The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 50 The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 20, 1971ALBERT PICK HALL FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES: Geography and new nations departments will occupy new building. On, offcampusservicesto mergeA merger of the on and off-campus stu¬dent personnel services, effective imme¬diately, was announced by Anita Sandke,director of career counseling and place¬ment Tuesday.Rietta Goldberg, interviewer of studentsand part-time employees has moved her of¬fice from personnel to career counselingand placement, room 200, Reynolds Club.Her new title is student employment coun¬selor.Mrs Goldberg’s duties, according to MrsSandke, “Include counseling of studentswho need campus and off-campus jobs,term-time and summer, as well as thecoordination of the placement of studentseligible for the work/study program.”Mrs Goldberg said that in her previousposition in personnel she could only placestudents in on-campus jobs while all off-campus placement was done at careercounseling.Pick Hall to open for first occupantsThe University geography and new na¬tions departments will move into the sec¬ond and third floors of the new Albert PickHall for International Studies, 58th and Uni¬versity, the week of May 5, Universityarchited; Harold Heilman said Monday.Heilman said the remainder of the build¬ing .jyill become occupied sometime inJune.The geography department, which willoccupy the entire third floor and part of thesecond, is presently located in RosenwaldHall, which will be renovated for businessschool offices. Heilman said the renova¬tions would “be getting underway imme¬diately.” The new nations department, which willalso occupy part of the second floor, is nowin Foster Hall basement. The basementwill be used for storage of papers and mail¬ings.According to Robert Adams, dean of thesocial sciences division, the political sci¬ence department will be the largest occu¬pant of the building, filling the fourth andfifth floors.Other departments to move into thebuilding include African studies, Slavicarea studies, the committee on inter¬national studies, the committee on Africanstudies, the Middle East study center, and the Latin American study center.Adams said the University has been “un¬der heavy pressure because of shortage ofoffices” so it is “not clear” if there will bemuch empty space after the various inter¬national studies departments vacate theirpresent locations.Heilman said the money for constructionof the building, which will cost approxi¬mately $2.5 million upon completion, camemainly from donations by Albert Pick, theFord Foundation, and the National ScienceFoundation.Construction on the building began May19,1969. Those deciding on the change, she said,felt it was “a good idea to have everythingin one place.”The University libraries will continue tointerview prospective employees separate¬ly from career counseling, she said.Mrs Goldberg may be reached at exten¬sion 3-3286.Great impact seen in Crewe discoveryANITA SANDKEDirector of career counseling and place¬ment announces merger of personnel serv¬ices.CorrectionThe article on FOTA in last Friday’s Ma¬roon incorrectly stated that the presenta¬tion of Handel’s Thoedora would be by theChicago Symphony Orchestra. Members ofseveral orchestral groups wiii actually Deperforming the piece.scientists were encountering serious diffi¬culties with its cyclotron as they were at¬tempting to extract a beam of proton par¬ticles from the machine for closer study.Roger Hildebrand, physics professor inthe Enrico Fermi Institute, heard aboutCrewe’s work in England where, with DrW H Evans, they had built that nation’sfirst diffusion cloud chamber. Hildebrandvisited Crewe and returned to the UnitedStates convinced that Crewe could solve theproblems with the University’s cyclotron.Crewe was the man who could get “thebeam out of our machine,” Hildebrand toldHerbert L Anderson, professor of physicsand later director of the Fermi Institute.In 1958 Crewe became director of theParticle Accelerator Division at the Ar-gonne National Laboratory, where he re¬mained until returning to the University toteach in 1967. During his years at Argonne,he directed much of the research and con¬struction of the Zero Gradient Synchroton(ZGS), now in use there, and developed astrong relationship between the ArgonneLaboratory and industrial research scien¬tists.Crewe has extended this relationship tohis present position by serving on an advi¬sory panel on the environment for Com¬monwealth Edison. In part, Crewe hopes toContinued on page 3By GORDON KATZ“There’s no law of nature that says youcan’t look at an atom. We just haven’t beenable to do it. People have had this dreamfor a long time, and what we are doing istrying one approach to it.”That was what Albert Crewe told report- PROFILEers in 1964 when they asked him to explainhis work at Argonne National Laboratory.Last year Crewe announced the develop¬ment of a “scanning electron microscope”with which he has successfully photograph¬ed uranium atoms. Now he hopes to usethis instrument “as a tool for biology andchemistry.”ALBERT CREWEDeveloper of scanning electron microscopewill bead phy-sci division..V. \ * v ,1 v«, >: v * • .♦.t- This technique is expected to have greatimpact in many fields, particularly in gen¬etics where Crewe and his associates arepresently trying to determine the order ofthe DNA chain. Such a discovery would bea major scientific breakthrough and couldpossibly lead to a Nobel prize.In addition to his research, Crewe main¬tains a high reputation as a teacher. July 1he will succeed A Adrian Albert as dean ofthe division of physical sciences.Born in Bradford, Yorkshire, England in1927, Crewe received both his BS and PhDdegrees at the University of Liverpool,where he also served on the faculty until1955.About this time, University of ChicagoHarper library, Wieboldt to be remodeledHARPER LIBRARY: Construction of newoffices and classrooms is now underway. Wieboldt and the first and second floorsof Harper library will be remodeled by ear¬ly 1973 into offices, classrooms and smallmeeting rooms. Construction will begin bynext January.Construction is now underway in HarperEast Tower, which will be ready for occu¬pancy by the beginning of next year.According to Loma Straus, assistant pro¬fessor of anatomy and chairman of thecommittee on the library renovation, con¬struction on the first two floors might beheld up because “the University hasn’tHearings between the library union andthe University held before the National La¬bor Relations Board (NLRB) will recon¬vene May 6.The hearings have been delayed becausethe University and union lawyers went outof town. Hearings were held at the FederalBuilding March 7 and 8.According to Pat Coatsworth, chairmanof the Library Staff Organizing Committee,the March hearings dealt with the status ofsupervisors. Supervisors may not vote inthe NLRB elections. The University dis¬agreed with the number of and who con¬stituted supervisors.Mrs Coatsworth expects several issues tocome up when the NLRB reconvenes in¬cluding professionalization, library clericalworkers and student participation in elec¬tions. Mrs Coatsworth said the Universitydefines a professional as someone who pos¬sesses a professional appointment from theUniversity.The union defines a professional as onewho performs in a professional capacitywhether the University appointed them ornot.Mrs Coatsworth said another question iswhether the clerical staff in the library isseparate from other clericals on campus. raised all the money yet.” The money,however, will not be needed for anotheryear.Plans call for the first two floors ofWieboldt to be occupied by the humanitiescollegiate and divisional faculties.Classrooms, seminar rooms, and the of¬fices of the dean of the College, dean ofundergraduate students, all advisors of¬fices, and admissions and aid will be lo¬cated on Harper’s first two floors. ManyCollege faculty will also have offices in theremodeled Harper.The other major issue concerns studentswho work part-time in the library.As of now there has been no precedentfor student participation in the NLRB elec¬tion. This election determines whether theunion will represent the workers at the li¬brary.Mrs Coatsworth said, “We know we’ll beat the NLRB for quite awhile. This is acomplicated issue and the Universitydoesn’t want to capitulate.”As of yet there are no official resultsfrom last week’s elections for Student Gov¬ernment (SG) and National Student Associ¬ation (NSA) because of charges that signa¬tures on several candidacy forms wereforged.The charges, made by several membersof the SG assembly, will be considered anddecided upon at a special meeting of the SGelections and rules committee Wednesdayat 8 p.m. SG rules require that the officialresults be submitted by 9 am. According to Mrs Straus “the goal is thateverybody will have private offices.” Shesaid that now many social science andhumanities faculty share office space.The vacated space in Gates-Blake willprovide more office space for college facul¬ty.The schematic drawings for the new of¬fice spaces have been completed, and thearchitects are currently developing moredetailed designs, Mrs Straus said.She expects the first phase of the designsto be completed in a couple of weeks. TheHarper renovation committee will then re¬view the designs, which will take aboutthree months, she estimated.After the plans are approved, the archi¬tect alters and incorporates specific de¬tails. This should take another six months,she said.Only after the final designs have beendrawn do contractors bid to undertake therenovation. It will take 18 months to com¬plete the construction.Construction is currently going on in theEast Tower of Harper. The contract wasawarded at the beginning of April. It willbe ready for occupancy the beginning ofnext year, she added.The candidacy forms are required of ev¬ery candidate running for an SG or an NSAseat, and must be signed by the candidatehimself. The charges allege that in severalcases someone other than the candidatesigned the form.SG vice-president Gerard Leval ’72 willserve as acting chairman of the electionsand rules committee at tomorrow’s meet¬ing, due to the resignation Monday ofprevious chairman Gene Goldberg ’71.Library hearings to reconveneSG election results challenged;allege candidacy forms forgeryBUSES TO WASHINGTONApril 24—STOP THE WAR—See PersonalsBrent House Institute forIntergroup CommunicationAnnounces itsSPRING QUARTER PROGRAMPEOPLE IN PROFESSIONS:CONFLICT AND CHANGE"An exploration of the relationship between the individual and profes¬sional expectations and societal needs."A weekend (April 30 - May 2nd at Childerly in Wheeling, Illinois) andEvening Workshops.Make Reservations thru Brent House, 5540 Woodlawn, 753-3392IS THIS YOUR BAG?If ATHER WINC BAGSMADE IN SPAIN.LATEX LINING KEEPSTOUR GOODIES FRESH.SEND $350 TO:AARHUSP.O. BOX 33214HOUSTON, TEX. 77035 IIAVber'S ALL-NIGHT StiCUPERFORMANCES FRIOAT & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURE UNWANTEDPREGNANCYHAVE A LEGAL ABORTIONPERFORMED IN NEW YORK STATECOSTS RANGE FROM $110CALLLEGAL ABORTION PROJECT312-743-3640or312-743-3388Monday through Saturday9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Apr. 23 Apr. 24PAINT YOUR THEWAGON ADVENTURERSLee Marvin Candice Bergen12, 2:15 a.m. 12, 3:00 a.m.May 1Apr. 30 LITTLE FAUSSWUSA AND BIGPaul Newman12,2:00 a.m. HALSEYRobert Redfordnam si so - Our thing is your ring —*'Nf fwfifts *Oi Sf *!AtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENOIIWOOD EVCRORICN PLAZA2/The Chicago Maroon /April 20, 1971 CAM1RA CLUBBring Pictures to be shown at McCormick Placeon Friday to the Camera Club Meeting,Tonight at 7:30, Room 103, Business East, orbring them to Al Gorman at Model Camera.For more information call Pat Remy 643-7273 or Al Gorman 493-6701(This is a warm-up for FOTA) WORKING CLASS_ ACTION AND THEOR X ANTI-WARWASMNGTONFOR YOU-.An InternationalSocialist's Forum.Ida Noyes 7 PM Wed.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th Sl.363-6363MASK OFDEMETRIOUSwith Sidney Groonstroetp/usTHESEA 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.» , IAccelerator enhances phy-sci prospectsCREWE AND MICROSCOPE: ‘There’s no law of nature that says you can’t look at an atom.” Steve AokiNLRB to decide in lab school electionThe outcome of an election to determineif University laboratory school teacherswish union representation is still uncertain,pending a decision by the National LaborRelations Board (NLRB).The results of the Thursday election willnot be known until the NLRB rules whetheror not to accept 12 ballots challenged by theUniversity.The ballots in question, which will re¬main sealed until the NLRB makes its deci¬sion, were cast by faculty members whothe University feels were not eligible to vote, such as department chairmen andtwo head librarians.Of the unchallenged ballots, 81 favoredrepresentation by the Faculty Associationof the University of Chicago LaboratorySchools, which requested the election.There were 84 votes against representation.The 12 challenged ballots could sway theoutcome of the election either way.Richard Muelder, faculty associationpresident, hopes the final outcome will bein favor of the association, which providesteachers with an organization to negotiate for a new contract.Among demands of the association,which is affiliated with the American Fed¬eration of Teachers, AFL-CIO, are “morefaculty involved in educational policy deci¬sions; improved facilities, both personneland physical; a better personnel policy in¬volving more job security.”The faculty association has more than 60members, or about a third of the labschools’ faculty. It is NLRB policy to super¬vise an election if 30 percent of the employ¬ees support the organization requesting it.Lovgren restricted to city for marchFred Lovgren, one of the three coordinat¬ors of the Chicago Peace Action Coalition(CPAC), has had a federal travel banplaced on him thereby restricting him fromgoing to the anti-war protest and march inWashington Saturday.The ban was placed on Lovgren as a re¬sult of an indictment handed down April 8by a federal grand jury for refusing to sub¬mit and to cooperate with induction into thearmed forces.According to a CPAC spokesman, Lov¬ gren reported for induction into the armylast September at that time he wentthrough a security check and was told to gohome. He did not hear from his draft boardafter that, the spokesman said, until theindictment came down.A $4500 bond, one of the highest in thehistory of Illinois for such an indictmentaccording to the CPAC spokesman, wasplaced on Lovgren. Lovgren had to post tenpercent, or $450, to keep out of jail.Lovgren was able to have the travel banIIi 1 1■ i 1 H 1 i<I\ -| 4■ • \ I it•} I:■ !1 3 i ■ il.5 111 1 ! ; Continued from page 1change prevailing attitudes that science isresponsible for the environment’s prob¬lems.“There’s a general feeling that sciencehas done damage to the culture as awhole,” Crewe said. “I, of course, do notbelieve that. Once you can convince peoplethat science and environment work togeth¬er, this feeling may decrease.”Crewe would also like to break down thebarriers within scientific disciplines to en¬able broader-based research. “Perhapsphysics departments will become moreflexible — you now find physical chemistsdoing work on DNA, much as we aredoing,” Crewe said.In terms of graduate curricula, Crewefinds the inter-disciplinary concept attrac¬tive but expresses doubts whether it can betreated as an educational technique.The future of the division in general andthe physics department in particular at theUniversity should be a bright one, accord¬ing to its new dean. Next year dis¬tinguished physicist James Cronin wlilcome from Princeton to join the physicsdepartment.Like Argonne National Laboratory, thefederally financed accelerator to be built inBatavia, Illinois is to be staffed in largepart by University personnel, and Creweforsees this as being an added attraction tothe division. “It is the largest acceleratorin the world — and it will be for a numberof years,” he said.It is unlikely, Crewe reports, that an ad¬ditional building for the Enrico Fermi In¬stitute will soon be built. “It would be de¬lightful if we could have that building, butwith money the way it is, who knows?”Crewe commented.Beginning six years ago on the construc¬tion of the scanning electron microscope,the Fermi Institute presently has two inoperation. A third microscope, with twicethe resolution of the other two, is expectedto be completed by the end of the summer.lifted for Monday night to enable him totravel to Notre Dame University, and hislawyers are currently working to have theban lifted for Saturday.Bus tickets to Washington for the protestSaturday are being sold by Student Govern¬ment.The tickets, $35, can be purchased in theSG office Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fri¬days, 10:30 am-5 pm, and Tuesdays andThursdays, 1:30-5 pm; Mandel corridor11:30 am-l:30 pm weekdays; or from JanetCantrick, 922-1068.Drivers are urgently needed for car poolsto Washington, according to a demonstra¬tion spokesman. Persons willing to drive orwho need a ride should stop at the “April24” table in Mandel corridor between 11:30am and 1:30 pm weekdays, or go to the SGoffice.For further information call Lucy Ari-mond, 753-2249, extension 1124. Steve AokiALBERT CREWE:“Science and environment can work to¬gether.”SPORTS SHORTSWASHINGTON MARCH: Will the people persuade the President? Steve Aoki In this column the Maroon mil attemptto provide regular weekly coverage of allvarsity events. We hope that in comingweeks our coverage will become morecomplete and we invite reader reaction.• The track team had a successful outinglast Wednesday, outscoring North ParkCollege 80-64. Two days later they partici¬pated in the Ohio State relays at Columbus.Larry Woodell had an outstanding day,winning the 100 and 220 yard dashes andfinishing second in the shot put com¬petition.Don Brovillctte was also a double winner,finishing first in the 440 yard hurdles andtriple jump. Coach Ted Haydon expects to take about six men to the Drake UniversityRelays at Des Moines Friday.• The baseball team lost its third gameof the season Saturday to Illinois Instituteof Technology by a score of 18 to 5.• Coach Bill Vendl’s soccer team isopening a spring practice schedule Thurs¬day against last year’s champs, LowerFlint. This will be the first of four springworkouts to improve playing technique.Sports events this week: Tuesday, Golf vs Roosevelt,Niles at White Pines Wednesday, Track vs Concordia,Stagg field, 3:30 pm. Tennis vs Wabash, Stagg field, 1pm. Thursday, Soccer vs IM socim champs, Lowerciin* stass field, 4 pm. rrldey and Saturday, Tiuck a!Drake University Relays, Des Moines. Saturday, Base¬ball at Lake Forest (2 games), 12:30 pm. Monday, Golfvs Loyola, DePaul at Glen Eagles, 1:30 pm. Tuesday,Baseball vs ITT, Stagg field, 3:30 pm.April 20, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/3fThe Chicago MaroonPAUL BERNSTEIN, MITCH BOBKIN, CON HITCHCOCKCo-editors•DON RAINER SUSAN LOTHBusiness Manager Senior EditoreJUDY ALSOFROM, Managing Editor AUDREY SH Ail INSKY, Executive EditorFRED WINSTON, News Editor GORDON KATZ, Contributing EditorNANCY CHISMAN, Executive Editor STEVE AOKI, Photography EditoreLISA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, KEITH PYLEAssociate EditorseRICK BALSAMO> FRANK GRUBER, LESLIE LINTON, BRUCE RABEStaff•STEVE COOK DIANA LEI PEREditor Emeritus Assistant Business ManagerFounded In lt92. 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 mall $8 per yearIn the United States. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, Illinois.Coed housingPlans to coeducate dormitories are in the news again, and on thebasis of coeducation’s success this year, we strongly favor their imple¬mentation.Almost every resident of a coed house would agree that the pres¬ence of the opposite sex on a regular, informal basis radically improvesthe dormitory atmosphere. The more houses become coed the better,as long as there is still room in the system for those who prefer a segre¬gated arrangement.The coeducation committee of Inter-House Council has recom¬mended that coeducation be extended to other houses and complexesnext year. Director of student housing Edward Turkington has acceptedthe recommendations in principle; but he added in a letter to the com¬mittee that their implementation “must depend, in large measure, onthe availability and willingness of appropriate numbers of men andwomen to live in those houses which you propose to coeducate.”We must take exception to this approach to instituting coeducation.Under such conditions, present plans have a poor chance of being real¬ized in their entirety. It is indeed understandable that women residentsof Woodward Court, for example, should be unwilling to move to suchfar-away places as Burton-Judson and Boucher.We suggest instead that in cases where not enough upperclassmen and women are available to meet plan requirements, the remainingnumber of rooms be assigned to incoming freshmen of the appropriatesex. In this way more dormitories would become coed once and for all,regardless of the decisions which present residents arrive at. At firstit would mean a high ratio of freshman women to upperclass women insome dormitories, but the ratio would eventually decrease as these coedplaces became more popular.It strikes us as unfair that freshmen residents of the housing sys¬tem in years to come may be denied the benefits of coeducation becauseof inevitable upperclassman reluctance. The way to institute coeduca¬tion is on a mandatory basis. It won’t infringe upon anyone’s rights,and it will make a lot of future students happier.Student GovernmentIt would be pleasant to say something good about Student Govern¬ment for a change. Instead of reporting botched up meetings attendedby 25 representatives and political issues which generate only limitedinterest on campus, it would indeed be welcome to report a sense ofresponsibility in SG and a new awareness of student interests and needs.Sad to say, we cannot.After last week’s election, we had hoped that the new SG couldstart off on the right foot. Unfortunately it did — an angry session Mon¬day concerned itself with illegal voting petitions, a matter which shouldhave been considered before the election, not after the people had beenelected.SG has often accused the Maroon of trying to “kill it.” This is notthe case, and in our news coverage we attempt to be as objective aspossible towards SG. We can see the need for an effective Student Gov¬ernment on campus, but one that is obsessed with trivia is not goingto receive our support or that of many students.Rather than shout “murderer” at its critics, SG should recognizethat most of its unfavorable image results from a rather dismal trackrecord to date, and efforts at reform should be made.We hope that next year’s assembly, rather than concern itself withthe petty in-fighting that has characterized past sessions, would set asits goals upgrading student life, providing more services, acting as aneffective organ for student opinion, and in general making life heremore tolerable. KlMMEL ,"We prefer Montovani"Referendum defeat may alteractivists' thinking and tacticsBy PAUL BERNSTEINLast week’s defeat of the people’s peacetreaty referendum is as difficult to inter¬pret as the purpose of the referendum it¬self.The balloting was significant if only be¬cause it attracted some 31 percent of thestudent body, which at this University is anunusually large turnout. But what do theresults mean?It was extremely unlikely from the verybeginning that the University would consid¬er implementing any of the referendum’sproposals if they passed. In all probability,then, the defeat had no meaning in terms oftangible results.Yet it might prove to be important in itseffect on the thinking of referendum orga¬nizers. The sponsors were no doubt hopingthat the referendum would mobilize sup¬port for their demands, which could be use¬ful in a confrontation with the University.It failed to do so, and they can now attrib¬ute its failure to one of three reasons.The first explanation would be that a ma¬jority of students voted against three of thereferendum’s four parts out of ignorance. Ifthe People’s Peace Treaty Coalition hadonly drawn more clearly the relation be¬tween the University and the Indochinawar as they saw it, the proposals mighthave fared better.But this argument is hard to accept. Thesponsors explained the proposals in an ex¬tensive publicity campaign, and their viewswere also aired in the student press.In any case, most veterans of campuspolitics are familiar with the analysis byradical groups of the role the Universityplays in society and no doubt understandthe arguments behind the referendum.The second explanation for the defeat isthe anti-referendum campaign waged bythe Campus Coalition. But the correlationis impossible to prove, and on the basis ofthe sparse crowds at Coalition-sponsoredpanel discussions, it seems likely that thegroups influenced few votes.The most plausible explanation is thatstudents nrvter stood the thinking behind the ANALYSISreferendum and simply disagreed with it.The proposal for an enforcement of a banon war-related research, for example, rancontrary to their values. The demands toend lay-offs of campus workers and to res¬cind next year’s tuition hike were dis¬missed as unrealistic. The referendum’scontent was too radical for what is basic¬ally a liberal student body.Does this mean that the campus that ex¬perienced a sit-in two years ago and astrike last spring has suddenly been de-radicalized? Is the referendum another signof the new wave of student apathy that weread about in Time?There are good reasons to believe thatthat is not the case. It should be remem¬bered that the sit-in and the strike werespontaneous expressions of discontent fol¬lowing unexjpected events.They temporarily united people of differ¬ent political persuasions because they werebased on emotional response rather thanintellectual analysis.The referendum was instead a documentthat was examined and debated for weeksand one that asked students to reach anuncomfortable intellectual position.An emotional response was impossible,because the sad truth is that the Vietnam¬ese war has been going on too long to pro¬duce suddenly a high-pitch moral frenzy?However cynical it sounds, the referen¬dum may have proven once and for all thatcampus radicals will get nowhere by ap¬pealing to students’ intellect.The radicals of two years ago had a wis¬er strategy: they contincally raised issuesthat were new and relevant to students. Fi¬nally one of them, the firing of MarleneDixon, had the force to trigger action.Perhaps this year’s activists will resumethat tactic in order to come to terms withliberal ideology on this campus.Paul Bernstein 72, is co-editor of theMaroon.4/The Chicago Maroon/April 20, 1971'Aggressive self-defense planned for May ITraining sessions for May action inWashington DC were held last Sunday inthe Blue Gargoyle, and featured instructionon self-defense, health care and legal prob¬lems.The purpose of the May demonstrations, according to Dave Moberg, 72, member ofthe People’s Peace Treaty Coalition andMay Day Action group, is to “stop businessas usual” in Washington and stop the gov¬ernment from functioning. The protestors’strategy includes the blocking of major traffic arteries, bridges, and entrances tomajor government buildings.In anticipation of opposition from policeand other governmental forces, the trainingsession taught basic forms of what wascalled “aggressive self-defense”. Moberg, however, claimed that this does not detractfrom the stated non-violent nature of themarch.“By non-violence”, he said, “we mean noinitiation of attacks on people and proper¬ty.” Moberg continued, “There’s a lot wecan do to maintain non-violence, but in theend the decision is not entirely ours.”LETTERS TO THE EDITORSNCD admissionsMay I correct some wrong ideas aboutnew collegiate division (NCD) admissions?Although we have a spring admissions sea¬son, and we encourage applications fromfreshmen at this time, students can applyat any time after the first year.In this less than best possible worldsNCD has had to continue to affirm its needto limit enrollment. The reason is fairlysimple and seems intransigent.The new division exists in the Indepen¬dent Study project and in the requirementsof two major writing projects plus a ratherelusive requirement that a foreign lan¬guage be “used in the student’s work”.In these formal ways we try to provide aplace in which students can learn to do in¬tellectual work — to refine a question, askit in varying contexts, argue it in public,and so on.This demands a great deal of faculty ad¬vising and attention. But faculty is not anunlimited resource. So NCD limits enroll¬ment to those for whom it can provide fac¬ulty supervision. And of course there aresome subjects we haven’t the teachers toteach.Admission is not determined by academ¬ic record. This is not a place where, as oneprospective applicant told me, “you acceptstudents who already know everything, andput a stamp of approval on them.”The admissions interview at its best is a conversation between faculty and studentabout how and where the student can bestget the education he is looking for.A student who wants to study somethingwe can teach, and who respects the inde¬pendent study notion and the importance ofserious writing in the Division, will, withinthe limits of human error, be accepted.Janet KravetzNCD administrative assistantCriticizes terminationI don’t understand how and why the Slav¬ic Department decided to eliminate Bar¬bara Monter from its faculty. After beingaway from Chicago for a year, distance hasobscured the motives and trivialized thepolitics.On the other hand, distance has sharp¬ened my perspective as one of the very fewundergraduate Russian majors at the uni¬versity. I believe the decision was a seriousmistake.Mrs Monter was more encouraging andmore critically interested in my work —and in her own work — than I found anyother member of the Russian literature fac¬ulty to be.Perhaps more to the point is the clearlypositive and enthusiastic response of MrsMonter’s humanities students, which is amatter of public record (1970 publication ofHumanities Collegiate Division studentevaluations), and the many positive reac¬tions of graduate students who were unoffi¬ cially polled during fall quarter.I was closely involved with the Slavic De¬partment for four years and the decisioncomes as no surprise. The tenured Russianliterature faculty has never seemed to meparticularly interested in its students — es¬pecially its undergraduate students.It is no coincidence that so few choose tomajor in Russian literature (I was one oftwo in my year). It is also no coincidencethat the department receives such a dearthof graduate applications.My best wishes to Mrs Monter, and toEdward Stankiewicz, chairman of the Slav¬ic Department who has decided to leave theuniversity.To those who remain — you must bedoing something wrong.Rima ShoreWork, don't bitch!The members of the FOTA committeeare volunteers. When they become mem¬bers of the committee, they take on thehard work that goes into arranging a festi¬val of such scope; they also take on theinevitable frustrations, headaches, and ag¬gravation.Then three callow editors complain (Ma¬roon, April 16) that they “are sick and tiredof selfish bureaucrats presenting what theywant to see on campus with absolutely noregard for what the majority of the campusContinued on page 6 People aren’t in the mood to allow them¬selves to be beaten,” he added.About 35 people were on hand for thetraining session, which Moberg emphasizedwas “to make the people aware of con-tigencies.” Advice was given on karatetype self-defense, first aid, and legal proce¬dures. Participants were given suggestionson how to respond to such adversities asgas, clubs, bullets, and general busts.Moberg termed the planned May demon¬strations as representing “a sharpening ofwhat is already a political crisis in thiscountry,” and added that the “military ofthe anti-war movement is taking on a classoriented nature.”While he expects a large turnout in Wash¬ington (“I would be surprised if there areless than 15,000”), he admitted that thechances are great that the University willbe relatively poorly represented. He esti¬mated the number going as “between 50and 75,” but hoped that it would increase.Moberg urged all those interested in par¬ticipating in the May actions to contact thePeople Peace Treaty Organization’s officein the Gargoyle.Another training session will be heldshortly in Lincoln Park. Anti-war actionsare being planned for Chicago at the sametime as those in Washington. The empha¬sis here will be on mass protest andmarches.Moberg called the training session impor¬tant in that they will help prepare the dem¬onstrators for any situations that they arelikely encounter. He said that they will“give the people more confidence whenthey’re in the street, and be less hystericaland more efficient in disruptive actions.I SH4TRACK STIRIQSOVMP VPll dementi of the Truth Captured Live on Rimr - JLEON RUSSELLThe Master of Space &Ti me |JKTHOTl WRfORfn IDTHf PL£ft/UKPfilPCtf OFOTSaCftTTSA MOVING PICTURE iflWMQMMfTKO-GCXDWYN MAYER (xemoti JOE COCKER MAD DOGS & ENGLISHMENwi* IEON RUSSEll Executive Product* JERRY MOSS Associate Producer SIDNEY LEVINProduced by PIERRE ADIDGE HARRY MARK Sew’d ROBERT ABEL Directed by PIERRE A DOGEAn A&M film In Association With Creotive film Associates In ColorA WALTER READE THEATRE OPENS FRIDAYme ^squire 23rdPARKING AT 33 E. CEDARSB E. OAK STREET • 337-1117 3Vt HRS. $1.00de Antonio's The Harper Concert SeriespresentsSonata #5 for flute and double basscontinue, by J.S. BachFirst Duo, by L BeethovenDuet in G Major, by G.P. Telemannperformed byJudith Johnson, fluteBrian Smith, double bassFriday, April 23, 4 p.m.x Harper Reading RoomSponsored by the College and the Officeof Student Activities“WHAT ARE LADIES VOICES"plays by Gertrude Steinand Tennessee Williamsdir. by Elaine Cohenand Ann Beckermanpiano music - Buzz Whiteat the April 23, 24, 25 8:30Blue GargoyleREDEEM THIS COUPON A TOURofMR. JOSEPHSHAPIRO S PERSONALART COLLECTIONwill be conducted in hishome, Wednesday,April 28 at 8 p.m. A buswill leave Ida NoyesHall at 7 p.m. Signupsin INH 209For further info, call 753-3591 PREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining a legalabortion immediately in New YorkCity at minimal costCHICAGO (312) 923-0777CALL PHILA. (215) 07S-50OOMIAMI (305)754-5471ATLANTA (404) 524-4701NEW YORK (212) 502-4740• A.M.-10 PJL—7 DAYS A WEEKABORTION REFERRALSERVICE (ARS), INC.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 later than 5 p.m. on April23.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 DAILYIN THE YEAR ™Cobb Thursday, Apr! 22 7:15 & 9:15 For Gym Shoes $3.89Bellbottoms from $4.99Body Shirts 2 for$8.88This offer expires April 26, 1971JOHN'S MEN'S WEAR1459 E. 53rd WORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSORDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.April 20,1971/The Chicago Maroon/5LETTERS TO THE EDITORS ABOUT THE MIDWAYContinued from page 5are interested in.”Well, if the “majority of the campus”wants something different, why don’t theyvolunteer for the committee and do thework? Why shouldn’t the committee mem¬bers provide what they think will be inter¬esting for the campus? If the committeemembers are going to do the scut work,they at least ought to work on somethingthey care about.What’s sickening and tiring are students(even when doubling as editors) who thinkthat other students were placed on earth tocarry out the whims of “the silent major¬ity.”Gloria PharesLinguisticsNoise pollutionThe approach of spring is bringing with itthe usual plague of Buildings & Grounds noise pollution.In the fall it’s the leaf-pickers and vacu¬um hoses. In the winter it’s the turf-tearingsnow blowers. And in the spring, it’s theseed planters, graders, and all varieties oflawn mowers, running all over the quadswith their noisy combustion engines.It always kills me to see the B&G peopletinkering with these silly machines andgunning them like hotrods over the defense¬less quads. During spring last year, the dinoften got so bad that I was forced to retreatto the relatively peaceful dungeons of theSoc Sci reading room.What purpose does all this mechanicalchaos serve except to thwart nature? IfB&G would just leave the grass and leavesalone, nature would manage without them.I hereby volunteer two hours per week ofmy free time to taking a sledgehammer toall these ridiculous machines and finding ascrap metal place to sell the junk. (B&Gcan contact me at 5400 Greenwood.)Peter Goodsell ’71 Ford grantThe Ford Foundation has granted ShmuelEisenstadt $82,500 to develop and publishhis ideas on the interaction between tradi¬tion and development. Eisenstadt will be avisiting professor of sociology beginningfall quarter. He is currently a professor ofsociology at Hebrew University in Jerusa¬lem and is former chairman of the sociolo¬gy department there.The five-year grant compensates for re¬leased teaching time, and pays for re¬search and secretarial assistance, con¬sultations and travel.Walk for developmentUniversity lab school students are co-or¬dinating the May 8 and 9 InternationalWalk for Development in the Hyde Parkarea.The Walk for Development is sponsoredby the American Freedom from hunger Foundation as a means of raising money tosupport self-help projects which are se¬lected by local committees.Each marcher is sponsored by a privatecitizen or business who pledges a certainamount of money for each mile that is cov¬ered. Walks are generally about 30 miles,and help is needed to man food stations,checkpoints and first aid stops.Anyone interested in the walk should con¬tact John Goldwyn, 955-1616, or Joel Fried-land, 363-8211.Dellinger to speakDavid Dellinger, member of the Chicago7, will speak at the Blue Gargoyle Wednes¬day night at 8 pm. He is being sponsored bythe Chicago Peace Council and People’sPeace Treaty Coalition.Dellinger, who spoke on campus last yearduring the Conspiracy trial, will talk on“The Spring Offensive” in anticipation ofthe coming events in Washington.There will be an admission charge of $1.Visiting professorBULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, April 20MUSIC: Lec+ure-demonstrattan at the organ console byEdward Mondelta, University organist, RoclctfellerChapel, 12:15 pm.MEETING: Camera club to select prints for exhibit atPhoto Expo 71, aN welcome, Busines East 103, 7:30pm.FILM: George Cukor's "The Women" with Joan Craw¬ford, Rosalind Russell, Clare Booth Luce, and 136other women and no men. 7:30 only. Quantretl. DOC.MEETING, Gay Lib study group, Blue Gargoyle, 8 pm.READING: Michael Hamburger will read a selectionof his poems and translations, Social Sciences 122,8 pm.FLICK: Lemaze films "American Naissance — Journeywith a Friend," shows Lamaze clas and an actualdelivery. Folowing the film a doctor will answerquestions about the psychoprophylactic, "Lamaze" method of childbirth. Admission 50 cents, St ThomasSchool, 5472 Kimbark, 9 pm.Wednesday, April 21MUSIC: Carillon recital, Robert Lodlne, RockefellerChapel, University carlllonneur, 12:15 pm.LECTURE: Jacque Ehrmann, associate professor offrench, Yale, (in french), "Problems du reclt: lededans et le dehors," room 10 Classics, 4:30 pm.REHEARSAL: University orchestra, Mandel Hall,strings 6:30 pm. and full orchestra, 7:30 pm.FILM: A double bilt: Howard Hawks' "The DawnPatrol" (1930) with Douglas Fairbanks Jr and Rich¬ard Barthlemess at 7:15 and at 8:30 John Ford's"The Sun Shines Bright" with absolutely nobody butCharles Flynn claims that It Is stiff great. DOC.SEMINAR: UC-Hyde Park chapter of Chicago Women'sLiberation Union and Southside Womens Center spon¬ sor "Why don't mothers and children treat eachother like people?", Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: Pierre Van den Berghe on South Africa,"Mechanisms of Minority Domination," Social Science122, 7:30 pm.Thursday, April 22DISCUSSION: African Studies group bag — lunch dis¬cussion with professor Pltrre Van den Berghe, opendisdussion on issues of sociology in Africa, SocialScience 302, 12 noon.MEETING: Go club, Ida Noyes, 7 pm.FLICK: "In the Year of the Pig," Quantrell, 7:15,9:15 pm.MEETING: Gay Lib consciousness-raising group onbisexually, Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.INTERVIEW: Dylanologist AJ Weberman, WHPK, 88.3FM, 6:30 pm. Medical historian Fridoolf Kudlien, hasbeen appointed visiting professor in theFishbein center for the study of the historyof science and medicine, for spring 1971.Kudlien’s research has been in ancientGreek, Latin, medieval, and renaissancemedicine. He has also devoted research tomedicine under German national socialismin the 1930’s and early forties, and is aboutto publish a book on this theme.He studied at Humboldt University andFree University, Berlin, from 1947 to 1953,and earned the PhD in 1957. His thesis wason one of the Galenic commentaries on Hip¬pocrates.From 1954 to 1961 he was an assistant atthe German Academy of Sciences. He thenmoved to Braunschweig to continue studiesfor his book on Aretaios.IDA NOYES PROGRAM BOARD PRESENTS:COOK COUNTY VOCAL SINGING CONVENTIONTHE MOST RESPECTED SPIRITUAL MUSIC IN CHICAGOIda Noyes Cloister Club "FrOC" 8:00 P.M. Friday, April 23DEPARTMENT Of MUSIC and FROMM MUSK FOUNDATION IpresentTHE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSOf THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO STUDENT OMBUDSMAN 1971 -72Ralph Shapey * Music DirectorClaudo Kipnis Mime Theatre * assisting artistsWorks by Kolb • McKinley • StravinskyFRIDAY 8:00 P.M.APRIL 23 MANDEL HALL The 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.Admission free with ticket. Tickets available at ConcertOffice, 5835 University Ave.WANT QUALITYCONTRACEPTIVES?Once upon a time, the best male contraceptives that moneycould buy were in your local drugstore. That time is gone.Today, the world’s best condoms come from England, andare available in America only fromPOPULATION PLANNINGthe exclusive U.S. distributor for two remarkable (andhighly popular) British condoms—scientifically shaped NuFormand superfine Fetherlite—And we make them available throughthe privacy of the mails. Both are superbly fine and light-lighter than drugstore brands. They average 1.25 gms apiece tobe precise. These contraceptives are made by LR Industries otLondon, the world’s largest manufacturer of contraceptive prod¬ucts. They not only meet rigorous U.S. FDA specifications, butare made to British Government Standard 3704 as well. Youwon’t find a more reliable condom anywhere. At the request of the President, I 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 StudentsOur illustrated brochure tells you all about Fetherlite andNuForm. And about seven other American brands which we havecarefully selected from the more than one hundred kinds availabletoday. And we explain the differences.We also have nonprescription foam for women * and a widevariety of books and pamphlets on birth control, sex. population,and ecologyWant more information? It’s free. Just send us your name andaddress. Better still, for one dollar we’ll send you all the informa¬tion plus two Fetherlite samples and one NuForm. For four dollarsyou’ll get the brochure plus three each of five different :ondombrands (including both Imports). All correspondence and merchan¬dise is shipped in a plain cover to protect your privacy, and weguarantee your money back it you're not satisfied with our products.Why wait?POPULATION PLANNING ASSOC.Box 2556-N, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514Gentlemen: Please send me: Your free brochure and pricelist at no obligation. Three samples for $1. Deluxesampler package for $4NameAddress• City State ZipSCIENCE FICTION FILMSBandersnatch 7:30 Fr«« Tugs. Nites“27th Day" 2Vi star! TV GuideAliens equip a group of earth people to take on theworld. Continued patronage of these free flicks insuresthat the series will continue through the Quarter6/The Chicago Maroon/April 20, 1971 PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDMONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERVICES ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS Ik HRS.Contemporary European FilmspresentsMIZOGUCHI’STHE BAILIFFone of the greatestJapanese films of all timeSunday T he Law SchoolApril 25 75c ♦ C or nett T)tori A *# 1645 E. 55th STtKV J* CHICAGO, ILL. 60AI* $5 Phene: FA 4-1851 m^***********(Maroon Classified Ads)MY MOTHER HAD FRIED SOME CHICKEN LEGS ..CLASSIFIEDSClassified ad deadlines are 10:00AM Monday for Tuesday's Paper,and 4:00 PM Wed. for the Fridaypaper.The cost is 50*/line the first run¬ning and 40* for repeated in¬sertions for University people;75*/line and 60*/repeat line fornon University people.Strictly Per¬sonals are run for everyone at25*/iine.Ads must be paid in advance sobring them to our office, Rm 304Ida Noyes, or mail them in with acheck. ,for sale'65 VW Sedan, low mileage, ww-tires, radio, ecx. running cond. Call684-8725 after 9 pm or weekends.$550.Oak Dresser, kitchen table, chairs,small hsehld goods. 363-19JJ.Read Da Daily GraniteUsed Furniture — Sat. Apr. 24 from10am to noon — 5316 DorchesterSponsored by Service Bureau — UCService Leage. Admittance by U ofC I.D. card. Cash and CarryArt collectors and historians: 17, 18,19th Century Flemish Maps anddrawings. Lim amt. 288-6775FOTA: The Unlawful AssemblageWATERBED EXPERIENCE -wholesale-retail, BEDS $9-65, 20 milunion carbide vinyl, 20 yr. guar.Heaters $12-35, silicone rubber, 400wat, 115 volt, thermstat. WaterbedExperience, 2259 Polk, S.F., Calif.Call (415)441-5111, 441-2744.Lithe FM Radio KLH Model 21 BigBass Sound. Excellent condition $65($25 off list price) 752-2796 (after 5).Blisters 8> bunions $35 per set Busesto DC for April 24 Antiwar March— tix Mandel & SGVery cheap furniture (Almost free)ED 667-1347 or 947-6435 SUMMER GIRL — MOTHER'SHELPER 1 infant, 1 two-year old.Air cond. home in N.W. suburb ofChgo. Phone 965-5304 for Mrs. Zein-feld. Personal references required.Read Da Daily Granite.TEACHERS: Chicago Suburban andMidwest placement service for ailfields and levels. Also principals.Please write today. LynneMcLaughlin Employment Service.PO Box 435, St. Charles, Illinois.FOTA: "Sacco and Vanzetti"STAFF, STUDENTS. Subjectsneeded for experiment in speechperception. A session lasts 3-4hours, and pays $7 in cash OnCampus. Call x3-4710 for an appoint¬ment.Male Wanted to share Furn. HydePk. Apt. on lake w-sm. 493-4841FOTA: Sibyl ShearerFemale Roommate Wanted 684-7275HOMEWORKERS BADLY NEEDEDAddress envelopes In spare timeMINIMUM of $14 per 1000. Sendstamped envelope for immediateFREE details to MAILCO, 340Jones, Suite 27, S.F., Calif., 94102.—Teachers Wanted—SOUTHWEST TEACHERS’A C E N C YIMS Central N.E.Albuquerque. N.M. ST1A6Our 21th yrar uervinq Southwest,Entire West and AlaskaMember N. A. T. A. FREE.RegistrationSubjects wanted for sleep studies.Come to Sleep Lab — 5741 Drexel— Room 302 to complete applicationform, 9-5, Monday thru Friday.FOTA: Irish poet Richard MurphyExperienced sitter for three monthold baby. Weekdays eight to six.Call 842-1623 after 6pm.Fern. Rmmate wanted. Spaciousfurn. rm In apt. 667-3321.FOTA: Sock-HopSPRING CRAFT CLASSESNow FormingCALL 928 9208 TODAYCLASSES BEGIN MAY 3WEAVING Ten VA hr. Lessons $30.00MACRAME Six 1 hr. Lessons $12.00RUG MAKING Ten 1 hr. Lessons $20.00CROCHETING Six 1 hr. Lessons $12.00KNITTING Six 1 hr. Lessons $12.00TEXTILE ARTS UNLIMITED13739 SOUTH LEYDENRIVERDALEWater 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. 363-4555.65 Black VW Bug — Lotsa Milesbut still beautiful. 493-3283.WANTEDWill pay substantial commission toperson who helps me find right apt.31-5 rms pleasant, sat 8, quiet. CallWH4-4012 & leave your name andnumber for Thomas, room 508.WANTED: Men's lightweight, 3-speed bicycle, used, in good condi¬tion, cheap. Call Don, x3-32 63 days,288-2859 evenings.RIDE WANTED: to Near North -Lincoln Pk area, Thursday after¬noons, around 4:30 p.m. Call Diana,X3-3263 days.Electric Typewriter in good condi-tion FA4-135S, eve aft. 10.people wantedFOTA: Cameo Opera Company• ••••• • CUP AND SAVE • • • • • a aIVOUR ABORTIBIIiSU] LOTTERY!!• Ca,t the people who’ve taken the chance*• out ot abortion. #:(2f2)490-3600;• OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK •• PROFESSIONAL SCHEDULING SERVICE. INC. •• $45 Filth »*«., Naur Tark City 10017 •• • • Therejsa tee for our service • • •• CARPET CITY• 6740 STONY ISLAND• 324-7998) ^iHos what you need from a $10,Tvsed 9 x 12 Rug, to a customPcorpet. Specializing in Remnants*Mill returns ot a fraction of the1^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Ovalities▼Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad» free DELIVERY MEN of ell 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.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 SALETyping, papers, theses, dis¬sertations. Northwest, 673-5839.Massage for Male 8, Female ScandVn a v I a n , Oriental 8> Mid-EasternMassages — All three In one mas¬sage. Call Bob: 326-4739 anytimeRUSSIAN INSTRUCTION by nativeteacher. Trial lesson, no charge.236-1423 or 363-2174.MOVING?Licensed mover 8, hauler. Call ArtMlchener. 955-2480SPACE6 large rm 3 bdrm 2 bath near 1CMay 1 $225 So Shr 978-1636Large 3 floor furnished house nrcampus to rent from July 1, '71 toJuly-Aug '72. Call 363-8436SUMMER SUBLET 3 bdrms 2 bathsnew ktchn faculy housing $65 mo.PH 288-7985.FOTA: Young Artists SeriesApt. 5455 Blackstone Sublet in sum¬mer, option to renew lease In fall. 3rms and bath unfurnished $150 mo.363-5954 eves.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest dally, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithLAKEFRONT 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 & 3-car gar. Ideal for family or sharing$350-mo. 326-4221.Summer Sublet, $85-mo. 51 rms54th 8. Harper w-darkroom. Eves.493-5508. Furnished 2 bdrm. apt, good loca¬tion. Call HY3-7443 or HY3-6227.Summer Sublet. Ideal location: 57St. nextdoor to playground, park,stores, coffeeshops, bookstores.Walk to 1C, beach. 2 bedrooms, 2baths. Livlngroom, diningroom,kitchen. Treetop study. Sunny balco¬ny. Fireplace. Washer dryer. Mid-June to late Sept. $225 month. 288-4004.Fern. Rmmate wanted: spaciousfurn. rm. In apt. 667-3321.2 room apt. $150-mo. air cond. 1451E 55th St. 684-2582.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.3 rm urn apt available 26 Apr$140 month 684-0639 eveningsWORK STUDYW O R K 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.MARCH ON DCApril 24-stop the war — BUS TIXMandel 11:30-1:30 or SG office Tix-ifany left-will also be sold at busdoor on Fri. April 23 at 3:00 pm atIda Noyes.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, 8,natural. Only $2.25 per can —enough to slick a lot of stick.ANATAHANCEF & the Program Bd present Jo¬seph von Sternbergs' last & greatestfilm this Wed at Ida Noyes at 8:00.Ranked by Orson Welles and Truf¬faut as one of the 10 best Americanfilms of all time. Admission 25cents.INCOMPETENCEAnnouncing the first annual Quint-rell Award for Incompetence in un¬dergraduate teaching. Send nomitingletters describing your worst in¬structor to the Pierced Tower Room1510 by May 3.MAYDAYAnyone who wants or can give rideto Washington May 1-5 or wants in¬formation call 955-7666ANIMALS "Glass sided aqueria, reptiles, am¬phibians needed for special ed. chil¬dren. Will buy if reasonable. CallJohn at PL2-9647 or Janine at 493-3284.Very Beautiful Fern Cat must havenew home or die. Owner dev-severeallergy to cats. Will someone pisgive this lovely pet a home? Call324-1149 evesFOTA: Tom WolfePENIS SPRAYSCENES GESTALT Encounter Group. Week¬end of April 23, 24, 25. Limited toten. $25. Lorrie Peterson, ex¬perienced leader. 288-3541.Tired of pollution 8> smog? Get outof the city this summer i, go toKibbutz $650. Call 761-6152 or 274-1011.FOTA: April 30th — May 23rdRepresentational Group A (part-time workers 10-20 hours) of Local103 NCDWA-L1BRARY STAFF —will have informational meeting todiscuss wage contract demandsTuesday, April 20th, 7:30 pm at Uni¬tarian Church, 57th 8, WoodlawnOVERLAND EXPEDITION TOINDIALeaves London in June. $545. Bro¬chure: Encounter Overland, 1414 E.59 St. Chicago, 60637.The -Super fantastic FOTA poster-calendar is coming!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.Yoga Poses Concentr. Meditatn.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Classes SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155AN HOUR OF DANCEAp. 24 8 p.m. Mandel HallAp. 25 2:30 pm Mandel Hall$1.00 ( 50 cents students)Tickets at 20) Ida NoyesFOTA: Architect Norman PfeifferLearn TAI CHI. 10 lessons $20Taught by Robert Chang. Come toBlue Bargoyle, 2nd floor, Tues, 8:30pm or Call 624-2848.FOTA: FireworksA tour of Mr. Joseph Shapiro's per¬sonal art collection will be con¬ducted in his home Wed., April 28.at 8 pm. A bus will leave Ida NoyesHall at 7 pm. Signups in INH 209.For further infor call 753-3591.Informal Bible Study, Sun. eveningsat 8 pm. Cali 667-7632FOTAfairFOTAfairFOTAfairUC Modern Dance Group ConcertApril 24, 8:00 p.m. 8. April 25, 2:30p.m. Mandel Hall Tickets at 201 IdaNoyes 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. nmor]•PLATTER;Pizzo, Fried Chicken *I Italian Foods ■I Compare the Price! jIe/»T.Ak. I 1460 E 53rd 643-2800 :ELECTION MAY 3-7, 1971 ■ WEKLIVEB •Eight 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.RELIGIOUS? ART? L - __W{n36UVEJR_ __ jLearn to sail with the uting Club.Call Dean at 753-3541.BLUE BOOKBAG Lost around Rey¬nolds. Reward for return. Call JohnBurleigh 667-7086.Will the person to whom I gave theSun-Times classifieds please callme.FOTA: "Peter Pan" with G. LaRue$25 REWARD for 1, 11, or 2 miunfurn apt avail beg May; pref old¬er apt, sunny, porch, etc. near lakeor campus. Call Henry, 493-7118 11am-l:30 pm or Fri. or Sat.FOTA: Chalk-In.LOST 4-15 Blue Bike $ Pam x33442FOTA: MayPole DancingF. Jackson Craig, following in thefootsteps of the men who made thiscountry what it is today! Come seeThe Democratic Way. April 30-May1, May 7-8.10th annual exhibition at the BaptistGraduate Student Center, 4901 Ellis.A maior rang-up. It's a new rebirthof wonder. Open 2-5 pm dailythrough Sunday, May 2. FREE.GO CLUBTHUR-IDA NOYES-7PMGAY LIBGAY LIB Consciousness-Raisinggroups on BI-SEXUALITY everyFor 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— berry, lemon, lime 8. natural.Lip-smacking good. Now on sale atthe Maroon Office for only $2.25. MAH. YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 B. SSfliOf., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* per lino, 40* per each line if the ad » repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There it an extra charge of $1.00 for your awn heading. Normalones (Per Sales, etc.) are free.»,FOTA: Danish poet Vagn SteenCome calling at Tricky Dicky'shouse on April 24 — buses, carpools to DC — tlx 8i info Mandel11:30-1:30 or SG office.OPEN PARTY — Music by Woof-Sat. Apr. 24-UC ID-5639 UniversityFOTA: Pop Arch. Slide ShowBlackfriars comes up with a hit.Come see The Democratic WayApril 30-May 1, May 7-8.ZEN 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.FOTA: Roger Corman Flicks AFRICAN STUDIES GROUP opendiscussion with visiting lecturerPierre Van Den Berghe ThursdayApr. 22, 12 Noon, Soc. Sc. 302. Bringyour own lunch. Welcome!FOTA: Anthony Burgess author ofMF-guess what that stands for.Discussion: 'CYELON: Recent Po¬litical Events" by Michael RobertsFri Apr. 23, 8 pm Crossroads Stu¬dent Center 5621 BlackstoneFOTA: Easley BlackwoodONGOING GESTALT EncounterGroup Begins Monday, April 26, 7-11pm for 7 weeks, limited to 12. $30Lorrie Peterson, experienced leader.288-3541.ABORTIONSWHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE In Hyda Park?NY abortions from $150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015 THE BAILIFFThis Sunday at the Law School CEFpresents Mizoguchi's The Bailiff:generally ranked as one ot the 3greatest Japanese films ot all times.At 7 & 9:15 Admission 75 cents.PERSONALSProgram Board and CEFJoseph von Sternberg'sANATAHANan american classicWednesday25e IdaNoyes Uncle Sam taking too large a shareof your income. Life-time financialplanning service. Call Phil Sidler282-1406.Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU-SICRAFT. On campus. Bob Tabor,363-4555.NUDIST CLUB for single women,etc., describe yourself, send 35cents, MYW CLUB, PO Box 1342Aurora, III., 60507Students for Israel otters an ex¬citing program for those seriouslyconsidering living there Jut-Aug $450(Ind transp.) Will be based on Kib¬butz 8i explore various KibbutzimUrban Collectives, developmenttowns as possible homes. Call 761-6152 or 274-1011.FOTA: Director Roger Corman DRIVE SPIRO SPEECHLESSDrivers urgently needed tor carpools to DC for April 24. If youneed riders or a ride come to Man-del 11:30-1:30 or SGLOST: Rect. lady's watch, blackstrap, TRADITION Call: 324-3846Pregnant and distressed?Call 2334)305Make a revolution In your life —Come to Kibbutz this summer!STOP THE WAR!Buses to DC for April 24 March-tixMandel 11:30-1:30 or in SG office,Ida NoyesVery Cheap flights to Europe &Asia. Contact 9224)723.Free Kittens. Call 493-2685.CHERRY BLOSSOMSBusses 8> car pools to Wash, torApril 24 antiwar march. Tix & InforMandel 11:30-l :30 or SGSUPER PERSONALSMen are In {ail for better thingsthan the Democratic WayThanks to Blessed Virgin Mary forcoloring books received.THE BOOK YOU ARE LOOKING FOR!Rudolf Steiner’sKNOWLEDGE OF THE HIGHER WORLDSAND ITS ATTAINMENTPresents in detail the means whereby everyonecan develop a new consciousness.Only $2.25 from your bookstore or write:THE ANTHROPOSOPHK PRESS211 Madison Avenue • New York. N.Y. 10016April 20, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/7When it comes to rock,we’re solid. Seven daysa week. Fifty-two weeksa year.WBBM/FM plays rock.All kinds of rock. Softrock. Hard rock. Knownrock. Unknown rock.Yesterday’s rock. Andtoday’s rock.And we play more of itper hour than any otherstation in Chicago.Without the usualinterruptions. Like loud¬mouth jocks. Commercialscrammed back-to-back.Or station jingles thatsound like the FourFreshmen-wrestling Slyand the Family Stone.Things that turn you off.And eventuallyconvince you to do thesame to the station you’retuned to.We think that makes usa different sound. Kindof new. Very refreshing.And long overdue.We’d like you to sitback and listen. All youhave to do is turn to 96 onyour FM dial. WBBM/FMin stereo.In Chicago, we rewhere rock is.*/The Chicago Maroon/April 20, 1971