J The Chicago MaroonVolume 7S, Number 48 The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 13, 1971Room and board ratesto rise by JO percentA 10 percent increase in room and boardrates for the 1971-72 academic year hasbeen announced by Gilbert Lee, vice-presi¬dent for business and finance.The new rates will be effective autumnquarter, 1971. Rates will range from $615 to$726 for single rooms and from $561 to $594for double rooms.The rate for a full board contract of 20meals a week for an academic year will be$840.At the same time, Lee announced thatadministrative reponsibility for the depart¬ment of residence halls and commons hasbeen assigned to the office of the dean ofstudents.Edward Turkington, who has been direc¬tor of student housing at the University forfive years, has been appointed assistantdean of students with general supervisoryresponsibility over all single-student hous¬ing.He will supervise in areas such as build¬ing maintenance, maid service and foodservice, which have been the responsibilityof the office of business and finance.Lee said the rate increase in both roomand board was made necessary to helpmeet the constantly increasing operatingcosts of wages, food, supplies and servicesLow student turnout anticipated forthis week's peace treaty referendumThe people’s peace treaty referendum,calling for a “withdrawal” of the Univer¬sity from the Indochina war, will be heldWednesday and Thursday.Only students may vote and they mustpresent a valid UC ID card or temporaryID. No campaigning will be permitted with¬in 25 feet of the polls.Student Government (SG) and NationalStudent Association elections will be held atthe same time.The referendum is in four parts. The firstpart requests that the University sign thepeople’s peace treaty. Part B recommendsthe cessation of war-related research oncampus.University assistance of a non-militarynature to Southeast Asia is requested inPart C. Part D pertains to University hir¬ing and firing practices.Mike Fowler ‘71, SG president, said “Ithink the turnout will be 25 to 35 percent ofthe student body. I feel that sections A andC are most likely to pass. These apply tothe People’s Peace Treaty and most of thepeople are familiar with it. Also Part Cdoesn’t antagonize anyone.“Parts B and D are more difficult; PartB because it’s more controversial and Dbecause it’s not very well understood. If itdoes pass the University will probably re¬spond by ignoring it.”Miles Costick Lev-Ary, a member of theCampus Coalition which opposes the refer¬endum, doesn’t expect a heavy turnout. “Iwould be satisfied if one third of the regis¬tered student body turn out to vote and thisis almost high hopes,” he said.“The smaller the percentage of turnoutthe greater the chance for passage. I wouldbe inclined to think that Part A has thebest chance of passage. I think that Part Ais a vehicle to pass the other parts.”David Moberg ‘72, a member of theFVnpip’c Peace Treaty Coalition, said,“The results of the canvassing are very en¬couraging. The whole thing has a very goodchance of passage. “Part A, C, D, and B represent the orderof support. A lot of misinformation hasbeen associated with Part B. If it does passthe University is going to try to avoid it ornot rush into it.”Moberg felt the amount of turnout is“pretty unpredictable.”Joel Guttman 74, of the Campus Coali¬tion said “We are hoping for as large aturnout as possible.” He would not venturean opinion as to which of the sections aremost likely to pass.The polling places and times are: lawschool lobby, 9 am-12:30 pm; SSA lobby, 12:30-4 pm; Burton Judson, 4-7 pm; SocialSciences lobby, 9-11 am; Mandel corridor,11 am-2 pm.Other places and times are Harper li¬brary’s third floor, 2-4:30 pm; WoodwardCourt central unit, 4:30-7 pm; Cobb lobby, 9am-7 pm; Pierce Tower lobby, 4:30-7 pm,Regenstein, 9 am-7 pm; Judd, in front ofJ126, 1:30-4:30 pm; and weather per¬mitting, the center circle of the Quads 11:30am-l:30 pm or the same times at the divin¬ity school.Locations and times will be the same forboth days.90 run for SG seatsMore than 90 candidates are running forthe 97 seats in Student Government (SG) inelections that will be held Wednesday andThursday.Also to be elected is a ten man delegationto the National Student Association (NSA),which will hold its national convention inAugust.At stake are 53 seats in the graduatehouse and 44 in the undergraduate house.Members elected will serve for a full yearthat will start with the convening of thenew SG sometime later in the quarter.The only party is the Alliance for Inde¬pendents, whose candidates are running ona platform of “making SG relevant,” cut¬ting down the SG budget and increasingservices, and “not subverting SG for anyparticular interest group.”An “anti-NSA” delegation, whose candi¬dates were filed after the 5 pm Mondaydeadline was ruled legal at a meeting ofSG’s election and rules committee Mondaynight.Following is a list of candidates for SGposts, listed according to constituency,number of seats, and candidates.UNDERGRADUATE HOUSEBlackstone(2), no candidates. Boucher(2), John Porges(At), Oliver Long. Breckinridge(2), Evle Hott, ReginaLandes (Al), Carole Traffley. ChamberllnO), Tim Con- lan. Dodd-Mead(l), Fred Rayfield. Salisbury (1), MichaelBorish, David Goldston. Vincent(l), Jerry Risack. Fra-ternities(2), Michael Fowler, Arnold Lund (Al), KarlMenninger (Al), Donald Putterman. Greenwood(2),Mike Mahern, Richard Pokirny, James Sack, BobSchmitz.Henderson (1), Gerald Leval. Shorey (1), Mark Brick-ell, Patrick Spain. Thompson (1), Bruce Ide (Al),Tufts(l), Don Klngley, Leslie Kohn (Al). Hitchcock(2),Bob Esty, Barry Kellman, Ed Tanzman. Lower Flint(l),Jim Collins. Lower RickertO, Chris Luzzle (Al). UpperRickert(l), Paul Collier (Al). Lower Wallace(l), MarciaSettel. Upper Fllnt(l), Steve Froikin.Upper Wallace(l), Lisa Capell (Al), Elizabeth Maier.Other CollegeOS), Amos Bien, Thomas Campbell (Al),Kerry Clock, Ted Felnson (Al), Joe Manclnl (Al), PatMcQuilkln(AI), Bill Pollack (Al), Mark Ragan, AmyRuan (Neo-Dadist Coalition), Cynthia Ward, Rita Gold-nasser, Lawrence Chudnoff, Dan Wintz.GRADUATE HOUSEBiology(2), Ann Foley, Vinton Thompson. Medicine(4), Clifford Marbut, Humanities(7), Judith Gray, AllenZagarell, Ken Dunn, Michael Buckner (Al). PhysicalScience (6), Donna Blake, Ed Doak (Al), Richard Han¬sen (Al), Don Heller (At), Robert Ivano, Peter Kranz,Howard Lemberg (Al), John Tyson (Al), Adrian Wads¬worth, David Bintinger (Al).Social Science (13), Abby Goldstein Arato, ClaudiaCarr, David Crider, Phyllis Cunningham, Carlos Da-bezies, Walter Dickie, Peter Dreier, Steve Easton, JoanHerbert, Jody Hopkins, Dwight King, David Moberg,Richard Obermanns, Ira Rosofsky, Paul Weber (Al).Business(S), Scott Andrews, Steve Fifield, Sally Hunt¬er, Tom Krull, Donald Reed, Pat Remy, Roy Turner.Divinity(3), no candidates. Education^), no candidates.Law(5), Lawrence Kuperman, John Mauck, Steve Har¬ris, Thomas Scharback, John McCaferty, Michael Jones,James Pratt, Peter Kontio. Library School (1), MichaelCarr (Al), Roseann Osrato, Social Service Adminls-trationM), no candidates.NSA CANDIDATES (5 seats, 5 alternates)Oliver Long, Cynthia Ward, Greg Palast, Ed Tanz¬man, Micnaei t-owier, Carlos uabezies, Peter Kranz,Barry Kellman.Antl-NSA delegation: Paul Collier, Vid Ravdin, JohnBrogan, Dan Wintz, Don Heller. ►Al: Alliance of Independents. All other candidates run¬ning as independents. required.In 1970-71, be said, operating expensesare expected to exceed income from roomand board charges by $434,000. Without arate increase, the deficit for 1971-72 wasprojected to grow to $671,000.Operating costs, Lee added, refer only tothe actual physical maintenance of and op¬eration of the residence halls and includeneither capital expenditures nor costs ofdepreciation and debt service.Lee pointed out that a number of privateand public universities across the nationface similar room and board increases fornext year.“Columbia, Harvard, Princeton, Stan¬ford, and Yale all have either already an¬nounced similar increases or anticipate an¬nouncing them,” Lee said. Such increaseswill range from 7 to 12 percent.“Although rates at other institutions arenot directly comparable because some in¬stitutions do not provide maid service orlinens or because their meal contracts in¬clude fewer meals a week, it would appearthat in comparison with Chicago’s newrates, the rates next year at Harvard andYale will be somewhat higher, Princetons’sand Stanford’s somewhat lower, and Co¬lumbia’s about the same.”Undergraduate students are remindedthat the office of College aid will in¬corporate the new room and board ratesinto its calculations of financial need in de¬termining 1971-72 scholarshiD aid.Stave AokiDIRECTOR OF HOUSING EDWARD TUR¬KINGTONAnnounces 10 percent room and boardincrease.mm : iiu u h « \ hm > m i'* M * • 1 ' M * v, \ •, \'*\ . , * i i i , *, i t iTHE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALETO WED? Flawless DIAMOND .26ctmarquise-cut In 14k white gold w-match'g, never used, guar, papers,$85, 343-2489FARFISA Duo Compact organ 2keyboards $550. 343-1373Dresser w mirror, cedar-lined ward¬robe, 9x12 rug, dining rm chairs,kite, chairs and table, sewingmach., zither, clothes, books, dishes,etc. 343-1933Furniture Sale. Moving. Must emptyapt. Cheap stuff. Call Ed, 447-1347or 947-4435.Oak chest, roll-away bed, 2 mantent, 3 chests-of-drawers. Call 443-0155.Cohan, Rodgers, Hammersteln, andStrouse Rally knew how to write asong. Come see the DemocraticWay.Men are In (all for Loesser thingsthan The Democratic WayAssted Furniture Cheap PL2-9447'47 OPEL St. Wagon. 443-8451Water beds from $70, health food,old furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2924 Broadway. 248-mi.Save $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 343-4555.WANTEDCEF Spring series ticket. Will paypremium. Call 443-5338 pmsThe Baha'i New WorldOrder "...calls for noless than the reconst¬ruction and the demi¬litarization of thewhole civilized world— a world organicallyunified in all the essen¬tial aspects of its life, itspolitical machinery, itsspiritual aspiration, itstrade and finance, itsscript and language,ana yet infinite in thediversity of the nationalcharacteristics of itsfederated units."Shoghi Effendi—The World Order ofBaha'u'llahpage 43. I need a place to live May 1 thrumid-June. Call Ed 447-1347 or 947-4435.Couple and 3 children need house,apt, or commune, any size for Mayonly (so kids can finish school) Call484-8141.4 people need Ig apt or house InJune or Sept. 753-2249 ex 1218WANTED: Bicycles — one man's 8>one women's, used, lightweight, 3-spd., In good condition. CHEAP.Call Don or Diana, 753-3243, days.WATERBED SERVICEAt least two things are better on aWaterbed! King size: $40. Anythingfrom a basic water mattress to acustom walnut Installation. Thesebeds are guaranteed! Share yournights with living water — 752-2707.WATERBED LESSONSLearn the secrets of The Bed. An¬cient wisdom Si power. 752-2707SPACESUBLET 4-15-9-1 on tree-lined Har¬per Ave Luxurious 4 rm palace Ter¬race, aircond, vast 4-lang. lib, pi¬ano, hifl. Ideal for respons. coupleInt in classical music Gk-Fr-Russlit. $130-mo. 447-8278.Large 3 rm apt. Jun 15-Sept 20Pleasant, furnished, nr UC, park.Resp. prof, couple. $150. 955-7245Needed: 3 roommates, either sex,for summer 8, next year, for apt at58th 8> Kenwood. For details: 484-5141, ask for Dave.Furn U rm apt avail now 5419Harper kitchenette good view 288-4441 or 324-0342Sunny U room apt to sublet vieH a r p e r-54th. Call Mary 447-1545Mon-Fri 9-5.4) rm, 76 & Kingston, l block tocamp, bus stop. MARRIED gradstudent preferred. RE4-0450. 2 rm apt furnished. 5405 S. Wood-lawn MI3-2740 ; 447-5744Studio, June 1, E. Hyde Park hl-rise, lease ends Aug. '72. $134-mo.Furn for sale optional (rugs, kitchenset, drapery, big bed). Call 324-4443evenings.SUMMER SUBLET. 4-room 3rd-floor apt. 1 blk from campus. Juneto Sept. Fully furnished, TV, books,stereo, porch 8, tree. 484-3839CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithFurn apt 4 rms 5435 Kenwood 493-0448 $140 summer only.PEOPLE WANTEDMOTHERSWork while children are in school.Educational Interviewing. Call Mrs.Loeb.493-83512 M grd Std sk smmr rmte for SShore apt May 1-Oct. 1 or fractionthereof. Call Gary at 947-5048 or 374-7844 after 4.Wine and cheese party — April 14Phi Sigma Delta — Friday 4:30 pm5425 S. Woodlawn FACULTYGUESTTONIGHT BANDERSNATCH 7:30FREE "Destination Inner Space" —sea lab battles alien — 3-star!! I2 Fern Rmmts wntd: 57 8> Drxl. $57mo. Lease June 15. 493-4031Fern roomate desperately neededroom-furnished. $75-mo Must Likeanimals. Call Maggie at 32593 daysor 484-3424 nights.STAFF, STUDENTS. Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. 1.75 for an hour's work. Oncampus. Call X3-4710 for an appoint¬ment.i CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Thos whot yew need from o S10Twsed f s 12 Rug, to o customPcarpet. Specialising in Remnants^44 Min returns at a fraction of the <^original cost.^Decoration Colon and Quakfievf Additional 10% Discount with this*Adt FREE DELIVERY Rider wanted to Seattle (Portlandor Vancouver). Share driving andcosts. Leaving Apr. 24. Call Phyllis324-2907.Student to teach family of 3 rudi-m e n t s of Danish. Arrangementsvery flexible. Call 753-8055 or 324-4047.MEN of all trades to NORTHSLOPE, ALASKA and the YUKON,around $2800.00 a month. For com¬plete information, write 1o Job Re¬search, P.O. Box 141, Stn-A, To¬ronto, Ont. Enclose $3.00 to covercost. HOMEWORKERS BADLY NEEDEDAddress envelopes in spare timeMINIMUM of $14 per 1000. Sendstamped envelope for immediateFREE details to MAILCO, 340Jones, Suite 27, S.F., Calif., 94102.WOMEN TO CALLHIGH SCHOOLSPublishing Co. needs phone repre¬sentatives to call social studiesteachers 're class subscriptions. 4-5hour shifts. $2.50 hr. 8, commissions.Call Immediately 493-2020.PEOPLE FOR SALEMassage for Male & Female Scandl-n a v I a n , Oriental & Mid-EasternMassages — All three in one mas¬sage. Call Bob: 324-4739 anytimeMOVING?Licensed mover A hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480PARTYWine and cheese party — April 14Phi Sigma Delta — Friday 4:30 pm5425 S. Woodlawn FACULTYGUESTTAI CHI CHUANNow Is the moment now, to takewhat healthfulness the Gods allow:TAI-CHI CHUANTIME: Thurs 7-9 pm, Sun 8-10 pmPLACE: Ida Noyes Hall Dance RmGO CLUBTHUR IDA NOYES 7PMSHULAMITH FIRESTONE3 films April 15 8 pm Cobb $1SHU LIE 1948 sketch of ShulamitFirestone. HUM 255 Nancy Stokely,expelled '49 confronts UC film class8 yr later. WHAT THE FUCK ARETHESE RED SQUARES? Post-Cam¬bodia, Striking Art Institute Stu¬dents discuss their role in society.LIFE CAN GROW BETTERG e s t a I t-Encounter Workshops bytrained, experienced leader. MichaelGoodman works with Body Dynam¬ics, Transactional Analysis, & more.Marathon Sat & Sun April 24-25 lim¬ited to 10: $25 Seven Thurs evesstart Apr. 22: $25. "You are Howyou eat" — Gestalt A Food. Sat. ASun. May 1-2: $25. Call 752-2707. SCENES ABORTIONSGAY LIBGAY LIB Consciousness-Raisinggroups on BI-SEXUALITY everyThur 7:30 pm Ida Noyes 1212 E 59If you’ve seenone redwood tree,you’ve seen themall.” R. ReaganRedwood TreeThat statement was made about six years ago. Lastmonth, in regard to a major oil spill — the same man said“It could have been worse.”Times have changed, but most of the people runningthis country haven’t. Clear Creek is what you can doabout it. We’re a magazine for doers, telling precisely theway things are and what you can do about them.In Clear Creek you’ll find reports by Nader’s Raidersand concerned scientists. We will also have visionaryarticles on ecology, animal behavior, the origin andevolution of life and habitat design. Regular featuresinclude works of art, poems, a children’s page, organicgardening and cooking, and environmental law.It’s about time you had straight reporting with nothingleft out. Get Clear Creek at your newsstand. 50<f a copy or$5.00 a year. For subscriptions, write: 617 Mission Street,San Francisco, California 94105.Our cnuulrv. Ifinorr il anil il 11 ill fin nuniv. SEE THE PRETTY MAIDS FEATUREDIN THIS MONTH'S PLAYBOY MAGAZINEa good footballcoach, can getaway with murderI/The Chicago Marooa/April 13, 1171 MGMpncm ROCK HUDSON ANGt DICKINSON TELLY SAVALAS^ PRETTY MAIDS ALL IN A RCW Co ROOD/ McDCNMALL KEENANWYNN Sc«r«i» b, GENE RO00ENBERRY B*«d on the nowi by FRANCIS POLLINIBI ADULTS mom0 METROCOLORNOW PLAYING IXClUSIVt HOST CHICAGO SHOWING CRAFT COOP features prints, tiedye, leather, macrame, and otherhandcrafts, all done by local artists.Visit us Mon-Fri 11:30-2:30 ThursNlte 7-9 In the Blue Gergoyle 57th AUniversity.Yoga Poses Concentr. Meditatn.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Classes SRINEROOE OF INDIA DO 3-0155Folk Dancing is Aliva and Well inIda Noyas HallSundays 8-11:30 SOcentsINDIAN COOKING CLASSES BeginApril. Contect 955-9812 — morningbefore 10am, or evenings.Tired of pollution A smog? Gat outof the city this summer A go toKibbutz $450. Call 741-4152 or 274-1011."SOUTH AFRICA LIBERATIONMOVEMENT" Talk by ThomlMhlambiso African National Con¬gress, Wed April 14 7:30 pm Inter-national House Everyone Welcome!FREEGESTALT Encounter Group. Week¬end of April 23, 24, 25. Limited toten. $25. Lorrle Peterson, ex¬perienced leader. 288-3541.ZEN MEDITATION GROUP SittingMon end Wed 5:00 5844 Harper 288-7485 or 447-1347.Hear African Freedom fighterThoml Mhlambiso Wed 7:30 Inter¬national House.PRE-MED CLUB MTG 7:00 pmThurs. April 15, Billings M-137 Jo¬seph J. Celthaml on Applying toMedical Schools — ElectionInternational Panel: "VIEWS ONABORTION" Fri Apr 14, 8 pmCrossroads Center 5421 Blackstone.ONGOING GESTALT EncounterGroup Begins Monday, April 24, 7-11pm for 7 weeks, limited to 12. $30Lorrle Peterson, experienced leader.288-3541.Don't let the right take over. SayNO to the alliance.REVITALIZATION meeting Thurs.7:30 pm Ida Noyes, 3 rd Floor.The Democratic Way — The Showwith more hits then Guys end Dolls,Bye Bye Birdie, Damn Yankees,and Carousel put together. A Black-friers Production.SCI FIC FILMSTONIGHT BANDERSNATCH 7:30FREE "Destination Inner Space —sea lab battles alien — 3-star!!! WHY PAY for abortion counselinony FREE •" Hyde SSNY abortions from $150 CallService, 447-4015 ler9yPERSONALS ~~Pregnant and distressed?Call 233-0305Sexist of the Month lives! “To a Baha'i, effective change^occur in two ways - m self and insociety. Efforts In only one are insufficient. We welcome investigationof the unifying principles and programs at work in over 300 areas ofthe world.LOST: Grey A white male kitted55th A Cornell. Answers to Appleby343-5918 after 3:00 PLEASE V-8 adits, 3 chldrn A 4 pets wnt torent, Ise or buy approx 15 rm hseor apt bldng 30 min from loop for 2-3 yr grp Ivng exprnce. Prsnt leasesexpiring A time Is short! We needgood prospective leads) Please heioIf you can — call 343-3814.How can you be an "independent"end run on a slat# at the sametimeTONIGHT BANDERSNATCH T*)FREE "Destination Inner Space'' -see lab battles alien — 3 star!! >Make a revolution in your Tife~ZCome to Kibbutz this summer!The so-called "Amence~ZrTndepZ.dents" slate is the same gang whohave brought SG to its current stateof disrepute — under a new nameUncle Sam taking too large a shZeof your income. Life-time financialplanning servlca. Call Phil Sidler282-1404.Blow your mind with good musicLowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,343-4555.NUDIST CLUB for slngla women,•tc., describe yourself, send 35cents, MYW CLUB, PO Box 1342Aurora, III., 40507Students for Israel offers an ex¬citing program for those seriouslyconsidering living there Jul-Aug $450(inci trensp.) Will be based on Kib¬butz A explore various KibbutzimUrban Collectives, developmenttowns as possible homes. Call 7614152 or 274-1011.SUPER PERSONALSThe Democratic Way — The BiggestPut-on since the real thing. April 30,May t A May 7-8.Beware the Golden Jockstrap IHAYLfT’S ALL NIGM SUCHPfRfORMANCfS FRIDA/ l SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAS! REGULAR FEATUREApr. 16Till ME THAT YOU 10V! Mi,JUMtf MOONLizo Minnelli 12, 2:00 a m. Apr 17TNI WILD BUNCHWilliam Holden 12,2:15 a mApr 23FAINT YOUR WAGONLee Marvin 12, 2:15 a m Apr 24THi ADVENTURERSCandice Bergen 12,3“ a mApr. 30WUSAPaul Newman 12,2:00 am May 1IITTIEFAUSS AND BIG HALSEYRobert Bedford1 nuns II58 lCEF 75VIRGINIA WOOLFApril 18Law School 7 & 9:15REDEEM THIS COUPON FORTHOMAS JEFFERSON BIRTHDAY SPECIALLevi JeanJacketsBluejeatt Bellsoffer expires 4/19/71•7.98•4.49■rrTTnM'l j ? il-t.'i ifBillings workers ratify new 2-year contractBy FRED WINSTONBillings hospital workers have ratified anew two-year Contract with the University,effective yesterday, which includes wageincreases and a change in sick-pay bene¬fits, personnel director Fred Bjorling saidMonday.Employees will receive a 35 cent perhour raise for the first year of the contractand a 20 cent raise the second year. 1116shift premiums have also been raised from15 cents to 20 cents per hour extra. According to Bjorling, the raises keep theworkers’ salaries “pretty much in line”with other hospitals in the Chicago area.Under the new contract, disabled hospitalworkers are eligible to receive 60 percentof their salary for up to the entire sixmonth period between the end of their sickleave and the beginning of long-term dis¬ability compensation. They will also re¬ceive 60 percent of their full salary duringthis latter period.Under the previous contract, workers could only draw on their vacation pay andwere not eligible for any other pay benefitsduring this time period.In exchange for the sick leave accrual,the amount of sick leave has been reducedfrom two weeks to one week.Employees will also be eligible as of June1 for paid vacations of five week? after 20years of service instead of after 25 as underthe previous contract.Other vacation benefits of three weeksfor those in their first 10 years of service and of four weeks for those between 10 and20 years in service, remain the same.The University will also survey hospitalworkers to see if a majority want to getinto the University’s medical insuranceplan, Bjorling said. If over half vote for theplan, it will be available to the workers.One other major point of the contract isthe establishment of a joint union-manage¬ment training committee to study and rec¬ommend training programs for upgradingthe training of hospital workers.ABOUT THE /MIDWAYBritish minister lecturesAnthony Wedgwood Benn, minister oftechnology in the British labor government,will speak on “Multi-National Corporations,Large Companies and Government Policy”Wednesday at 4 pm in Quantrell Audito¬rium.The lecture is sponsored by the social sci¬ences collegiate division and the center forpolicy study.As minister of technology, he pilotedthrough parliament the industrial ex¬pansion act and used it to support the Brit¬ish computer industry. His functions wereenlarged in 1967 when the ministry of tech¬nology sponsored the engineering industry.In 1969 his department took over respon¬sibility for regional economic and develop¬ment policies.All interested students are invited to aninformal discussion hour with Benn in Swiftlounge, Wednesday at 2 pm.UNWANTEDPREGNANCYHAVE A LEGAL ABORTIONPERFORMED IN NEW YORK STATECAP meetingThe Hyde Park chapter of the CampaignAgainst Pollution (CAP) is sponsoring acitizens’ meeting to protest US Steel Corpo¬ration’s alleged failure to institute ade¬quate pollution controls both inside and out¬side its mills.Hie meeting will be held tonight at 8 pm,at the First Unitarian Church, 57th andWoodlawn.Speakers will include Stanghton Lynd,radical historian involved in civil rightsand peace work, Ed Sadlowski of theUnited Steel Workers, and Paul Booth, co-chairman of CAP.Psychoanalyst to speakThe University Club for Responsible Indi¬vidualism is sponsoring a lecture by Ernestvan den Hagg, professor of social philoso¬phy at New York University, on “Jews andthe Radical Left” Wednesday at 8 pm inr marPLATTERRANGE FROM $110CALLLEGAL ABORTION PROJECT312-743-3640or312-743-3388Monday through Saturday9 a.m. to 5 p.m. IIIJ Pizza, Fried Chicken J• Itolion Foods 'j Compare the Price! |! 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 JL Wi.QfJkSVER JCUP AND SAVEABORTIONiis m EIY!• Call the people who've taken the chance• put of abortion.;(212)490-3600• OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK• PROFESSIONAL SCHEOOLINC SERVICE. INC.• MS Fifth Ave., New Vor* City 10017• • a There is a fee for our service • •ESSENCE OF BUDDHISMA 10 Week Lecture CourseConducted by theVen. G.M. KuboseWed. Eve's 7:30-9 PAAApr 14 thru Jun. 16Fees: Course $15;Single Admission $2BUDDISTEDUCATIONAL CENTERFor Information 4RegistrationCal! 334 4661DR. AARON ZIMMEROptometrist•y« examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde PorkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 CHEVROLETHeadquartersHyde ParkChevrolet5500 Lake Park363-8600PfttGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONreferral, why spendmoney needlessly?OUR PROFESSIONALSFRI/TCFS are free.CALL (215) 722-5360- 7 DAYS ;l| HRS. Ida Noyes Program Bd. 25ePROGRAM ONE(Truffaut, Lester, Polanski)Wednesday8:00 Social Sciences 122.A practicing psychoanalyst, van denHaag is the author of “Education as anIndustry”, “The Fabric of Society”, and“Passion and Social Constraint”. He hasmade contributions to numerous scholarlyworks and journals.His most recent book ,“The Jewish Mys¬tique,” explores the nature of “Jew¬ishness” and discusses myths about Jewsand Judaism. CorrectionIn the article entitled “Math team winsnational competition” in Friday’s Maroon,Robert Oliver ’71, was said to have placedfourth in the William Lowell Putnam mathcompetition. Actually, ranks are not an¬nounced, but Oliver’s name fell fourth outof the top six in alphabetical order. Weregret the error.BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, April 13FLICK: Dinner at Eight, Quantrell, 7:30 pm.LECTURE-DEMONSTRATION: Edward Mondello, Uni¬versity Organist, demonstration at the console, 12:15pm.GAY-LIB STUDY GROUP: Blue Gargoyle, 8 pm.GENETICS TRAINING PROGRAM: Thomas J Schopf,University of Chicago, "Genetic Characteristics ofMarine Shallow Water and Deep Sea Species," Zoo¬logy 14, 4 pm.NUC FLICK: "Finally Got The News" by League ofRevolutionary Black Workers followed by a discus¬sion with Herman Holmes, a member of the Inter¬national Congress of Colonized Workers and MikeGoldfield, former UC student and present member ofSojourner Truth Communist Organization. Charge,$1. Blue Gargoyle 8 pm.Wednesday, April 14FLICK: Two Weeks in Another Town, Quantrell, 7:30pm.LECTURE: "Cultural Revolution in China," JoshuaHorn, MO, Author, in China for 15 years, St ThomasChurch, 5472 Kimbark, 7:30 pm.TALK: Thami Mhlambiso, representative of the Afri¬can National Congress, "South Africa LiberationMovement," I-house homeroom, 7:30 pm.SEMINAR: "My Daughter The Doctor, Women In TheProfessions," Blue Gargayle, 8 pm.FILM: "My Lai Witness," followed by discussion ofplans for April 24 march on Washington, Studenttv **.,.• Mobilization Committee, Ida Noyes 3rd floor theater,3:30 pm.LECTURE: B B Lai, director-general, archaeologicalsurvey of India, "Kalibangan: A Provincial Capitalof the Indus Civilization," Breasted Hall, OrientalInstitute, 4:30 pm.REHEARSAL: University Orchestra. Mandel hall;woodwinds, 6:30 pm; full orchestra, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: Margaret Engel, UC department of micro¬biology "Generation of Novel Genotypes," micro¬biology club, Ricketts north, room l, 3 pm; tea inroom 7 at 2:30.LECTURE: Ernest van den Haag, professor of socialphilosophy, NYU, "Jews and the Radical Left," UCclub for responsible individualism, soc sci auditor¬ium, 8 pm.LECTURE: Anthony Wedgwood Benn, minister of tech¬nology in the British Labour government, "Multi-National Corporation, Large Companies and Govern¬ment Poicy," social science collegiate division, Quan¬trell, 4 pm.Thursday, April 15GO CLUB: Ida Noyes, 7 pm.MEETING: Joseph J Ceithaml on applying to med¬ical schools, pre-med club, Billings M-137, 7 pm.MEETING: Revitalization, Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.GAY LIB: Consciousness-raising groups on bi-sexuality.Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.THEATRE: Burning City guerilla theatre troupe, top¬ical skits. Blue Gargoyle, 8 pm, 75c.FILMS: New Cinema One (Truffaut, Lester, Polansky),CEF & INPB, 8 pm, 25c.Founded 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 60637. 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.PHOTOIMMERSIONsponsored byU of C PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB&MODEL CAMERAin cooperation withAGFA HONEYWELLBESELERSCHEDULEFriday, April 16: Meet at 6 p.m. Lecture and rapsession until 10 p.m.Saturday, April 17; Meet at 6 a.m., Field Trip. 10-11a.m. develop; proof sheets. Lunch;look at proofsheets. Print until eve¬ning; crit. session; possibly moreshooting.Sunday, April 18: More of the same for as long asenthusiasm persists.$35 Fee includes paper, film, chemicals.Cali Al Gorman 493-6700for information and registration.April 13, 1971/Tti? Chicago Marw*) .3 ,,- • ■ - ' v.‘ )>• *f 1 f Jmmm. * » 4 .. . i ! t VThe University of Chicago Rockefeller Memorial Chapel • 59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueOratorio finalSunday Afternoon • 3:30 • April 25, 1971RICHARD VIKSTROM Barbara Pearson/Susan Nalbach Lutz, SopranosDirector Charlotte Brent, Mezzo-SopranoThe Rockefeller Chapel Choir with 42 members ‘ Donald Doig, Tenorof the Chicago Symphony Orchestra * * Arthur Berg, BassTICKETS:?5.00 Reserved '*4.00 General Admission4..50 UC Connected/Alumni2.50 [ C StudentsGroup rates available upon request to theChapel Music Office, 753-44X7.Mail Orders To: Chapel M usic Office, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, Oyth Street anil Woodlawn, C Iueac'o, mois hohArms Control Lecture"The Implicationsof SALT for NATO'Frederick S. WyleVice President and General Counsel of Schro-ders Incorporated, New York; past DeputyAssistant Secretary of Defense for Europeanand NATO Affairs.FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 19713:30 P.M.Breasted Hall Oriental Institute1155 East Fifty-Eighth StreetMr. Wyle will deliver the seventh in a series ofpublic lectures in connection with the ArmsControl and Foreign Policy Seminar sponsoredby the Center for Policy Study of The Universityof Chicago.No admission charge Tickets not required4/The Chicago Maroon/April 13, 1971 MALE 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 gorage near home or school.SAy‘1 LOVE YOUwith a diamond f rUhlUsmTkFINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARS119 N. Wabash at WashinftonEVERGREEN FLAZA^ ENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZAWOW!Low, Low Driving Instruction Rate nowavailable. $9.50/hr. All new air condi¬tioned instruction cars.The School that gives you the best for less.John Hancock School of DrivingCall TU 9-5678Available at:Alt PICK KTR( )\ outlets, including MarinaCity; Dial T I C-k I- I' S tor nearest outlet.Reynolds C lub Desk, ;~th Street and l ni>ersirv.Woodworth’s Bookstore, 141 PL. ;~rh Street.Cooley’s Corner, ;:i 1 Harper Avenue.Please make checks payable to The 1 niversitv </>f Chicagoand enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope.WINGSThe ALL silentclassic of 1927.Starring Oara Bow,Richard Aden, Buddy Rogers.NO Soundtrack. This legendaryfilm will be shown with organaccompaniment by Hal Pearl.Show Timos: M-F7A930Sot-Sun 2,4:30, 7, A 9:30THE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. linnln MS-4133Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all timos is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends.• As MU* Or ueiMtt^BiMLSin-NIAtlY orwciLECO SERVICES, UNLIMITED6 East Cart laid Blvd.(55th 4 State Street)Chicago, Illinole 60615285-1725*2 DISCOUNTFOR OTHER OFFICES(312) 775-0122PREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining a legalabortion immediately in New YorkGty at minimal costCHICAGO (312) ftl-VmCALL PNIIA. (215) I7I-5WPMAM (315) 754*5471ATLANTA (4#4) $24-47*1NIWY0RK (212) 512-4740I A.NL-1B P.RL—7 BAYS A WIIKABORTION REFERRALSERVICE (ARS), INC.xMeeeeeeeMCwt! *7fori si j1645 t. SSthSTtW jCHICAGO, 111. 60613 J2 Phone: M 4-IA5I a********jThe Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 49 The University of Chicago Friday, April 16, 1971Part C sole winner in referendum voteMANNING POLLING PLACE: Two undergrads watch over voters as they decide onreferendum yesterday. About 31 percent of the student body de¬feated sections A, B and D of the people’speace treaty referendum last Wednesdayand Thursday. Part C of the referendumwas passed by 16 votes out of 2300 cast.Part A of the referendum, which calledon the University to sign the people’s peacetreaty, was defeated by a vote of 1360 to967, or 58 percent.Part B, which demanded a cessation towar-related research on campus, lost by 71percent of the vote, 1653 to 663.Part C, which requested University aid toNorth Vietnam of a non-military nature,won narrowly by a vote of 1172 to 1156. TheCampus Coalition had not decided at presstime whether to ask for a recount.Part D, called for the rescinding of nextyear’s tuition hike, and an end to lay-offs ofcampus workers, and reordering if Univer¬sity priorities was defeated by the largestmargin, 1715 to 553 or by 77 percent.Preliminary results of Student Govern¬ment (SG) and National Student Associ¬ation (NSA) elections showed SG presidentMichael Fowler and treasurer Paul Collierboth lost their seats in the assembly.Complete returns of this election, heldconcurrently with the referendum, were not^ Coed dormitories will increaseir By LISA CAPELLCoeducation may extend to Pierce Tow¬er, Burton-Judson Courts, Boucher, Breck¬inridge, and Lower Rickert next year, asa result of recommendations submitted bythe coeducation committee of Inter-HouseCouncil (IHC).Director of student housing Edward Tur-kington approved the recommendations inprinciple, while objecting to some parts.The recommendations call for 46 womento be housed in Pierce, in Tufts and Shoreyhouses; 38 women in Burton-Judson in Sa¬lisbury and Dodd houses; 25 upperclasswomen in Boucher on the first floor; 54men in Breckinridge on the first and sec¬ond floors; and 20 men in Lower Rickert.The committee in its report also proposedthat “in those houses where the number ofupperclass students wishing to return ex¬ceeds the spaces available for them, thedecision about who must leave be made by each house.”Turkington, in a letter to Mike Walker72, president of IHC, objected to the lastproposal saying “under the terms of itshousing contract the University reservesthe right to set procedures for the assign¬ments of room.I do not wish to relinquish that right andso shall want to approve any procedureproposed by any house which limits thenumber of current residents who can re¬turn to that House next year.Further commenting on the report Tur¬kington stated that the size of next year’sfreshman class is not likely to exceed thatof this year’s.Moreover, he wrote, “the extent to whichthe report can be implemented must de¬pend, in large measure, on the availabilityand willingness of appropriate numbers ofmen and women to live in those houssswhich you propose to co-educate.” Turkington strongly advocated that mar¬ried couples serve as resident heads incoed houses. “Both partners should beequally involved in carrying out the respon¬sibilities of the position”, he said.The committee said it assumed that dueto budget problems no significant physicalchanges would be implemented in furtherco-educating dorms. On floors inhabited byboth men and women, separate bathroomfacilities are required by the city housingcode.The committee also suggested that if notenough women are available to meet theplan’s requirements, Dodd house in Burton-Judson remain all men.Last year the same committee made rec¬ommendations to coeducate which resultedin coeducation in Woodward Court, Black-stone, and Greenwood.This is the first year that men and wom¬en have lived in the same houses. available at presstime and will be reportedin Tuesday’s Maroon.Observers noted that this was the heavi¬est turnout for a University-wide election inrecent years. Less than 10 percent of thestudent body voted in last year’s StudentGovernment elections.Miles Costick Lev-Ary, chairman of theCampus Coalition which opposed the refer¬endum, expressed dissatisfaction with theturnout, however. “I expected a heavierturnout,” he said. “In spite of our effortsthe great apathy was still present.“Most of the people who did not vote feltthat it was beneath their dignity to vote ina referendum. I feel that if there had beena larger turnout, the defeat would havebeen more significant.”Members of the People’s Peace TreatyCoalition (PPTC) were disappointed by theresults “I’m glad that Vietnamese livesdon’t depend on University of Chicago stu¬dents,” commented one member cynically.“Students want to be comfortable in theiropinions, but don’t want to put them to ac¬tion,” said another in analyzing the refer¬endum’s defeat.In a formal statement released after thetally PPTC stated that “individuals whosee themselves as opposed to the war butwho fail to understand the connection be¬tween that genocide and their lives are ei¬ther irresponsible, uninformed about themeaning of the war, in which case much ofthe blame is ours, or are complicitouswith the ruling class’ continued prosecutionof the war.“We hope that students who do supportthe people’s peace treaty will demonstratetheir support in May in Washington duringthe long months until the Vietnamese canlive in dignity and freedom.”Referendum ballots were counted in theeast lounge of Ida Noyes Hall under thesupervision of SG election and rules com¬mittee chairman Eugene Goldberg. Repre¬sentatives from both PPTC and theCampus Coalition served as counters.Although balloting was heavier than ex¬pected, there were more students in IdaNoyes Hall watching the Academy awardson television than there were awaiting votereturns.Commented one student, “George C Scottwas a lot more exciting than any of thosereferendum votes.”FOTA limited by money, committee attitudes> »:*rIf By JUDY ALSOFROM“As any organization on campus, we’relimited by the committee and what themembers on the committee want to do,”says Isaac Finkle ’73, this year’s chairmanof the Festival of the Arts (FOTA).And it is this limitation which will makethis year’s FOTA stress an atmosphere ofserious classical ventures rather than thefrivolous gaiety of previous years, andwhich will make this year’s “big-nameband” the Chicago Symphony Orchestra inits presentation of Handel’s orotorio “Theo¬dora.”Finkle also explained another kind of lim¬itation which will give FOTA its characterthis year: “Anytime an activity interfereswith the University’s right to function, itgets put down. No organization can put onsomething with too large a focus on theextra-curricular. This is what we have tofight.FOTA also had to fight an economicbattle (as has everone this year). Theiroverall budget was cut from a $30,000 allot¬ment, which Finkle considered insufficient,to $20,000.This money has been parcelled out to thevarious committees: speakers, dance, the¬ater, music, FOTA fair, orotorio, sock hop,publicity, administrations, and buildingsand grounds.Noticeably absent from this list is a des¬ignation for the Beaux Arts Ball and theVi’.c"\V . i.1' \ ANALYSISGrand Gala, traditions which have been re¬placed by the sock hop and the fair.Finkle explained that Sears, Roebuck andCo, which normally gives a grant to fundthe Gala (last year, a brass ensemble inthe grotos of Rockefeller chapel played to acrowd below, followed by a fireworks dis¬play) did not come through with the moneythis year.However, FOTA has allotted money to re¬place the gala with the fair. This day-longfunction will include a display of craftsfrom all over the city, bluegrass music byJ D Crowe and the Kentucky MountainBoys, and fireworks to follow in the quads.As for the demise of the Beaux Arts Ball(at which Cold Blood and Corky Siegelplayed last year, and Paul Butterfield hasplayed previously) a committee memberclaimed, “It was more or less a consciousdecision on our part for not have a bigband, as we thought this was the responsi¬bility of Revitalization (to bring big-namebands).”This decision was also helped by the diemal financial showing of the ball last year,and by the fact that no one on this year’s FOTA: Last year’s festival began with maypole dance on quads.FOTA committee was interested in puttingon a concert.In hopes that last spring’s enthusiasticresponse to the Sha-Na-Na concert wassome indication of just exactly where thestudent interest does lie, FOTA is sponsor¬ing a sock hop replete with TV flicks fromthe 50’s (such as Lassie, Leave it to Beaver,etc.).A campus group, Phil and the Fastbacks,4ft ft ft ft ft « ft ' « ‘ 4 * 1 ‘ will play, and all students with greasedhair and/or bobby socks can get in free.The selection of Phil and the Fastbacksis another factor indicative of FOTA’scharacter this year. Why do the majorevents include a production by an impro-visational group similar to Second City, aYoung Artists music scries produced byuniversity students in the Midwest area,Continued on page 7t M* ftStraus is named dean ofundergraduate studentsLORNA STRAUS: Assistant professor of anatomy to replace retiring George Playeas dean of undergraduate students October 1.★★★★★★★★★★★★★****cfflarycTraversIN CONCERTORCHESTRA HALLSAT.. MAY 8—8:30 P. M.Tickets: 5.50. 4.50, 3.50For Proforontial SeatingMail orders only220 S. Michigan *0404. EncloseSeM-Addressed. Stamped Envelope ****** RENT YOURAPT! ★ifif Lorna Straus has been appointed dean ofundergraduate students for a three-yearterm, effective October 1,1971.She succeeds George Playe, who re¬signed recently to return to full-time teach¬ing and teaching and research at the Uni¬versity.Mrs Straus has been a University facultymember since 1964. She was appointed anassistant professor in the department ofanatomy and in the College in 1967. Thatsame year she also was named assistantdean of undergraduate students.Mrs Straus is a University alumna. Shereceived her MS and PhD degrees from theUniversity in 1960 and 1962.Her father, Ernst Puttkamner, is profes¬sor emeritus of law at the University. Hetaught at the University from 1920 until hisretirement in 1956.Commenting on her appointment, in ajoint statement, Roger Hildebrand, dean ofthe College, Charles O’Connell, dean of stu¬ dents, said, “We are very happy to an¬nounce the appointment of Lorna Straus asdean of undergraduate students. She is re¬markably well-attuned to the College, to itscurriculum, and to its students.“The fact that she is a graduate of theUniversity only adds to the quality of herinsights into student concerns. We join therest of the College and the University inwelcoming her to her new position.”Last year Mrs Straus was awarded theUniversity’s Quantrell award for excellencein undergraduate teaching.Her special field of academic interest isteaching the correlation between biologicalstructures and functions, at both in¬troductory and advanced levels.At the University, she also serves as sen¬ior advisor in the biological sciences colle¬giate division and is a member of the Uni¬versity’s Educational Review Commission.She and her husband are faculty senior fel¬lows of Breckinridge house.or sell yourbooks or bodyor say hello tothat cute boyor girl in yourHum. class. * Ombudsman position is* now open for applications* ••• * '—«—* i:t_. —j aic****3^ Use the Maroon Classifieds for all these pur-poses and many more. You can place them inperson or use the convenient form on the^^.classified page.★★★★★★★★★★★ Applications for the position of ombuds¬man for the 1971-72 academic year arebeing accepted through April 23 by CharlesO’Connell, dean of students.All individual applications or recommen¬dations should take the form of a letter ac¬cording to a release from O’Connell.Applicants will be interviewed by a com¬mittee consisting of three faculty membersappointed by Provost John Wilson; threestudents, one appointed by incumbent om¬budsman Tony Grafton, one by StudentGovernment, and one by student members on campus student life; and O’Connell.The reviewing committee will submit apanel of candidates they recommend toUniversity President Edward Levi who willmake the appointment.The ombudsman is a part-time salariedofficer of the University who should have“a superior academic average and shouldbe willing to take only a partial academicprogram during the 1971-72 academic yearin order to have sufficient time to serve asombudsman,” according to the release.Copies of the release are available in Ad-Flea Marketand BazaarHARPER COURT5200 South HarperinHyde ParkSunday, April 18th12 to 5 p.m.BARGAINSTHINGS • JUNKWHITE ELEPHA NTSTREASURES•SURPRISESi2/The Chicago Maroon/April 16, 1171aocr v Nixon faced with dilemma: MorgenthauHANS MORGENTHAU: The political science professor spoke before a crowd of 200 on Nixon’s dilemma in S E Asia.Rally protests U S Steel violationsBy FRED WINSTONA rally protesting alleged pollution codeviolations and tax dodges by United StatesSteel Corporation’s South Works was at¬tended by some 75 people at the First Uni¬tarian Church, 5650 Woodlawn, Tuesdaynight.Campaign Against Pollution (CAP),which sponsored the rally, earlier Tuesdaycharged that the county assessor’s officehad underassessed South Works nearly $119million, costing Cook County taxpayersnearly $12 million a year in tax returns.CAP claimed that South Works, assessedin 1969 at $43.4 million, should have beenassessed at more than $162.1 million andthat its tax bill should have been $12 mil¬lion more than its last bill of $4.4 million.Speaking at the rally Tuesday night werePaul Booth, co-chairman of CAP and a for¬mer fellow of the Adlai Stevenson Institute;Staughton Lynd, of the Calumet area taxresearch group and a former University as¬sistant professor of history; and Ed Sad-lowski, international representative of theUnited Steel Workers of America. Booth said that in 1965 US Steel pollutedthe air with 63,000 tons of particulate mat¬ter and that by 1970 the amount had onlybeen cut to 61,500 tons.A CAP report concerning the pollutionstates, “ in five years no meaningfulimprovement was made although the Cor¬poration (US Steel) had been given a vari¬ance from the city pollution law in 1965 onthe condition that they eliminate air pollu¬tion by December 31, 1971.”Sadlowski said, “The concerted effort hasto come now, it has to come today.“United States Steel has polluted the wa¬terways, the air we breathe and they’ll con¬tinue to do so unless something is done.”Referring to delays by US Steel in begin¬ning pollution control, Sadlowski said, “IfUnited States Steel says it wants time toinstall anti-pollution equipment, we justmight give them the time — we just mightshut them down come August 31.”The current union contract expires Au¬gust 31. Lynd said that the pollution “joins theworkers inside the mill with the residentsoutside the mill.”He pointed out that under the eight yearsof the Kennedy-Johnson administrationssteel prices rose seven percent but that un¬der the three years of the Nixon adminis¬tration steel prices had already risen 18percent.Booth announced a campaign to organizethe homeowners to seek an adjustment of a73 percent decrease in their property taxeson the grounds that US Steel is receiving a73 percent reduction.He said that the law requires that eachproper adjustment claim be given a sepa¬rate hearing.“If US Steel is allowed a 73 percent re¬duction in their taxes.” he said, “then wethink every homeowner whose property isdamaged, who is forced to repaint hishouse every year because of US Steel pollu¬tion, is entitled to the same 73 percent ad¬justment.”Expect half million at DC protestThe major thrusts of the spring antiwarcampaign begin next week as an estimated500,000 people will converge on WashingtonDC for the April 24 march and rally.Planned by the National Peace ActionCoalition. (NPAC) and the Student Mobiliza¬tion Committee (SMC), sponsors are ex¬pecting between one-half million and onemillion demonstrators, including a sizablecontingent of organized labor.Next Saturday’s activities in Washingtonwill begin at the Ellipse south of the WhiteHouse, where marchers will assemble be¬tween 10 am and noon. From there, theparade will march around the White House,down Pennsylvania Avenue, ending at theCapitol where a 2 pm rally is scheduled.Coretta King, Senator Vance Hartke,Representative Ron Dellums, National Wel¬fare Rights Director George Wiley, andRev Jesse Jackson are among the tentativespeakers.As of yesterday, permits have been ob¬tained for all but the Capitol rally. Accord¬ing to NPAC organizer Fred Lovgren, per¬mits for use of Capitol facilities are underthe authority of the Vice-President and un¬til last summer Capitol demonstrations hadbeen prohibited.Over 50 buses will leave from Chicagonext Friday afternoon. SMC buses willleave Ida Noyes beginning at 3 pm, and willreturn from Washington on both Saturdaynight and Sunday morning.The Washington march is one of twobeing held April 24. Among the speakers atthp other demonstration in San Franciscowill be Eqbal Ahmad, the Adlai Stevenson fellow and member of the Harrisburg 6.Beginning next week, veterans opposingthe war will come to Washington, many ofthem to return battle decorations. Testi¬mony from the “Winter Soldier” war crimehearing, held in Detroit last February, will be presented on the Capitol steps.Following the April 24 march, a “people’slobby” will be established to remain inWashington through May 1 to apply pres¬sure to cabinet departments as well as Con¬gress. Hans Morgenthau, warned Wednesdaynight that President Nixon, may deploynuclear weapons in Southeast Asia ratherthan face “ignominious defeat.”Morgenthau, Michelson distinguished ser¬vice professor of political science who willsoon be retired from the University, spokebefore a crowd of 200 at The Church, 400Blackstone. His appearance was sponsoredby the Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference and the Hyde Park-South SidePeace Council.“Nixon is confronted with a painful di-lemna,” Morgenthau said. “He musteither admit defeat or reescalate and win.”If he chooses the latter, the Presidentmay resort to low-kiloton nuclear bombs,the only weapon he has not used so far,as a means to victory, Morgenthau ex¬plained.“Nixon’s pugancious nature and his con¬cern for a place in history may compelhim to destroy what little is left of Viet¬nam,” Morgenthau said.Morgenthau sees as particularly possi¬ble the use of smaller nuclear weaponsto obliterate the strategic Ho Chi Minhtrail, especially if Nixon’s current policiesshow no signs of success in time for the1972 elections.“This impending debacle, this terribledilemma could have been avoided had thepresent Administration not aligned itselfso closely with the Thieu-Ky regime,”Morgenthau said.Calling the Thieu-Ky government “an in¬superable handicap,” Morgenthau stressedthe need for a non-military government inVietnam.In the meantime, Vietnam is “stuckwith a government that cannot possiblycommand the loyalty of the people,” Mor¬genthau said. “Thieu and Ky are regardedby the Vietnamese as stooges of a for¬eign power.”Morgenthau also expressed his fear ofChinese involvement in Vietnam.“Despite our ping pong diplomacy,” Mor¬genthau said, “there are people in Wash¬ington who regard the conflict in Indo¬china as an opportunity to settle accountswith Red China by provoking their entryinto the war.“These people in Washington believethat a war with China is inevitable, andthe sooner we get it over with, the better.The headlines must not blind us to theenormous danger we face in Vietnam,”Morgenthau said.Morgenthau feels, however, that thisdanger can be minimized “if we can bringhome to the President and his advisorsthe unwillingness of the people to wagethis war.”“Faced with a disintegration of supportfor the war on all fronts, the Presidentmay bring the war to a complete close be¬fore the 1972 elections,” Morgenthau said,“but only if the disintegration is main¬tained until then.”SG president indicted on tax chargeStudent Government president Mike Fow¬ler received a federal indictment todayon two counts of supplying false infor¬mation on his federal income tax W-4forms.Fowler, who is an employee at Billingshospital, changed the number of ex¬emptions claimed on his W-4 form from oneto four May 27, 1970 after he decided toprotest American military action in Cam¬bodia by paying less federal taxes.Over the summer Fowler wrote a letterto Internal Revenue explaining what he didand his opposition to the Indochina war.In December he raised the number of ex¬emptions claimed to five.Fowler was interviewed in February byInternal Revenue special agents who warn¬ed him that he would be prosecuted.Indicted along with Fowler were CarlMeyer, a University graduate, and BillHimmelbauer, a former University doctor¬al candidate.Fowler, Meyer, and Himmplhanpr arp allmembers of the South Side Fund for Man- MICHAEL FOWLER AND JULIUS HOFFMAN: SG president and judge to spar in court.kind, a group which, according to Fowler,pools money saved from not paying federaltaxes and spends it on “human needs rath¬er than to spend it on killing people.” Hesaid some of the monev saved has beendonated to a medical clinic. Fowler was told that he would not be ar¬rested but that he would receive a sum¬mons to appear in Judge Julius Hoffman’scourt for a hearing May 6.The maximum sentence Fowler can re¬ceive is one year in jail and a $500 fine.April 16, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/3fI THE WORLD IS FULL OF BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE AND PLACES.To help you get there,TWA introduces the Getaway* Program.It you could dig hitch-hiking across Spain orcamping along a road in England. Staying at achateau in France or living near a beach inCalifornia. TWA brings you Getaway.First there's the Getaway* Card. With it, you cancharge airfare, hotels, meals, cars, just aboutanything just about anywhere. And then take up totwo years to pay.There's also the Youth Passport* Card. It lets youfly at 33'/’,% off on all domestic flights on a standbybasis.It also gives you reduced rates at many placesyou'll be staying.Youth Passport is good on 20 other airlines. It costs$3 and it's available to anyone between 12 and 21.And if you send in the coupon, we'll send you theGetaway Vacation Kit.It has a Getaway Book, a 224 page look at 19 ofthe great cities of the world.Three brochures, one on America, one on Europe,and a third on Africa, Asia, the Orient, and thpPacific. It has the independent Getaway Brochure. Forthose who would rather travel by themselves thanwith a group.And it has applications for both the YouthPassport and Getaway Card.Mail in the coupon for TWA's free GetawayVacation Kit.And find out how easy getting away really is.The Getaway ProgramU.S.A./EUROPE/ASIA/PACIFIC/AFRiCA| TWA, P.O. Box 465,|Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735I Please send mej TWA's free Getaway Vacation Kit.I NameAddressFiuty StateCHM041214/The Chicago Maroon/April 16, 1971 *S<fVM m.irks owned f\< liMvelv l»\ IWXEssays on Sex EqualityA classic in the history of woman’s rightsJohn Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor MillEdited by Alice S. Rossi $1.95The American JuryNowhere but Light: Poems 19b4-1969 Harry Kalven, Jr., and Hans Zeisel $5.95Ben Bellit $1.95New Views on the Nature of ManEdited by John R. Platt $2.95Poetic Closure:A study of How Poems EndBarbara Herrnstein Smith $3.95The Linguistic Turn:Recent Essays in Philosophical MethodRichard Rorty $4.50Theatre of the WorldExamines the Renaissance public theatreas one of the products of the Vitruvianmovement among the artisan classes of lateTudor EnglandFrances A. Yates $3.45 These titlesavailable atUC Bookstore,558th & Ellis, new phoenix paperbacks.STUDENTRATE-ALLTIMESSNOLBABORTIONERY!Call the people who’vi; taken the chanceout of abortion.(212)400-3600OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEKPROFESSIONAL SCHEDULING SERVICE. INC.tas Firth tv. M.W V,.v r.,} .«n. .• • There is a fee for our service • • the university of Chicago press“A master-1 piece, aI brilliant.I funny,I movingi nim”April 16, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5. a ,t tit;. li'HVi'.c.uVJ ._Politics in the Twentieth CenturyEssays on persistent intellectual andpolitical problemsHans J. Morgenthau $4.95The Abolition of Slavery in the NorthArthur Zilversmit $2.75Obscenity and Public MoralityHarry M. Clor $2.95The Fiscal Revolution in AmericaHerbert Stein $4.50The Cave and the Spring:Essays on PoetryA. D. Hope $1.95PROFILEdesign: As a member of DOC films, hecreates many of their posters and will alsobe doing the posters for the next Black-friars production.Although James does the most postersand has even designed a book cover, hehad no experience in art before coming tothe University. He first thought of doingposters “while doodling in humanities classmy first year,” he said. “I convinced thehead of DOC films, who grudgingly agreedto let me do one.“Gradually the next year I did more andmore and improved my technique. I find itmore interesting than studying.”Preston traces his artistic history backto his early childhood. “As a little kidI always thought the Mona Lisa was stav¬ing at me,” he confided. He says that heused to illustrate pornographic novels andhopes to write and illustrate them againsome day. “Just think how much bettermy technique will be after this experi¬ence,” he said.Preston finds the posters much easier todo because he has had some contact with STUDENT ARTISTS: David P James (left) and Paul Preston put their creative talents to use by doing most of the poster workon campus.film through DOC. “I get more ideas thatway,” he says. Though he rarely sees amovie before drawing its poster, he does“try to convey the movie,” but sometimeshas “to settle for just a nice strangeposter.”James also tries to capture the mood ofthe film. “I am very happy after I see themovie if I have succeeded in catching itsmood. Sometimes I try to make the posterswitty, but often people don’t seem to getthe humor even after I explain,” he said.Preston says that he works as much as several days on one poster. First he triesto get ideas from the title, then from thestory blurb, and finally “the last resort isan abstract design.”He usually works on the desk in hisPierce Tower room, a room which hesays “is covered floor to ceiling with post¬ers.” Occasionally to get inspiration heretreats to his closet to draw, thoughthere is a problem with lighting and Iforesee one with heat.”James finds that he has problems dueto his lack of drawing experience. “Some¬ times half way through I find I have tostart over again if I cannot draw somethingthat I thought I could.He emphasizes that he likes posters“pregnant with symbolism.”James estimates that he sometimesspends 12 hours on a poster. His works arerecognizable because they have certaincharacteristics. “Lately I’ve gone into apop art period,” he said, “though my fav¬orite art styles are art decco and artnouveau.” His greatest symbol, he feels,Continued on page 7” iwliticA In tlwV iNNNHMft EWlWRThe Sumerians:Their History, Culture, and CharacterSamuel Noah Kramer $2.95Chinese Thought from Confuciusto Mao Tse TungHerrlee G. Creel $2.95Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit"A classic in economic theory.”George J. StiglerFrank H. Knight $3.95Man's Role in Changing theFace of the Earth"... should be read by everyoneinterested in the story of man on his earthor concerned with the future of both manand earth."—5. T. EmoryEdited by William L. Thomas, Jr. With theCollaboration of Carl O. Sauer, MarstonBates, and Lewis Mumford Vol I $4.75Vol II $5.95artists discussBy AUDREY SHALINSKYMany students have found that the easi¬est and cheapest way to decorate theirrooms is by collecting the posters advertis¬ing upcoming films and other campusevents. These free decorations reflect thecreative talents of David P James andPaul Preston, two student graphic artistswho do most of the poster work on cam¬pus.James ’72, an English major, said thatby June of this year he will have completed172 posters. As the art director of DOCfilms he does their posters free, but is paidfor his other work.Preston ’72, also in English, likes to“pick and choose” which posters he will DOC films postersH»«>■»« <*» U») f»*ATTENTION:VOLKSWAGEN OWNERSIf your Volkswagen needs bodywork/ bring it into our shop andlet Peter Petersen repair it.Peter is a trade school graduatefrom Germany and is a crafts¬man from the old school. Heonly knows one way to repair aVolkswagen—the right way.South Side's Finest Body ShopOur 17th Year In BusinessjvSHORE AUTO REBUILDERS, IRC.1637 East 75th StreetMidway 3-8066ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSunday April 18, 1971 11:00 A.M.E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“The Road Back From War'Weekday Chapel MusicTuesday, April 20, 12:15 p.m.Lecture-Demonstration at The ConsoleEdward Mondello, University OrganistThe Chicago MaroonPAUL BERNSTEIN, MITCH BOBKIN, CON HITCHCOCKCo-editorsDON RATNERBusiness Manager SUSAN LOTHSenior EditorJUDY ALSOFROM, Managing EditorFRED WINSTON, News EditorNANCY CHISMAN, Executive Editor AUDREY SHAIINSKY, Executive EditorGORDON KATZ, Contributing EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorLISA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, KEITH PYLEAssociate EditorsRICK BALSAMO, FRANK GRUBER, LESLIE LINTON, BRUCE RABEStaffSTEVE COOKEditor Emeritus DIANA LEIFERAssistant Business ManagerFounded in 1892. 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, 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Telephone (312 ) 753-3263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per yearin the United States. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, Illinois.FOTAFOTA 1971 does not excite us. The FOTA committee seems to bemore concerned with diversity and the more traditional art forms —classical music, dance and art — than with waking up a campus thathibernates throughout the winter months.The object of this year’s FOTA according to its chairman is toemphasize local talent — to highlight the creative people on campusand in the city. Yet in so doing, FOTA has spent $20,000 to presentpeople on campus that we have already seen this year. Louis Falco, theMcKinley jazz group and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra are alltalented, but they are nothing new to us.We so much preferred the FOTA’s of the past that supplied thiscampus with exciting, original people — Allen Ginsberg, the ButterfieldBlues Band, Ken Kesey, Aaron Copeland, Jerry Grotowski, Studs Terkil,Nelson Algren — than flower arranging and discussions on Chinesepainting. These topics might be of interest to some people on campus,but probably not more than 20 or 30. We think that FOTA should havea bit more broad based support than that.We are even more upset by the death of the Beaux Art Ball. Thisevent has often been the most exciting in FOTA’s schedule. Last year’swas a financial failure because of the poor group chosen — Cold Blood.However, the ball is not being held this year because the members ofthe FOTA committee were not interested in working on one. We aresick and tired of selfish bureaucrats presenting what they want to seeon campus with absolutely no regard for what the majority of thecampus are interested in. We think that a good Beaux Art Ball, featur¬ing a big name band, might attract a few more people than a sock hopwith Phil and the Fastbacks.All of this is maddening and upsetting. FOTA once was a high-point of the spring quarter. It looks like FOTA 1971 will only be ofmarginal interest, and perhaps priorities should start to be reexamineda bit. Some $20,000 for a festival of limited interest strikes us as apoor investment. Before FOTA is killed, it might pay to suggest tothis year’s FOTA that it re-examine its programs while there is stilltime to make some changes.Good teachingAll of us at one time or another have had a teacher whom we feltwas a true master, a person whom deserved some sort of recognitionor praise, and yet we felt powerless to indicate our approval.Four professors in the College are given $1000 Quantrell awardsevery year, having been selected for the honor on the basis of lettersof recommendations from their students.College Dean Roger Hildebrand said this week that letters recom¬mending an individual professor for this year’s award could be acceptedthrough Monday, April 19 in his office, Gates-Blake 132.We think students who have been impressed by a particular pro¬fessor should take this opportunity to reward good teaching and sendin a letter. It’s one way of making your voice heard.Dean StrausWe were pleased to hear this week of the appointment of LornaStraus as the new dean of undergraduate students. Mrs Straus hasdistinguished herself as a fine teacher, respected administrator, anddedicated friend of students. She was an excellent choice for a demand¬ing position, and we wish her well.v,v,',y *'• . . Jf KlMMEL »MACHINE AGE !IILETTER FROM THE EDITORSStarting with today’s issue a new boardof editors is taking over the Maroon. Thismight seem a little unusual, but this is thefirst time in memory that a senior hasedited the Maroon. By stepping down dur¬ing spring quarter, he, and hopefully sub¬sequent editors, will be able to pay full at¬tention to graduation plans rather than try¬ing to balance writing incompletes withwriting editorials.The Maroon will be led by a triumvirate:Paul Bernstein, Mitch Bobkin and ConHitchcock. This too might seem a little un¬usual, but we think that we can work to¬gether and provide the Maroon with adepth of experience, leadership and ideaswhich has been sorely lacking in pastyears.There won’t be many dramatic changesin the Maroon for the rest of this year —we will still cover campus news as thor¬oughly as we can and our make-up will lookthe same, but starting with this issue, wewill try out some new ideas.At the moment, we’re hoping to put moreemphasis on features, profiles and in¬vestigative reporting during the comingyear, such as the poster people profile andthe analytic look at this year’s FOTA, in to¬day’s issue. Spot news is fine and neces¬ sary, but in a University it is sporadic andit’s often hard to fill a newspaper with justspot news stories and make it interestingBy increasing our features coverage wehope to make the Maroon a more inter¬esting, more informative newspaper.All of these ideas sound great on paper,but we need people to help us do them. TheMaroon staff is small — too small — andsome events are presently not being report¬ed merely because we don’t have people tocover them. If we’re going to do half thethings we want to next year, we’re going toneed your help.The Maroon is open to everyone and wehope you will join us for the rest of thisyear, and continue on next year. In thisway, you can get some valuable experienceduring the rest of the spring quarter andcan get to know us before the new yearstarts.We are anxious to hear your ideas aboutwhere the Maroon should be going. Moreimportantly, we are anxious to discuss yourrole on the Maroon. Come up to our office.Ida Noyes 303. some afternoon and have acup of coffee. It’s a brand new Maroon andwith your help, it can be a great one.PB, MB, CHBULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, April 16DISCUSSION: South Side Women for Peace, HarperGallery, Harper Court, noon to 6 pm. PANEL DISCUSSION: "International Views on Abor-tion," Crossroads student center, 5621 Blackstone, 8pm.PLAY: University Theatre, "Minds and Bodies," Rey¬nolds club theatre, 6:30 pm.LECTURE: Sheldon H White, professor. Harvard schoolof education, "Consolidation of Higher Order ThoughtProcesses In Children," Judd 126, 3 pm.LECTURE: Frederick Wyle, former US deputy assistantsecretary of defense for European and NATO affairs,"(mplicationso f SALT and NATO," center for policystudy. Breasted hall, Oriental Institute, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Dr Darwin Murrell, department of micro¬biology, "Studies on the Mechanisms of Immunity toLarval Taenia," microbiology club, Ricketts north,room 1, 4 pm; tea in room 7 at 3:30.SEMINAR: K Stewartson, University College, London,"Ground Effect of Vortices," department of thegeophysical sciences, Hinds lab auditorium, 4 pm; teain room i/e at 3:3u.PUCK: Norman Mailer's "Maidstone," Doc, 7:15 and9:30 pm. Saturday, April 17SYMPOSIUM: "The 1971 White House Conference onChildren," registration in SSA building lobby, 8:30 am.WRITING COMPETENCY TEST: Required of all fresh¬men and all upperclassmen who have not yet passedit; Quantrell (students whose last names begin with A-K), Kent 107 (L-R), Kent 103 (S-Z), 1:30 pm.FLICK: "The Wizard of Oz," Hitchcock films, Quan¬trell, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.GAY LIB COFFEE HOUSE: Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pm to1 am.PLAY. University Th*dl.e, "Minds »nu Bodlis,"nclds Club Theatre, 8:30 pm, tickets S2, students $1.50.Continued on page 771 FOTA: predominantly amateur talentFOLK DANCERS: One traditional event from last year’s FOTA. Continued from page 1and a dramatical production by a DepaulUniversity group?“Because the focus is on amateur talentand talent that is on campus and in thearea,” one committee chairman explained.Some of the features on the FOTA sched¬ule, particularly the William McKinley jazzgroup, the Masque of Winter theater show,the Louis Falco Dance Troupe and moderndancer Sybil Shears have all performed ei¬ther on campus or in the city in the pastfew months. Lack of imagination seemsapparent here. There must be some otherinteresting professional people in this areawho haven’t performed on campus beforewho could be invited. This would allowFOTA to stick to its ideals and to still givethe campus some new entertainment.FOTA can claim diversity in its sched¬ule. There are lectures on flower arrangingand twentieth century Chinese painting.Yet these lectures lack the charisma whicha personal appearance by Francois Touf-faut would have had (an event which might have happened but for delays and mixups).FOTA has tried to enliven its calendarwith some frivolity. A production of PeterPan, with ex-Mr. U of C Gangrene LaRueplaying Captain Hook, will be held onemorning at 1 am in Mandel Hall.There will be numerous poetry readingsand a pop colloquium at which some no¬table authors and architects will speak,headed by Tom Wolfe “Mau Mailing theFlack Catchers” fame.It may well be that local talent, which isavailable and cheap at anytime, shouldhave been held in abeyance this timearound. More energy, time, and effortshould have been concentrated in areassuch as these — bringing in professionaltalent that is little seen in the campus area,and is too expensive for most students’ bud¬gets, but within the realm of FOTA’s com¬paratively large budget.FOTA is traditionally initiated on MayDay with a Maypole dance around the flagpole in the quads, and an opening speechby Dean of the College Roger Hildebrand.Artists use trademarksBULLETIN OF EVENTSPLAY: University Theater, "Minds and Bodies," Rey¬nolds Club Theater, $2, $1.50 for students, 8:30 pm.From page 6Sunday, April 18UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: Rev E SpencerParsons, "The Road Back From War," RockefellerChapel. 11 am.MEETING: Gay Lib open meeting, Ida Noyes, 3 pm.DANGERS OF FOOD ADDITIVES: Dr Kenneth DuBois,director of the University toxicity laboratory, HydePark Neighborhood Club, 5480 Kenwood, 3:30 pm, pub¬lic invjted.WOMEN'S COFFEE SHOP: Pot luck dinner, open re¬hearsal of women's theater group, child care provided.Blue Gargoyle, 6:30 pm.HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS FROM HYPPO: will be atBonhoeffer house to discuss the future they see, 6:30pm.LECTURE: Ann Paul of the Chicago Art Institute willlecture on the Feminine Image In Art, BonhoefferHouse 5554 Woodtawn, 6:30 pm. Monday, April 19RECEPTION: Warwick Exchange program meeting ofsophomore and junior history majors interested inspending autumn quarter next year at Warwick Uni¬versity in England, in lounge joining Bergman Gal¬lery. 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Dr Charles Thomas, department of biologi¬cal chemistry. Harvard Medical School, Boston Mass,"Organization of Nucleotide Sequences in Chromo¬somes," Ricketts 7, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: The Committee on African Studies and theDepartment of sociology, "Caste in an IndustrialSociety." Soc Sci 122, 7:30 pm.GAY WOMEN'S MEETING: Gay Community Center,171 W Elm, 8 pm.GAY LIB MOVIE: "Experiment In Terror," Cobb Hall,$1, 8 pm. Continued from page 5is a large red circle which he especiallyuses for Japanese films. His famous trade¬marks are checkerboard squares, lots oflittle dots, and the color blue.Preston has a self-proclaimed bird fetishwhich he explained by standing up onchairs waving his arms and talking aboutbirds rising above the clouds. “All myposters have birds in them, only peopledon’t know it and I won’t tell where theyall are,” he chirped. He is frequently seencarrying a bird with him.James often writes and receives lettersfrom actors or directors of the films heillustrates. So far he has received favorablecomments from George Cukor, Sam Fuller,Jerry Lewis, Gene Kelly, Katharine Hep¬burn, Eleanor Bron and Nicholas Ray. However, he noted somewhat sadly that“Jane Fonda did not like my “Barbarella”poster and went around ripping down asmany as she could find.”Preston is known for doing strange things.He portrayed a carrot on Halloween andprior to the DOC presentation of “I AmCurious, Yellow,” wrapped himself in goldfoil and introduced the film by saying“I am what you have come here to see.I am Curious Yellow.”Most posters are printed at the Univer¬sity Industrial Relations Center. For anevent that is to be publicized only on cam¬pus, about 100 posters are printed, accord¬ing to Joseph Sefcik of the printing depart¬ment. Since they use “such wild colors,”the average cost of a DOC or CEF posterper 100 is $50, Sefcik said.CANON PENTAXMINOLTAMAMIYA SEKORPETRI MIRANDALEICA NIHONNIKKORMATPOLAROIDKODAK YIYITARSOLIGOR BALERSTROBONARMINOX BESSLEROMEGA DLRSTAGFAKINDERMANAn low priced orlower then you canfind them down¬townMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St.493-6700A bicycle puts youclose to nature - Thusspake ZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh, Robin Hood,Falcon, Peugeot, Citane,Mercier, Radius and Daws.Factory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spasmod*ically. Fly-bv-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; SAS 10-8TV arpMUffm from OI4 Town WHAT WE MUSTLEARN IS TOm zmThis unique book takes youon a journey into the mindand spirit — past drugs —through Eastern religion—and past that into unionwith the Eternal. Ajourney through thetransformation of RichardAlpert into Baba Ram Dass,a journey through the incredible home-made mind-blowing art of the LamaFoundation (a communeNew Mexico), a journey throughA Cookbook for A Spiritual Life,which tells how to live in Americain 1971, a journey to gladden yoursoul.BE HERE NOWA Lama Foundation BookS3 33. paperbound. now at your booKStore. orCROWN PUBLISHERS419 Park Avenue South. New York N Y 1001CKIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!CAN OC TRIPSPlan an exciting canoe trip intothe Quetico-Superior Wildernessfor the highpoint of your summervacation! Rates you can afford.For information write BILL ROM'SOUTFITTERS, ciy, Minn. THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Kimbork Plaia * HYY4355 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOThe LVilliam Vaughn Moody Lecture CommitteeMichael HamburgerWILL READA SELECTIONOF HIS POEMS ANDTRANSLATIONSTUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1971, at 8:00 p.m.SOCIAL SCIENCES 1221126 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637Admission is without ticket and vtitbout chargeApril 16, 1971/Tbe Chicago Maroon/7Every issuehas twosides.Evenlaw andorderConcern over moral issues hasseldom been so evident as itis today when thousands are wontto take public action to expresstheir views This new study estab¬lishes a framework in which toevaluate the actions involving civildisobedience By presenting bothsides of the hotly debated subject,it strives to untangle the confu¬sion surrounding law and orderand civil rightsThis book is essential reading notonly for those whose only alter¬native to silence is shame, but tothose millions of Americans whohonestly seek a better understand¬ing of the civil disobediencethat marks our society today"A fair and penetrating reviewof central issues affecting the muchdebated and much tortured ques¬tion of civil disobedience It shouldhelp anyone interested in thequestion to know oetter where hestands... and. more important,to know why. '—Charles Frankel.Columbia UniversityCloth $7.50, paper $2 95CIVILDISOBEDIENCEConscience.Tactics,and the LawCarl Cohen® COLUMBIAUNIVERSITY PRESSNew York, New York 100255424 KimbarkVII 3 3113'foreign car hospital HYDE PARK THEATRE #1NO 7-9071\Kohlberg53rd & Lake ParkSTARTS FRIDAYAPRIL 16THrmroNPOPULAR PRICES!™S. * nun fccuntT runiM, scmwi rmtcm GP HYDE PARK THEATRE #75238 So. Harperheatres\ 493-3493HELD OVER2ND BIG WEEKDIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT’Now For The 1st Time At Popular Prices!ALSO“ ‘M A!S H’ is whatthe new freedomof the screen is all about.”—Richard Schickel, LifeHBEEdAn Ingo Preminger Production rip]Color by DE LUXE* Panavision* ifeaFrom 20th Century-Fox.The most spectacular film ever made STYRENEFOAMPELLETSforBEAN-BAGCHAIRSLightweight polystyrenepellets for filling bean-bag chairs, pillows, mat¬tresses and many otherhobby items.BIG PACK of 10 cubicfeet only $6.00phone841-4300HANSON FOAM PRODUCTS13833 S. Indiana Ave., Chicago. III.NICKY'S PIZZAAND RESTAURANT"ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THEUNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Own5 prn. sstH (losing1208 EAST 5 3RD STREETWhether you relax in the friendly atmosphere of our restaurant or inthe comfort of your own home, you'll always find the folks at Nicky'seager to serve you with a pizza that is a gourmet's delight andstill the "Crown Delicacy of Hyde Park." Drop by or give us ocoll and see for yourself. We appreciate your patronage.PHONE FAIRFAX 4-5340OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK — HOURS 11:00 A.M. TO 2:00 A.M.SUNDAYS — 12 NOON TO 2 A M.The Committee on African StudiesandThe Department of Sociologypresents two lectures onSOUTH AFRICAbyPierre L. van den BergheProfessor of SociologyUniversity of WashingtonApril 19, 1971"Caste in an Industrial Society"April 21, 1971"Mechanisms of Minority Domination"7:30 P.M.Social Science 122 CHEVROLETVEGAHeadquartersHyde ParkChevrolet5500 Lake Park363-8600UNWANTEDPREGNANCYHAVE A LEGAL ABORTIONPERFORMED IN NEW YORK STATECOSTS RANGE FROM $110CALLLEGAL ABORTION PROJECT312-743-3640or312-743-3388Monday through Saturday9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Straight Talk:Vour diamond is at...DESKS-BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDC BRAND ) EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with I.D. card SbllhtntbFINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARS119 N Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN I IIERGREEN PLAZA^JFar East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fri. & Sat 12-12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blvd955-2229 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARIS IproprietorMASK OFDEMETRIOESwith Sidney GreenstreetplusTHESEA HAWKwith Errol FlynnTHE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. Lincoln Dl 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Ad¬mission at all times is only$1.25. Bring your friends.Saturday Night Cobb Hall 7:15,9:30 $1.00THE WIZARD OF OZ8/The Chicago Maroon/April 16, 1971Ex-GI says protest logical way to end war“The majority of people don’t want thewar. Only a lot of involvement will helpbring about the end,” said Rick Harbeck, aVietnam veteran and chairman of the Uni¬versity of Illinois Student MobilizationCommittee who spoke on campus Wednes¬day.Discussing the upcoming demonstrationsin Washington DC, Harbeck said, “Demon¬strations are being called as a logicalmeans to end the war by people who realizeA national conference of newspaper wom¬en’s editors who wish to improve their cov¬erage of urban problems will be held at theUniversity April 18-20.Among the speakers will be Nicholas VonHoffman, syndicated columnist for theWashington Post; Edwin Diamond, presscritic for WTOP-TV; Bryce Rucker, South¬ern Illinois University journalism profes¬sor; John Cordwell, a nationally dis¬tinguished architect and urban critic, andColleen Dishon, president of the Featuresand News Syndicate.Seminar leaders will include Paula Fos¬ter, assistant professor of anthropology andan authority on the sociology of women;Leonard Link, director of the Center for that elected officials aren’t going to do it ontheir own.”Harbeck feels that students are not thesegment of society that has the power tostop the war. The important aspect of stu¬dent involvement is that “they build move¬ments that involve other segments of thepopulation.“A great many other segments of the pop¬ulation are aligning with students. This issomething the anti-war movement has nev-Environmental Studies at Argonne NationalLaboratory; and Lorenz Aggens, of theNorthwestern Illinois Planning Commis¬sion.Shop talk sessions will be moderated bywomen’s editors selected from among thedelegates attending.An illustrated lecture-workshop photo¬journalism session will be led by RobertGilka, director of photography for the Na¬tional Geographic Society.Other press and academic leaders willlead seminars titled:• “How to Cover and How Not to Coverthe Black Community.”• “Urban Affairs Reporting: Organiza¬tion, Staffing, Training, Writing and er seen before.”Harbeck cited a large increase in laborsupport and said “I think there will be alarge GI representation at the march itself.“These demonstrations will show to theGI that the public supports the right to dis¬sent, to disobey orders they consider im¬moral, and disapproval of policies theyhonestly don’t believe in,” said Harbeck.In regard to Lieutenant William Calley,Harbeck seemed to agree with the guiltyEditing.”• “Special Problems: The Cityside,Management, and ‘Why-Can’t-We-Do-It-The-Way-We’ve-Always Done It?”A display of outstanding women’s sec¬tions and a film program will also be con¬ference features.The meeting will be sponsored by the ur¬ban journalism fellowship program admin¬istered by the Center for Policy Study.The Urban Journalism Fellowship Pro¬gram is funded by the John and Mary RMarkle Foundation, the Ford Foundation,and other sources.Complete information on the conferencemay be obtained by writing to Paul Gapp,room 501, 5801 Ellis. verdict. “He is definitely guilty and shouldbe punished,” he said.Harbeck felt that mitigating circum¬stances such as body counts and free firezones should be taken into account whensentencing.He said that President Nixon knows thatincidents such as My Lai occur and con¬sequently “Nixon is a criminal and shouldbe brought to justice.“Nixon tried to say atrocities are isolatedincidents. I say he is a liar. On one scale oranother this is happening all the time. Ter¬rorism is a tactic used by the US Army.”There is an “illusion of justice,” Harbecksaid. “The military are protecting a largemajority of its own. People have not beenaware of the type of war that’s beingfought. Now people are becoming moreaward of this and realizing how it isfought.”Harbeck believes one area of the warconcerns race. “The war has many, manyracial overtones. During the training youreceive from the military the Vietnameseare referred to as ‘gooks’ or ‘slant eyes.’You’re taught they are inferior to you assoon as you enter the Army. This makes iteasier for the Army to persuade you tocommit atrocities. If you consider someonesub-human it is easier to kill.”Lady editors to study city coverage■ auto ©leurope|| dept. 13-4STUDENT/FACULTY GRANT ProgramSpecial rates in European overseas travelfor purchase, lease, 8t rental of cars. Formm details and brochure write: UniversityGrant Dept., Auto Europe, 1270 Second^^Avenue, New York, New York 10021. LAWYERSVISTA (Volunteers in Serviceto America) needs lawyerswho wish to volunteer ayear of service to helpAmerica’s poor in suchareas as economic develop¬ment, housing, welfarerights, consumer protection,and legal education of thepoor Slots available in theJune/July training cycles.Call John K. Szabo, toll free.800-424-8580, or write toVISTA, 910 Seventeenth St.,NW, Washington, D.C. 20006(Other skills needed too.) ELECTION MAY 3-7,1971Eight graduate and undergraduate students areto be elected May 3rd through 7th to positionson the Faculty-Student Advisory Committee onCampus Student Life.Details and petitions for candidacy are avail¬able in Administration 201, the Office of theDean of Students.Petitions must be returned to the Office of theDean of Students no laer than 5 p.m. on April23. EMPLOYMENTOPPORTUNITIESCALIFORNIA ARIZONA HAWAIIProfessional/Trainee positions cur¬rently available in all fields. For !month's subscription containing hun¬dreds ol current openings . . andJOBS in the SUN's proven techniquefor landing your job! Satisfactionguaranteed Send $9 to:** P.O. BOX 133 'LA JOLLA, CALIFORNIA 92037STUDENT OMBUDSMAN 1971-72The University is now seeking applicants for the post of Student Ombudsman for the1971-72 academic year. Although the 1971-72 Student Ombudsman’s term of office willnot begin until Autumn, 1971, he will be expected to work with the 1970-71 StudentOmbudsman through the remainder of the 1970-71 academic year.At the request of the President, 1 have sent letters to the Student Government, to theseveral Student Councils of the major academic areas, and to the Faculty-StudentAdvisory Committee on Campus Student Life asking if they wish to submit recommenda¬tions for the post.Applications from individual students are welcome, as are recommendations fromindividual students or other student groups.Applications or recommendations should take the form of a letter and should besubmitted to the Office of the Dean of Students by Friday, April 23.Charles D. O’Connell, Dean of Students THE HYDE PARKSUPERMARKET:A Really Great Place to Shop!Before you spend your $10 for the week,think about value. If you do, you willwant to shop at the Hyde Park Super¬market, 1346 E. 53rd St. (formerly theNational). The values are better thisweek with the following specials:Orange Juice Buy 1 /Get 1 FreePepsi 6 cans/79eRound Steak $1.09/poundLettuce 19cFlorida Oranges 4C eachDole pineapple, chunks or slices• 3cans/$1.00JAPANESE CINEMAProgram ChangeApril 25 One Day Only 2 p.m. & 7 p.m.Ozu's Film Classic"TOKYO STORY"co-feature“RAINBOW FLIGHT"Francis Parker School 2247 N. Clark St.i JESSELSOrSTfjfrFRESH FISH & SEAFOOD752-2370, 752-SI90,343-9134- 1340C. 53*4 RODMcKUEN'/// CoqcertOPERA HOUSESUNDAY, April 25 at 7:30 pmTickets $6.50, 5.50, 4.50, 3.50 Box Office Now Open “If you do nothing else, read one bookon your own history, LABOR’S UNTOLDSTORY.”—BERNADETTE DEVLINIn a speech. New York City, March 7, 1971Paperback edition LABOR’S UNTOLDSTORY, $2.50 at your bookstore, or sendcheck or money order to: UE, publishers,11 East 51st Street, New York, N.Y. 10022UNITED ELECTRICAL RADIO ANDMACHINE WORKERS OF AMERICA (LE)Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Cift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856 ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288 2900Saturday Night Cobb Hall 7:15,9:30 $1.00THE WIZARD OF OZApril If, 1971/Tbe Chicago Marcoa/t. r » . t t i9 * 9 , • # ( «ABOUT THE MIDWAYFSACCSLElections for the student members of thefaculty-student advisory committee oncampus student life (FSACCSL) have beenscheduled for May 3-7.The committee is made up of five fac¬ulty members appointed by the President,eight students from the various academicareas, and the dean of students as ex-officio chairman.Three students are to be elected from theCollege, two from the professional schools,and one from the humanities division, so¬cial sciences division and combined biolog¬ical and physical science divisions.In order to run, a student must file fromthe academic area in which he will be reg¬istering as a degree candidate in 1971-2.Nominating forms which must contain the signatures of 40 students, may be obtainedin Administration 201 and returned by 5 pmApril 23.Ballots will be counted by current studentFSACCSL members unless they are up forre-election. Members for 1970-1 include Eu-g e n e Goldberg, Gary Nakarado, TomBiersteker, Douglas Adams, Giorgio Pic-cagli, Howard Smithson, and Paul Stokes.In the past FSACCSL has dealt with is¬sues such as campus security, student part-time and summer employment, campuscoffee shops, and the career counselingprogram.Tickets to rideStudent government is selling bus ticketsfor the April 24 anti-war march on Wash¬ington. The tickets, $35, can be purchased at theSG office MWF 10-1:30 and TTH 1-5 pm;during lunch in the Mandel corridor; orfrom Janet Cantrick, 922-1068.For those unable or unwilling to take thebus, car pools to DC are being organized.Persons needing either cars to ride in orriders to fill their cars should drop by the“April 24” table in the Mandel Corridor be¬tween 11:30 and 1:30 weekdays, or go to theSG office. For further information, callLucy Arimond, 753-2249, ext. 1124.People are needed to be both captains onthe buses arid parade marshalls in Wash¬ington. Interested persons should call PaulBirnberg at 752-4081 or 753-3541 immediate¬ly-Warwick exchangeThe college history committee is sponsor¬ing a reception in the Bergman gallerylounge Monday at 3:30 pm for history ma¬jors interested in the Warwick exchangeprogram.The program exchanges students fromWarwick University, England, during theautumn term. Chicago students depositregular academic and dormitory fees withthe Bursar and tuition scholarships arecontinued.John Coatsworth, director of the ex¬change, will be available at the reception toanswer questions.Furniture saleForm Co-op furniture will hold a sale inHarper Court Sunday to raise funds for thelegal defense of an employee arrestedrecently on AWOL charges.Furniture at reduced prices will be onsale from noon to 5 pm. Organizers hope toraise more than $1000.Anyone interested in offering legal serv¬ices should call FA 4-9010.Salt LectureFormer US Deputy Assistant Secretary ofDefense Frederick Wyle will give the sev¬ enth arms control and foreign policy semi¬nar lecture today at 3:30 pm.Wyle’s address on the “Implications ofSALT for NATO” is sponsored by the Uni¬versity’s Center for Policy Study and willbe given in Breasted hall of the OrientalInstitute, 1155 E 58th St.Wyle served with NATO from 1966 to 1969and was a member of the policy planningcouncil for the department of state from1963 to 1965. From 1962 to 1963 he was amember of the defense staff of the US mis¬sion to NATO headquarters in Paris.He is a member of the council on foreignrelations and of the board of directors ofthe American council on Germany.The seminar on arms control, part of athree-year program, is made possible by a$264,000 Ford Foundation grant.The seminar covers problems arisingfrom the role of scientists in arms policyand policies which result from national andinternational concern about arms control.Child conferenceCharles Hurst, president of Malcolm XCollege, and Naomi Hiett, executive direc¬tor of the Illinois commission on children,will be the featured speakers at a sym¬posium sponsored by the school of socialservice administration (SSA) Saturday.The symposium, on the 1971 White HouseConference on Children, will be held in theSSA building, 969 E 60th St. Registrationwill begin at 8:30 am in the SSA lobby.Miss Hiett will give the opening addressat 9 am on “The History of White HouseConferences on Children and their Impacton Child Welfare Legislation and Service inIllinois.”Discussion groups will be held from 9 45to noon on learning, health, parents andfamilies, communities and environments,and laws, rights and responsibilities.At noon Hurst, Illinois delegate to the1971 White House Conference on Children,will discuss this year’s conference from the“minority viewpoint.”EMPLOYEESNOTICEThe employees of the l' of (', library have alreadybegun to do something about LAY-OFFS. JOB Sh-CURITY, LACK OF UNEMPLOYMENT COM¬PENSATION. EXPENSIVE HEALTH & PENSIONPLANS and MORE. Thev have formed aUNIONaffiliated with the National Council DistributiveWorkers of America and the Alliance for LaborAction.So have the employees of N.Y.U., Boston University,Brooklyn Polytech. Yale University, Fisk University.Temple University.Now vou can do what isNEEDEDto improve your salary, your job security, to endlayoffs, to improve your benefits. The NCDW A willhelp ALL employees of the University of Chicago toorganize local unions like the Library Employees.For more information contact:Jim Higgins360 N. Michigan. Rm. 615Phone 332-2563 PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDHONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERVICES ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2h HRS.ABORTIONpregnancies up to 12weeks terminated from$175.00Medication, Lab TestsDoctors fees includedHospital & Hospitalaffiliated clinics.(212) TR 7-88032k hours-7 daysPHYSICIANS REFERRALWe know we can help you, even ifit's just to talk to someoneJO/,The Chicago Marqon/April If, 1971 PLAYHCY'% ALL-NIGHT SHGYYPERFORMANCES FRIDAY t SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREApr. 16TELL ME THAT YOU 10V! ME,JUNIE MOONLiza Minnelli 12, 2:00a.m Apr. 17THE WILD BUNCHWilliam Holden 12,2:15a.m.Apr. 23PAINT YOUR WAGONlee Marvin 12, 2:15 a n Apr. 24THE ADVENTURERSCandice Bergen 12,3°°am.Apr. 30WUSAPaul Newman 12,2:00a.m. May 1LITTLE FAUSS AND BIG HALSEYRok>ert Redford^P-r*'r*-I’*r**T**T**T**T*,T**T**T**T**1'I COLD CITY INN ** **** Maroon** New Hours:^ Open Daily* From 11:30 a.m.^ to 9:30 p.m.* "A Gold Mine of Good Food"*1* Student Discount:^ . 10% for table service* 5% for take home| Hyde Park's Best Cantonese Food15228 Harper(near Harper Court)AS* Eat more for less. *******************&493-2559 £***If (Try our convenient take-out orders.) jj ABORTIONQUESTIONS?If you, or a friend, are seeking an abortion, theWomen’s Pavilion Inc. can help you.Call us now (collect, if you wish) and one of ourdedicated staff will answer your question* aboutplacement In accredited Hospitals andClinics in New York City at low cost.It is advisable to call us as soon as possible after youlearn you are pregnant. In many cates, the costcan be very low, and you can arrive in New York Cityin the morning and be on your way home that evening.We can also help you with airplane and othertransportation arrangements.IF YOU NEED SOMEBODY TO TALK TO, CALL US ANYTIMEAT (212) 371-6670 or (212) 759-6810AVAILABLE 7 DAYS A WEEK / STRICTLY CONFIDENTIALWOMEN'S PAVILION INC.,515 Madison Avenue New York, N.Y. 10022FESTIVALSGEORGE \\ 1.1N Presents the 18th AnnualNEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVALJULY 2, 3. 4, 5, 1971Festival Field. Newport. Rhode Islam!NEWPORT FOLK FESTIVAL/)./</ ilflil .1 l.lulllOHJULY 16. 17, 18Festival l aid, Newport, Rhode IslandOHIO VALLEY JAZZ FESTIVALJULY 30, 31 •Ohio Riverfront Stadium. ( ineimutiHAMPTON INSTITUTE JAZZ FESTIVALJUNE 25, 26Hampton Roads Coliseum, Hampton, Virginial ull intonwatitwr t.sr all cwtrts, artists,priies. ticket order turn)*., tree "it rts|ucstNEW THIS YEAR — Greyhound Festival Excursionstrill package price including transportation, hotel and ticketsAll details . . write . NEWPORT I ESI IVAI.SRO IV >x s29 Newjsort. Kite vie Island tl’S illDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 PREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining a legalabortion immediately in New YorkCity at minimal costCHICAGO (312) W2-0777CALI: PHILA. (215) I7I-5W0Ml AMI (305) 754-5471ATLANTA (404) 524-47*1NEW YORK (212) 512-4740I A.M.-10 P.M.—7 DAYS A WittABORTION REFERRALSERVICE (ARS), INC.(Maroon Classified Ads)WATCH FOR THE CONTINUING STORY OF SAPPHO'S DAUGHTERSCLASSIFIEDSClassified 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 ir.sertions for University people;75‘/1ine and 607 epeat line fornon University people.Strictly Pei -sonals are run for everyone at25£/line.Ads must be paid in advance sobring them to our office, Rm 304Ida Noyes, or mail them in with acheeky ,FOR SALE2 KLH 17 $100. Call 955-7384.65 Black VW Bug — Lotsa Milesbut still beautiful. 493-3283.Wrangler Bluejeans $4.98, Levi jeanjackets. Sale Priced. John's Men'sWear, 1459 E. 53rd.SAILBOAT 17' Daysailer w tlr, out¬board, extra eqpmt 684-0280.See The New Politics in action -TheDemocratic Way. Blackfriar April30-May 1, May 7-8.Superb pipe collection, smoked butgreat condition. Available singly,Dunhill Quality 477-8846.Electronic flash, strobonar 770 4mo. old. $95. 477-8846.VOLVO Wagon 1966 new Pirellitires, shocks, brakes, exhaust sys¬tem. No repairs Needed. M. Billing374-3890.Assted Furniture Cheap PL2-9647Teachers WastedSOUTHWEST TEACHERS’A C F. N C YnOB Central N.S.Albuqtaarqwa. N.M. 8T1MOur 24th yanr amvinf Soulhnml.EnUra West and AlaakaMmSir N. A. T. A. mEE.R«i<lr>lmDresser w mirror, cedar-lined ward¬robe, 9x12 rug, dining rm chairs,kite, chairs and table, sewingmach.. Either, clothes, books, dishes,etc. 363-1933Furniture Sale. Moving. Must emptyapt. Cheap stuff, Call Ed, 667-1347or 947-6435.Oak chest, roll-away bed, 2 mantent, 3 chests-of-drawers. Call 643-0155.TO WED? Flawless DIAMOND 26ctmarquise-cut in 14k white gold w-match'g, never used, guar, papers,$85, 363-2489Water beds from $70, health food,old furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2926 Broadway. 248-1761.Save $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 363-4555.Electric Typewriter in good condi¬tion FA4-1355, eve aft. 10.SALE: 1970 Harvard's ''Let's Go-Europe 8. America" $.25. U of CCharter Flights, 1212 E 59, rm. 306,1-5 pm.WANTEDWANTED: BICYCLE, used, cheap,good condition 753-2249 xll04.Apt wntd for 3-4 for SUMMER andschool year. 753-2249 x!212.Peter Cook finally becomes god.The Bed-sitting Room, Sunday.I need a place to live May 1 thrumid-June. Call Ed 667-1347 or 947-Couple and 3 children need house,opt, or commune, any size for Mayonly (so kids can finish school) Call684-8141.Will pay substantial commission toPerson who helps me find right apt.rm* P,e***n,» sat 8> quiet. Call14-401 i a, leave your name andnumber for Thomas, room 508. PEOPLE WANTEDExperienced sitter for three monthold baby. Weekdays eight to six.Call 842-1623 after 6pm.Student to care for 4yr old girl inour home (behind CCE) wkdys.12:45-4:45pm $20-wk. 363-6387.Fern. Rmmate wanted. Spaciousfurn. rm in apt. 667-3321.Rider wanted to DC. Share costdriving. Leave 4-22 Return 4-25. CallJudy 268-3156 after 6 pm.2 M grd Std sk smmr rmte for SShore apt May 1-Oct. 1 or fractionthereof. Call Gary at 947-5068 or 374-7864 after 6.MEN of all trades to NORTHSLOPE, ALASKA and the YUKON,around $2800.00 a month. For com¬plete information, write to Job Re¬search, P.O. Box 161, Stn-A, To¬ronto, Ont. Enclose $3.00 to covercost.2 Fern Rmmts wntd: 57 8, Drxl. $57mo. Lease June 15. 493-6031Fern, roomate desperately neededroom-furnished. $75-mo Must Likeanimals. Call Maggie at 32593 daysor 684-3626 nights.STAFF, STUDENTS. Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. 1.75 for ar, hour's work. Oncampus. Call X3-4710 for an appoint¬ment.HOMEWORKERS BADLY NEEDEDAddress envelopes in spare timeMINIMUM of $14 per 1000. Sendstamped envelope for immediateFREE details to MAILCO, 340Jones, Suite 27, S.F., Calif., 94102.Subjects wanted for sleep studies.Come to Sleep Lab — 5741 Drexel— Room 302 to complete applicationform, 9-5, Monday thru Friday.ST. LOUIS ANYONE?Ride wanted to 8, from St. Louisthis or other wknd. Will share driv.,exp. Sarah 944-1837.WOMEN TO CALLHIGH SCHOOLSPublishing Co. needs phone repre¬sentatives to call social studiesteachers re class subscriptions. 4-5hour shifts. $2.50 hr. 8, commissions.Call immediately 493-2020.BABYSITTER WANTEDResponsible babysitter wanted forthree easy-to-take-care-of preschoolgirls in our home. Tues-Thurs, 11-4.Call 684-2820.PEOPLE FOR SALEGraduate student will babysit. 753-2237.Belly Dance lessons 8, Dance atBanquets. Kahraman 493-8626.RUSSIAN INSTRUCTION by nativeteacher. Trial lesson, no charge.236-1423 or 363-2174.Instruction in French 288-6775I Do All Your Fortran Programs.For information call 298-6775.Massage for Male 8, Female Scandi-n a v i a n , Oriental 8, Mid-EasternMassages — All three in one mas¬sage. Call Bob: 326-4739 anytimeReed college drop-out desires ap¬prentice work-study relationshipwith UC prof., any field, beginningnext fall. I will do research, what¬ever If mutually profitable. Call 684-3308 before May 31. Randall.MOVING?Licensed mover 8, hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480SPACEWHY PAY RENT Invest in a home& gain income tax deductions.Charming 2 bedroom frame home,exc. cdtn, 2 car garage, price$17,000, $400 dn, $130 mo. p.Sil. Fordetails call Mrs. Brown at Kennedy,Ryan, Monigal 667-6666.Room for rent. Spacious, sunny (2perches) E. Hyde Park apt. Reesor.able rent M-F or couple. Immediateoccupancy. 955-0459. Summer Sublet, $85-mo. 51 rms54th 8, Harper w-darkroom. Eves.493-5508.Studio, June 1, E. Hyde Park hi-rise, lease ends Aug. '72. $134-mo.Furn for sale optional (rugs, kitchenset, drapery, big bed). Call 324-4663evenings.LAKEFRONT HOUSELrg 4 bdrm home for rent on E.72nd Place, 100' from lake. BeBeach 8, lakefront privileges. Hugerms, 2 baths, liv. rm. w- fireplace,sep. din. rm, full bsmt. Yard 8, 3-car gar. Ideal for family or sharing$350-mo. 326-4221.Furnished 2 bdrm. apt, good loca¬tion. Call HY3-7443 or HY3-6227.Very lrg rm in lrg apt w-3 guys 528, Dorchester $56-mo. 288-6888 before10:30 p.m.Summer Sublet. Ideal location: 57St. nextdoor to playground, park,stores, coffeeshops, bookstores.Walk to 1C, beach. 2 bedrooms, 2baths. Livingroom, diningroom,kitchen. Treetop study. Sunny balco¬ny. Fireplace. Washer dryer. Mid-June to late Sept. $225 month. 288-4004.Splffy 3 rm apt., amply frnshed,utils, pd. A mere $119-month! June15-Sept 15. 725-1278 LOVE.Fern. Rmmate wanted: spaciousfurn. rm. in apt. 667-3321.Lrg 3 Bed, 2 bath apt with modernkitchen. Available June 15 for sum¬mer with fall option. Furniture andair-conditioner for sale. 5114 HarperCall evenings. 752-1469.2 room apt. $150-mo. air cond. 1451E 55th St. 684-2582.1 bdrm Apt available June 1. Un-furn. Partial lake view. Petsallowed. Ample parking. Lots ofparks. 11 blks from 53rd 1C stop.5300 S. Shore. 752-8892 after 6.$177.50-mo incl utilities.SUBLET 6-15-9-1 on tree-lined Har¬per Ave Luxurious 4 rm palace Ter¬race, aircond, vast 4-lang. lib, pi¬ano, hifi. Ideal for respons. coupleint in classical music Gk-Fr-Russlit. $130-mo. 667-8278.Large 3 rm apt. Jun 15-Sept 20Pleasant, furnished, nr UC, park.Resp. prof, couple. $150. 955-7245Needed: 3 roommates, either sex,for summer 8, next year, for apt at58th 8> Kenwood. For details: 684-5161, ask for Dave.Furn 11 rm apt avail now 5419Harper kitchenette good view 288-4641 or 324-0342Sunny 11 room apt to sublet vieH a r p e r-54th. Call Mary 467-1565Mon-Fri 9-5.41 rm, 76 8, Kingston, 1 block tocamp, bus stop. MARRIED gradstudent preferred. RE4-0450.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithWATERBED SERVICEAt least two things are better on aWaterbed! King size: $40. Anythingfrom a basic water mattress to acustom walnut installation. Thesebeds are guaranteed! Share yournights with living water — 752-2707.WATERBED LESSONSLearn the secrets of The Bed. An¬cient wisdom 8, power. 752-2707HEBREW DISCUSSIONCome speak Hebrew with us Monnights at. Hillel 8:00. Both beginning8, advanced groups. Nice people 8,good teachers!PENIS SPRAYFor those days when you don't feellike staying In, EAT OUT. But firstmake sure that it tastes good ...Men's personal hygiene spraydeodorant in four delicious flavors— berrv. lemon, lime A naturalLip-smacking good. Now on sale atthe Maroon Office for only $2.25. LIFE CAN GROW BETTERG e s t a I t-Encounter Workshops bytrained, experienced leader. MichaelGoodman works with Body Dynam¬ics, Transactional Analysis, 8, more.Marathon Sat 8. Sun April 24-25 lim¬ited to 10: $25 Seven Thurs evesstart Apr. 22: $25. "You are Howyou eat" — Gestalt 8. Food. Sat. 8.Sun. May 1-2: $25. Call 752-2707.THRILLS AND. CHILLSGAY LIB presents EXPERIMENTIN TERROR with Lee Remick &Glenn Ford Mon 4-19 Cobb 209 8pm$1.VIRGINIA WOOLFCEF shows Who's Afraid of VirginiaWoolf this Sunday at the LawSchool Auditorium at 7 8. 9:15 for 75cents. All Season's Tickets are soldout for this quarter.WOMENAnn Paul of Art Institute with slidelecture on the Feminine Image inArt. Sunday, April 18, 6:30 p.m.,5554 South Woodlawn.LIKE A PHOENIXreborn the sexist of the monthawards competition returns — no¬torious offenders, ye know neitherthe day nor the hour of judgement(jockment?).ABORTIONSWHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE in Hyde Park?NY abortions from $150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015ELECTION MAY 3-7, 1971Eight graduate and undergraduatestudents are to be elected May 3rdthrough 7th to positions on the Fac¬ulty-Student Advisory Committee onCampus Student Life. During thepast year the Committee has beenconsulted and made recommenda¬tions on such subjects as campussecurity, student part-time and sum¬mer employment, campus coffeeshops, and the career counselingprogram.Membership on the Committee is anopportunity for students to contrib¬ute their opinions and efforts for theimprovement of the University com¬munity.Details and petitions for candidacyare available in Administration 201,the Office of the Dean of Students.Petitions must be returned to theOffice of the Dean of Students nolater than 5pm on April 23rd.THE MOST BIZARREMOVIE EVER MADERichard Lester director of HELP AHard Days Night 8< Petulia presentsa wild comedy of life after atom.What the War Game left out. Chi¬cago Premier. Sunday, Cobb. DOCFILMS.Starring in order of height: RitaTushingham, Dudley Moore, SpikeMilligan, Michael Hordern, PeterCook, Ralph Richardson 8, MartyFeldman as the national Health Ser¬vice.SCENESZEN MEDITATION GROUP Priestfrom Zen Buddhist Temple of Chi¬cago will give talk and answerquestions on Zen, April 21 Wed 7:00Ida Noyes 2nd Floor East Lounge667-1347. Sitting Mon and Wed 5:00,5844 Harper 288-7485.Free food if you bring a game andplay it here — Ida Noyes of course.Free coffee, coke, cake and icecream to the players. Ida NoyesProgram Board 8:00 pm — 1:00amTonight.THE WIZARD OF OZSaturday Nite7:15 $1.00 9:30The COFFEE HOUSE needs peopleto perform and help s rn it. Callor come down Fri. nite.Henry-BJ351 or Josh Hitchcock 48or come down Fri. nite.8:00pm to 1:00am — Games Nite atIda Noyes. Bring a game, play ithere, get free coffee, coke, cake andice cream. By the Ida Noyes Pro¬gram Board.BE A PART of the COFFEEHOUSE. Ida Noyes Lib. Fri. 8:30 to12.INTERNATIONAL COMMU¬NICATIONSWEEKENDParticipate with people of 6-8 differ¬ent cultures. Verbal 8. nonverbal en¬counter. Develop creativity, imagi¬nation, insight. April 23-25, Fridayevening to Sunday afternoon. Forfurther info, call Allan, 955-3889.Wanna see some really new film?Norman Mailer in MaidstoneTonight and big premiere of Rich¬ard Lester's new comedy The BedSitting Room, Sunday, DOC.OVERLAND EXPEDITION TOv INDIALeaves London in June. $545. Bro¬chure: Encounter Overland, 1414 E.59 St. Chicago, 60637.Coming to your precinct soon. TheDemocratic Way. Blackfriar.The end of the world is only the be¬ginning. The Bed Sitting Room Isdifferent from any other movie any¬one has ever seen. Sunday.COUNTRY PHOTOGRAPHYWORKSHOP For eye 8, spirit onWisconsin farm in Summer. 248-9294'"♦•’■netlonal «***•!• "VIEWS ONABORTION" Fri Apr 16, S pmCrossroads Center 5621 Blackstone.MAH. YOUR CLASSHWD TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th Sf., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* por lino, 40* por oach lino if the ad is ropoatod in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free.— F ONGOING GESTALT EncounterGroup Begins Monday, April 26, 7-11pm for 7 weeks, limited to 12. $30Lorrie Peterson, experienced leader.288-3541.CRAFT COOP features prints, tiedye, leather, macrame, and otherhandcrafts, all done by local artists.Visit us Mon-Fri 11:30-2:30 ThursNite 7-9 in the Blue Gargoyle 57th 8,University. Students — Europe for ChristmasEaster or summer. Employment op¬portunities, charter flights, dis¬counts. Write for information (airmail) Anglo American Ass'n. 60aPyle Street, Newport, I.W., Eng¬land.Uncle Sam taking too large a shareof your income. Life-time financialplanning service. Call Phil Sldler282-1406.Yoga Poses Concentr. Meditatn.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Classes SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155 Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,363-4555.Folk Dancing is Alive and Well inIda Noyes HallSundays 8-11:30 50 centsGESTALT Encounter Group. Week¬end of April 23, 24, 25. Limited toten. $25. Lorrie Peterson, ex¬perienced leader. 288-3541.Tired of pollution 8t smog? Get outof the city this summer 8, go toKibbutz $650. Call 761-6152 or 274-1011.MAILER MAID-STONEDPolitics and sex don't mix. NormanMailer runs for president andmakes porno pix. Shot by the manwho made Monterrey Pop FirstAmerican showing with first worldshowing of Charles Flynn's firstfilm (from Joyce).Gangsters gene. The clean malewhorehouses and rampant sexismNorman Mailer assults the mind inMaidstone Tonite DOC.WORK STUDYWORK STUDY applications forsummer jobs now available in Col¬lege Aid Office 5737 S. University.Student's eligibility is determined inpart by the income level of the fam¬ily. Preference given to familieswith small incomes.GAY LIB NUDIST CLUB for single women,etc., describe yourself, send 35cents, MYW CLUB, PO Box 1342Aurora, III., 60507Students for Israel offers an ex¬citing program for those seriouslyconsidering living there Jul-Aug $450(Incl transp.) Will be based on Kib¬butz 8< explore various KibbutzimUrban Collectives, developmenttowns as possible homes. Call 761-6152 or 274-1011.pRza’PLATTER!Puzo, Fried Chicken *j Italian Foods II Compare the Price! J! 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800*L WE.DEUVER J8 adits, 3 chldrn 8, 4 pets wnt torent, Ise or buy approx 15 rm hseor apt bldng 30 min from loop for 2-3 yr grp Ivng exprnce. Prsnt leasesexpiring 8. time is short! We needgood prospective leads! Please helpif you can — call 363-3814.The GAY LIB Coffee House livesSat. 4-17 at the Blue Gargoyle 5655S. Univ. Av. 7:30pm to lam.GAY LIB Open Meeting Sun 4-18Ida Noyes 1212 E. 59, 3pm Come!THE WIZARD OF OZSat. Nite Cobb 7:15, 9:30, $1.00.PERSONALSBring a game, play it here and youget free coffee, coke, cake andmaybe even a slice of Bandersnatchpizza free. Free Fat from the FatCity people. Ida Noyes 8:00pm-1:00am tonite.FOUND: Grey Kitten 324-1537.Tonight — Ida Noyes — 8:00 pm to1:00am Free Cake, Coffee, Icecream and coke to those playerswho bring to and play in Ida Noyesa game. That Ole INPB.Chess, Go, Hyde Park, Monotany,Bridge, Blacks and Whites, Risk,Mille Borne. Bring Them to IdaNoyes tonight at 8:00pm. Play themhere and get free good and drinks.The INPB.That was no porridge that was’mewife. The Bed Sitting Room A brandnew Richard Lester movie. Sundayat DOC.Free Kittens. Call 493-2685.Very Cheap flights to Europe 8,Asia. Contact 922-0723.LOST: Siamese Cat Male Sealpt.REWARD. Andy 363-5049.Norman Mailer bites off Rip Torn'scar. For real and in color (mostlyred) Tonite DOC.FREE KITTEN pick of litterTrained playful 667-1723.JORGE: You're the Best! Pregnant and distressed?Call 233-0305Sexist of the Month I Ives IMake a revolution In your life —Coma to Kibbutz this summer!CROTCH ROT?Don't be betrayed by embarrassingcrotch odor. oFr the man who haseverything. Now on sale at the Ma¬roon Office, men's personal hygienespray deodorant, in four deliciousflavors — berry, lemon, lime, &natural. Only $2.25 per can —enough to slick a lot of stick.SUPER PERSONALSMALA: You're OK unless yourmind is 5 sheets to the wind.ZZZZZ FAIR PAMMIEThe Democratic Way-Where wereyou born, F. Jackson Craig?BG: You wouldn't believe itl Somesaid 18ft. some said 20. THEWEDGE CHICK.Beware the Golden JockstraplGETTING MARRIED?Perhaps you would be in¬terested in an individuallycraftedWEDDING BANDIn Silver from $20Gold from $40CALL BASHA337-0715,days or eveningsVisit with me at my work¬shop and see other hand¬crafted sculpture to wear.TEN THOUSANDPAPERBACKSat /A price(and still growing)POWELLS'BOOKSHOP1503 E. 57th (at Harper)10-10 DailyApril M, ltn/Tbe Chicago Maroao/117 "set0™ BeethovenThe N ine SymphoniesGeorge Szell23.98 List COLUMBIAA specially priced 4-record set.4RICORDSE SZELLFLEISHERBEETHOVENTHE FIVEPIANOCONCERTOSTHE CLEVELANDORCHESTRAM4X 3005211.98 List 7 RECORD SET ]Bruno Walter/BeethovenThe Nine SymphoniesY7 3005120.98 ListANOTHER 40% £* SALETHE TCHAIKOVSKY BALLETALBUMEUGENE ORMANDYPHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRASUITES FROMTHE NUTCRACKERSLEEPING BEAUTY SWAN LAKEA specially priced 2-record set.SZELL CONDUCTSMOZARTvYMl'HONYNO v; HAFFNERSYMPHONY NO w/SYMPHONY NO 40SYMPHONY NO 4i "JUPITERTHE CLEVELANDORCHESTRASpecial BonusLeonard Bernsteindiscusses Stravinskyand his PetrushkaballetBERNSTEINCONDUCTSSTRAVINSKYPETRUSHKACompleteFIREBIRD s,,„eNEWY0RKPHILHARMONICA Specially Priced 2 Record Set MG 30269 6.98 List[ 2-RECORD SETTHENOEL COWARDALBUM40 COWARDCLASSICSThe Lotte Lenya Albumand American Theater Songsof Kurt Weill from Lost inthe Stars, Happy End,TheThreepenny Opera, lodyin the Dark, Mahagonny,Knickerbocker Holiday,Street Scene, & more pEUGENE ORMANDY PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRAPHILIPPE ENTREMONTAN AMERICAN IN PARIS CONCERTO IN F TOY AND BESSDurtDSOOY INBLUETheCoplandAhumBernsteinNew YorkPhMhannonicAppalachianSpringBmyTheKktB Salon MexicoRodeo MG 30073MG 30071 George SzellTHREE FAVORITE SYMPHONIESBEETHOVEN'S FIFTHSCHUBERT S "UNFINISHED"DVORAK'S "NEW WORLD”The Cleveland OrchestraMG 30072AlbunMG 30371 ner!MANDYDRCHESTRA1LKYRIES/MAGIC fire MUSICANDFEST MARCH)£ATH AND MGHfc2-Rf CORD SETShe 93adi tflbtimChigmr CSVnian^WtilaMphia GYthretraIS Favoritesincluding\n on I he t. String/Annv./Meener. Wake. i,» ,,f Man's IVsirmif /Sheep Mas Safclv (.u/eA specially priced 2-record set. ieini)Mm..rMG 30300g) Bruno Walterawv MahlerSymphony No. 9The Columbia Symphony OrchestraY2 30308 (g) ‘dcsSrOCVSiPYSzella,„jucs Richard StraussTill EulenspiegelDon Juan I Death and TransfigurationThe Cleveland OrchestraY 30313® —Tr oistrakh/Ormandy^ Sibelius Violin ConcertoThe Swan Of TuonelaThe Philadelphia OrchestraY 30489 2.98 List<g) nSS-v TCHAIKOVSKY'VIOLINCONCERTODAVIDOISTRAKHEUGENEORMANDYTHEPHILADELPHIA~ORCHESTRAY 30312^ BRUNO WALTERIgJvsSr BEETHOVENSYMPHONY NO 5COLUMBIA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASCHUBERTSYMPHONY NO 8 (’ UNFINISHED'')NEW YORK PHILHARMONICY 30314 orywvGlenn Gould BeethovenPiano Concerto No. 1, Piano Sonata, Op. 14, No. 1The Columbia SymphonyVladimir Golschmann, ConductorY 30491ST MUSIC FORf) CLARINET & PIANOySey BERNSTEIN/DEBUSSY/MILHAUDHONEGGER/BAXLEONID HAMBRO PIANOSTANLEY DRUCKER CLARINETY 30492 Austrian Music for Harpsichord [and ClavichordIGOR KIPNISFroberger Poglietti Fux MozartHavdn BeethovenCHARGEWITH 6an« Avif uicawo-4. 4 c-0UJ&L recordsOPEN SUNDAY 12 TO HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505512/The Chicago Maroon/ April 16, 1971