U.S. POSTAGE BULK RATE I™ PAID tfora-fS aopaoo PERMIT NO. 33 Port Washington* Wli Not t*£' be ^ffufCTrf" *y tbe with delivery to begin In January waukee or Kenosha plants.' technically as 'shocking* or mor­ 1^ three atttal makersH( <§JMw* of 19751. M certain options are Obviously.1 with KM* lit' servj ally as outrageous as making Chrysler and Ford), American picked up, the total contract could ious financial difficulties ever napalm* it's still part and parcel Motors Ms biitf or and been awar­ reach a value of more than 172 since George Romney left AJM. of the same war machine, tt ded a 105.8 million-dollar con* million dollars.'' - for the not so greener political might be useful to let AM and tract to build a new quarter ton , Allegedly, the jeep wW be built pasture, this contract Is a real other local war manufacturers jeep for the United States Army. by General Products which has lift financially, though at the' know how you feel about their As farasweknow, this contract, Its headquarters' la Wayne, Mich­ expense of becoming part of the complicity la the War in South­ awarded to the General Products igan with plants la Indiana, A all too real' military-industrial east Asia. It's obvious gov- Division of AJMt, la' tlie first press release put out by Hoy complex* &** too bsd that XM» % , emment isn't listening - maybe such military contract for Amer­ Chapin Jr. KM* chairman, does needs the UUS. Army's money business will - if they can be ican Motors.. not mention if any work on the (your money) to survive, "s convinced that war is "bad for The contract calls for the pro­ Jeep will be done in the Mil* - - Though • making'^ jeeps- is not business*'. duction of almost 35,000 vehicles *C' ;-,r:'i • —Dennis Gall

Local psychiatrists and psy­ dividual, family and group prob­ ' at a session with another speaker/ chologists will give their views on lems, mental health education rotating each 30 minutes fblH mental health at special freeMen** and therapy. Participants will their three separate sessions. gistration forms may be tal * Health Rap sessions .which have die, chance to talk with Topics to be discussed Include picked up at the UWM Union will start on Thursday. March 11, three different experts. ";.v * "Fear* and Addictions"? **F*sW main desk, VWtfs Student Hea­ at 8 p.m. in the tMversify of Groups from 12 to 15 mem­ etiological Aspects of Drugs % lth Center, the Student Activities Wisconsin-Milwaukee Union sec- bers wUl meet with one speaker, "Adrift Therapy^ Group Therapy, office, the Department of Pay*- von4 floor. The sessions, are In­ for 30 minute sessions. Indivi­ and T* Groups", "Psychosis, chology office, or at the Union tended to offer Insights into in­ duals will then join another group Generation Gap, Psychology of Activities Board office.

. \ We're at the end of an era. | when the court felt that such (hp. right of federal courts to in­ It is interesting to note that .A n era In which the Supreme prosecution tended to have a terfere In state prosecutions. Court of the United States, led ; the original MIRANDA ded- ^^^^^^eit^^,|^^st' In effect, the DUMBROWSKI de­ ; slbn' was also made by - a - 5 to 4 by former Chief Justice Earl gAoumdment, •,',-, " cision no longer applies except in Warren, took an active role In With the election of Nixon, and majority. The addition «f Burger cases where there is a strong: and Blackmun to the high court shaping the law of -the -land, I with the- resignation of Earl M&r- snowing that the prosecution is I t& many areas where -the Con­ "ran and the forced resignation of being made in bad faith. It Is not effectively swung the decision the gress or state courts and legis­ Abe Fortas, the president was enough, as In the past, so con­ other way. - *• . >,£ < - • >y » latures were reluctant -iter make i;. in a position to alter the courts vince a federal eourt that First The MIRANDA decision may still stand, but nowthere's a loop­ changes, the Warren court made \ liberal balances First with the , A*nendme«t rights are being ab­ the changes for them* appointment of Warren Burger hole through which over-anxious ridged. Instead, a defendat must . cops and prosecutors will soon In the 'areas of defendant's | as Chief Justice and later, after -•'' first exhaust bis state court re­ rights, the First Amendment and the Carswell and Havnesworth medies and then appeal to the' be Jumping. civil rights, the Warren court debacles, with the appointments Of the two decisions, the most damaging appears to be the one took the lead* In BROWN vs Harry Blackmun as an Associate The next day, the 24th, the . THfe BOARD It struck down the Involving the* right of federal % Justice, Nixon was able to get court.' fe a 5 to 4 decision, di­ , <©Jd; theory of "separate but eq- the court swinging his way.. luted the effect of the MIRANDA >. courts to stop state prosecutions uel** accomodation In public ed- Until last week, however, no decision by holding that confes­ In cases where, the law being used , ucaetaa —* thereby, striking a . one was too sure.about what el* sions that would be inadmissible in unconstitutional. What this deathblow at legalized segrega­ feet the' Nixon court would have as part of the prosecution's case means is that instead of getting tion In public schools. In MI­ on the decisions of the Warren may still be used to challenge immediate relief from a federal RANDA, the court protected the court. Some liberals ha4 hoped the testimony of a defendant if he 1 ^courtj, ^''petk^''^$\ .take ti*a citizen from forced confessions that all the court would do was has the audacity to take the lengthy process of appealing th­ 'tad provided that be be given a •• refuse, to go- any further in cer- stscod ip ids own defense. Any - rough the state court system. lawyer &$& informed of Ids con­ * tala areas «? there was hopethat statements he might have made Even then, be baa little chance stitutional rights. And In DUM- of prevailing. Most state courts ; •Mai court would not begls rtaoa*. prior to trial, though they still BROWSKt ys PHSTER tliecourt~ ing back the clock." can't be used directly as evi­ are very reluctant to rock the authorized federal courts to In­ - On February 23, the court, In dence, can be used to point out 1 boat. Federal Judge John Rey­ tervene in state prosecutions six separate decisions, limited how a defendant changed his story. nolds of the Eastern District of Wisconsin once pointed out In Coat, page 17

A group called Accent on Art The show, which la billed as for their biting humor and gen­ Is presenting a show dealing with an exhibit and sale, will feature erally progressive nature. He's the "Fine Art of Cartooning.*' -SHI :%&ders ejl'^M^jMllwaukee atrip in himself* The show will be held on Sunday Journal* '%hders» who wiJl also • Also being ieatared is Tom and Monday, March 7 and 8 from Judge the snow and present aw­ Curtis, of:the Milwaukee Senda*? .11 a.m. to 9 p>m. at 2500 S. ards* 1$ reason enough to at­ ei» the right-wing answer to San­ —•*«* t ***** uMresxora, Jim Mitch— '.Jar^t "Street.' tend. His cartoons are famous ders, though Curtis can't even ell, Wendell Pugh, Dennis IQltch- en and others, ft you dig car- .toons,- it should be a good show proposal. James Shallow and Br­ is a nameless entity in his day to Chce again, the Milwaukee Brier, usually close mouthed, uce Hanson, both attorneys, sup­ day contact with people*'* Cbmmon Council has shuffled ro spoke out vigorously against the ported the name tag idea and Sheliow also charged that the tune of Chief tferoM Br|er * proposed ordinance pointing out Sheliow was especially critical of , "there are either standing or­ favurrte melody, "It's not in the that when' Kaleidoscope printed, police who had, according to him. ders or it's custom not to give best Interest of the Department/* the names, addresses and phone, "refused on numerous occas­ the names of police officers even *- An ordinance introuucedbyAI- numbers of all Milwaukee cops it ions to give their names." on request." derman Oville Rtts to require led to "continued harrassmeW'* Sheliow argued that the name At this point the Chief inter­ police officers in uniform to wear of Ms men. tags were needed not only so rupted Sheliow, saying *% never name tap at all times came up ' Tbe<»mm&tee also liad a com­ citizens could Identify officers got a complaint from Mr. Shel­ before a cowBCtl committee on munication from the Cfty Actor-:; In complaints but also pointed out iow and I don't know what Ms February 24. KsA as expected, aey saving in effect

The grand official re-opening lowed by live music and sing­ "Tve lost faith in dreams some- nal announcement) benefit at the of the Women's Center will be ing. Everyone is welcome to the hew," •*•> Hank War Memorial Friday the 26th Friday, March 5, 7-10 p,m., fol­ Sunday program,; especially wo*;« yms te--raise- the first months lowed by a weekend, of various -men of the west-side community.^ Progress on the dream/pro­ rent on the Astor street build­ The re-opening of the center ject, Sts. Boris & Qeb Church/ ing. Somewhat to the surprise of Saturday evening beginning was the result of a split along Community reads like en Under­ the disheartened .planners, 2,000 about 8 p,m- there will be a 'Vevelutlonairy-reformist** lines. ground Switchboard daily street people and' afgf»"i>ximately $1500 women's, dance to celebrate both ; in the Milwaukee women's move­ dope report* In other words «*- ^ph^toge^er/" * the re-cpening and International ment. We, the revolutionary lac- * lotza ups and downs.. '" In the Journal article it was Women's Bay, March 8. Wcimen's ,#en, took on the Women's Can- - The first big down occured revealed that Shafton, et el, had music and women musicians will ter as one project for our group. .- Tuesday Feb. ,23 when it was' decided to scratchfrom tie pic­ be featured, U you're a woman Part of the other faction, which made public in the Milwaukee ture the planned sundry commu­ and you play something, come on we term 'Wei-mist** for lack of journal that east sl<$e landlord* nity center in favor of his "own" down! Admission is free. Snacks a more accurate potd, hasfom>> Elliot Shafton and Ms partner, plans to convert thechurch build-'; tee* ; v..£v - --. ~ ^ ed the Ken-Violent Feminist Co- - Charles Klotsche had after mon­ Ipg late a "Fled Piper commer­ Sunday afternoon beginning at I operative, and" they" elo plan to ths of indicating otherwise that cial day care center." The jfa&r«j •>1wm*-'there*ll"be tap" groups nal #tcry also hinted that ~£$j£ : I open a center. Tfaeejsactpolitical they weretf t going to rent/lease 'on $N96 care, welfare rights $tanc*.-of iWst coeperativelspro- his church located at 1527 N.' police 'jaM- city go^srnment ap­ and^&xer wottien^ movement plied presstu% o&.Shaffedn todeny " bably j&gfsi e^ained by the we- < ;,As^(t6t^'^©^""^;^rBc^s- x '%^ie^^;liw|^^§^ fS^ft&k men themselves, so we will net^ and Qte& Congregation, Juki the :*mp &£oup^ e lease far the' dinner will be sopflatii Jw*" attempt to^defcrlbe;it' s, The lame duck (after the Jour*- building that w&Udi fW once be 2 o^i^gyii

We received a warning for recently gt*~e ride with an old­ hitchhikers from two young wo­ er men M§b tseemedfiK Jtttle too Bil&lpEflP.. men-about a certain "gentleman" \$dLsttl8$o His catrfscked wJpi a but­ who expects more than sdntilatr ton en his side $£\the deer* ing conversation from people he Beware- ^sb^ny^rf^cars, «sr-. "pecislly expensive ones#vasthey' Cfeir driver, who 4s described are often i»q§&ppei wim such e * as- a young straight male ,about> device. DosHMI^ lhat you he«e 25 with short blond btdf and well «te^*ik«/«, ride from the firsc dressed, picked, up rwo-women on. person"" t^at stops J*- .drivers | Brady ^reet Jp«6W^pH^tp(|8^ exercise discretienaboui whotdiev a White Ford Torino* late model . {n^t^ andMtchMkei^slsoRUldbe' just as choosy. V 'st^pe {very macho) and a blue ftecentiyf Lloyd' &»Barbee #^4 'and -red interior* and he has the quaint habit of putting his*hands on f&£ passett^srjr^fidhe^tha^ $81" *^fe^^''The bltt^bs stUl^'c^fB^'"' ^p^teering wheel. mittee. As ij^ftlinds noW^-pi^W . •l^^^mhe twos%omen repulsed -hl^ng is still technica^^ilifej*; his unwanted attentions* he pro* gal iifchis state. Enferaajnent ceeded to begin playing with him-* is, as always* selective. It's self (yeC!\k^&#- what I mean). best net f$ stand $£ the road The womej| decided th^t|;J*>^ when hjUdyfer^ because that seems ther neftk and when he fjj&fa&fLp i^Ef^be cause fo^ the police to »: a stop light on^teate Street "~§fit£ ifesally ^ you're -l°n the they j^teped out of the-car. sidewalk Milwaukee poltie won't Hit^Hking is fun an*tj£heap, bother you. BuC^temember that - N$$l a little cauti^ should be they can if they Jfliit|iyC- observed, espedaJO^idm too fr- ^Dsnnis dill iie»dly^J|nales- ^^^^^E^^H^ ^^RPOBB I mm Diane di Prima (in a discussion with Phyllis Todcl) ON REVOLUTION If the Panthers won their kind of revolution, I would have to fight to win my kind of revolu­ tion from them, because they don't acknowledge the importance of | magic, drugs and sex. They work strictly from what they can see or touch. The old Marxist ap­ proach. But it's time to get into something more. I don't believe it's a good time to get into head-on confrontation because we're not together en­ ough. As it is now, we're set up to be wiped out easily. I'm not putting down the people who have thought things out well. They know what they're doing. I'm not about to tell them what to do. Yet some groups are ca­ pitalizing on the confusion and frustration of young people by calling them to the streets, to the civil war that's going to take place in the streets of the ci­ ties. That's a mistake. We've got to be better prepared. We should get away with things quietly. To be flamboyant, like the Yippees or the Weather Peo­ ple or the Panthers or Tim Leary is an ego-trip. There's one theory that the system will go o n indefinitely and we'll have to fight it...mean­ while our alternative life styles will serve to set up posts we can use later, and they will serve to reaci^^-i«t more peo­ ple, lliere are still a lot of people to be reached. In the early fifties there were only about 200 dropouts and they were out of touch with each other. During the mid-sixties there were suddenly two million people. Now there is dissemination, like the yeast in bread. Five years ago communes were started, and the people separated and new communes were formed. Communes are not simply guerilla outposts; they have developed new ways of deal­ ing with people and new ways of reaching people ...(that's the magic part). The second theory is that the system will collapse or run it­ self down. If that's the case, we will be rising up in the al­ ternative society. I don't think, history has any more room for hierarchy. Our diversity and dis­ organization are the main things we have going for us. There's a difference between organic and imposed organization. Some people are quicker and more accurate in their examina­ tion and analyzation. They will naturally be ahead, but their leadership is not permanent; it must change as situations change. I think it's stupid for the white Continued on Page 13 photo/bwhari

"I GOT TROUBLES, I GOT WORRIES"

Monday night just before this Chris and Mary had been conduct­ Issue was finished being pasted hear is that three more people, Smut was found starving on the ing a rent strike since early "Buck," "Kenny," and "Lupe;" streets months earlier by some­ down, I decided to take a walk winter to protest the heating have just been busted allegedly one living on the street and nursed down to Kane Place by the old problem during the cold win­ for some jive dope warrants or back to health. The men offered food co-op. WOJJI had it that ter months. The slumlord gave the night before one of the something. no thanks for the care given them until March 1st — either Talk inside the houses was of Smut. islf •£ houses in the 1100 block of East pay or leave. So early Monday Kane had experienced a late mid­ the constant pig presence, infor­ There have been brighter mo­ (March 1) he turned up as sche­ mers and of what happened to ments too on Kane. Partial ex­ night eviction raid by some man­ duled, with the pigs. The pigs iac slumlord named Ron Arts, "Cbxis and Mary the night be­ planation for the heavy presence it turned out had no authority to fore. They also said "Kane of swine on the turf down by and eight or ten of Milwaukee's evict anyone without a court or­ f finest who came along to help House" is no more. the river Sunday night and Mon­ der. That nicety — EVICTION day could be the moving of an him clean out two women named — is reserved for the county In the week previous to this Chris and Mary in the "Kane a window in the co-op store-, old junk car onto the street sheriff's department. Confronted Sunday afternoon. Later some House" (1140 E. Kane). Arts with that, the slumlord, et aL front was smashed by unknown had been squabbling with the wo­ attackers on Saturday night, Feb­ unknown gunslingers pumped it left. But before leaving they haul­ full of lead. men for several months over the ed in Pat Burke on an old jay­ ruary 20th. On Wednesday, the lack of sufficient heat in the walking ticket warrant. 24th, one of the Kane Street /K Kane resident said the car house (one space heater) and Tribe dogs, "Smut" was viciously" bit was done to celebrate the other building code violations. So as I get down near the dognapped by three strange men nice warm spring weather. Next Kane co-op, the first thing I who claimed the dog was theirs. comes the heat wave folks. —Pat Small THE CRY OF LOVE (Jimi Hen- cast their assigned songs not so ially the use of harmonics on 18th-century Whiskey Rebellion. drix). Produced by JimiHendrix, much for Barbra, but more in the "Your City Is Falling," for ex­ The Band groped closer with de­ Mitch Mitchell and Eddie Cra­ molds the composers styles dic­ ample). tached portraits of the land and its mer. Reprise MS-. 034. tated. As a result, the artist The records has only six cuts, folk, feeding "Woodstock Na­ Jimi Hendrix never enjoyed the has had to overcome several giving the band plenty of room to tion's" romantic retreat to rural success on records that his repu­ major style conflicts. This is es­ stretch out, and they work out life, never grasping the lonely tation would seem to have indi­ pecially noticeable with Harry admirably. Personally, I would harsh life struggle of the land. cated. His sold well, but Nilsson's "Maybe" which is ar­ have liked to have heard a little Seeking musical roots too, never in the quantities that his ranged perfectly for Nllsson but less of John Mealing's organ wh­ touching country to rock, laying superstar status should have war­ awkwardly for Streisand. The only ich tends to overfill just a bit and acoustical over electrical — a ranted. other obvious mismatch is Gor­ heard a little more of Dick Mor- new sound, fitting in good artists The Cry of Love is a good al­ don Llghtfoot's "g You Could rissey's soprano work, but to go jumped over by fashions move bum; it is not a great . Hen­ Read My KSjnd." The Laura Nyro any further would be to get picky. from folk to rock. Cut of that and drix seemed to be searching for cuts work beautifully, as do "Just There is a certain excitement out of Woodstock—Happy and his expression—a new statement, a Little Lovin'" and (after a slow and sense of musical adventure Artie Traum. Acknowledging a communication. Each of the ten start) "Free the People." in If that I have never heard in their ties in "Going Down to See tracks is very different (and de­ The musicians on the album comparably structured groups. Bessie," a song by the Band's liberate) in both style and mood. represent a cross-section of the I suggest that if you dig jazz Danko and Robertson, and "Un­ And, importantly, they are songs; best studio men in town, so no and good music in general, you cle Jedd Say," with Tracy Nel­ there is no extended, flashy gui­ complaints there. And as for Bar­ pick up on this album and listen son and Mother Earth's help, tar work. Each piece is a con­ bra herself. . . Well, the day she to six guys blowing their mus­ they build a new part of the cise statement unto itself. finds a song she can't perform ical brains out and having fun Woodstock sound. The album has all the markings will be the day the world goes while they're doing it. Their music grabs first — si- of a transition piece —a stepping deaf. The lady has a lot of style, —Chris Van Ness miliar to The Band, yet less stone into a new musical dimen­ and she wears it like a cross; LA Free Press hazy, a more pure sound; superb sion that must remain unrealized. but underneath I have a feeling HAPPY AND ARTIE TRAUM (Ca­ acoustical guitar playing support­ This is the first and only album there lurks a very warm, tal­ pitol Records). ed by the head-filling flights of Jimi did at his own studio; and ented human being. Emotions are A good distance from Wood- Eric Kaz's harmonica, beauti­ while we will never know where not just curses and coffee ice tock, THE FESTIVAL still fully blended by Mike Esposito's he was trying to go with his mu­ cream. means the Woodstock Festival, bass, with Jerry Carrigan on sic, we will at least have a pretty IF2 (K). Produced by Lew Fut- which spawned "Woodstock Na­ drums. Music surrounding Hap­ good idea of how he was getting terman. Capitol SW-676. tion," Utopia of the drug-rock py and Artie's poetry, depicting there. * What more can I say about youth culture. Woodstock, the the solitude and hardships, hope STONE Y END (Barbra Streisand). this group except that they've "town, is already one of the my­ and hopelessness of the people Produced by Richard Perry. Col­ gotten better. I raved about their thical meccas of rock culture ensnared in, crying out against, umbia KC-30378. debut album last summer, and —home of Dylan, the Band, Van fighting the trap of America. Think what you will about Bar- now here I am listening to one Morrison. It's a town with a Singing of what they know. bra Streisand; but-the lady has a that is far more adventurous history of over half a century Still young, Happy and Artie were lot of talent, and it is showcased but iust as successful in everv of Bohemian artists, dancers and younger —both singing for civil brilliantly on this album. aspect — except possibly the vo­ writers — men and women living rights groups before the sit-ins, Producer Richard Perry is the cal lead (J.W. Hodkinson). together experimentally in com­ for peace groups and other pol­ man responsible for this parti­ I don't mean to imply that munities of creators, retreating itical causes; Happy refusing the cular set. He's the man who made Hodkinson isn't good. He is eas­ into the Woodstock mountains draft before the Vietnam War, Tiny Tim a minor legend and ily better than David Clayton- and valleys where they could lead recording political broadsides in tried unsuccessfully to popularize Thomas or anything Chicago has -splendidly eccentric lives. . 1962, later editing SING OUT Ella Fitzgerald and bring back to offer (forgive the inevitable THE FESTIVAL evoked one magazine. Young old musicians Fats Domino. This time he has comparisons); but the material vision of Woodstock. Blending — into politics, into people, brid­ succeeded in creating a new mar­ is far more demanding than any­ country into rock (as he had ging the gap from old folk to new, ket for Barbra — but not without thing the other bands have done, earlier wedded rock to folk), still singing of the American re­ surmounting some severe, self- and as a result, Hodkinson has Dylan approached Woodstock's ality. imposed obstacles. trouble staying on top of some heart—the farmers, shopkeep­ Reality of Woodstock, really of The problem is primarily with of the vocal riffs. The vocal ar­ ers and mountain people — stal­ the Southwest,- where "the earth the arrangers (Gene Page, Perry rangements are nothing short of wart Republicans and rural icono­ cracks open like a broken skull," Botkin and Glaus Ogerman) who brilliant, however (note espec­ clasts tracing their history to the while a rabbit runs toward a Continued on Page 15

"And Remember *> to Tell Your Friends About THE GRANFALLOON1 in concert

SUNDAY* MARCH 21 -2:00 p.m. EXPO CQNITER - across from Mitchell Field $3.50 advance $4.00 at door

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: 1812 Overture - 1433 E. Brady 2)9 E« Silver Spring Pants Unltd. - 6324 W, Fond du Lov 311 W. Main (Waokesh* Chess King - Southridge Mall 45ffe St. hfo -4500 17th (Kenosha) Earthworks - 625 Main (Racine) Francois Truffaut has dedi­ It follows very closely the jour­ mating all of his own 'natural* cated his film "Wild Child" (at nals of the actual Dr. Jean Itard Impulses Into his work What was the Downer theatre) to Jean- of the Paris Institute for the first only a cool scientific in­ Pierre Leaud, the actor who play­ Deaf and Dumb who had 'civi­ terest in the child on Itard's part, ed Antoine Doinel (or Truffaut lized' a child found living wild grew to a very strong love. Vlc- himself as a child) in "The 400 outside Paris, In the latter'part tr's 'education' may have been Blows." Like Truffaut's earlier of the eighteenth century. as much a redemption by love for film "Wild Child" deals with The learning process for Vic­ the doctor as a loss of inno- the loss of innocence. Although, tor is often a painful one. He Is cense for Victor. (The Absurdist not as good as "The 400 Blows" sensitized by sprinkling cold wa­ play-write Ionesco made a fas­ this is probably Truffaut's best ter over him while he is in a cinating exploration of the sex­ film since then — except "Shoot hot bath. His reward for 'cor­ ual nature of the 'master and pu­ the Piano Player." rect* responses is a glass of pil' relationship in his play "The victor (Jean-Pierre Cargol) cold water and his punishment Lesson ") is discovered living wild in the for 'incorrect' ones is a dark While Truffaut ended "The 400 forest. In beautiful lyrical shots closet. Victor loves water and Blows" on a pessimistic note Truffaut celebrates victor's na­ sunlight; the two things that his with Antone trapped at the edge turalness as he runs naked transferral from a natural state of the sea looking back toward through the woods, eats mush­ to a civilized state has not de­ the bleak world that he must re­ rooms, and drinks from a spring. prived him of. turn to, "Wild Child" ends opti­ But soon he is discovered, by Dr. Itard teaches Victor a mistically. With his faceexpres-r civilized man had hunted down sense of justice by punishing sing . total love and trust Vic­ with dogs. him when he is innocent. When tor is looking back at Itard.. After his capture the long pro­ he rebels Itard knows that Victor Truffaut seems to be saying that cess of 'civilizing' him is under­ can differentiate 'right from wr­ although civilization can be a taken by Dr. Itard (played by ong.' cold inhuman trap, as it was in Truffaut). Truffaut is quite am- There is something very im­ "The 400 Blows," It has the bigiuous as to whether the boy plicitly sexual In the relation­ one compensation of love to offer might not have been better off ship between the doctor and his it's victims. Truffaut's entire living free in his wild state. pupil. I had the feeling that the career has been a tribute to that The film sticks to a very fac­ doctor (a perfectly civilized' gift. tual, low-key, type of narrative. man and a bachelor) was subli­

I was pleasantly surprised with ucation and $30 between them, classes, it is doubtful If anything Donald Shebib's film **GoinDown they soon find themselves trap­ positive will develop in that area. the Road" at the Esquire theatre. ped In a series of brutal jobs. The capitalists have made it a I was expecting another 'road' Both desperately need love but tough competitive world to live picture such as "Little Fauss their backgrounds have made it in and this spirit has permeated and Big Halsy" or "Five Easy virtually impossible for them to the entire society to the depth Pieces," but Shebib's film turned relate to women as much more' of each members psyche. It is out to be a really excellent film. than "a set of knockers." When the working classes that receive There isn't a hint of the Fon­ Joey does marry we feel it is a good share of this *brutality* da, Nicholson weepy-macho pho- more out of guilt over Betty's and under Shebib's very sensi- niness in either of Shebib's pro­ (Jayne Eastwood) pregnancy than 'tive handling their world emer­ tagonists, or anywhere in the real love. For although he pro­ ges as a grim and tragic terri­ film. The film bears a closer tests to great length that he tory. relationship to the Italian neo- "loves" her it takes very little Shebib is so honest and all his realistic type of film, or the prompting under pressure for him actors are so painfully authen­ British 'kitchen sink* type of to abandon her, pregnant, and tic that it is very easy to forgive realism than the crop of cul­ leave her "for the coast" with him for an occasional slip into ture exploitation things that the Pete. cliche (there are a few lyrical American 'new* directors are About the most human rela­ shots to the accompaniment of aiming out. tionship that emerges is the love folk songs). Joey (Paul Bradley) and Pete {implicitly homosexual) between Paul Bradley, Doug McGrath, (Doug McGrath) are young work­ Joey and Pete. With all the ta­ and Jayne Eastwood are about as ing class men who go to Toron­ boos attached to homosexuality, to to find work. With little 'ed- perfect for their parts as any especially among the working Continued on Page 15

plaster often sticks to the pu­ "GROUPIES," now playing fine groups like Ten Years Af­ ter and Joe Cocker, you are bic hair of the subject. We are, at Cinema IL is an experience assured, however, that no perman in self-criticism that no self given an inside look at the cyn­ respecting member of the "cou - ical world of the teeneybopper ent damage is done(tragedy of ter-culture" should miss. groupie. Drugs, music, and most­ tragedies). ly talk about sex predominate The movie as a whole Is not As you would suspect,the film an endorsement of the "grou­ deals with the rather warped this film. Its highlight is a flesh scene that attends the stars, close-up shot of Cynthia P. pie scene," nor is it particularly and the superstars of the rock Caster's plaster cocks of famous sympathetic towards it. Filmed music world stars. There's a technical dis­ at both Filmores, the Whiskey The film is almost entirely sp­ cussion of the art of plaster ca­ A Go Go, and the now defunct sting which points out how the Kinetic Playground in Chicago, the ontaneous. Besides hearing some Continued on Page 15

"ONE OF YEARS 10 BEST!" -Stewart Klein, WNEW-TV -William Wolf, Cue —Joseph Gelmis, Newsday "'THE CONFESSION' IS VASTLY MORE INTERESTING THAN '!'! MUCH MORE COMPLEX, MUCH MORE HUMAN! Costa-Gavras is a mOVie master!" -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times

"BONE CHILLING! A REAL LIFE HORROR STORY!" —Kathleen Carroll, N.Y. Daily News

Paramount Ptctmes presents A Robert Dorfmann ana Bertrand Javai Production ^Wes Montand Simone SignoreL "The Confession" Directed by Costa Gavras STARTS MARCH 10 SHOWN DAILY In Color AT 7:00 AND 9:30 2589 N. Downer 964-2720 The Conspiracy Of The Young

THE CONSPIRACY OF THE Lauter and Florence Howe(Wor-» youth to help alleviate problems she explains, "is half the pop­ YOUNG, by Paul Lauter and Flo­ Id Publishing Company, $8.50), on the homefront; sort of a non- ulation immobilized from acting rence Howe, $8.50. a far more valuable book than military draft —which they op­ on social problems or issues. Everybody who's aware, with- Greening. In fact, a veritable pose on the grounds that it is, What if you could release all it, fashionably in, has, of course, handbook for social change. to say the least, involuntary. that potential? read The Greening of America. Beginning with "Freedom Sum­ "It's attractive," Paul admits, "There are two basic issues Or in lieu ofthat arduous task, mer—Mississippi" in early "but extraordinarily dangerous— involved in the oppression of swallowed the general acclaim 1960, all the major movements— and probably less constitutional women, and they're fundamental for it. Greening has been an even from Peace Corps to National than nationalizing, say, the steel to this particular society. One bigger boon to cocktail conversa­ Service — are studied in extra­ industry for a similarly good is marriage in the family, and tion than that latter day Shake­ ordinary detail. Textbook detail. purpose. That would be social­ the other is the economy. Once spearean sonnet, Love Story, be­ 'The result is a de-emphasis of ism to the very people who —not you start fiddling with the first, cause, well, it's relevant. And the groovy, our-thing explana­ subject to conscription themsel­ start living in communes —think exactly what that means is that tion for action that's obviously ves — are all for mobilizing the of what it would mean to the it's become a tool —albeit a rocked the old boat — alienating youth. I'm just appalled at how economy!" If even half the peo­ rather impotent one —for the many of its comfortable inhab­ Liberalism could come up with ple in the country decided to live plastic Liberal whose dedicated itants—and the development of such an idea, the implications two couples instead of one, it position in the establishment has understanding: not only why and of which areyabsolutely terrify­ would mean halg as many re­ heretofore made it difficult for how it happened, but why and ing in terms of the potential mil­ frigerators, half as many wash­ him to come to grips with his how (perhaps the most import­ itarization of the entire society." ing machines, half as many every­ "social conscience". Now he can. ant differentiating element, con­ Florence Howe, who has just thing else. Right? So the women's Not by doing anything, of course, sidering all the generation-gap been elected to a rare female movement is potentially fantas­ but by talking about it. Because, slush on the market) social change presidency of the Modern Lang­ tically dynamic in terms of the after all, that's Reich's most will have to continue to happen. uage Association, begins the economy. And I think that's why recurrent point in Greening: the "We started the book," Paul chapter on "The Female Ma­ the sex thing is so upsetting to kids don't have to resort to phy­ Lauter explains, "partly to illus­ jority" with the surprising claim people: ig women didn't need sical or intellectual activity to- trate that it wasn't so much a that "sexual lines in the United men sexually, well, what would solve a problem —like poverty, difference of generations—but States are (and are likely to that do to marriage in the fam­ war, pollution — they just have to. of values. We figured that show­ remain) more rigid than racial ily? Then you'd have a com­ feel it, man. And nobody—neither ing, in detail, what young peo­ lines." She bases this on two pletely different society." the kids nor their mod-sideburned ple had done to combat social facts: for blacks at least there The book is surprisingly de­ elders — gets inconvenienced that ills would make it easier to is the possibility of separatism; void of cliches and blind de­ way. understand tht the 'conspiracy' and they have a history of vio­ nunciations. Typical is the chap­ But that, fortunately, is too was as much society's—for en­ lent reaction to enslavement. ter titled "Schools in America — much of a generalization —at forcing their values Then, in Work towards social change in The Making of Jet Pilots". The least in respect to the young. the last chapter, we attempted that area, she feels, is by far authors take a popular reform Because there have been, are, to come back around to the be­ the most difficult ~ and could be theme —in this case, that the and will continue to be scores of ginning and say how can you, in the 'longest revolution of them school system isn't working— practical, effective youth-or­ a sense, institutionalize the drive all". | surprise you by contradicting it, iented projects, movements, de­ for different values, to live in She defends the movement from then make an even stronger case velopments for social change. But a way that is consonant with the criticism that it's self-indul­ out of that: they don't get much mileage on one's own values in this society— gent in view of more seemingly "If you could be any of these the cocktail circuit, or, coinci- and at the same time to change important social issues: things you wanted, which would dentally, on the New York Times society." "Until, or unless, women are you want to be?" When socio­ bestseller list. The various ways to go about as liberated as men, until they logist James S. Coleman asked They do, however, get all the that become the authors' answer are able to do at least as much that question of a cross-section exposure they deserve in The to "National Service" — a pro­ as their capacity allows them to of high-school students, almost a Conspiracy of the Young, by Paul posal to utilize the energy of the do, what you havem in fact," Continued on Page 17

?•?-*—

THOUGHTS ATA

GREENINAFG

AMERICA "Hip underground TV show spoofs the Video Wasteland"- Chicago Sun-Times

"... you'll think you never laughed so hard" The line on the top of the page Individuality amongst the tangled I don't went power; I don't says Thoughts While Reading went to be coerced by power. —Johanna Steinmetz, Chicago Today "Greening of America**, but the I have been my own bestfriend I disavow all forms of competi­ thoughts are not new, onlymore ell my life, alone enough to know tion including games involving "... more aching laughter than I have heard on concentrated. The thing about the myself—to know whet I am and "beating** one's opponent. Xtblnk book is that it delineates an over­ what made me that way; alone to mountains more impressive than Broadway this year" whelming power structure which dream of constantly learningnew wonders of engineering or mus­ —Tom Prideaux, Life stifles all our Jives. It's not skills, of becoming a pilot or a eum masterpieces, I believe in that the existence of the struc­ good musician or amarinebiolo­ magic (in a young girl's soul); ture was never realized—some gist or an excellent mechanic; I |ust believe in me—the beV of us have been fighting against alone so that no one can shutter with Yoko. My god(hydrogen, at "Go And See conforming to that structure all my dreams, fantasies, or pri­ the moment},, loos at yourselves, our lives—it's just that Reich vate pleasures by telling me 1 look at what you're doing, who brings together att aspects of am amisfit, emotionallyunstable, you're hurting. Why are you con-" GROOVE TUBE" society's destructive machine so not able to adjust, or the other demising that poo&geuJ for having that one can't avoid tMnkingdeep- pigeonholing techniques used by the wrong length of hair, or the, —Clive Barnes, N.Y. Times, ly about one's life and times with­ people who have been program­ wrong make of car —or any car— out a great deal of sadness. med to hate anyone not like them. or the wrong political bent; why "Outrageously Funny"—Cue Listen, you ugly people out when ($)he*s the victim of the We" are programmed /from, there. X'-etu tired of having you same grinding machine that you "... zany new show ... refreshing and childhood to be smoothly func­ tell me what to do, be, say, think. are, that we all are, the machine tioning cogs in the machine; we or''feel. X |m a; peaceful anar- that molds us, chews us, devours perceptive"—Will Leonard, Chicago Tribune are not to question, but must ac­ $&*&•£ no longer usefujytnto gutters and more important components' of other individualwhetherthat life­ graves and old-age homes. The "It's uncensored TV ... insanely funny society, who are also program­ style b&~&iaoisco Avenue, |afe*f system is your enemy, whether and irreverent"—Show med and used as we are. We are: tioch College, or Yippie engen­ it be capitalism, ;^^p^||Jism. not allowed time alone to think dered^ em qufefe^i^EHRtent t$fit|. Marxism, Keynesian economics, of Whet* 4B&P**.'Sphere and when Presented by RICHARD A. KLEIN asfc?** The thoughts are in their litt£eredbooks, any more Pfck up'Greening of Americaand ;;0oset^f relief and superiorly; than I haveJ&itit in the -so«£cal$ed - try reeding the first couple of ^:|<^pftp|^1^^'s^N%%ha^ w*A Christians %& this country who hundred pages* lui&k about ft* ft J. PELLMANN THEATRE jested some of us, we are better hive' e&t'ih$?sowers in their" —»€$oria 2844 N. Oakland Ave. 962 6611 00 for It In retaining our own- little black books. s$A'--'•£%. (Formerly Fred Miller and Milwaukee Repertory Theater) an x-ray which will show if her from brain damage due to they have it, or even that there sease, since the chancre syphilis. NEW YORK (LNS) — Most in her vagina, and therefore not fallopian tubes are blocked by people are unaware that there is anything at all wrong with scar tissue or not. Sterility is Why is medical treatment and is a worldwide epidemic of ve­ them until the late (and most visible. incurable. information about VD so hard to nereal disease. In the United dangerous) stages of the disease. The second stage of syphillis Gonorrhea does not make men get? One reason is that our States there were more report­ For men the symptoms of gon­ may produce body rashes and fall­ sterile. It can, however cause puritanical society still sees any­ ed cases of gonorrhea than there orrhea are painful urinating and/ ing hair. Those symptoms may fibrous bands in their urethras thing associated with sexual in­ were of hepatitis, measles, me­ or a yellowish discharge from the cease without any medication as which have to be removed by tercourse as sinful and disgust­ ningitis, rheumatic fever, and tu­ penis. For women the symptqms will the chancre but the disease operation. ing, and so it pretends that VD berculosis put together in 1968. are a grey, foul smelling dis­ remains. Syphilis is diagnosed by a blood does not exist — at least "nice" In 1969 the U.S. Public Health charge and pain during inter­ Doctors* diagnosis and treat­ test, or if a chancre is present, people don't get it. Service survey stated that they course. But often a woman has ment of VD is often very poor by looking for syphilis germs Another reason is that medicine estimated the number of cases of no symptoms at all if the in­ especially for women who have on pieces of the chancre under a in the U.S. is a male-dominated gonorrhea at 1.5 million and sy­ fections stays in her vagina. She gonorrhea. Gram stains, the usual Darkfield Microscope. Anyone profession. Maybe if men had philis cases at 70,000. Both di­ can, however, still transmit the test for gonorrhea, is accurate wh has gonorrhea should demand such serious repercussions from seases have spread rapidly since disease. for only 6 out of 10 people I a test for syphilis also. The gonorrhea as women do — they then. If the germ travels up a wo­ The Chocolate Augar Culture, treatment for syphilis is peni­ would use better tests to detect Although VD can cause infec­ man's vagina into her uterus she also used to test women, is a cillin. it and accurate dosages of me­ tions, sterility, and brain da­ experiences severe pain. No wo­ little better — accurate for 8 Many doctors do not realize dicine to cure it. We also need mage, very little is being done man should wait until the disease out of 10. The Thayer-Martin that there are penicillin-resi- more women doctors. to fight it. Many people think is that far progressed since the Culture is the newest and most tant strains of VD. After treat­ The real problem, of course, that syphillis is dangerous and chances of such complications as effective test, but most doctors ment you should wait two weeks is that the medical profession that gonorrhea is just a nuisance, sterility and chronic Infection do not use it. So a woman may and then have another check-up. Is a money-making business and but it's not true — both are dan­ will be much greater. get a "negative" on her test If you still have VD, get new not a public service which people gerous. The early sign of syphilis in and still have gonorrhea. Even if medicine or a new doctor. have control over. Preventive Gonorrhea can cause sterility both men and women is the her infection is discovered, a wo­ The VD epidemic could be health care (meaning checkups and arthritis in women and blind­ appearance of a chancre, which man with gonorrhea is not always stopped, and since neither gonor­ every month or so) is necessary ness in children who are born to is a round raised flat sore about safe. Hospitals and clinics often rhea or syphilis are crippling to prevent the spread of VD Infected mothers. In its late one quarter to one half inch treat women with 2.4 million units until their later stages there is and other crippling diseases. stages syphilis can cause heart in diameter. The chancre usually of penicillin, the effective dose no reason why these diseases Preventive medicine akes big disease, blindness, and brain da­ appears on the genital organs and for MEN — a woman needs twice need be a threat. Yet last year money-making operations and ex­ mage. is usually painless. Just as in the that much. 96 people were admitted to men­ tended hospitalization unneces­ The trouble with VD is that case of gonorrhea, it is harder A woman can find out if she is tal hospitals in New York City sary. people often don't suspect that for a woman to detect the di­ sterile by having a salpinogram, GLEB from page 2 backing that Shafton said was controlled by the burgeoning east necessary before he would al­ side youth ghetto. low them to move in. It appeared that Shafton's plan To add insult to injury, Sts. for a commercial day care opera­ Boris and Qeb didn't hear about tion was planted in his $$ orien­ the Shaf ton/Klotsche decision un­ ted mind by the Sts. BB & G til the newspapers contacted them people themselves. Last fall when after the wheeling-dealing real­ he was first approached about tors contacted the press first. the building by Sts. B & G, they told Shafton that they wanted to A WORD ON THE COMMUNITY use it to set up a church and CENTER BENEFIT operate various projects from it. One of the projects they said would Some people at the benefit may be a "free day care center,** not have cared what their money for mothers in the neighborhood. was to be used for but came _ 1W8E- SW£5 R\GKT— IF Shafton was mind-boggled at the for the good time and were giv­ Idea of baby care being free and en it. T WEJRE-F\G>HTlN& IN VIETNAM, acted accordingly by attempting to Running the benefit gambit to X WOULD ONI* BE. PERPETUATING* make a commercial venture out raise money for various projects of it (Such is the nature of is a highly unpredictable thing to "THE. INTERESTS OF THE. AMERICAM co-optation of constructive ra­ get into. dical ideas.) In the culture, success or fail­ RUUNG> C1ASS, AND It also seems apparent that ure in these things unfortunately 1 OPPREJSS\NG, VAELR since last fall Shafton has been has little to do with the cause stringing along the community for the night; but rather the popu­ m V\ETNA*AESE- center idea while he secretly larity and quality of the musicians took steps to do other things and their music. 4 S\STE-RS// with the building. Friday at the War Memorial I've learned from a reliable the 'music and good vibes' were source in the local media that provided by an electric-blues- state inspectors were called to and folk sound combination. the building by Shafton. This was Crosspatch, Fat Jessie's Blues to determine what work would Band The Bethlehem Boogie band have to be done to remodel the and Woodbine filled the bill. The church in order to meet state guitar work of the Boggles Pete health codes, etc for the day care Zangara stimulated more dancing operation. He also hopes to fill than usual. Some of the music the center while children whose literally knocked people down to mothers are welfare recipients the floor. with the welfare department pay­ But some people didn't need ing $108 a month for each child. music to bring them down. The While Shafton was doing all amount of barbs in the young that Sts. B & G was busy night crowd was almost as much of a and day lining up the financial Continued on'Page 15 kifffifi

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WASHINGTON, D. C(LNS) — Sou­ as treason. There are also many thern Congressmen have issued a printed handouts from this report condemning underground group that advocate causes far papers as unfit reading matter above the average student's for the young. The report is part understanding such as '127 B1-. of an investigation of D.C. public ack Panthers Repression*? 1 schools. Underground papers are 'Bobby Must Be Set Free'; discussed on page 22 under the 'Revolutionary People's Conr title "Pornography, Revolution­ stitutional Convention'; Old ary, and Other Inflammatory Mat­ Mole; Off Our Backs; ad in­ erials." '» finitum. Movies of how to kill policemen; to make bombs; "On the school grounds there molotov cocktails; inflamma­ is sold or given away printed tory devices and to destroy matter that is salacious, pru­ America are shown in thesch- . rient, pornographic filth such ools by teachers; Black Pan­ as the Quicksilver Times. This ther Party members and oth­ type of material may affect the ers: Nothing has been done, young minds af~the many. Ef­ so far, to. stop it/ This bar­ forts to have the courts stop it rage and steady stream of have been to no avail. heavy stuff continues, all for "There is also sold or given the unsophisticated minds: - of away the Black Panther, an al­ the young. They are being br­ leged organ of the Black Pan- ainwashed with no one to ex­ .ther Party. This paper advo­ plain the facts as they really cates violence and revolution are under the United States which might have been consid­ Constitution and the Rule of ered at one time by our courts Law."

-> Ahertteh Counseling t. 303«f7d'$ THE RASBEf&Y HOW TO START YOI - 4£hP« Theatre ^A^..*..9^5si44 • -American-"^ml liber- | DECLARATION ON THE BIRTH they were isolated fit marriage ||pes Unie#4$G*$l «*.2fk-4032 OF THE CHILD LORCA «fO' 3^e%fs^arJ^jfeM. n^fee. att and privacy and coftld not organ-* IJpfc Cb-ofr^t4^^&-tRS-9395 oBf '/with ^i^i^eM ffafpe ^ipl^#* Casa Maria.. -. .a4«^vS?*V"--344-^S^4$" We will not send child to 1J$eja, l#l|p Is^^iffl^ e^y school. We Imow now that no* Committee^! Returned a>^|^c^^!^>|* N^l^^t to a couple can cope alone with even Ippilumeers *^m^*^l4»W^7. private one in the usual sense. | ci?eat$en of j||ter^ate real£ti||^; m&? mm re^^^^^^^^^ Countyl&nergency Together we N*ve managed to guerilla enclaves of Life in the ^^pl^^H^ free our' I teptfal ~^ro|S^342~3600 learn ntucft the schools couldn't State of Deat&: v : : n ^^|ig' many must come together,, Dental (MU) >i*^^^p .224l^p. .teac.i us* and unleetn senae *& Good life learning means un* iP^iiii* '^^'^^^^^Is criri- • ,Dial-a-Prayer ...Jj|k..464-5320 wl^ t&eip did. - Hhe heart -%& .our pU mass and intimacy. We be* Draft Counseling *jp,.342-Q19I; knowledge is outs now, stud *u Ipos. We display our knowledge peso it involves aH entering Election Commission ..276-3711 tells us we must be responsible'' etjual aa «Mldreii;ifi^^p|i^|: Ifevlornmental ourselves for the conditions of ^^i^^^^^^lfcsystems of pf e larger Fanl||^^a '"information, ^^J^;. 962-2557 our child's growth. This is no education, competition and au0b* j-|^%li^-|M^vj^,..964-5966 romantic hippy daydream It is. ^ ;jto" fr< ':^^^^^6rG3^^^^' •• 3^^323' a full political actt.grounded in, ^ei&Ch other's teachers, siblings. Free Streejt Theatre*>...93^3883 theory, chosen as strategy, im­ .and lovers, parents andchiloJ||| plemented with ail the skills of Wpy how we tend and heal and °*^ c^|^o|^tj|S' lortnat^xs. We betieyehclspos*' 1 ttderground Swi$ch%*^ ^^<^^tco^i^pii^^ec^^ l ^ out" ^eedoBi wJ^houtC* ^sa^ li^^SS^iS^.?i%23 „ il^ i^^is$^t^f^s^^^$me*X sibie, because It is ialrea«> ti*> J smuggle. TM» 'du 4£j$jif %»nv Theatrk*<|^^««J^^3i4ig374 How waj know that other lives of. ;|o|$Ba*""Tj&-. meet ^^^^|f||^ U^M^^^^^^^S^^- leading 3l4>^M^^Bi^K || **w P*«e«ts were Iorc^dl"^o' abandon their children to>he\ and #ie politics aof, OtaV .nee*;;'- ^ies ~«uy-cnoMses* ^ad prepare to resist ^ fight ,$#'#»!•&$ ^MS^ioa#iRftsc^m^^lS72-31l78 * votv^t *^d faiv4:*he sMIs^and ^«W^Hfny and cultare, because ol ouif futM@pe# and %&• fio^fsit in -Wbisaen's Centtl^^^;933-4783 t^%tewei& £or *we .have, been they sawTno alteraative, because :;l^^-iheyond^on^:t!e^bai^s:C^#|| ,wros5^|^^^^476-io1tt : ^^^^j^^^l^^i Etessman wul ] ^^ S^^^^fe228r4666 *^^F-^^^^^^^5i^7070 South International Part*, i OTJJt Street Sheet..962-4315 :S^f^ i

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Poem written in a laundromat He quotes things that lesbians have said thinking about my ex-husband And then attaches a little psychological nametag without much bitterness so that you can dismiss real gut feelings i think as being abnormal in the realm of the neurotic, e.g. Anti-male feelings: "I still feel incensed and outraged that a woman's sex life must be dictated and directed The thing about being ^^J s by the public while a man is allowed perfect heterosexua I and complete freedom in this respect. " e.g. is that you have an Feelings of inferiority: acceptable cover ^lill "It's a terrible physical strain to be So that even at the .w.'% struggling against the whole world every same time waking minute." that your He says that homosexuals do strange things sexuality which prove that they (we) are neurotic is being Like we group together in bars and other places smashed & denied f^S! Where else can you safely walk down the street you are or dance o.k. with another woman? because you are being smashed He says acceptably that Lesbians are sad and lonely and also As though human beings are not sad and lonely you don't have to talk about it And how not to be sad and lonely some of the And everyone can think time when the whole world would like you to That you are believe that you are unnatural and wicked Satisfied because you love something whose body is the And that's what counts same as yours? isn't it But there is something that this doctor this asshole I am not sure what to write, but I know that it is time (my anti-male feelings/may they thrive to say something. I want to say something. It seems in­ they are founded in thousands of years credible to me now that we put out a special woman's of empirical data) issue of the Bird before the Women's Festival in October does not understand without anything on lesbianism. We were all straight at And that is the strength and the beauty the time (straight ) although the time between And the togetherness straight and gay weave in and out and someone who is That comes from lesbian love straight today may be gay tomorrow. AH it takes as it That comes from a whole new way of turns out is to follow your instincts. A friend of mine thinking and doing sex, no—sexuality who I knew years ago in the civil rights movement when Sex which can be so ugly and brutal with men we were both heterosexual/straight (aren't the words Is quite something else with someone for shit?) and who I just met again this weekend, both Whose body is yours of us lesbians, said— "Every woman is a caged lesbian." Lesbianism is not just a response to men EVERY WOMAN IS A CAGED LESBIAN Lesbianism is not just a replacement for EVERY WOMAN IS A CAGED PERSON an unsatisfactory relationship with a man I read this book about It is the Affirmation of loving another woman Female Homosexuality It is the ultimate threat to men A Psychodynamic Study of Lesbianism And it is quite possibly the ultimate liberation by a man for women And it pissed me off EVERY WOMAN IS A CAGED LESBIAN He said that some lesbians can be cured EVERY WOMAN IS A CAGED PERSON To accept their (our) Natural Role I say Lesbian now of Wife, Mother, and Homemaker And it is a beautiful word and Passive Sexual Receptacle That rolls out of my mouth He said that striving for freedom among women I can say words now that ^wlP^ if kept at a rational level I could not say before without (italics mine) cringing is an asset to our future society like Vagina yifSP But that striving for freedom I look at the women in the gay bar does not mean going against Nature And I love them That is contrary to our basic needs Some women in the women's movement And our preordained role to reproduce the race are afraid of the word Inside the Nuclear Family Lesbian Why is it that if men don't use their Men and even some women God-Given-Sperm they aren't going throw it at activists in the Against Nature? women's movement He gave many examples of case studies of women Throw it at any woman who are Lesbians whether she is in the movement (Yea!) or not who had had bad sexual experiences Because we are necessarily queer as adolescents or younger if we choose to be without men with fathers-jrothers-boyfriends-men on the street or if we do not run our lives and made the mistake around men ,of generalizing this onto all men %j$$ But try to stand as equals Talking as though bad experiences with men Like one time in June I was lying is something that happens individually '$0$. in the grass only to a few women with a girlfriend of mine here and there o '••^J\i'S in the park once in a while and this man started to talk to us Not understanding and we said Not daring to understand could you please leave us alone since he is one of Them we'd like to talk to each other That man to woman is and he said ' -S^ The Oldest Power Game in the world what are you predating & postdating Lesbians every society we know about I did not know then that I was That we women have all been raped in some way I was still in my cage He said Dikes/queers/tomboys/lesbians/ in a moment of stunning clarity , homos/ That it is We are all Lesbians shattering (boom!) And it is good to be to the male ego to think that women can , —V. Satisfy Each Other Great Speckled Bird Without men ILACKOUT m

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WILMINGTON, N.C. (SCEF)-- reports distributed by major news services on recent racial violence here have not told the truth about what took place, a ANTI-GAY black reporter charges. Jim Grant, who writes for the Southern Patriot, was on the JURY TEST scene for five days at the height WASHINGTON, D.C.(LNS)-»Twe- of the crisis. lve gay men were arrested dur­ "What happened here was as ing the Revolutionary People's close to an insurrection as any­ Constitutional Convention, over thing I've ever seen," Grant the Thanksgiving weekend, when said. "About 1,300 students were they tried to sit-in at the Zep­ involved in one way or another. hyr, a Washington restaurant. The real cause of the trouble The 12 had come to the res­ . was a conspiracy between police taurant when they heard that school officials, and city govern­ four third world gay men had ment ~ a conspiracy to try to been thrown out of the bar for crush those students." wearing make-up.

MIX 4 cups rolled' oats and rolled wheat 1-1/2 cups shredded unsweetened coconut 1 cup wheat germ 1 cup chopped nuts 1 cup hulled sunflower seeds 1/2 cup sesame seeds 1/2 cup bran 1 cup ground toasted soybeans HEAT 1/2 cup oil H 1/2 cup honey 1-2 tsps. vanilla COMBINE honey-oil mixture with dry ingredients wuo%> and mix. BAKE on oiled cookie sheets at 375 degrees for 20- 30 minutes, stirring now and then.

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From Page 4 what life is about. Magic has ON COMMUNES ON MAGIC why to take it. When you reenter drug culture to goose-step with practical uses. Like they used to from an acid trip, you know the Communist Party. For the I lived in an Ashram in New I'm into healing which, I sup­ use oracles in waif are, we could where you'll be at and what last 50 years, the CP in Am­ York for 1 1/2 months, then at pose has always been a woman's consult the I Ching abouty whe­ you'll be doing for a period of erica has pre-empted peoples Millbrook for 5-6 months (from thing. I'd like to learn medicine ther or not we should have a time afterwards. That way it's revolutions and used them as le­ the Equinox till January, 66-67) and languages; they're all a part demonstration at a particular useful. It can also be used verage to make deals with the and at Black Bear (from the of poetry for me. And poetry is time. to bring a group of people living establishment. The most recent Equinox till January, 69-70). In chant, ritual, incantation...making together to a closer understand­ example I can think of is Paris addition to that, I've lived with magic. There's a lot of magic in­ ON DRUGS ing. On acid you can study, learn in '68. But it goes back to Lenin people, just sharing flats, start­ formation like healing and mani­ meditation or write, etc. dealing with the anarchists in the ing in 1955 when the communal pulation of the forces, that aren't The significant thing that hap­ We can changethelandscape Ukraine right after the revolu­ issues were not articulated yet. talked about in history. Well, we pened around 1967 was when peo­ by reaching a lot of people. tion. It really would help if we Four to six to eight of us would can use that information because ple went back to the basic things Almost no one likes things the knew a little more of the his­ live together: we were all into we can make more sense out of of human nature like sexuality, way they are. To reach more tory *of the struggle. It's been the arts, we did not consciously it than IBM. I don't believe ma­ ritual and myth. Information was. set things up and there were no opened to us through acid. Now people we will have to stop mak­ going on at least since the pro- gic is a myth. I'm more likely ing, the distinction between testant reformation — the up­ clear cut sexual relationships. to follow its directions than if revolutionaries are talking from I don't particularly like living analyze it. the head (following ideology ra­ straight and hip. We will have to risings of the German peasants stop feeling that we are "pure"' I in the 1400's. with one other grown-up. I think The white European culture ther than dealing with root things, like dance, sex and magic), his­ and everyone else is "corrupt." We should watch the CP and people should live alone, or with that existed prior to Christianity kids, or with a large group of has been wiped out over 1000 tory has already passed them by. make sure that we avoid a re­ The way the population problem The most important toing is to formist revolution. I'm tired of people. It's hard to find enough years ago by the Christian older people to live with. I'm used is presented and the number of get strong, physically and emotio­ revolutions going through the Church. But just as there is a nally, with no hangups and the to puttering around the house ra­ real black culture, there is also "don'ts" that are laid down work same shit. You know. I've read against love and undercut the freedom of sexuality. All this about all this before. If you sac­ ther than sitting around talking a real white culture. Almost about where my head is at. most important things we should groundwork has to be laid. We rifice things in front, how do every past culture has come down should postpone direct confronta­ I'm working on a book based to us in garbled form. Either the be considering. Our real strength you expect to get them back af­ comes when we work from our in­ tion until we are stronger and terwards? on a day-by-day account of what system doesn't want us to know clearer. You can't fight a guer­ it or they've forgotten it by now. stincts. happened at Millbrook and Black illa war if the rural population ON WOMEN So what goes down to the new One of the most revolutionary isn't with you. Not just the long- Bear. The two places were very age depends on us. things that's happened is the use different. At Millbrook, on the hairs. We're not exactly in the Service to and for other peo­ Magic cannot be apolitical or of hallucinogens. Drugs don't only same position as Castro, or Mao. East Coast, there was a lot of counter-revolutionary. It's like reveal the falseness of bourgeois ple is very important. It would be money and dope. At Black Bear, We have to win over a lot more good if men would learn to do saying drugs are counter-revolu­ structure, they release the life people than we have. on the West Coast, it was poor force in us, they awake in us the things women do, rather than tionary. We can make it either We have a tendency to blow up having women cut the service and funky. The most important revolutionary or a power-trip. desire to live as free as ani­ difference was that I was at mates in a particular landscape. an image of how the revolution off. Men should serve the wo­ For instance, healing is done with should be fought. Confrontation at men like Women serve the men. Millbrook in 1966 and at Black herbs and incantation. Magic is To me, that's what the revolu­ Bear in 1969. Essentially there tion is all about. this time is going to force us into Everybody's got to do the shit- understanding the forces behind a more rigid form. It's going to work, and there's a lot of shit- were the s same problems: matter, rather than pushing Timothy Leary knows how to where to draw the line between use acid for everything it can be keep us from our more organic work involved in living. The whole around matter. and total goals; it's going to cut planet has to be housecleaned. communal and personal property, Rather than being on a head used for. He told people how and how to relate to women, and how us off from a lot that we want Women have to get rid of the trip worrying about live china­ before we've even begun. feeling that they have to live to avoid having two or three men and dead russians, we should people doing all the work. As and die for a man. You know, get into understanding our biolo­ Diane di Prima —Good Times there are one * billion men in spoiled as the people were at gical roots, into understanding (UPS) the world, and they are all pret­ Millbrook, they took on more ty much alike. And all the women are pretty much alike. As human beings we are all pretty much responsibility and were more alike. doing-orientedthan at Black Bear. I CUP THIS COUP<5KI SPECIAL j TWO EGGS j (Fried or Scrambled) Toast & Two Cups of Coffee 1947 N. FARWELL 278-7535 65c OPIN 24 HOURS 2216 N. THIRD % % 1440EBrady JCOUPON GOOD ONLY AT BRADY & FARWELL 212-2622 I « 264-2820 L _BETWEEN FEBRUAR^^JJRU^r^HJV

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FOREVER NAMELESS from page 3 from page 6 (rom e 7 MUSIC . p°9 answered by platitudes like 'it's was mat anyone FOR name tags not in the best interest of the was biased, but those opposed, coiled snake, "toward a* trap that department.'" like himself, had open minds. GOINDOWN... I have known." "toward a fate Besides Shellow and Hanson, It is ever amazing to see now ! cular that points out the cruelty that I shall know.** Where "In three other people spoke includ­ the Common Council jumps th­ casting director could ever hope of the whole scene* A gay male the dry desert heat" the Hung-, ing a black man, Arthur Bowden, rough the Chief's hoop. On any to find. They are so 'unselfcon- is taunted by members of a ry Dogs of New Mexico **flght and myself. question even remotely concern­ - scious' of their acting that 1 had rock group (The scene is cruelly for the last piece of meat," The committee wasn't buying ing the police the Council always the impression that they weren't accurate in its portrayal of the "chewing on roots and bones un­ any of it. Alderman John take Brier's word for law. acting as much as being them­ homosexual seeking acceptance til dawn.** Czarnezki became excited at There must, one would think, selves and that is something that and the heterosexual proving his < Woodstock, Southwest, Amer­ several points during the hear­ be some reason for this. Maybe. very few actors are able to ac­ manliness. It brings to mind that ica — reality. ing and exclaimed, 1*11 go for Brier holds a heavy stick over complish. remark by the Prince of Denmark Poetry into music, but also cops wearing badges If you'll the aldermen. Obviously, an Al­ Antonionni's "Red Desert""will. that goes, "Me thinks the lady music into poetry, the two in- wear one and if Irwin Maier derman depends on the voters for be at the Magik Grande on March doth protest too much.*' separately wedded. The stark will wear one." his job, and the voters are very 10. It's a searing expose of The movie is rated X, But clarity of harmonica and guitar Czarnezki was especially irate concerned about "law and order." the 'morality* of the decadent except for a few "tit and ass" Intertwining with Artie's plain­ over Kaleidoscope's attendance Is there an implied threat, that and the alienated (also a great' shots and some common language, tive voice in "Rabbit's Luck." and at one point shouted, "It's police protection in a ward will work of art). Jean Luc -God- the film hardly rates it at all. The upbeat piano and drums back­ easy for people to come here and slack oft If the Alderman votes ard's "Contempt** will be shown One. member of a rock group ing, contradicting, yet emphasiz­ talk loose. They have no consti­ incorrectly? Only Pitts, whose March 24th. "Contempt" stars commented during the film that ing the tragedy of "The Trials of tuency but they have the power community has suffered years of Brigitte Bardot and Jack Palan- he thought the whole gig was Jonathan." The High-and-Mighty •through their newspaper to warp police occupation, does not need ce and Is sort of a modern tel- "pathetic man, just pathetic.'* type harmonica theme accentuat­ people's minds." the good graces of Brier. Pitts, • ling of the Ulysses myth and is One thing that may disillusion ing the "Hungry Dogs of Mexi­ Most of the hearing was at this by the way, never showed up for about (among a myriad of things) some rock stars who are 'big' in high level of clever remarks and the hearing. Maybe he knew it co." The strong Band style piano would be a waste of time. prostitution In every way, shape, * the groupie scene is the way In "Going Down to See Bessie." slanderous reparte. Suffice it to and form (also a great work of the women have of totally putting say that the committee "filed" No matter, Brier is still the The evocative percussion backing single most powerful man in art). down the sexual prowess of cer­ "Lone Wolf.** And the country the proposal, which, in Common- tain stars. Theirs is a cynicism Council jargon, is the same as Mi waukee. He cannot be removed —Leroy Burt ballad sound of banjo and fiddle from office, except for cause, born of constant exploitation in. providing a beautifully simple killing it. a male dominated world. At one stage during the meet­ and he wields great power not depth to Happy's voice in "Gold­ only over the citizens of the GROUPIES... Thanks to the spontaneous na­ en Bird." ing it was suggested that other ture of the film, the groupies departments that used name tags community but over his own men. film has a* certain unrehearsed A musical reach for that ang­ His men, it appears from the come across as real people — uish and integrity of the core of be contacted and asked about how quality that brings out the best much more real than many of . the system worked in their city. recent epidemic of "blue flu'* In the people being filmed. Of­ America— the roots mat "Wood­ the stars they follow. Joe Cocker "I don't know if this is such a : are ready to challenge his auto­ ten the people on camera are stock Nation" must touch before cratic ways. That's a kind of is worth seeing and the music its revolution. They deserve a lot good Idea," Brier commented, skeptical about whether their is good though the sound system "because the chiefs In cities courage our local politicians are raps will be in the movie. leaves, much to be desired. of listens. where they have this will naturally sadly lacking. There is one scene in partt- - Harlon be biased." iS . —Dennis Gall' Great Speckled Bird (UPS) Incredibly, what Brier had said —Dennis Gall (WOMEN'S CENTER fr p. 2 I Our group, which has no name, \ | believes liberation for women is J not possible In the present sys­ tem, and therefore, we "advocate revolution," as the Journal Is wont to say. ^fik Literature at the center will i reflect our politics. We will also I do public speaking. , To help women with the daily .; I problems of their lives, we have ' set up some services. Birth con- ! trol and abortion information is | given to any female who needs it. • We have a free clothing and toy | exchange. A private lounge area i is set aside for conversation or I reading. A skills-exchane is now j being organized, whereby women can teach each other basic skills. So far, we have teachers for driv-_ ing (you provide the car), silk screening, knitting, macrame and • sewing. If you want to learn or | TEACH something, call the Wo- ! men's Center, (2110 W. Wells) at 933-4783, between 7 and 10 p.m. Monday through Friday and 1-4 on Saturday. Incidentally, we really need more clothes for < the exchange I p|| —Women of the Women's i Center

• GLEB from page 8 The easy sitdown format of Shafton's church hasn't been Woodbine folk sound which closed entirely ruled out yet either. His l/$2. I downer to this observer as the the night was described by one- _$$ day care center may not ma ' barbs themselves. listener as good 'crashing mu­ teriallze. Becuase of nelghfaor- 3/$5. The high energy sets usually sic' hood zoning restrictions which 5/$8. black field • reserved for the finales at con- What will Sts. B & G do with he may not be able to pull enough L - certs came on early Friday night. the $1500 that was drummed up? strings to change. Shafton may I0/$I5. | red star The energy carryover may have Different alternative buildings soon be looking for another pay­ 20/$25. green grass accounted for the random window ' are being explored and this time ing tenant to help pay the high ,, damage done to parts of the Me­ Sts. B & G will be in the advan-; mortgage payments on the church 25ormore/$l. each 20 by30" morial. Unfortunately building tagous position of having cash In property. | damage had to be paid by the fist in future negotiations with —Pat Small • church sponsors. (Who says rock literal pig landlords or realty | music ain't dangerous?) companies;. WITCH SIDE ARE YOU ON?

Cultivating anarchy, revolution & 9» free boo, new nation flags attached to staffs are handy at demos etc. Dis­ play one proudly on yr. front porch. 4783 Run one up the pole in yr. local school yard, city hail, or state cap- FEMINIST NEWSPAPER FEMINIST BOOKSTORE § tol bldg. Stand HIGH for Anarchy. Subscriptions: Hours: 1:00-6:00 Moo. thru Sat ' regular-$6 per year 0£ U4 tl UJ UJ sustaining->25 per year books, buttons, bumper Send check, money order or barter to; broke-6 blue crap books strips, pamphlets, magazine reprints, posters' Qm. c UJ2. */>' MILWAUKEE YIP/ BETSY ROSS COLLECTIVE o .* o P.O. BOX 5457, MILW. WIS. 53211 I I - UJ HOW MANY? SEND 25 CENTS FOR A SEND FOR A FREE © as rN c - Z£ SAMPLE COPY! CATALOG! © m a> •g •< CO 4- ADDRESS EVERYWOMAN 1 4> i* < UJ2 CITY .STATE 1043 B W. WASHINGTON BLVD. X — VENICE, CA. 90291 r Honor Anarchy

17 SILENT COURT CONT. FROM PG. 2 a "DUMBROWSKI" type action cision has done is to leave people go — we do know that the states of Nixon's men. And the result E. Michael McCann in Milwau­ that "the state courts in this one at the mercy of the antiquated, will soon be having a field day may be felt long after Nixon is kee will have a field day with are of First Amendment rights censor-minded, state judicial with the First Amendment. And gone. If the present trend of the you rights. We are entering an are often less than zealous." systems. the federal.courts won't be there court continues we can expect era where silence will truly be Reynolds contended that it was No longer can one easily ob­ to step in. more assaults on the rights of golden and those who speak out necessary, in such cases, for the tain an injunction barring pro­ One thing that these decisions individuals and more "law and can expect swift and brutal jus- federal courts to intervene. Not secution of *n allegedly 'obscene' point out is that those of us order" decisions. book, newspaper or movie. Now tice. •any more. who "stayed home" during the It appears that the next few The only hope that liberals may In taking away jurisdiction in you must fight it out in court 1968 presidential election be­ years are going to lean ones as and appeal. If you ultimately cherish with some confidence is such cases the high court has cause there was no choice may far as liberal causes go. Chal­ that Nixon will hot survive the deferred to the rights of the win it doesn't much matter. It have done ourselves in. Maybe lenges of abortion prosecutions might take three years to find out '72 elections. If he does, you can state to handle its own affairs. it doesn't much matter which and obscenity cases, for example, rest assured (wherever you are) That kind of thinking would be that you were right. In the mean­ party is in power, but in -one have been successfully slowed time your freedom of speech has that the United States Supreme all right if state courts felt it area it has made a significant down. Court will be the "silent necessary to follow Supreme effectively been curtailed. difference. Instead of the two We will have to wait and see We cannot know just how far court" for the silent majority. Court guidelines. What this de­ 'liberals' that Humphrey would just what happens, but you can bet —Dennis Gall this new conservative trend will have appointed, we now have two your ass that prosecutors like CONT. ROM PG. I hook "If schools have been ' suc­ third (31 6%) of the boys said voted to war and profit will al­ cessful," the task of educational they wanted to be jet pilots. Tne ways create schools equally dedi­ reformers is far different from only category to score higher cated to those goals." their conceptions. For remedying was "nationally famous athlete," That's the format throughout: the system does not involve the a perfectly reasonable result, lucid presentation of situations simple tonics of money or the since the most glamorous kids that make not only the need for reeducation of teachers that turns in high school are often athletes. change evident — but the reasons them into "facilitator" or "ch­ Coleman and others have taken' for the opposition to it as well. ange agent." It involves, rather, these figures as evidence of the The authors,t both college tea­ changing the fundamental tasks "failure of the schools," since chers and social activists, have which this society demands of its the vocational areas "that stu­ written a book that will educate — schools. So long as these remain dents identified as relevant are in the full sense of th word — the separation of people and the not shared by the conventional every type of reader But it | perpetuation of privilege, the cul­ educational process." But one won;t allay any social guilt thr­ tivation of social stupidity, the in­ might with equal justice conclude ough the false security of "aware­ culcation of conformity Mid com­ that the students are remarkably ness". It's too concrete, too full petitiveness, and the dissociation well tuned in to schools in the of answers and positive propos­ of feelings and ideas from the per­ United States; that the jet pilot, als — at a time when it's much formance of technical functions,: streaking over the Vietnamese more fashionable to say "no­ tinkering will not do. The educa­ countryside, is the logical, mag­ thing works." Advocates of that tional system is, finally, a re­ netic consummation of American cop-out better not read The Con­ flection of the values of the so­ education, as well as of American spiracy of the Young. It might ciety itself. And a society de- technology. change their lives. —Christopher Watson

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qfradjrvS>f6 hread Mioififim-r QUI WHO AY, f*A*CN 1H it -the LuTHc^AN CewT MARCH 5 Alverno Songs et Program. Al­ WVTV. Confrontation, with Bob MARCH 10 UWM Fine Arts Theatre. Also verno College, 7:30 pm. Sherwood. 8pm. Mar43,19-20. Free Street Theatre meeting Museum Weekend Lecture. Poco and Linda Ronstadt at Harriet Tubman dies. 1913. WMVS-TV. This Is It. 7:30pm. to plan action in conjunction with Houseboat to Florida, with How­ Chicago's Auditorium Theatre, WUWM-FM. Heroin Addic­ Film. China, 1/4 of Humanity. Laos and peace treaty. Marietta ard Pollard. MATC Auditorium, 7pm. tion— . 12: UWM Bolton 60, 7:30pm; Rhu­ House, 3270 N. Marietta, 7:30 3&8 pm; also Mar7, 3pm 30; also Marl 2. barb, 10:30pm. pm. For info call Perry or Lar­ Children's dance program. "On the Way to the Cross- Theatre Alverno. Ballad for a ry, 933-3883. Dance Magic. Downtown YWCA, Gethsemane"; dialogue from Firing Squad. Alverno College UWM RAP. UWM and the Out­ 11:30am. "For the Sake of the People". Auditorium, 8:30pm. side World. UWM Union, 3-5:30. Mary Bee and Dave Ramey. Next Door, 3046 W. Wisconsin, WTMJ-TV. Tender Scoundrel, Sen. George McGovern at Mar­ The General Store, 1717 W. Wis­ 7:15pm. with Jean-Paul Blemondo. 4pm. quette. Brooks Memorial Union, consin, 9pm. Melies Film Society. Red De­ Film. I Have a Dream. The 1 pm. Dance Workshop, w|th Juana sert. Magik Grand, 9:30pm. General Store, 1717 W, Wisconsin Films. Hanoi 13; Time of the de Laban. UWM Uhlan Ballroom, Museum Discovery Program. 8pm, Locust. UWM Bolton 60, 7:30pm; 9-5pm. Spencer's Mountain. Museum Le­ Milwaukee Players. Cabaret. Rhubarb, 10:30pm. Milwaukee FUm Circle. Miss cture Hall, 7:30pm. West Division High School. Thru WMVS-TV. This Is It. 7:30pm. Julie; When Angels Fall, UWM WMVS-TV. The Great Amer­ Marl4. UWM Studio Theatre. The Pri­ Fine Arts Recital Hall, 8pm. ican Dream Machine. 7:30pm. vate Ear; If You've Got Manure Italian Films. Prima Delia Ri- on Your Boot. . .Don't Step on My voluzione. UWM Bolton 150, 7:30. Shoulder. UWM Fine Arts Studio The POlice and You: Part n. Theatre. Thru Mar7. The General Store, 1717 W. Marquette University Players. MARCH 8 Wisconsin, 7pm. The Apple Tree. Also Mar6-7, WTOS. The people from Aq­ 11-14. Teatro Maria. International Women's Day. uarius read The Hobbit. 3:30. Great International Magic Show. The Boy Friend, with Anna UWM Fine Arts Theatre, 8:30pm; Maria Alberghetti. Uihlein Hall, also Mar6, 1:30pm. PAC. Thru Marl3. Planetarium lecture-demon­ Basketball. Buck vs. Seattle stration. UWM Planetarium, 7&8 Supers onics. Milwaukee Arena, MARCH 13 pm. 8pm. Butterflies Are Free, with Glo­ Great Organists of the Midwest. Fritz Bluebottom, plus Ox and ria Swanson. Thru Mar6. Uih­ Paul Manz. Carroll College Shat­ The Hound-Dog Band. Oriental lein Hall, PAC. tuck Chapel, 4pm. Theatre, Midnight. UWM Cineseries. Bob & Car­ MARCH 7 WMVS-TV. They Went That a Museum Weekend Lecture. ol & Ted & Alice. UWM Bolton Way: Hoot Gibson. 9:30pm; also csa Caravan Across South Africa, 150, 5,7:30, & 10pm. Sunday Morning Forum. Sen­ Marl 3, o:30pm. with Karl Maslowskl. MATC Au­ Film The Tenement. The Gen­ sitivity Groups — An Answer to Great Decisions. Communist MARCH 11 ditorium, 3&8pm; also Marl4, eral Store, 1717 W. Wisconsin Alienation with Ervin Teplin. China and the U.S.: Can We Live 3pm. 8pm. First Unitarian Church, 10am. in Peace? with Maurice Meisner. Piano recital. Sister Lynmary ' "Law, Order, Justice—in the Crisis Concert. Benefit for 50£ supper. The Coffee House, Ehrgatt. Alverno College Alph- UWM Civic Center Campus, Room 631 N. 19, 6pm. Streets and in the World," with Martin Luther King School. UWM 279, 8pm. onsa Hall, 3:30pm. Senator Alan Cranston. Alverno Union Ballroom. 2-6pm, Mount Sinaf Lecture. Uihlein Gay People's Union. General Hall, PAC, 8pm. Kinder-Cinema. Emil and the College Wehr Hall, 8pm. Marquette University Players. meeting. UWM Bolton 56, 8pm. Detectives. UWM Fireside Loun­ Film. Wholly Communion, with One-act plays: The Independent Mental Health Rap session. Poetry seminar. Samuel Hazo. UWM Fireside Lounge 8pm. ge, 1:30 & 3:30pm. Ginsberg, Ferilnghetti, Corso, Female or A Man has his Pride; Mount Mary College, 8pm. Open Sing. The General Store, et el. The Coffee House, 631 N. The Room; and Hello Michel­ Theatre X, in a "living news­ WTMJ-TV. Tarzan's Desert paper" documentary on the Amer­ 1717 W. Wisconsin, 9pm. 19, 9pm. angelo. Also Mar8-9. MU Bell- Mystery. 12:30pm. Wisconsin Federation of Hand- Dimensions In Music Milwau­ armine Hall, 8:15pm. ican Indians and the American Vienna Choir Boys. Uihlein White. The Coffee House, 631 weavers meeting. Capitol Drive kee 'Symphony Orchestra; Maria Films. Hanoi 13; Time of the Hall, PAC, 8:30pm. . Lutheran Church, 1:15pm. Alba Dance-Co. Milwaukee Audit­ Locust. Rhubarb, 9pm; Storefront N. 19, 9pm; also Marl2-13. Girl Scout Week, Mar8-14. Political Life in Formosa: the Milwaukee Symphony Orches­ orium, 8:30pm. Manor Coffee House, 1336 N. Be prepared. - tra. Shirley Verrett, soprano. Waukesha Civic Theatre. The Astor, 4pm. Silent Majority with Peng Ming- min. UWM Bolton 46, 3:30pm. Uihlein Hall, PAC, 8:30pm; also Crucible. Waukesha Playhouse. The Fine Art of Cartooning: Marl4, 7:30pm. Also Mar6,12-13,19-20. Bill Sanders, Tom Curtis, et al. WTMJ-TV. My Brother's Ke­ WUWM-FM. Blues Roots: Lit­ 2500 E. Jarvis St., ll-9pm; also eper, documentary on Wiscon­ tle Walter & Big Walter. 9-10 Mar8. sin prisons. 8:30pm. Vienna Choir Boys. Carroll Pick a Pack Players. Androcles MRT. The Liar. Thru April College Shattuck Auditorium, 81 and the Lion. J. Pellmann Thea­ 18. Todd Wehr Theatre, PAC. Steppenwolf at Chicago's Syn­ tre, 2pm; also 3 Sundays follow­ Milwaukee Art Center Film drome, 8pm. ing. Program* Lilac Time. MAC Aquinas Lecture. Reason and Memorial Hall, 8pm. Faith Revisited, with Francis H. Public Health Forum. Dr, Joy­ Parker. MU Todd Wehy Chemis­ ce Brothers. Uihlein Hall, PAC, try Bldg., 100, 3pm. 8pm. Film. China, 1/4 of Humanity. Music for Youth. Uihlein Hall, MUTWC100, 8pm. PAC, 3:30pm. Benefit Blues Revival. Wiscon­ MARCH 14 sin Unio Theatre, 800 Langdon, ftr?) Madison, 7-12pm. Agape supper. The Coffee H- Chicago, Believe It or Not ouse, 631 N. 19, 7pm. (film), with Art Wilson and Fred Faculty recital, Robert Silver­ MARCH 6 Keiffer. Shhorewood Auditorium, MARCH 9 man. UWM Fine Arts Recital 3pm. Hall, 8:15pm. Draft Counseling Seminars, - Senior Recital, Kathleen Boyum WUWM-FM. The Last Resort. High Himalaya (film), with Russ with Michael Brophy. UWM U- Alverno College, 3pm. 9-12pm. Potter. Shorewood Auditorium, nion 221, lpm. Celebration at The Coffee H- Draft counseling seminars, 3pm. Muriel Hogan. The Coffee H- ouse, 631 N. 19, 7pm. g|l with Michael Brophy. UWM Union Music for Youth Concert. Vo- ouse, 631 N. 19, 9pm. Jean-Pierre Rampal, with the 207, 6pm. gel Hall, PAC, 3:30pm. J Kinder-Cinema. Uli. UWM Fi- Fine Arts Quartet. UWM Fine Elizabeth Schwarzkopf. Uih­ * WTMJ-TV, Our Hushed Cri­ . reside Lounge, 1:30 & 3:30pm. Arts Theatre, 8:15pm. lein Hall, PAC, 8:15pm. sis—The Real Dope. 6pm. WTMJ-TV. The Rainmaker. Milwaukee Classical Guitar So­ Part I 4pm; Part II , MarlO, ciety. Al Pederson. Wisconsin 4pm. MARCH 12 College Conservatory, 3pm. MAC seminar. Tomorrow's An­ Film. China, 1/4 of Humanity.. GALLERIES tiques, with Nicole Teweles. Mil­ Rhubarb, 9pm; Storefront Manor' waukee Art Center Lecture Gal­ WUWM-FM. Blues Roots: Lit­ Coffee House, 1336 ^N. Astor, lery, 8pm. tle Walter and Big Walter. 9- 4pm. MILWAUKEE ART CENTER: CHARLES ALLIS ART LIBRARY: Contemporary Trends. Kather- 10pm. Milwaukee Art Center Concert. Children's art from another ine Kuh, art critic of Saturday ' Sentinel Sports, Travel and Lower Galleries, Milwaukee Art Terrence Evans, drawings and Review. UWM Fine Arts Lecture land. Feb7-Mar7. CAP Gallery. watercolors; Louise French, stlt- Boat Show. Thru Mar21. Mil­ Center, 3pm. Halt, 7:30pm. waukee Auditorium-Arena. Chldren's Illustrations for the chery. Opens March 14. Senior recital. Catherin Wei- Odyssey. Lecture Gallery, thru WISN-TV. Allinthe Family, UWM Opera Theatre. An Ex­ land. Pentecost Evangelical Luth­ CENTRAL LIBRARY: 10:30pm. periment in Musical Theatre. MarI4. EM Durer and his times.Thru Mar. eran Church, 3pm. BRESLER GALLERY: Copper reliefs by Y. Goldstein. Thru Mar. CARDINAL STRTTCH COLLEGE: BRADLEY GALLERIES: Senior art exhibits. Watercolors by Laurence Rath- ALVERNO: UN- CLASS IF I E O sack. Thru Marl8. John Brown, recent paintings. VELDMAN GALLERIES: Thru Marl2. Group show: Thompson, Wag­ MOUNT MARY: The Women's Center is looking WILL THE TERSONS who took ner, Franke, Moeller. Marl-30. Sculpture by Richard Herr; CUSTOM MADE clothes. Made the small brown female dog call­ paintings by Joseph Rozman. Thru for someone, preferably female, MARINE PLAZA ART GALLERY: to order. Reasonable. Please call to spend one or two evenings a ed "Smut" from 1152 E. Kane . Drawings and biographical sk­ Mar22. Liz, 475-1847 please call 278-8775. Pleasel UWM FINE ARTS GALLERIES: week teaching self-defense cour­ etches of famous baLck Ameri­ ses'for women. Call 933-4783 cans. Marl-14. Wis consln Designer -Crafts­ WANTED: Housekeeper, room & men exhibition. Thru Marl 7. FREDERICKS GALLERY: board provided. Jack, 271-4792 Watercolors and acrylics by UWM FIRESIDE LOUNGE: Les Fredericks. Thru March. Body prints by Marcia Grubb. DO YOUR OWN THING...Get into business silk screening crests TV's radios, stereos or gui­ POTTER'S WHEEL: Thru Marl2. tar amps repaired cheap or will Exhibits of stoneware pottery, ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO: and emblems on sweat shirts, FREE 1 1/2 year old spayed t-shirts, jackets ..want to dis­ female dog. Housetrained, me­ exchange for other services or 1022-B N. 3rd St. Minor masters o the Japan­ usable items — perhaps other JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER: ese prints Thru Mar25. pose of stock of 43 screens, inks dium size short-haired mongrel. German painting of the 19th and supplies. Best offer, 962- NEEDS HOME, please call Jan equipment. Will also arrange Wisconsin Art Teachers Emer­ swap deals. Ralph, 278-7981 itus Exhibit. Thru Marl5. century. Thru Mar28. 3462. at 964-6973. 19 s&&mm*mBw.&$&?^^^m

CfTV" * • * ZIP- •"''"- ...this widened f? war has narrowed •••'•'? domestic welfare programs, making the^ poor, white and Negro bear the burdens both at the front I and at home... I DR. MARTIN L KING, JR. Jaa15,1929-April4,1968

SPRING CALENDAR MARCH 8: International Women's Day 13 & 14: NWRO demonstration in Las Vegas 25 & 28: National Convention of Gay Liberation in Austin, Texas APRIL 1-4: Martin Luther King Days 8: All Gay ' Peace Treaties to be into Milwaukee Gay May Day Tribe Office 10: Gays meeting with Vietnamese in Paris 19-23: Vietnam Vets Against War begin the war in the Land of Congress 24: Beginning of first wave of activities in Washington, D.C. Mas­ sive rally and march. 25-27: People's Lobb> 26 & 27: Training for massive civil disobedience. 28 & 29: Massive civil disobedience in D.C. MAY 1: Gay Day in Washington Rally & March, massive rally and march for e erybody. 2: Massive rally and March 3: Civil disobedience begins. Gay action with straight support at Justice Department 4 & 5??: Civil disobedience continues For More Information: PEACE ACTION CENTER, 272-3040 GAY MAY DAY TRIBE, 273-3178

HONOR HIS MEMORY sMS STOP THE WAR NOW!

arch on Washington &nd San Francis#wpif 24 NATIONAL PEACE ACTION COALITION 11029 VERMONT AVE.,N.W., WASH., D.C. 20005/202-628-5876

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