222 6023 or 222 6026Mon'.-Fri., 9-5(212) PL7-3170 24 hr*., 7 day*A registered nurse schedules you atlowest available cost.Save td for future reference PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian Food*Compare the Price!1460 E. 53rd 643-2800L;WED€UVER jpressed by a brief lecture by a State De¬partment officer on the history of the diplo¬matic and strategic issues in Indochina.One official said to the students “theFrench on 1945 and 1946 were operating inthe most stupid and anachronistic fashionin attempting to turn back the clock onehundred years.”In dealing with the North Vietnamese,the official continued, it must be under¬stood that “to them we are the lineal des¬cendants of the French.”The students learned of tacit Americanapproval of the 1963 coup that deposed andeventually assassinated South Vietnamesepresident Ngo Dinh Diem.Those who were relying on the UnitedStates as they plotted the coup to over¬throw Diem “were correct in that they hadAmerican acquiescence,” one State Depart¬ment officer said. “We never of coursethought that it would reach the stage ofhim being actually assassinated.”Students also discussed with other StateDepartment officers the Middle East situ-CLIP AND SAVELOW COST, SAFE, LEGALABORTIONIN NEW YORKSCHEDULED IMMEDIATELY(212) 490-3600 ation, Africa, and the issue of principles inforeign affairs.“Moral principles in foreign policy arevery numerous. The difficulty with moralprinciples in foreign policy is that there areso many,” said one official, citing theMideast situation as an example.One officer characterized the Mideast as“more dangerous than Vietnam. The likeli¬hood of major power involvement is veryunlikely indeed” in Vietnam, but not in theMideast.The students’ reception at the State De¬partment was generally cordial. There waslittle expression of annoyance with studentprotest except from one officer who said“We shouldn’t argue so much whether Viet¬ nam is right or wrong,” and insisted “Youdon’t get peace in this world by wishing forit. You don’t get it by wandering aroundwith placards. You get it by enduring.”The program was something of an ex¬periment for the State Department, whichis considering similar programs.The students were largely satisfied withtheir sessions at the State Department, butpessimistic about the Nixon administrationin general.They also felt that State Department in¬fluence with the President is not great.“After all,” one student wryly remarked,“how could anybody interested in reallytalking and listening to us count for muchwith Nixon?”Abortion referrals risePROFESSIONAL SCHEDULING SERVICE. Inc545 Fifth Ave , New York City 10017There is i fee for our serviceSTUDENT SPECIALSunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday1-31 through 2-46 PACK OF POP WITHORDER OF ANY LARGE PIZZAwith a University I.D.NICKY'S1208 East 53rd StreetFAirfax 4-5340DELIVERIES & CARRY-OUTS ONLY Continued from page 1psychiatrist fees cost her some $800.Local abortion referral services and lob¬bying groups have stepped up action inlight of the Friday court ruling.The Clergy Consultation Service forProblem Pregnancies (CCS) is contactingChicago hospitals and medically licensedclinics to arrange low-cost in-state abor¬tions.Women past the 16th week of pregnancycan get legal abortions in Tokyo, Rev Par¬sons added.“The problems before us now,” said RevParsons, who is also vice-chairman of theHyde Park-based Illinois Citizens for theMedical Control of Abortion (ICMCA), “are will the hospitals be able to accommodatethe desired number of abortions, will thelegislature now feel free to bring the Il¬linois law in conformity with the federaljudgment and will the legislature now takesteps to provide for the medical care ofpeople whose pregnancies now exceed 12weeks?”The ICMCA has sent teams of women,physicians and lawyers to discuss the issuewith state legislators, he said, and the re¬sponse has been surprisingly positive.The CCS is anxious to get feedback fromwomen about the ease or difficulty theyencounter in obtaining Illinois abortions,”said Rabbi Max Ticktin, another of ChicagoCCS’s 45 volunteer counselors.SIX PLAYSFeb. 5,6,7 Reynolds ClubTickets $1 at R.C. DeskCOLLEGE WINTER WEEKEND RETREATFebruary 6-7There will be a College Winter Weekend Retreat ro Williams Bay, Wisconsin, site of the GeorgeWilliams College Camp, on Saturday and Sunday, February 6-7. Facilities at the camp include skating,sledding, tobaggoning and snowmobiles. Alpine, one of southern Wisconsin's leading ski slopes, is just afifteen minute drive from Williams Bay. There is a separate fee for skiing, but all other activites plus mealsare included in the price of the weekend.Buses will leave from Woodward Court at 9:00 a.m. on Saturday, February 6, and will return fromWisconsin Sunday afternoon. The cost to each student will be $14.00. (Students whose financial aidexceeds $3,000 per year may see Mr. Vice in Gates-Blake . 13 about a special rate.)Any undergraduate who wishes to go on the College Winter Weekend Retreat should go to Gates-Blake 113 on Monday, February 1, after 9 a.m. to register. You must bring with you $14.00 in cash orcheck. Because space is limited we must accept reservations on a first-come, first served basis.mmF leu retieJust like your dream.Timeless.Reaching the Infinityof a thousand stars.Reflecting a heritage of loveas old as time.As young as the dawn.Fieurette by Orange Blossom.; l-J 890- . A JOT V1 VJEWELERS * SINCE 1SSStvLKl.KttN PLAZA YORKTOWN Cut Your Cost of Living By CuttingOut This Coupon.! Bluejean Bellbottoms — 5 4.50 j12 Never Iron Long sleeve shirts.... $ 7.49 ii ;| offer expires February 12 *i !John's Mens Wear 1459 E. 53rdPUriiCy’S ALL-NIGHT SPCUPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREFEB 5HOUR OF WOLFINGMAR BERGMAN'S FEB. 6PUTNEY SWOPEFEB. 12 FEB. 13ANGEL LEVINE LET IT BEZERO MOSTEL THE BEATLESFEB. 19 FEB. 20TASTE THE BLOOD MADWOMAN OFOF DRACULA CHAILLOTCHRISTOPHER LEE KATHARINE HEPBURNFEB. 26 FEB. 27END OF THE ROAD TRILOGYTRUMAN CAPOTE'S TRUMAN CAPOTE'SMAR. 5 MAR. 6MORE BATTLE OF ALGIERS1 noun si.» | Give the Gift of LoveUaientine Special1 5X7 Portrait inLIVING COLOR $7.50|Call for your appointment now) MU 4-7424CORONA STUDIOS1312 E. 53rd St.(Hyde Park's oldest & finest portrait studio)SS=S=iAl's Tire &Supply Co.8104 Cottage GroveHU 3-8585All Major BrandsSpecial Discounts to U. ofC. Students & Faculty &EmployeesBra kes-Shocks-Wheelalignment-tune ups-mufflersWholesale DistributersU. S. Royal • Firestone • B.F. Goodrich • DelcoBatteries • GooJyeui STARTSTONIGHT!Two Great W.C. FieldsFlicksNEVER CHEAT ANHONEST MAN&NEVER GIVE A SUCKERAN EVEN BREAKTHE BIOGRAPH THEATRE5433 N Uwtel" W 3-4133Plan to visit u* soon. Admissionat all times is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends.February 2, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/7// I may not be another Aristotle, but we can't tell yetCLASSIFIEDSClassified ad deadlines are 10:00AM Monday for Tuesday's Paper,and 4:00 PM Wed. for the Fridaypaper.The cost is 50*/line the first run¬ning and 40" for repeated in¬sertions for University people,-75‘/line and 60"/repeat line fornon University people.Strictly Per¬sonals are run for everyone at30" /line.Ads must be paid in advance sobring them to our office, Rm 304Ida Noyes, or mail them in with acheck.FOR SALEDUAL Turntables new VERYCHEAP Blank tape. BOB CZES-CHIN, BJ 836.LIBERATION LIT SALE (SouthernAfrica) Mandel Hall, 10:30-2:30, Wed& Thurs, Feb 38,4.'66 VW, Blue snrf, W-W, AM-FM, R-Wind opens, trlr hitch, engine lock,stone grds, S-V mirror, S-belts, $800.Call 38527Portable Stereo-684-2668 eves.Save $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 363-4555.Water beds from $70. Health foodold furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2926 N. Broadway. 248-1761.PEOPLE WANTEDSingers for new choral group atHillel. 1st meeting, Feb 7, 4:30 pm.752-1127.CREATIVE TEACHER sought byparents forming school for 10-14 yr.olds Near West suburbs. Phone:386-7309 or 848-1238.Need 1 or 2 fern. rmts. Close tocampus. Own rm. $67. Judy M. 955-4545 days. City getting to you? Join us! Feb.19-21. Camp Chi, Wise. Call 346-6700,x421. Cost: $15.Gym Teacher to conduct classeswith emotionally disturbed children.Must have experience with children,knowledge of games and activities.30 hours a wk. Call 643-7300 x. 34.Rmmt. wanted for spacious S. Shorehouse, own room, near bus. Call493-7326.Study on the iob. Desk clerk inSouth Shore. Will Train. Hrs. 4-12mid; 3,4, or 5 day Wk. Call 374-45019 am 8, 4 pm.MENTAL HEALTH FREAKSVolunteers needed to work with dis¬turbed children, probably Sun. after-noon. Call 493-3284.PEOPLE FOR SALERUSSIAN INSTRUCTION by nativeteacher. Trial lesson, no charge.236-1423 or 363-2174.Drum Lessons Hyde Park Studiofor beginners. 955-0459, -2270TYPING SERVICE HY 3-3755MOVING?Licensed mover 8, hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480 ABORTIONSSPACEOwn large bdrm in apt 54 8. Dorch$80 mo. 667-1501 eves.Lge pvt rm, bath, kit facilities forwoman exchange for house-child¬watching, dishwashing, bird feed¬ing. So Sh home. Campus bus. CallMrs. Sherman 324-2050.Sublet 3 mos fr Mar 29, 4 turn rmsnr 53 ST. BU8-0675 REFSSAVE-Take over my lease in any Uof C dorm-thru June. 955-6587.Room, pvt. bath, near campus, $10-wk. D03-2521.WANTEDAdult desires 4-5 room apt or coachhouse. Refs. 548-4251.Going to Bloomington, Indiana Feb¬ruary 5? Ride needed. Will shareexpenses 8, conversation. CallLinda, 324-1794.THEATRE FIRSTpresents"THIEVESCARNIVAL"Delightful Co/nedy byJean AnouilhDirected byKenneth MacCowanWeekend Perf.Thru Feb. 14Fri. & Sat., 8:30;Sun., 7:30 p.m.$2.00 - STUDENT DISCOUNTAdm. with ID, $1.25AT THE ATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport 463-3099 i CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998 i?Hos what you need from a $10▼used 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom1Tcarpet. Specializing in Remnants1 *4* Mill returns at a fraction of the^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with this|AdJ FREE DELIVERYPEOPLE WHO KNOW StudentCALL ONJAMES DiscountSCHULTZ ModelCLEANERS CameraCUSTOM QUAUTYCLEANING 1342 E. 55th10% student discount 493-67001363 E. 53rd St. Most complete photo shop752-6933 on South sideiStraight Talk:Your diamond is at...l: FINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA^ | DON'T GET RIPPED OFF by out-of-state abortion referral services.Abortions under 12 wks are now le¬gal in Illinois. Or for FREE referralservice right in Hyde Park, call theClergy Consultation Service forProblem Pregnancies, 667-6015.GAY LIBThe GAY LIB Coffee House is aliveand well at the Blue Gargoyle 5655S. Univ. Sat 2-6 7:30 pm.JOFFREY DISCOUNTCOUPONJOFFREY BALLET Student dis¬count coupons now available at theMaroon office, rm 304 IDA NOYESHALL. Tickets only for 1-30 8, 1-31,Mats; 2-3 8> 2-4 eves; and 2-7 mat 8<eve. EDUCATION and the (Real Live)PERSON.Thursday 8pm 5540 Woodlawn AveEscape and Revitalize: 2-19-21 CampChi, Wisconsin Dells. Call FI6-6700x421. 115'SHIR-New Choral Group at HillelHouse. 1st meeting, Sun 2-7, 4:30pm.5715 Woodlawn.E.A. Maser speaks on "Art and Art¬ists of 18th Century Venice" Wed. at8pm in Classics 10.CARMINABURANAComing February 19, 20, 26, 27.YOGA Poses Concentr Meditatn.Quit drugs Single-group classes. SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155GESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPSat. Feb. 6 noon to midnight, Sun.Feb. 7 noon to 6 pm. Limited to ten.$20. Lorrie Peterson, experiencedleader. Has studied at Esalen. 288-3541.CEF PRESENTSBondarchuk's War and Peace 18,11.The Russian adaption of Tolstoy'snovel will be shown in two parts inMandel Hall on Feb 6 8. 7. Eachpart will be shown only once at8:00. $1.00BOGIE LIVES!GAY LIB presents THE HARDERTHEY FALL with Humphrey Bogart8< Rod Steiger Thur 2-4 8 pm Quan-trell, $1.SCENESPre-med Club Mtg. 7:30pm ThurFebruary 4, Billings M-137 Dr.Frank P. Stuart on "Trans¬plantation Immunobiology".Workshop-Discussion with HerbertThelen. Thursday 8pm 5540 Wood¬lawn Ave.Bag-lunch discussion: "Church Aidto Liberation Movements: Reportfrom South Africa" Dick Sales,Gates-Blake 321 Feb. 9 12 Noon.Bring a Lunch."THE ARTS 8. THE ARTIST IN ATECHNOLOGICAL AGE" discussionwith Chicago Sculptor Egon Weiner,Fri Feb 5, 8pm Crossroads 5621Blackstone. Weldome! ABORTIONINFORMAT I ONANDASS I STANCECALL (215) 878 • 580024 hours 7 daysFOR TOTALLY CONFI¬DENTIAL INFORMATION.Wi reeorrrrend only:tk» most reputable physicians' doc¬tors offering fair and reasonableprices; services which will be com.pletely within the 'aw: services per¬formed at accredited hospitals.Lagal Abortions Without DelayARS I NT.DR. AARON ZIMBIEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 All Bottoms$8 - $10now$6.90BOTTOMS522216 Harperhrs. 11-9 DailyMALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSORDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. "INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURESAND PERSONAL GROWTH" withHerbert ThelenThursday 8pm, 5540 Woodlawn Ave.PERSONALSLOOKING FOR MEANING?Try a weekend at Camp Chi.Feb. 19-21. Fi6-6700, x421.Remember when your Hum Classwas on page 1348 In War and Peace.while you were beginning 64 andthought Natasha was one of Napo¬leon's generals. Find out what hap-pened. Feb 6 8, 7 8:00.Hiking and backpacking equipment.Free catalog. Timberline Trails, 215Zelley, Moorestown, N.J. 08057.Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus. Bob Tabor,363-4555.Chess like love, like music has thepower to make men happy. Monday7:00 pm. Ida Noyes.ABORTION is legal in NY. For re-ferral to accredited hospitals call212-633-9825 6 pm to 6 amAfter dropping a heavy load in thejohn, the Idiot King said "Hey man,I've got to get my shit together."Stay tuned for the continuing adven¬tures of the Idiot King, same time,same station. Writers' Workshop. (Plaza 2-8377)—‘STRICTLY PERSONALCARLOS RODOLFO GARCIA DFIGADO, Te Quiero y solo deseo estarcontigo para siempre. Eres lo unicoen el mundo que me import*Quiero Hacerlo Contigo. mporTaFRIENDS: I swear | lost bv aotTdam glasses. They're black and in ablack case. Return BJ 234.“PREGNANCY'PROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDMONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERI/ICES ARE FREECALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2k HRS.Department of MusirCONTEMPORARY IAZZ ANDIMPROVISATION ENSEMBI FTUESDAYFEBRUARY 2 MANDELHAM8:30 P.M.Adm: $2 ($1.50. Fae. & Staff ); student. SITickets at Concert Office. 5835 University Ave.: orat \1andel Hall on evening of concert.A symposium (free) will precede the concert from6:15 - 7:15 P.M.We want to talk to youabout a career in law...without law school.When you become a Lawyer s Assistant,you II be doing work traditionally done bylawyers — work we think you 11 findchallenging and responsible. AndLawyer s Assistants are now so criticallyneeded that The Institute for ParalegalTraining can offer you a position in thecity of your choice and a higher salarythan you d expect as a recent collegegraduate. You'll work with lawyers oninteresting legal problems — and therewards will grow as you do.A representative of The Institute forParalegal Training will conduct inter¬views on;THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11Inquire at Placement Officefor exact location of interviewThe Institute forParalegal Training13th lloor 401 Walnut St Phila Pa 19106(215) WA 5-0905Contemporary European FilmsMandel Hall WAR AND PEACE -1 & II Feb. 6 -17-118:00 Only.HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - Birch$45/TON DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESpecial Student Rates************** Corn'tf 3(nriii ** 1A4S» SStkSTRSCr ** CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *J Rhone FA 4-7651 j*************b The Chicago Maroon/February 2. 1971 ^Jempfe a i a l SsraeiProudly PresentsANDREW F0LDI in concertBASS-BARITONEIn His Triumphant Return FromLa Scala, San Carlo, Vienna State OperaDR. ROBERT LODINE, AccompanistSUNDAY. FEBRUARY 7th. 19717.00 P. M.Presented AtTEMPLE ISAIAH ISRAEL7 79? E*st Hyde Perk BoulevardCALL WAgner 4-1234 General Admission $2.50Student Admission $1.50 FELLOW STUDENTSRecently, the leader of the Jewish Defense League, Rabbi Meir Kahane,and several other league activists were indicted by a federal grand juryin New York on various charges stemming from the JDL's harassment ofRussian officials over the discrimination and persecution of RussianJews ... and the arrests continue.No matter what you may feel about their tactics or ideology, thesebrave men and women need support and money for their defense.Please Help. Correspondence and contributions can be sent to the:JDK LEGAL DEFENSE FUND101 Vi GREENLEAFEVANSTON, ILLINOIS 60202NEVER AGAIN, or call mornings, 312—475-5139JACK NUSAN PORTER, Co-ordinator of JDL Defense Fund,founder of tho radical Jewish Student Movement,Northwestern University and instructor in sociology.STEVE GURNER, Jewish Defense League,youth coordinator, Chicago.