Workers React to Petition for Free MealsBy Sarah GlazerLast week the campus worker-student al¬liance committee of SDS announced it hadcollected about 1200 signatures on its peti¬tion for free meals for cafeteria workers.The petition demands that the University“provide one free meal per shift to cafe¬teria, kitchen, and dietary personnel imme¬diately. This should not be used to raisefood prices.”In response to these demands director ofpersonnel Fred Bjorling has issued a state¬ment with lists of comparisons betweenUniversity wages and commercial restau¬rant wages to show that the Universitymore than compensates for a free mealwith its higher pay rates.SDS leaflets admit that University wagesare not low compared ot other food serviceworkers’ but says that wages for food ser¬vice workers are barely decent everywhereand that employees cannot live adequatelyon the $2 per hour wage they receive. AnSDS flyer issued early in the year reads,“Even the government says a family offour needs $10,500 a year to live in Chicagoadequately. This means $5 hour pay. Whatdo UC workers get? . . . Dorm and cafe¬teria workers often get less than $2 hr.! In other words no one who works for theUniversity in a manual job gets a decentwage! ”The University statement said that vaca¬tions, holidays, sick leave, and the insur¬ance and retirement plans are superior torestaurant contracts. Wages listed rangedfrom $2.07 for a counter worker to $2.65 froa vegetable cook.At Monday’s SDS meeting there was dis¬cussion over this frequent student reaction:cafeteria work is an unskilled job andtherefore the University is only responsiblefor paying wages comparable to those atother restaurants. SDS members’ reactionwas that this view is “racist,” because itviews black and women workers as “somespecial kind of people for whom $2.07 anhour is a decent wage.” According to KathyLindlsey, the “University uses racism asan excuse for depressed wages,” since foodservice work is a “category reserved forblack workers.” She said that studentswere less likely to be outraged by low sala¬ries for black workers than they would be ifthe workers were white. SDS intends to putgreater emphasis in the future on racismas one of the most important reasons forContinued on Page Four MmmmMontv FutcbCAFETERIA WORKER: SDS is attempting to help him.THE MAROON* ■ ■ . —Volume 78, Number 19 The University of Chicago Friday, November 7, 1969Programs ProgressingFor Next MoratoriumMonty FutchLAST MORATORIUM: The Civic Center Plaza was filled by Oct. 15 rally.Bureau Studies UC Urban Crisis RoleThe University of Chicago is one oftwelve institutions to be included in a na¬tionwide study of university involvement inthe urban crisis. The study is being under¬taken by the Bureau of Social Science Re¬search, Washington, D.C.The twelve case studies will be publishedin one volume late in 1970 “as an aid touniversity faculty and administrators whoare interested in involving their institutionsin urban, community and minority groupaffairs.” In addition to the University ofChicago the institutions to be studied in¬clude the University of California at LosAngeles, Columbia University, HarvardUniversity, Morgan State Coliege, the CityUniversity of New York, Northeastern Uni¬versity, Our Lady of the Lake College, Rut¬gers University, Southern Illinois Univer¬ sity, Wayne State University, and WesleyanUniversity.Walter Walker, Vice President for Plan¬ning, said that he had not heard about thestudy, and that he knew of no Universityadministrator who had.Dr. George Nash, urban sociologist, willdirect the study, and will do field work herein March and April. Nash feels that “highereducation has a major contribution to maketo the urban crisis.” He cites black studiesprograms and student volunteer work asways in which “the university can becomeinvolved as an educator.”Nash also feels that universities “haveplayed leading roles in the physical revita¬lization of their neighborhoods,” and thatthey have provided services to the commu¬nity by taking steps “to reform their re- Student Government (SG) president MikeBarnett reports a soaring of student sup¬port for the November moratorium sincePresident Nixon’s November 3 speech.Since Monday, 40 tickets to Washingtonhave been sold, while the number of volun¬teer workers has risen sharply.SG is calling on everyone in the Univer¬sity community to cancel or leave classesand jobs next Thursday and Friday to ob¬serve the moratorium.John Siefert, a spokesman for the Univer¬sity moratorium committee emphasized thegreat need of the committee for funds, topay for buses, speakers’ expenses, and leaf¬lets.Former Senator Ernest Gruening (D-Alaska), one of two men who voted againstthe Tonkin resolution in 1964, will speak atthe November 13 convocation in Rockefel¬ler Chapel at 9:30 am. Jimmy Breslin, for¬mer Herald-Tribune columnist; Cesar Cha¬vez, leader of the California grape boycott;and Charles Evers, Negro mayor of Fa¬yette, Miss, are also slated to speak.Following the conclusion of the con¬vocation at about 11:30 am, twenty buses.search and make it more relevant.”Nash mentions that “the way that theuniversity relates to urban problems canserve as an example to other organiza¬tions.” He feels that in this connection“many institutions have instituted pro¬grams to upgrade low level employees andothers have vested endowment funds in so¬cially useful enterprises.”Those organizing the study hope that itwill be “interesting and useful to the Uni¬versity of Chicago as well as to the highereducation community generally.”The Bureau of Social Science Research,established in 1950, does sociological re¬search sponsored by public agencies. Thisparticular study is sponsored by the Bureauof Higher Education of the United StatesOffice of Education. will take students to shopping centersthroughout the city with leaflets stating theinadequacies of Nixon’s plan for peace. Theleaflets urge citizens to write to their con¬gressmen demanding immediate end to thewar. As ways of relating the effect of thewar to community problems, the morato¬rium committee has scheduled alternateactivities. Students have options of leaf lett¬ing for A1 Raby and talking about the warin black neighborhoods, or picketing JewelFood Stores for selling California grapes.Thursday at 7 pm, the Chicago peace con¬ference is sponsoring a city wide candle¬light procession down Michigan Avenue. Anestimated 10,000 people are to march.Buses will probably leave from the Univer¬sity, details to be announced later.The University moratorium committeewill send buses to a moratorium processionand rally sponsored by the Latin AmericanDefense Organization Friday at 11 am. Themarch from Humbolt Park to the welfarecenter will publicize the effect of the waron the poor community and protest existingwelfare conditions.Six buses will leave from the Ida Noyesparking lot at 4 pm Friday, taking Univer¬sity students to the anti-war march inWashington DC. During the Washingtonmarch November 15, church bells through¬out Hyde Park will ring at five minute in¬tervals to express support of the march.All students who plan to go to Washingtonare urged to buy their tickets in the SGoffice before Monday, when Greyhound BusCompany demands full payment of $6,600.The SG office is open from 1-5 pm week¬days. Tickets are $25.Friday night at 7:30, the Hyde ParkPeace Council is sponsoring a candle lightprocession from Rockefeller Chapel to theFirst Presbyterian Church at 64th and Kim-bard where a light will be lit that will burnuntil the end of the war.A play, sponsored by the moratoriumcommittee, entitled “We Bombed in NewHaven” will be presented by UniversityTheatre Friday, Saturday and Sundaynights of moratorium weekend in ReynoldsClub at 8:30.Joshua Taylor: Art Historian Goes NationalBy Christine FroulaJoshua Taylor, one of the University’snost popular and respected teachers, will:ake a two-year leave of absence startingwinter quarter to serve as director of thenational collection of fine arts (NCFA) ofthe Smithsonian Institute in Washington.Taylor has been at Chicago as a profes¬sor of art history and humanities since949. He was chairman of the first year pro¬gram in humanities from 1954-58, and re¬ceived the Quantrell award for excellencein undergraduate teaching in 1956.“Offers from other institutions usually dQnot appeal to me,” said Taylor, who likesthe “educable” quality of students here andthe opportunity for interdisciplinary pur¬suits. “But this one is very different — anopportunity to foster a keener professionalinterest in research in American art, byapproaching it not as an isolated area ofart history, but in relation to European art,the influences that have affected it since itsbirth.”Born in Hillsboro, Oregon, Taylor attend¬ed the Museum Art School of Portland, andwas a theater and San Francisco OperaBallet designer during the mid ’30s. Afterreceiving his BA and MA in French liter¬ature from Reed College, Taylor taughtthere from 1939 to 1941.Drafted in 1941, Taylor rose from privateto major during his Army service, and wasawarded the Bronze Star. He had alwaysintended to pursue a career in the practiceof art, but his being stationed near Naplesand Rome led to change of plan.“I was extremely impressed by the Ital¬ian artists and professors I met,” says Tay¬lor, “and became involved in all kinds ofnew interests. I would spend my weeklyday off walking around the city and explor¬ing old churches. At first, considering allart after the Romanesque period somewhatfrivolous, I’d immediately go down to lookat the Romanesque crypts, but graduallythe Baroque paintings on the walls and ceil¬ings began to interest me, until finally I PROFILEnever got to the crypts at all.”Inspired by these new interests to widerreadings in art and to tracking down theworks of obscure painters, Taylor finallydecided to combine his love of art, lan¬guages (he speaks five) and history in arthistory. Upon his return to the states, heearned his MFA and doctorate at Prince¬ton.Taylor specializes in 19th and 20th centu¬ry art, because, he says, “before you canunderstand the art and culture of anothertime you must understand that of your own.You begin by recognizing the excitement ofart in the stage of becoming.”Taylor’s approach to art history hasmade his courses some of the most stimu¬lating on campus “I don’t see history as aGod given progression, marching to con¬clusion, but as a continuous creative oper¬ation, infinitely complex and varied. Theeffect of this live process is a continual re¬formulation of history. Why should we takea 19th century critic’s word for what a 14thcentury painter was doing?”In his modem art course, which he willcommute from Washington to teach nextspring, he attempts to destroy his students’“preconceptions of schemes, of historicalbins based on historical obtuseness, by re¬turning to the works of art as to fresh ma¬terial.”Taylor describes his directorial position,to be assumed in January, in terms of thethree major areas of the NCFA program:• the past: research in American art inrelation to that of other times and cultures,which centers around the archives of Amer¬ican art housed in the Smithsonian, theNCFA library, and the actual works of thecollection. • the present: studying, criticizing and col¬lecting ongoing art here and in foreigncountries.• greatly broadening the educational pro¬gram of the NCFA.Little has been done thus far in the lastarea. Taylor wants to make art educationaccessible to both children and adults, toattempt, as he does in his teaching here, tomake art a part of everybody’s thinking —“a respectable, necessary, irreplaceablesatisfaction.”An integral part of Taylor’s educationalprogram will be experiments with “how toteach in a gallery.” He plans exhibits of artdesigned to make the viewer think aboutparticular questions of art — for instance, “What is a portrait?” Taylor explains, “Wedon’t wish to present our own views dog¬matically in the way we show the paintings,but to draw the viewer’s attention to a par¬ticular aspect, to make him call his ownartistic judgment into operation in forminghis own opinions.”“I’ve already made plans for the totalreorganization of the building, which mayshock some of my colleagues,” he addswith a distinguished twinkle in his eye.“Unless you know the paintings well, aroom full of one man’s works is boring. Bydisplaying the paintings properly, we canenable people to get more content from theexperience in the gallery.”Continued on Page FourCUPID IS BACKCUP/D COMPUTER QUESTIONNAIREO -■ - -.w .....YOU1. Sex: (1. Femo’e) (2. Male) I. CD2. Race: (1. Caucasian - while) (2. Negro) ' „ 2, [ ](3. Oriental) (4. Other)3. Religion: (1. Protestant) (2. Catholic) (3. Jewish) 3. CD(4. Other (5. Agnostic) (6. Atheistic)4. Age (in years): 4. CD(1. 18 or younger) (2. 19) (3. 20) (4. 21) (5. 22)(6. 23-24) (7. 25-26) (8. 27 or older)5. Height (in feet and inches): 5, [ ](1. 5' or shorter) (2. 5'1" to 5'3") (3. 5'4" to 5'6")(4. 5'7' to 5'9") (5. 5'10"to6') (6. 6' 1" or taller)6. Weight (in proporfior to height): 6. CD(1. very thin) (2. light) (3. averoge) (4. heavy)(5. very heavy)7. Physical Attractiveness: 7, CD(1. under average) (2. average (3. above overage orgood looking) (4. beautiful or handsome)8. Color of hair: (1. black) (2. brown) (3. blond) (4. red) 9, CD9. Length of hair: (1. short) (2. overage) (3. long) <5, [10. Color of eyes: (l.blue) (2. hazel) (3. green) (4. brown) 10, C D11. Intelligence: (1. low) (2. moderate) (3. average) II. CD(4. superior) (5. genius)12. School year: (1. Freshman) (2. Sophomore) (3. Junior) 12, CD4. Senior) (5. Graduate)13. Area of Interest: (1. fine arts) (2. humanities) 13, CD(3. natural science) (4. social science) (5. business)14. Belief in God: 14. CD(1. no) (2. do not care) (3. yes. But not very religious)(4. yes. Go to church weekly) (5. Very religious)15. Moral code: (1. very liberal) (2. moderately liberal) 15. CD(3. average) (4. conservative) (5. very strict)16. Scope of reading: (1. narrow) (2. average) (3. wide) 16. C D17. Drinking: (1. never) (2. sometimes) (3. often) 17. CD(4. whenever possible)18. Smoking: (1. never) (2. sometimes) (3. often) 19, C D(4. always)19. Children: (1. dislike them) (2. they're O.K.) 19, C(3. love them)20. Politics: (1. liberal) (2. middle road) (3. conservative) 2C, C D21. Dancing: (1. not interested) (2. fairly interested) 21. CD(3. love it)22. Sexual Experience: (1. none) (2. little) (3. average) 22. CD(4. much) (5 very much)23. Dress and grooming: (1. unconcerned about clothes) 23, C D(2. average) (3.well dressed)24. Sense of Humor: (1. very little) (2. some) (3. humorous) 24. C D(4. very humorous)25. Philosophical awareness: (1. unconcerned) (2. average) 25, C D(3. pensive) YOUR DATE1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5thCDCDCDCDCDC D C D : D C D C DC D C D C D C D C DC D C ] C D C D C Diidcdc'dcdcdC D C D C D C D c DC D C D C D C D C D[ D C D C D C D C DC D C D [ D C D C DC D T D C D C D C DC D C D [ D C D C DC D C D C D C D C DC D : D [ D C D C DCDCDCDCDCDCD^DCDCDCDC D C D C D C D C DC D C D C D C D C D: D C D C D C D C DCDCDCDCDCDC D C D C D C D C DC. DCDCDCDCDC D C D C D C D C DC D C D C D C D C DC D C D C D CD c D(Last name first; one letter per box; abbreviate if necessary'.■VA7E r. D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D r D C D C D r D r ]■ f D r 1 r D C Daddress r ] c D C D C D [ D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D f D T D r DC D C D C D [ D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C D C DRHODE [ D C D C D - C D C D C D C D IMPORTANCEC DC DC DC DC DC DC DC DC DC DC D[ DC DC D[ DC DC DC DC DC DC DC DC DC D The Cupid Computer questionnaire contains 25 questions which are multiple choke. Choose theanswer which best describes you and write the number corresponding to that answer in the box at theright in the column marked “YOU".Then go back and answer the questions again - this time describing your ideal date. Notice that thereare 5 boxes corresponding to each question in the column marked “YOU* DATE". The first box on the left(marked 1st) is reserved for your first choke. In it, write the number corresponding to that characteristicwhich you fool is most necessary that your date possess. K you have more than one choice, enter them all- in order of preference - in the boxes marked 2nd, 3rd, etc.EXAMPLEIf you are 21 yean old and would prefer a date 22 but would accept a date between 21 and 26, youmight answer question 4 like this:4 Age (in years): you YOUR DATE(1. 18 or younger) (2. 19) [4] [5] i*] [41 T71 r D(3. 20) (4. 21) (5. 22)(6. 23-24) (7. 25-26)(8. 27 or older)Finally, Cupid would like to know whkh question you consider to be the most important. Road thequestionnaire carefully and pick the question which you fool is the most essential. Mace a 1 in the box tothe right of that question in the column marked "IMPORTANCE". Next, select the question which rankssecond in importance for you and place a 2 in the box at the right. Continue this process for your 3rd, 4th,5th, etc. choices until all the boxes in the column marked "IMPORTANCE" are filled. You should haveused the numbers 1 through 24 inclusive.CLIP OUT THE QUESTIONN/URE AND MAL TO:Cupid Computer Service111 N. Wabash AvenueRoom 1310Chicago, Illinois 60602THE SERVICE FEE FOR CUPID IS $5.0f,BE SURE TO INCLUDE THECHARGE WITH THE QUESTIONNAIREPage 2/The Chicago Maroon/November 7, 1969>*« :,nci.uM ofctsVO# «* * V i > ■' 'Vs. ", V.Committee SuggestsBookstore LocationThe standing committee on the bookstorehas recommended moving the bookstoretemporarily to the Stagg Laboratories inorder to provide services starting winterquarter, and then to move it to the firstthree floors of administration building bySeptember 1,1970.No action has been forthcoming on therecommendations by the committeechaired by Julian Goldsmith, chairman ofthe geophysical sciences department, onUniversity priorities and spending.Ellis Hall, where the bookstore burnedOctober 23, must be torn down soon tomake room for hospital expansion.According to a study made by the com¬mittee on planning arid physical construc¬tion, the cost of moving to the adminis¬tration building will be cheaper by $5 asquare foot than constructing a new build¬ing.If the bookstore moves to Stagg Labs theamount of usable space will be reducedfrom the present 11,500 to 9000, thus provid¬ing room for only the essentials. It is esti¬mated that a minimum of 25,000 square feetwould be needed to provide adequate book¬store service to the campus.The bookstore committee commented onthe biggest complaint of students, the highcost of textbooks, by saying that the book¬store is obligated to show a yearly gain todefray other University expenses. EugeneGoldberg, ’71, a member of the committee,commented, “The procrastination of thebookstore affair is symptomatic of a basictheory that spending on the University hasgenerally followed. When it comes to spend¬ing for student-related facilities such asCORSO or student housing, its consid¬eration is automatically on the bottom ofany list.”One of the reasons for the high cost oftextbooks is the acceptance of a recommen¬dation by the bookstore committee twoyears ago that non-essential products becurtailed in the store. However, this is themechandise on which the bookstore makesprofit. They usually lose money or breakeven on the sale of textbooks.Some actions are being taken to expeditetha loss experienced by students and facul¬ty. It is rumored that a newsstand will beplaced in Mandel Hall to sell such items asthe New York Times. Students have beenupset because of the lack of food and to¬bacco close to campus. As one person said,“It’s disgusting. No place to get a goodkosher pastrami sandwich near campus. And I have to go to 51st St to get somedecent pipe tobacco. (NOTE: Kosher sand¬wiches on sale in the C-shop).Bookstore manager Harlan Davidson saidthat certain bookstore services will be pro¬vided in case of emergencies:• Requisitions for stationery and suppliesmay be forwarded on bookstore form 99 viafaculty exchange. Inquiries about requisi¬tions not delivered can be handled by tele¬phoning extensions 3307 and 3318. Atpresent requisitions can be filled only withexisting merchandise.• Those books needed for class use or anyother urgent academic purpose may be or¬dered via faculty exchange or by tele¬phoning extension 4098. Those needed forclassroom use may be charged to the pro¬fessor and picked up at the northeast doorof the store.• Photography supplies may be ordered onform 99, or delivered to Belfield Hall. Mostsupplies in the store were destroyed. Filmprocessed at the time of the fire may bepicked up at the education branch book¬store. Film to be processed may be leftthere.• Typewriter service calls are now beingmade on campus. A new repair shop isbeing set up and will accept machines be¬ginning today. All questions will be handledby calling extension 3317. BOOKSTORE DAMAGE: A hole appears over old magazine rack. David TravisDirector Defends Stevenson Institute“There is probably not an organization inthe world as free from (outside influence)as the Adlai Stevenson Institute.”This statement by William Polk, directorof the institute, was in response to a flyer,“Pigs in a Polk Institute,” distributed bythe International Socialists (IS). The flyercharged that the Institute and the Univer¬sity’s Center for Middle Eastern studies areclosely associated. Both are headed byPolk. It further charged that the goals ofboth were to plan “for the next counter¬insurgency, for preventive inter¬vention ...”Polk stated that the Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute is “an independent, non-profit, non¬partisan, educational institution which at¬tempts to find solutions to critical problemsof political and economic developmentthroughout the world and the UnitedStates.” He emphasized its total autonomy fromgovernmental or University control andthat it receives no money from eithersource as a gift, aid or endowment. Thereis no central authority that makes policyfor the Institute. Polk claims that its staffand fellows represent “a very wide spec¬trum of political beliefs and ideologies” andthat they would not agree to have theirwork supported if any restrictions onideology were required. The only interest ofthe Institute is in “closing the gap betweenpoor and rich people here and in the thirdworld.”Polk resigned from the post of director ofthe Center for Middle Eastern studies lastMay. He is still director of the Institute andis a professor of history here.The current director of the Center is NurYalman, associate professor of anthropolo¬gy and fellow of the Center for AdvancedFroines Urges Marching on Capitol for PeaceAt a sparsely attended but vocal rallyheld in Kent Hall Wednesday evening togenerate support for the November 15march on Washington, John Froines, Con¬spiracy 8 defendant said, “We (the defend¬ants) hope everyone comes to Washingtonnot just to protest the war, but to go to thesteps of the Justice Building and say ‘Stopthe trial, Free Bobby Seale.’ ”At the rally, sponsored by the New Mobi¬lization Committee, Froines said it was notjust enough to say ‘stop the war in Viet¬nam.’ “The administration is at war with awhole generation, the black people and ev¬ery insurgent group in America.”Froines said he was not up to “rappingon the horrors of the trial.” He declined todiscuss the four year contempt charges lev¬eled at Seale by Judge Julius Hoffman ear¬lier in the day, saying all the defendantsfelt anguish and uncertainty over the at¬tempt to silence Seale.“I think this war is as much againstpeople like Seale as the Vietnamese.” Hecompared the denial of Seale’s rights to USInvolvement in Vietnam. “This case is nojoke. The government is making the samemistake as in Vietnam. The Nixon adminis¬tration refuses to get us out of either di¬lemma.”Cindy Burke of the Chicago Student Mobi¬lization committee (CSM), said later in theContinued on Page Seven JOHN FROINES: The Conspiracy 8 defendant in Kent 107. Monty Futchvi; s Study in the Behavioral Sciences (1960-1961). He is on leave of absence until June1970. The acting director for the autumnquarter is W. F. Wilfred Madelung, associ¬ate professor of Islamic history.The as yet unconstructed Pahlavi build¬ing will house the Center and a proposal isbeing considered for moving the Institutefrom its present location in Robie House, at58th and Woodlawn across the street intothe Pahlavi building. The Institute does notpay University rent for use of the RobieHouse, but does pay for the upkeep and didpay for some improvements made on thebuilding.The flyer also mentions several of the of¬ficers of the Center, among them R. W.Komer, a former special assistant to Presi¬dent Johnson on Vietnam and former depu¬ty ambassador to Vietnam in charge of“pacification.” According to the acting as¬sistant director of the Center, Mrs. CarolynG. Killean, assistant professor of modernArabic language and linguistics, it is trueof Komer and generally true of the other“officers” cited that they have played anextremely passive role in the work of theCenter in recent years. They are on thevisiting faculty list and do “little if any¬thing more than appear on the Center’s let¬terhead.”Polk felt that the only way to correct anymisunderstanding that students or facultymight have about the Institute is for dia¬logue between them. He has invited anystudent or members of the University com¬munity who want to find out more about theInstitute to come to Robie House and makean appointment with Polk and other mem¬bers of the staff.Construction at the site of the Pahlavibuilding is scheduled to begin in March. Itis being financed by a three million dollargrant from the Shah of Iran. According toD Gale Johnson, dean of the division of so¬cial sciences, the Shah’s stipulations aboutthe building will not be released to the pub¬lic for a few weeks.Pahlavi is the name of the ruling familyin Iran; it is customary to name a buildingin honor of the donor who has financed itsconstruction. Drawing an analogy, SidneyHyman, fellow of the Institute, claimed thatthe Pahlavi building and the activities tak¬ing place there would no more be subject tothe influence of the Shah than is the man¬agement and service of Rockefeller Chapelsubject to the influence of that family.5 c r i • < i I i i * * t M »j : H-) * INovember 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroor,/ Page 3Workers Interviewed SupportContinued from Page Oneexisting wages here. Most of the cafeteriaemployees are black.Of seven workers interviewed by the Ma¬roon in Hutchinson Commons and theC-Shop (two men ,five women), five sup¬ported the petition, one was against it, andone knew nothing about it. The supporterssaid most workers in their cafeteria hadsigned it. One woman who signed the peti¬tion said, “I think it would be a good thngto get if it works. I don’t think it will workthough.” She said that Marshall Field’s andCircle Campus, where she worked before,gave free meals. The workers said that allother food places they had worked at hadprovided meals free, or, in one case, at acut rate.The workers said that Hutch Commonsand the C-Shop, which are under the man¬agement of Stouffer’s, used to give freemeals until about three years ago. Oneworker said that this practice was dis¬continued — without a pay raise at the time— because employees in other campuscafeterias run by the University did not have this policy. She said that the man¬agers, who are from Stouffer’s, still havefree meals.Three of the workers made the point that,as one man said, “It would cut down onthefts since we’re handling the food.” Hesaid that most people took food under thecounter. All the workers agreed that foodprices were “exorbitant.” Workers ques¬tioned about the union were rather vague intheir feelings about it. None knew whetherthe free meal demand had been recentlypresented to the union. (SDS says that ithad been brought up at a union meeting forhospital workers but was virtually ig¬nored.)At Woodward Court the two employeesquestioned knew nothing about the petition.Two women supervisors would not permitthis reporter to speak to any more workers.One supervisor said “The union fights theirbattles for them. It’s the students that arestirring up all this trouble.” The other re¬peated several times, “We’re one big happyfamily here. The employees are con¬tented.” Kathy Lindsley said that the* su¬pervisors had prevented her and other SDS members from talking to employees duringtheir lunch break.At Burton-Judson the one worker inter¬viewed had signed the petition. What didshe think about students organizing it? “Ithought it was nice. They were concerned.”Last year several busboys in the C-Shopwere fired when they were found eatingfood without paying. A wildcat strike fol¬lowed, students boycotted effectively, andthe union negotiated a wage increase — no free meals. SDS says that the union leadershave sold out and do not represent theworkers. ■,Can the worker-student alliance be astrategy that is successful and appeals toworkers? This is one of the questions aris¬ing from the petition, but perhaps the mostimportant question is how will the Univer¬sity answer the demand to pay workers, notaccording to food service standards but ac¬cording to an “adequate living” standard?Taylor Professor Since 1960Continued from Page TwoTaylor became a full professor in 1960,and in 1963 was named William RaineyHarper professor of humanities. He is amember of the Museum of ContemporaryArt in Chicago, the advisory committee on20th century art of the Art Institute, thefaculty advisory committee of Encyclo¬pedia Brittanica, the College Art Associ¬ation of America, and Phi Beta Kapa.Taylor has published several major worksof scholarship in his specialty.Taylor pursues his hobbies — drawing,painting, and photography — at his home in Taxco, Guerrero, Mexico. “I don’t havemuch time for them now,” he says, “but Ido it mainly to keep my eye and handsharp. And then sometimes I just get fed tothe teeth with words, and it’s good to thinkin paint instead for a while.”Guiding the progress of the institution de¬voted to America’s artistic heritage will un¬doubtedly require a great many words, butwith Taylor’s talents, knowledge, and ex¬perience behind them, the NCFA may beexpected to enter an extraordinarily stimu¬lating era in its development during thenext few years.Bring All the Gl's Home NowMarch on Washington November 15- But/- IfVou Cant GoDon't MissTOUrFRIDAYSAT.-SUNNovember 14 15-16November 21 22-23 at 8:30University TheatreReynolds Club THE FANTASTICKSNOVEMBER 6, 7, AND 8th AT 8; 00 PMANDNOV. 9th AT 7:30 PMIN CLOISTER CLUB$2.00, $1.50 - STUDENTS.performances MUSICRAFT PRESENTSA BEST BUY IN STEREO LOWEST PRICES,FULL SERVICE 30-DAY EXCHANGEPRIVILEGES, FREE DELIVERYAN EXCEPTIONAL VALUEKENWOODKT-1000FCT•FM AMAUTOMATICSTFWO TUN! RKENWOODMOO40 WATTSSOLID STATESTFRCO AMFLIfkRON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-4555» UiuiCiaft48 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500 CAUTION: NOT TOBE TAKEN BY THEFAINT AT HEARTSlack-Suit with wideself-belt and flap;pockets to be worn in'or out. Glowing Mo¬hair - blend fabric ingrey, gold, green, roy¬al, brown or black.PLUSFASHIONSFor Men and Women5225 S. Harper324-68005 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRY JESSELSOH’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 • 1340 E. 53rd4/The Chicago Mareon/November 7, 1969AssemblyCORSO'sDavid TravisSTUDENT HEALTH: The gynecology center has left these quarters for new ones. Following a delay of several weeks, thestudent government (SG) ssembly has ra¬tified the budget of the Committee on Rec¬ognized Student Organizations (CORSO) ata meeting Wednesday. Ratification cameafter a lengthy debate over the NationalStudent Association (NSA) appropriation.Members of the University of Chicagochapter of NSA contended that they hadbeen unfairly deprived of funds needed topay for the expenses of the University dele¬gation to this summer’s NSA Congress inEl Paso, Texas. Bill Phillips, 71, an NSAdelegate, proposed a motion giving NSA$198.25 in addition to the $50 written into thebudget. This motion, is well as a similarone requesting an even larger sum, was de¬feated.Connie Maravell, chairman of CORSO, in¬dicated that CORSO would give the Maroon$2000 rather than set aside a $1500 contin¬gency fund, as had been originally planned.With the inclusion of this change, the bud¬get originally submitted October 19 waspassed with litle opposition by the SG As¬sembly.Having passed the CORSO budget, the as¬sembly proceeded to approve its own bud¬get. The total for the year’s SG budget, in¬cluding a special fund for speakers andfilms, is approximately $7,500.SG filled the six vacancies on the student-faculty-administration (SFA) Court. PhilDavis, 72; Jerry Webman, 71; DavidSteele, 72; and Jerome Culp, 72 wereelected to fill the four two-year seats. PeterBurks Views Gynecology ProblemsThe student health gynecology center hasmoved to new quarters to facilitate appoint¬ments and now has available “morning af¬ter pills,” Dr James Burks told about 20women students in Lower Wallace houselast week.Burks, assistant professor in the depart¬ment of gynecology and obstetrics, has vis¬ited several undergraduate women’s housesto discuss the gynecology center and re¬lated topics.He said the October 1 move from the stu¬dent health section at Billings to the eastoffice clinic at Chicago Lying-In was de¬signed to cut waiting time for appointmentsto a maximum of two weeks. Two full-timefaculty members will be available everyMonday and Thursday afternoon, Burkssaid.In his Wallace house presentation Burksexplained slides detailing contraceptivetechniques and human sexual response. “Any contraceptive technique is better thannone and the most effective technique is theone to use,” Dr Burks said to about 20 stu¬dents in Lower Wallace last week.Dr. Burks feels that the pill is the mosteffective method of contraception at thepresent time and that side effects from itare no more dangerous than from any me¬dication, including aspirin. However, DrBurks contemplates that in the not too dis¬tant future “there will be a one day a yearpill.”“Eighty percent of American women nev¬er experience orgasm,” Dr. Burks said, cit¬ing the usually accepted figure, and headded, “they never know what they aremissing.” Other countries have about thesame percentages, but it does vary becauseof education, he said. He explained thatwhat sexual response in the female consistsof its “completely unknown” except forsome physiological changes.Ducey Quits Posts in Protest Dr. Burks favors an abortion law inwhich “the abortion is a matter betweenpatient and physician.” He also is consid¬ering the possibility that human parthe¬nogenesis (self-fertilization of the ovum)exists, “Though there is no way to proveit.” It is interesting to compare the failurerate of contraception techniques abouttwo percent — with the rate of parthenoge¬nesis in lower animals — about two per¬cent— he said.Dr. Burks says that within the next ten tofifteen years theoretically it will be possible“to create test tube babies.” This willcreate a whole range of moral dilemmas,he said. He termed this next stage “socialand psychological evolution” because manwill be able to control his own evolution.The gynecology center had come undercriticism last year for its inadequacies.Students had criticized long waits for ap¬pointments, gruff treatment by attendantsand lack of supplies. The move to thenewer quarters will hopefully alleviatethese problems.In an open letter to all members of theUniversity community, Michael Ducey,graduate student in sociology, president ofthe society for social research (the Sociolo¬gy student group), and member of the fac¬ulty student committee for south campus,has resigned his offices and urges all otherstudent officers in all parts of the Univer¬sity to do the same.Summarizing his nine page explanation,Ducey says, “I quit these offices because Isee them as part of a political structurewhich is in essence illegitimate and in prac¬tical effect a process which conceals fromus the objective forces governing ourlives.”Accepting a subordinate role in the stu¬dent-teacher relationship as necessary forlearning, Ducey feels that students’ “value-orientations” are just as valuable as thefaculties or anyone else’s. “Every person inthe University ... has the right to have hisvalues safeguarded,” he said.Ducey claims that politics and valuejudgements enter into academia in all theareas of hiring, course selection, publica¬tion of journal articles, all the economic decisions of the departments.At present students have only an adviso¬ry role in all these value controlled deci¬sions, and Ducey feels this is no true powerat all. The only power left to us “is thepower of the powerless not to play thegame,” Ducey said. This is why he urgesall students to resign from University com¬mittees and officer positions.Pointing at “structural,” not “personal,”immorality as the issue, Ducey calls uponthe University to “re-write the statutes ofthis University so that its electorate anddecision-making structures represent alladult human beings with interests and val¬ues whose lives are involved in the Univer¬sity community. The board of trusteesshould be elected by all the members ofthis community ... AH decisions whichhave any political (value-oriented) contentshould be shared by all whose lives theyaffect.”Ducey says his battle cry is not “destroythe University,” but “destroy all relationsof ruler and ruled in the University.” Hiscomplete letter is available in Foster 410,the Society for Social Research office. Ratner, 70, and Robert Koss, 70, were ap¬pointed to the two one-year seats. The as¬sembly also voted to appoint Phil Davis toserve as chief justice for a one-year term.Consideration was given to the report is¬sued two weeks ago on the controversy sur¬rounding Jeff Schnitzer, last year’s CORSOChairman. The assembly endorsed the ba¬sic findings of that report which concludedby urging, “.. .that the Student Govern¬ment in joint assembly exonerate JeffSchnitzer from the charges of malfeasancemade last May, and invite him to sit withthe present members of CORSO in an advi¬sory capacity, in accordance with theprocedures of that committee, and as is hisprivilege.”'Die final item of business discussed atWednesday evening’s meeting was themanner in which the names of those stu¬dent elected last week by SG to serve onthe Blum committee on student housingshould be presented to the administration.Frank Day, 71, chairman of SG’s housingcommittee, presented a motion urging theadministration to consider all four studentselected by the assembly as members of thecommittee. Previously SG has only sub¬mitted recommendations; appointmentshave been made by the president of theUniversity. Day’s motion passed withoutdiscussion.Following is the budget for student activi¬ties approved by the SG assembly:Organization Grant Loan (Request)Baba People $ 144 S 244Black Colony Production 300 * 450 900revisedBlack Students Alliance 185 694revisedBalckfriars 560 800Cap & Gown (yearbox) pending no formal requestChess Club 265 513basic238travelChicago Review Speakers 600 975Concert Band 700 1,270Country Dancers 100 100Cricket Club 125 282Dames Club - • o 100 100loan, revisedFestival of the Arts 3,500 7,000Folkdancers 300 500Folklore Society 200 1,150 400grant1,150loanInter-fraternity Council 250 435MaroonMarried Student Housing 2,000 3,220past debt2,000emergency publicationTenants Association 100 979Modem Dance Group 350 500Musical Society 350 350revisedNational Student Association 50 389revisedOuting Club 109 109Revitalization: Concerts 4,700 1,200 5,700Speakers 1,150 500 2,250Rugby ClubSki Club 285 6500 55 55Student Government: Basic : 5,304 5,433Speakers 2,200 2,470University ChorusUniversity Women's pending no formal requestAssociation 600 896basic950speakersVISA 250 750WHPK 4,600 6,909revisedWash Prom pending no formal requestWhitewater Club pending no formal requestTOTALS *29,277 $3,455 $49411FOOTBALL: The final game of the seasonField. Go! David Traviswill be played at 2pm today on Stagg^ November 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/Page 5EDITORIALBookstoreWhether the inconvenience to you has been that you can’tget hold of the newest edition of Thucydides or that you miss thekosher pastrami sandwiches, the bookstore has probably been onyour mind. We are patiently waiting for an announcement of amove to temporary quarters, and then, hopefully more adequatepermanent quarters. Time is getting short for books for winterquarter to be readied, and we’re getting worried.We’re not trying to fault the people who are desperatelyworking now to find a place to put the bookstore. What makes usangry are the people who have put off relocating the bookstorefor years, even though it’s been in an inadequate location for years,and even though it’s been known for one year that its site is dueto be torn down. We at the Maroon have periodically checked for ayear to see what was going on with relocation plans for the book¬store, and were constantly put off and told that it was “underconsideration.” If it’s been “under consideration” for so long,we don’t understand why there wasn’t some plan at least halfwayready when the bookstore was unexpectedly closed by fire.Another topic of prime consideration should now be a thoroughinvestigation of the possibilities of a co-op bookstore. We haveheard the reasoning that the bookstore can’t be a co-op because itmust make money to defray other University expenses. It makessense only if you’re willing to make students a low priority item.Other major universities operate thriving co-ops; students heredeserve either the same thing or a full explanation.The bookstore has long been a problem on this campus thatwas joked about by students- and consequently not treated seri¬ously enough by the administration. It never was that funny, andnow it’s time for something to be done.MoratoriumUntil Monday night, this month’s moratorium activity hadnot gotten as much support as last month’s. Monday night, how¬ever, one of the nation’s top entertainers preempted prime time,and the new version of his old song and dance which we sawthen has had the effect of generating a lot of interest in participat-in November moratorium activities.It’s about time. It’s ironic for the moratorium to depend onPresident Nixon to generate support, but before his speech, theapathy that people felt about future anti-war action was discourag¬ing. Now, hopefully, people are interested again, and want tosupport moratorium activities.One of the best ways to do it is with cash. The moratoriumcommittee here is flying in speakers, is arranging for buses toWashington, is preparing for leafletting for local anti-war candi¬dates. All these things take money, and they haven’t been gettingit, not from the students who could afford a little bit, even lessfrom the faculty who could afford a little bit more.Another way to do it is with thought. If you are interested ingoing to Washington, think about it and decide as soon as you can.You can sign up for the long distance buses for $25 at the studentgovernment office, but they urge that you sign up by Monday,when they must give full payment for chartering the buses.President Nixon’s self-assured appropriation of the supportof the “majority” of Americans can be answered by the clearrefutation of numbers, if anti-war activites can muster enoughactive support. Division among doves is all too apparent; we havealready seen leaflets condemning moratorium activities as beingtoo liberal, too establishment. Those who are against the war,however, cannot afford to bicker, to refuse to unite against thewar. We don’t recommend sacrificing sacred principles; If youreally believe the moratorium is an immoral establishmentariansellout, you should not participate in it. If, however, you feel thatit’s a meaningful, legitimate protest, as we do, you should give ityour support. 'Eftette Snob'We must respond to the challenge thrownout by Dick and Spiro. The “vocal, impu¬dent, effete, minority of snobs’’ must dem¬onstrate not only that it is right, but that itexpresses the sentiment of the Americanpeople on the war in Vietnam. Now, morethan ever before, the success of the morato¬rium on November 13 and 14 is crucial tomaintain the momentum of the anti-warmovement. And students must, on thosedays, reach out to the people, and broadenthe base of vocal, antiwar protest.When students disperse to shopping cen¬ters November 13, they will be able tochoose from a variety of methods to protestthe war and present their opposition to thepublic. One of the most significant ways todo this is to picket the Jewel food storeslocated in shopping centers all over thecity. Jewel, which has 38 percent of Chi¬cago’s retail grocery market, has refusedto honor the nationwide boycott on scabgrapes, grapes grown in California, bygrowers who refuse to recognize the unionformed by their employes. The farm¬workers, led by Cesar Chavez, have beenon strike four years, demanding union rec¬ognition, a living wage, and adequate pro¬tection of worker and consumer alike frompesticide poisoning. The boycott on the saleand consumption of table grapes is the onlyweapon the farmworkers have to useagainst the growers.The relevance of the strike and boycott tothe antiwar movement becomes clear asone realizes that the enemy of the strikingfarmworkers is California big business,supported, of course, by Ronald Reagan,the California courts, President Nixon, andthe Pentagon. Yes, the Pentagon has beenbuying huge quantities of grapes ever sincethe boycott became effective, making thesoldiers in Vietnam eat the grapes spurnedby American consumers. By picketing Jew¬ el stores November 13 we can significantlyaffect Jewel’s sales and thus add greatpressure on them to stop carrying grapes.Such a demonstration of the effectivenessof students in working with the poor, theworkers, and minorities on problems de¬fined by them can impress these groupswith the strength and potential power of thestudent segment of the anti-war movement.Thus important segments of America’s “si¬lent majority” will feel that it makes senseto give voice to their opposition to the war.Thus involved in the political process, theoppressed can transform the American sys¬tem so that it is responsive to their needs,so there are no wars like Pietnam.David Bensman, 70Close. It Down!The following is a letter we have sent tothe faculty senate of the University of Chi¬cago:We request that you, as the presumedpolicy making body of this University, closethe University on November 13 and 14 toenable its members, including all employ¬ees that so chose, to participate in the anti¬war activities being planned here and inWashington for these days.The suggestion last month of PresidentLevi that each of the University’s membersbear witness individually against the war ifthat’s his or her thing, is reminiscent of thegovernmental officials, from Presidents toSecretaries of Defense who have individ¬ually borne witness against the war. Andwhile we realize that an “institutionalstand” by the University of Chicago at thispoint would do as little to erase the historyof its complicity in the War effort throughresearch and ideological pacification aswould such a stand by the United Statesgovernment, nevertheless we demand theContinued on Page EightFriday, November 7FOOTBALL: Marvelous Maroons take on the WheatonJV at 2:90 on Stagg Field, 58th and Maryland.MEETING: Why the anti-war movement must turn left.International Socialists and New University Confer¬ence, Reynolds Club South lounge, 3:30 pm.SEMINAR: William Swinbank of the National Center forAtmospheric Research on "Wind Structure and Shear¬ing Stress in the Planetary Boundary layer", Rm. 176,Henry Hinds Laboratory, 4 pm. Tea will be served at3:30 pm.WORKSHOP: Warren Anderson, National Bureau ofEconomic Research, "Toward an Empirical Model ofthe American Birthrate," Soc Sci 106, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Hugh Lloyd-Jones, University of Oxford on"The Sophists, Thucydides, and Euripides", Swift 104,4 pm.LECTURE: "Pop Science — the Depiction of Scienceand Scientists in Popular Culture". Quantrell Audito¬rium, 4 pm. VIVEKANDA LECTURE: "From Tradition to Backwardness, an Interpretation of Economic Change inIndia under the British Raj", Tapan Raychaudhuri,department of history at Harvard, Foster lounge, 4:10.CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS: Prayers and readings on thesubject "Peace," sponsored by the Christian ScienceOrganization in Ida Noyes Library, 5:15 pm.FLICK: "The Soft Skin," Francois Truffaut, Doc, Quan¬trell Auditorium 7:15 and 9:15. 75 centsMUSICAL: "The Fantasticks", Blackfriars, Ida NoyesCloister Club, 8 pm.DEBATE: "The Roots of US Foreign Policy — Interestvs Ideology." Richard Levins, biology dept, and PeterNovick, history dept, Sponsored by the New UniversityConference. Blue Gargoyle, 57th and University, 8 pm.FOLK FESTIVAL: Seventh Annual Folk Festival, Inter¬national House, 8:15 pm.PLAY: America Hurrah, by Jean-Claude van Itallie.Reynolds Club Theater, 8:30 pm.TALK: Gordon Sherman, president of Midas Inter¬national, "A Jewish businessman turns Radical", Hill-el House, 5715 S. Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.CHAMBER MUSIC: Baroque Ensemble of the ScholaCantorum Basiliensis, Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.Saturday, November 8Editor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: David TravisFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondellkSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Susan Left, GerardLeval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, EllenSazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, David Steele,John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Steve Aoki, Mike Brant,Steve Current, Richard Davis, Monty Futch,Ben Gilbert, Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer,Phil Lathrop, Jerry Levy, David Rosenbush,Paul Stelter.Founded In 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. CROSS COUNTRY: Midwest Conference Championship,Washington Park, 11 am.DANCE: Folk Festival workshop. International House, 2pm. Dance party with the Orchestra Beograd of Mil¬waukee, 8:03 pm.CEF FLICK: "Petula", Quantrell Auditorium, 7 and 9:30pm.MUSICAL: "The Fantasticks," Blackfriars, Ida NoyesCloister Club, 8 pm.CONCERT: Collegium Musicum of Southern Illinois Uni¬versity presents a program of Renaissance music.Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "America Hurrah", ReynoldsClub theatre, 8:30 pm.Sunday, November 9CHEC: Women's Liberation course — informal brunchand discussion in Eleanor Club lounge, 1442 E. 59th.11:00 am.CANVASS: For Raby and Warman, who will speak inIda Noyes before buses and cars leave. 11 am.CHURCH: Rev E. Spencer Parsons in Rockefeller Chap¬el, 11 am.ORATORIO FESTIVAL: "Elijah" by Mendelssohn, Rich¬ard Vikstrom conducts the Rockefeller Chapel Choirand the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. 3:30 pm.DISCUSSION: "The American Civil War II?" Dr Rich¬ard Luecke of Chicago's Urban Training Center. Bon-hoeffer House, 5554 S. Woodlawn, 6:30 pm.CHEC: Calligraphy study group. Bergman Gallery, 7pm.TRAVELOGUE: International House presents travelogueto Israel. Home room, 7 pm. Students 50 cents, others$1.BLACK FRIARS: "Fantasticks". Cloister Club, 7:30 pm.Monday, November 10CHESS TOURNAMENT: USCF rated, registration in IdaNoyes third floor at 7 pm. First round starts at 7:15.Time limit — 40 moves in V/i hours, bring clocks. Allplayers must join USCF, special rates for club mem¬bers ($2.50 juniors, $5 over 21). Sponsored by UCChess Club.SPEECH: Allard Lowenstein (D-New York) on "Politicsand the Vietnam War". Sponsored by the Political Sci¬ence Association. Breasted Hall, 7:30 pm.MADRIGALS: Allegro Conspirito, 5540 S. Woodlawn, 8pm.LECTURE: Wolfgang Panofsky on strategic armslimitation, Quantrell Auditorium, 4 pm.Page 6/The Chicago Maroon/November 7, 1969; V“vt * < ••*'< - '*. « #.?-*- **•*%*%*» *Number 7, Friday, November 7, 1969Look Out Rich Doctor9 The People Are GonnaGet Your mAMAIf there was a contest on what was the most reactionaryorganization in the United States, there is no doubt thatthe American Medical Association is sure to be close tothe top. It had financed one of the largest Congressionallobbies. Being such a strong force in medicine, it is boundto work against any radical changes in that field which isin desperate need of improvement. Bert King, a graduatestudent in the Department of Pathology and a fourth yearstudent in the Pritzker School of Medicine, examines thepast, present and future AMA and how it relates to medic¬al care.By Bert KingDR. GERALD DORMAN was installed as the new presi¬dent of the American Medical Association under a virtualstate of siege. Dozens of plainclothes police guarded thedoors of the Imperial Ballroom of the Americana Hotel inNew York City. The police were preparing for a possibleonslaught by several hundred dissidents from the MedicalCommittee for Human Rights, the Student Health Organi¬zations, the Movement for a Democratic Society, and theHealth Policy Advisory Center. A few days prior to theinstallation of Dr. Dorman, the same groups had inter¬rupted the opening session of the House of Delegates ofthe AMA to read a condemnation of organized medicineand to call the AMA the American Murderers Association.The demonstrators also refused to stand during the nation¬al anthem, an action which so incensed some of the AMAdelegates that they threw ashtrays and screamed obsce¬nities. The demonstration was only slightly more militantthan those that have occurred at the AMA conventionsevery year for the past four years. For the relativelysmall but growing number of progressive and radicalhealth workers, the AMA convention remains an impor¬tant if somewhat repetitive location for attacking the lackof public responsiveness and accountability of the doctorswho control the delivery of health care in the US.Public criticism and action against the AMA continuesto grow despite an intensified public relations effort and anew moderate image emanating from AMA headquarterson N. Dearborn St. in Chicago. The public relations de¬partment of the AMA has indeed changed from the daysof Dr. Morris Fishbein, former editor of the Journal of theAMA and one-man spokesman for the medical profession.In 1943, Fishbein (quoted in R. Harris’ book A Sacred Trustcalled the Murray-Wagner-Dingell bill for federal nationalhealth insurance “a blueprint for medical revolution, deal¬ing with the sick and with the physicians who care forthem as inanimate units to be moved at a dictator’s will.”He went on to say that the bill was ‘‘perhaps the mostvirulent scheme ever to be conjured out of the mind ofman.” The AMA of 1969, however, declares that healthcare is a human right, black physicians should not bediscriminated against, there is a shortage of doctors afterall, and sponsors national conferences and national com¬mittees to study problems of health care for the poor.Even Dr. Fishbein has been rehabilitated. Although hesuccessfully opposed almost every effort to improve andexpand health care for the past thirty years, Dr. Fishbeinwas recently honored at a $500 a plate dinner to raisefunds for the new Morris Fishbein School for the Study ofHistory of Medicine at the University of Chicago.The 220,000 doctor membership of the AMA representsabout 60% of US physicians. This percentage has beenfalling each year as more physicians going into grouppractices and into academic and preventive medicine nolonger finds advantages in AMA membership. The mem¬bership of the AMA at the county medical society levelstill holds an enormous degree of influence over bothhealth and local politics; in most areas these politics varyfrom John Birchite to Nixon Republicans .The IllinoisState Medical Society in their resolutions this year votedagainst recommending increased food allowances for wel¬fare recipients. Such obtuse and reactionary actions by county and state medical societies remain the rule ratherthan the exception. Medical society politics remains theprovince of those elderly physicians who have been mostadept in converting their medical receipts into widespreadinvestments (often in health related industries such ashealth insurance, drugs, and hospital supplies though oilremains popular with the Southwest medical man.) Theactive and controlling membership of the medical so¬cieties generally remains unruffled by the concept ofhealth care as a human right; the local AMA man contin¬ues to maintain faith in himself as a combination healer-community leader-successful businessman. The smallnumber of more progressive county societies from easternstates are submerged by the preponderant conservatismof the AMA structure.The collapse of the health non-system is now a matterof public record, a subject of innumerable newspaper andfeature articles. The shortage of health personnel, relent¬less inflation of physician and hospital fees, maldistribu¬tion of facilijjes, and racist, inadequate care are the pil¬lars of the industry. No matter how desparate the situ¬ation, however, the physician continues to do better finan¬cially. Although the AMA opposed Medicare and Medicaidbitterly, its opposition to such legislation set the stage forits own members to increase their incomes under the“usual and customary fee” provisions of these laws. Allrecent federal health legislation has preserved the MD’sperogative to set his ever increasing fees.But the non-system is collapsing and the leaders oforganized medicine realize that they must work hard topromote a responsible image. A number of groups in¬cluding the UAW-sponsored Committee for NationalHealth Insurance and the AFLrCIO have proposed feder¬ally-administered universal nation health insurance. Suchlegislation would undoubtedly lead to some type of publiccost-quality controls over the price and methods of deliv¬ery of medical care. As its strategy to head off a publicnational health insurance program, the AMA (in the Octo¬ber 27, 1969 American Medical News) has proposed thatpeople be given income tax credits for purchase of privatehealth insurance. Economically disadvantaged individualswould be given federal funds to purchase private healthinsurance. This proposed windfall for the insurance in- dsutry would provide real security for the AMA. It wouldpreserve the doctor’s power to receive his privately setpayment and would also strengthen his investments inprivate insurance companies. The struggle over nationalhealth insurance is the next great national battle for theAMA. At any cost, organized medicine is preparing tosmash the beginnings of a publicly accountable healthcare system.The 242 member House of Delegates of the AMA iselected by the state medical societies and reflects theessence of the successful medical politician. The resolu¬tions of the House of Delegates are carred out by a 12member Board of Trustees, a 910 man executive staff inChicago, and a 2 6man staff in Washington. The AMA staffalong with the overlapping staff of the American MedicalPolitical Action Committee (AMPAC) is responsible forimplementing the work of the professional committees andsections of the AMA as well as for carrying out politicallobbying and support of conservative congressional candi¬dates. AMPAC has state medical society affiliates whichare responsible for expenditure of campaign funds in sup¬port of candidates who are loyal to the concept of freemarket place health care. In a typical campaign yearAMPAC and its state affiliates spend about 1.5-2 milliondollars usually concentrating upon a carefully selectednumber of races in which conservative candidates are in¬volved in close contests.While the members of the House of Delegates andBoard of Trustees continue to be elderly MDs holding toviews according to Morris Fishbein, there are currents ofsocial change affecting the AMA that can no longer beignored by the mandarins of medicine. After twenty yearsof assertions that there were sufficient numbers of doctorsbeing trained in the US the AMA only last year (in theMarch 11, 1968 AMA News) reversed its opposition to fed¬eral support of medical school education. After losing aforty year, multi-million dollar fight against Medicare, theAMA leadership (at least that portion of it still in touchwith reality) recognizes that a line can no longer bedrawn against all government involvement in health care.The real future threat to the AMA will come from a nas¬cent coalition of young health workers and health careTHEATREHurrah for “America Hurrah 7 ?IF YOU ARE CURIOUS about what is meant by “NewTheatre,” Jean-Claude van Itallie’s America Hurrah — acollection of three one-act plays — will go a long waytoward illustrating the term. In some ways it is one of thebest introductions to the current theatrical scene, perhapsbetter than the sensational but erratic, overlong, mean¬deringly repetitious, and frequently offensive LivingTheatre which jammed Mandel Hall last year, and causedriots elsewhere. For one thing, America Hurrah managesto be outrageous, brutal, and obscene without ever beingoffensive. For another, it is brief. And possibly most im¬portant, it explores effectively the rich vein of humorwhich is inherent in the new drama, and which in anycase is an antidote to dramatic weariness and boredom.Once known as “anti-theatre” (but that term is nolonger employed, since the essentially reactive emphasisimplicit in the phrase has given way to concern with thescene itself), “New Theatre” is characterized by an open¬ness and freedom in language and movement which gowell beyond what were once thought to be the limits notonly of social, moral, and aesthetic convention, but of thestage itself. Most people’s experience being what it is, andthe news media being what they are, what has dominateddiscussion of New Theatre has been four-letter words andbare butts. More central to the effect of New Theatre,however, is its directness and immediacy (sometimesachieved through brutality), its effect of spontaneity, itsapparent unawareness of convention (flaunting conventionis long since passe), its strong sense of the rhythms of allhuman activities — movement, gesture, language — andits employment of these rhythms in an open, very physi¬cal, but highly disciplined way.Indeed, ensemble work — not as a group of individ¬uals relating to one another, but as units comprising awhole which occupies and uses the controlled space of thestage (or theatre) — is perhaps the heart of New Theatre.The emergence of the group may reflect the loss of identi¬ty and individuality in our society; but in theatrical terms,the group represents a new entity or “character” whosedynamics are explored and maximally utilized. Thus,paradoxically, style and discipline are characteristics ofthis superficially anarchic and chaotic theatre.The central insight that underlies and unites the threeparts of America Hurrah is van Itallie’s perception thatlife in America has become pop. This life style may wellprove to be America’s enduring contribution to the historyof civilization. That this quality (What is the noun? Pop-FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS ONLY50-SAVINGREADER’S DIGESTLESS THAN 17< A COPYOrder Cards located in college bookstore.Send no money. Mail your card today.IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWjust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from (arafe near home or school. ness? Popity?) has transformed existence into a nightmareand a horror has long been a cliche of contemporary liter¬ature. What van Itallie adds (he is, of course, not alone) isthat it has turned existence into a fiasco as well. It is thishorrendously comic vision that van Itallie pursues throughthese three short plays. (One of the interesting implica¬tions of this view of life as pop is that pop art can be seennot as exaggeration nor as put-on, but as literally mim¬etic. Hence the function of the “camp” perspective; tohelp us distinguish between art and life.)I have nothing but admiration for the achievement ofthe student directors (Alan Woll and William Ravich) andthe actors involved in the present production. Haivng seenthe highly acclaimed off-Broadway production, I canvouch for the fact that the first play, Interview: A Fuguefor Eight Actors, is handled with a discipline, a style, anda choreography comparable to that of Joseph Chaikin. Theplay is a study of the dehumanized, mechanical quality ofGREAT PANTS a *EXPLOSION ^1532 N. Wells (upstairs)Chicago, Old Town 787-5908BELL BOTTOM SLACKSJEANS FROM $6.50BODY SHIRTST-SHIRTS LEATHERSOVER 3,000 PAIRS OF PANTS IN STOCKHOURS: llam-lOpm llam-6pm Sundayl0“/» Discount with Student I. D.ATHENA CENTER FORCREATIVE LIVING:April 1970, San Miguel deAllende, Mexico. Health Pro¬gram, Yoga. Sessions on Selfand Community to facilitateour constant struggle to behuman in our repressive, ar¬tificial society. Write: 2308Smith Ave., Aliquippa, Pa.15001;- - - - - ~ - American life, where all qualitative and emotional dis¬tinctions have ceased to exist. Language has broken down,explanations are meaningless, calls for help are unheeded.The second play, TV, is a brilliant metaphor illustra¬ting the pop quality of American life. The scene is a view¬ing and rating room for the pop medium par excellence.TV. The viewers — a middle-aged man, a young girl, anda young man — comprise an unsavoury menage a troiswhose weary involvement with adultery, reciprocal dupli¬city, and lovelessness are juxtaposed with a stream offragments from the TV screen acted out by a group at therear of the stage. The indifference, the emptiness, and theboredom of the three “real” pople reduces all their ac¬tions and comments to a state of absolute equality, andtherefore meaninglessness. Precisely the same effect isachieved on the TV screen by the totally indiscriminateheightening and exaggeration of every action and state¬ment — soap operas ,Wonderboy, an “interview” with areturned Vietnam veteran, a toothpaste ad, an evangelist,etc. Slowly, as the play proceeds, the TV figures drawcloser to the “real” people, until all merge into one groupwho talk, laugh, and otherwise respond together. This playwas handled skillfully, though the limitations of the Rey¬nolds Club stage seemed to me to restrict the verbal andphysical counterpoint of the two groups. However ,thepower of the basic metaphor employed by van Itallie eas¬ily carried the play.Much the same could be said of the third play, Motel:A Masque for Three Dolls, far and away the most savageand powerful of the three. Basically a pop art animatedsequence employing grotesque papier mache masks andpadded figures on raised shoes, the play incarnates theincredible mixture of violence, wanton destructiveness,raw yet mechanical sexuality, infatuation with obscenity,and passionless carnage which van Itallie sees as theAmerican response to the boredom and emptiness of itsculture. I would like more stylization in the reduction ofthe motel room to a shambles, but this is not to deny thesheer power of the sequence. Particularly effective wasthe calm flowing rapture of the Motel-Keeper (the record-et voice of Annette Fern) intoning the romantic virtues ofthe road, motels, and material comforts set off against thecarnage in process.America Hurrah will have only two more perform¬ances, tonight and tomorrow night (November .7 and 8)By all means see it.Marvin MirskyCAFE ENRICO1411 E. 53rd.144 35300TERRY CALLIERIS BACKBLUES AND FOLKFRI., SAT., SUN.8:00 PM-2:00 AM50‘ COVERWE STILL BUTCHER OUR OWN MEATAND GRIND OUR OWN HAMBURGERFROM CHOICE CATTLECALL PAUL FOR RESERVATIONSFILMA Film For the End of the DecadeALICE’S RESTAURANT, now playing at the Woods, is anextraordinarily daring, if somewhat confused picture. Itcould only have been made by a man with as great asense of integrity as Arthur Penn. Arlo Guthrie’s songcould easily have provided the basis for a genial littlecomedy which none would have resented, and which wouldhave been sure money at the box-office. Instead, we havea decidedly pessimistic picture that is not really aboutAlice or her restaurant or Arlo or the draft but ratherabout Community — one of the most cherished ideas ofthe sixties — and our failure to achieve it on even themost simple level. The film is courageous in that it doesnot lay fault with our generation or with their generationor with America or with human nature or with any onething in particular. Instead, it presents a failure on thepart of three different generations to achieve the sameideal.It is daring to make a film like Alice’s Restaurantbecause when a director is being deliberately diffuse he isrisking the loss of artistic unity and of his audience alongwith it. To further add comedy, which bears no obvioustrumatic relation to the rest of the material, is courtingdisaster. There are times when the center does not hold,when the film loses sight of its purpose, but these timesare rare, and we would be impoverished men indeed if wewere to miss the real value of the film.Perhaps the most daring and rewarding of Penn’srisks in Alice is the triple sense of time which he createsfor the film. On a strictly literal level the picture takesplace over a period of about four months. Arlo Guthriegoes to college; gets run out of town (in the terriblyAmerican and violent manner which is so dear to ArthurPenn); goes to New York to see Woody; goes to Stock-bridge for various reasons including the famous “Thanks¬giving dinner which couldn’t be beat”; gets run out ofStockbridge with a half ton of garbage; and returns towitness the final disintegration of the marriage of hisfriends Ray and Alice. On a second time level, Penn chro¬nicles the shifting moods from the beginning to the end ofthe 1960’s. On the third level, Penn discusses the impact ofthe ’30’s (the generation of which Arlo’s father was aforemost spokesman) on the generation of the ’60’s.One of Penn’s most propitious expressions of the secondtime scheme is his use of music, which assumes a certainamount of knowledge on the part of the audience butwhich, given the ubject matter, is about the most appro¬priate device possible. When Alice and Ray first move intothe church that is to become their home, the music is thatof the early sixties — guitars and banjos, lots of stompingand singing together. By the end of the picture, at themock marriage, we have shifted to the amplified, drugladen music of today; some of the instruments are thesame but the style and the spirit have radically changed.The music carries us back to the third time level. Thescenes between Woody and Arlo in the Queens hospitalTB8ITBI The draft board scene from “Alice Restaurant” with Arlo Guthrie (center).where Woody dies are expressive of the desire and ulti¬mate inability to transfer the music and spirit of one gen¬eration to the next.Music, of course, is not the only device which Pennuses to chronical the failure of community and communalliving. Other aspects of life style can be even clearerindications of change. Penn has wisely decided to showthis change in life style throgh characterization. Films ofpersonal change still represent the dominant trend in theAmerican cinema. It is far easier for us as audience togeneralize from a change in character than it would be for,us to understand what the change in a mass means for theindividuals involved. It is wise as well because Penn hasalways been strongest when expressing himself throughcharacterization. It is not coincidental that he is one of thefinest actors’ directors in the American cinema. Penn’sability to link emotional reaction with its objective situ¬ation is a direct and sin,pie means of communicating.In Alice’s Restaurant the burden of the picture fallsupon Alice and Ray (magnificently played by Pat Quinnand James Broderick) and Shelly (Michael Me Clana-than). But they exist clearly in a framework, a frameworkwhose somewhat artificial artistic confines are made clearer as we understand the stylization being employed.This stylization is most evident in the comedy sequencesbut it extends to the rest of the picture as well. Its majoreffect is to make us understand that Alice, Ray, Shelly,and Arlo are merely examples, characters whose situationextends far beyond their selves or their problems. It tendsamong other things to make the attendant “hippies” morereal than they seem at first glance. If we got close enoughto them, Penn tells us, they could involve us as easily asthe main characters. (The incumbent involvement withthose one comes into close contact with is one of the mostimportant themes of the picture and perhaps the mostdemanding reason given for the failure of communal liv¬ing.) The effect is to make the individual failures of thecharacters all the more meaningful and universal.I do not want to end this review without giving creditto an extraordinary lady, Dede Allen, the film’s editor. InAlice’s Restaurant the cutting is as chancy as is the treat¬ment itself and a good measure of the film’s success mustlie with Miss Allen. Editors tend to be among the forgot¬ten workers of the film industry. This one you shouldn'tforget.T.C. FoxDurrenmaCs Not Quite Epic TheatreFREDRICK DURRENMATT wrote Die Ehe des HerrnMississippi (The Marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Mississippi),which was performed last Thursday night at the Athe¬naeum Theatre by Die Schauspieltrupe Zurich, in 1952.This was a time when the post-war acceptance of the workof Bertolt Brecht had made epic drama a “respectable”form of theatrical endeavor — it is a pity that Durrenmattdid not have a greater grasp of the implications of theform. Epic drama is not a theatrical gimmick; it evolvedin Brecht's hands as a necessary means for changing thetheatre from an idealistic to an ideological instrument. Inthis present play, Durrenmatt leaves the audience withthe feeling that he is saying to them,” look, I am writingepic drama”, when in fact he is reducing the epic tech¬nique to a mere formality. The opening of the play inwhich Saint-Claude enacts his final death would seem tobe leading us to the valid role of the epic theatre, that ofremoving our attention from the plot line to permit us toconcentrate upon incidents as they succeed one another.Durrenmatt removes the tension, but does present us withany really significant incidents.The play treats, in a simplistic manner an artificialdialectic between Herr Mississippi, a public prosecutorand the representative of an extreme form of Mosaicrighteousness (he secures personally two hundred and fif¬ty death sentences) and a caricature of a Marxist func¬tionary who has come to the unnamed country of the play(Switzerland?) to realize a successful Communist Utopia.There is no synthetic resolution of the dialectic. The arriv¬al of the drunken count, Ubelohe Zabemsee (a formerlover of the heroine Anastasia), whose ten-minute solilo¬quy in the middle of the play forms the technical solilo-point of the drama, is presumably intended to represent avia media of Christian love. This does not work. The cen¬tral difficulty of the play is that Durrenmatt, having setup two very static positions at the beginning and failed toresolve them in the person of the count (at the same timesuggesting that his actors and the audience are mere pup¬pets) is faced with a second act which in these circum¬stances is bound to stagnate theatrically. This it does. This dramatic stagnation is brought about by the author’srefusal to commit himself to a position, and the very rep¬resentation of the possible synthesis by a drunkard showsthe extent to which Durrenmatt’s unwillingness to commithimself goes. This lack of commitment in a ideologicalframework is bound to drag the play to a halt and engen¬der the need for repetition in the second act.Having said this about the play, let us turn to its per¬formance. The overall standard of the cast is good andRobert Freitag as the unyielding Herr Mississippi man¬aged to maintain his characterization throughout the playin a role, which in the hands of a lesser actor could easilydegenerate into caricature or simply disintegrate. Theweakest part was that of Anastasia, the wife whom Mis¬sissippi has married as a gesture of Mosaic penance, afterdiscovering that she has poisoned her husband for in¬fidelity with his (Mississippi’s) wife. Mississippi has in¬cidentally poisoned his wife for her part in the affair.Anastasia, was never convincing as the grande dame orthe femme fatale, the aura of a provincial Iphigenie hung' too closely around her head. tegrated into the play and heightened our feeling of super¬ficiality.These are, however, relatively minor points, it was goodto have the opportunity to see a professionally performedplay in German in Chicago and one wonders why thecompany could play for three nights in Salt Lake City andbarely fill the theatre here (a small house) for one nightonly; one more indication of the lack of interest in inter¬esting theatrical ventures in Chicago.David R. BathrickKenneth NorthcottSome ChangesStarting mext week, the Grey City Journal will bemaking a few changes. Culture Vulture, famous for hisacid personality and hi s humorous comments, will beexpanded so it can be looked to as a reliable guide to whatis happening in Chicago on not only the cultural but manyother fronts.In general, it can be said that the somewhat declamato¬ry style of acting, still favored mi the German-speakingstage, led at the beginning to a real sense of epic distance,but as we have said the epic nature of the work is super¬ficial and the style becomes wearing after a while in aplay which becomes increasingly realistic.The direction was, on the whole, consistent, one wouldwish that cognac bottles could be filled with somethingapproaching the color of the fervent spirit, and that realcoffee could be poured out. Small points in techniquemight also have been corrected: when coffee spoondrops as part of the action in the text the maid is sum¬moned by a bell, when it drops accidentally the characterpicks it up. This is perhaps a question of training, but itdisturbs nonetheless.As a final word, we would have wished that somethingmore specific could have been made of the Don Quixotemotif at the end — it somehow never seemed to be in¬ Hopefully all campus events of interest will be men¬tioned (not only ones which have good public rela¬tions men). Furthermore, events in Chicago why may in¬terest people on campus will be explored in order to helpalleviate the symptions of Hyde Parkitis.We will try to make this guide extensive. The onlyway this can be so is if any campus activity which wouldlike to be mentioned informs us of the details. Consideringprinting deadlines this must be done by noon Tuesdaybefore the Friday of publications. Unreasonable as itsounds, that is the only way this guide can be at allcomplete. Also, if you know of anything interesting hap¬pening in the city, (no matter how obscure) which mightinterest someone else send that in too. The address is TheCulture Vulture, the Maroon, 3rd Floor, Ida Noyes Hall.Continued from Page Oneconsumers who question the very basis of private fee-for-service medical practice. A more imminent threat to theAMA’s hegemony is the growing power of the large aca¬demic institutions which are gaining control over healthcare planning and policy. It is necessary to examine howthe liberalized public relations effort of the AMA is deal¬ing with these new forces.THE AMA AND THE POLITICS OF MEDICAL STU¬DENTSAMA membership as a percentage of all U.S. physi¬cs.ns has passed below the 60 %mark and continues tofall. When this figure falls below 50%, irreversible deterio¬ration of the AMA’s influence will have occurrred. TheAMA has therefore been recently quite concerned with itsimage among medical students. Since 1965, many studentsin medicine, nursing and allied health fields have joinedtogether to form Student Health Organizations (SHO’s) inmost major cities. The initial purpose of SHO was simplyto educate health science students about the conditionsand forces that make health care in some poverty areaseven worse than in some underdeveloped nations. Buteach year for the past four years SHO members havebecome more involved in the politics of health and healthscience education. SHO members are now typically work¬ing for community control of health facilities, for in¬creased admissions of black and brown students to healthscience schools, and for an end to the fee-for-service basisof medical practice. A number of SHO groups, stimulatedby the heightened political consciousness of entering stu¬dents, are actively supporting movement organizationssuch as the Black Panther Party and the Young Patriots.The implications of this radicalization of health studentshave caused consternation among the least obtuse officialsof the AMA. For the economic and political power of theAMA rests upon domination of health policy by organizedmedicine — doctors must maintain their “right” to contin¬ue to set their own income. A coalition of communitymembers, health workers in all fields and progressive-radical young doctors would rapidly reduce the AMA’sclaim to eminent domain in health care delivery.The AMA’s response to the acceptance among medicalstudents of forbidden political philosophies has been pre¬dictable. When students in the Student American MedicalAssociation (SAMA) followed the lead of SHO in devel¬oping community oriented programs, the Board ofTrustees of the AMA decided to support SAMA in order toco-opt medical student efforts into moderate and limiteddirections.SAMA until 1965 was a moribund organization pat¬terned after the structure and policies of the AMA. Since1965, SAMA members have begun to be mildly critical ofsome of the more absurdly reactionary positions of theAMA. However the leadership of SAMA has recently ce¬mented a warm political and financial understanding withthe AMA. The SAMA budget is now approaching one mil¬lion dollars per year in private and federal grants. The“new SAMA” leadership is consciously preparing itself totake control of organized medicine in the 1970’s when aliberalized AMA will be necessary to maintain the domi¬nance of organized medicine in a sector of the economyalready exceeding 60 billion dollars per year. Thus theAMA recognizes that its survival is dependent upon thebolstering of a national medical student organization thatwill not seek to question the physician’s control of medicalfrom Encounter, the Bulletin of the Stuchmt Health OrganizationPage 'A/&Kty €*r*<>unHrl/Nwember 7, iMJMU \ •— Service Vv.'«&%***£/w-"f 1" r.V.%*."I challenge the speaker's charge that we have one health caresystem for the rich and another for the poor. To us, there areno poor!"Copyright, the Denver Post, reprinted With permission, the Los Angeles Times Syndicatecare policy. This goal seemed partially realized whenSAMA president Edward Martin proudly pointed out thethe AMA that there were many SAMA members who stoodduring the national anthem and did not participate in themilitant demonstration at the recent AMA convention.More importantly, the SAMA leadership has carefullyavoided exposing its membership to the radical speakersand ideas that have been an important part of the SHOprogram since 1965.Recent federal health legislation has been directed to¬ward regionalization of health planning. Such legislationincludes the Regional Medical Program and the Com¬prehensive Health Planning Act. The AMA did not opposeenactment of these bills which included assurances thatthey would be implemented without “changing existingpatterns of health care delivery”. However governmentand public concern for some sort of solution to the healthcare crisis have generated pressures for the medicalschools and teaching hospitals to take a large part of theresponsibility for delivering health care to regionalizedareas. The staffs and faculties of the academic medicalcenters are composed of many doctors who see no valuein holding AMA memberships. Given the significant feder¬al research funds which flow to the medical schools, thesefacts have promoted the concentration of increased healthpolicy-making power within large teaching institutions.The real estate and corporate-dominated boards oftrustees of these institutions lend additionarpower to thenew medical empires such as Albert Einstein and Colum¬bia in New York and the University of Chicago-MichaelReese in Chicgo.Unfortunately for patients and hospital workers, how¬ever, the leadership of the medical empires may be asequally unresponsive to their rights as the AMA. The cele¬brated battle over the proposed appointment of Dr. JohnKnowles to the Department of HEW did not represent astruggle between liberal health policies and conservativeAMA positions. In fact Dr. Knowles in 1967 joined with F.J. Blasingame, then executive vice president of the AMA,to produce an infamous report concerning civilian casu¬alties in Vietnam for Lyndon Johnson. The report (1967Report of the Vietnam Medical Appraisal Team) stated inpart that “the U. S. military and AMA volunteer healthprogram in Vietnam is an effective tool in winning thehearts and minds of the people and should be used to thefull in the over-all pacification effort”. Blasingame andother AMA doctors also reported in the publication of theDow Chemical Co. that napalm has resulted in only a verysmall number of civilian casualties but that it was ex¬tremely effective in routing the enemy!The controversy over John Knowles reflected thestruggle between the AMA and the institutional medicalempires over which group is to control future health pol¬icy. The appointment of Dr. Roger Egeberg of the Univer¬sity of Southern California in place of Dr. Knowles wasstill a defeat for the AMA. But it was not a victory forprogressive health policies. Medical schools and teachinghospitals have been no more responsive than the AMA tothe need for community control, respect for patients’rights, and for decent opportuniteis and wages for hospitalworkers. The Association for American Medical Collegeshas refused to take any action against its constituentmember schools that continue to oppress hospital workers.At Columbia and the Medical College of South Carolina,teaching hospitals have bitterly opposed hospital workers unions such as Local 1199. Moreover, the approach of themedical schools to community health problems has con¬sistently been research oriental and has utilized a veneerof technical expertise to separate community membersand health workers from real participation in meeting thehealth needs of the people. The growing national decision¬making power of the medical empires represents a con¬centration of influence in a technocratic and corporateelite that is unresponsive and unaccountable to the con¬sumers of health care. Problems of community health arepolitical problems, problems of power and control over theinstitutions which affect one’s daily life. Though both theAMA and the medical empire builders think differently,health inadequacies are not simply the problems of apply¬ing new technologies or new public relations images tobackward areas. ;THE AMA: AN AUTOPSY REPORTThe power of the AMA remains immense. Were it notfor the realities of health care in the US in 1969, themachinations and statements of the AMA would provideconsiderable entertainment. But the past and present pol¬icies of organized medicine have so retarded the devel¬opment of a humane health care system for millions ofpeople that thousands continue to die for lack of the mostbasic and simple care. To call the AMA the AmericanMurderers Association is somehow an understatementThe growth of a progressive health movement among con¬sumers and healthworkers offers hope that we will in thenext decade begin to repair the widespread damage doneby an avaricious, egotistical profession. The following edi¬torial report from the August, 1969 Health Rights News(Published by the Medical Committee for Human Rights)is slightly premature but provides an excellent summaryof the decline of a bloated and insensitive institution:“The subject, a 124-year-old dinosaur, was found mori¬bund by an outraged society. Immediately antemortemthere was a spasm of hysterical ranting. The last wordsheard by horrified observers were “AMPAC, AMPAC!”“The past history was highly contributory. The subjectfor years had been manifesting bizarre symptons. Despiteenormous community needs, AMA had effectively restrict¬ed the numbers of physicians trained in its jurisdiction.“For decades it had opposed all efforts to financerising medical costs through national health insurance. Analarming tic, twitching with grunts of “socialized medi¬cine,” completely replaced normal discourse.“An additional feature during AMA’s last days was atotal inability to communicate with medical students andand younger doctors. A special prosthesis, a “SAMA,’.’was reactivated and programmed to say, “AMA is gettingmore progressive; there is nothing to fear from theseradical medical students.” Although offering comic relief,the “SAMA” proved to be a useless palliative.“A lifetime problem of AMA was Racism. While thismalady had been endemic throughout the nation, AMAsuffered from a particularly virulent form. This was atfirst erroneously ascribed to myopia. Later studies provedthe cause to be Delusions of White Supremacy.“Addictions to several varieties seriously aggravatedAMA’s morbidity. Predominating was a fee-for-servicehabit. Tolerance from prolonged use had made the feedosage almost prohibitive. The need to score every daywith an ever larger fix had serious anti-social effects.“Another AMA addiction that grew to dangerous pro¬portions was the purchase of presidential candidates, leg*Continued on Page SevenRECORDSThe Kinks Finest Achievement: ArthurTHE RECORD WORLD is a quagmire of junk, crap andwasted money. However, hidden beneath all of this thereare a few brilliant things being done by a few talentedperformers. Finding those few things is the task of everyinterested listener. Here a few of the newest releases andalthough I didn’t find exactly what I was looking for, thatdoesn’t mean that the search is over.Authur or The Decline And Fall Of The British Empire bythe Kinks (Reprise 6366):Tommy, the Who’s rock-opera, being one of the big¬gest successes of the year, is now subject to crass copiesand imitations. With the release of very new album, I ex¬pect to find some new rock-opera claiming to be revolu¬tionary, exciting and every other adjective imagineable.When I learned that the Kinks were releasing a mini-operacalled Author all I could picture was one of these copies.After all, the Kinks didn’t even seem to have enoughimagination to choose a very original title. And when boththe Kinks and the Who were scheduled to appear at theKinetic Playground together last Friday, I was sure thatArthur would be paled by its competition.I couldn’t have been more happy to be wrong aboutanything. The Kinks wisely did not perform any cuts fromArthur their first set but instead did some of their oldersongs. And I discovered after listening to the alubm thatAuthor is very, very fine on its own merits.Merely from listening to the album, you cannot get anidea of the theme of the story, for Arthur is actually thescore for a television drama and therefore should not becalled an opera, or even a mini-opera at all. But no mat¬ter, for the music is still all that counts and this music iscatchy, meaningful, interesting, creative and fun. Greatcuts are ‘Victoria’, ‘Yes Sir, No Sir’, ‘Australia’, ‘Shangri-La’, and ‘Arthur.’ The driving force behind the Kinks, RayDavies, is a master with words. He wrote all of the Arthursongs and his satire is beautiful.Listen to ‘Shangri-La’ to see what I mean. Arthur, Ihope, will bring the Kinks the recognition they so deserve.The album is so good that I have no qualms putting itbetween Tommy and Abbey Road in my record rack.rim Led Zeppelin n by Led Zeppelin (Atlantic SD 8236):It took me awhile to get into the new Led Zeppelinrelease. It took me so long in fact that I was about readyto give up. I recognize that Jimmy Page of the Zeppelin isa talented, versatile guitarist (he comes from the Yard-birds, the same group that spawned Jeff Beck and EricClapton) bdt I just couldn’t get interested in the album. Itsounded like fifteen other albums by British blues guitar¬ist. The vocals by Robert Plant were not intriuging either.In fact, my initial reaction to the album was exactly myinitial reaction to the first Led Zeppelin album, big deal.However after listening to the first album about fivetimes I began to notice interesting nuances that I hadmissed previously, and the same thing happened with thisrecord. Page’s guitar work is not as sterile as it first ap¬pears to be. Plant’s vocals get a little less grating afterlistening a few times and generally, the album, begins togrow on you, but not really enough to make this a greatThis Weekend’s Campus FlicksTHE UPPER MIDDLE CLASS gains prominance thisweekend on campus as Doc Films and Contemporary Eu¬ropean Films present the finest works of Francois Truf¬faut and Richard Lester respectively. Truffaut and Lesterwould seem to be very divergent talents and it is indeedsurprising to realize that the two pictures are similar notmerely in subject matter but in the manner of their suc¬cess as well.La Peau Douce (The Soft Skin) represents a kind ofturning point in Truffaut’s career. After Jules et Jim andbefore Fahrenheit 451 it is the last picture in which he isultimately personal, in which his characters concern himas much as his style. The story of a humanistic literarycritic who is destroyed by machines, the film maintainsan almost fanatic loyalty to the emotional attitudes of thevarious people involved.Petulia deals with the same class of people in a differ¬ent social atmosphere. Instead of France of 1964 we aregiven California of 1968. Here we are not dealing withBalzac scholars but with doctors. A difference to be sure,but not a great one in the emotional attitudes of the per¬sons involved. Like La Peau Douce the film is based onmoments of emotional crisis, on the attempts to create ameaningful life.What is most important about both films, what givesrnrmiuYippie NightBECAUSE JULIUS HOFFMAN seems to be directingthe festivities for the Conspiracy 8 (or should we say 7,now that they have picked off Bobby Seale), Abbie Hoff¬man, Jerry Rubin and their Yippie friends have decided torun a night of their own festivities on Monday at 8 pm atthe Second City. The $2 donation will be put into the fast-depleting Conspiracy fund.The festivities range far and wide. TTie whole attemptwill be to involve the audience with the performers.People who are expected to appear are the All FreaksMarching Band; Wavy Gravy; Hog Farm; folksingers BobGibson and Johnny Keen; the inimitable Chicago poet,Joffrey Stuart; possibly celist Charlotte Mooreman, andmost probably the rest of the Conspiracy 8.Non-musical activities will be a light show, body paint-mg, and a Yippie fashion show from a large supply ofcostumes which have been donated. It seems like they’llhave something for everyone — except you Julius. Go,have a blast and give your 2 bucks to 8 guys who really them their ascendancy over all other work in each direc¬tor’s oeuvre, is the control of imagery which is maintainedthroughout each. Lester, like Truffaut, had been strivingfor this kind of control for quite some time (witness hisunsuccessful attempt How I Won the War). In Petulia hefinally succeeds in making a flower more than a flower bymaking its each appearance significant. Likewise in theTruffaut, glass becomes a symbol of technology as thefinal crisis hinges more and more mi conversations takingplace beyond glass walls.The Soft Skin will be shown Friday evening at 7:15and 9:30; Petulia Saturday at 7:00 and 9:30. Both are inQuantrell.TCF record. Should you buy this album? Personally, I wouldsay no. There are so many blues groups doing this type ofthing and this album is not even among the best ofthem.-RUNNING DOWN THE ROAD by Arlo Guthrie (Reprise6346):Arlo Guthrie appears to be the man of the year. Hegets married in- a heavily publicized pop wedding, themovie Alice’s Restaurant appears to be popular favoritewhich makes him an actor now. Yet even in his actor role,you can’t get it out of your mind that this young man isreally a singer. And singer he is on his new album. Hedoes his own songs, and selection by his father Woody,Pete Seeger and Mississippi John Hurt. Arlo seems to becreating a paean to the people he respects the most onthis album and he is also showing how their music canmix with his own.Arlo is more musical on this album and less satiricalthan he has been in the past. There is no “Alice’s Restau¬rant” or “Motorcycle Song” on Running Down the Read.Arlo just lets loose and sings as he did on the flip side ofAlice’s Restaurant which is probably the most unlistenedto side of any album in the world. His voice is not great,but he gives off a feeling to his songs that is light andeasy. “Creole Belle,” “Oklahoma Hills” and “Coming into Los Angeles” are especially good.The Great PumpkinTHEATRE =======UTs MoratoriumUNIVERSITY THEATRE will participate in the Novem¬ber Moratorium by presenting an anti-war play on Novem¬ber 14, 15, and 16 and also performing the next weekendfor those who will be in Washington for the Moratorium.Joseph Heller, author of the ironic, bittersweet, yet up¬roariously funny Catch-22, has written a play in much thesame style and tone as his novel. We Bombed in NewHaven opened, appropriately enough, at Yale University,and then went on to New York where it met with less thanresounding success. For the University Theatre produc¬tion, director James O’Reilly has made some alterationsin the script which he thinks will solve many of the prob¬lems which beseiged the New York production.We Bombed in New Haven takes place in an Air Forcerecruiting station right now. The characters — the Major,Captain Starkey, Sergeant Henderson, and several otherenlisted men including a number of Idiots — step in andout of their roles with remarkable, and potentially con¬fusing, fluidity. Almost simultaneously, the actors playtheir roles, talk about themselves as actors, comment onthe play, and often express utter confusion on their ownparts as to what is real and what is theatre. When Pvt.Fisher, attempting to figure out the style of the play, says“. . . I’m not sure what it is. I think it’s more like Piran-delle.” Sergeant Henderson retorts, “If it’s Pirandello, it’slousy Pirandello.”O’Reilly has interpreted this confusion as a political one,and has emphasized in his productiMi the fact that thecurrent war is real and is actually happening although tous who are so far removed from it, it may seem likemake-believe. He feels that the play is of the upmost time¬liness and is perhaps the best contribution which Univer¬sity Theatre could make to the Moratorium.“People so often accuse actors and directors of beingwrapped up in their art and uninvolved with the real prob¬lems of today. Well, this is what we as actors can dotowards peace. The theatre lends itself to many purposesand amMig them are showing, protesting, and teaching.”Curtain time for the performances will be at 8:30. Tick¬ets will be sold at the Reynolds Club Desk.November 7, * ^tntrrir,"1*rV.*..f*rr\|rtRVt*f»c5thAnnualChicago InternationalFilmFestival November8-20,1969VillageTheater 1548NorthClarkStreet Chicagoi2pm StudentFilms,PariOn* Th#younghim-makershave someth.ngtosay'Theirnewap¬ proachdevetopngtechnical skillsandareasotconcernace comprehensively0splayedmthis' screen.ngo*thefinalistsmour internationalStudentFilmCom¬ peltion 16ano3Smm Allt.cketStorthisprogram$tSO•pm OpeningNight' EarlyWort*(RaniRadovi) Yugoslavia/84W/70minutes RepresentedYugoslaviaatthe BerlinFestival—wonthefestivals GoldenBeartopprizeThetealureisofpoiit*caicalibre,ex tremelyself-criticalasisthe communistoutlookuponlife containsshockingingredients andthelanguageisveryout spokenandoftenvulgarThefilm showsthreeyoungpeoplenotso muchdisillusionedmthe«rdrift towardcommunism;butdisillu¬ sionedmtheirdrifttowardStalin¬ ismTheDirectorwillbepresent UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorZehmtrZiinik CastMiljaVuianovicBogdan TimanicCedomirRadovic.Zel miraZutovicSlobodanAhgrudic2pm InternationalShort SubjectCompetition PartOn*Anexcitingprogramofthebest of•ourentriesincludingShort SubjectsfromEngland.Italy. UnitedSlates.YugoslaviaCzech osiovakia.RumaniaandBelgium G*org*PalSp*ak*...of Space,TimaMachine* andOtherWorlds Specialpresentationandappear¬ anceofMrGeorgePal.noted producer-directorInnovatorof spaceorientedfilms,ie.When WorldsCollide.DestinationMoon. WarotTheWorlds.MrPalalso pioneeredwithsuchfantasyfilms asTomThumb.TheTimeMa chme.TheWondcrtutWorldot TheBrothersGrimm.Seven FacesorDrLao.etc7pm TheLongestNight (NaiDulgataNosht) Bulgaria/BAW/102mmutes Thefilmtakesusbacktothedays whentheNazirapeofEurope focusedonBulgaria.itillu¬ minatesthehumanemotionofa peopleoppressedABritishflier escapesfromapr.soncampand makeshiswaytofreedomThe presenceofIhestrangerenemy createsconflictsmthepeoplehe meets,eachreactingtohisown faars UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorVutoRadev9pm TheLondonSchoolot FilmTechnique—19M PartOn* ChicagowillwelcometheworldofBritishStudentCinemawhen theSthChicagoInternationalFilm Festival.November820.presents •tsSalutetoTheLondonSchool ofFilmTechnique"—etributeto thebeauty,imaginationanddiver sityoffilmsproducedbyamost respectedfilmschoolThis specialeventwilllasttortwoper formancesandcoveraperiodot fiveyearsmtheschoolsfilm¬ makingproduction7pm ThanCam*th*Legend (PuisNaquitLaLegende) Romania/Color/102mmutes ThenCameTheLegendfeatures unusualscenesfromlifeitself, blendmgrealitywithdreamsto asserttheessentialconditionof contemporaryman.hisactiveand consciousattitudetowardslife Thefilmisanexpressionofdirec¬ torAndreSlater'sstrongdesireto getclosertohumanbemgsandtorecorddramaticeventsfrom theirlives UnitedStatesPremiere/Mann- heimFilmFestival DirectorAndreiBlaier ProducerBucurestiFilmProduc¬ ingCompany9pm MySid*ofTh*World (MofaStranaSvijeta) Yugoslavia/BAW/86mmutesAdynamicfilmconsistsof mindbendingeventswhichmakeupandmoldthelivesofpeople anywheremtheworldTheaction occursmthereallifeconditions ofthedry.sun-scorchedlandof Hertzegovma.andtellsofa peoplewhostruggleforsur.ival lusttomamtamdignity UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorVlatkoFiltpovic7pm lsrael/BAW/90mmutes Siegewasselectedtorepresent Israelatthe1969CannesFilm Festivalunderthepatronageof thePrimeMinisterMrs.Golda Meir TheSixDayWaratimefor reevaluation,agonyandsorrow forthosewhosurvivedunderthe pressureofthelossofaloved one.lossisevensharper amongalltheservicefamilies Readjustmentappearsonlyasa farfetcheddreamOneparticular familyishighlighted,andalso servesasthestoryofanentire nationAbrilliantmasterpiece withdepthandsoulSiegedis¬ appearsintoscenesandexcerpts fromotherstories,individualand collectiveasthisis.butonestory outofmany,thestoryofawnoie nation..besieged UnitedStalesPremiereand CannesFilmFestival DirectorGHbertoTofano ExecutiveProducerMichaKagan ProducerYaakovAgmon Cast:GilaAlmagor,Yehoram Gaon.DahnBenAmotz9pm PaulBrennansBibleproblemis notmlivinguptotheteachings oftheB'bie.butintheselling Forhimandhisthreefellow salesmen,livingisselling—sell¬ ingagift/edgedDuPontfabncoid piastic-andnylonboundBible that'swashableandoutlasts leather4to1."Salemg,salemg.oerlife'sstormyseasPaul Brennanfightsthetidethat washesouthissalemgdaysThe Directorwillbepresent MidwestPremiere DirectorsAlbert6DavidMaysies CastPaulBrennan.Charles McDevitt.JamesBuker.Raymond Marios.KenmeTurner TheNewDirectorsSeriesWED123pm TheCastleolTheRose (JangmiaeSung) Korea/color/91mmutesAwoman'sworld7Threegen¬ erationsofwomensetthemselves upinresplendentisolationmThe CastleotTheRoseTheinhabit¬ antsfightofftheinevitablesiege oftheenemy—manAmovietd berecalledandrelivedagamand again UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorBongreLee CastJongsookMoon.Jonghee Yun,JmNam.AmPark.Eunjm Han CT7pm MonsieurHawarden Belgium-Netherlands/ YOSmmutes MyraBreckenridge.meetMon sieurHawarden Thethemeofhomosexuality, transvestism,transsexualityis beingexploredbynovelistsand playwrightsallovertheworld MonsieurHawardenisapro¬ foundlythoughtfulandmemorable filmThestoryissimpleAwoman leadsthelifeofacountrygentle¬ man.asecretonlyknownbyher servantSheputsonfemaleattire, givesherselftoalover,andthen commitssuicideItisclassicm itstellingandissensitively patheticmitseffect UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorHarryKumel CastEllenVogel.HildaUitter- Imden9pm Everyonespeculatesfromtimeto lime(usuallyabouteveryfour years)onthehorriblepossibility otelectinganimpossiblyincom¬ petentPresidentLikeSevern Darden.TheVirginPresidentA Presidentwhosaysanythingthat comestohisheadLikeSevern Darden,whoadlibseveryime butonemTheVirginPresident OfcourseasFiliardMiitmore.he hasbeenwellpreparedfor'the PresidencyHespent32yearsm theWhiteHousebombshelter waitingtorthedayhisPresident latherisdonembyhisunbeiiev ableCabinetFittardsucceeds, accordingtoplan,tothePresi dencyandproceedstorunthe countrysmoothlyandsmartlymto thegroundTheDirectorwilloe present ButhehashelpOarden<sjomedbythe.sharpestgroupofim- provisaiionaiistsevercapturedon filmThetotalpreparedscriptot TheVirginPresidentconsistsof thisoneimeGoodgnet.a poisonparrot*USPremiere DirectorGraemeFerguson ProducerSevernDardenGraeme Ferguson.JimHubbard CastSevernDardenRichard Neuweiier.RichardSchaai.Paul BenedictTHUR7pm OulofAnOldMan’sHead(IHuvetPaEnGammal Gubbe) Sweden/color/76mmutes SomethingnewhasbeenaddedtoSwedishfilms—theanimated featureAstorywhichgrewout oftheideathatmtheheadof anoldman'almostanything couldtakeplaceaunique andwildtechnicalconceptThe childlikesequenceisnaivistic. thevisittothebrothel>sa jugend"orgy,thatisfollowedbyasurrealisticsequenceWhanthe oldfellow'sthoughtsstarttowan¬ der.hissmfulfantasiestakeover Thejumpsbetweenrealityand fantasy,betweenrealMeandani¬ matedfilm,areintendedtocon¬ veyaportraitofanoldmanfrom withmandwithout UntiedStatesPremiere DirectorsPerAhlm,Tage Danielsson CastHansAlfredson.Gosta Ekman.MonicaEkman9pm WalkACrookedPatti (GreatBritain) featurefilmtobe12midnight ToBeAnnouncedFRI147pm ltaly/Color/35mm/90mmutes TheofficialItalianentrymthe 1969CannesFilmFestivalwas notedbymostcriticsattendingasabitmgandsoulsearchingve¬ hiclenottobemissedA youngGermansoldieristocover theretreatofhisfellowsoldiers Fromhisvantagepomtheseesa villageandailthingswhichpomt towardsnormalcyHisconflictis whethertoventurefromthetreeortoremamasperordersHav¬ ingmadethedecisionhefinds thateachventureonlyendsmhis bamgbroughtbacktotheharsh¬ nessofrealitybysomedisaster Eachdisasterforceshimbackto thewombofthetreeHisfinal venture,soughtforitsrelease fromthehorrorsofreality,ends withtherealityoflifedeath DirectorRaffaeleAndreassi FJ.i9pmILove,YouLove (JagAlskarDuAlskar) Sweden/BAW/35mm/97mmutes Astheirperiodoflivingtogether drawstoitsinevitableendSten 2ndHelenadiscoverthatababyisonthewayAnxietiesandag gress.onsbeg.ntodarkenthe lightheartedplaywhichhasbeenacharacteristicofthe>raffairIn searchofrelief.StenembarksonanewaffairWhenthetimeof Helenasconfinementarrives. Sten.impatientwithwaitinggoestoaernemaandreturnstoolate tosharemthebirthAlterthe birth,Helena,emotionallyweary, startsanawaffairherself UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorStigBjorkman 12midnightAmostexcitingandpowarfui dramauniquemitsabilityto produceoestrusandencompass ingallth#ingredientsofloveand sexThreehighlytalentedGreek himstarsbuildthislovetriangletounbelievableheightsThe museandsongswerewrittenby Yann.sMarcopoutosoneofthe mostfamousGreekcomposers UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorGeorgeScaienakis CastElenaNathanaelSpyros Focas.TheoRoubanis.Despo Diamanhdou2pm StudentFilms,PariTwo7pm EenyMeenyMinyMoe (OleDoleDoff) Sweden/B&W/110mmutes ThewinneroftheBestDirector AwardandBestFeatureFilm Awardofthe1967ChicagoFilm Festivalisbackwithastrong, beautifulandpainfulfilmThehim won5topawardsatlastyears BerlinFilmFestivalTheMmpor¬ traysacurrentsituation—the student-teacherconflictThein¬ structoristragicallyaffectedby hisdesperateattempttomamtam disciplinemhisclassHesym¬ pathizeswi^ithechildrenandyet acknowledgesthat,itisIhewhole systemwhichhasturnedchildren mtoenemies UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorJanTroeli CastPerOscarsson9pm Horoscope(Horoskop) Yugoslavia/BAW/90mmutes Thefilmtellsoftheabsenceof anyrealdirectiontoMeoffive youngmen.aboutsouldestroying idleness,abouthumanregions scorchedbeyondhopeofvege tation.aboutthedes^etoescape fromonesownskm TheDirectorwillbepresent UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorBoroDraskovic CastMiienaDravicPaviaVuiisic. MisoJanketic.DraganNtkoiic 12midnightAsayoungand.magmativedi¬ rectorRichardMyerscreatesa brillianttrimdialogonthecurrent AmericansceneHeshowsa starksordid,andyetrealisticar¬ rayofcurrentsocialphenomenon wh«hcompriseapsychicfan¬ tasymeltingpotOurAmerican vacuum' <sdepictedwithunique insightmtoitsidiosyncrasiesin¬ stitutions.behav.ofsanditscon tnbutiontotheuniversalsanity DirectorMyersarecipientofa GuggenheimFellowshiptorliim- makmg.hasbeencommendedby suchnotablesandinstitutionsas NormanJew■sonTVandfilm directorLawrenceSchwab,host anddirectorofCeneposiumand theAnnArborFilmFestivalThe Directorwillbepresent UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorRichardMyers ProducerRichardMyers CastRobedOhlnch.PatMyers2pm InternationalFilmstor ChildrenCompetition TheInternationalFilmsforChil¬ drenCompetitioniscomprisedof entries—featurefilms,featurettes liveactionoranimated—pro¬ duced*especiallyfoentertama youngviewingaudienceTheiury forthiscompetitioniscompletely madeupofchildrenfromvarious areasofChicago5pm TheGreenWall (LaMurallaVerde) Peru/cofor/110mmutesAprovocativeandsometimes shockingfilmofafamilywhore .establishIheirMemtheiungle ofPeruafterthetrialsandtrib¬ ulationsofcitylivingThecouple tmdthatbureaucracy,indifference andstupidityareinescapable evenmthejungleTheDirector willbepresent WorldPremiere DirectorArmandoRobiesGodoy CastJulioAleman,SandraR-va RaulMartin.LorenaDuval. EnriqueVictoria7pm TheUpThrownSlone Hungary/BAW/92mmutes TheUpThrownStone,thefirst featurefilmofHungarysSandor Sara,g.vesusayearmthe life" storyofayoungmanbut theherosstoryisfilledwithmore encounters,crises,pathos,drama andexcitementthanmostpeople experiencemalifetimeSetm thelate40smsouthernEurope Baia/sPasztorfrustratedfrom hi$chosencareerbythepolitical smsofhisfatherbecomesin¬ volvedmthepoliticalattarsof llias.aGreekcommunistrefugee, andhiswifeIrmi.whowmBaiazs loveTragically,theirassociation endsmIhasviolentdeath,and Baiazsmovesontofurtherad venturesmavillageofgypsies Beautifullyfilmed,poignantlytold thepromiseofgreatthingstocomafromSandorSara UnitedStatesPremier#CrectorSandorSara9pm ThaLondonSchoolof FilmTachniqua—4969 PortTwo ThisspecialLondonSchoolTrib¬ utehasbeenarrangedwiththe cooperationofMrRobenDunbar principaloftheLondonSchoolofFilmTechnique Generallyspeakingontyfestival personnelandstudentsofMmare familiarwiththeoutstandingwork andproductsofthisfineBritish organization3pm IndustrialFilmFinalists Themostexcitingandambitious filmsproducedforindustry— screeningofthefinalistsofthe IndustrialFilmCategory Ticketscomplimentaryby reservation7pm IndustrialFilmFinalists9pm InternationalShort SubjectCompetition PartTwo Anexcitmgprogramofthebest ofourentriesincludingShort SubjectsfromEnglandItaly. UnitedStates.Yugoslavia.Czech osiovakiaRumaniaandBelgium7pm TheMostBeautifulAge (NejkrasnejsiVek) Czechos)ovak<a/B&W/90minules Theproblemsofagingareuni versai.andtheproblemsofthe agedarebeginningtodemand someconsiderationofoursocial consciousnessTheMostBeau¬ tifulAgeMtstheveiloflimeto giveouryouth-centeredculturea touchingglimpsemtoaperiod ofMesomanyteartofaceso fewunderstand Undertheskillfuldirectionof JaroslavPapousekthefilmtellsasimplestoryofsimplepeople— simplybeautifullyHeshowshow necessaryifisformantobe wantedandneeded,tohave memoriesandhopes,tospicethe bonngnow" withlaughterand mnocentgoodhumor There>smuchbeautymsosimpleacircumstanceasage UnitedStatesPremiere DirectorJaroslavPapousek Producer-Feix-Broz.Barrandov FilmStudio CastJanStockl(Hanzlik).Anna Pisankova(Kulhankova).Hans Brejchova(Vranova).Josef Sebanek(Vosta).LadislavAdam (Ada).JinHalek(Frania) 19L9pm TheMountofLament (LelejskaGora) Yugosiavia/B4W/1?0mmutes ThefilmissetinYugoslaviaat thatmomentm194?whenthe nationalrevolutionwaspassing throughitsi-agtccrisesThe MountolLamentisapowerful psychologicaldramawitha strongphilosophicaltoneotmanmparticularcircumstancesIt maybeseenasathrillingstoryofhumanlonelinessasthefight betweengoodandevilorasthe storyofthetrialsandsufferings oftheCommunist.LadoTajovic UnitedStalesPremiere DirectorZdravkoVeiimirovic Cast.SlobadanDimiinjevcMil*- vojeZivanovicAnkaZupanc StoleAraYidjeiovic3pmTV.FilmCompetition ScreeningtheImalislsofthe TelevisionProductionCategory, plusaselectionofthebest internationalandUnitedStates theatricalandtelevisioncommer ctals Ticketscomplimentarybyreset7pm King,Murray USA/BAW/86mmutes Whathappenswhenthreezany youngMmmakerstmdatruly charismatic,unstoppableinsur¬ ancetopbananacreateaseries offictionalandspontaneoushap¬ peningsmhisworldotsuccess andrichbusinessmen,andjom himmhisfunseekinggambling launttoLasVeqas7 King.Murrayhappens* Andwhatahappening1Youmeetamanandcometoknowhimm allhishumanfascinationand complexityHeisprobed,dis sected.takenapartandputto getheragamobservedinthefull spectrumofmoodandemotionmtheendknownandrompas smnatelyunderstood KingMurrayisauniquemimil ablefilmItisalsoadisturbing intellectualconsiderationItis alsoanoverwhelmingemotional experienceItisalsoaMmyouII wanttoseeagamTheDirector willbepresent MidwestPrerhier DirectorDavidHoftman ProducerAmramNowak CastMurrayKing.(KING.MUR RAY).LoraKaye(HisGirltorthe Tnp)9pm BestolTheFestival PresentingtheFestivalAward WinnersmtheFeatureFilm.Tele¬ visionCommercialandStudent FilmCompetitions AllticketsS375THUR20soldout8pm BestofTheFestival Presentingth#FestivalAward WinnersmtheFeatureFilmTele¬ visionCommercialandStudent FilmCompetitions EachProgram(UnlessIndi¬ cated)$250 NewDirectorSeries(4Fea¬ tureFilms)$7.50 Students(withcurrentI.D.) andSeniorCitizens(Over65) AllRegularFeatureFilmPro¬ grams$1.50 StudentPass(Alleventsex¬ ceptOpeningNight.Sun., Nov9.5pmPerformance; Ball.BestofFestival)$25.00 Allprogramsandorderof filmssubjecttochangewith¬ outnotice. EachFeatureFilmProgram beginswiththescreeningofa finalistfromtheTelevision CommercialCompetitionandaShortSubject TicketReservations4Pro¬ gramInformation,call ChicagoInternationalFilm1FestivalHeadquarters: Ml2-3111 DuringFestival.Village Theatre—642-1260 Ticketsbeingheldat*Box Officewillgoonsaleifnot calledforonehourbefore performancetime. Ticketsareavailableatthe BoxOfficeoratallTicketron outlets.TicketCentralandall MarshallFieldandMont¬ gomeryWardstores VillageTheatre—1548North ClarkStreet—FestivalBox Officeopens600pmSat. Nov.1 Formailorders,writeto ChicagoInternationalFilm Festival 235WestEugenieStreet Chicago.Illinois60614Besuretoclearlyspecifythe day.date,timeofperform¬ anceandthenumberof ticketsbeingorderedRe¬ membertoenclosecheckor moneyorderinfullpayment andaself-addressed,stamped envelope. Norefundsorexchanges TheChicagoInternational FilmFestivalisanon-profit, tax-exempt,culturalorganiza¬ tion. InternationalFilm FestivalBall TheKnickerbockerNote*Gr»*v Ballroomwithannte-ta* discothequea"girtcrr*esva andstrollingvio'msdu'*ngdnne-ISthesettingforthisdmn. forFestivalguestsand celebrities AttendanceLimited(64??mi Blacktieoptionalfdan*-e vst.ngtheitbe An Unorganic ImprovisationTHE NEXT GENERATION is the title of the revue cur¬rently appearing The Second City. The reason the title ismentioned here is more for the reader’s information thanto tell him anything about the show, for the show has nounifying theme; least of all does it make any meaningfulstatement about the “Next Generation”.This lack of focus seems to be the show’s most signifi¬cant problem, among a host of others, and it brings up aninherent problem of cabaret theater. It might be stated inthis way: how is a show, which is essentially composed oftiny pieces, to hold together as a unit? The Second Citygroup has traditionally tried to solve this by identifyingthe bulk of their material as “satire”. This seems like apretty broad category. However, it is not big or inter¬esting enough to provide a unifying theme. Realiizng thisfact has led the company in their past and in their currentproductions to include humorous and sometimes touchingvignettes, which have never quite fit in. They have alwaysseemed a nice, but irrelevant addition.What is needed to create an organic whole out of whatcan only be called a statched-together show is some guid¬ing “idea”; not an insistence on the basically sterile andnegative concept of satire, but a positive direction andguiding artistic viewpoint involving the intelligent selec¬tion and strict following of some important human themefor each show. Again, satire can be refreshing and cathar¬tic in its effect on an audience, but as a guiding principlefor improvisation it must remain of today and mean¬ingless tomorrow. An example might be the absurdity thatone experienced seeing last year’s A Plague On Both YourHouses after the election was over. Its subject was politi¬cal and when the political figures it limned and the issuesit blasted had died, so did the show except for those pieceswhich were non-satirical in nature and which had neverbeen a real part of the show anyway.I have contrasted with satire the idea of a human andimportant theme for each show. This would not deny theexistence of satire within a unital framework, but put it inits proper place as only one facet of the company’s state¬ment on the stage. This important, human statement (thephrase has unforgiveable overtones of pomposity) neednot be of gigantic moral or didactic dimensions. It should,in fact, be guided as far as possible away from any di¬mension that the improvisational actor, at his levelskill, can not give it. It may be as simple as one canreasonably make a two-hour show.Further, the Second City group, even in their stifinglynarrow concept of improvisational theater, have created aproblem for themselves having to do with what I havesaid above. That is, they have attempted to achieve adidactic importance in their work that they are simply notgood enough actors to maintain. Satire, of course, lendsWreyGITYjoumiilHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.IU the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T.S. EliotMurder in the CathedralMunchkinsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaff ExtraordinairePeter RabinowitzT. C. FoxStaffGregory FergusonChristopher LyonMyron MeiselThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroIJ* 8r*y City Jwmil, published weekly In cooperation witti Th*CMcat* Maroan, invites staff participation and contributions fromtno University community and all Chicago. All Interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices Ida Noyes Hall.ContributorsDavid Bathrick is a doctoral candidate in GermanicLiterature, head of the German Department at St. XavierCo! lege and on the faculty of the Goodman Theatre.Marvin Mirsky is an Assistant Professor of Human¬ities in the College.Kenneth J. Northcott is Professor and chairman of thegraduate department of Germanic Languages and Liter¬ature, and head of the d»*ama program in the Committeeon General Studies in the Humanities. itself to didacticism anyway, and if the actors cannotteach convincingly their message, they are trite. A bitthey have created called “I came back” illustates this.One by one, crippled soldiers hobble on to the stage recit¬ing the Brylcream slogan “I came back” and finally acoffin draped with a flag is carried on and makes its mutelittle statement with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer.The acting quality of Second City has, in fact,dropped, even from last year’s level. What has happenedis that the original players have gone off to New York in arevue called From the Second City and Second City’s trav¬elling troupe has replaced them semi-permanently.More than anything else, these new people lack ex¬perience. This manifests itself in a number of ways. Han¬dling of objects, for example the ability to make an imagi¬nary glass real to the audience, is basic to improvisation.There were serious problems with this throughout theshow. A more serious problem is the reliance of the actorson easy stereotypes and caricatures in many of the scenesinstead of creating a characterization with dimension. In apiece about persecuted early Christians, we see only theCULTURE VULTURE rudest sketches of the martyres and the soldiers (alongwith extremely heavy-handed allusions to the local copsand their perrenial victims.) Improvisational skits by ne¬cessity use typical characterizations as a form of artisticshorthand by which they are freed to explore the meaningof a particular scene more deeply in a limited amount oftime without providing the exposition needed in a tradi¬tional play. That does not, however, mean creating somepopularity “funny”, cartoon-type figure and hanging thehumor on his appearance or speech. The Second City play¬ers apparently find this to be the easier way out.In spite of all this, I recommend you see this show.Even with the advent of San Francisco’s The Committeeand New York’s Fourth Wall group ,it is a unique andinteresting example of what is perhaps the most neglectedand most potential-ridden of the theater-arts.What is called for now is an organic theater of impro¬visation incorporating all of the stage disciplines into auctural vision within which the group will be enabled toe above piecemeal performing.Christopher LyonA Culture Screech from the VultureBEFORE GOING INTO SOME of the lighter entertain-me nts on the boards in this fair city, your favorite birdseems compelled to mention what looks like it will be along running drama. How do you define theatre anyway —maybe a mixture of realism, fantasy and sheer nakedpower. The Conspiracy Trial seems to have all three (withlarge amounts of the Theatre of Cruelty thrown in.) Atthis time spectators’ tickets are easier to get now that thenovelty of the thing has worn off. Get there early but go.FilmTonight Doc Films presents Truffaut’s The Soft Skin.This film deals with an affair between a middle-aged liter¬ary critic and a younger woman. Like all Truffaut films,he makes oblique references to such extraneous people ashis idol Alfred Hitchcock and Andre Gide.Tomorrow night is Richard Lester’s Petulia presentedby Contemporary European Films. With what would ap¬pear to be the odd combination of Julie Christie andGeorge C. Scott there never seems to be any middleground between the pros and cons about this picture abouteverybody’s favorite subject — marriage.Sunday, the day after, CEF is showing another Lester,the better known The Knack. If the critics were mixedabout Petulia, they certainly weren’t about this one. Tohave Rita Tushingham screaming “Rape” every five min¬utes is hysterical in itself.Tuesday night is a double feature by Howard Hawks,The Crowd Roars and Air Force. The former is with Jim¬my Cagney (in his non-gangster days) and Joan Blondell.The latter takes place on such an unlikely place as abomber in transit between San Francisco and Hawaii.Wednesday Doc Films presents Nicholas Ray’s TheSavage Innocents starring Peter O’Toole (pre-Lawrence ofArabia) and Anthony Quinn. O’Toole is a white man in¬vading the world of the Eskimo ! Quinn) in a film whichhas been contemporary since the first explorers went out.MusicFor a school whose music department stresses every¬thing but performance (like all departments, it is againstthe “practical”) there are a surprising large number ofconcert groups on campus. Without even thinking one canname the University Symphony Orchestra, the CollegiumMusicum and the University Chamber Orchestra. The lat¬ter group is giving a concert, Tuesday at 12:30 in MandelHall. It will feature orchestral music of the eighteenthcentury. Specifically what will be performed will be Wil¬liam Boyce’s Symphony No. 1, Arcangelo Corelli’s Christ¬mas Concerto and W. A. Mozart’s Symphony No. 29 in A.What a chance to see UC musicians in practice.Other musical groups are inundating the campus thisweekend. The Baroque Trio of Schola CantorumBasil-iensis, a group that specializes in early music, will per¬form a program of Renaissance and! Baroque music 8:30pm tonight in Madel Hall. Tickets are $4 for general ad¬mission and $2 for students and faculty.Hie Collegium of Musicum of Southern Illinois Univer¬sity will perform a concert of Renaissance music at 8:30pm tomorrow in Bond Chapel, and admission will be free.The Rockefeller Chapel Choir and SO members of theChicago Symphony Orchestra will perform Feli Men¬delssohn’s oratorio Elijah at 3:30 pm Sunday. RosemaryBode, soprano, will sing the part of the widow, and HenriNoel will be htard as Elijah. Tickets are $4.50 for reserved seats, $3.50 for general admission, $3 for Universityfaculty and staff and $2.50 for students of any college oruniversity. Tickets are available through Ticketron.Dr. Jerker Engblom, professor of literature to Karls¬tad College, Sweden and Paul Austin, author of severalbooks on Sweden, will present a program in songs andwords on Carl Bellman (1740-1795), a Swedish troubadourin Room 21 of Classics Monday afternoon at 4.ArtBergmann Gallery will present a double show this Blackfriar’s “Fantasticks”week through December 6. Part of the program is originallithographs by Jacob Landau. These works are speciallyselected by the University Press for a book, Selected Writ¬ings of E.T.A. Hoffman. The other section of the show islithographs from the press of Michael Casse. Stop in for alook.TheatreThere are two student productions this week-end soyou have quite a choice as to entertainment.Playing in Ida Noye’s Cloister Club is the musical TheFantasticks. One of the most simple and yet popular ofcontemporary musicals it is about a girl and a boy grow¬ing up and in love. If you “Try to Remember” some ofthe songs, you’ve remembered one already. It is beingpresented tonight and tomorrow night at 8:00 and Sundayat 7:30.Also this week-end is America Hurrah which is play¬ing the last week-end of its two week-end stand. The threeone-act plays (reviewed elsewhere in The Grey City Jour¬nal) will be performed tonight and tomorrow at 8:30 inReynold dub Theatre.AMA, Doctors, and MoneyContinued from Page Fourislators and other governmental figures, largely throughits AMPAC. The extremely offensive odor accompanyingthis habit was very embarrassing.“At autopsy the AMA showed signs of marked recentloss of size. The scalp was balding; the residual hair wasgrey. The skin was devoid of melinin.“The nose was blue.“The brain didn’t weigh much at all.“There was a lot of spleen.“The G-I tract was riddled with obligate parasites ofthe John Birch bacilli and the George Wallace cocci types.“The spine was completely fused, indicating a totallack of flexibility at the time of death.“Both fists were tightly clenched in rigor mortis.1Forced open they contained membership in the Best Coun¬try dub and a Diversified Stock Portfolio.“Epicrisis: Unable to adapt to the obvious need for arational, humane, universally available system for healthcare, this dinosauer expired, leaving a hostile public andalienated profession behind to seek remedies which mightcure the sick system the dinosaur bequeathed.” .November 7, 1969/Grey City Journal/Page 7/You still get all the great food andTWA features like movies and stereomusic* But it won’t cost you like itdoes everyone else.And TWA flies to nearly all themajor cities in the U.S., plus we havea special youth fare to Hawaii.With all that going for you, there’sonly one excuse for not going homefor the holidays.Getting your hair cut.*By Inflight Motion Pictures Incon transcontinental non-stops. BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd St.As a member of the SkiSpecialists Guild we are in¬viting you to visit our shop.Allow us to custom fit youwith your requirements.^ e have all qualitybrands of equipment.Complete rentaland serviceOpen all year3422 Fullerton Ave.Chicago, III. 60647A/C 312 278-6606 The Unhrersfty ef OikafoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Wood lawn Are.SUNDAY AfTNMOON,NOVfMMl 9, SkSIRICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MuskTHE ROCKEFELLER OMKLCHOftWith 50 members ofTHE CtflCAGO SYMPHONY ORCH.Mendelssohn'slElitaffTICKETS:U.C. Fac. - Staff $3.00Gen. Adm. $3.50Students $2.50Reserved $4.50ON SALE AT Tkket Central, Ma¬rina City at 300 N. State Streetand all Marshall Field and Mont¬ome ry Ward stores: Cooley'sComer 5211 Harper Ct.; Rey¬nolds Club Desk.MENTIONTHEMAROONM. BERG CLEANERSFree Pickup & DeliveryCovered by InsuranceUnclaimed used furs, $25 to $100. Settle forcharges, values up to $1000. Also fabulous minkcoats and stoles. Tremendous values. We alsodean suede coats and knitted goods.1619 East 55th Street 493-9413We’re out to get you home for theholidays. Fast.Which is something that yourparents will probably enjoy too.- Something else they’ll enjoy is ourfares for students. On a standbybasis, you’ll get 40% off regularcoach fares.Which doesn't mean you'll beflying second class oranything like that.Where’s the 3 largestwedding ring selection?119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOODEVERGREEN PLAZALIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue FREESHAEFFER'SCARTRIDGE PENWITH EVERY $5.00PURCHASEWOODWORTH'SBOOKSTORE1311E. 57th ST.343-4800 Clarkniiiiin enjoy ourspecial studentrateQC C attimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office -■m■■M■■■ • different double featuredaily0 open 7 30 a.m. —late ■■■ show midnight ■■ • Sunday film guild ■■ • every wed and fri. isladies day-all gals 75‘little gal lery for gals ■■■ only ■■ • clark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m. ■■■ • write for your freemonthly program 1 You don’t have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip"Clark & madison fr 2-2843 * Cornett tJtorhl ** 1645 E.55»h STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *£ Rhone: FA 4-1651 £TWA put a price on your heathat even your parentsmight agree to pay. Attention Pre-Law StudentsHarvard Law SchoolNovember 11Two Law Fellows of the Harvard Law School will hold agroup meeting in Ida Noyes Library at 8:00 P.M. onNovember 11. All interested students are invited to at¬tend.November 12Individual interviews will be held in the office of CareerCounseling and Placement, Reynolds Club, Room 200.Please call extension 3282 for appointment.•W^MSfVWVIW^; «tw*9.- * * *-•#■■» ■* ■ -w •Med Students ThinkOfferings InadequateAbout 150 freshmen medical students iniochemistry 310 fired complaints aboutic first quarter curriculum at three facul-members involved with course planningednesday morning.The meeting was held one day after aadfly column on the course written byraduate anatomy st udents Paul Heltne ap->ared in the Maroon.Students felt that Biochem 310 was notlccessfully teaching course material.The material seems to be very dis-•ganized and disjointed. There has not?en a smooth flowing sequence,” Davidawling, freshman member of the medical'hool council of elected representatives;ER) said.JDS PresentsVorker's PlightSome 15 members of SDS put on a skit tofull house Tuesday in Hutch Commons,leking to build support for the free meals• cafeteria workers demand, the radicalsirodied President Edward Levi and direc-* of personnel Fred Bjorling. The skit de-cted Levi throwing away uneaten foodid plotting with Bjorling. For a finale, stu¬nts and workers linked arms and rushedorling.Many lunchers in Hutch left after theit, ignoming the speech calling for aarch on Bjorling s office.The SDS-ers marched to Bjorling’s officethe administration building, only to findlocked.SDS is planning another demonstrationxt week to continue the cafeteria workersmand. Because the course was taught by aseries of lecturers, no one person worked tokeep the course coherent, students charged.One suggested alternative was that thecourse be split into two or three sections,with one or two instructors placed incharge of each.Joseph Ceithaml, dean of students of thebiological sciences division and professor ofbiochemistry, answered that while this ideawould work well, it would require more fac¬ulty time than is available.Students answered that the biochemistrydepartment has one of the lowest student tofaculty ratios in the University and thatthey couldn’t believe faculty were un¬available.Afterwards Paul Monter, freshman classrepresentative to the medical school cur¬riculum evaluation committee, said, “No¬thing was resolved at the meeting. Itserved mainly as a device to open com¬munication between the faculty and thestudents.”The meeting was organized at studentrequest after William Doyle, professor ofanatomy and coordinator of the medical-biology sequence, sent a letter Tuesday toall freshman medical students stating thatcriticism of the curriculum was premature.He said that the students had only been inclass for five weeks and that that was hard¬ly enough time to decide whether or not thecourses were relevant. Students were in¬dignant, stating that they were complainingabout quality rather than relevance.Freshmen in previous years have alsohad trouble with their courses. DavidFrank, chairman of the CER, said studentdissatisfaction goes back several years.“Members of the CER feel that the currentcurriculum for the freshman class needs tobe continually evaluated while it is beingused,” he said. “Provisons should be madefor changes during the present year, notdelaying them until next year.” HUTCH COURT: Site of SDS skit (Story at left).Speakers Relate March PlansContinued from Page Threeprogram, “The government depends onpsychological effects to turn the movementoff. The new charges against Seale and thejustice department’s refusal to issue amarch permit November 15 are to get usscared, worrying and wondering.”There was worry in the offices of morato¬rium committees over the justice depart¬ment’s refusal to issue a parade permit formore than a small “symbolic” group ofmarchers in Washington November 15. As aresult, two of the rally’s scheduled speak¬ers, Sidney Lens, national co-chairman ofthe New Mobilization Committee, and An¬drew Pulley, one of the Fort Jackson 8,were at an emergency moratorium meetingin Philadelphia.Miss Burke seemed to think the answerto the justice department’s order was alarger march. “You can’t bust a millionpeople.”Agreeing with some University students, Miss Burke thought President Nixon’sspeech Monday has motivated some peopleto go to Washington. She emphasized thatthe important thing about Nixon’s speechwas that he took time to discuss the prosand cons of withdrawal. “This indicates thesuccess of the October moratorium and theanticipated success of November’s anti-warprotest,” she said.She listed the prominent dangers to themoratorium as the exclusion of one groupof anti-war demonstrators by another, op¬portunists who had no confidence in themovement to end the war, and the fear ofoppression.Miss Burke, optimistic about the contin¬uing vitality of the movement, said newgroups were being drawn into the morato¬rium, most notably GI’s across the country,stating, “Nixon can’t win the war unlessthe soldiers fight,” and trade unions, say¬ing, “They’re the ones who make, ship andtransport the guns.’A FreeUniversity Celebration5 p.m. Sunday .Graham Taylor Chapel58th and UniversityMusic — Allegro CouspiritoAn Ecumenical LiturgyAll Welcome TAI-SAM-A5ANRESTAURANTSERVES GOOD CHINESE FOODDAILY 11 A M.-9 P.M.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS OPEN1 2 NOON - 9 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY288-91001318 EAST 63RD STREET 684-1062 yojimbo Thurs. Nov. 13-8:00 PMCobb Hall $1CHGO'S OWNSWINGERS CLUBSEND $1.00 FOR 64 PAGEILLUST MAGAZME, 100s OFPERSONALS. MKS, BOX3806. CHCO 60654. HARVEY WALLBANGERcan be madeby the direotor of JULES AND JMFRANCOISTRUFFAUT’S^ ith the sensitivity one would expect from the director of THE 400 BLOW S and IT.TLESAND IIM, Truffaut examines an ill-fated love affair between a middle-aged literary criticand a beautiful young woman, References to Andre Gide and Mfred Hitchcock round outwhat is definitely Truffaut's most precise (and least-seen) film.THE SOFT SKIN TONIGHT7:15 & 9:30Cobb 75cGDoc FilmsNovember 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon /Page 7LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page Sixclosing of the University on the 13th and14th for the purpose of releasing peoplefrom certain hindrances (such as the lossof wages by University workers) in the wayof their collective activity in solidarity withthe millions of people throughout the coun¬try who oppose the War.The University’s failure to close wouldprovide simply another bit of “innocent”help for the American military effort.Sex to effective political action and to openingup the political structure to avoid futureVietnams is the attempt to reach largenumbers of community people on a numberof levels. Stopping “business as usual”should not be a “one-shot” affair, as Mr.Goumas suggests; it requires the continuedparticipation of large numbers of people for NSA Adsindependent politics at Con-Con, for Con¬gressional votes against military appro¬priations, for support for the grape strik¬ers, as well as for mass demonstrationsagainst national policy. time on some of the issues raised in thisletter.Len OliverPolitical Action Director for Rabyfor Con-ConGraduate Student in EducationI read in a recent issue of the Maroon ofa new course being offered called “humanreproduction.”As a fairly new employee of this es¬teemed university, I am surprised that sucha course is only now being given and in alimited way.It seems to me (a non-college graduate)that all freshmen students should be givena thorough orientation in the area of sexualrelationships, including what is usuallycalled “family living,” so that, for ex¬ample, a young woman graduate would beable to diaper a baby as well as do pera-metric equations.Name withheld on requestMass ActionMr Goumas’ letter in Tuesday’s Maroonapproached the issue of what to do for the“moratorium” from a single perspective.His argument for mass action and boycott¬ing of classes in November’s moratoriumaction is based on the assumption thatlarge numbers of people at a given pointand at a given time can effect change innational policy. Mr Goumas wants “to getthe war over immediately.” Who doesn’t?But name one mass action (or all of themtogether) over the last 5 years that haschanged policy.As I understand the Student MoratoriumCommittee’s plans, they are based on a lesssimplistic assumption of political life. Amass convocation, boycotting of classes, amass march, boycotting of stores carryingCalifornia grapes, and leafletting in thecommunity are also planned for the No¬vember moratorium action in addition tothe canvass for Raby and Warman.' Thisapproach seems to recognize that the key Goumas speaks of “obscure local candi¬dates,” of “simply planning to leaflet,” andthat Vietnam is secondary to Raby andWarman. These obscure generalizationsdisplay an ignorance of what Raby andWarman are trying to do. Raby’s indepen¬dent volunteer campaign for Con-Con ischallenging Daley and his patronage hacksat the gut level. The machine perceives areal threat in Raby’s candidacy, for Da¬ley’s power and patronage apparatus workmost effectively in Chicago’s Black wardsand precincts. Raby has brought moreblack people into the political process —manning offices, canvassing, leafletting,election day work — than any other inde¬pendent local politician. As this newly a-ware, highly politicized black constituencybegins to flex its political muscle, the Da¬leys, the Johnsons, the Humphreys, and theNixons are not going to be able unilaterallyto take this country’s youth to fight a hope¬less struggle in a far-off land, while de¬nying its people at home the fullest oppor¬tunity for political and economic participa¬tion. Perhaps no one reads inside ads any¬more, but more likely anyone who was of¬fended by the National Security Agency adsof October 17 and 21 thought it futile toprotest the recruitment of spies on campus.Addressed to libera rts majors and tolanguage majors, the language is as-toundingly frank. For those who know “cer¬tain languages” (there is a drawing ofthree groups of men and one woman speak¬ing the languages of the USSR, China, andVietnam), this can lead to “more complexand sophisticated duties,” “for practicalapplications of their craft” (in cryptogra¬phy, for liberal arts majors), and for pre¬paring “special reports.”NSA is “a unique civilian organization”(with its college relations branch in FortGeorge G. Meade, Maryland) and is “re¬sponsible for developing ‘secure’ (“in¬vulnerable,” in the October 17 ad) commu¬nications systems to transmit and receivevital information.” . .imagination is theessential qualification,” but they want totest you first, then interview you, to ensureyou have the right kind of imagination. Seewhat you can learn from Maroon ads?Bob Anderson present their recommendation on prcsors who are up for reappointment. I ajthat the best time for evaluation is atend of every course. But the informawe received from this very action in onMr. M-’s courses last year yielded a \limited response, and it was our decisioattempt to reach a greater number ofdents by polling these studetns once agIn addition we sent letters to studentsrolled in a previous course, given byM- Before any student evaluation was t>done by anyone in this College.The letters were sent with the fullproval of Mr. Rudolph, undergraduatelitical science chairman.4Mark DeBoer,appointments commitundergraduate polilscience associatNo “Public Auction"I urge every student to canvass with usfor A1 Raby and Ed Warman on Sunday,November 9 as one part of the Novembermoratorium action. We are going to talk toa lot of community people on Sunday — sohere’s your opportunity to start making themoratorium work by reaching out into thecommunity. The moratorium as a tactic,Mr. Goumas, will only succeed if those par¬ticipating do not consider it a “one-shot”affair — but a continuing process of dia¬logue with broader masses of people — on anumber of critical issues and candidates.Students willing to canvass on Sundayare urged to come to Ida Noyes at 11:00 onSunday for canvassing assignments. BothA1 Raby and Ed Warman will speak at thatSUBSCRIBETHE CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyat Hall,Chicago, IllinoisMaroon issues for the remaining academic year (69-70) can be sent anywhere inthe country for $8.00. For an additional $1.00 we throw in the June 6 YearbookIssue last year.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, impress yourfriends. The Roger Black letter “Public Auc¬tion”, which appeared in the Tuesday, No¬vember 4 issue of the Maroon, contains aserious error and reaches some rather un¬fortunate conclusions about the nature ofthe letter he received.The letter was not sent to all politicalscience students. It was sent to those stu¬dents who were registered in either of thetwo courses offered by Mr. for which classlists were obtainable and who are currentlyregistered in the Social Sciences CollegiateDivision. Mr. Black’s conclusion that it wassent to all political science students wasincorrect.The reason the letters were sent out isthat the undergraduate political science as¬sociation has been asked by the faculty toSt udent JPtauwriqhtC.ontedtJ NAMEJ ADDRESS ZIP.I □ 1 year subscription $8.00! □ Yearbook Issuo $1.00 festival of the yQrtioffers★ ★★$75 PRIZES ★★★— — — ' maJMAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637 for original, previously unproduced plays written bystudents of the UniversityDATES TO RUN.NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE:HEADING: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, aridpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free.’age I/The Chicago MaiVttn/November 7, 1969 ★★ PLUS **SPONSORSHIP OF THE PRODUCTIONof the prize-winning plays performed by students in thecollege, during the annual Festival of the ArtsApr. 27 - May 19Entry deadline: 11 February, 1970#Entries judged by FOTA drama committeeDirect questions to drama secretary:Deborah Davison288-6610, Rm. 1318around and about the midwayOopsRadio-TV people met Tuesday to discusswith radio station WAIT (820 am) the Sun-day morning canning of “From the Mid¬way,” an hour long University producedweekly show heard on 50 stations aroundthe country.On the show scheduled to discuss Ra-belaisan humor, Dr. Roderick Childers, as¬sistant professor in the department ofmedicine, reminisced about his friendBrendan Behan, with verbatim anecdotesabout the late great playwright.After three “fucks” and one “shit,”WAIT cut off the program at 10:40 a.m.WAIT “was concerned, but they’re notgoing to cancel the show,” an adminis¬trative source said Thursday. “They wereinformed in advance of the words in ques¬tion, as were all the stations involved. Ei¬ther they didn’t read the advance or theydidn’t screen the program.”University Radio-TV director Nick Aron¬son added that WAIT decided to cut theshow 20 minutes early because it prceded alive lecture by Dr. Preston Bradley of thePeople’s Church. “They were afraid that ifit got too close to Dr. Bradley’s speech,since a lot of wliat Behan said was anti¬clerical, it wouldn’t make too good a transi¬tion.”Pollution CommA national group, with a Chicago branch,has called for a national teach-in April 22 todiscuss all aspects of air, water and soilpollution.The group, which was formed in Wash¬ington recently by a group-of law schoolstudents, will hold its first organizationalmeeting in Chicago on Monday evening,November 10 probably somewhere oncampus, although it might be held at theUniversity of Illinois, Circle Campus.Information about the group or the meet¬ing can be obtained at 752-7045.Mailer MovieThe first and only Chicago showing ofNorman Mailer’s film, “Beyond the Law”starring Mailer, Rip Torn and GeorgePlimpton will be presented Monday throughThursday of next week at 7:30 and 9:30 pmat the Los Angeles Coliseum Theater, 1653North Wells.The film was written, produced and di¬rected by Mailer and admission will be $2.Information about the film can be obtainedat either 337-4750 or 525-5871.LecturesDr. George Basalla, assistant pro¬fessor of history of science at the Univer¬sity of Texas, will speak on the topic “PopScience—the Depiction of Science and Sci¬entists in Popular Culture,” today in Quan-trell Auditorium at 4 pm. The address isfree and open to the public.Hugh Lloyd-Jones, Regius professorof Greek at Oxford University and a fellowof the British Academy, will lecture on‘The Sophists, Thucydides, and Euripides”at 4 pm today in Swift 106. Admission isfree.Folk FestivalThe seventh annual International FolkFestival will be held Friday and Saturday,November 7 and 8, in the auditorium of In¬ternational House.The Festival is sponsored by the Univer¬sity Folkdancers, a student group.A performance of songs and dances fromaround the world will begin at 8:15 p mNovember 7. Tickets, $2.50 for adults and• i 25 for children and students, will be soldat the door.A dance workshop will begin a 2 p mNovember 8. There will be no charge. At 8P m a dance party will be held. Dance par¬ty tickets, $2 for adults and $1 for childrenor students, will be sold at the door.A combined ticket good for both eve¬ David TravisKAZOO BAND: The infamous marchers at the Lake Forest disaster.nings, $4 for adults and $2 for children andstudents, also will be sold.Tickets may be purchased in advance bysending checks or money orders to PaulCollins, 5215 South Dorchester Avenue, Chi¬cago, 60615, or in person at the Student Ac¬tivities Office.FingerprintingAbbie Hoffman, well-known Yippie leaderand a defendant in the Conspiracy 8 trial,will fingerprint copies of his books, Revolu¬tion for the Hell of It and Woodstocknationin the Harper Court Book Center todayfrom 5 to 8 pm.All proceeds from the sale of finger¬printed and autographed books will go tohelp the Conspiracy defendants.Fermi AwardWalter Zinn, a former University facultymember who constructed the world’s firstnuclear reactor under the direction of thelate Enrico Fermi, has been named thewinner of the $25,000 Enrico Fermi awardfor 1969.Zinn, now a vice-president of CombustionEngineering Inc, will receive the awardfrom the Atomic Energy Commission inSan Francisco December 2, the 27th anni¬versary of the first sustained nuclear reac¬tion.Vietnam TalksThree eyewitness reports on the state ofthe war in Vietnam will be discussed at ameeting Monday night in Kent 107 at 7:30pm.A movie entitled “People’s War” will bepresented by Norman Fruchter, who hasrecently returned from North Vietnam.Vivian Rothstein, a member of women’smovements in Chicago and North Vietnam,will speak. She visited North Vietnam in1967.The final speaker of the evening will beDan Ryan, a student here who is a Vietnamveteran.The meeting is being presented by agroup called the New! Improved! Left!Poll WatchersBennet Harvey, an independent candidatefor the Illinois Constitutional Convention inthe eleventh district, is seeking volunteersto serve as poll watchers on election day toinsure that the election is conducted with¬out “irregularities.”According to Jeffrey Liss, who is co-ordi¬ nating poll watching for Harvey, in theprimary election in some of the precinctsnot being watched unusually large voterturnouts and unusually large majorities forthe Machine candidates were reported.The Harvey workers hope that a largeturnout of poll watchers will insure a “fairelection.”Volunteers can telephone Liss during theday at 726-9000 or during the evening at 784-1212.AppointmentLuke W. Mo, has been appointed assistantprofessor in the Enrico Fermi Institute andin the physics department.Mo comes to the University from Stan¬ford University where he has been a re¬search physicist at the Stanford Linear Ac¬celerator Center, Stanford, California.He served as a research associate in thephysics department at Columbia Universityfrom 1963 to 1964 and was a teaching assis¬tant at the National Taiwan University,Taipei, from 1956 to 1957.Salt TalkA lecture on strategic arms limitationswill be delivered by Wolfgang Panofsky, di¬rector of Stanford University’s linear accel¬erator center at 4 pm, Monday in Quantrellauditorium.Panofsky is an authority on nucleararms, especially those carried by ballisticmissiles, and has long been an advocate oftheir limitation.A renowned physicist, he served as amember of President Kennedy’s scientificadvisory committee and since then hasbeen a consultant to the office of scienceand technology in the executive office ofPresident Johnson.Former director of Stanford’s high ener¬gy physics laboratory, Panofsky has alsoserved as an American delegate to the con¬ference on the cessation of nuclear tests,held in Geneva, Switzerland.A native of Germany, he is a recipient ofthe Lawrence prize of the Atomic EnergyCommission (AEC) and in 1966 was namedCalifornia’s scientist of the year.The talk is the second in a series of Quan¬trell lectures and is without ticket orcharge.Freshmen CandidatesElections will soon be held for the selec¬tion of freshmen representatives to the stu¬dent advisory committee to the dean of theCollege. All those wishing to be candidates areasked to submit their names and addressesto Carolyn Haynes, 3320 Woodward Court(you can use Faculty Exchange) no laterthan Wednesday, November 12.NUCNew University Conference (NUC), theorganization of left-leaning concernedfaculty and graduate students is planningtwo activities in the next week in re¬sponse to the moratorium and otherevents scheduled to protest the war inVietnam.Today at 3:30 in Reynolds Club SouthLounge, NUC along with IS is sponsoringa meeting to discuss alternatives to themoratorium for those who are dissatisfiedwith its effectiveness or its politics.Monday at 8 pm in the Blue Gargoyle,NUC is sponsoring the first of its debateson the Critical University. This one’s titleis “Imperialism” and the participantswho offer very different viewpoints areRichard Levins, associate professor inthe biology department and in the com¬mittee on mathematical biology and Pe¬ter Novick, assistant professor in the his¬tory department.Con-Con CanvassingTwo buses will leave Ida Noyes parkinglot at 11 am Sunday one going to the NorthShore and the other to South Shore to al¬low students to canvas these neighborhoodsfor liberal candidates for the Illinois Con¬stitutional Convention.In South Shore, students will canvass forA1 Raby, an independent, who is also run¬ning in the Hyde Park area. Raby, a lead¬er of the Operation Breadbasket, is a grad¬uate student in the University.In the fashionable 13th Congressional Dis¬trict in the North, students will canvassfor Ed Warman, a liberal Democrat whois running against Philip Crane, a conser¬vative Republican.Students are urged to go canvassing Sun¬day to help these candidates get elected.ACLS GrantsThree faculty members and graduate stu¬dent have been awarded grants for re¬search and study by the American Councilof Learned Societies (ACLS).The award winners are Kostas Kazazie,assistant professor of linguistics for thestudy of the Romanian language; EdwardLowinsky, the Schevill distinguishd profes¬sor in the humanities for the study of Jos-quin des Prez; Robert Scranton, professorof classical art and archeology for a studyof panels in glass from Kenehreai, a site ofunderwater archelogical explorations in theGulf of Corinth; and John J. Valentino, agraduate student for the study of Polish.All four grants were made after two sep¬arate nationwide competitions, one spon¬sored by the ACLS and the other jointlysponsored by the ACLS and the Social Sci¬ence Research Council.HEW FellowshipsA $375,000 grant from the US Departmentof Health, Education and Welfare, (HEW),to the University will make available 75 fel¬lowships for graduate students of foreignlanguages, geography, history and anthro¬pology.The fellowships, awarded under the pro¬visions of the National Defense EducationAct (NDEA) Title IV, include funds for tui¬tion, fees, living expenses, and travel allow¬ances. Most of the fellowships will be for1969-70 with summer fellowships providing$1150 and full academic year fellowshipsproviding $4500.Main areas of study covered by the fel¬lowships include Asia, Latin America,Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union, theMiddle East, Africa and Western Europe.The program was begun ten years ago inresponse to the need for specialists in for¬eign countries and languages.November-;7, 1969/The Chicago MarOdn/Pa§« i9PRESENTS TWO NIGHTS OF RICHARD LESTERPETULIASAT., NOV t SI 7 and %30 COBBFrom the Director ofHELP! andHARD DAY'S NIGHT THE KNACKSUN., NOV. 9EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 NEELY’SSTANDARDSERVICE DR. AARON ZIMBIEROptometristTo Our Customers1 have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we cancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and better service.Please join us at our new location.6600 So Stonv IslandPhone Bl 8-9645 eye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping CenterThank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard Service 1S10E. 55th St.363-7644 CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998* Has what you need from a S10▼used 9 x 12 Rug. to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants4& Mill returns at a fraction of the^original cost^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with thisfAd.♦ FREE DELIVERY iWhy does Bob Reilly feel he’s putting hisM.B.A. to good use at Ford Motor Company?"I’m matching wits with someof the best minds in the business.”“Just being associated with astaff that has such an outstandingreputation in the world of financeis a stimulating challenge,” saysBob Reilly of Ford Motor Com¬pany’s Finance Staff. “Workinghere has been like getting an¬other post-graduate degree.”When Bob joined the companyin 1964, he set a personal goal ofmaking Supervisor in five years.He reached that goal in two-and-a-half years. In less than five, hewas named Manager of the War¬ ranty Analysis Department. “Nosmall company could have givenme similar opportunities to growand to learn,” he emphasizes.Success stories like this arenot unusual at Ford Motor Com¬pany. If you have a Masters De¬gree in Business Administration,you’ll find opportunities to “growand to learn” in Financial Man¬agement, Operations Research,Product Planning and Marketing.See our college recruiter whenhe visits your campus. Or contact Mr. Richard Rosensteel, CollegeRecruiting Department, Ford Mo¬tor Company, American Road,Dearborn, Michigan 48121. Anequal opportunity employer.... has a better ideaFord Interviewer Will Be On Campus NOVEMBER 7, 1969p*9< r1 /.HPYWb” }*** FESTIVAL5 Last Days$1.25 all timesITRobert Frank's"Me and My Brother”with Allen GinsbergPlus"The GoldenAge of Comedy”with Laurel and Hardy,Harold Lloyd, KeystoneCops, etc.2424 LincolnPark Free528-9126 WALLER GALLERYORIGINAL GRAPHICSandCUSTOM FRAMING9:30 -6 Mon.- Sat.Sunday by appointment5300 BLACKSTONE • 363-7446ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd Si. BL-8-2900SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rate! forStudents and Relative!Single room! from $9.00 dailyDouble bed room! from $12.00 dailyTwin room! from $14.00 doilyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveA bicycle puts you closeto nature - Thus spakeZarathustraTurin in. Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh, ftobin Hood. Falcon,Peugeot. Citane, Merrier,Radius and Daws. Factorvtrained mechanics. Csed bicycles spasmodicallyFly-bv-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 - 8:30; SAS 10 - 8Tkf rwprlbt||tn from OM Town #¥**¥*¥*¥¥▼.*■*41 Sunday Sew York Time* 4. 8:30 AM (daily too) +BOB’S NEWSSTAND9* 51st and Lake Park *♦ Huge slock* of Current Mafia- ■¥4 sines, Paperbacks, A storied 4^ Pornography. Come & meet ^my dog “Michael. ” ^The Carpet BarnA d* «iwon ol Cortland Carp*We hove an enormous select tonof new ond used woll-to-wallcarpetings, staircase runners,remnants and area rugs (a largeselection of genuine and Amer¬ican orientals). Antique furnituretoo.We open our warehouse to thepublic for retoil sales on Sat¬urdays ONIY from 9 - 4.1220 W. Kinzie (at Racine)PiArccr’S ALL-NIGHT SHOWRfREORMANUS FRIDAY A SATURDAY I0I10WINC IAST REGULAR FEATURENov. 7 Nov. 1Or son WoHos -If Gogol'sCITIZEN KANE TNE OVERCOATNov. 14_ _ Nov. ISDavid Loom's Fellini'sOllVER TWIST LA STRADANov. 21_ Nov. 22BobDyloo Antonioni'sDON'T LOOK BACK I'ECIIPSINov. 71 Nov. 29TRUFFAUT'S <!■■> FELLINI'SSTOLEN KISSES SPIRITS OF THE DEADDocS Doc AIN THE NEAT mm THE GOOD, THEOF TNE NIGHT BAD l THE UGLY1(Maroon Classified Ads)JOEL! EVEN WITH ONLY ONE EYE YOU'RE FANTASTIC!playwrights' Festival of the Arts Announces AContest For Original, UnproducedStudent Plays. Our Drama Commit¬tee will give $75 to the Writers ofthe 2 Best and Will Produce ThesePlays During FOTA. AMERICA HURRAHSee Jean Claude Van Itallie'sAMERICA HURRAH 8:30 Oct. 31,Nov. 1, 7-8 Rey Club Theater Stu¬dents $1.50 Others $2.00.YEARBOXNOTICECHANGE IN DATE OF 400 BLOWSCEF Will be showing Truffaut'sthe 400 BLOWS on Nov. 30 in¬stead of Nov 15 as previous cal-endars advertise. Please come! 7& 9 pm COBB $1.lost and found CAN a good natured, modest boxcompete with the vinyl-coveredworld? No! The Yearbook will notbe modest, it will be great. Jointhe boxer rebellion today. Submityour thing to the Box.FREE FILMS See FOTA Ad This Issue For De¬tails of Exciting Playwright Con¬test. Top 2 Plays Will Be ProducedDuring FOTA Entries Due FEB 111970 Contact Deborah Davison,Drama Secy 288-6610 RM 1318.Mel Wald weighed 235 lbs afterrunning the Snack Bar for 4 years.Who says that only a TV horseand Al Shpuntoff like our food?KNOW YE, oh pacifist.Many have died for your sins.Interested in new improved leftpolitics? Come to Kent 107 7:30/WON DAY.Lost Last Week: Yellow Leather1 and Suede Girls Wallet. If FoundPlease Call 285-5189.DRUMS4 piece set; 1 yr old, $70 or best‘offer. 955-6232.MARCH ONWASHINGTON1 NOV 15thCharter Buses Leaving Friday fromMain Quads. Students-$25 Adults-*30 ROUNDTRIP—r] Buses Will Leave D.C. Both Sat[1 AND Sunday Eves. TICKETS ATIf IDA NOYES RM 218 1-5 PM For||a Info x3273-4.WIRELESSAnyone interested In forming aChicago Amateur Wireless SocietyI please call Dennis at 955-3995 orAlan, 288-6051. All welcome.STUDENT PERSONNELASSISTANT• Persons with two years or moreof college needed to work In asemi-professional capacity with col¬lege students under the supervisionof professional staff. Full or part-time positions available. $3.75 perhour, minimum. Call Moraine Valley, Community College, 4740 W. 95thStreet, Oak Lawn, III. PersonnelOffice 425-9300, Ext. 30.PEOPLE FOR SALE"/Way We Do Your Typing?" 363-' 1104.Expert typing. 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm'% & weekends. CONTEMPORARY EUROPEANFILMS Presents A Free DoubleFeature Nov 29. Miss Julie at 7:00pm Welles' Magnificient Ambersonsat 9:30 Cobb Hall Nov 29.PERSONALAMERICA HURRAH this weekendA Jewish Businessman Turns Rad¬ical. Gordon Sherman President,Midas International F.-i., Nov 7, 8:30pm Hillel House 5715 S. Wood lawn.COUVAH is coming I I IBirthday Greetings from the WestWind Anchorage. We sure enjoyedyour Visit. Love, Mrs. Bette Scott.After 3 Wars . . .After 3 Wars . . . Come hear whatpromises to be the most provocativespeech of the year.Rumor has it that Mel weighed91 Vi lbs when he first came to thePierce Snack Bar.Ever Had a Desire To Have Oneof Your Treasured Original PlaysPerformed By Talented UC DramaCo? Why Not Submit It to FOTAc/o Deborah Davison Drama Secy288-6610? 2 Best Plays Each Re¬ceive $75 Prize.AMERICA HURRAHLife before the Revolution!Dear ElliotFine?Dennis and EsfherJenntfer.Barbara.Stay outa my lift. An attempt to include serious aswell as humorous works of art andnon-art is underway in the formof a box, the yearBox. Do yourthing in a box this year. Needgood advertising staff. The year¬Box fives.ARE YOU GOING TO THE FAN-TASTICS THIS WEEKEND?Ron Rico. Isn't he the tall guy whoworks at the Snack Bar on Tues¬days and Thursdays?RUN AMERiCA!!Send a telegram to any elected of¬ficial from the Maroon, Ida Noyes.15 words at less than half pricerate of $1.00.WRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL2-8377)Buy a Snack Bar Burger or Shake.They make great presents.DANCE—NOV 15 at 9:00 PM inBartlett Gym to the music ofHowlin' Wolf.Don't let the Justice Dept, stopthe March on Washington! Senda telegram to the Attorney Generalfrom the Maroon office.Couple Wants Apt to Rent or Rmin Commune Pref Furn Near UCCampus to $115 643-7838.Would you believe Kosher meatat the Bander snatch — KOSHERSalami, Pastrami, Com Beef.Some Sound Advice! MUSICRAFTCares Enough to Have a CampusRep, Lowest Prices, & Free Deliv.on All Stereo Components. Call BobTabor 363-4555 For Price Quotes.You Need Leather Balls to PlayRugby.The world will end Sunday! Seethe 7th and last Intern. FolkFestival Nov. 7 & I. Int House.After 3 Wars . . ., WOMAN DESIRES MORNING.CLERICAL WORK APPROX. 2MOS. 548-4251.SKI VAIL AT XMASSKI CLUB WINTER TRIP—ONEWEEK VAIL, COLORADO BY AIR.f >-Mve Dec 13-Return Dec 20. Rea¬sonable it—Marty 324-8930.M/' »H ONWashingtonri<1*—*22.00 Hurry Space-t(>- HO) 226-8147.RUGBYFIT R,U VS CHICAGO LIONS-£TJC PM STAGG FIELDstag! ST am?rose sun 1 PMthe southside willRISE AGAIN!fl BLUEGRASS BY THF* COU.MTDV erh.La^VRI^G™nAsT|Ry T^ith^mpTov^a*lONFn BYoT=LJ.NEW OLDFASH-rLAYERS BA?°?UE COMPASSOU3 it 5238 S‘ HARPER - $1.SOPHOMORE THRUGRADUATE STUDENTS' 14 manager* **iti<*W~^aliable as a' Imarklt JL °‘Vcam»>us advertising,wSfts awnsstr sss ii'cZYj' In Paris they cover the Left Bank.In Chicago there is only one! Butwe run It; so EAT at the BAND-ER'SNATCH. Lunch on Saturds.Need Recent Edition (1967-69) ofHandbook of Physics and ChemistryTel BU 8-6610 Rm 3204.The Spirit of Mel Wald Still re¬sides In the Pierce Tower SnackBar—Next to Gabby Hayes' horse.The Snack Bar: Open 8:30-12:30Nightly.Gurd|ieff people: Where are you?Call Cathy Mi3-0800 Ext 3371 AM.Dear Gook,Get your insects out of my partof the map. I'm not about to loseit to no slant-eyed, bearded Com¬mie nigger-lover like you. I've gotthe bomb, so either swim away orI'll sink you. Do I make myselfclear?RespectfullyRichard the lion-heartedAll POWER to the Snack Bar! Whoelse represents so well the inter¬ests of Sex, Booze, Good Food andGabby Hayes?CHESSPLAYERS: To get PublishedNatl Recog Rating enter Tourn on4 Mon eves start Nov 10 INH Re¬gister 7 pm Fdi 7:15. No EF. USCFMemb reqd: SlO/yr, $5 for studunder 20—50% less if you loin Club($3). Bring clock.Richard Nixon will not be affectedby AMERICA HURRAH.With a 15 word run America tele¬gram you can tell Nixon to "getlaid" 7 times for only a buck. Never Touch a Rubber's Ball.Happy Birthday, Crazy Alice!Where Is the Snack Bar? Or—moreclearly—What is it? PT Snack Bar.the grease pit of the north campus,at 55th and University: Open daily.8:30-12:30 and 4:30-12:30 on Sundays.Physical Fitness—Body 8. MindWalk for your meal I Eat LUNCHat the BANDER SNATCH IDANOYES.Is the YearBox the mysterious re¬surrection of Paul McCartney (ifis certainly not the cap and gown)-a Photo Shows the deceasedslumped over in the MAROON busi¬ness office Pg 76 also Pg 7 showshim disguised as a medicine man,Pg 117 shows a little known exhi¬bit from the Oriental Institute givenin honor of the late Beatle (inlate cap & gown) The yearBoxPromises More. Contact MAROONPhoto-editor.Can you stand for this shit? $1.00in the Maroon office sends a 15word message to the Prez. Tellhim to get his balls a retread.We're sorry if you've seen "Farfrom the Madding Crowd" or"Fahrenheit 451." Julie Christieactually is good in one film besides"Dari ing,"—PE T ULIA—Sat night 78. 9:30 Cobb Hall-CEF.SCENESSKI CLUB MEETING—films, equip.Thurs., Nov. 13 7:30 Ida Noyes.YOU GOT THE BLUES FREE attha Blue Gargoyle Tonight at 7. peace Corps Alumni, Meeting cnCommittee of Returned Volunteers,Monday, 7:30, Chicago TheologicalSeminary, 58 and Woodlawn, ToDiscuss Relation To WashingtonMobe, Travel Arrangements, Abol¬ition of Peace Corps, Etc!"LIBERATION MOVEMENTS INSOUTHERN AFRICA" INTERNA-TIONAL DISCUSSION GROUP NOV.7 8PM Crossroads Center 5621Blackstone.COMING NOV 11 Dave DellingerAt The Blue Gargoyle 7:30PMPierce Cinema presents RichardLester's A Funny Thing HappenedOn the Way to the Forum on ?11/22.SUNDAYS. Margaret's Church — The Episco¬pal Church of South Shore — 2555 E.73rd St. (corner Coles)7:30 am Holy Communion9:00 am Family Eucharist 8>Church School11:00 am Choral EucharistDon's miss it! The Intern. PolkFestival—Your richest virual ex¬perience for the yeari Once aYear!! At Int. House. Nov 7 8. 8.There are other things to do thisweekend, but you'll enjoy the Int.Folk Festival Fri 8> SatHOWLIN' WOLF is playing theBlues in Bartlett Gym, Sat. Nov 15at 9:00 PMDANCE DANCE DANCE DANCETHE NEW! IMPROVED! LEFT!brings youThree Eyewitness Reports on Viet¬nam Monday 7:30 KENT 107.An Evening with Richard Lueckeof Chicago's Urban Training Center.Bonhoeffer House, 5554 S Woodlawn.6:30-8:00 PM Nov 9. Informal Dis¬cussion on the American Civil WarAll Right you Richard Lester fansCEF is bringing you TWO of hisbest this weekend. Petulia on Satand THE KNACK on Sun, both at7 & 9:30 so get out and come.(Cobb Hall)A Good Party tonight with theSUNSHINE GOSPEL MISSION atAtpha Delt, 5747 S University 9-12:30, 50c Males-University ID card.Car pool forming for the trip toWashington. Sign-up 8, be matchedto a vehicle or have your vehiclematched to marchers.Don't let Nixon think, mold hisopinion from the Maroon, $1.00 for15 words via Western Union. SendIt from the Maroon office, direct-line to Nixon's ear.FOR RENTROOM FOR RENT; Quiet, Sunny,Bath, Refrig, 57 8i Blackstone, RentReas Call NO 7-7507.Nearby unfurn. 3-rm. Also apt. toshare with woman. 955-9209.FURN ROOM WITH PR. BATH INAPT CLEAN LINENS SOME COOK¬ING 55th and Hyde Park $40 mo955-4825.TO SUBLET: AVAIL DEC 1 To Oct1 I ge Stud Apt Furn Util Incl 3Blks From UC *87.50. Eve CallMi 3-0800 Ext 3196 or 955-9510.Exceptionally Light, Airy 6 RmApt Avail. Dec. l to Faculty, Staff,Grad Students. 3 Brms, 2 Baths.$180. Lease. 288-4004.Nearby, unfrn., 2 rm $80, free utils,pvt bth., stm ht. 955-9209.ROOMMATES WANTEDLOVELY 5 rm. apt w fm. grad.Good HP loc. $66/mo. Avail. D/Jan.684-5388.Female to share 5-Room Apt. S.Shore area Near 1C. Call 768-5563After 8 on weekends.Own Room in Furn. Apt. 2 Blks.From Campus. 33/mo. 643-8210.FOR SALE57 VW Very solid *250 955-7809. PHOTO EQUIPMENT 20% Off toJ of C Personnel AARDVARKPHOTO SUPPLY 643-0035 Evenings.Photo Finishing. One and Two DayService. Free Pickup and Deliveryon Campus AARDVARK PHOTOSUPPLY 643-0035 Evenings.Blue Chevelle St. Wag. 65 mod,6 cyl., aut., excellent condition.$600. Lien, X2852. Rider wanted to Frisco, Calif inVW—end of Nov. call 328-8293 after5:30 pm.PART TIME MONEY^AM OR PMDeliverymen in "secure" areas(Cottage to the Lake, 47th to 60th).Inside help also needed. AAR. PIZ¬ZA Mr. Schoenwald 493-828266 Pfym Convertible V8 Automat51000 exc. condition $1200 2-6PM667-7086.TWIN BEDS—ELEGANT CARVED,COMFORTABLE. I PD. *35 EACH.CALL JAYME EVES HY 3-4567 OR9554)725.Xerox Copies 9c,7t,5c,47c,5c,3c $10runs, 10% Discount on 9c7c5c rate:MODERN IAAPRESSIONS1031 West Polk at UICCPhone: 8294)248.GUITAR: El Martine for $20 752-9508 Eves. Bob Gottesman.DOUBLE BED—AAATTR ESS, BOXSPRING, FRAME, HEAD BOARD$75 EXCEL. CONDITION 7524M80EVES.STEREO COMPONENTS AT LOW¬EST PRICES AR, KLH, DUAL,GARRARD, DYNA. ALL AT MUSI-ORAFT. CAMPUS REP BOB TA¬BOR 363-4555.SHORTWAVE RADIO-SUPER HAM-SET NATIONAL 1830, ALL WAVE¬LENGTHS $75-MI 3-8326 TUNE IN,TURN ON.Peugeot 404 63 Heater, SunroofAircond, Excel Condn, Economicala. Reliable $475 955-4036.RIDESTORONTO Nov. 14 Share 752-7115.2 Girls need Ride to FLA Xmas.Share expenses. 852-2454, 752-5582.Thanksgiving Ride to Detroit BJRoom 330A 643-6000. PEOPLE WANTEDMothers Helper to Live in WithFamily 8. Help Take Care of 6Yr. Old Girl. References. Call 363-4041 8-9 AM or After 6.Board of Ed. Certified teacher toteach in school for emotionally dis¬turbed children in Hyde Park. Ex¬perience with normal children neces¬sary. Call Miss Johnson at 643-730Cfor application.' FREE TUTOR WANTED: MEDSTU GOING TO CALIFORNIANEEDS TO LEARN SPANISH Bob324-5355.WANTED; Paid medical examinersfor insurance exams. Resident typedoctors preferred. Full professionalfees paid by nationally known in¬surance firm. Ralph J. Wood. FR2-2390.U.C. MORATORIUM COMMITTEENEEDS YOUR HELP. VOLUN¬TEER-CALL MIKE FOWLER 935-0425 LEAVE NAME or 288-5248.CLIENT-SIMULATOR NEEDED BYCOUNSELING CENTEROnce again the teaching staff of theCounseling Center PsychotherapyPractkum would like to provide itsstudents with an opportunity to tryto be helpful to persons with minorpsychological problems. We needvolunteers who have problems, con¬cerns or anxieties they would bewilling to discuss with graduatestudents who are in clinical train¬ing. The volunteer must commit twohours a week for 5 weeks, maximum10 Interivews. Cell AM 341800, x2360to make an appointment for orien¬tation Interview.NovMttbtr 7, 1969/Tho CMcttfo Mw*Wi/Pi*r 11'W A NT K I)CAMPUSREPRESENTATIVES4 GIRLS NEEDED$4 25 7 50 per hourBecome a demonstrator ofpersonal and home careproducts. Everyone needs them,so why not sell them'’Flexible hours to lit aroundyour class schedule. Work inyour own area All trainingfurnishedHASTINGS ASSOCIATES17 N S I A 11 SIl UK AtII 1 INOISFor interview, call 236 0324THE EAGLEcocktails . . , luncheon . . . dinner . , . late snacks , , ,^53T^BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933^Page 12/7Le Chicago Maroon/Npvembw 7, 1009COLD CITY INK**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM - 2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM-9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNAllegheny Airlineshelps you beatthe waiting game...And saves you up to 331/3 %. »Allegheny's Young Aduit Card lets you tlywhenever you want to (even holidays)and still get advance reservationsIf you’re between 12 and 2?what are you waiting for?Stop by any Allegheny ticTHcounter and purchase yourYoung Adult Card. the C.P.O. shirt alaWoolrichOur C.P.O. shirts by Woolrich are well worth asalute. For valiant woolen plaid. For thick, warm¬ing - hut light - pile lining. In tan. white or blueplaids. $27.50IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings 1811 East 71stStreetMonTuesThurFri9:00 - 9:00Wed&Saturday9:00 - 5:00SUN LIFE OF CANADAideasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet's talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU Office Floors 9 to 5 Mondays,One North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602 Others by Appt.FR 2-2390 — 798-0470Allegheny Air SystemWe have a lot more going for youyou can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tap You're under 25but you drivelike an expert.Why should youhave to payextra for yourcar insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY VINSURANCE Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856PIZZA ;PLATTER!Pizza, Fried Chicken IItalian Foods |Compare the Price! j1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 |WE DELIVER ! UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 L 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARIS IproprietorCohn A SternStoum Sc (EaittpuaShop AUTHORIZEDDEALERNEW 1970MODELS ARENOWONDISPLAYIN OURSHOWROOMSOUTH IMPORTMOTORSNon-Profit Org.U.S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931