CHICAGO MAROONVolume 77, Number 10 Chicago, Illinois, October 11, 1968 20 Pages, 2 Sections“I will deal with administrative proce¬dure,” said Moscow, “both questions ofproper and improper use of discretion andcases where perhaps the rules are wrong.On police decisions, for example, I will in¬vestigate to make sure the decisions weremade on full knowledge of all relevantfacts. I don’t know how much more I cando,” he explained.Levi NamesStudent 90 (X)By Barbara HurstJohn Moscow, ’69, this week was appoint¬ed official ombudsman at the University.The post is a newly created one and thefirst of its kind among American collegesand universities.Moscow is a political science major andhas been news editor of The Maroon. Hisappointment was made by provost andpresident-designate Edward H. LevivThe ombudsman office is designed todeal with student complaints in academic,social, and policy-making areas. Like hishistorical counterpart, the ombudsman atthe University investigates complaints todetermine if they are justified and may‘‘recommended and persuade” but has noformal power to mete out solutions.Maroon — BEN GOLD Maroon — DAVID TRAVISCONDEMNED: Woodlawn apartment house which Student Government is trying to save from the wrecking ball. At right,some of the tenants of the building.SG Files Demolition Brief;Rally Called for MondayBy Wendy GlocknerStudent Government (SG) will file anamicus curiae (‘‘friend-of-the-court”) briefnext week against the purchase of a build¬ing at 6043-45 Woodlawn, by the Depart¬ment of Urban Renewal.According to Jerry Lipsch, SG president,the brief is the first step in a coordinateddestruction of housing in the ‘‘South Cam¬pus”, until replacement housing has beenbuilt.SG is filing the brief as part of the caseof the City vs. Walker Realty. The hearing,scheduled for next week, will determinewhether or not the Department of UrbanRenewal will be able to purchase the build¬ing. The lawyer who is representing thetenants of the building is Irving Bimbaum.The brief will be filed in the interestof maintaining student housing and of pre¬venting what SG calls “university expan¬sion at the expense of students and poorpeople.”University expansion plans depend onthe provisions of the Urban Renewal Actin order to acquire the land from 60thto 61st, Stony Island and Cottage Grove,for University use.“It is sometimes suggested that weshould not challenge the priority of Uni¬versity expansion over the needs of poorpeople,” Lipsch commented. “We are toldthat the needs of an intelledtual commu¬nity. . .should be met before the needs ofpoor people. We cannot accept that view: THEHOUSINGCRISISpoor people are being kicked around allover the world by American political andeconomic power and it’s always in thename of some higher value which tran¬scends the allegedly narrow, insignificantneeds. . .of its victims.”At the present time, the struggle againstUniversity expansion and in favor of re¬placement housing for both students andmembers of the community is being car¬ried on by SG, the SDS Housing-UniversityExpansionism Committee, and the Coali¬tion for Housing.Demonstration Next WeekA demonstration in order to help drama¬tize the entire issue is being consideredfor sometime next week; SG plans to holdit either at the nearest DUR office orat the university.SG hopes for outspoken community sup¬port in it’s fight against University ex¬pansionism; however, he stated that com¬munity support will depend on studentsdemonstrating that they are serious aboutthe University expansionism that is inconflict with the interests of the peopleon the South Side.Lipsch maintains that the University andthe city should be responsible for provid-Continued on Page Four By Caroline HeckPlans for a student housing rally infront of the Administration Building Mon¬day at 12:15 pm were made at a meetingThursday attended by 40 people.There will be four speakers at the rallywho will discuss the history of housing inHyde Park, the relation between the hous¬ing issue and institutional racism, and thecourt brief that Student Government isbringing against the city.Speakers will also discuss plans for ademonstration at the court house whenthe case comes up Tuesday.At the rally there will be available a listof tentative housing objectives drawn upby the student steering committee on hous¬ing which arose out of several meetings onhousing in the past two weeks.These tentative objectives include an im¬mediate halt to all destruction by the Uni¬versity in Hyde Park-Ken wood and SouthCampus, University underwriting of stu¬dent leases, and student access to all fileson housing.Students at Thursday’s meeting devoteda large part of the discussion to the issueof student involvement in community hous¬ing problems.Some students suggested that a housingissue that encompassed neighborhood prob¬lems and the Department of Urban Re¬newal might not involve as many studentsas a rally devoted entirely to student hous¬ing problems.Howie Machtinger, replied to this argu-Continued on Page Four Initial reaction to the creation of the postand to Moscow’s appointment is somewhatdivided. Students appear to be far less en¬thused over the idea than administrators,who view it as an exciting experiment.Jerry Lipsch, president of Student Gov¬ernment, remarked: “I had no idea — infact I think no students at all, except Mr.Moscow, would have had any idea — thatJohn was being considered.“It’s certainly an appropriate choice forMr. Levi to make,” Lipsch continued,“since, as anyone who has read Mr. Mos¬cow’s stunning insights in the Maroon, onall subjects, must know, John will fit inperfectly with the administration, sinceJohn is known to be as truly sensitive tothe needs of students as any administra¬tor.”Dean of the College Wayne C. Booth, onthe other hand, defended the appointmentand argued against an election of an om¬budsman. “I think it would be a fallacy toassume that because Levi appointed thisman he’s not representative and thereforeI won’t go to him,” said Booth. “It wouldbe an act of uncritical a priority to assumein advance that Mr. Moscow’s new officecan be of no help. I’m quite sure he couldbe effective in some ways that current re¬sources are not.”Some students have other reservationsabout the office. “In the past,” one said,“University officials such as Dean Vice andPresident Beadle have tried to keep them-Continued on Page FiveJOHN MOSCOWOmbudsman'Catonsville Nine Trial Draws National InterestBy Mary Sue LeightonAn estimated 2,500 peace demonstratorsmarched to the Baltimore Post Office onMonday, in support of the “CatonsvilleNine,” whose trial on three charges ofdestruction of federal property and inter¬ference with the Selective Service Systembegan at 10 am.The Nine, Thomas and Marjorie Melville,John Hogan, Daniel and Philip Berrigan,Mary Moylan, Tom Lewis, George Mischeand David Darst, burned 380 I-A, I-Y, and2-A draft files in Catonsville, Maryland,on May 17 as a protest against the warand American foreign policy.Organizers from the Baltimore PeaceAction Center and the local members ofthe Catonsville Nine Defense Committeehad planned a week of political activities,from marches to various acts of civil dis¬obedience, beginning with a rally on Sun¬day evening. Hoping literally to steal theshow, however, local law enforcementauthorities started the action early withthe arrest of Dan Berrigan on Friday after¬noon after a gathering at Towson StateCollege. It seems that the state of Mary¬land had elected to prosecute the groupunder the state laws covering the burningof files, in spite of the federal chargescovering the same act, and, refusing topostpone the arraignment for state chargesuntil after the federal trial, issued war¬rants for the arrest of the seven who had been free on bail since May.Two others — Tom Lewis and Phil Ber¬rigan — were already in jail serving sen¬tences for an- earlier conviction involvingpouring blood on draft files last fall. Theyhad been denied bail since the secondaction.People in the audience at Towson madea spontaneous attempt to keep Father Ber¬rigan from being taken away, but the statewon the first round and he joined hisbrother for the weekend in jail.The remaining six determined to avoidarrest at least until after the rally Sun¬day evening, and spent the weekend atthe home of a friend, engaging in ludi¬crously elaborated maneuvers designed toelude sundry local and federal agents. De¬spite frequent news bulletins about the ar¬rest warrants and rather casual precautiontaken by the defendants, they were suc¬cessful. Two appeared at the Sunday eve¬ning rally, and after leading the police ona chase reminiscent of the Keystone Cops,turned themselves in at the County Jail.The others walked into the courtroom Mon¬day morning.The trial went as was predicted: juryselection Monday (the defense had de¬cided not to contest any member); pre¬sentation of the case for the prosecutionon Tuesday; and defense on Wednesdayand Thursday.The prosecutors typically based their arguments on the simple statement of factthat the law had been broken, which facteach of the defendants cheerfully admittedand asserted that they had no regrets andwould indeed do the same again.The defense seemed to involve twopoints: intent and priority of certain lawsabove others. Most of the defendants al¬luded to the United States contribution tothe law articulated at the Nuremburgtrials, and the necessity of maintaining thesubordinance of law and order to justice,as dictated by conscience.The consensus of the defendants, theircounsel (who included William Kunstler,Harold Buchman, Harrup Freeman, Wil¬liam Cunningham (SJ), and honorarily,Bishop James Pike) and the supportgroups was that under the present system,a trial has to be considered little morethan a meaningless legal formality whichby definition operates in accordance withthe failings of the institutions it represents.Hence the emphasis of the week’s acti¬vities was “in the streets” where demon¬strations were held daily. Permission topicket the Post Office building, where thecourt is located, was denied, so in thespirit of “the streets belong to the people”a militant but dignified group claimed the sidewalk there every afternoon and circledaround persistently.Heckling by the few vocal members ofthe conservative community was continu¬ous but not usually aggressive.Every evening in the hall of St. IgnatiusChurch, several blocks from the Post Of¬fice, the defendants and their supportersgathered for supper, a summary of theday’s events both in and out of the court¬room, and short talks by those who hadcome from all over the country to testifyfor the defense, (and who had been re¬fused access to the stand, as is custom¬ary). Among the speakers were NoamChomsky, Bishop Pike, Howard Zinn, Gor¬don Zahn, Rennie Davis, and Dorothy Day.On Tuesday evening. Mary Molan, oneof the defendants, spoke about the forma¬tion of a National Liberatio Front, whichwould represent the concerted efforts ofall the members of the radical communityand which would constitute a pledge ofmutual support.At the conclusion of her speech, an ex¬hortation not to join in the living deathwritten on the stony faces of the jurorsbut to “celebrate life,” one of the menin the crowd ignited his draft card. FromContinued on Page Nine5210 So. HarperSomething More• banjos• dulcimers• guitars• instructionclass & private• harmonicas• mandolins• records• song books• instrument building classes* accessoriesthe £ret shopHARPER COURT in Sight and SoundRecordersall qualitiesand sizesKungMoecketcNO 7-1060pat only fatty eenU<fou com heatam oj tAt faneatdoAOicul yuitatiaUin all &UcAqa ...H&t MUSS ^cdtawia»U5211 SautH ^ atpet frwit667-4002•ta minimum afaet t&e (linnet haut Sheaffer’s big deal gets you through29 term papers, 3 book reports, 17 exams,52 quizzes and 6 months of homework.Sorry about that. Sheaffer’s big deal means you canwrite twice as long. Because youget the long-writing Sheaffer dollarballpoint plus an extra long-writing49C refill free. All for just a dollar.How much do you think you canThe world’s longest writing dollar ballpoint pen. SHEAFFER'2 The Chicago Maroon October 11, 1968City Reaffirms Position on TWOBy Jeffrey KutaErwin France, black administrativeassistant to Mayor Daley and head ofChicago’s model cities program, reiteratedon campus Wednesday night his positionthat The Woodlawn Organization (TWO)must be considered “as only one among anumber of groups in the community” andhence unjustified in asking for a majorityrole in Woodlawn model cities planning.To a student’s argument that TWO’s de¬mands should be accepted since to demeanthe role of an existing viable communityorganization would only hurt Woodlawn, he replied that he could not allow any onegroup to dominate the planning process.“You can’t get yourself into this bag, baby,that this is the thing you’ve got to do,” hesaid.TWO has refused to accept less thanguaranteed 51 percent representation onthe Mayor’s Woodlawn Model AreaPlanning Council even though offered mi¬nority representation. Despite this, Francetold a Public Affairs 291 class, he thinksthe two groups “will come to a point wherewe’ll find grounds to work together.”Regional Model Cities Director AlanThe New Bio MasterBy Sylvia Piechochen“I like to think of myself as a catalyst,says Arnold W. Ravin, new master of thebiology collegiate division, and with hisfrank, disarming manner he tells you whyover a cup of coffee. “I can bring peopletogether and I can make recommendationsbut ultimately faculty and students decidewhat needs to be done.”Ravin is replacing James W. Moulderwho was temporary master for a year.Moulder considered himself a caretakerwhose job is was “to improve the basicadministrative position (of the master)without making decisions that would re¬strict the new man.” He had agreed to helpout the College but at the same time re¬tained his post as chairman of the micro¬biology division, to which he has returnedfull-time.Ravin says he is deeply concerned abouttwo issues at the moment. The first is thequality of undergraduate course offerings,particularly the common-year sequence,which he hopes to evaluate via some sortof curriculum committee composed of stu¬dents and faculty teaching members.“I’m not sure that it meets the aims ofa common-year course,” Ravin explains.“A course of this kind should have differentkinds of aims for different kinds of studentsPossibly it isn’t serving the interest ofeither the biology major or the non-scienceone.”Another issue that concerns Ravin is theseparation between the graduate and under¬graduate divisions, a situation he feels isdetrimental to the College. “A College,” hethinks, “is an entity of its own and shouldremain so, but the fact remains that itcannot attract nearly as many outstandingscientists as other professional people be- PROFILEcause it lacks the facilities for independentresearch.”The problem is to persuade the heavilyresearch-oriented graduate departments toinvolve themselves in undergraduate teach¬ing, and Ravin’s position as associate deanof the graduate division of biological sci¬ences should help him in this respect.“The scholar,” Ravin says, “could de¬velop his own ideas and, at the same time,his continuous activity in a project of hisown would infuse his lectures with en¬thusiasm.”SG SpeakersStudent Government is considering start¬ing again a visiting speaker program.Under consideration now are a theme forthe program and exactly who might be in¬vited. In addition, the proposed programwould depend on the availability of funds,and will be considered by CORSO thismonth.In the past, SG has had extremely suc¬cessful speakers programs, which havebrought to campus such prominent peopleas Martin Luther King, Allen Ginsburg,and Herman Kahn.Students who are interested in eitherworking on or making suggestions for sucha program have been asked to contactSteve Metalitz at Pierce 1520x or AlanLahn, 15C8.& we/come /cnp Aair ^f.yf/end Amr ca/tinp ant/Jfy/tngt ^| 1541 €. J4yJe Park EU. PJ 2-9255 I4^ appoint merit ArA> rAvrjn fA>*A*rA>rAvrAvrAr<AvrAv*AvrAvrAvr3pV vjw vjw vjtrf vjw vjv JJW Jjy JJw JJw vjv Jjv# vjv# v|v* vp* vp*whatever is new in hairstyling . . .PERMANENTS* TINTING • CUTTINGWAVINGRANDELLBeauty and Cosmetic Salon^ AIR CONDITIONED— Open Evenings by Appointment —.5700_HARPER AVENUE FAirfax 4-2007~yg~fl'a a a mro'o o a a a nnrtmmro smnnnra a omnrs^Students & FacultyUse this ad for10% DISCOUNTon all Dry CleaningatPUBLIC CLEANERS, INC1380 E. 53rd., 1310 E. S3rd St., 1457 E. 51st.While you are there, pick up your per¬manent 10% Courtesy Discount CARD.SSL 9999 9, fl-P.P.ttJLPJUULftAA.fl.fl .9 99 99999/L99.M EncounterFor those interested inexploring Sensorti a-wareness first hand agroup oceanic experiencewill occur at the Mc¬Cormick YWCA, 30WestOak, Auditorium, 2ndFloor.$2.00 contribution8:00 p.m. Oct. 12. Goldfarb also spoke to the class, which isstudying the model cities program as itrelates to Woodlawn. Goldfarb noted thatthe Department of Housing and Urban De¬velopment (HUD), which oversees the ur¬ban assistance program, “has a contractwith the city” and that a dispute betweentwo rival proposals would officially have tobe worked out at the city level.The University last spring agreed toassist TWO in drawing up its own modelcities proposal to provide that the Univer¬sity considers a “professionally acceptablealternative” to the city proposal, the plan¬ning process for which has been criticizedwidely for alleged lack of widespread citi¬zen participation and inadequate technicalassistance to the existing citizen participa¬tion and inadequate technical assistance tothe existing citizen participaton structure,the Woodlawn Model Area PlanningCouncil.The Center for Urban Studies, which iscoordinating the University effort, lastweek published its first issue of The Cen¬ter Newsletter which details the TWO-Uni-versity side of the story. The Newsletteris scheduled to continue as a regular pub¬lication, printing news of the center fourtimes yearly.Faculty and student task forces thisweek were preparing a rough draft of theTWO-University proposal subject to revi¬sion by TWO after extensive discussion. Abitter political battle is expected in No¬vember, when the city’s proposal will beready for submission to the City Counciland then HUD for approval.Although TWO and the University arecontinuing in their effort to produce a pro¬posal so much preferable to HUD than thecity’s that Daley may be forced into atleast making major concessions to TWO,observers here are pessimistic. They feelthe city will lift enough material from the TWO-University proposal to make the twoproposals appear alike in most areas, butthat no real provision will be made in thecity proposal for a sanctioned governingrole for the community.English Profs NamedDavid M. Bevington, a prominent scholarof Renaissance drama, and Hamlin Hill, anoted authority on Mark Twain and Ameri¬can humor, have been appointed professorsof English at the University.Both appointments, which were effectiveOctober 1, were announced by John T.Wilson, vice-president and dean of facul¬ties of the University.Commenting on the appointments, Rob¬ert E. Streeter, dean of the humanities di¬vision and a professor of English, said,“David Bevington and Hamlin Hill, both intheir late 30’s, have already made incisivecontributions to the scholarly understandingof English and American literature. Bev¬ington’s work on English drama has ex¬plored inventively an important dramatictradition, as well as the interplay betweenthe theater and the social and political cur¬rents of English life. Hill’s work on MarkTwain has been informed by comprehen¬sive and precise knowledge of the milieuin which Twain worked, and by great tacton focusing this knowledge sharply onTwain’s writings.”Bevington was a visiting professor at theUniversity of Chicago during 1967-68. Hehas been a member of the faculty at theUniversity of Virginia, Charlottesville,since 1961. He had been an instructor atHarvard University during 1959-61.Hill previously had been an associate pro¬fessor at the University of New Mexico, Al¬buquerque, New Mexico. He served on thefaculty of the University of Wyoming andwas an instructor at the University ofNew Mexico from 1950 to 1961.Cohn A Stem©mint & (ilamjJUHShoplilRBS?;"We have nothing to fearbut fear itself . . . and theboogy man.”Support this simple saviorof America’s destiny. Buyhis official, profusely illus¬trated campaign manual-biography-platform — atbookstores now. $2.95Mg «Kragen/Fnta 451 N Ca"0n Beve", H r. Ca 90210PLAID WASH ‘ N WEAR LEVI’SThese slim cut, traditionally styled Levi’skeep their clean, crisp good looks thru thelongest day. 50% Fortrel, 50% cotton ingrey or brown glen plaid. Waist sizes 28to 38, Pre-cuffed in 28’’ to 33” lengths.$10.06IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings Same Day 5 Hr. CleaningNo Extra ChargeCustom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd. 752-693October* 11, 1968 The Chicago MaroonStudents Present Petition on Married HousingNearly all of the residents of two Univer¬sity-owned apartments for married studentspresented a petition Thursday to director ofstudent housing Edward Turking and Ken¬dall Cady, general manager of UniversityRealty Management.The students, who live between 60th and61st streets, Ingleside and Drexel ave.,said in the petition they were “distressedby (the) paradoxical situation” that whilesingle students were having difficulty find¬ing housing* 16 of 62 apartments in theirbuildings remained empty.Of the 46 couples living in the apartments42 signed the petition which was circulated last weekend by residents Mr. and Mrs.Claud DuVerlie. Only one couple actuallyrefused; three couples could not bereached.Questions asked by the petitionersincluded:• Is Student Housing in the process ofemptying these buildings without notifyingpresent tenants?• If the buildings are scheduled to be de¬molished, will demolition take place thisyear?• Or is Student Housing just unable tofill them with married students, yet un¬willing to open them to unmarried studentsFriday, October 11FILM: Viridiana, Quantrell, 7:15 & 9:15, $1.00, (DFG).DANCE: I.N. Cloister Club, 9:00 (admission) (REVI¬TALIZATION).LECTURE: Dr. Kornburg. "Current Studies on theBiochemistry of Bacterial Sporulation and Ger¬mination," Kent 107, 12:30 pm.CONCERT: David Eicher, cellist, and Lyle Settle,pianist. Works by Bach, Beethoven, Brahms,Schumann. International House, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: Rabbi Samuel E. Karff, Chicago SinaiCongregation; Visiting Lecturer, DivinitySchool. "The Dilema of the Religious Liberal:Structure and Freedom in Jewish Life." HillelHouse, 8:30 pm.Saturday, October 12RIC MASTEN: poet-song-writer, guitarist, singing hisown songs, accompanying himself on guitar.Blue Gargoyle (Disciples Church), 9:00 pm.BICYCLE TRIP: Along the lakshore cycle path. Leavefrom Ida Noyes parking lot, 9:00 am. Back by11:00.FILM: The Knack, Cobb Hall, 7:30 and 9:30.RECRUITING FORUM: open to Negro male and femalecollege seniors and college graduates. BobNelson-Ernie Banks Ford Showroom, 76th andStony Island. 8:30 am to 2:30 pm.FOOTBALL: Wilson Junior College. Stagg Field, 10:00am.SOCCER: Wheaton College. Stagg Field, 2:00 pm. SERVICES: Rick Masten, poet, song-writer, guitarist,"Twelve String Sermons," First UnitarianChurch, 10:30 am.OPEN HOUSE: for graduate students, Hillel Founda¬tion, 4-6 pm.RUGBY: UC Rugby Club vs Illinois Valley RugbyClub, Washington Park, 2:00.SUNDAY EVENING AT BONHOEFFER HOUSE:"Lutheran Action?-Lutheran Radicals?", MissRuth Porisch, Chicago Area Lutheran ActionCommittee, Mr. John Kretzman, National Chair¬man, Lutheran Action Committee, BonhoefferHouse, Supper-5:30 (75c), Program-6:30. Trans¬portation will be provided. Call HY 3-6451.DISCUSSION: "Current Issues and Action on Peace"Rev. John Houck, Episcopal Peace Fellowship,Michael Presser, CADRE. Brent House, 6:00Supper, 7:30 Discussion.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 11:00 am.CROSS-COUNTRY: University of Chicago Track Club.Washington Park, 2:00 pm.Monday, October 14Sunday, October 13CAMPAIGN: Canvass for Bill Clark for US Senator.Come to Chapel House, 11:30. Return 4:30.FOLK DANCING: International Folk Dancing, IdaNoyes, Cloister Club. Beginning level teaching7-8 pm. Intermediate level teaching 8-9 pm,Requests 9-11 pm. DANCE GROUP: Experimental Dance Group, IdaNoyes Theater, 3:00 and 4:15.LECTURE: Traditional and Contemporary Arts ofBlack Africa, James Porter, Classics 10, 8:30.SEMINAR: "Christian Humanism," Leader; E. SpencerParsons, Dean, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.First meeting: Chapel House, 4:30.MEETING: Small Groups Club - all interested -Beecher 1st floor, 7:00.SWIMMING INSTRUCTION: open to all adults, 18yrs. of older. Beginner, Intermediate andAdvanced levels. Ida Noyes Hall Pool, 6:45-7:45 for 8 weeks.LECTURE: Professor Frederick H. Borsch, Seabury-Weslern Theological Seminary, "The Priorityof the Son of Man in Rival Parallel Sayings."Swift Hall Common Room, 7:30.CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 i. 41st STREETDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-6866CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a$ioused 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcaipet. Specializing in Rem¬nants & Millreturns at afraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERYPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!' 460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 is mum of...Sun Life Insurance is a sureway to financial independencefor you and your family.As a local Sun Life representa¬tive, may I call upon you at yourconvenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street,Chicago 60602FRanklin,2-2390- 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY “who are begging for lodging?”The residents also noted the increaseddangers of fire and forced entry in build¬ings with so many vacancies. In addition,they complained of an “unjustified” rentincrease and “very inadequate” main¬tenance.The petition concluded that either StudentHousing provide an adequate “explanationand solution” or that rents be returned totheir former rates. If one of the alternatives is not fulfilled, they said, “we intend andare prepared to take action to provide forour rights and our security as tenants inthe buildings.”Turkington said Thursday that a numberof non-married students have been re¬ferred to vacant married-student apart¬ments this fall.He said that the housing office and uni¬versity is studying the petition and that hewill be discussing it with residents of theapartment as soon as possible.Mosf Tenants Want to StayContinued from Page Oneing evicted tenants with new housing ifit intends to carry on its policy ofexpansion.A brief canvass of the tenants (whichinclude black and white families and onestudent), conducted by SG, revealed thatnearly all the tenants wished to remainin the building; also, SG found that mostof the repairs needed were minor. Therepairs include the replacement of locksand the cleaning of the basement and thebackyard.According to Lipsch, the owner of thebuilding, Frederika Blankner, has agreedto keep the building up to building codestandards, and to make all additional re¬pairs as soon as her ownership is moresecure. She also agreed to place a ceilingon the present level of the rent. Miss Blankner holds an A. M. and aPh. B. from the University, and is anItalian scholar and a poet.Housing RallyContinued from Page Onehousing, then it’s a student chauvinisticaction. The issue here is not only housingbut racism and in this case the racism isinstitutional. The racism in this neighbor¬hood consists of the University renewingout black people.”Lipsch urged that the community issuebe pressed at the rally, and that studentssupport SG’s court brief by coming down¬town to the courthouse next day. “Com¬munity groups will come in on this,” hesaid, “but we must show them we’reserious.”UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 I. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorThe Chicago Maroon October 11, 1968• * ,ri jctt oCADRE and Quakers Shield ResisterBy John Welch“I haven’t regretted what I did,” writesVictor McNeil Bell, a GI who refused tokill and so went AWOL. Vic Bell was im¬prisoned just after the convention followinga week in a community of sanctuary ex¬tended to him by The Resistance and theQuaker Meeting.“And I get stronger everyday,” he con¬tinues in a letter written from the stockadeat Ft. Riley, Kansas, to Diana Anderson ofthe Chicago Area Draft Resisters(CADRE).Vic surfaced just before the conventionweek at the Resistance Movement Centerat Quaker House, 5615 South Woodlawn andasked the Resistance community to givehim sanctuary. “I just know that I can’tkill anyone,” he wrote in explaining whyhe had “resigned from the army.” Bellhad been assigned to a military policecompany at Ft. Meade, Maryland.The group immediately agreed to supportVic, and to offer nonviolent resistance tohis arrest. Talk was of placing Vic in thecenter of his supporters when MP’s came,of sitting in doorways, and of then sittingaround the car into which he would be put.The 57th Street Meeting of Friends joinedResistance in extending Vic sanctuary.Manning telephones, recording arrestsand injured, arranging bail, driving to oddcorners of the city to pick uy stray people,and continuosly rapping his affirmation ofpeace and life to whoever was near, Vicquickly gained the respect and love of hisbrothers in the Resistance.He also quickly won over several Chicagopolicemen who had breakfast with himseveral mornings at Quaker House.Victor Bell spoke to the press at a Near-North Side church on Convention Thursday,where in an expression of solidarity fourresisters and clergy chained themselvesto him. His dramatic arrival and speechclimaxed the mobilization rally that after¬noon in Grant Park.The following Sunday, Victory took com¬munion in a service at the Hyde Park Un¬ion Church. As he walked into the QuakerMeeting House afterwards, two membersof the army’s criminal investigation divi¬sion grabbed his arms, snapped, “VictorBell! Come with us!” and led him away totheir car.Some of the CADRE people who hadbeen with Vic in church blocked the car;the others got help from Quaker Meeting. Chicago police arrived and freed theagents after arresting nine CADRE work¬ers and Friends who stood fast in frontof the car.On September 1, Vic was placed in thestockade at Ft. Riley, Kansas.On October 3 a court marshall sentencedhim to six months at hard labor, saying hewould be returned to his unit afterwards.“Hard labor” at Ft. Riley is an inten¬sive basic training and advanced infantrytraining program that the army usesto “rehabilitate” men it finds are unableto kill effectively.Two weeks ago Diana Anderson wrote toVic on CADRE stationary and received thisreply:Dear Diana,I was overjoyed to receive your letter.I am sorry I didn’t write before but 5 nev¬er had anyone’s address.That Sunday is something I shall neverforget. I wanted to do something butdidn’t know what. I never felt so close topeople as I did that day. I still feelI should have done or said more than I did.I can’t express my feelings any way thatwould be exactly true to them.OmbudsmanContinued from Page Oneselves open to a free interchange of com¬plaints, discussion and opinion of the Uni¬versity. Recently this interchange has beendeclining. The solution is to encourage thisopenness rather than closing it off by chan¬nelling it into a separate office.”Despite this Moscow feels he can do “agood job. “I think it’s a damned usefulthing. I don’t believe that most of the ad¬ministrative matters in this University arebeing run by people of bad will, nor do Ibelieve that student complaints are un¬founded.“In some cases,” Moscow said, “the stu¬dents don’t know the reasons for the rules,but would agree with them if they did. Inother cases, the rules themselves ought tobe changed. I’d like students to come in tome if there’s something that is botheringthem. I don’t know if I’ll be able to help,but I’d like to try.”Moscow’s office is in Room 204 of theReynolds Club, recently vacated by the Of¬fice of Career Counseling and Placement. But I thank you and everybody else whostood by me that day. My captors can’tunderstand why anybody would be willingto go to jail for someone like me. “A mis¬fit of society which needs removal,” thatseems to be their definition of me. Pleasetell and give everbody by personalthanks, since I can’t do it myself. Theyhave been trying to break me ever sincethey got me. But I keep telling them togive up but they try anyway.They put me in a little cell and won’t letme out. They are afraid I might start ariot. NWell the worst is almost over. I get court-martialled Thursday, October 3, 1968. Idon’t know what will happen, but intend todefend myself. I don’t think it would makeany differnence if I had Christ himself todefend me.These people have already let their feel¬ings be known. So I will just have to praythey think I am nuts and throw me out.I have met one groovy person since Ihave been here and that is the chaplain.He is on my side as much as he can bewithout hurting himself.I received a letter this week from DeCoursy Squire, which was very encourag¬ ing. She is at C.N.V.A. so I wrote back andlet them know what happened.I sure wish more people would writesince that is all I have to fill the lonelyhours.Boy it sure is lonely in here/Peoplehave such a wild outlook on life.Oh by the way tell Mike to tell his friend,you know the one that was so hip on thedraft laws. . .Anyway tell him I haven’t re¬gretted what I did yet and that I getstronger everyday.I hate to sound so persistent about it butit really means a lot to hear from the out¬side world. It is like escaping from thisnightmare for a while. And tell Bob (Free-ston, a member of CADRE recently sen¬tenced to three years for refusing induc¬tion) not to give up. Tell him I am withhim in spirit if not in body. Well, I guessI will have to go. My time is just about up.Oh by the way the paper you wrote yourletter on was beautiful.Well, By By. And may you all find thepeace you have fought for. I am with youalways.PEACE AND LOVEVIC“Look to the past in Joy;And to the Future in Hope;OFFICER’SCHAIR DIRECTOR’SCHAIRCREATIVE I CONTEMPORARYPLAYTHINGS 9 FURNITURE& ACCESSORIESBaldwin Kingrey105 EAST OHIO 644-9103THEEPISCOPALCHURCHatThe University of ChicagoServices on Campus9:30 A.M. Sundays BOND CHAPELSung Eucharist, Student Choir7:30 A.M. Wednesdays BRENT HOUSEHoly Communion12:00 Noon Thursdays BOND CHAPELHoly Communion and MeditationSunday Evenings at Brent House5540 WOODLAWN AVE.6:00 Buffet Suppers 7:00 Ecumenical Forumsand DiscussionsAll WelcomeCHAPLAINS:The Reverend John W. Pyle FA4-7241,752-5732The Reverend Edward Berckman 288-4144 Attention ! !BOREDHousewives students Moth6™Have Good Office Skills ? ?NEED EXTRA MONEY ? ?thenEarn Top RatesWorking in our Clients’ OfficeDAYS - WEEKS - MONTHSwithV/a} e4atvsA(^//tC'.The Temporary Service of IntegrityFree Gifts to Experienced Bona*FideApplicants who apply and Bring thisAd with themOctober 10-11-128:30 - 5:00To This Location OnlyLobby FloorHyde Park YMCAHome Office 1400 East 53rd street Branch OfficeStivers Lifesavers, Inc. Evergreen Plaza7 S. Dearborn Street Garden LevelChicago, Illinois Evergreen Park, IllinoisAn Equal Opportunity Employer l~JV[ad HatterResta urant & Cafe• ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE TRACKS’’Enjoy your food listening to classical music — OurMenu is exquisite and reasonable • Steakburgers*French Pancakes • Hoppel Popple • Homecookeddinners • Fabulous Vala’s Ice Cream, Sodas, Pas¬tries and Coffee •1656 E. 53rd STREET 955-2229MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.October 11, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 5EDITORIALOmbudsmanThe appointment of John Moscow to the new post of studentombudsmen indicates two things: Edward Levi’s dawning concernfor students; and the distance which still separates him from them.If a poll were taken, say, of Maroon readers on whom theywould rather not have as their ombudsman in the administration,John Moscow would probably get a large majority of the votes.As news editor of the Maroon last year, he did not advancethe most enlightened or radical, never mind progressive ideasabout the University and the students’ role in it. Delving as hedid into the Pierce Tower student drug bust last spring, did notincrease his store of trust with the student. His repeated attacksand scoffings at SDS and Student Government have built him areputation as an “ad symp.”Moscow is familiar with the interior workings of the admin¬istration. He knows the administrators. (That is why he got thejob.) On his own he has helped students cut through the incredibleprofusion of red tape on this campus.But all of this (and the secretary and the office and the $500a month the University is giving him) will be wasted if a sizeablenumber of students are so out of sympathy with the ombudsmanthat they won’t use him. (Question: Would you go to John Moscowwith a drug problem?)Ad symp or not, the administration acted with its usual dis¬regard for students in appointing Moscow. If any students wereconsulted about the appointment, they were so well within thethe administration fold that they were unaware of the distinctlack of student enthusiasm that would greet what otherwise couldbe an important step in getting students into the operation of theUniversity.The academic senate, meeting in its customary closed session,deliberated on the idea of an ombudsman, and then on the idea ofJohn Moscow. Apparently they just barely approved Moscow’sappointment; a more activist student, the rumor is, would havebeen rejected. This does not say much for the academic senate.An ombudsman is certainly needed as some defense againstthe thickening bureaucracy at the University. And there is a goodargument that he should be someone that the administrators,especially the top administrators should be able to work with.But the theory behind having a student ombudsman is thatyou take a student and make him a .champion of students in theireternal against a troglodyte bureaucracy. Making a student a partof the administration will almost thoroughly co-opt him (cf: the pastchairmen of CORSO). But it defeats the whole purpose of thething to name as ombudsman someone whose allegiances are notthroughly tied with the people he is supposed to defend.What the general student reaction to the appointment will beis yet to be known, but it ought to be one of outrage. An unsympa¬thetic student is appointed ombudsman (a position which ought toimply sympathy), and the students aren’t consulted or even in¬formed beforehand.But beyond outrage should come a sense that the Universityshould be set up so that these kind of decisions are not made insuch a stupid way. Somehow students should be included in thedecision-making structure of the University. The faculty senateshould not be the only body to pass on a decision that affectsstudents and students alone.One way this could be done would be to make StudentGovernment a student senate, comparable to the faculty senate,and with the constitutional power to approve or veto Universitypolicies which involve only students (matters such as studenthousing, dormitory rules, the use of student facilities, the Uni¬versity’s relations with the Selective Service System, and appoint¬ments of University officers who deal primarily with students).A student senate should also have a voice in all decisions ofthe University.This transformation of student government would completelychange student attitudes toward the official University. And thatis exactly what is needed. The Clark-Daley Split:The Winner Takes AllBy Michael DunlapIn reply to Mr. Barnard’s remarks, whichappeared in the Oct. 7 Maroon concerningWilliam Clark’s campaign against EverettMcKinley Dirksen for the U.S. Senate, weof SPA (Students for a Political Alterna¬tive) defend Senator Eugene McCarthy’sdecision to endorse and actively campaignfor Mr. Clark and our decision to supportSenator McCarthy in this endeavor.First of all, we categorically reject Mr.Barnard’s ill-informed accusations concern¬ing William Clark’s position on the Vietnamwar. Although Mr. Clark has used the nebu¬lous “peace with honor” slogan (as hasSenator McCarthy) he has specified his po¬sition to a considerable extent and has in¬sisted upon the crucial demand that a co¬alition government be formed based onfree elections with the NLF participating.His call for an immediate bombing halt isunconditional and makes no demands onHanoi. These proposals are fundamentallyidentical with McCarthy’s and contrastquite distinctly with Mayor Daley’s blanketendorsement of Johnson’s policies and the ANALYSISgood enough to mention that Clark’s stu¬dent workers walked out when the Bosscame in and re-entered shortly thereafter,after Daley had left at his first opportunityto get out. Nor were we told that more re¬cently in a South Shore meeting Daley’sregulars walked out on Clark in a rageover the disloyal tone of the meeting. Norwere we told about Clark’s desperate short¬age of funds, due to the lack of supportfrom the regular party organization. Norwere we told that regular democratic pre¬cinct captains have often refused to cooper¬ate in handing out Clark literature. And,while it is true that Clark didn’t denounceDaley for the police barbarism at the con¬vention, he didn’t back Daley up to thehilt, as Mr. Barnard alleges, but ratherWe can't wait for saints andmartyrs to woo us into fightingour own battles/farcical Vietnam plank engineered by hisand LBJ’s henchmen in their convention.McCarthy’s and Clark’s serious and real¬istic Vietnam positions seem clearly dis¬tinct from Mr. Humphrey’s fervently scru¬pulous desire not to “force” a coalition gov¬ernment on the Vietnamese and the manystrings attached to his rather inappropriate¬ly named “unconditional bombing halt”proposal and other ludicrous affronts topublic intelligence advanced by other John-son-Daley puppets.Regrettably, in his ardor to discreditClark’s positions on the issues, Mr. Barn¬ard skips over the two most important is¬sues of all: the coordinate issue of blackliberation and the abolition of economic ex¬ploitation of the poor. Mr. Clark endorsesand supports Senator McCarthy’s revolu¬tionary and crucially important new bill ofrights, namely:• the right to an adequate income,• the right to a meaningful job,• the right to decent housing,• the right fo an adequate education, and• the right to good health care.The new rearranging of priorities andthe assumption of complete responsibilityby the affluent society for the eliminationof the injustices of poverty and racism inits midst represented by these revolution¬ary demands offers a glaring contrast tothe hypocrisy and insincerity of the John-son-Humphrey-Daley-Dirksen war on pov¬erty fraud.To lay the issues aside, Mr. Barnard hastold us that Daley was present at a Clarkfund-raising dinner. He was, however, notTHE C UICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechfNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisTimothy S. Kelley, Paula SzewezykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaNews Board: Wendy Glockner, Caroline Heck,Contributing Editor: John MoscowProduction Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,Cameron Pitcairn, Howie Schamest, LeslieStrauss, Bob SwiftFounded in 1892. Published by University ofChicago students on Tuesdays and Fridaysthroughout the regular school year and inter¬mittently throughout the summer, except duringthe tenth week of the academic quarter andduring examination periods. Of fices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0600, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. Agnew! Gesundheit. rode the fence with a statement condemn¬ing intemperate actions on both sides.Admittedly the absence of an open breakbetween Clark and Daley is basically dueto opportunism on both sides. Daley doesn’twant to denounce Clark openly because hewould be violating the sanctity of the holyDemocratic Ticket. Daley’s power rests onthe vast unquestioning masses who votestraight democratic, and to disturb thishappy state of mind is too dangerous agame for Mayor Daley to play with muchrelish. Clark himself can hardly look uponthe prospect of fighting both the Democratsand Republicans all at once with muchglee.In the last analysis, honesty forces us toadmit that William Clark is after all a pol¬itician and not a saint. It is not that he hasno convictions (otherwise why has herisked political oblivion by seriously antag¬onizing Daley and running against Dirksenat the same time?), but rather that poli¬tics is his career and that he has alreadyrisked a great deal more than any Satur¬day canvasser or Chicago student lam¬basting Daley on campus. The point is that,like most everybody, including, we imagine,even most students here, William Clark isnot disposed to martyrdom and cannot andwill not fight the Illinois machine all byhimself.The simple fact of the matter is that wecan’t sit out on the sidelines and pout andwait for the Second Coming; we can’t waitfor saints and martyrs to woo us intofighting our own battles.We must as a constituency show thedepth of our commitment and the maturityof judgment to start at the bottom andgradually clean up this state. Many of ourcampaigns will lack glamor and many ofour candidates may be less than inspiring;not everyone will be a poet. But in the finalanalysis we must be our own strength andour own inspiration, if any reform is everto be lasting, for we can ultimately trustonly ourselves and no single leader. If wehave determination and are organized, thenwe are strong and need no strong man onwhom to rely. All we really need is a de¬cent man who knows where his supportcomes from, and who is responsive. Wil¬liam Clark is such a man, no more, no less.Our real problem does not lie in findingenough Clarks in Illinois politics; enoughsuch responsive men can and will be found. •No, the really interesting question is wheth¬er we as a constituency have the strengthand will to sustain a successful struggleagainst the Daleys of this country. iMr. Dunlap is a member of Students fora Political Alternative.\6 The Chicago Maroon October 11, 1968LETTERSResist!November 14 is a Day of Resistance,when hundreds of young men across theUnited States will send their draft cardsback to the government. So far, three ofus at the University of Chicago have cho¬sen that day to act. We will not ask for oraccept II-S or other deferments or even C.0. status. When we are classified I-A andcalled for induction, we will each sayHELL NO, loudly and publicly.We are committed to changing America.We are against the domination of foreigncountries, a domination that often must bedefended by American troops. We areagainst U.S. aggression in Vietnam, whichthreatens to destroy a people hungry forfreedom and peace. We are against thedraft, which controls so many lives, forcingsome of our brothers to fight in Vietnam,and scaring others into college or certainapproved jobs.The Vietnamese must fight the troopsour government orders over there. Black people must fight for self-determination intheir communities. Migrant farmers mustfight for unions and decent wages. WEmust fight the draft. WE MUST RESIST.We have sympathy for the other struggles,of course, and we want to help those peo¬ples get rid of the causes of their oppres¬sion, but it is crucial to make our ownstruggle against the institution that mostdirectly affects us.The Vietnamese face death. The blacksface economic, psychic, and military op¬pression. The migrant farmers face losingtheir jobs, and having even less money andfood. And we face prison.Yet, resistance is not experienced as awalking into prison. It is a breaking out, aliberation. We feel more enslaved by ourcooperation with the draft, by our failureto live according to our convictions, thanwe will by iron bars.Resistance is an affirmation. We sayNO to killing, NO to war. We say NO tototalitarian pressure, NO to the draft. Thisis part of saying YES to life and YES to freedom. For each of us, the decision toresist means saying YES: I will live thekind of life my heart, mind, and guts tellme I have to live.So that’s a little of what we’re about,and maybe it’s the best we can do whenwe see you as a constituency for a leaflet,and you see us as one more piece of paper.But we’re not a piece of paper, and you’renot a constituency. Each of us is a manwho made a decision about how his life isgoing to interact with today’s most pres¬sing social and political problems, and whodecided to get together with others whoStudents will again have an opportunitythis year to discuss University-relatedproblems with deans at informal, weeklymeetings.The gustatory ombudsmen, ProfessorGeorge Playe, Dean of Undergraduate Stu¬dents, Charles O’Connell, Dean of Students,and Professor Wayne Booth, Dean of theCollege, will hold the meetings at Hutch made similar decisions. Over the past yearat least 3000 men have decided they can’tcooperate with the draft, and October 16,December 4, and April 3 were nation-wideDays of Resistance. November 14 is next.Won’t you join us, brothers?If any of this sounds good to you, let’stalk. Look for us by the omega flag in thequadrangle or at the Hyde Park Anti-DraftUnion in Quaker House, 5615 S. WoodlawnAve. 363-1248.Rob Skeist, 70John Welch, 70Michael Presser, 70Commons Thursday mornings from 11:00am to 12:00 pm. Students may discuss anyaspect of University life about which theyhave complaints with the deans.Dean O’Connell described the weeklymeeting as, “an informal hour in whichany student can come to the Commons andcount on seeing three deans there.”Take a Dean to Lunch, PleasepaRamoum picTURes PResemsa Dino De lauRennis PRODucnon/ jane X FonDaeifeikiiiJOHN PHILLIPLAW MARCELMARCEAUDaVID IIGOHemminGS^ lOGnazzi -^D1N0 DE LAURENTIIS KROGER VADIM ssr.™. •itRRY Vi-1 hi e>, f**"**"s,vmma .< j Msnsnns Productions SAA Franco Italian Co Production ■ Dino De Laurentiis Cinematografica SpAPanavision®Techmcolor®A Paramount Picture jjjpjfcjSEE BARBARELLA DO HER THING STARTINGFRI., OCT. 11. CHICAGO THEATRE. CHICAGOAND SOON AT ATHEATRE IN YOUR AREA!t opWitzie’s Jlower Sk"FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS"1308 EAST 53rd STREET MI 3*4020 ’ ' \"v v.'- / .Sixty of the world’s most thoughtfulscholars and students of the Chinesescene have joined their efforts tocreate this monumental library offacts and reasoned speculations onChina’s past, present, and probablefuture. For scholar, governmentexpert, student, it is an unsurpassedreference work.CHINAIN CRISISEdited by Ping-ti Hoand Tang TsouForeword by Charles U. Daly,Director of the Center for PolicyStudy at the University of Chicago,where the materials on which thesevolumes are based were firstpresented at the inauguralconference.Volume I: CHINA’S HERITAGE ANDTHE COMMUNIST POLITICALSYSTEM (in two books). $20.00Volume II: CHINA’S POLICIES INASIA AND AMERICA’SALTERNATIVES. $10.00CONTRIBUTORSAlexander Eckstein • S. N. Eisenstadt • Ping-ti Ho • Francis L. K. Hsu • Chalmers Johnson• John W. Lewis • Kwang-Ching Liu • Ta-Chung Liu • Frank E. Armbruster • Davis B.Bobrow • Norton Ginsburg • Morton H. Hal-perin • Abraham M. Halpern • Roger Hilsman• Harold C. Hinton • Richard Lowenthal •Ruth T. McVey • Hans J. Morgenthau • DavidMozingo • Uri Ra’anan • Robert A. Scalapino• George E. Taylor • Wayne Wilcox • DonaldZagoria • Franz Schurmann • Benjamin I.Schwartz • Tang Tsou • C. Martin Wilbur •C. K. YangWITH ADDITIONAL COMMENTARY BYDerk Bodde • Jerome Alan Cohen • HerrleeG. Creel • Robert Dernberger • Albert Feuer-werker • C. P. FitzGerald • Herbert Franke •Hsu Dau-lin • Philip Kuhn • James T. C. Liu• Michael Brecher • M. J. Desai • Richard A.Falk • Samuel B. Griffith II • George McT.Kahin • Morton A. Kaplan • Roderick Mac-Farquhar • Vincent D. Taylor • Paul A. Varg• Donald J. Munro • Marius B. Jansen • Mi¬chel Oksenberg • Dwight H. Perkins • StuartR. Schram • Peter Schran • Richard H. Sol¬omon • Anthony M. Tang • S. Y. Teng • EzraF. Vogel • Wang Gungwu • Arthur FrederickWrightAt your bookstore, orfrom the publisherUNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO PRESS5750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637October 11, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 7s-in>4 .44 fnrrni** jir-f »"i i sH *————^—————————I- X - • 'ABOUT THE MIDWAYUniversity ChangesThe University is entering the academicyear with increases both in student enroll¬ment and administrative organization.Chief among the administrative changesis the imminent inauguration of Edward H.Levi as president of the University, suc¬ceeding George Wells Beadle, who isretiring. Levi’s former duties as provosthave been assumed by John T. Wilson, whohas the new title of vice-president and deanof faculties.Changes in the office of the dean of stu¬dents include the appointment of James W.Vice as assistant dean of students and deanof freshmen, a new post, and the appoint¬ment of Tim Scholl as assistant director ofcollege aid.In the divisions and the professionalschools, Peter Dembowski has assumed thepost of dean of students in the division ofthe humanities. The graduate school of bus¬iness will be under the direction this yearof Walter F. Fackler, associate dean ofthe business school, acting in the place of George P. Shultz, dean of the school, whois on leave of absence this year. The Uni¬versity Extension has a new dean, RanLincoln.Public relations has appointed two assist¬ant vice presidents for development andpublic affairs, Eddie N. Williams and Mi¬chael E. Claffey.In the college, two collegiate divisionshave new masters. Arnold W. Ravin suc¬ceeds James W. Moulder as master of thebiology division. Donald Levine, has re¬signed as master of the social sciences di¬vision, and that post is now occupied by Ar-cadius Kahan.In the student body, increases in enroll¬ment took administrators by surprise. Lastyear administrators predicted drops in en¬rollment of 500 students, due to the draft.This year’s University quadrangles enroll¬ment of 8416, however, is 119 more thanwere enrolled on the quadrangles last yearat this time.The greatest change in student enrollmenttook place in the business school. The grad¬uate school of business, which had pre¬dicted the sharpest drop in students, has 103 students more than last year.Total enrollment for the professionalschools this year is 2561. Total enrollmentfor the divisions is 3280, down 77 studentsfrom last year. Enrollment in the Collegethis year is 2575.RevitalizationRevitilization, a relatively new studentorganization on campus, has announcedplans for a series of local and big nameconcerts, speakers and dances to be heldthis year on campus.According to Mitchell Pines, chairmanof Revitilization, talent shows, paint-ins,and poetry readings ae also beingplanned.Plans for entertainment include concertsby both Second City Review and MartinYarborough, a Chicago folk singer. Revi¬tilization also feels confident that they willbe able to hold concerts by both Phil Ochsand Country Joe and the Fish.Dances in Ida Noyes once a week are be¬ing planned by The Committee, a subcom¬mittee of Revitilization. According to a member of the Committee, the dances arebeing held in order to bring studentstogether as dormitories have done in thepast.Revitilization was formed last April byconcerned students who wanted to bringbig-name entertainment to campus. Ac¬cording to Pines, the original goal of theorganization was “to get people excitedabout what was happening on campus. Wewanted to get 1000 UC students at the sameplace at the same time.’’Philosophy VisitorDistinguished French philosopher PaulRicoeur has been appointed the John Nu-veen Visiting Professor of Philosophyof Religion for the autumn quarter in thedivinity school and deparmtent ofphilosophy.Ricoeur is a professor of philosophy atthe Sorbonne and has an international rep¬utation as a humanistic scholar andteacher. He is the author of several worksin philosophy and the phenomenologicalmovement as well as numerous articlesand contributions to books and journals.Friends! Seniors! Sheepskin chasers! Lend an ear to arewarding career in menswear marketing, merchandising, engi¬neering at Van Heusen! For full information, send your name andaddress to: College Grad Department, The Van Heusen Company,417 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10016.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-911- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’sFREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsWhen you come on in aVan Heusen shirt...the rest come ofTlikea bunch of stiffs.124 SPORTS SPIDER...$3,181 p.o.e. New YorkFIRST PRIZE:Fiat 124 Sports SpiderSECOND & THIRD PRIZE:All expense paid trip to aspring auto showFOURTH & FIFTH PRIZE:$100.00PLUS: $50.©0 for each state winnerHOW TO WINThe Fiat Safe-Driving Essay Competitionwill be based on essays of 100 to 200 words,detailing a personal experience in the life ofthe entrant in which one or more safe-drivinghabits prevented or minimized an accident.Entrants must be matriculating students atan accredited college or university In addi¬tion to the safe-driving essay, they must fillout and include the entry blank right. En¬tries will be accepted if they are postmarkedbetween October 1 and December 10 of 1968. RULES AND REGULATIONSEntries will be judged on the basis of theirpertinence to the development of safe-drivinghabits, originality and clarity. The judge* willbe a selected panel of automotive leadersDecisions of the judges will be final.50 finalists will be selected from the 50states. Each state winner will receive a $50cash prize National winners will be selectedfrom among the finalists. State winners willbe announced at the end of December 1968,and national winners at the end of January1969. State and national winners will be notifiedwithin a few oays of their selection and win¬ners' names will be published and posted atFiat dealer showrooms.All entries become the property of the FiatMotor Company, and will not be returned tothe entrants. The competition is void whereprohibited by law. All Federal, State andlocal regulations apply. Employees of FiatMotor Co are not eligibleAdditional blanks available at Fiat Show¬roomsDetach coupon and mail, with your essay to:THE FIAT SAFE-DRIVING ESSAY COMPETITIONFIFTH FLOOR - 598 MADISON AVENUE • NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10022HOME ADDRESS. ..AGE.ENTER THE FIATSAFE-DRIVING ESSAY COMPETITIOFOR COLLEGE STUDENTS.Now from Van Heusen ... the scent of adventure ...Passport 360 . . . the first to last and last and last!t8 The Chicago Maroon October 11, 1968O'Dwyer Draws Wide-Spread Student SupportThe New ork s< natorial candidacy ofPaul O’Dwyer, who endorsed EugeneMcCarthy for the Democratic nom¬ination and now refuses to support Hum¬phrey, has attracted large-scale studentactivity in New York and considerable in¬terest on this campus.Mike Fowler of Students for a PoliticalContinued from Page Twothis flame six or seven more were burnedand by the end of the evening, at leastthirty cards had been destroyed.It was hoped in the interest of expedi¬ency and political effectiveness that thetrial would be over by Thursday afternoonor early Friday. Most of the people in¬volved consider the verdict a foregone con¬clusion, and there is some speculationabout a directed verdict. In allowing the Alternative, (SPA), the organization whichsent students from here to campaign forMcCarthy in Wisconsin, Indiana, and Ne¬braska, estimates that there are approxi¬mately 500 registered New York voters onthe University campus, many of whomwould be interested in obtaining informa¬tion on how to cast absentee ballots forpresence of a jury it had been the intentof the defense to give some opportunityfor legal ambiguity in this matter. Therewas some feeling that on the appeal toeach member of the jury about being “theconscience of the community”, one mightbe persuaded that the case was not cutand dried. A “hung jury” could mean theend of any false sense of security stillexisting among those who work for theSelective Service System. O’Dwyer. In addition to providing this in¬formation and distributing O’Dwyer but¬tons and literature, SPA plans to conductO’Dwyer fund-raising activities, possiblyincluding one or two parties for studentssympathetic to O’Dwyer and to the pre¬convention McCarthy student movement.Expect 15,000 StudentsJeff Brand and Paul Nussbaum, co-chair¬men of the Young Citizens for O’Dwyerorganization in New York, are hoping that15,000 students from outside the state willcharter buses and come to work during thefour weekends remaining before the elec¬tion. According to Fowler, students herewho are interested in going to New Yorkover a weekend to join the campaignshould contact SPA in the basement ofChapel House at 5810 Woodlawn (Ext 3579).Whether or not rides are organized, andthe scale of O’Dwyer activities in general,will depend largely upon student interest.Brand and Nussbaum have already re¬ cruited more than 6,000 students from 60colleges and universities in New York stateto stuff envelopes, canvass, and do othercampaign work in the state. They hope toultimately generate the kind of studententhusiasm which was aroused by the cam¬paigns of Eugene McCarthy and RobertKennedy during the Democratic primariesthis spring, and their major specific goalis a doorbell-ringing campaign involving25,000 student man-hours this month.It was at a rally in O’Dwyer’s behalfthat McCarthy broke his long post-Conven-tion silence Tuesday with the statementthat he will not be able to support Hu¬bert Humphrey’s Presidential candidacy ifthe Vice President’s position on Vietnamremains the same.O’Dwyer, whose surprise victory in theNew York primary June 18 was regardedas a significant show of strength for theMcCarthy forces, faces a difficult electioncontest November 5 against RepublicanSenator Jacob Javits.Guilty Verdict AssumedHow to tap a keg(and tie into the best reason in the world to drink beer)IPick up a half-barrel of Bud®(good for about 245 12-ounce cups. . . with foam) and the tapping equip¬ment on the day of the party. Justse<. iic beer in a tub of ice to keepit coid. 2 Just before the party begins, tapyour beer. First, make sure thebeer faucet is closed (you wouldn’twant to waste a drop of BeechwoodAged Bud!). Then, insert the faucet-and-pump unit into the upper valveof the keg, give it a quarter turnclockwise, and lock it in place bytightening the lower wing nut.O^ Next, insert the lager tapin the lower valve of thekeg and give it a quarter turn.Now, set the keg upright in atub and pack ice around it.4 You’re now ready to drawbeer. Pump pressure to theproper point for good draw,usually about 15 lbs. That’s allthere is to it, but there’s no ruleagainst sampling just to makesure everything is perfect.Ahhhhh! It’s no wonder you’llfind more taverns with thefamous “Bud on Draught” signthan any other!Budweiser.ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON • COLUMBUS Fri., Sat. & Sun. atCAFE ENRICO1411 E. 53rdOLIVERThe Ballad ManHY 3-5300 for reservations50 cents coverforeign car hospitalservice5424 kimbark ave. mi 3-3113LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 COTTAGE GROVE AVENUE955-4545\V>\ c ><irvPizzaHY 3-8282Italian 8c AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry-Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount1540 E. 55th ST. MI3-75I I *October 11, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 9-The Yellow-Billed Wortipickerdoesn’t write words.It helps you remember them.The Stfipto Wordpicker is a marking penthat pinpoints names, gleans words, andhighlights them all in bright yellow. You don’tuse it to write down the words you have toremember. You use it to write over them.The Yellow-Billed Wordpicker.It reminds you how smart you should be.And for 49c, you shouldn’t have to bereminded to buy one.SEMINARS Sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Council atthe University of ChicagoFALL QUARTERI. CHRISTIAN HUMANISMAn exploration of the meaning of technology for the life ofman and culture, the phenomenism of racism in institutionalmanifestations, and tne problem of pluralism and dissentwithin the framework of the American Dream.Leader: E. Spencer Parsons, Dean, Rockefeller MemorialChapelFirst Meeting: Monday, October 14 Chapel House(library)4:30 P.M. 5810 S. WoodlawnII. LEGAL JUSTICE AND THE POORAn examination of the religious, moral, and political dimen.sion of the law as it relates to justice for the poor. Repres¬entatives of the legal profession and community organiz¬ations will participate in the seminar.Convenor: Philip M. Dripps, Methodist ChaplainFirst Meeting: Tuesday, October 15 Chapel House (library)4:30 P.M. 5810 S. WoodlawnEach Seminar will meet once a week for six consecutive weeks.Open to all members of the university community.Reflections on what’s happening under 30:Europe and Americanew POLICTICS Oct. 13new SEX Oct. 20new STYLE Oct. 27new ASCETICISM Nov. 3I I A.M. Hyde Park United Methodist ChurchFifty- fourth and Blacksone for the University manOUR GOOD-LOOKING BLAZERSAND ODD TROUSERSDouble-breasted blazer oj wool cheviotin a steep twill weave with waist suppression,deep side vents and brass buttons in anew warm tobacco shade, navy or tan, $75Our classic single-breasted woolflannel blazers, $65Our wide wale cotton corduroy blazer indeerskin or olive, $55Odd Trousers in a patterned woolcheviot, $29.50; solid colors, $25;cotton corduroy, $ 16.50; others, jrom $ 11ISTAtllSHiD Itll( ('.• o£®Tm1J|@%03$ens ?r8ogs furnishings.3HIats vVj§hocs'4 E. MADISON ST., NR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. 60602NKW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURoll • ATLANTAS\N FRANCISCO • I .OS ANGtl.hS(VOLVO)Volvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.The best reason for buying a Volvo is because it lasts so long.Exactly how long we don’t guarantee. Hot we do know that over95'1 of all the Volvos registered in the United States in the last11 years are still on the road.The hest reason for huying a Volvo now, is localise we havea few in stock. And frankly, we don’t expect to have themaround too long.Which brings up an interesting paradox about Volvos. Ourcustomers like to buy them because they last. Welike to sellthem because they don’t.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-3800The Chicago Maroon Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856October 11, 1968 %Playtex invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent... it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind...the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45 r! more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. So the chance of a mishapis almost zero!Why live in the past? plltyTCX*elf Jiiftifttift*tamponsTheReynolds ClubBarbershop5 barbers-no waitingin the Reynolds Club Base¬ment hand by the StudentCo-Op ANDERSON’SBULKO{1UWSERVICE STATIONHIGHEST QUALITY gasolineat lowest pricesFEATURING THEBULKO PANTRYA complete Grocery StoreOPEN 24 HOURS57th & COTTAGE GROVEHELP KEEP OURSTREETS BEAUTIFUL>rrr\MAKE YOURimports, inc. NEXT CARbi ba of Georgetown U.African & Indian clothesbedspreads — sandals, etc. 2235 S. MICHIGAN326-2550 DAW!22 East Elr 10% discount SUBSCRIBE NOW!MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES- For University students,faculty,'and staff: 50 cents perline 40 cents per repeat line.For' non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 28 charactersand spaces per line.to PLACE AD: Come or mailwith payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over thephone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BE,N BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUSTBE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO3:30 P.M. DAILYFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0300, Ext. 3266.MUSICBASS PLAYER needed for rockgroup. 955-2532.DePaul U.'s Electronic Music Stu¬dio has an informal offshoot. Wantto join? WA 5-8809 ask for Therese.AUDITIONS: Chicago pop musicmanagement company holding audi¬tions. Talented singers, vocalgroups, bands call AN 3-1671 —Peter Shelton 10:30-5 (M-F).CHARTER FLIGHTSAnyone interested in a Christmascharter flight to Europe call Ext.3272, 1-5 weekdays. Call before Oct.16. ,FOR SALE67 BSA LIGHTNING 650. Low miles.Helmets. Ml 3-4578.TYPEWRITER. Adler J-4, 1 yr.old, excellent condition, portable.$70. 324-8339 after 5.AUSTIN HEALY '55 convt.-wirewheels, radio, gd. cond. $675 oroffer. 487-6212.intelligent, affable, male MONKEYplus two room cage $25. 375-9034.7 AUTIFUL SOUND 12-string gui¬tar. Brand new with hard case$100. 684-5722.Drapes, bdsprds, dishes, stainlesspots & pans. SO 8-0029very warm brown and white realmink coat. $45. 324-3558.Save on RECORDS. Get any recordat discounted prices. For example,the new Butterfield Album onlyS2.90. Sanford Rockowitz, 5400 S.Greenwood Ave. Apt. 39. 288-4204.Beige wool rug. 684-7927.STUDENT CO-OPOpen Saturdays too?You’d better believe it.12-6Reynolds ClubPool Hall AnnexWe sell no bras—nrrrSHURE M3D Cartridges: $8.88$49.95 Columbia Cassette Record¬ers: $30.$30 Panasonic FM-AM ACRadio: $20.AR Turntables (Demo's): $58.Used Ampex Stereo Deck: $75Used McIntosh Mono Preamp: $22.TRADES INVITEDSchwartz Bros. Hi-Fi, 1215 E. 63rd.FA 4-8400NIKKORMAT FTN f/2. PL 2-9708.PIANO LESSONSLarry Mendes, Ml 3-6000, Rm 125— Dodd. 1005 E. 60th. Recommended11 by George Haddad, Prof. Ohio State«i University.SERVICESTerm Papers, Theses Typed. IBMat Elec- 40c/page. Mrs. Cohen 338-5242Jo* evenings.May | do your typing? 363-1104.Boutique Dressmaking. Alterations.667-7255.JOBSSTUDENT WIFE, mother of pre¬school children, wanted to care fo:our 2+yr. old boy in her home.M-F 8:30-4:30. 493-2248 after 5only.3 ■ Writer looking for editorial assfPart-time. 374-2172.Excellent Youth Leadership posi¬tions afterns., evgs, and Sundays,call Chicago Masada, Youth Group,^e Zionist Organ, of ChicagoWANTEDI HONDA S-90, pref. 1965 any condi-|hon. Need parts. Sanford Rocko-\WltZ, 288-4204.KUTOR wanted for Akkadian lesIsons. 487-6212.[Have carT need job. Nick KE 8- Fem. Std. wants apt. in Hyde Parkwith 1 or more girls. Heide after7 P.M. SU 7-4660 Apt. 17J.GIRL needed to share apt. 58thBlackstone. 324-2445.FOR RENTRoom for girl. 3rd fl. of prvt.home. $40 month. MU 4-5076, 5-9P.M. or weekends.PRIVATE, inexpensive rooms. WithMeals. At 56th and Woodiawn (NEcorner). Stop by or call PL 2-9704or HY 3-7102.SUBLET. Furn. charming hse onBlackstone, 3 dbr. and study, 2bth. fireplaces, to respon. Refs.About Nov. 15, 9 mo to 1 yr. $300mo. PL 2-0505.PERSONALSExperimental Dance Workshop. 1stclasses Mon 3, 4:15, Ida NoyesTheatre.The steam plant heard it was go¬ing to be cold next month, so theydecided Ida Noyes Hall shouldstore up some heat.TURN DOWN THE DAMN HEAT.INH.Peace talks at Brent House. Dis¬cussion of current action 7:30Sunday. Come at 6 for a good,cheap meal.Serving grog with a liberal hand—The Bandersnatch.Join Folklore Society. Cobb CoffeeShop 7 to 10 P. M. Monday.Man can bear little reality; heprefers fo live inside the screenswhich protect him from its on¬slaught.Gendlin (our sponsor) says: re¬late! Small groups club. Beecher1st floor. Mon. 7:00.HELP THE BLUE GARGOYLE.If you sing, play an instrument,wiggle your ears, etc., perform atthe Gargoyle. Drop in or call 9247636.I dropped into Efen.di the othernight after fhe show. Had the fin¬est baklava ever. They don't usehoney, but their own syrup. Out ofsight Turkish coffee.WHO IS DAGNY TAGGART? 12131.RUSSIAN taught by native teacher,Rapid method. Free trial lesson.CE 6-1423, 9-5.I forgot to mention that the atmos¬phere at the Efendi is the mostrelaxing in Hyde Park. Ask thebar tender what his uncle usedto smoke in the three-foot pipeshanging above the bar.Peace at any price. 75c BrentHouse.There's plenty of housing spaceinside the Stagg Field track.All you need is pep to be a U ofC cheerleader. Join us at tryouts.10/15 INH Dance Room 7 P. M.That the early Christians, nour¬ished in the same apocalyptic andmillenial tradition as Jesus, be¬lieved that he would return shortlyfrom heaven and establish the per¬fect kingdom on earth in their ownlifetimes is unquestionable. Yef bythe fourth century the church, nowestablished and successful, its lead¬ers enjoying the good things ofthis earth, began its efforts tocontrol the millenial dream and toexpel paradise from time.YOGA—meditate, relax. Hatha. SriNerode: DO 3-0155.QUOTE WITHOUT COMMENT BUTNOT WITHOUT SARCASM:"The Maroon is the student news¬paper of fhe University . . . Sinceits founding in 1892 it has been theprimary medium for communicationof news and opinion on the Quad-ranges. The Maroon is written andedited entirely by students: thereare no faculty advisers or Univer¬sity control. The paper tries topresent an objective account andanalysis of news and trends atthe University." 1968 Student Hand¬book.This Saf., Ocf. 12, 9 P. M. 5747University. They have returned.Writer's Workshop—PL 2-8377.They roused him with muffins—they roused him with ice—theyroused him with mustard andcress ... at the B.S.?Tired of a handful of grease? Trya taste of Italy—The Medici.Yes! The U. of C. does have cheer¬leaders. Come to tryouts 10/15 INHDance Room 7 P. M.Any student interested in smallseminar on Machine Politics con¬tact Barbara, 955-5036. Likewisefaculty to teach.Ric Masten, Big Sur poet and song¬writer, does his thing at the BlueGargoyle, Sat., Oct. 12 at 9 P. M.Joel looks like a what?!Yellow pin? M's call George. 288-0162, noon-midnite. Urgent.Joy is deeper than sorrow. Art and not religion, then, is thesource of value; and the artist—not the priest, not the metaphysi¬cian—introduces value into theworld.The Ecumenical Institute's RSIwill be given at Hyde Park Meth¬odist Oct. 18-20; for information:Ml 3-4395.Where did you say you could getswordfish on a sword in HydePark for less than six dollars?EFENDI.Right across from Eugene canyonwhere all visitors agreehe stood and cried for Texasevery weekend,while senators and congressmensuddenly conferredstraight info the arms of a mannamed Northcote Williams.Forbid the passing strangerall residents imploredfor he is gun and whipand we all know murder.The season of the strangerwas a line of november rainand his lady broke her heartinto triangles.Forbid me cried the strangerfor my hand is so unsurebut I've grown a hundred pocketsjust for weeping.McgiveneyLunch at the Medici starting Mon.Oct. 14.Listen to tapes from past festivalsCobb Basement, Mon. 7 to 10 P.M.Folklore Society.Be in a T-Group? Sensitivity train¬ing? Marathon? Beecher 1st FloorMon. 7 P. M.The Knights of Soul return. Sat.Oct. 12, 9:00 P. M. 5747 University.Songs and poetry at the BfueGargoyle, Oct. 12, 9:00.Young male model wants to donude posing for photographer orartist. If you would like to seeme for $2.00 per hour leave yournumber in the men's room INHbasement.Daley supports Mikva supportsHumphrey supports Mikva supportsDaley. Help elect Tom Ireland toCongress. Young Republicans 493-7521.Goodies! Culinary and theatrical.Blackfriars welcomes old and newmembers—writers, actors, compo¬sers, singers, musicians, dancers,acrobats, et al. Tuesday, Oct. 15, IdaNoyes Library, 3:30—5:00. Discus¬sion of Fall and Spring Productionsinterspersed with high socializing.Hear reminiscences of past glories!Plan strategy for future triumphs.Come one! Come all! You'll have!a Boxl 10/15, INH, 3:30.Redbeard gives the Medici Will the Catonsville Nine win theseries? Brent House.Jablonski: this is God. Put thatgoddamn Frisbee down.Where's Brent House?He Snurrfled by Bull Frog Lake.You've got your head so far upyour ass your Q-tips are brown.Charter a blimp from Marco Polo.Wolf, wolf, wolf, wolf."In my Own Dream," the newButterfield album, only $2.90. Otherrecords similarly discounted. San¬ford Rockowitz 288-4204.Ahmad's is above the star system.We are but the shadows of stillmore shadowy things.RIC MASTEN, poet-songwriter ofBig Sur, singing his own songsand accompanying himself on theguitar. BLUE GARGOYLE (Disci¬ples Church) 5655 Unlv. Sat., Oct.12, 9 P.M. Also at First UnitarianChurch, 57th & Woodiawn, in"Twelve String Sermons" Sun.morning, Oct. 13, at 10:30.Canvass for Bill Clark for SenatorSun. Oct. 13, 11:30 A.M. ChapelHouse 5810 Woodiawn. Bring cars.Return 4:30 P.M. (SPA).DANCE TONIGHT—if you like mu¬sic, women, song or wine, notnecessarily In that order, INH 8:30.WANTED, person who needs mail¬ing address. Cost negotiable. Call493-8631.Multiply two times eight-and-half.What did you get? Okay, now mul¬tiply eight times two-and-a-half.Did you get the same result?You're as stupid as I am.His eyes filled with unconscioustears, he dreams of scaffolds,smoking his hookah. You know him,reader, you know this sensitivemonster—hypocritical reader, mytwin, my brother. He is myself.He is you.—Baudelaire.WANTEDPEOPLE—to sing, play music, act,read poetry, hand your paintingsor photographs, or other-iwe per¬form or exhibit at the BLUE GAR¬GOYLE.be trapped by Hyde Park’sfirst and finest BoutiqueTHE MOUSE TRAPjewelry, hip clothing, craftswe custom-make clothes atincredibly reasonable prices1453 E. Hyde Park Blvd.363-9215 The profoundest satisfaction of thehuman mind, Nietzsche concluded,is the creation of the world—outof nothingness. From that act ofcreation emerges the sense of val¬ue; and the sense of order, thesense of meaning, and th sense ofidentity are but our instrumentsfor that act. Joy is deeper thansorrow. CREATIVE WORKSHOPRight here in the Maroon ClassifiedAds. Bring your creation to us, andyou too can be published, have yourname in print. That's right, yourname in print. We'll rent you thespace at our cost. Room 304, IdaNoyes Hall.IS SEXTHE BEFORE AND AFTERTHOUGH OF LOVE ? ORIS LOVETHE BEFORE AND AFTERTHOUGHT OF SEX ? ORIS FEELINGTHE BEFORE AND AFTERTHOUGH OF ALLyp-=ooThe Eberhard Faber TR35 porous-point penwon’t dry up even when uncappedfor weeks. Yet ink dries instantly on paper.Thanks to our Perma-Moist™ Point.You get pressure-free writing action tothe last ink drop. Black, blue, red, green,yellow, orange, brown, purple.69<TM Reg U S Pet Off and Other Countries\ WILKES BARRE. PA. • NEW YORK • CANADA • GERMANY • VENEZUELA • COLOMBIAsongs and satire by c—THE GRIMM BROTHERSFriday & Saturday, Oct. II, 12 9 P.M. to 1 u/ iHARPER THEATERCOFFEE HOUSE y \y5238 S. HARPEROctober 11, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 11HYDE PARK FEDERAL SAYINGS is celebratingNEWCOMERS MONTH just for you!Stop by HYDE PARK FEDERAL SAVINGS say “Hello”and pick up these wonderful “WELCOME GIFTS’"• Your own savings account at HYDE PARK FEDERALSAVINGS with the first dollar deposited for you.• Six month’s free subscription to theHyde Park Herald• Your Newcomers guide full of maps, announcements,everything to acquaint you with your community\HYDE PARKFEDERAL SAYINGS1508 E. 55th St. In the Hyde Park Shopping Center 955-4444HOURS: Mon., Tues. 9-4:30 Closed Wed. Thurs.,Fri.,9-6 Sal 9-1The Chicago Maroon October 11 r 1960 bftr PKfNi'H rifls^ . //V * 'AmMTHE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number Three October 11Hasty GrillIf, despite official admonitions, one ventures to walkdown Fifty-third Street late at night, he encountersat Kenwood avenue, a brightly lit streetcorner grill,heretofore known as the Hasty. By no means an Estab¬lishment establishment, the soon to be renamed BlackMouth, might lure one through its door by the strains ofsoul music, or the fragrance of grilled onions. Liveliest atnight, the Hasty atmosphere is reputed to fill the belly,open the mind and sooth the soul.This remarkable reputation seems to stem from theclientele, some of whom may at any given hour be strewnin the corners passionately pounding conga drum, noless than from Dan Danner, the proprietor.Dan describes taking over the Hasty as “a Cinderellathing,” done to finance the printing of a poster hedesigned. Wanting to turn the Hasty into a quasi-art-gallery, primarily to exhibit his own paintings, Dan andhis crew quickly transformed the sleazy, sloppy oldHasty into the cleaner grill it is now. %—New York Festival Part Two ]festival Ophul’s work emerged as perhaps the most dif- ter, a reconstructed English one shall finally be shown. 1/% r MM §4 /IV ’ . r . ...... f! i : .1 tl.. TA»o oil ooorc Inn lata for thic fn ho Hnno hnl lilro “Tn*i » 1By T. C. FoxThe Chronicle of Anna Magdelena Bach (Jean-Marie Straub) has been taken seriously both by Sightand Sound and Cahiers du Cinema, a fact that augersill for both these journals since the movie is the oppo¬site of the kind of personal cinema these magazineshave long championed. The film consists of perhaps fortyshots, approximately thirty of which show different musi¬cians playing Bach’s music. Unlike Dreyer, who couldmake supreme simplicity of motion a profound expe¬rience, Staub’s hit and miss composition results invisual boredom. He is especially betrayed here, as in hisearlier Unreconciled, by his camera angles which at thispace become startingly out of place. Staub’s premise,moreover, that Bach being a musican expressed himselfwily through music is ridiculous (after all a man withthat many childern must have expressed himself in atleast one other way.) Were Straub not so mindless Imight have been able to take him more seriously,but all I can conclude is that both the man’s mindand instincts are far from being either, important orcinematic. His cold and unmusical handling of theMunich concert hall is particularly disappointing afterviewing Douglas Sirk’s wonderful use of the samehall in the 1956 Interlude. What saves the film some¬what is that 93 minutes of Bach cannot be boring. Ibelieve if I had closed my eyes some wonderful imagesmight have been evoked.Suzanne SimoninJacques Rivette’s “Suzanne Simonin, La ReligieuseDe Diderot” was banned in France at the insistance ofMadame de Gaulle and created the largest film furorprior to the dismissal of Henri Langlois (which someclaim was the first act of the spring rebellion). The banseems to me to be particularly absurd since it is onlywhen one reads a social or political meaning into thefilm that it becomes disappointing. If the film is aboutanything it is the repression of sexuality, although I amquite content to accept this film as a very beautiful andmoving story of a particular girl Suzanne Simonin(played by Anna Karina). Like “The Immortal Story”and Marcel L’Herbier’s 1927 “L’Argent” (also presentedat this festival), La Religieuse contains that rare com¬bination of superb acting and superb direction of actorsthat go into truly great performances. A yellow tint thatpeople who viewed the film in Europe tell me pervadedthe film has been removed, but even so it is a joy tolook at and even though it lasts 140 minutes it is per¬fectly paced as well. festival, Ophul’s work emerged as perhaps the most dif¬ficult and complex of his films. My first viewing, at theafternoon press screening, left me severely disappointed.It was on the second viewing, when I thought I waswatching only the composition, camera motion, and cut¬ting that the film began to make complete sense. ForOphul’s subject is memory and the process of memoryand the parallels I wished to draw to Alban Berg’s “Lu¬lu,” with its circus metaphor and femme fatale, andJean Renoir’s “French Can-Can” with its conflict oflove and art, proved to be merely superficial resem¬blances which obscured the real subject.Ophul’s memories are very specifically the memo-ris of an older women, a women who includes her pres¬ent age in very past action. Thus when Madine Carolleremembers her childhood Ophuls does not give us a girlwho has some resemblance to M. Carole, rather we haveCarole (much like Joan Fontaine in the earlier “LetterFrom An Unknown Woman”) herself. Unlike Fontaine,Carole is not at all convincing as a teenager. Whatseems a fault is actually a philosophical point thatmakes Lola Montes’ final leap, which can only be de¬scribed as a leap from damnation into hell, all the moretragic.Ophuls’ incredible ability to make each frame, eachaction a statement and not merely a technical point isufliat makes him a great romantic artist and not merelya mouther of romantic cliches. Ophuls tracking shots donot end where one expects them to; instead they createa rhythm that is responsive both to the immediate situa¬tion and character and to the general direction of thefilm. The columns that prevade both the circus of thepresent and the rooms of the past all build quite definite¬ly to the cage in which Lola Montes is left at the film’sconclusion.Rumors of the festival leave hope that the versionof this film, badly re-edited and cut besides, that hasbeen shown in this country will finally be suppressedand that either the original French version or, even bet- It’s all years too late for this to be done, but like “Toni,”it’s better to have a great film here late than to be ableto see it only twice in 13 years.Les BichesSince Claude Chabrol’s Les Biches is being sold asa lesbian film it shall probably reach Chicago in therelatively near future. This is somewhat ironic consider¬ing that lesbianism is the least interesting and perhapseven the least perverse of the sexual relationships whichexist in the film, but then Chabrol has always had to dis¬guise his films in sexual metaphors to make them evenmarginally palatable.I find Les Biches strangely muted and positive. Theworld is still malevolent, but it is perhaps more subtlyso. Rather than attacking the people who live in it, itgently oozes its poison out, granting a somewhat greaterchance of hope. Even after the inevitable murderLola MontesIt would be extremely presumptuous as well as ab¬surd for me to proclaim Lola Montes a masterpiece.That was something done when the film was first shown13 years ago. Certainly the most anticipated film of theJEANNEMOREAU"THE BRIDE „WORE BLACKD'iec»ed byFRANCOISTRUFFAUTCOLOR by DeLuxeTHREE 2424 N. LincolnFullert0"-Halsfed^°ne block east of.Fullerton "El" stop.Tel.; 528-9126FREE PARKING2438-40 N. Hoisted| Student Price $1.50 1 Henderson Films PresentsTHE KNACKRichard LesterSaturday, Oct. 12Cobb Hall 7:30 & 9:30 PRAGUED BY THEESTABLISHMENT?LIBERATE YOURCONSTITUTION WITH ABICYCLE FROM USTURIN BICYCLECO-OPCheapest prices for Fal¬con, Carlton, Raleigh, Gi-tane, Ranger and RobinHood. "Factory trained"mechanics. Used bicyclesspasmodically. Fly-by-nightrentals.Free delivery.2112 N. CLARKLI 9-8863M-F 12:00-8:30SAT. & SUN. 10-8The Magical Mystery Turin Be Practical!BuyUtility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, ‘^Levis,"etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd. St.Sunday at 7 & 9:30Cobb Hall AuditoriumTHESHOPONMAINSTREETSeries Tickets for8 shows now only $3.50Single Admission $1.00 UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTSTHE NATIONALTHEATREOF THE DEAFwithTHE WESTERN WORLD’S FIRSTPROFESSIONAL COMPANY OF DEAF ACTORSA Japanese No Drama,A Program of Poetryand Sheridan’s THE CRITICONE NIGHT ONLY!! MANDEI, HALLTuesday, October 22nd 8:30 p.m.Tickets and Information atUT Office, Reynolds Club, ex 3581-.Tcr-n/!i iit- in f r:ouSH!/■ • .-.‘AHMSTiuU. S THcSTiLZBURGa £a r THerrceOF THcWORLDGocoAic’.n! hcctfo90vt- a , -1 .-. l/Mvi.! O-i ■ ?: >7I i-.kt! Ci n'.rjt iU Michigan Av»,luis bunuel’sVIRIDIANAFriday, Oct. 11, Cobb Hall 7:15 & 9:15, $1. Doc Films PLAyecy’S ALI-NICtlT SHOW3 PERFORMANCES NIGHTLY THRU DAWN FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURETuiiocnavOctober 10lesl.e CoronGIGI muiwuniOctober 17Julie Andrew*TH( AMERICANIZATIONOf EMIIT- FRIDAY October 24Seller* KubnckLOLITA October 31Molloween TreatRASPUTIN AND INI REPTILESOctober 11 October 18 October 25 November 1Jonothon Winter* William Wyler * Michael Came lynn Redgrove Alan Bate*THE IOVED ONE THE COLLECTOR THE WRONG IOX GEORGY GIRLSATURDAYOctober 12 oni unL/H iOctober l« October 26 November 2Stanley Kubrick * Dean Marlm Dual. *y Moore Peter Cook Jome* CoburnDR STRANGELOVE THE AMIUSHERS BEDAZZLED IN LIKE FLINTPLUS 'Tht Playboy Serial'—Every N.ght A New Chopie,- -John Wayne ,n 'The Sign Of The Eogle1204 N DEARBORN • PHONE 944 3434The Grey City Journali t -j > . ... . . _. October 11, 1968*1 r)f'OJyou don’t havemore than a minuteI* IlkMIU IUOG.MmiCxaft SPECIAL PURCHASEThe Great ADC 404Compact Speaker System.Now only$39.95.Here is an achievement in sound never matched before in aspeaker this size...at a price that may never be equaled again.The famous ADC 404 compact that regularly lists for $56 is nowonly $39.95.Thts is the same speaker system that was top-rated by the lead¬ing independent consumer study, and is one of the most talkedabout speakers on the market today.The ADC 404 is the perfect bookshelf speaker system. Its ver¬satility is limitless as it provides you with excellence of sound,matching the capabilities of the most up-to-date amplifiers. Andmost important, it utilizes the same component features found inthe more expensive ADC systems.Its exclusive high flux mylar dome provides wide dispersion. Anda 6 linear travel piston cone offers excellent sound with extremelylow resonance, the ideal power performance play you want from aspeaker system. ’Take advantage of our sale offer today. The ADC 404 at only$39.95, with a five-year warranty on all parts and labor. Blackfriars are searching, searching, searchingWANTED:SCRIPTS FOR THE SPRING 1969BLACKFRIARMUSICAL-COMEDY PRODUCTIONENLIGHTENED AUTHORSIN SEARCH OF COMPOSERSENLIGHTENED COMPOSERSN SEARCH OF AUTHORSOR SUSAN BOSWORTH — x3757DEADLINE FOR SYNOPSIS AND FIRSTCOMPLETED ACT :MONDAY, NOVEMBER| CONTACT ALAN RUDNICK — HY 3-4516SuiipJeas ‘Suitpjgas ‘Suiipjeashad to deal with the mysteries of film laboratories.The film was booked before it had been completed andalthough terribly much awaited there never did seemmuch chance of its actually arriving. That did leave twoother films by Godard, however.Max Ophuls’ “Lola Montes” TOYOTA TEST DRIVE ONE - YOU’LL BE SWITCHEDALL MODELS - IMMEDIATE DELIVERYBOB NELSON MOTORS 7722 Stony Island 374-455548 E. OAK ST. - DE 7*4150 Muiifitafr 2035 W. 95TH STREET 779*6500The most fascinating aspect of the film is the con¬cept of the transference of evil that Chabrol has been de¬veloping recently. A student of Hitchcock, in fact, thefirst man to do a major criticism of Hitchcock’s films,Chabrol has taken the idea of guilt transference andmolded it into a personal concern with the nature andsource of evil. Thus, although the film can be describedin class terms and has many similarities with Losey’sThe Servant, Chabrol’s work merely uses the politicaland psychological aspects to build to a discussion of mo¬rality. A full discussion of this film, especially in thelight of The Champagne Murders, is in order and willappear as soon as the film has its Chicago premier.GodardJean-Luc Godard’s One Plus One starring Anne Wia-zemski and the Rolling Stones never did appear at thefestival, something that was no surprise to anyone who Or gain.We'll give you that guarantee when you buy an Accutron" time¬piece. It'll be accurate to within a minute a month.r An average oftwo seconds a day. Other watches have their own notions about howlong a (fey should last. Sometimes they shorten it to 23 hours and 56minutes. Or make it last longer than the usual 24 hours. Accutrondoesn't believe in making time. Or losing it. Just keeping it.ACCUTRON5* by BULOVA It goes hm m m-m.[OFERTE^EatcjMcvMlStudent discount1422 East 53rd St. Phone: 363-0161One of them, Two or Three Things I Know AboutHer had previously been shown at the Museum of Mod¬ern Art without the addition of English subtitles. Madesimultaneously with Made in USA, the film is nearly asbad. Two or Three Things is an attempt at a sociologi¬cal essay and is (incredibly enough for Godard) alwaysentirely without a soul. Whenever the film becomes ex¬tremely promising, such as the now famous shot of theblack screen, Godard drops the abstract image for ainterior of a coffee cup in cinemascope ration or thegradual glowing and dying of a cigarette in an otherwisemuch less interesting neo-Witgenstein dialogue. Subtitlesproved much more detrimental than helpful since Go¬dard’s language here is rather free from slang and cer¬tainly easy to comprehend while the titles obscure therare beautiful images he at times creates.The other Godard, Weekend, described as a filmsalvaged from the scrapheap is an astounding work thatI found grotesquely humourous, brutal, literally incredi¬ble, and oddly boring. The boredom appears to be oneof the devices Godard uses to make his emotional im¬pact in this study of highway accidents and cannibalism,and the fault certainly lies in me and not in Godard.(“someone is always killed in my films, I don’t likeviolence, I don’t think it’s a solution, but my charactersalways need to express their repressed violence; per¬haps it’s a way of working my own out”), the final shot,a man wallking into a house bathed in blue light, sug¬gests a finality that in Chabrol must be considered pos¬itive. Certainly it is far better than the equally powerfulfinal shot of The Champagne Murders, which leavesthree people struggling for a gun on the red floor of afalling room dislocated in space and time. (Chabrol isthe only director I know of who has worked out a colorscheme that is consistent throughout his work so thateach color begins to convey a moral and philosophicalmeaning as soon as it appears in the frame.) ACCUTRON“425" Water¬proof,' sweepsecond hand,applied romannumeral dial6135.00A scene from Godard’s “Weekend”October 11, 1968 The Grey City JournalMusicNOW THAT THE bel canto fad of the early sixties isdying out, it has become fashionable once again to deni¬grate the Bellini-Donizetti-Rossini triad. Even Norma,which has always kept up its respectability, has comein for some abuse. Its current production by the ChicagoLyric Opera has occasioned at least one outburst by alocal critic, to the effect that while Norma may be O.K.for opera buffs, real music lovers had best stay away.This is an old canard, but like many popular/fashionblemisconceptions, it has some truth to it: the strong pointof the music is its wealth of unabashed melody and thereis nothing particulary complicated about the score;there are certain rythmic devices which are used overand over again.Yet Norma is immeasurably superior to Bellini’sother operas and, I would say, to those of his contempo¬raries. Part of the explanation lies, believe it or not, inthe libretto: the situations (the eternal triangle, sacri¬ficing love, etc.) have become cliches, but they are pre¬sented here with a minimum of verbiage and conse¬quently make their points forcefully. Moreover. Bellini’smusic is not only effective in a general way, but is quiteshrewdly tailored to reflect specific situations. Compare,if you will, the type of music written by Donizetti forthe wedding scene of Lucia di Lammermoor with Bel¬lini’s handling of any of the big scenes in Norma.Musically, Lucia is not a jot inferior, but the emotionalburden of the situations is more poignantly character¬ized in Norma. In the theater it can add up to an excit¬ing evening, and as for the musical side of things—well,I recall that both Wagner and Chopin had some respect¬ful things to say about Norma. Of course, if you aren’tashamed of liking “unabashed melody”, no apologies arein order.The Lyric Opera production is, all things considered,quite a good one. Most of the singing is of a high calibre,but I cannot escape the suspicion that the “up” feelingpervading Monday night’s performance stemmed fromNino Sanzogno’s conducting. The orchestra (not surpris¬ingly) sounded more at home with this music than it didlast week in Salome—indeed, its playing was quite dis¬tinguished — and Maestro Sanzogno’s straightforwardbeat kept the music moving at a nice clip. A bit moredash would not have been amiss in spots — “Vanne, si,mi lascia indegno!” lacked the needed savage impulse — and the balances occasionally seemed odd. Why, forexample, was the bassoon punctuation stressed Glaring thffinal scene? It only broke up the flow of the music.Undeniably, however, this Norma was in experiencedhands.La Scala’s scenery borrowed by the Lyric Opera,compels division of the opera into four acts — an un¬fortunate practice because the middle two are very shortand the intermissions run twenty minutes at a stretch.Monday evening’s partial power failure prohibited prop¬er evaluation of the sets until mid-performance. Thefinal scene, using the full depth of the Lyric’s stage, ismost impressive, the lighting, declining into a fierysunset as the act progresses, is especially apt. Othereffects, however, jarred: the exterior of Norma’s dwell¬ing looks like Stonehenge or the Grand Canyon, and thebackdrop of the Druid village in Act IV is downrightugly. A more serious complaint is that Luciana Novaro’sstaging does nothing to minimize the shortcomings oftraditional “step-to-the-footlights-and-cut-loose” operaticacting. Only Fiorenza Cossotto and, intermittently, ElenaSuliotis even attempt to act; and while the statuesqueapproach could conceivably work in this production withits (quite well handled) masses of Druids, warriors andpriestesses, the stars at least should be prevailed uponto stand out from their stylized surroundings.The role of Norma is among the most difficult in allof opera. Lili Lehmann once described it as more chal¬lenging than all three Brunhildes and this applies onlyto the vocal requirements — a hefty dramatic sopranoable to trill and to achieve lightness for the coloraturapassages. Moreover, the artist must be young, beautiful,and an actress of burning intensity. Understandably,Normas of international stature come about once everygeneration. The Champeen Normas of the ‘40’s and ‘50’s,Gina Cigna and Maria Callas, were both flawed singersbut possessed steely, authoritative voices and a wealth ofhighly individual approaches to the role. At her finest,the new contender, Elena Suliotis, could give us somevery pleasant evenings as Norma but, as yet, she is justnot major league. The precarious voicing of “Castadiva” Monday night may well have been due to a passingindisposition and, since she improved throughout theevening, there is no reason to think that her insecurity is innate. But even in the latter half of the performance,where she was singing at close to her best, there weredanger signs: her pianissmi remain pallid and unreso¬nant, her high notes white and tending to shrillness —and, besides, a Norma who is outsung by her Adalgisasimply will not do. Interpretively, she has very little tooffer that is more than superficially dramatic — there istemperament aplenty but all of a generalized sort, con¬veyed through heavy application of a rough chest tone.If the weaknesses apparent in her singing Monday nightare not brought under control, she is not likely to besinging Norma for very long. Right now she is generallygood, but not good enough to make one want to see heragain.As has been suggested above, vocal honors arecarried off by Fiorenza Cossotto’s Adalgisa. Her voiceis huge, the only one in the cast that could make itselfheard over the orchestra with power to spare. She sangquite beautifully, too: her dark, contralto-like tone iswelcome in her scenes with Norma. Her Act I scenewith Pollione (gracefully written though it is, it is notone of the score’s high points) was interesting throughthe sheer opulence of her tone. Working apparently onher own, she acted fairly effectively — Lord knows whatshe could do with a better director. Altogether, a splen¬did performance.The men are rather slighted in this opera: at leastPollione has some moderately difficult music to singonce he gets on stage, but Oroveso’s sole function seemsto be to accompany the chorus and to give more hard¬working singers time to spray their throats. Ivo Vincofills this thankless assignment handsomely and the cho¬rus is quite good too. Gianfranco Cecchele's singing ofthe tenor hero/villain is also enjoyable, though he is notcoloratura and other lyrical niceties. In the ensembleshe is drowned out, but elsewhere he makes an agreeablyforthright impression.In sum, despite the unevenness of the cast, I recom¬mend this Norma. So many opera performances descendto the level of mere repetition that the capacity to beconsistently entertaining is not to be scorned. And sinceNorma is heard only infrequently under live conditions,the opportunity to see a good production should not bemissed.William Murnanea collection of brilliant short films by thedirectors of the 60’s (& 70’s)New CinemaGODARDCHRIS MARKERB0R0WCZYKDICK LESTERPOLANSKIBECKETTJORDAN BELSONTRUFFAUTM0GUBGUBAT THE SELLOUT PREMIERE AT LINCOLN CENTER’S PHILHARMONIC HALL THE CRITICS SAID:Arcturus Collect on Re eased by JlAJvA Seen* .from Chris Mark«i"Santa Claus Came 49 Weeks Early" "Extremely Worthwhile" “An Excellent Cross-Section” “Like a Breath of Fresh Air"Judith Crist, world journal tribune cue magazine cbs boston globePROGRAM NO. 2Concert of M Kabal Walerian Borowuyk, PolandAll Boys Are Named Patrick Jean-luc Godard, FranceAi! Yo|l Kuri, JapanAct Without Words Guido Bettiol, FranceActua Tilt lean Herman, FranceDo-It-Yourself Cartooe Kit Bob Godfrey, EnglandThe Games of Angels Walerian Borowczyk, PolandThe Apple George Dunning, EnglandThe Most Richard Ballentino and Gordon Sheppard, Canadan»H motion picture* hovo collectively won almoat every major abort Mm award in tha world, including:Mannheim Festival - Golden Ducat. Venice Film Festival Silver lion of St Mark. FIPR t S C I. (International Film Critics' Association) - 1st Prlie;Oberheusen Festival of the Short Film First Price; Pris Simon Debreuilh (Mannheim Best Shoit film ol the Year's Festivals, Mar del Plata: Bilbao:laiona Festivals: San Francisco film Festival Golden Gate Award, International Experimental film Competition, International Federation ot Cine ClubsPrlre. Tours Festival ol the Short Film Special Jury Prire: London Film Festival Selection, New York Film Festival Selection, Cannes Film Festival -Official French Entry; Official Belgian Entry; Annecy Festival at the Animated Film Special Jury Prlre, Bergamo festival ot Films on Art - Diploma; TriesteFestival ol Science Fiction Films - Grand Prlre, Pflx JEAN VICO french Film Critics' Award. Cracow Festival ot the Short film, Milan - 1st Prire ofInternntioml Technienl Industry ot thd Cinema, Melbourne film Festival - 1st Prite. PROGRAM IIOCTOBER 9 A 10 • $1.50OCTOBER 11 & 12 • $2.006:30 & 9:30LOYOLA UNIVERSITYLAKE SHORE CAMPUS CENTER6525 North Sheridan RoadChicago, Illinois4 The Grey City Journal October 11, 1968FilmsThe Documentary and the RevolutionBy Ken ShermanMIDDLE CLASS AMERICA is inundated by a prolifera¬tion of tax-deductible “worthy” causes. There are Kore¬an orphans to adopt, CARE packages to send, the schoolof your choice to support. This almost ritual sprinklingof Holy Money on charity is useful only as a palliativeto the American Conscience. What is needed now is notwell-meaning financiers, but fiery-eyed revolutionaries.Radical reform is the only hope for a more equitablesocial order.There is one communications medium which holdsthe potential of conveying the need for such reform tomass audiences. This medium is film, specifically thedocumentary. Why the documentary rather than theessay, or the Presidential fireside chat? Because peoplebelieve what they see, and if a film appears to be hon¬est, it can convince its audience. If it is not only honestbut moving, it can mobilize mass audiences to the ac¬tion necessary to correct social abuses. But film hasnot yet realized its potential, (and, I fear, never willdo so) because of two major obstacles.The first is production. To produce a film these dayscosts a great deal of money. The conservative influencemoney has on its possessors diminishes the possibilitythat a truly effective documentary will get the financialbacking it needs. (It would be just the United States’luck that H. L. Hunt would lead the way.) What thiscountry needs is a filmmaker with the aesthetic sense ofConrad Rooks (Chappaqua) and the spirit of a MalcolmX. Until we are blessed with such an unlikely combina¬tion. we will have to make do with what we’ve gotand do our best to ensure the success of movies likeThe War Game, Titicut Follies, and The Face of War.The second (and related) obstacle is distribution.Even if our mythical filmmaker were to produce theideal documentary, it would never be distributed to massaudiences. Judges and politicians are very much con¬cerned with maintaining the status quo. They are goingto permit changes when it suits their own purposes,not when the general welfare demands it. And they wilicertainly not tolerate any hint of the need for revolu¬tionary change in the cinema. When a film threatenstheir position, they will do anything to suppress it. Ourpolitical censorship is not quite as heavy-handed as Rus¬sia’s, but it is almost as effective. A good example ofpolitical censorship on a relatively minor scale is thefate of Titicut Follies. This film was made several yearsago, and has been shown only twice commercially inthe United States. It was banned in Massachusetts, os¬tensibly because it violated the rights of privacy ofmental patients at Massachusetts’s Bridgewater StateHospital for the Criminally Insane. The real reason forits suppression is that it is political dynamite.Massachusetts politicians do not want their electorsto see what conditions are really like in mental insti¬tutions. If people in the state knew what it was like tolive in places like Bridgewater, they would (hopefully)demand costly radical reforms. Massachusetts politicianshave much better things to do with their state’s taxesthan spend them on crazy people. After all. roads haveto be built.To gain some insight into the minds of our politicalcensors, let’s take a closer look at Titicut Follies. Tech¬nically, the film is deplorable. The sound is terrible-much of the dialogue is lost because of the lack of proper Titicut Folliesequipment. There are many skips in the prints avail¬able. The film is grainy. But we forgive. After all, Fred¬erick Wiseman, the producer and director, made themovie with his own small personal finances. And thefilm is good, even excellent.We know that Wiseman isn’t exaggerating. There islittle overt cruelty. No one gets beaten up; no one ismentally tortured. Yet one can sense the prevadinghopelessness in most of the patients. There is no hopebecause no one cares. No one expects the patients toget better. The psychiatrists are more interested inlabelling than in curing, in maintaining their cool thanin getting humanly involved.The movie is effective also because it does notpreach. There is no narrator telling us when we shouldbe shocked. Each scene speaks for itself.There are, to be sure, a few occasions when Wise¬man does editorialize. For example, we see a man being force-fed, with shots of him being prepared for burialinterspersed. But these few editorial comments do not in¬terfere; they complement the stark reality portrayed.As I said, Wiseman does not exaggerate. He doesn’tmake Bridgewater a medieval bedlam. On the contrary,it is evident that Bridgewater is probably one of ourbetter institutions. It is chilling to think that there arehuman beings in mental institutions who are worse offthen those at Bridgewater. (To find out about one ofOregon’s state hospitals, read Ken Kesey’s One FlewOver the Cuckoo’s Nest.)Titicut Follies is effective despite its low budgetEvery now' and then, a socially significant film getsmade with adequate backing Usually this is accidental.Such was the case with Warrendale, an exceptionalCanadian film.The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation commis-Continued on Page EightMENTIONTHEMAROONTAl-SAM-YMtCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU4-I0623 Shows NightlySpecial! 8pm ShowsFri.-Sat—Sun. opento ALL agesReverendGary Davis5 Nights OnlyOct. 16 - 20The Quiet Knight131 I No. WellsOld TownParking next doorphone 944-8755for reservations AlliedProducers,Ltd. FIRSTCHICAGOAPPEARANCE!DAVE BRUBECKTRIOfeaturingGERRY MULLIGANSUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1968 * 3:00 PM * AUDITORIUM THEATRE $6.00, $5.00, $4.00, $3.00TICKETS AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 N. MICHIGAN AVE.,AND ALL MONTGOMERY WARD, MARSHALL FIELD ANDCRAWFORD STORES TO ORDER BY MAiL, SEND A CHECKOR MONEY ORDER TO ALLIED PRODUCERS, LTD., 612N. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ! LLI NOI S 606 1 t. ENCLOSEA SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED ENVELOPE. ‘DAZZLING!-uFEPARAMOUNT PICTURES prr.rnt.A BHE FILMTheFrancoZeffirelliPwdetliw ofRomeo^JULIETNo ordinarylove story....TECHNICOLOR* / A PARAMOUNT PICTUREfOR FEATURE TIMES CALL 944-2966CARNEGIE Car Buffs do it!English featherFor men who want lo be where theaction is. Very racy. Very mascu¬line. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION.$2.50, $4.00, $6 50 From the com¬plete array of ENGLISH LEATHERmen’s toiletries.A PRODUCT Of MEM COMPANY, INC , NORTH VALE, N. J. 07*4/October 11, 1968 Hie Grey City Journal——7—~—^——* mRomeo and Juliet: No Ordinary Love StoryI’VE BEEN TRYING all day to write a dispassionateand intelligent opening for this review, to abstain fromthe general gushing chorus of meaningless praise, butit just cannot be done. Franco Zefferelli’s film produc¬tion of Romeo and Juliet is the kind of experience thatleaves one running out into the street screaming, “It’sso great; it’s just so great!” I hated this play beforelast Wednesday; I didn't like the construction, the lan¬guage, or the characters. I thought that if I never sawanother Romeo and Juliet I would be quite satisfied. Ohboy, was I wrong! And that’s what this movie is allabout.It’s the kids that do it. They’re not just a publicitystunt for Paramount Pictures; they’re the key to Zef¬ferelli’s interpretation that makes this film so far su¬perior to his Old Vic staging of six years ago (certainlythe best stage presentation in recent memory). Whenthe film opens we see these two gangs of rich, degener¬ate kids who have nothing to do but provoke fights be¬tween each other. And then there’s this sixteen-year-oldguy named Romeo who wanders off to the woods, whois thought somewhat queer by his companions, and whoinstinctively knows something's wrong with what’s allaround him. And suddenly he sees this fourteen-year-oldchick. the middle of one of his desperate jests has been re¬tained from the stage production. His being an olderman in a group of boys, however, makes it all muchmore clear and moving, and Romeo’s subsequent en¬raged murder of Tybolt becomes equally clear and in¬evitable. Juliet’s parents are lost bourgeois unable tofind any love or attraction in each other, finding poweronly through the younger members of the clan.Most wonderful is Zefferelli’s concept of Friar Law¬rence, a man who like the protagonists is looking forvalues but is so impotent and afraid that he com¬mits the gravest sins and errors, finally rushing out of atomb screaming terror at what he has brought about.He is, nevertheless, treated with far more compassionthan the prince, who remains aloof throughout, enragedat these subjects who keep throwing dead bodies on hisdoorstep but who is never able to do anything but issuemeaningless commandments.And it just goes on like that. All the conceits geland Franco Zefferelli becomes one of six men who arecapable of totally alerting our view of Shakespeare’splays. (The list is fast becoming one of film directors.Orson Welles has long been filming exclusively; PeterBrook and Peter Hall have recently resigned from the Royal Shakespeare Company and appear to be headedtowards cinema. This leaves only John Hancock andTimothy Meyer working exclusively in theater.)I’m going back to this film again. When I do, I hopeI’ll become coherent enough to talk more intelligentlyabout this production as film. Zefferelli is capable ofsome rather abhorrent cinematic excesses (quick pansof flashing color; men, women, and swords runninginto the camera) as well as some cinematic flashes ofgenius (the use of light throughout, especially duringJuliet’s awakening from the drug to find the world newand beautiful.) The acting is typically English, whichmeans full of style and technique. Nino Rota’s music,like Zefferelli’s conception, is at one highly romanticand very beautiful, certainly his finest score to date.But all this is for a later piece which I do promiseto write. Meauwhile, rush to the Carnegie Theatre (Oakand Rush St.) and pay the exhorbitant fee they are sureto charge. By the time the film reaches general releasethe prints will be in such shape that the magnificentcolor values will be lost. Besides, to be quite honest,you can’t afford to wait to see this movie. It’s just thatgreat.T.C.FoxShe comes on like a doezn girls I’ve seen in subur¬ban high schools who are on the verge of discoveringand using their sexual power. The difference is that thisis 17th-century England (never mind the Verona setting;like all Elizabethans Shakespeare merely transferredhis society to a different time and locale) and Juliet’sjaded, desexed mother is about to marry her off to aslimy bastard named Paris.So Romeo and Juliet becomes the story of two kidswho are forced to find values rather quickly before theyare lost. And they do. The balcony scene, which even inthe midst of my ecstasy over the film I still feared, wasplayed as the discovery of the joyous power of love andsex and managed to leave me in tears. Yes, Romeoand Juliet do silly things and speak stupidly at times,but that just happens to be what kids do.As for the others in the film: the concept of Mecurioas a tragic unsatisfied faggot clown killed by accident in IsabelOVER THE PAST DECADE, French Canada haswitnessed a renaissance in its literature, music, art andfilm. Isabel is the first French Canadian feature, so faras I know, to receive distribution in the U.S. While pre¬senting his ideas with the honesty and subtlety of thegenuine artist, Paul Almond, the director, has neverthe¬less produced a work which should fascinate even themost bourgeois of audiences.Like the Prix Medici novel, Une Saison dans la vied’Emmanuel, the film takes place in rural Quebec alongthe St. Lawrence. Whereas, however, Une Saison de¬scribes the bitterness and poverty of rural winter withilUST OUT! Zolaesque. despairing detail, Almond has handled hisrealism with a lighter touch; indeed, for anyone famili¬ar with rural Quebec, or even perhaps rural America,many of the characters must seem amusingly satiric.In this prosaic setting, Almond tells a story of death,guilt, sexual repression and, finaHy, Isabel’s incipientmadness. In portraying this madness, which seems tobe pparanoic. Almond introduces horror movie appari¬tions, using as well shock cuts and playing on Freudianfears of confinement, though eschewing cliched musicand heavy mood lighting. It seems like a horror movie,thus gratifying the philistine burgher, but is in fact astudy of a distorted anguish, using, as Baudelaire usedPoe, an horrific and hence expressive imagery.Michael AndreMUNCHtheuniversityof Chicagobookstore5802 ellis ave. The Dll-Deiiigq campus& CAREERRlinilllbThe in guide to groom¬ing and grooving for thecollege man-in-the-know and on-the-go.With such features as:■ Your Fall / WinterWardrobe: What’s In.■ Choosing A Career:The Right Job ForYou.■ Gary Beban: Is TheHeisman a Jinx?■ Tips on Shaving, Side¬burns, & Beards.■ Co-Ed Roommates:Extra-Curricular Cam¬pus Capers.■ A Post-Graduate Dis¬course With DustinHoftman.NOW ON SALE FOR $1at newsstands and lead¬ing men’s stores, orsend $1 to: GQ Campus& Career, Dept. N, 488Madison Avenue, N.Y.,N.Y. 10022. WHPK-FM 88.3First o« your dialUniversity of Chicago student-operated radioSATURDAY I22 30 The Flea Market A a verse magazine oi musicaland spoken art5 45 Comprehensive Critic5 SO Campus news and events6 00 More Flea Market, until 2 30 a m. (News at8 and 111SUNDAY 132 30 Conversations at Chicago StaugMon Lynd.Marlene Dmon. Richard Flacks discuss'Student Unrest”3 00 Sunday Soul Session5 45 Comprehensive Critic550 Campus news and events6 00 African Highhfe and Calypso8 00 News -E venmg Report8 10 Sweet Sound of Soft Soul10 00 The OM P0mt (New at If >12 00 Joint SessionMONDAY 147:00 10 30 a.m. Happy Wake-Up Service (News at 8»2 30 Classical Music5 45 Comprehensive Critic5 50 Campus news and events6 00 South Side Soul8 00 News-Even.ng Report8 10 Community Viewpoint900 Jazz11 00 News-Late ReportI • 05 Andy’s Monday BluesTUESOAY IS7.00-10 30 a.m. Happy Wake-Up Service (News at 8i2.30 Classical Mus.c4 00 Mahler. Symphony "I5:45 Comprehensive Critic5 SO Campus news arid eveots6 00 Sooth Side Soul8:00 News-Evening Report8.10 Community Viewpoint: "U.S. Senate— TenCritical Races.”9:00 JazzI i 00 News—Late ReportII 05 Stonehenge Revisited WEDNESDAY i67 00-10 30 a.m. Happy Wake-Up Service iNews a' 82 30 Classical Mus.c5 45 Comprehens. ve Critic5 50 Campus news and events6 00 Soutr Side Soul8 00 News—E vert mg Report8 10 Community Viewpo>nt--Phorte*ln9 00 Jazz Mann• I 00 News-Late ReportH OS TRUCThursday 177 0010 30 Happy W.we-Up Service (News at 8>2 30 Classical Music2‘45 Comprehensive Critic5 SO Campus news and events6 00 Thursday Soul Session8 00 News-Evening Report8 10 Community Viewpoint9 00 Jazz11 00 News-Late Report1 • C5 The Left ForkFRIDAY i87 00-10 30 Dr. Feelgood’s Happy Sound TherapyClinic .News at 8.2 30 Classical Music5 45 Co«'prehensive Critic5 50 Campus news and events6 00 Southern Funk8 00 News—Evenmg Report8 10 Community Viewpoint900 Jazz11 00 News—Late Report11 05 Late Night FmatCLIP THIS PROGRAM GUIDE AND PASTEYOUR RADIO UNDER ITDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734*6393The Grey City Journal October 11, 1968TheaterA NEW TRANSLATION of Hugo von Hofmannsthal’sThe Salzburg Great Theatre of the World premieredlast week at the Goodman Memorial Great Theatre ofChicago. Hofmannsthal, writing in 1921, borrowed fromCalderon and from still earlier morality plays in theChristian tradition the simple metaphor that the Worlderects a stage on which humans play roles; when theproduction is over the Lord judges how well each player has performed.As the play opens, a play is to be performed forthe entertainment of the Master. A number of super¬human characters are awaiting His commands. He asksWorld to stage the play and Death to act as stagemanager. Adversary (the Devil), without an invitation,tries to divert the course of the action by his prompt¬ing. Six souls appear and are assigned parts. One soulCulture VultureOne morning this week. I happened to be downtownand crossing Dearborn street mid-block, as I steppedup the curb I saw a yellow sign proclaiming in blackletters “Nickelodeon. . .Nickeldeon. . .Ladies Please Re¬move Your Hats.” Curious, I went over to see whatit was.It was a nickelodeon. Right there, in public, pro¬jected from inside the front-window of the CameraExchange, 16 N. Dearborn, back-to-back with a tinySony TV, there was Charlie Chaplin flickering aboutsilently on a screen no more than a foot and a halfsquare. The Garrick Pop Corn Shop right aroundthe comer on Madison (follow your nose) can providegoodies of legendary quality to enhance your viewingpleasure. The movie itself is silent and not convention¬ally accompanied (cf: Yesterdays’ Main Street in theMuseum of Science and Industry) but not quiet: traf¬fic passes, pedestrians hurry by, the subway rumblesdown below and business goes on inside.And everything that happens on the front of thestreet is reflected in panavision and technicolor onthe same glass on whose backside Chaplin performs.In the little w*hile I stood there I saw lawyers makingdeals on their way to lunch, delivery trucks, subwayriders emerging from underground and a cop writinga ticket for an illegally parked car. It all made awonderful montage. Is this street-theatre Chicago-style?FoodThe most exciting recent event in the realm offood and entertainment in Hyde Park is the HarperTheater Coffee House, recently reopened. Already serv¬ing such delicacies as rum, kahlua and port wineparfaits, Greek custard, hot and cold cider, homemadesoups, pastries and bread (really homemade bread),Vala’s ice cream—the coffee house now is open onlyFriday and Saturday evenings from 8:30 till verylate. The new co-managers, Sharon Avery and BemdMetz promise expanded hours, expanded menus too,in the near future. Even open these limited hours,the coffee house—excellent food, pleasant company,perfectly charming early 20th century interior—is awonderful place to have in the neighborhood.The Blue Gargoyle, 5655 University, started its sec¬ond season this week, from noon till late weekdays,from 7 till late Saturdays; on Sunday, its a church.The menu has expanded a little, but the Gargoyle isstill inexpensive, still friendly.The Bandersnatch in Ida Noyes is open again,too, in the evenings. Manager Brad Johnson statesthat he hopes to obtain a juke box and a collectionof old records. So far, though, just WHPK and ringsideviews of the Cloister Club.FilmsTitticut Follies at the Aardvark, 1608 N. Wells.CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganEBERT SUN-Times****“It should win an AcademyAward’’LESNER NEWS“A Treasure”terry tribune“Film is a Smash”MARSTERS AMERICAN“Everyone Should See It”JUDITH CRIST N.B.C.TV TODAY SHOW“I Love This Movie” -r-ft THETlAlOo;Students $l.5(T^ith ID CardGood every day but Saturday Shocking and controversial through the end of nextweek.Viridiana tonight at Doc Films, Quantrell Auditor¬ium, 7:15 and 9:15.The Shop on Main Street Sunday, Quantrose 7:00.I Was a Male War Bride on Tuesday, also inQuantrell, 7:15 and 9:15.Freaks. Another Doc Films favorite. Wednesday.Also Quantrell, also 7:15 and 9:15.Barbary Coast, Doc Films on Thursday. Same times,same station.Revolt: Films of Revolution on Four Continents,four films, Inside North Vietnam, Huey: the Story oftthe Black Panther Party; West Africa—Another Viet¬nam- and End of a Revolution? Three Penny Cinema,2424 North Lincoln. Friday and Saturday.Salzburg Great Theatre of the World at GoodmanTheatre. 8:30 Fridays and Saturdays, 7:30 other nightsexcept Monday, matinee Thursday 2:00. Fridays andSaturdays $4.00, other times $3.50.The Crossword Man. Just opened at Hull HousePlaywrights’ Center, 222 W. North Ave. Fridays and Sat¬urdays, 8:30, $2.00.The Indian Wants the Bronx and It’s Calledthe Sugar Plum. Both by Israel Horofitz. At JaneAddams Theater, 3212 N. Broadway; Friday and Satur¬day, 8:30, 7:30 Sunday.The Skin of our Teeth. Presented by the TeenageActing Workshop, at Jane Addams 3212 N. Broadway.Saturday afternoon, 1:30.MusicSalome. Last performance this season. Lyric Opera.20 N. Wacker, 8:30 tomorrow night.Continued on Page EightSend aSUBHOME rCOMFORTfor CONTACTLENS WEARERS▼are you getting the mostfrom your presentwetting solution?TRYSiOiGDICI(JtiJerij oj\>iCcfiaz&juse at ourexpense andTHE DIFFERENCE!FREE SAMPLESand brochure atNO OBLIGATIONSend coupon below["mi-con LABORATORIES, INC.| 520 Bonner Road| Wauconda, Illinois 600841450 E. 57thSTREET Hyde Park's Oldest cm3Most DistinguishedCo(fee7iouse.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. ADDRESSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870. PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd FoodDrinkPeople311 E. 23rd Street2 blocks W pf McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400j&roerfc objects to being given the role of a miserable beggar.An angel insists that he cannot judge the value of therole before he has played it; unwillingly, the soul ac¬cepts the role.The play-within-the-play begins with the picture ofa harmonious kingdom: a king happily unites Beauty,a courtesan, Wisdom, a nun, Wealth, the power behindthe throne and a farmer who supports the kingdom byhis conscientious labor. The beggar, now entering, dis¬mays the other characters because he lacks everythingthat any of them possesses: he has no faith, no power,no joy, no wealth, no work and refuses to be contentwith his lot.The farmer offers him a job cutting wood in hisforest; the beggar accepts, then realizes that he willnot escape oppression: as overseer he must beat the“widows and orphans” who trespass; in sudden rageand frustration, he turns to slay the others with his ax.Just as he is about to strike Wisdom who is kneel¬ing in prayer, a vision blinds him and he falls to theground. He recovers and, to his surprise, finds thateveryone is still alive. Somehow, through this experi¬ence, he has discovered an eternal order far superiorto the temporal order which, up to now, he has beenfighting against. He has discovered his identity as asoul separate from his character. He goes off to theforest to cut wood.Now, to signify the passage of time, World comesout and sings a song about time. Afterwards, the fivecharacters on stage discover that they have aged;beauty is most consumed with grief. The angel in¬structs the stage manager, Death, that it is time toend the play death calls off the actors one by one:each meets his death differently.The first to go is the King who tries to leave hispower to Wisdom; World snatches it away. Immediatelywhen he is gone the Rich Man tries to rape Beauty,she runs to Wisdom for protection. Now it is her turnto go, still she clings to Wisdom. Death calls Wisdom;the two women go off together, Wisdom supportingBeauty. Death calls the Farmer who at first does notcomprehend, then is reluctant to leave his worldly workunfinished. He goes; the Rich Man, called next, re¬fuses to leave. Death leaves him writhing on the groundand announces to the Beggar that it is his time to go.The beggar embraces his fate gladly; the Beggar speaksto the Rich Man as a brother, coaxes him to come andthe two leave the stage together.HYDE PARK THEATRESTARTING FRIDAY, OCT. 11thALSOor late,.^ou’lf Fall ii» withstrand eewiSH-APDFIIIN(Swith JASON ROBARDS & BARBARA HARRISA used to be for Apple...Now it’s forAnnihilate!IS FOR OVERKILLA Survival AlphabetDrawings by Reginald Pollack£ Words by Merrill Pollack^3 $1.00 paperback$5.00 hardcoverVIKINGor4October 11, 1968 The Grey City Journal 7DOCUMENTARIESContinued from Page Fivesioned Alan King to do a TV documentary on a schoolfor emotionally disturbed children. Warrendale, a groupof homes, is privately financed by George Brown, nowa member of the Ontario provincial parliament. Eachhome is set up as a family unit with a half dozen orso children and two surrogate parents. These “parents”are non-professional, though generally well-educated.They are young. They are poorly paid. But they careabout their children because they too are finding itdifficult to adjust to society and receiving a stated num¬ber of hours of therapy a week from the staff psycholo¬gist, Dr. Fisher. There in Warrendale is a commitment,not a job.The theoretical orientation is closer to A.S. Neill’sSummerhill than to any other psychological gestalt.The children are accepted, loved, for what they are.There is no punitive discipline.The workers at Warrendale operate under the pecu¬liar assumption that emotionally disturbed children canget better. This assumption is a radical one, but is borneout by the results. Many of the children at Warrendalewere sent there as a last resort, considered hopelesscases by their parents and provincial institutions. Thesuccess rate, judging by the percentage of children whoreturn to public schools and foster homes or their ori¬ginal parents is nothing less than phenomenal, comparedto similar institutions in Canada.The film shows us why this happens. It shows usin a way that is difficult to forget. I saw mis moviealmost a year ago, but many scenes are still overy clearin my memory.Alan King is a very sincere man. We feel not only thathe is being honest, but that he cares about the children.It would have been impossible for him to have gotten thechildren to ignore the camera completely unless theytrusted him and his crew implicitly. They earned thekids’ trust by setting up their equipment for a couple ofweeks without actually using film. The children wereaccustomed to lights and cameras. More importantthey got to know King and his crew. They began to be¬lieve in what he was doing. They realized that honestportrayal of the type of therapy that takes place at War¬rendale would help the public to understand those amongthem who were maladjusted and to treat mental illness,not as a scourge, but as a curable disease. Before thefilm was released, the children were given a specialscreening and there were no objections from the partici¬pants. This is remarkable considering that these childrenwere as old as 18, and many of them were portrayed inless than flattering circumstances.The result of this empathy between filmmaker andsubjects is striking. For example, we see little Tony,suffering unbearably from lack of love, telling Dr. Fish¬er, and others, to “fuck off.” Again, we see a group ofthe older boys watching a hockey game on television, smoking cigarettes and cigars, noisily placing bets onthe outcome. Tony, eight years old, is smoking a largercigar than any of them, and shouting twice as loud. Theyare having a great time. No one tells them to stop. Thisis the sort of acceptance that these children desperatelyneed. All parents in the audience must sense that theymust treat their children as individual human beings,with their own needs, and not as extensions of their ownegos and desires.One very interesting and controversial technique usedat Warrendale is that the workers “smother” a childhaving a tantrum. A worker will hug a child who isscreaming and kicking, preventing him from hurtinghimself or others. At the same time, the child intuitivelyknows that he is loved. Soft words are spoken (for tenminutes if necessary). The child works off his tantrumby shouting and struggling, and gradually calms, relax¬ing into the womb-like clutch of his concerned surrogatemother or father.Warrendale was by far the best film to come out ofCanada for years. It is one of the best documentaries ev¬er made. Yet it was not shown on CBC-TV, for which itwas originally produced. Why not? Because Tony usesthe word “fuck” frequently, and the other children arefree to use any language they please, at Warrendale andin the film. This sort of narrow-minded censorship iswhat is preventing TV from presenting intelligent opin¬ion, instead of slavishly follwoing the dictates of the low¬est common denominator.Fortunately, because the fim is such a moving workof art, it was distributed in four or five cities acrossCanada. The audience reaction in Toronto must havebeen gratifying to Mr. King. Undivided attention (a rarecommodity among Toronto filmgoers) greeted the film,and most people leaving the theatre were very quiet,some speaking in hushed tones about how they didn’trealize disturbed children were so much like their own.Warrendale served an important function in Canada.It enabled George Brown to bring public attention to theharrassment he was receiving from municipal courts inthe Toronto area, which were regularly fining his homeson tricky points of zoning laws. This has pretty muchstopped.This relatively mild result is far removed from whatcould have been achieved if the film had been shown onTV, but it is certainly a sign of what can happen.Is it possible to infer from such incidents that thereis genuine cause for hoDe for the revolutionary potentialof documentaries? Intellectually, I know there is nohope, but an irrational stirring deep within keeps insist¬ing. VULTUREContinued from Page SevenNorma. Lyric Opera on Monday.Grimm Brothers. Harper Theatre Coffee House. Fri¬day and Saturday, 9:30 and 11:00. Students $1.50, others$2.00.Eileen Farrell on Tuesday 8:00 p.m. at the Audi¬torium Theatre.Chicago Symphony. Conductor Hans Schmidt-Isser-stedt; Strauss’s Don Juan; Bartok’s Concerto for PianoNo. 3, Sibelius Symphony No. 1 Today, 2:00, Saturday8:30 in Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan.Reverend Gary Davis at the Quiet Knight, 1311 N.Wells. Next Wednesday through the weekend. Showsat 9, 11 and 12:30 nightly. Reservations recommended.944-8755.Lectures, Exhibits, Special EventsTwo Young Collectors, Bergman Gallery in CobbHall.Ellamarie and Jackson Woolley. In the RenaissanceSociety Gallery, Goodspeed Hall. Acrylisc on canvas,enamel on copper panels, constructions; dazzling newideas from California.American Indian Festival. At Field Museum, Roosevelt Road at Lake Shore Drive, through this weekendonly.Traditional and Contemporary Arts of Black AfricaA lecture by James A. Porter from the Department ofArt, Howard University. No tickets, no charge. Monday.8:30. Classics 10.Prolongation of African Art into Certain Communi¬ties of Latin America. James Porter, Tuesday. 8:30Classics 10. Contemporary Afro-American Art. Informaldiscussion with interested members of the Universitycommunity and James Porter. Wednesday, 8:30. Classics21.Options. Museum of Contemporary Art. 237 EOntario.Virginio Ferrari: One-man Sculpture Show At Evanston Art Center. 2603 Sheridan Rd Evanston.Psychology and Alchemy The first of a series oflectures by Dr. James Hillman; Wednesday, 8:00;Kent 107.FOTA. Initial general organizing meeting for studentsand faculty members interested in planning Festivalof the Arts for next spring. Reynolds Club Lounge,Tuesday. 8 p.m.FREEHUEY] RALE/&HiSPORTS •.. big selections in stocknow for thebike riding season!Model DL22 I| $65.00More quality,more value, more fun• Slurmey-Archer 3 speed hubwith trigger control• Brooks leather saddle• Dunlop Amberwall Tires• Front and rear caliper brakes• All steel tubing construction• Three-point chain guardanchorage• Shock stop grips• Boy's and girl’s modelsavailable• Double rear mudguard staySee the DL22 today.You'll know quality whenyou see it. uemwam racer4795BUY NOW %EASY TERMSThe Schwinn Racer is an ideoi tour¬ing model at a low budget price.Lightweight styling, Schwinn tubu¬lar rims, sports touring fires endfoam cushioned saddle. Schwinnquality throughout.On/y a Raleigh is really a RaleighART'SCycle &Hobby ShopsIC3S E. 55th ST. 3S3-7524 j'636 E' 55,h ST- 363'75341710 E. 87th ST. SA 1-5883 ,1710 E. 87th ST. SA 1*5883ART'SCycle &Hobby Shops Why would Bic tormentthis dazzling beauty?Why?To introducethe most elegantpen oncampus. Expensive newBic Clic forbig spendersW/c^CUCOnly 8,c would dore to torment a beauty like th,s. Not thhe pen she s holding. It s the new luxury model B,c Clic.. cor scholarship othle.es, lucky cord players and other richsocialites who con afford the expensive 49-cent price.But don t let those delicate good looks fool you Despb e punishment by mad scientists, the elegant Bic Clicfirst time, every time.Everything you want in a fine pen, you II find in theClc Its retractable. Ref,liable. Comes in R barrel colors. )a'l Bic pens, writes first time, every time ..no motter whatabuse sadistic students devise for itW°le'mo" Bit Pen Corporation. M.llord Conned8 The Grey City Journal October 11, 1968