The Chicago MaroonVolume, 79, Number 35 The University of Chicago Tuesday, February 9,1971Protest against Laotian invasion plannedBruce RabeANTI-WAR PLANNING: Following a meeting in Mandel Friday, students met in workshops to discuss future action against the in¬vasion of Laos. A demonstration is scheduled for Wednesday noon in Quantrell.Grad school applications decreaseBy PAUL BERNSTEINApplications to University graduate divi¬sions have decreased this year, while thenumber of applicants to its professionalschools has increased, following a trendthat has been noticeable over the last fiveyears.The drop in applications to graduate divi¬sions could create financial problems, forthe University if it results in a smaller en¬rollment next year than anticipated in bud¬get calculations.Graduate division applications decreased26 percent from 1967 to 1970. Indicationsare that they will decrease another 10 to 15percent this year, although late appli¬cations continue to come in.Deans of students in the divisions, whoare receiving applications directly for thefirst time this year, attribute the drop tothe reported lack of jobs for PhD’s and thescarcity of fellowship funds.In the division of the biological sciences,for example, dean of students Joseph Cei-thaml sees a drop of about 10 percent inapplications.“This is associated with the fact that theamount of fellowship money is much small¬er this year,” Ceithaml said. “And the fore¬cast is for even less in future years.”Federal fellowship and traineeship fundsadministered through the University deanof students office have dropped $1 millionover the last two years. This year’s figurewill decrease another $500,000 according toi dean of students Charles O’Connell.Applications to the physical sciences divi¬sion dropped 40 percent between 1967 and1970, but are up slightly this year.Dean of students Sol Krasner said thisdid not necessarily mean more studentswere interested in physical sciences. In¬stead he suggested that the same numberof students might be applying to moreschools.“Most physical sciences students knowthat these are not prosperous times,” saidKrasner. “It’s harder to get admitted withaid to one school, so they may be applyingto more schools.”Krasner also predicted that a smallerpercentage than last year of those admittedwould actually decide to matriculate.Applications to the humanities divisiondecreased 35 percent from 1967 to 1970, andare down 10 percent this year, according to>dean of students Nancy Helmbold.Mrs Helmbold cited both high tuitioncosts and the tight job situation for PhDsas reasons for the decline.( In the social sciences division, appli¬cations at this time are down 15 to 18 per¬cent from last year, said dean of studentsReuben Smith. In addition to the fellowship and job mar¬ket situations, Smith noted that with theend of the post-war “baby boom” fewerstudents were at the age at which to applyto graduate school.He emphasized, however, that there wasno correlation between the number of appli¬cations and of new students matriculatingthe following year.“This academic year (1970-71), thoughapplications had been down a little over1969, in fact our new student matriculationwas up over 1969-70,” he said.“This starkly underlines that the declinein enrollment is related to in-residence stu¬dents,” Smith concluded.Total University enrollment was at 7496for autumn 1970, down from 7944 in autumn1969. The decline was sharpest in the grad¬uate divisions, which had 3104 students in1969 and 2681 in 1970.Because budget calculations for fiscal1971 were based on an expected enrollmentof 8300, the University lost about $1 millionin tuition revenues. Current budget calcu¬lations for fisca1 1972 are based on an en¬rollment figure of 7400 to 7500.Applications to professional schools in¬creased 26 percent from 1967 to 1970.This year’s figure will be still higher, dueto a considerable increase in applicationsto the law school and the Pritzker school ofmedicine.The law school received 1242 applicationsin 1967 and 1820 in 1970, for an increase ofThree women graduate students havebeen appointed by University PresidentEdward Levi to the new committee on Uni¬versity women.Mrs Susan Hoch, a graduate student inthe Pritzker school of medicine; Mrs AnnePetersen, a graduate student in educationand resident head of Blackstone hall; andGloria Phares, a graduate student in lin¬guistics and resident head of Snell, werechosen by Levi from six names turned in tohim by the committee. The committee re¬viewed 28 nominations before submitttingthe six names to Levi.Mrs Hoch was nominated for the com¬mittee by students and faculty in the medi¬cal school, Mrs Petersen by the faculty-student advisory committee on campus stu¬dent me (FSACCSLj and tne student coun¬cil of the graduate school of education, andMiss Phares by Mrs Nancy Helmbold, deanof students in the humanities division in re- almost 50 percent. This year’s applicationsare running 15 to 18 percent ahead of lastyear’s, according to dean of students Nich¬olas Bosen.Bosen explained that this growing inter¬est in law school is a national phenomenon.He noted that some 80,000 students wereexpected to take law school admissionstests this year, but that 100,000 actuallytook it.“The number of women and minority stu¬dents going to law school has dramaticallyincreased,” Bosen said. He added that thelaw school was now receiving a substantialnumber of applicants with MA’s andPhD’s.Bosen noted that law school was an al¬ternative for students discouraged by thejob situation for PhD’s. He said that appli¬cants may also be influenced by activistlawyers such as Ralph Nader.The law school will continue to admit aclass of about 160.Applications to the Pritzker school ofmedicine are “well above” last year, ac¬cording to Ceithaml. They increased 40 per¬cent between 1967 and 1970.Ceithaml explained that a new central¬ized applications center in Washingtonmakes it easier for students to apply tomore medical schools. He guessed that theaverage medical school applicant appliedto eight or nine schools this year ratherthan four or five.The institution of the committee was oneof the major recommendations of the Neu-garten repolrt on University women. Protests and demonstrations are plannedlocally in response to the invasion of Laosand continued American participation inthe war in Indochina.A Wednesday noon demonstration, pro¬testing the recent widening of the war intoLaos, has been slated for Quantrell audito¬rium by sponsors from Student Govern¬ment (SG), New University Conference(NUC), and the ad hoc People’s PeaceTreaty Committee.Attempts are being made to bring JohnFroines, one of the Chicago 7 defendants, tospeak at the rally.SG President Mike Fowler said late Mon¬day night that there will be a demonstra¬tion outside the Dirksen federal buildingWednesday at 4 pm, followed by a “mili¬tant lobbving effort” at the office of SenCharles Percy (R-Ill) to persuade him notto vote for military aid to Indochina na¬tions.The demonstration is sponsored by theChicago Peace Council, and buses willdepart for the demonstration at 3:15 pmfrom the Blue Gargoyle, Fowler said.Another Wednesday demonstration pro¬testing the invasion of Laos is planned bythe Student Mobilization Committee (SMC)for 5 pm in front of the federal building.Last Friday, approximately 200 studentsattended a rally in Mandel Hall to discusssoliciting signatures for a proposed univer¬sity referendum to ratify the treaty.Student government, the organizationwhich would sponsor the referendum, re¬quires that six percent of the student bodyor approximately 500 signatures, be repre¬sented on petitions before a campus-widereferendum can take place. Sponsors of thepeace treaty expressed confidence yester¬day afternoon that the necessary signa¬tures would be gathered by the end of theweek.The People’s Peace Treaty, drawn up bythe National Student Association (NSA)and the Provisional Revolutionary Govern¬ment, contains nine provisions under whichthe people of the United States and Viet¬nam agree to end the war.Over the weekend, a delegation from theUniversity attended a national Student andYouth Conference on the People’s PeaceTreaty in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The 2000delegates ratified the Peace Treaty andcalled for a national demonstration inWashington on May 1.Student Government president Mike Fow¬ler, one of those attending, said, “I wasvery impressed with the conference.There’s definitely a reawakening of theanti-war movement.”The University chapter of the Movementfor New Congress has asked people to writeletters to their congressmen protesting thelatest actions of the war. They will alsosponsor a speech by Eqbal Ahmad in thenear future, according to Dick Oberman,an MNC organizer.ERICA REINERChairman of the committee on Universitywomen.Levi appoints 3 students to new women's unitsponse to a request by the student councilof the humanities division.The appointments, according to com¬mittee chairman Erica Reiner, professor ofNear Eastern languages and civilizations,will probably last two years.Miss Phares, said of the committee, “Isuppose we’ll try to implement those partsof the Neugarten report that are availablefor implementing.”She also said she would encourage thehiring of more women, but not just becausethey are women.The council of the University senate ap¬proved the creation of a standing com¬mittee on University wcfmen last Novem¬ber. The faculty members of the com¬mittee, including Miss Reiner, were nomi¬nated by Levi and approved by the com¬mittee of the council.Public LectureW. AVERELL HARRIMAN“America And Russia InA Changing World”Time:8:00 p.m., Thursday, February 11Place:Law School Auditorium1111 East 60th Street\Sponsored by The Center for Policy Study ofThe University of ChicagoNo admission charge; tickets not required——gg—— . — ■■Contemporary European FilmsTHRONE OF BLOOD/MCobb Hall Feb. 14Throne of Blood 7:00M9 15THE SWEET UFE"It lingers in the mind like a vivid, anxiousdream! An extraordinary film!”—Peter Schieldahl, N. Y. TimesONE OF THE YEAR’S 10 BEST—Judith Crist. New York Magazine —Stewart Klein Metromedia TVDonald SOebib sCOIN'DOWN THE ROADstarring Doug McGrath ■ Released by o-ie^Ftom A Division ol Cmecom CorporatmnGP r*-™- . STARTS WED. tOfhFret Parking ?4?4 Lincoln 5?8 91?6 3 PENNY CINEMAMALCOLM X's COUSINHAKIM JAMALeducator - author - activistWednesday 8:00 pmFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH57th & WoodlawnDonation 51 cosponsored by Student (jov't.Chgo. 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Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA2/The Chicago Maroon/February 9, 1971l.llllHMIiMtlU *M J ( I lllllllw tll llll « M > Ji < I t « f I t • i M J • I I 111111 <• mAhmad, Berrigan plead not guilty to chargeEQBAL AHMAD: Shown here in a recent speech, he and five other defendants pleadednot guilty Monday to charges of conspiracy to kidnap Presidential adviser Henry Kis¬singer.University still undecidedI By SUE LOTHThe waiting list of women desiring abor-t.ons at Chicago Lying-In grows longer, asUniversity attorneys continue to ponderthe legal implications of performing abor¬tions for women less than 12 weeks preg¬nant.The considerations began last week,shortly after the January 29 decision of aUS district court panel which ruled uncon¬stitutional Illinois’ abortion law. The lawprohibited abortion except to save the lifeof a woman.The federal judges ruled that the statecould not “prohibit, restrict, or otherwiselimit’’ women’s right to abortion performedduring the first 12 weeks of pregnancy byphysicians in licensed facilities.State’s attorney Edward Hanrahan fileda motion, asking Supreme Court JusticeThurgood Marshall to stay the effect of the injunction. Marshall has not yet passed onthe ruling.Until Marshall or some other appellatebody backs the district court ruling, Uni¬versity legal counselors are hesitant to givethe go-ahead for abortions at Lying-In.“In Illinois, we can only rely on a re¬straining order 100 percent when it has anappellate court blessing,” one source at theUniversity legal office said. “We’re inter¬ested in getting an appellate ruling beforewe feel easy.”The counselors no longer think the Uni¬versity would be subject to criminal liabili¬ty if it began performing abortions and thelaw were later reversed, the source added.However, he continued, the Universityand individual doctors might be subject tomore trouble with potential malpractice orwrongful death suits if plaintiffs com¬plained that the hospital did not wait for an By JIM HAEFEMEYERAdlai Stevenson Institute fellow EqbalAhmad and six other defendants all plead¬ed innocent Monday to charges of con¬spiring to bomb government utility systemsand to kidnap Presidential adviser HenryKissinger.The defendants entered their plea to USDistrict Court Judge Dixon Herman in Har¬risburg, Penna, only after gaining a briefpostponement in the arraignment to allowthem to confer with codefendant Rev PhilipBerrigan, imprisoned since last fall for de¬stroying draft files.Judge Herman postponed the arraign¬ment from 11 am to 2:15 pm after the de¬fense contended that US Attorney Gen¬eral John Mitchell had intervened to keepthem from communicating with FatherBerrigan.“Our government’s disregard for the con¬stitutional rights of its people has markedevery stage of the proceedings against us soon abortionsappellate ruling before beginning the newpolicy.“These are considerations that hospitalsalready performing abortions are just be¬ginning to consider,” the source said.Cook County hospital, which Saturday an¬nounced it will perform up to 125 abortionsweekly, is the fifth Chicago hospital to offerabortions since the new ruling.The other four are Grant, Chicago Wes¬ley Memorial, Michael Reese, and Presby¬terian St Luke’s.Chicago Lying-In physicians who dis¬closed plans to perform abortions in com¬pliance with the court ruling, are awaitingthe University’s decision. One gynecologisthoped that Cook County’s decision to per¬form abortions might hasten a favorableUniversity response.Between Monday and Wednesday lastweek, Lying-In collected more than 150names of women desiring abortions. far,” the 13 defendants and alleged co-con-spirators said in a statement after the ar¬raignment. “Most recently we have seen adeliberate act by the attorney general tokeep the defendants from communicatingwith each other.”The postponement made it possible forthe other defendants to meet with Rev Ber¬rigan for 30 minutes in a government room.The defendants have not announced thenames of their attorneys, in part becausethey want to consult with Rev Berriganfirst, an American Civil Liberties Union ob¬server said.Judge Herman ruled that the defendantscould travel to any of the cities which aredefendants’ homes, but only to consultabout matters concerning the defense.He postponed until Feb 17 a decision onreducing bail. Ahmad is free on $60,000 bail.US marshalls searched all those enteringthe arraignment chambers, and outside agroup of priests led prayers.In their post-arraignment statement, thedefendants and alleged coconspiratorssaid, “We are a diverse group united by acommon goal — our opposition to the massviolence of our government is in its waragainst the Southeast Asian people. It isbecause of this opposition that we havebeen branded a conspiracy.”“We ask our fellow citizens to match ourlives and our actions against the acts of thepresident, his advisers, and his Chiefs ofStaff, and to pose the question: ‘Who hascommitted the crimes of violence?’“If one is concerned with crimes againsthumanity is is the US officials who shouldbe on trial.”The statement said that it was US offi¬cials who should be charged with “bomb¬ing” and with “kidnapping,” for forcinglarge numbers of Vietnamese people tomove and for forcing American men tofight the war.The statement urged Americans to de¬mand an end to the invasion of Laos and torefuse further cooperation with the war.Encounter with Nixon results in depressionIJ By CAROLINE HECKYou don’t have to be American to lovethe White House. It is an unqualifiedlybeautiful building, tastefully decorated, im¬peccably maintained. As you ride up thedriveway through lawns that are perfectlytended even in winter, and step into its1 gleaming whiteness, into rooms of magnifi-diate and lasting impression: this is aplace of grace and wisdom, of a lovedtradition.'f i This impression is a great shock, espe-ally if, like me, you’ve gone to the WhiteHouse with your mind on politics, not es¬thetics or history.I arrived at the White House a week agoThursday with my mind on my upcomingmeeting with Richard Nixon, not on beauty,dsdom, and elegant tradition. Along with0 other college journalists, I had come toWashington for a day long program of in¬formation and interviews with William Rog¬ers, Secretary of State, and other officialsat the State Department. The imminent vis¬it with Nixon, not on our original schedule,was sending us into a flurry of scribbling,as we hurriedly tried to organize thoughts,questions and charges while being drivenfrom the bureaucratic box that houses theState Department to the much more statelyone that houses the President.Tension was high as we stood in an ante¬room, discussing who would ask what ques¬tions and, most important,, how we couldget the President to discuss Indochina. Ourdiscussions were interrupted as an owlish,somewhat rumpled looking man came upand shook our hands. He had come andgone, saying only “how do you do,” beforeI realized that it was Henry Kissinger,Presidential aide who heads the NationalSecurity Council.Still perplexed by his whirlwind visit, wevere ushered down a long carpeted hallnd around corners. We started walking insingle file through a large doorway and,from the voices, I knew that the Presidentwas inside. Very bright light was stream¬ing through the doorway, and I was suret'>dl mere were movie or TV cameras in¬side. I stepped inside and, standing near WASHINGTON MEETING: The author (left front with back to camera, shown heretalking with Secretary of State William Rogers, who is at the far right) found a latermeeting with the President disappointing, despite the grandeur and beauty of theWhite House.the end of the line, was jolted by the dis¬parity between scenario and setting.The brightness was coming not fromklieg lights but from the sun, which pouredinto the large, oval room though immensewindows that looked onto a garden. TheOval Office is one of the most beautifulrooms I’ve ever seen, brimming with light,covered by a bright blue round rug with aborder of yellow stars, furnished with mas¬sive but elegant chairs, couch, desk.In the middle of the room was a manshaking everyone’s hand. He reminded meof a candy store owner I’d known when Iwas seven; he’d always smiled at the chil¬dren, but he hadn’t really liked them. Bythe time I shook his hand, my mind wasback on the President again, and we matched inanities as I answered his solesmall-talk query about the ratio of men towomen at the University of Chicago.Richard Nixon looks considerably betterin person than he does on television. Hisface doesn’t have that livid look, and hishair doesn’t look quite so greasy.He didn’t try any “let me make thisclear” sincerity gestures on us, and hissmiling heartiness seemed not forced,merely disinterested. Clearly, this was anunimportant meeting for him. He was re¬laxed, casual, perhaps bored.Our attitude was precisely the opposite.Besides the nervousness of meeting thePresident, there was not only our nearlyunanimous general hostility toward him butalso a specific anger and concern: In¬ dochina. We interrupted his easy conversa¬tion on revenue sharing with our questionsabout Cambodia and the Cooper-Churchamendment. He responded with in¬furiatingly nonchalant comments, denyingfirst that there had been any violation ofthe amendment, and reiterating next thathe was pledged to any air action in In¬dochina necessary to holding back theCommunists. He then easily returned torevenue sharing and ushered us out.The net result of the meeting was depres¬sion. Not anger, not surprise, but regret,depression. To the dumpy, smiling man, wehad never really been there. He hadgreeted us, smiled, and responded to ouranger as you might respond to a kitten thattried to scratch you, only to be petted andplaced aside.But there was another, subtler reason forthe depression. It was the contrast, the an¬ticlimax between the beauty and promiseof stature of the White House itself, and itsinhabitant. If you have to meet RichardNixon, a Cobb hall classroom would be amuch better, less disappointing place thanthe White House.It’s not just that Nixon has no class; styleis not always a reliable indicator of sub¬stance. It was rather that Nixon was sohopelessly incongrous with his setting, anddidn’t seem to know or care.Of course, we hadn’t expected Nixon tobe gracious or witty, wise or admirable. Itwas precisely because those attributes hadbeen far from my mind that the WhiteHouse itself was such a shock, and also areminder of a past that I’ve never knownand that is perhaps a myth: the tradition ofexcellence. What the White House suggestsis that America was once run by menwhom you may have hated, but whom youcould at least recognize as extraordinary,in some way fitted to be prominent.The White House does not suggest ideal¬ism, but it does suggest stature. RichardNixon has neither, and although I hadn’texpected either from him, the White Housemade the second loss a little more poi¬gnant.February 9, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/3The Chicago Maroon about the midwaySTEVE COOK DON RATNEREditor Business Manager•CON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography Editor•JUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, JIM HAEFEMEYER, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate Editors•USA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, ALLEN FRIEDMAN, FRANK GRUBER, ELSA HERSH, BARRY KELL-MAN, LESLIE LINTON, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE, KEITH PYLE, BRUCE RABE, FRED WINSTONStaff•CARL STOVALL CAROLINE HECK DIANA LEIFERContributing Editor Senior Editor Assistant Business ManagerFounded in 1692. 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 40637. Phone 753-3263. Distributed oncampus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S.Non-profit postage paid at Chiacgo, III.Laotian invasionToday marks the second day of the invasion of Laos by South Viet¬namese forces with air and logistics support supplied by the US.Apparently the invasion of Laos, which is clearly a widening of thewar in Indochina by the Nixon administration, is the latest tactic inVietnamization. The American people have been misled into thinkingthat under Vietnamization American involvement in Indochina would bedecreased.Instead, we have seen the American invasion of Cambodia and nowthe American-supported invasion of Laos. We have seen the continuedbombing of North Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. We have seen un¬successful raids on prisoner of war camps in North Vietnam and Cam¬bodia which were based on intelligence information known to be in¬accurate.Under Vietnamization we have seen the changing of the color ofthe corpses on the battlefield, not an end of the war. We have seen afurther mechanization of the war, not an end of the killing.Eqbal Ahmad, in a speech on campus two weeks ago, said onemotive for the mechanization of the war is an attempt to keep Indo¬china out of the headlines, to make it a “forgotten war.” We wonderif the same affliction of insensitivity that has characterized popularreaction to the war for the last 10 years is finally seeping through tothe nation’s students."In reality, many tactics have been tried, but littlehas been done. It is not new tactics that we need,but a new spirit."We hope that students are not forgetting the war, yet there hasnot been a major anti-war demonstration in this country since the Maystrike. The national press has been interpreting the silence on thecampuses this year as a turning away from politics by students. Wehope that they will be proved wrong.One thing is clear. The students of this country are the only groupcapable or willing to remind the American people that the Nixonadministration is not planning to end the war. We must, like EqbalAhmad, continue to speak out against a war which appears to beforgotten by our people.We constantly hear from fellow students that “there is nothingto do” about the war, that demonstrations are unfulfilling, that workingfor peace candidates requires too much of a compromise with the“system,” that more militant actions only bring repression. “Every¬thing has been done,” we hear, but we do not believe it. For in reality,many tactics have been tried, but little has been done.It is not new tactics that we need, but a new spirit. We need anew anger bom out of nine months of uninvolvement. We must realizethat organization and commitment are the essential elements for pres¬suring the government to end the war.We support tactics that are aimed at building massive support forunilateral withdrawal of American troops, supplies and air supportfrom the Thieu-Ky government. We believe that the demonstrationsplanned for April 24 and May 1 in Washington represent the best at¬tempt at mobilizing massive vocal support against the war and at put¬ting direct and immediate pressure on the Nixon administration to endthe war and end suppression of dissent at home.We urge students to start planning now to make those demon¬strations successful. It is important that broadbased support amongall segments of American society be evident in Washington next spring,but that effort must be organized now. There is much work to bo done4/The Chicago Maroon/February 9, 1971 Chris HoneymanWHO IS IT? This is the special mystery candidate for the title of Mr University ofChicago, which contest will be decided Saturday night at the “Second and Last AnnualLascivious Costume Ball.” Will this mystery candidate win? Come to Ida NoyesSaturday and find out.Harriman to speakOne of America’s leading statesmen, WAverell Harriman, will speak on “Americaand Russia in a Changing World” Thursdayat 8 pm in the law school auditorium, 1111E 60th St.The program will be open to the publicwithout ticket and without charge.Harriman’s appearance is sponsored bythe University’s center for policy study.Harriman has been governor of NewYork, US ambassador to the Soviet Unionduring World War II, secretary of com¬merce, adviser and confidant to PresidentsFranklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, JohnKennedy and Lyndon Johnson.Harriman was ambassador-at-large andchief American delegate to both the limitednuclear test ban talks and the Vietnampeace negotiations in Paris.In a recently-published book Harrimanwrote: “To me the Vietnamization of thewar is an immoral thing to do . . . (It) isnot in my opinion a program for peace buta program for the perpetuation of the war. . . The people of South Vietnam wantpeace and not a continuation of the war.”Jamal to speakHakim Jamal, cousin of Malcolm X andauthor of the soon to be published book,“From the Dead Level, Malcolm X andMe”, will lecture tomorrow at 8 pm in theFirst Unitarian Church, 57th and Wood-lawn. Admission is $1.Jamal’s lecture will be entitled “MalcolmX and 1971”. He will discuss Malcolm X’sunderstanding of the black-white con¬frontation in the world today.For the past six years after Malcolm X’sassasination, Jamal has toured Europe, theUnited States and Africa raising money tofound Malcolm X-Montessori schools. Chil¬dren from two to six years old attend theseschools. Jamal views education of the nextgeneration as the solution to racial prob¬lems.Shortly after Malcolm X’s death, Jamal founded the Malcolm X foundation in Cali¬fornia, having been the director of the Or-ganization of Afro-American Unity foundedby Malcolm X himself.A former alcoholic and drug addict, Jam¬al was cured by Malcolm X. His book abouthis life with Malcolm X will be publishedthis spring.Last lascivious ballThe coronation of Mr University of Chi¬cago will highlight SVNA’s “Second andLast Annual Lascivious Costume Ball” Sat¬urday at 8:30 pm in Ida Noyes hall.The inauguration will be conducted bylast year’s Mr UC, Gangrene La Rue. LaRue helped found the men’s lib group, Stu¬dent Project on Equal Rights for Men !(SPERM). Assisting will be Mr UC’s per¬manent chaperone, the ex-roomate of theex-Miss UC.This year’s contestants are Big Moe, ICharlie Petosky (last year’s runner-up Lback for another try at the title), the ubi¬quitous Frank Malbranche (back from hisvacation in Skokie), Zygman Zygote, and aspecial mystery contestant.Also featured will be belly-dancers, strip¬pers, Greco-Roman wrestlers, dancing,nude swimming, body-painting, and freepunch.Soledad speechFay Stender, a Berkeley attorney repre¬senting the Soledad prisoners, will speak inroom LV of the law school tomorrow atnoon.Stender is the chief defense attorney forthe Soledad Brothers, George Jackson,Fleeta Drumgo, and John Cluchette whoare accused of killing a white guard at theCalifornia prison.The speech is sponsored by the Chicagochapter of the National Lawyers Guild. TheSan Francisco guild has been active in or¬ganizing the Solsom prison strike this win¬ter.BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, February 9ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello, University Organ¬ist, Rockefeller Memorial chapel, 1:15 pm.BIOCHEMISTRY OF CANCER LECTURE SERIES: DrTing-wa Wond, assistant professor, department of pa¬thology, "Transfer Ribonucleric Acids in TumorCells," Billings P117, 3 pm.MEETING OF THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL: BusinessEast 106, 3:40 pm.WRESTLING: Valpraiso University, Bartlett gym, 4 pm.COLLOQUIUM (JAMES FRANCK INSTITUTE): HarveyGould, Department of Physics, University of Mich¬igan, "A Microscopic Theory of the Lambda Transi¬tion," Research Institutes 480, 4:15 pm.FICK: Seventh Heaven, free, Quantrell, 8 pm.BASKETBALL: Illinois Institute of Technology, fieldhouse, 8 pmMEETING: College Teaching Evaluation Group, Cobb102, 8 pm, new members welcome.RAMSEY CLARK: WHPK rebroadcast of speech atMandel Hall, 9 to 10:30 pm.COLLOQUIUM: K'ai-ching Chu, division of engineeringand applied physics, Harvard University, "Team Deci¬sion Theory and Information in Optimal Control Prob¬lems," Research Institute, Rl C-113, 4 pm.MEETING: to discuss formation of school advisorycouncil for Kenwood High School at Kenwood HighSchool, 8 pm. •LECTURE: Students International Meditation Society,Ida Noyes Library, 8 pm.Wednesday, February 10LECTURE: Howard Brown, "The Restoration of Vene¬tian Music," Classics 10, 8 pm.REHEARSAL: University Orchestra, 6:30 strings, 7:30full orchestra, Mandel Hall.LECTURE: Herman Lebovics, a candidate for a tenureappointment in Modern European history, Cobb 119,3:30 pm.SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPLE: discussion number 3,"Professionalism" >.,im lorry i/.'Ot, Dick Lewontiii,Terry Turner, Bill Zimmerman, Soc Sci 122, 8 pm. CARILLON RECITAL: Robert Lodine, University Caril-lonneur. Rockefeller chapel, 12:15 pm.FLICK: Steamboat Bill, Jr, and Easy Street, Quantren,8 pm.Thursday, February 11BIOCHEMISTRY OF CANCER LECTURE SERIES: Dr \Robert Kirschner, Instructor, department of pathology, IDora De Lee Hall, 3 pm. _ .... jTRACK: Freshman — Sophomores and Junior CollegeRelays, field house, 4 pm. ,PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM: D H Wilkinson, professor anahead, department of nuclear physics. University of Ox¬ford, "The Failure of Mirror Symmetry in NuclearBeta-Decay: Second-Class Currents?" Eckhart UJ-4:30 pm. . .TALK: W Averill Harriman, "American and Russia ina Changing World," law school auditorium, 8 Pm<FLICK: China, One Fourth of Humanity, Quantrell, 7:15and 9 pm. . _SPECIAL SEMINAR: Dr Jurg Joss, Air Force Cam¬bridge Research Laboratories, "Results of t*periments with Vertical Pointing Radar and uitrometers for Raindrops," 101 Hinds, 3:30 pm.COLLOQUIUM: Andrew Hall, Bell Telephone La?ora-lories, "The Altran Language and System for Ra’!on“Function Namipulation," Research Institutes, Rl C-n-1'RETHINKING URBAN EDUCATION: Nathan Black¬man, principal, Chicago Public High School f°r M®T'°'politan Studies and Thomas Wilson, director Educa¬tional Division Urban Research Corporation, ' Metro,The School Without Walls," Judd Hall Commons,Kimbark, 7:15 pm. _ .LECTURE: "The Decision Process of the Soviet Economy," D Gale Johnson, professor, department of ecnomics, Cobb 209, 1:30 pm. , _„.inRECRUITING VISITS: Institute for Para-Legal 1 raming, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, call x 3-3282 for >pointment. uRECRUITING VISIT: Sherwin-Williams CompanyCleveland, Ohio, dhicayu, can x 4-j28« id' “fo¬ment.I Co-ed dorms bringing change in student lifeBy LISA CAPELL“There is better communication betweenmen and women. It is putting relations in amore natural context and it is more fun,”said David Hartley ‘73, a resident of Black-stone about co-ed living.An overwhelming majority of studentslike co^ed dorms. Co-educated dorms afforda more enjoyable atmosphere in which tolive. They are livelier and seem to be aplace where people live as well as justsleep or study.The favorable reactions to co-educatedhousing have been noticed by the residentmasters of Burton-Judson and Pierce Tow¬er, Walter Walker and Kenneth Northcott,respectively.They are requesting that their dorms bemade co-ed. The only problem they foreseeis security. However, in the dorms cur¬rently co-ed there is no security problem.In many cases doors are left open evenwhen the room is unoccupied.The recent co-educatio(n of dorms beganin Feburary 1970 when the Inter-HouseCouncil’s standing committee on co-educa¬tion recommended that 13 houses be made CO-ED DORMS: Males and females in same house create a livlier atmosphere and a better place to live. Bruce Rabeco-ed.The recommendation was based on re¬sults from questionnaires and a desire tomaintain an eight to five male-female ratioin the houses.Because only 15 women wanted to moveto Burton-Judson and two to Pierce, onlyfive houses were co-educated: Upper Rick-ert, Upper and Lower Flint, Blackstone,and Greenwood.This year, in response to a greater de¬mand for co-education and the favorablefeedback from students, the co-ed com¬mittee is considering co-educating Pierce,Burton-Judson, and Breckinridge (formerlyEleanor).They are basing this proposal on therequests of the freshman class, 75 percentof which favored co-education in a housingoffice prill.The IHC coed committee will ask eachhouse to outline arrangements they would be willing to agree to under coeducation.Edward Turkington, director of studenthousing, said “There is no kind of policy toprevent further co-education if that’s whatpeople want. What makes it difficult is thenumbers. If we co-educate a house thenumber of men and women should be rea¬sonably equal.”Turkington feels there should be a cer¬tain number of upperclass residents in thenewly co-educated dorms. But “We wouldco-ed on the assumption that it will costvery little and will incur few physicalchanges.”Turkington fears an entirely co-ed hous¬ing system. But all the co-ed dorms’ resi¬dent heads feel there is enough roo(m withinthe system to have several kinds of hous¬ing; the traditional system, floor by floorco-ed, and random rooming.According to Turkington students will de-★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★)$-******************************** LAST ANNUALLASCIVIOUSCOSTUME BALLStarting 8:30Saturday, February 13at Ida Noyes5 BandsExotic DancersGreco-Roman W restlersGrapesEducational FilmsNude SwimBody PaintingMr. U. ofC.Advance Tickets go on sale today,Reynolds Club Desk. $1.50A t the Door: W ithout costume $2.00With Costume $ 1.50Without Clothes Free *******************************★ ★ ■*★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ termine the cq|urse of co-education whichwill be geared to provide the maximumcomfort within the housing system.The positive responses of the students inco-ed dorms has prompted the new impetusfor further co-education. The residentshave found many advantages to this sys¬tem. The atmosphere is mofe relaxed andcasual, interpersonal relationships betweensexes are less strained, and increased andmore enthusiastic participation in house ac¬tivities.Rob Sullentrup 74, a resident of UpperFlint feels that the newly instituted randomrooming form of co-ed housing in Wood¬ward creates a situation where “associ¬ation itself is freer and easier. It’s a lotmore casual.”The attitudes of males and femalestowards one another have altered becauseof the increase in interpersonal contact af¬forded by co-ed housing. A male resident ofFlint had the revelation that “girls are justlike other human beings.”A male resident of Blackstone feels, “Thebest thing about co-ed housing is it getsboys and girls together for casual relation¬ships. You can talk to a girl simply becauseshe’s your next door neighbor and you don’thave to worry that a more serious relation¬ship has to develop out of it.“If the only way you see girls is by dat¬ing and you don’t like to date you see onlya few girls and with co-education you canmeet more. It’s nice if you’re shy.”Due to the nature of the interchange be¬tween sexes a “brother-sister” attitude ex¬ists in the co-ed dorms. There is a min¬imum amount of intra-house dating, be¬ cause of the emotional stress after a break¬up of a couple.After the split the former couple muststill see each other. In Greenwood, hriw-ever, the facilities, consisting of apart¬ments and three distinct units, providegreater privacy and isolation.The benefits seem to outweigh the dis¬advantages. These include greater partici¬pation in house activities.Mrs Anne Petersen, resident head ofBlackstone said “Study hour” (at Tuesdayevenings when food and criffee are servedin the lounge) wouldn’t have gone over atall last year when Blackstone was an allfemale house.”The same is true at Greenwood where,according to Paul Birnberg ’72, “Socialhours, which are held every week on Thurs¬day, are a little more civilized. They tend¬ed to be a rapid downing of food and dis¬appearance of people last year. This year ittakes twice as long.”Greg Hancock, resident head of LowerFlint noticed a more enthusiastic participa¬tion in sports activities in the house. LindaGolich ‘73, a resident of Upper Flint said“People are more willing to do things.They are more concerned about the houseas a whole and their actions.”Mrs Petersen expressed another advan¬tage of co-ed housing. “It’s feasible now tohave a party,” she said. “There’s so muchless at stake. If someone has a party theyusually invite the whole house and peopledrop in and they generally know people ofboth sexes so its not uncomfortable in thatway.”February 9, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5Field, former Presidentsleft, Marshall Field, Robert Maynard Hutchins, Lawrence KimptonFOUR NEW TRUSTEES: From named/and George Beadle. trusteesFour men have been elected to the Uni¬versity board of trustees, Gaylord Donnel¬ley, chairman of the board, announced.Three of the new members have beenelected as honorary trustees and are for¬mer Presidents of the University.The four new trustees are:• Marshall Field, publisher of the Sun-Times and the Daily News.• George Beadle, President emeritusand Wrather distinguished service profes¬sor of biology.• Robert Hutchins, chairman of theboard of directors of the Fund for the Re¬public, Inc, and the Center for the Study ofDemocratic Institutions, and former Presi¬dent of the University.Tenant union suit to testA tenant union suit involving a HydePark apartment building and designated asa test case on the legality of the standardChicago apartment lease, will begin in Cir¬cuit Court today.The Beechwood Tenants Association(BTA) filed the suit after the city’s suitagainst the landlord. William Bradley, forcode violations had continued for eighteenmonths without compliance.BTA, a member of the Hyde Park-Ken-wood Tenant Union Organization (HPK-TUO), complained of a hazardous electricalsystem, peeling paint and falling plaster inall apartments, unsafe porches and gener¬ally inadequate maintenance in the build¬ing at 1221-23 E 57th St.Bradley also refused to incorporate Chi¬cago Building Code standards into a collec¬tive bargaining agreement between himselfand the tenant union.According to a release issued by theAL RABY Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Confer-Believes change in apartment lease form ence in October 1969, after the suit waswill give tenants needed protection. filed, rents for the suing tenants wereilcibbuta unique social experiment in cooperative living whichstrives for personal and community self-realization.We invite you to experience the kibbutz through thefollowing programs:Kibbutz uiponA six month programof 1/2 day work and1/2 day Hebrew studies Temporary workersLiving and workingon a kibbutz onemonth or moreAGE: 18 to 35 COST: Transportation DATES: Year roundFor information and application for the above, and forpermanent settlement, winter, summerand teenage programs, contact:ISRAEL PROGRAMS! 220 S. State, Chgo. 60604, 939-6427KIBBUTZ ALIYA DESK, 2067 W. Farwell, Chgo. 60645, 465-6681200 Park Ave. S., N.Y. 1003, (212) 477-5663i CARPET CITY4 6740 STONY ISLAND4 324-7998Jho* whot you r***d from a $10Tuj*d 9 a 12 Rug, to o customYcorpot. Specializing in RemnantsMill returns at a fraction of the I^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼ Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad.} FREE DELIVERY DlAriiCT’S ALL - NIGHT iHCWPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURE"BYRD WINS, TF.DDY LOSES.Break the cider open, mother;/Take a brush to sister'shair. / Tell the hired handthe folks are / Going on atear. / I'll go slick up in theparlor; / You wind up thephonograph. / Golly Pete,ain’t felt so good since /Bessie dropped I for ° ,ree copvnational reVIEW, writ*: Dept.B. 150 E 35 Street,N Y 10016.her calf ./’ go1 FEB. 12ANGEL LEVINEZERO MOSTEL FEB. 13LET IT BETHE BEATLESFEB. 19TASTE THE BLOOD MADWOMAN OFOF DRACULA CHAILL0TCHRISTOPHER LEE KATHARINE HEPBURNFEB. 26 FEB. 27END OF THE ROAD TRILOGYTRUMAN CAPOTE'S TRUMAN CAPOTE'SMAR. 5 MAR. 6MORE BATTLE OF ALGIERSI nans ji so I6/The Chicago Maroon/February 9, 1971 lease formraised as much as 20 percent and evictionnotices were served on tenants.HPK-TUO Director Bob Adams said thejudge hearing the case, Judge FrancisDelaney, is new but “hopefully the chancesare good, the case is solid.” The decision inthis case, he added, could “change the fun¬damental principle of the lease.”HPK-TUO chairman A1 Raby said, “Thissuit, charging that the standard lease usedin Chicago gives tenants no protectionagainst hazardous conditions or retaliatoryevictions, grows out of the demands of ten:ants for an equitable relationship with theirlandlord.“If successful, this suit will alter leaseprovisions affecting the conditions underwhich thousands of tenants are forced tolive.“The fact that middle-income profession¬als and university-associated people resortto this kind of action, demonstrates that thehousing crisis affects people of all incomelevels. The growing demand for effectivesolutions is just beginning.” • Lawrence Kimpton, assistant to thechairman and a director of the StandardOil Company (Indiana) and former Presi¬dent of the University.Field has been publisher of the Sun-Times and the Daily News since October.1969. He was 28 years old when he becamea publisher and is still the youngest publi¬sher of any major newspaper.During his first year as publisher, bothnewspapers won Pulitzer Prizes.Beadle received the Nobel prize in 1958for his research on the relation of genes tospecific biochemical reactions. He servedas President of the University from 1961until his retirement in November, 1968.During his tenure the University con¬ducted a successful $160 million develop¬ment campaign. Since 1968 he has been amember of the University’s faculty.Hutchins served as President of the Uni¬versity from 1929 to 1951. He was only 30years old when he was first named to theposition. Prior to joining the University, heserved as dean of the law school atYale. After his 22-year tenure at the Uni¬versity, Hutchins became associate direc¬tor of the Ford Foundation.Kimpton served as President of the Uni¬versity from 1951 to 1960. During his tenurethe University raised $100 million in endow¬ment funds.NOWPLAYINGTHE ANNIVERSARYwithBette DavisFOUR CLOWNSwithBuster KeatonTHE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. Uncoln DU4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all times is only $1.25. Bringyour Frienas. PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDMONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERVICES ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2 A HRS.* Cornet/ JLrht ** 164S I. 55th STRCCV ** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *m Phone: PA 4-1651 u1KKPMEDITATIONas taught by Maharishi Mahesh YogiIntroductory meeting' Thurs., February 11,8:00 p.m.IDA NOYES HALLStudents' International Meditation Society authentic• Dinners• Late Snacks• Private PartiesDistinctive, handsomeroom atop the Hyde ParkBank Building.Exceptional anddelightful selection ofMid-East food, delicacies,cocktails, and wines.Ample parking. Tues. -Sat. 5 to Midnight; Sun.EfendiTuesday Night15% DiscountFor the U. of C. Students,-Faculty Members and Per¬sonnel. Bring this ad fordiscount.StudentDiscountModelCamera1342 E. 55th493-6700A A » I » , L \ Le-.jr,v_*./liifw/lCIC pilVJlUon South sideTHE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSfor saleNIKON FTN Camera 1.4 lens, 4 mo.old w-case, guarantee, xtras. Perfcond over $300 or offer. Dial 744-4848 or 684-4866 aft 8 pmAfghan Champ-sired Blu-BlackHousebroken male AKC Shots 41mo. $250 or best offer. 472-6557.1969 VW, AM-FM, air cond., low mi,$1800 or best offer. 288-44792 Chevy-ll Snow Tires. 4000 mi,$25. 324-2476.'64 VW Conv. Needs body work $500or best offer. 684-5956 aft. 7NEW Mitsubishi TRQ222 Stereo Cas-sette Tape Recorder. Call eves, af¬ter 6; 667-1230, 363-0302CLASSIFIEDSClassified 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‘/1ine and 60*/repeat line fornon University peop’e.Strictly Per¬sonals ore 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."Scrieu Thieu" Poster. $2. 4-H Asso¬ciates, 420 Market Street, San Fran-cisco, 94111. Wholesale rates.35mm Kodak Signet 40 Camera,Remington cordless 800QC shaver.Bob or Pam at 288-6218. Offer.Portable 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.COOP APT FOR SALECoop Apt. Ray Dist. 55-56 Wdlawn 7rms. Garage, Yard, 2 Fireplaces,Assess $84 mo. Pr. $23,000. 684-3105.PEOPLE WANTEDFOTA has lined up an excellentseries of Young Musicians Concertsand needs people to help run them.Call Isaac at 843 BJ College teaching evaluation groupneeds your help!! Come to meetingtonight 8pm Cobb 102Roommate wanted for apartmentnear 57th 8. Drexel. Rent Low,Kosher available. 324-3060Riders wanted to Ithaca NY Leavethis week. Call 472-6557FOTA needs people and ideas for a1950's Sock Hop. 843 BJBabysitter needed for young baby, 1day-week 8, other times. 888-4479Student to share S. Shore apt $70 &util on campus bus route 10-2, x.3581 after 6, 375-6073.FOTA needs someone to run a mu¬sic program. Please. 843 BJMENTAL HEALTH FREAKSVolunteers interested in workingwith disturbed children on Sun. af¬ternoons. Call 493-3284PEOPLE FOR SALEWill draw graphs, charts, etc. forresearch papers. PL-2-1400 Apt. 201.Leave message.Will type papers, assignments, inmy home for reasonable rate. Con¬tact Corrlne Serafin, RE4-5819 after6:00 p.m.TYPING SERVICE HY 3-3755Experienced baby sitting In myhome. Full or part-time. Reason¬able. 5410 Ridgewood 363-4858.Will do typing in my home. Call776-8989.ON THE BAYOUGenuine Caiun music by the BalfaFreres of Mamou, Louisiana, Sun¬day, Ida Noyes, 75c.SKI CLUB TRIPThere is still space left on the SkiClub's spring trip to SteamboatSprings, Colo. Call Marty 324-8930NOWMALCOLM XMalcolm X Montessori Schools:MALCOLM X and ME: FROM theDEAD LEVEL." Hear Hakim Jam¬al, MALCOLM'S COUSIN, Wed.,8:00 pm, 1st Unitarian Church,$1.00. He took the Word from theProphet and went straight ahead. SPACEFurnished apt. Nice, nr campus 4rooms. Responsible person call Dr.Zerbe. 493-0533CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell D03-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithSAVE-Take over my lease in any Uof C dorm-thru June. 955-6587.MOVING?Licensed mover & hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480WANTEDSPACE NEEDED to house MID¬WEST CONFERENCE participantsFri. 8. Sat. Call 477-3340.Kittens want unfrantic space. Moth¬er has blue aura. 324-2016SCENESMIDWEST CONFERENCE! "Impe¬rialism 8, Liberation in the 70's"with James O'Connor & Eqbal Ah¬mad. Feb. 12-14, 5757 UniversityStarts 6:30 pm Friday.Have a Lascivious Bail with I AmCurious (Yellow) Sat. Feb 13.Riding Lessons Boarding of Horsesstdnt disc, comm Riding sch. 323-9655 or call Pat 667-3321 Bag-lunch discussion: "Church Aidto Liberation Movements: Reportfrom South Africa" Dick Sales,Gates-Blake 321 Feb. 9 12 Noon.Bring a Lunch."TECHNOLOGY 8. the LAW" Paneldiscussion with Geo Anastaplo, OttoMailman, Fri Feb 12, 8 pm Cross¬roads, 5621 Blackstone.Get down with Johnny Young BluesBand 8 PM Thurs. GargoyleCARMINABURANAComing February 19, 20, 26, 27.YOGA Poses Concentr Meditatn.Quit drugs Single-group classes. SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155Feb. 13, 12:00 Panel discussion onGay Lib Mov. Free lunch. For res¬ervation call 888-8856The only campus restaurant atwhich you can find Ham8>Eggs atLUNCH, 8. Blintzes, the lowestprices. BANDERSNATCH 12-2 M-SMAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 6063?DATES TO RUNNAME. ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50* por 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 SI .00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fro,#.r-—t- y f r T T T T r : ■ T ;^:1 i 1 L r 117 y 11 r rn r ! 1i T1 — —1’ ! : ' 1 ’ : r ■ ! it 1 * * i1 ■ 7 t 1 1y "" ‘f * -* 4 • * ♦ ti . f ♦ ♦ t 1I I I.A 4 A 1 1 1 A*L .A i A A i 1 t i { ii i i i ; : ; : ; ti i L J .Jr - fA. i. I. L 1 yL r. I i l ; 1 ] 1:L! 1- t ; tL i 1 4 ♦ f——4- ^ fi i -l ii l. —*—i—l 1. , i ■i- ■ i ■ -L . 1 |1 J Howard Brown speaks on "The Res¬toration of Venetian Music" Wed8pm in Classics 10.Anyone interested in a Zen Medita¬tion group (Zazen) on campus? Or¬ganizational meeting Wed Feb 10,7:00, 5844 Harper 288-7485YPSL-SCAF DEBATE: Wed. 7:30.INH. PROPERTY : Problem or so¬lution? FRIEDMAN vs MURAV-CHIKSee Toshiro Mifune as a power-crazed samurai and Peter Lorre asa psychotic child-killer in two ci¬nema classics. Feb. 14 7 & 9:15 inCobb. $1.00Private Property: BEWARE of DE¬BATE. Wed. Feb. 10 7:30 INHCOUNTRY PHOTOGRAPHYWORKSHOP: 6 summer days onWisconsin farm. Winter eves, inChgo. 248-9294"Imperialism 8< Liberation"-Feb 12-14, Speakers, orkshops, films.Sponsored by NUC, CRV, CCAS,Venceremos, CAGLA. Info. 477-3340.The Fifth Horseman is Fear! Fri¬day Feb. 12, 8 pm, Kenwood High51st 8. Lake Park. $2.00.THE NEW BANDERSNATCHintrodlICCS this TUESDAY a (gustatory devolution in in in ifPIZZ(A)ETHE PIZZA SYSTEM«Our own special creations. The best in all of South Chicago; and best of all: the leastexpensive. Served also in THE NIGHT CLUB on Saturday nights exclusively.All varieties: Cheese, Sausage,Onion, Mushroom, Pepperoni,Anchovy.All sizes; All mixtures Mon-Friday5:30-11:00atIda Noyes Hall"He took the Word of the Prophet and went straight ahead/'MALCOM X’S COUSIN - HAKIM JAMAL CEF PRESENTS Writers' Workshop. (Plaza 2-8377)Kurosawa's Throne of Blood andLang's M. This double feature willbe shown in Cobb on Feb 14 7 &9:15 respectively $1. Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,363-4555.HALF-WAY HOUSES Do They Really Do It In Trees? 1Am Curious (Yellow) — In the Spir¬it of the Lascivious Ball.PEOPLE wishing to help rehabili¬tate former mental patients. CallJennifer, 493-3284 or Al, 667-5012. SUPER PERSONALSUC male seeks coed for meaningfulsexual rein. 288-0433.BOOKS FOR BAILRAY: 1 jerk off in the shower think¬ing about you. Don't be so shy! I'mmore than willing.20 SDSers Busted in 2 wks. forfighting UICC ban of SDS. GiveBooks 8. Rummage to raise bail.Phone 924-9375.HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - BirchS45/TON DELIVEREDABORTIONSDON'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.PERSONALSMORRIS, in person. Chairs aSOPHIE affair! 2-10-7:30 INH FOR IMMEDIATEGive a DAMN! Help beat the ma¬chine. Take a swipe atDEMAGOGUE DALEYCARPETBAGGER CHRISKNOW-NOTHING KEANECall Linda or Jay or Steve or Maryat 275-7796. DELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESpecial Student RatesBring your wits! (ypsl-scaf) Wed.7:30 East Lounge INH PEOPLE WHO KNOWTALES OF THE IDIOT KING (An¬other in a continuing saga).Said the IK's dealer to the IK:Hey, man, how about a lid?Said the IK to his dealer:Not with my jelly jar, you don't.You have just read dial-an-ldiot-Kingism. Tune in next issue for an¬other in the continuing sagaVolunteer your mind and body tomake FOTA'S Sock Hop the TOPdance in UC history. 843 BJLearn how the Imperialist Giant op¬erates around the world at the MID¬WEST CONFERENCE on "Impe¬rialism 8< Liberation" Feb. 12-14.Here. For info, 477-3340 CALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEAVERSCUSTOM QUAUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933The Fifth Horseman is FEAR!CAN YOU DANCE? Thurs. Night 8pm Blue Gargoyle. DR. AARON ZIMBLERSTUDENT TRAVEL, TRIPS,CHARTERS. EUROPE, ORIENT,AROUND THE WORLD. WriteS.T.O.P. 150C Shattuck, Berkeley,Cal, 94704 or see travel agent. Optometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping CenterMid-Winter Student Special-20% dis¬count on ready-made leather 8<suede items. 10% discount onMADE TO ORDER sandals (53 dif¬ferent styles). Effective Feb. 5 thru13. Ad Lib Studio, 5210 Harper Har¬per Crt , 752-3945.FREE INFORMATION! LOW COST, SAFE, LEGAL j! ARflRTinN ! 1510 E. 55th St.363-6363hif11n I iiii nuwii i luii i| IN NEW YORK >i SCHEDULED IMMEDIATELY i! (212) TR 7-8562 j1 MRS. SAUL |•certified ABORTION REFERRAL| All Inquiriei Confidential ] KINGINTERVIEWAbortionInformation(212)271-4401We believe that if you think you' arepregnant, you should be able to findout what to do.We believe that if you have con¬firmed your pregnancy, you shouldbe able to call someone to help youdecide what to do.We believe that if you want an abor¬tion, only the most qualified boardapproved gynecologists should per¬form it.We believe that you should have theright to decide whether your abor¬tion will be performed in a hospitalor outpatient facility.We believe that in all cases, thefacility used should be perfectlyequipped and staffed.We believe that you should under¬stand exactly what an abortion pro¬cedure is.We believe that transportation ar¬rangements to New York should bemade for you, as well as accommo¬dations if they are neededWe believe that all of these thingsshould be done at the lowest pos¬sible cost to you.We believe you feel the same wayWe know we can help you, even ifit’s just to talk to someone. King Broadcasting Com¬pany. a growing, diversifiedcommunications companycentered in the Pacific North¬west, would like to meet withgraduating seniors and grad¬uate students interested incareers within the communi¬cations Industry.The company owns andoperates TV-AM-FM broad¬cast stations in Seattle, Port¬land and Spokane: a film-production division, a com¬munity antenna (CATV) divi¬sion, and a properties andreal estate division.Entry-level positions occurin radio, television and filmproduction: announcing, newsreporting, sales, promotion,merchandising and photo¬graphy.Preference is given thosewith broad liberal-arts edu¬cational backgrounds at theundergraduate level.Forfurther information, youmay consult our careerspamphlet and the companypolicy manual at your campusplacement office, where aninterview with our represen¬tative also may be scheduled.King is an equal opportunityemployer.iwEhi Medref Inc.58-03 Calloway StreetRego Park, New York 11368(212) 271-4401 OOP KING■I BROADCASTING COMPANYWed. 8:00 pmUnitarian Church57th & Woodlawn »Donation $1.00co/sponsored by Student Govmt &Chgo Center for Black Religious StudiesFebruary 9, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/7TEhe C[nit)(T8itg of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELPass in j8 JWinorTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 31 members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRARICHARD VIKSTROM, Director of Chapel MusicEDWARD MONDELLO, Continue,SUSAN NALBACM LUTZ, Soprano BARBARA PEARSON, SopranoPHYLLIS UNOSAWA, Contralto DONALD DOIG, TenorSTEPHEN SWANSON, Baritone ARTHUR BERG, BassSunday * February 14, 1971 * 3:30 p.m.Tickets: Reserved $5.00 General Admission $4.00UC Connected/Alumni $3.50 UC Students $2.50On Sale: All TICKETRON outlets including Marina Citydial T-l-C-K-E-T-S for informationWoodworth’s Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetCooley's Corner, 5211 Harper AvenueReynolds Club Desk, 5706 University AvenueMail Orders to: Chapel Music Office, 59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago 60637Please make checks payable to The University of Chicago and enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope♦♦♦ Jrntrodiuctna ♦♦♦♦LUNG-HINGi♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ a new Chinese-American Restaurant in: ^ ? %Hyde Park1435 E. 51st St.667-1316 x♦♦♦♦^As a special for Maroon readers, to give an opportunity to** sample our unique dishes, we make the following offer: *♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Bring in this ad and receive:Dragon Pheonix Kew Reg. $6.00/now $4.00Cold Coin Chicken Kew Reg. $4.50/now $3.75Snow Flakes of July Reg. $3.00/now $2.503 Star Steak Special Reg. $4.95/now $4.00Order I day ahead the followingPekin Roast Duck (half) Reg. $4.50/now $4.00(whole) Reg. $8.00/now $7.50Pekin Roast Chicken (half) Reg. $3.75/now $3.25(whole) leg. $7.50/now $7.00Cocktail Hour5-7All drinks 50coffer good ’’till 2/2.3 ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ABORTIONI NFORMATI ONANDASS I STANCECALL (215) 878 • 580024 hours 7 daysFOR TOTALLY CONFI¬DENTIAL INFORMATION.w, recommend only:the most reputable physicians' doc¬tors o^ering fair end reasonableprices; services which will be com.pletely within the 'aw; services per¬formed at accredited hospitals.L«(il Abortions Without DelayARS INT.Produced by AL RUBAN Assooot* Producer SAM SHAWWr.tton ond Dtrectod by JOHN CASSAVETES FROM COLUMBIA PICTURESNOW PLAYING A WALTER REAOE THEATREwf squire58 E. OAK STREET . 337-1117 PIZZA iPLATTER;Pizio, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price! |I460E. 53rd 643-2800 |L W ^DELIVER jYOU REMEMBER YOUR FAMILYGIVE THEM SOMETHING TOREMEMBER YOU BY...SEND HOME A MAROONSUBSCRIPTION NOW.NAMEADDRESSCITY STATE.ZIPONLY $6 00 Forthe remainder ofthe academic year.8/The Chicago Maroon/February 9, 1971