Peoples peace treaty referendumYES NOBy STUART NEWMANThe principles that motivate part B of the Peace Treaty referendum (cessationof war related research) are not simply abstract injunctions against any and allgovernment funded or area-oriented research, or even all secret or military researchper se. But they are principles nonetheless, and not just particular objections at aparticular time and place.It is necessary to establish this point in order to answer criticisms that a panelsuch as that called for in the referendum would act in an unprincipled fashion,violating rights which are supposedly exercised freely at the University, with noother basis than the desired imposition of a set of political “opinions.” On the otherhand, if the principles are made clear they can be accepted or rejected.Most of us would recognize the justness of the Vietnamese war of nationalliberation and the criminality of the US war of agrression in Indochina, and rejectsuch empty abstractions as “all wars are unjustifiable.” Thus, even though we donot condemn all wars uniformly, we would contend that our judgment flows from aprincipled argument with an objective basis, and not simply from a set of sub¬jective opinions.Similarly, most of us would recognize that the nonexistence atthe University of courses or research dealing with phrenology, numerology, palmistry,or torture, results frim canons of legitimacy which are principled, and closely boundup with definite social (not arbitrary or subjective) values. We can take coursesand do research on the case against “totalitarianism”, but not on the case againstvivisection.It is certainly not true that anyone can come to the University of Chicago andresearch anything he or she feels like. Even within the disciplines the social settingContinued on page 6 By JOEL GUTTMANI oppose the People’s Peace Treaty referendum not because of my politicalbeliefs (I am a socialist and a Vietnam war “dove”), but because of an issue itraises that is entirely separate from the Vietnam war — the issue of academic free¬dom.The referendum’s provisions are both impractical and harmful to theUniversity as an academic community. I will first discuss the problems associatedwith only one part of the referendum — Part B. I will then argue that the referen¬dum as a whole does not help but actually defeats constructive action on issuessuch as student rights and war research.The net effect of Part B, if the University agreed to carry out its requests,would be to create a situation similar to the Joseph McCarthy’s witchhunts ofthe ’50s. The difference, of course, would be that the left would do the witchhuntingthis time, instead of the right.Part B demands that a joint faculty-student committee be empowered to“hear complaints, investigate research, subpoena witnesses, and take disciplinaryaction in case of failure to comply with its decisions, not excluding dismissal.”The committee would initiate an investigation any time 100 students sign a petitioninstructing it to do so.What sort of research could be investigated by this committee? Aside fromresearch designed to create new weapons or improve old ones and classifiedresearch, Part B states as objectionable any research done for the departments ofstate and defence or “the various national security agencies,” which might help theUnited States fight the war in Southeast Asia.Part B thus implies that the principle of faculty tenure, which frees facultyContinued on page 2The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 45 The University of Chicago Friday, April 2, 1971SG to reconsider referendum postponementStudent government will meet againMonday at 8 pm in Business East to finallydecide whether to postpone the vote on theApril 7-8 peace treaty referendum.SG will vote on a motion to reconsiderthe postponement. The motion to reconsi¬der was seconded at the SG assemblymeeting Wednesday night after the bodyvoted 21 to 9 to postpone the meeting.Under Robert’s rules, a motion to re-condider a decision by the body at a latermeeting needs only a second to pass, ifboth motioner and seconder vote with themajority.Frank GruberCAMPUS COALITION MEETING: Psychology professor Milton Rosenberg was amongfaculty who attended panel discussion on treaty last Tuesday night. B y Monday, student-faculty-adminis¬tration (SFA) court will rule on whetherthe referendum is a by-law, requiring atwo-thirds vote of the assembly to post¬pone; or a simple ruling, which requiresonly a majority. SG president Mike Fowlerruled Wednesday night that the post¬ponement wab a simple ruling. The suitwas filed by election and rules committeechairman Eugene Goldberg 71.If SFA court upholds Fowler’s ruling andif the assembly votes down the motion toreconsider Monday night, the referendumwill be postponed until April 14-15.Wednesday night, the assembly meetingeneded in chaos when several memberswalked out after the motion to reconsiderpassed, leaving the body without a quorumPanel say referendum limits freedomSome 50 people attended a student-facul¬ty panel discussion attacking the upcomingpeace treaty referendum Tuesday night.Political science professor Morton Kap¬lan criticized the referendum’s request forthe cessation of war-related research at theUniversity.Kaplan explained that the Universitywould lose it intellectual independence if itaccepted a single point of view in its re¬search. He said that the role of the Univer¬sity was to examine critically all points ofview.Law professor Soia Mentschikoff de¬scribed the referendum as a “totalitariandocument” which would destroy academicfreedom.Mentschikoff said that the University hadalways protected “the right of every facul¬ ty member to do whatever research he orshe wants.” She said that this right wouldbe destroyed if the University took a posi¬tion on the Vietnam war as recommendedin the referendum.“Groups within the University can andshould take different positions,” she con¬cluded.Chemistry professor Norman Nachtriebsaid that he would not abide by the provi¬sions of the referendum if it were passedand accepted by the University.Nachtrieb said that academic freedom isnecessary in the University so that it cantry to “discover truth and understanding.”He noted that forces outside the Univer¬sity have traditionally opposed the conceptof academic freedom. Now, he said, it isthose within the University who are criti¬cizing it. Also speaking at the meeting were PaulStokes, law student and president of theLaw Students Association, Frieda Murray’70, and Patricia Bradley, a member of theBillings hospital staff.The discussion was sponsored by theCampus Coalition as part of its campaignagainst the peace treaty referendum.ElectionThe Maroon will elect a new editor at ameeting in the Maroon office, Monday at 5pm. Everyone appearing on the Maroonand Grey City Journal mastheads in to¬day’* i**ue i« pypprlpd tn attpnd to vote on overturning the reconsiderationmotion.At the meeting, pro-treaty forces wereanxious to postpone the referendum for aweek in order to build support for the refer¬endum.The Campus Coalition and other anti¬treaty representatives opposed a post¬ponement on grounds that a date had beenagreed upon and that to change it would beunfair.The assembly first debated the numberof votes needed to change the date. Oppo¬nents of the extension argued that any elec¬tion laws must be considered by-laws underSG rules, and subject to change only by atwo-thirds majority.Fowler, however, ruled that the referen¬dum does not constitute an election, andrequires only a simple majority to beamended. A motion to overrule his decisionwas defeated.Although the motion to reschedule theelection was then approved, by a vote of 21-9, the date of the referendum remained indoubt. Henry Russell 74, then used an ob¬scure rule in Robert’s Rules to move thatthe vote be reconsidered.The motion passed with a second byMark Lawrence 71. Both motioner and sec¬onder had voted on the prevailing side, asrequired by parliamentary procedure.An uproar ensued on the floor over thelegality and implications of such proce¬dure, but before a motion could be made tooverturn Fowler’s ruling that the reconsi¬deration motion was valid, several SGmembers walked out. A cheer arose fromthe hall when a quorom call revealed thatonly 21 members, two short of a quoromwere present. The meeting adjourned andthe reconsideration stood.One of those who walked out, SG vice-president Paul Collier, 73, denied that hisposition on the issue itself was the reason.He upheld his action as being necessary tosafeguard the rights of assembly membersfrom what he termed “railroading”through of the amendment.SG election and rules committee ruledWednesday that both the People’s PeaceTreaty Coalition and the Campus Coalitionmust turn in records of the amount spenton the campaign.Some watchdogs, such as former E & Rchairman John Siefert 71, alleged that the$175 ceiling on expenses has been exceededby the Campus Coalition.Referendum would not limit UC war researchContinued from page 1members from the danger of being dismissed, except in extraordinary circumstan¬ces, is invalid. Further, it would be conceivably taken to prohibit such things asmalaria research, on the grounds that such research helps US soldiers in Vietnam,despite the fact that it helps many other persons as well.And entirely aside from implications such as these, there is nothing in Part Bthat specifically limits the proposed committee’s investigations to “war research.”The proposed committee would be free to harass any faculty member or studentwho does any kind of research which offends the committee’s political views.Admittedly, most of the text of Part B does deal specifically with war research.Whether or not the proposed inquisitional committee would allow itself to investi¬gate other kinds of research depends on how it interprets Part B. But, consideringthe political opinions of those who would probably be signing the investigationpetitions, one might expect Part B, assuming its exact wording is remembered atAhmad declares case'an obvious frame-up'Calling his case “an obvious frame-up,”Eqbal Ahmad was one of four speakers atthe Blue Gargoyle last night urging an endto repression in America.The speakers included Ahmad, Adlai Ste¬venson Institute fellow, Mickey Leaner ofthe Angela Davis Defense Committee,Renee Hanover of the National Lawyer’sGuild Women’s Caucus, and Bobby Rush,deputy minister of defense of the IllinoisBlack Panther Party.Ahmad, charged with conspiring to kid¬nap presidential adviser Henry Kissinger,said that the government is trying him andhis co-defendants “to test the credulousnessof the American people — to test whetherthey have the spine to sense the massiverepression they are victim to.”Appreciative of the support he has re¬ceived, Ahmad warned his listeners not toforget other victims of “vicious repres¬sion,” such as Angela Davis.“We have a personal stake in AngelaDavis and the Black Panthers,” Ahmad said, calling their arrests “a frontal attackon the American peace movement.”Next to speak was Mickey Leaner, whoalso appealed for more committment insupport of Davis, along with Black Pan¬thers Bobby Seale and Erika Huggins.“We are all political prisoners, she said,”“just some of us happen to be in jails.”Renee Hanover then discussed sexism inthe legal system, pointing out the “totallyinhuman” treatment which women and ho¬mosexuals are often subjected to by thecourts.“The courts do not know how to act orreact in a woman’s world or in a gayworld,” she said. “The current judicial sys¬tem is a whole area of repression neces¬sary to this government ... it’s the onlyway they can maintain their superiority.”The final speaker was Bobby Rush, whodescribed his Black Panther Party’s planto “return to the community and make thepeople a viable and powerful force througheducation and organization.” all, to be interpreted in a broader and broader sense.It is not as if there was no precedent for this kind of proposal. At many of the“elite” universities in this country, professors have been harassed and driven out,not because they were complying with the Vietnam war, but simply because theirideas do not agree with those of the radicals.I know many people who would be happy to see such a situation develop here.I disagree with them, not only because I dislike their political ideas, but because Isee the University as ideally being a sanctuary from political manipulation, fromboth the right and the left. Our society faces some very pressing problems, amongwhich I would list getting out of the Vietnam war, but it does not follow that everyinstitution and organization must take a stand regarding those problems. Anexception to that “every” must be the universities.Each of the other parts of the referendum can be objected to on the samegrounds. Part A does not say that the students support the People’s Peace Treaty,but that the University as an institution must support the Treaty. Part C instructsthe University to single out the Democratic Republic of Vietnam as being a countryfrom which it is desirable to accept research grants. Part D urges that the Univer¬sity re-hire all fired campus workers, rescind the tuition hike and not make anyfurther strikes with out the consent of a student referendum, and soon. Each part, forthese and other reasons, thus implicitly or explicitly commits the University to aparticular point of view — the view of the totalitarian left.Now many students would agree that provisions such as these are potentiallyharmful to the University as an academic community, but argue that the Universitywill never grant the demands of the referendum, and therefore that opposing thereferendum is not worthwile. I agree that the University would either ignore orflatly oppose the referendum’s requests if the referendum. This very factor, how¬ever, provides a second reason to oppose the referendum : the referendum amountsto an affirmation of a certain way of thinking and thus tends to defeat the cause ofconstructive change.I refer by this “way of thinking” not to many leftists’ conclusions about oursociety, but rather to the way in which they come to those conclusions. For theirrationality of this way of thinking can be used not only to oppose the war inVietnam, a conclusion I personally support, but also to arrive at conclusions suchas those of George Wallace and similar right-wing extremists.One element of this way of thinking is the mechanism of guilt by association.By this mechanism, a professor of economics can be considered a supporter of anynumber of President Nixon’s policies simply because he gives Nixon advice concern¬ing one of Nixon’s policies.This “way of thinking” allowed the Adlai Stevenson Institute to be ransacked,and a Chicago policeman to be prevented from speaking here, because being aChicago policeman automatically made this person a “fascist” and being a“fascist” automatically disqualifies a person from speaking here.This “way of thinking” does not just endanger principles of academic freedom,although that would be reason enough to oppose it. This irrationality also is oftencounterproductive, largely because it often assumes that demanding that somethinghappen is equivalent to making it happen.To be specific, demanding that the University concern itself more than it hasContinued on page 5TONIGHT! 7:15 & 9:30 COBB HALL $1.00 DOC FILMSJOHN CASSAVETES'FACESNEXT WEEK:7:30 Tuesday: Cukor's THE PHILADELPHIA STORY9:30 with KATHARINE HEPBURN, CARY GRANT, JAMES STEWART7:30 Wednesday: Ray's IN A LONELY PLACEHUMPHREY BOGART AS A NEUROTIC SCREENWRITER7:15 FRIDAY: Antonioni's ZABRISKIE POINT9:30COMING SOON!NORMAN MAILER'S MAIDSTONEOH! WHAT A LOVELY WARSALESMAN CITY LIGHTS LESTER'S THE BED-SITTING ROOMTHE BIRTHDAY PARTYTHE TRIAL2/The Chicago Maroon/April 2, 1971UC retires Morgenthau; will teach at CCN YBy NANCY CfflSMANA small crowd of students had alreadybegun to gather outside the room where, inan hour, Hans Morgenthau would begin hislast political theory course at the Univer¬sity.Morgenthau, who in several months willreach the University’s mandatory retire¬ment age of 68, has decided to move per¬manently to City College of New York,where he has been a commuting professorfor three years, rather than give up teach¬ing.“I would certainly prefer staying at theUniversity of Chicago, if I could,” Mor¬genthau said in a pronounced German ac¬cent. “I see by comparison to CCNY what aunique place this is.”Morgenthau first taught at the Universityin 1943 and has occupied the Albert Michel-son distinquished service chair of politicalscience and history for nearly 10 years. Heexpressed no anger or disappointment overhis retirement.“I understand the general policy" of theUniversity and I think it’s justified,” he ex¬plained. ‘‘There are younger people whowant to show what they can do. That’s apart of the whole American culture whichemphasizes youth instead of old age.“I notice now when you are nearing re¬tirement people pay less attention to youand they’ll pay attention to you again whenthey read your obituary in the newspaper,”he said in a voice tinged with irony. “Inbetween, you are physically around, butyou are not very much in the stream ofthings.”Morgenthau has always been very much in the stream of things. An expert in for¬eign policy, he has served as consultant forthe departments of state and defense and isa frequent and outspoken critic of US in¬volvement in South East Asia.But he is also skeptical of the proposedPeoples Peace Treaty, an issue now facingstudents and faculty at the University.“It will only have an effect as an ex¬pression of public opinion,” he pointed out.“But obviously a peace treaty by thepeople is a kind of monstrosity because thepeople at large are not active participantsin the processes of policy formation.“Much more important,” he added, iswhat the public opinion polls show — how¬ever efficient they are — and what opinionCongress will show. If Congress passes,with a large majority, a resolution demand¬ing the withdrawal of American troops sayby the end of next year, it would have anenormous effect.“Or if the Gallup poll continually showsthat Americans want an end to the war nomatter what — those are the factors thatare important. After all, for better or forworse the President can virtually do whathe wants.”Morgenthau spoke more critically of thesection of the peace treaty referendumwhich would give members of the academ¬ic community the right to impose limits onthe cooperation of all members with thedepartments of state and defense.“I don’t think that is feasible and even ifit were feasible, I think it is against thewhole ethos of a university,” Morgenthausaid. “After all, a university doesn’t have asoul or a conscience per se. HANS MORGANTHAUProfessor of political science and history“Empirically it is a collection of people,And so the individuals are not committed toa particular philosophy or policy. They canadvocate any kind of policy and embraceany kind of philosophy. It is against thevery conception of a free university to com¬mit itself to a particular philosophy, a par¬ ticular policy.“I don’t need to assure you of my posi¬tion in regard to the Vietnam war, but Ifeel that this is misguided activism, whichI do not support.”Morgenthau does believe Nixon ispresently in a dilemma which will forcehim to either escalate or pull out of Viet¬nam.Though Morgenthau favors student activ¬ism in response to the war and other issues“except for obvious excesses,” he believesits effectiveness and direction depend onthe general political situation in the coun¬try.“There is a possibility that people willbecome hopeless if they see there is nochange within the system. They will go outand do something instead of politics, orthey will become destructive because theyare utterly frustrated.“A lower voting age will help if the newvoters believe they can change things. Formany years I used to think that this was somyself. I voted meticulously for the peopleIVI recommended and not for the others.After several years of strenuous activity, Irealized how useless it was. One has towatch the degree of frustration new votersexperience and upon that degree dependstheir future active participation.”Morgenthau plans to continue his scholar¬ly work after retirement. He is now work¬ing on an analytical study of Lincoln — apresident he believes exerted a rare com¬bination of “practical statesmanship and avery keen awareness of the theoretical andContinued on page 5“ ‘Two or throo things I know about hor’dramatizes the beginning of Godard asthe formal movie essayist. It’s a lovelyfilm and should be soon.”—Vincent Canby, The New York Times“Godard is the most Brechtian of direc¬tors .. .The world he creates is scaringlymodern.. .There is the same energy ofthe displaced in Shakespeare and inSwift...Godard holds us in thrall by atechnical mastery that razes to theground most of the dumb receivedideas about cinema.”—Penelope Gilliatt, The New Yorker Magazine“One of Godard’s best.”Jean-Luc Godard’s“Two or three thingsI know about her"ADDED ATTRACTION: Prizewinningdocumentary "INTERVIEWS WITHMY-LAI VETERANS” - sensationalfilm by Jos. Strick and Haskell Wexler.Don't miss it!Student Rate all timesPark Free; 528-9126 WANTEDMaroonBusinessManagerfor next year.Requires 20-30 hoursper week minimum,open only to students.Should be in businessschool, though notnecessary. Access to acar also vital.Position entitles youto quarterly salaryand generous end ofthe year bonus PLUSnumerous fringe ben¬efits and ripoffs and asecretary of yourchoice.For more informa¬tion, call Don orDiana at the Maroonat 753-3263. Appli¬cations should in¬clude short resume ofexperience and educa¬tion. Turn them in toIda Noyes 304 orcome in or leave themin Don Ratner’s mail-folder in BusinessEast.SHORE AUTOREBUILDERS,INC.1637 EAST 75th STREET, CHICAGO. ILL.643-8066SOUTH SIDE'S FINEST BODY SHOPQUALITY WORK AT COMPETITIVE PRICESOUR I7TH YEAR IN BUSINESSDONALD J. ROLLHEISER University, union differon lay-off of machinistsBy FRED WINSTONThe University more than satisfied unioncontract requirements in notifying 10 ma¬chinists of their lay-off March 15 accordingto Glenn Richardson, associate director ofpersonnel.Richardson said that according to theUniversity of Chicago Machinist and In¬strument-makers Association (UCMIA)contract the University is not required togive notification prior to lay-offs of employ¬ees.A statement issued by Richardson Tues¬day said that five of the 10 men laid off areremaining with the University in other ca¬pacities and the other five “were given aweek at full pay in lieu of notice — not acontract requirement — in addition to ac¬crued vacation pay.”The UCMIA had filed grievances withtheir lawyer after the lay-offs charging thatthere was no advance notification nor dis¬cussion with the union prior to the lay-offs.It also charged that the University did notlay off men in accordance with the con¬tract’s formula and that it created an arti¬ficial seniority unit.Carl Grutter, union president, said thatall other University employees are entitledto at least four weeks notification prior tolay-off and that the union contract statesthat union members shall receive equalbenefits to those of all other University em¬ployees.Richardson said that the union contract,while guaranteeing equal benefits in sev¬eral areas, such as sick pay and holidays, does not cover notification prior to lay-offs.Richardson also said that the Universityis not required by the union contract to dis¬cuss the lay-offs with the union, “yet wedid.”One union complaint according to Grotterwas that “they (the University) gave outletters of notification to the workers whilethey were meeting with the union com¬mittee upstairs. We feel this was prettysneaky to do. They had made up theirminds before they consulted with theunion.”Grutter also complained that “one manlaid off has worked here since 1953 and hadfour times as much seniority and ability asanother worker who did the same job andwas retained.”One employee that was laid off was near¬ly ready for full pension, Grutter added.Richardson said that the union contractstates that the University, when laying off10 employees, has the right to choose themfrom the bottom 15 on the seniority list.The choices were made, he said, by a facul¬ty committee.Also, nine of the 10 workers were vestedin the retirement system, Richardson said.This means they will be entitled to reducedpension payments, according to the amountin their fund, when they reach 65. The tenthman is entitled to the money in his pensionfund.“When you have a union agreement it iscustomary to do what is required,” Rich¬ardson said. “The University went beyondthis.”The Chicago MaroonSTEVE COOKEditor DON RATNERBusiness ManagerCON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorJUDY ALSOFROAA, NANCY CHISMAN, JIM HAEFEMEYER, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate EditorsLISA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN, FRANK GRUBER, LESLIE LINTON, KEITH PYLE, BRUCE RABE,FRED WINSTONStaff•CARL STOVALL CAROLINE HECK DIANA LEIFERContributing Editor Senior Editor Assistant Business ManagerFounded in 1892. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E 59th St, Chicago, III 60637. Phone 753-3263. Distributed onramnni and in tho HyHo Parlr noinhhnrhnnrl fra« of charnP SllhsrrHitifms hv mail Sfl r>Pr year in the U.S.Non-profit postage paid at Chiacgo, III.April 2, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/3Appalachian String Band ConcertFat City, April 9, 8:30 3rd Floor Ida Noyes♦♦i♦ LUNG-HINGa new Chinese-American Restaurant inHyde Park 1435 E. 51st St. 667-1316 ♦♦♦♦♦^Special Chinese Brunch Service every Salureay & Sundaysa from 11 to 2 p.m. 50' per plate. Items such as a♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ 1. Egg Kow 3. B. B. Q. Pork Bun2. Beef Shui Mai 4. Shrimp ChinAs a SPECIAL FOR READERS OF THIS PAPERBRING IIS THIS AD AND RECEIVE:Diced Beef with Almond Reg. $3.30/now $2.90Sweet & Sour Shrimp Reg. $3.50/now $2.95Hong Sue Chicken Reg. $3.40/now $2.85Order 1 day ahead the following:Pekin Roast Duck (half) Reg. $4.50/now $4.00(whole) Reg. $8.25/now $7.50SPECIAL STL DENTS NIGHTS EVERY TUESDAYAll you can cat plus a glass of Imported Wine - White. Rose' or Red. Withanv of the following: ^ 2 951. Pekin Beef .3. Chicken Chop Suev or Chow Mein2. Extra Fine Cut Chow Mein 4. Beef Chop SuevCocktail Hour 5-7 Reg. drinks 50cBanquet Room Available for 30-50 People.Carry out service also available. Offer Good Till 4/5 ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦CAREERS FOR WOMENNu Pi Sigma and the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement will sponsor a career conference brunch onSaturday, April 3 at 11:30 a.m. in the Ida NoyesLibrary.It will feature the following women:Mrs. Natalie deBlois, Associate Partner, Skidmore,Owings and MerrillDr. Frances Hannett, Child PsychiatristMrs. Velma Thomas, Director of Pre-KindergartenChild Development Program Chicago Board of Educa¬tionMrs. Jeri Warrick, Broadcast Standards Supervisorand Producer of “It’s Academic”, NBC THU MOVEMENTTOWARDTHE BEGINNINGSilOnGREVOUITIORtiCffiU®flWHirr?■■■-SiffiT >J752 pages, paper bound . $5.95The telephone-book-size bookwith EVERYTHING in itHOWARD ZINN: “A feast of perceptions, ideas, feel¬ings — conveying more of the thought, the mood of themovement than anything I have seen in print . . .luxuriant... it stimulates intellectually and visually, and*has the remarkable quality of being sober and joyfulat the same time.”NOAM CHOMSKY: ”A brilliantly evocative account ofthe movement, capturing its insights and confusionsand, most important, the hope it offers for the future.This may prove to be a prehistory of the social forcesthat will help shape a decent future.”Already in its 55th thousand.Published by Pilgrim Press and Alfred *A* KnopfRALPH J. 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SAULCERTIFIED AIORTION REFERRAL!All Inquiries Confidential J3 Rock Bands - Fat City, April 9, 8:30Ida Noyes Gym4/The Chicago Maroon/ April 2, 1971 AIRFARESKIMMELMorganthau 'spoiled‘ by UCContinued from page 3more particularly the moral aspects of poli¬tics.”As the interview ended, Morgenthau pre¬pared to begin the first lecture of his lastquarter at the University of Chicago.“It’s been a challenge every time I’vetaught and I’ve learned something everytime I’ve taught,” he reflected. “The job offer from CCNY three yearsago came as an opportunity to continueteaching for a few more years in a place Iwanted to live for a while.“It was a coincidence that was naturalfor me to accept, and it has shown to mydistress how much better the students arehere than there.“I guess I’ve been spoiled.”SOMEWHAT HIGHER PRICES AMD OSTENTATIOUS: UCFACULTY MAY RE FOUND IMRIRING HERE.Maroon Restaurant ReviewIf you’ve got it, ftaunt it!THE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933WINGSThe ALL silentclassic of 1927.Starting Clara Bow,Richard Aden, Buddy Rogers.NO Soundtrack. This legendaryfilm will be shown with organaccompaniment by Hal Pearl.Show Times: M-F 7 & 9:30Sot-Sun. 2, 4:30, 7, & 9:30the biocraph theatre2433 N. Lincoln Dl 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all times is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St,684-0856 RUGBY...An outward sign of an inner grace.U of C vs. U. of Michigan in aduel of Midwest titans, Sat. 3 Aprilat Stagg Field.Practices in North Field everyTuesday and Thursday at 3:30 pm.No experience necessary.Information at 363-1372JESSELSONFRESH FISH A SEAFOOD752-2870, 752-8190, 343-9184-13408. 53rd Referendum must be defeatedContinued from page 2in the past with limiting war research, the way the referendum does, really doesnothing to stop war research. For the University almost certainly will not be respon¬sive to those demands.A more likely effect, once the demands are ignored or refused, would be toconvince more students than are presently convinced that attempting to changethings is futile, and at the same time to “justify” some people’s argument thatviolent action is the only way to effect change.The probable effect of the referendum would thus be the same as which alwaysfollows the “victories” of the totalitarian left — to defeat the cause of rationaland constructive change. The truly important questions of war research, fiscalpolicy and students’ rights would be further muddled and obscured. Passage of thereferendum would tend to raise the “level of hysteria” on campus.In short, by opposing the referendum I do not say that the status quo oncampus, in terms of issues like war research, is satisfactory. Rather, I oppose itbecause the cause of limiting war research would be harmed by the referendum’spassage.An ongoing dialogue such as this would be true to the traditions of thisUniversity, and the administration is more likely to listen to the outcome of such adiscussion than to the partisan and simplistic demands of the referendum. Butbefore such a discussion can take place, academic freedom must be affirmed, andthe irrationality of the totalitarian “way of thinking” must be confronted andopposed: the referendum must be defeated.Joel Guttman, 74, is a member of the Campus Coalition.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, April 2 CAREER CONFERENCE FOR WOMEN: Ida Noyeslibrary, 11:30 am.MICROBIOLOGY CLUB: Dr Thomas Jones, Rocke¬feller University, "Phagocytosis of Mycoplasma,"Ricketts North, room 1, 4 pm.DISCUSSION: Sheperd Bliss, ‘‘Culefora: Puerto RicanStruggle Against American Colonialism," Crossroadsstudent center, 5621 Blackstone, 8 pm.CONCERT: Lovecraft music and light companyat the Blue Gargoyle at 8 pm with Baby Huey'sband Pomylafungo.RICHARD FRIEDMAN: Law Students Association, room4 of Law School, noon.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes dance room, 6:30 pm.UKRAINIAN EXHIBIT: Official opening in Regensteinconference room, first floor, 7 pm.EXHIBIT: Robert Lipgar, "Photographs in Israel: InColor", Hillel, until April 30.LECTURE: Arcadius Kahan, "Jewish Socialist Move¬ments in Eastern Europe," Hilllel, 8:30 pm.TRAVELOGUE TO HAWAII AND ALASKA: Interna¬tional house, 8 pm, students $.50, others $1. Sunday, April 4CHINA DISCUSSION: Neale Hunter, "China and theIndo-China War," International House, 7:30 pm.REHEARSAL: Shir, Hillel, 4:15 pm.FLICK: A Cold Day In the Park, Hart Jewish com¬munity center, 9101 S. Jeffery, 7:30 pm, $1.GAY LIB: Open meeting, Ida Noyes east lounge, 3 pm.REHEARSAL: Carmina Burana, Burton Lounge, 7:30pm.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: Rev BernardBrown, "Prophet of Honor," Rockefeller chapel,11 am.THE PASSION ACCORDING TO ST JOHN: J S Bach,Rockefeller chapel, 3:30 pm, ticket.NEW COLLEGIATE DIVISION: An informal get-together, NCD students and faculty will discuss pro¬grams of the division, prospective applicants shouldplan to attend, Ida Noyes east lounge, 7 pm.Saturday, April 3 Monday, April 5FILM: Devi (Bengali dialogue with English subtitles),Breasted Hall. Oriental institute, 7 pm, $1.25, mem¬bers only $.75.GAY LIB: Coffee house, Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pm.CEF: 2001: A Space Odyssey, Mandel hall, 6:45 and9:30, $1. SEDER WORKSHOP: "History and TraditionsSeder," Hillel, 4:30 pm.MEETING: Chavurat Aliyah, 7:30 pm, Ivrit9 pm, Hillel.SPEECH: Milton Friedman, Theodore Lowi,Blackwood and two students on the People'sT'oaty referendum, Kent auditorium, 8 pm.flmMMMmsM>lSMH’•it?M4 4M4 4¥4 4mMmMHB2]tSnM of thegroup,EasleyPeacer&sTHE U.C.BOOKSTORE ISTHE BEST BETFOR ALLREQUIRED &RECOMMENDEDBOOKS &SUPPLIESOPEN SATURDAY -9:00-1:00( A quiet, good time to shop )In addition to texts, we havethe best general bookselection south of the Loopand north of New Orleans.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTOREHgmQS^S¥4*4M¥:4 4nnK:¥R«— mfl* 4k¥¥4 4nH¥mHKM¥HHMRm¥:UHuinsmm4 4¥4 4¥:4 4¥:58th & ELLIS o¥:4 4MtirApril 2, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5Rejection of some research not repressiveContinued from page 1structures the problematic and determines which questions do not get asked to asgreat an extent as it determines which ones do.Nevertheless, the principled rejection of some lines of research does not openthe door to the arbitrary suppression of any line of research, as some demagogueswould have us believe.Therefore, when we argue that in the present world context certain questions(what types of new weapons can best contain guerillas? which herbicides wouldbe most effective against Vietnamese rice? what incentives can win Indochinesemercenaries and elites to the cause of the “free world”?) should not get asked,researched, and developed, we are not asking for something which is alien to, or inviolation of, the normal course of academic practice. We are attempting to becritical rather than uncritical about that practice’s social, political and moralunderpinnings.It is also important to be wary of the mythology that holds that all Universityresearch arises autonomously from the intellectual curiosity of the academic, andindependently of the extrinsic needs of such vulgar practitioners as politicians,industrialists, and generals. Even if government and industry did not intervenedirectly into the universities (as they do) and financially determine that the workdone meets their needs, the social determination of whose needs get met still re¬mains. (You have to be an “impractical” and therefore bad, economist to suggestthat inflation can be fought by cutting back corporate profits. You have to be an“irresponsible” political scientist to assume the war can be ended without analternative way to “contain” China.) Therefore, without being critical of existingpower relations to the extent of choosing where the University community standswith respect to contending interests, we cannot even be critical in the academicsense.This is not to undermine the importance of the financial hold that the US powerelite has over the universities. This is currently their most effective means of con¬trol of education and research, though it is not the source of that control.It should be clear from the wording of the referendum that we are not seekingvigilante actions or the policing of anyone’s thoughts. Decisions on whether anyindividual’s research materially aids the war effort of the US government, and istherefore to be censured, are made by a panel which is to hold its hearings publicly,and is to be democratically elected by faculty and students. No sanctions could bebrought forward. The individual will be asked to cease any such research in pro¬gress, and only on refusal of this request would disciplinary measures deemedappropriate by the elected panel be taken.The question of possible complicity with the war effort is not an “academic”one at the University of Chicago. Morton Kaplan, Nathan Leites, and AlbertWohlstetter, of the political science department are known to consult with theRAND corporation, whose sparkling war record is well known.Norton Ginsburg, Phillip Hauser, and Manning Nash, of the geography,sociology, and anthropology departments do studies for the South East AsiaDevelopment Advisory Group (SEADAG) some of whose CIA and AID fundedresearch is’questionable enough to have been condemned in a recommendationof the Ethics Committee of the American Anthropological Association last fall. (SeeNew York Review, Nov 20, 1970 for further details.)These individuals work both for the University of Chicago and for agenciesContemporary European FilmsMY NIGHTAT MAUD’Sof the year’s Ten BestAcademy Award Nominee“Best Film of the Year” Siskel, Trib.Saturday April 10Sunday April 11DESKS-BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDC BRAND ) EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.• (Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with I.D. card which do secret, military research in aid of a war effort widely considered inviolation of international law. Perhaps none of their work has as a main functiondamage to the subjects of their studies.If so, let them establish this before a democratically elected Universitycommittee, if they can permit themselves (or are permitted) to discuss the resultsof their “free” research.Finally, it has been said that while research at the University involved withdeveloping weapons or other means of suppression should not be allowed to occur,research by a University member which is privately contracted for and privatelydone, should not be the business of a University board, or affect the individual’sUniversity status.This argument neglects the practical impossibility of dividing private fromUniversity research with respect to use of libraries, office space, computer time,equipment, etc, and the social status of a University appointment which creates thepossibilities in the first place for much of the private contracting with the defensedepartment, RAND, SEADAG, etc.The regulations broken by the ‘68 sit-inners, or by Leopold and Loeb, were donein their capacities as private citizens, but nevertheless provided pretexts forexpulsion from the University of Chicago. Unfortunately, the Vietnamese do nothave the forces within this country to prosecute violators of the Nurenburg conven¬tions or the Geneva accords. The implementation of part B of the referendum is astep forward in correcting this.Stuart Neuman is a graduate student in theoretical biology and a member of thereferendum research committee.ABOUT THE MIDWAYOppose referendumEconomics professor Milton Friedman,political science professor Theodore Lowi,and music professor Easley Blackwood willbe among those participating in a programof speakers opposing the People’s PeaceTreaty referendum Monday at 8 pm inKent 107.The two-part program presented by theCampus Coalition will open with speechesby the three professors and two students.In a forum following the speeches, thoseattending will be able to question thespeakers and present their own points ofview. “Hopefully, a variety of viewpoints will be represented,” stated Coalitionchairman Miles Costick Lev Ary.Drug abuseThe Illinois drug abuse program needsvolunteers to help collect and assemble in¬formation on drugs, treatment centers anddrug education resources.The volunteers will also be needed to dis¬tribute the information. Each worker willhave access not only to the library of print¬ed material, but also to members of theclinical staff and possibly to some patients.The work will be centered at the pro¬gram’s offices at the Museum of Scienceand Industry, 57th and Lake Shore Dr.PASSOVER APRIL 10-17SEDER WORKSHOPS:History and TraditionsMonday, April 5, 4:30-6:00 pmHaggada (Traditional andCreative) and Food and RitualsTuesday, April 6,8:00-10:00 pmSeder Songs and MelodiesWednesday. April 7, 4:00-5:30 pmSEDERS:No community Seder at Hillel.We encourage the trend to make yourown Seder. Haggadol, song sheets, sup¬plementary readings. Seder instructions,Passover recipes available. LUNCHES:11:30-1:00Saturday, April 10 toSaturday, April 17Cost 81.50 SUPPERS:6:00 p.m.Sunday, April 11 loFriday, April 16.Cost $2.50RESERVATIONS:Deadline April 2.No refunds after April 6.Payment mustaccompany reservations.HOSPITALITY: Home hospit ality at a student or faculty family Seder or at aneighboring Reform, Conservative or Orthodox congregation can be arranged throughHillel.ITnai B’rith Hillel Foundation 57 IS Wood lawn 752-1127South Shore Drive at 79th St. RE 1-3700Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fn & Sat 12 12Closed Monday53rd & Hyde Park Blvd955-2229 - ABORTIONpregnancies up to 12weeks terminated from$175.00Medication, Lab TestsDoctors fees includedHospital & Hospitalaffiliated clinics.(212) TR 7-88032k hours-7 daysPHYSICIANS REFERRALv*/. t«•»" ■*it's |ust to talk to someone CONSIDERINGALASKA??Accurate, comprehensivebrochure about opportu¬nities in construction, oilfishing and canneries, oth¬ers. Send $2.00 cash ormoney order to JOBS INALASKA, P.O. Box 1565Anchomae Alndrn QOSfU ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELPALM SUNDAYApril 4, 1971 11:00 A.M.BERNARDO. BROWNAssistant Dean of the Chapel"PROPHET OF HONOR”3:30 p.m.THE PASSION ACCORDING TO ST. JOHNJ. S. BACHThe Rockefeller Chapel Choir andMembers of Symphony OrchestraTicketEMPLOYMENTOPPORTUNITIESCALIFORNIA ARIZONA HAWAIIProfessional/Trainee positions currently available in all fields For 1month's subscription containing hun¬dreds of current openings . andJOBS in the SUN's proven techniquelor landing your job* Satisfactionguaranteed Send $9 to:A: in the#P.O. BOXLA JOLLA, CALIFORNIA 92037 TAKCAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East Alrd MU4-IQ&2.6/The Chicago Maroon/April 2, 1971THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSgetting married?An Original, Hand-crafted,One-of-a-KindWEDDING RANDis something to cherish al¬ways. Silver from $20. Goldfrom $40. Call Basha,337-0715. davs or evenings.Visit me at my workshop andsee other hand-crafted sculp¬ture to wear.FOR SALE4 mo. old stereo: Sansui 800 receiv¬er Sony 355 tape deck, GerrardSL65 table, 2 ADC 303AX speakers.Must sacrifice, $600 or best bid. 493-8853/324-97231970 BMW 2002 AM-FM 482-3384 ev.New Ten-Speed Bicycle for sale Ph753-2261 Rm 343 Ask for JimUsed Gibson guitars O. Schmittautoharp at LIFE RHYTHMSLarge desk swivel chair; 18 Inchdiag port TV, hi-fi. 684-0639.Water beds from $70, health food,old furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2926 Broadway. 248-1761.Carved sitar with ivory inlay $190 atLIFE RHYTHMS 1701 E 55Save $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 363-4555.Books, Paperbacks bought-and sold.1503 E. 57th. Powells Bookshop 12-10.64 Chevy II stand, trans. 1-owner, 4dr., gd. cond. $275 955-3938.PUPPIES PUPPIESACK Brittany Spaniels M&F Dualchampion stock; Ch sire Best ofBreed '71 Westminster. Or&whlteClever little beasts do every-thing:Show, hunt, pet, watch, love.And its spring 288-6943 anytimeFREECUTE, independent kitten, all black,3 mo. old male. FREE to goodhome. Call Mike, 465-0370Beautiful and affectionate kittens.Trained. 667-1723 FREE KITTENS. Fluffy lovable.Trained. 324-2637, evenings.FREE PUPPIES. 6 wks old 536-6490FREE CAT — 7 mo old male, veryaffectionate and lively, needs goodhome. Call 734-0171 eves.WANTEDHave old magazines you want to getrid of? Art student needs them forcollages — will pick up Larry, 731-4675 Leave message.Small refrigerator wanted, must bein good working order, cheap. CallOld Tight Don or Naturally CurlyDiana at ext. 3-3263.WANTED: 2 Bdrm Apt in Hyde Pkfor June 15. Call 955-6588Mellow kittens need home. Call Hal:324-4315 or 753-3582PEOPLE WANTEDMEN of all trades to NORTHSLOPE, ALASKA and the YUKON,around $2800.00 a month. For com¬plete information, write to Job Re¬search, P.O. Box 161, Stn-A, To¬ronto, Ont. Enclose $3.00 to covercost.1-2 to take turn 3 rm apt late Apr-12Jul $140 Mo. 684-0639.Day-to-day substitute needed for oc¬casional work in treatment centerfor emotionally disturbed children inHyde Park. Applicants must haveChicago Board of Education certifi-cation for substitute teachers.People having experience with dis¬turbed youngsters will receive pref¬erence. Ideal for graduate studentsand mothers desiring occasionaldays of work. Highly stimulatingsetting. Possibility of full-time posi¬tion becoming available; specify ifinterested in such. Also possiblethat summer vacation replacementwork will be available. Leave* nameand address with operator at 643-7300; application will be sent.Needed, exp. physics tutor (wavemechanics) for evenings and/orwkends. (approx. 3-4 hrs-wk.WIIIpay $4-hr. Pref. phy grad stu. 221-5842 (Sat-Th aft. 5 pm)) or 947-5521(Th. or Fri. nts).Male companion for schizophrenicchild 2 afternoons wkly. HY 3-7973.Receptionist & Bookkeeper wantedfor warehouse showroom. 324-1223.Babysitter wanted for 1 or 2 days-week 2:30-5:30. Call 324-8642.Salesperson wanted. Part-time. Fur¬niture Store. Jensen ContemporaryShops, Inc. 5300 S. Lake Park. 667-7000. Std or couple wanted to share SouthShore apt on campus bus rtx33581.1 '4,eve.375-6073 DonFOTA needs artists for the Univer¬sity Art Exhibition. All nonprofes¬sionals are urged to participate. En¬tries can be almost anything butpreferably no small 3D objects. IDentries should have some sort ofbacking. They can be brought toPierce Tower April 14-21 and givento Mrs. Northcutt or left at the deskif she isn't in. There will be a pre¬liminary screening by neighborhoodartists. First prize is $150; secondprizes are $50. The Exhibition willrun April 28 thru May 14 In thePierce Tower 2nd fir. Lounge. Ifany questions, call June, 684-5720.ROOMMATE WANTED Lrg Hse,own rm. $40 & util. 5422 Dorch 288-4192STAFF, STUDENTS. Participate inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. $1.75 for an hour's work. Oncampus. Call x3~47l0 for an appoint¬ment.King Size Water Matress $39, ppd.finest quality, guaranteed. Manufac¬turer seeks local distributor. ContactSteve Boone, Industrial Fabrics,Inc. 735 So. Fidalgo St., Seattle,Washington, 98102. (206 ) 763-8911.ART SPECIALISTS needed imme¬diately, to teach afternoons: Mon¬day, Ceramics, 3-5th Gr. Tuesday,Adult Copper Enamel 'g Thurs. ,Kdg-2nd Puppetry Thurs. 3rd-5th AllArt Media Thurs 3rd-5th Fabric De-cor'gPEOPLE FOR SALEExperienced Babysitting in myhome, Full or part-time. Live closeto University. Reasonable Call 955-1158.Belly Dance lessons 8< Dance atBanquets. Kahraman 493-8626.Exper Flute-Recorder teacher. Privlessons 667-0988 Frl-Sun.MOVING?Licensed mover & hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480MY NIGHT AT MAUD'SA special holiday treat for campusand Chicago film followers: the onlyscheduled S.Side showing of theAcademy Award Nominee. "BestFilm of the Year," Siskel, Trib,Morris, Scrips-Howard News Chain."Best film of the N.Y. Film Festi¬val," Vincent Canby, NY Times."One of the Year's Ten Best:" LifeLook, NY Times, Sat. Review, NewYorker, Andrew Sarris, AtlanticMonthly, Roger Ebert, etc. Regularprices will prevail: first come firstseated. SPACEStudio, June 1, E. Hyde Park hi-rise, lease ends Aug. '72. $134-mo.Furn for sale optional (rugs, kitchenset, drapery, big bed). Call 643-0500-leave name and number.No rent Ig pvt furn room bath cook¬ing fac So.Shore campus bus exchdishwashing childwatching femaleor cpl,ref. Call 324-2050Furn rm in nice apt nr campusavailable to end of quarter Maybelater $46-mo 684-0429SUBLET 4rm apt $125. June 1. Call643-8055 after 2:30.Lrg 3 Bed, 2 bath apt with modernkitchen. Available June 15 for sum¬mer with fall option. Furniture andair-conditioner for sale. 5114 Harper.Call evenings. 752-1469.3i Rm apt mid-Apr. 5535 Kimbark$140. 955-6624Furn apt for one avail now. Haskitchenette. $104 . 5419 Harper 324-0342 or 288-4641.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beach-park-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithBuy out contract Burton Judsonsingle, 1005 E. 60th, 753-2261 No. 534ABORTIONSWHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE in Hyde Park?NY abortions from $150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015GAY LIBThe GAY LIB Coffee House livesSat 4-3 Blue Gargoyle 5655 S. Uni¬versity Ave 7:30 pm to 12:30 amStarting 4/8 GAY LIB will beginConsciousness-Raising Groups onBisexuality Ida Noyes 7:30 pmGAY LIB Open Meeting Sun 4-4, 3pm Ida Noyes E. Lounge 1212 E 59St. Help plan this qt's workAW COME ON . . .THIS IS SERIOUSOur University has been asked tosend a team to the I IT InternationalInvitational Intercollegiate TricycleRace, April 24. It is a 12-lap event,and first prize is $125.00 and aFloating Trophy. A team must havebetween 2-12 riders.Interested?Call Student Activities, 753-3591. Ifmore than one team comes forth,the team presenting the best essayon "Tricycles and Western Civ¬ilization" will be selected as our of¬ficial entry. Deadline for entires isApril 7, 1970. CEF SPECIAL!Effective immediately the price ofall season tickets is reduced to $4.Tickets still guarantee first admis¬sion to such films as 2001, My Nightat Maud's Passion of Anna, Satyri-con, Z, etc. CEF would also like tocall attention to the Ida Noyes Pro¬gram Bd. 25 cent Film Series. NextWednesday, April 7, a Double Fea¬ture: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari at9:15 and The War Game at 10:15.One enormous 25 cent admissiongood for both films. At Ida NoyesSCENESPHOGOGRAPHS IN ISRAEL: INCOLOR — An exhibit by Robert M.Lipgar now at Hillel through April30.Always wanted to work in TV? Mrs.Warrick of NBC will be at the Sat¬urday Brunch, April 3, 11:30 A.M.,Ida Noyes Library.Hillel Choral Group, SHIR, is pre¬paring for a concert Spring Quarter.Rehearsals every Sunday afternoon,4:15. All interested singers welcome(note-reading not a requirement).Kids your creatures? Dr. Hannettwill kid you not at the SaturdayBrunch, April 3, 11:30 a.m., IdaNoyes Library.LEARN TO PROGRAMTake the Computation Center's For¬tran Class. Call 3-8437 for details.$25 includes computer time.Don't miss the Seder Workshopsnext week at Hillel. See ad this is¬sue. Sedar instructions and Hagga-dot for loan or for sale."What Harvest for the Reaper" Na¬tionally famous fMm about farm la¬bor. 6:30 pm at Bonhoeffer House,5554 S. Woodlawn Sunday, April 4.CHINA DISCUSSION: "China & theIndo-China War" with Neale Hunter,former Teacher in Shanghai. Sun.,April 4, 7:30pm. InternationalHouse. Home Room.Free Swimming Instruction foradults in the community on Mondaynights, INH pool, 7-8 p.m. Bringsuit, towel, cap.ILLINOIS STATE RENEWALSCollege students whose parents areresidents of Illinois should file appli¬cation for renewal of Illinois StateScholarship by April 1. Applicationsavailable in the College Aid Office5737 S. University.Yoga Poses Concentr. Meditatn.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Classes SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155P.R. Jones has a plan-and a man.All power to the Ad Agency. TheDemocratic Way 4/30, May 1, 78.8BLUES AT THE GARGOYLEDYNAFLO with J. Wolfe 8. FredBelow Thurs. April 8, 8pm.TRADITIONAL SEDER on a SUN¬DAY AFTERNOON? Call Rich, 346-6700 x421 (day) or 281-7595 (eve.)CRAFT COOP features prints, tiedye, leather, macrame, and otherhandcrafts, all done by local artists.Visit us Mon-Fri 11:30-2:30 ThursNite 7-9 in the Blue Gargoyle 57th 8.University.See the UKRAINIAN EXHIBIT ATRegenstein Library. Official openingApril 2, 7:00 pm in the ConferenceRoom at Regenstein.Chess Club welcomes Spring and isstill pushing wood Mondays 7:00 IdaNoyesProf. Arcadius Kahan will speak on''JEWISH SOCIALIST MOVE¬MENTS IN EASTERN EUROPE"tonight at Hillel. 8:30 pm. 5715WoodlawnBells of Sarna and finger cymbalsat LIFE RHYTHMS 1701 E 55Head Start Programs? NurserySchool Education? Talk with Mrs.Velma Thomas at the SaturdayBrunch, April 3, 11:30 am, IdaNoyes Library.Discussion: "CULEBRA: PUERTORICAN STRUGGLE AGAINST U S.COLONIALISM" with Shep Bliss,Fri, April 2, 8pm, Crossroads, 5621S. Blackstone.COLLEGE AID APPLICATIONSNow available in College Aid Office5737 South UniversityDue April 12001: SPACE ODYSSEYthis Saturday, April 3, at Mandel at6:45 and 9:30. Special C-Scopescreen.PERSONALSFight Spring Fever! Keep yourMind Alive — Play Chess. Monday7:00 Ida Noyes HallWe need volunteers — could youplease help us. We need you to blowup helium balloons, serve ice creamand to take tickets. This is for April9 The FAT CITY. Please call 753-1591 and leave a messane fnr OanWintz.Junior Yearin New YorkWashington Square College of Arts and Scienceof New York University sponsors aJunior Year in New York.The College, located in the heart of the city, is anintegral part of the exciting metropolitan communityof New York City—the business, cultural, artistic,and financial center of the nation. The city’s extraordi¬nary resources greatly enrich both the academicprogram and the experience of living at New YorkUniversity with the most cosmopolitan student bodyin the world.This program is open to students recommended by thedeans of the colleges to which they will return fortheir degrees.There are strong and varied offerings in many areas,such as fine arts, urban studies, languages includingnon-European, mathematics in the College and at theCourant Institute, psychology, and others.A qualified student may register for courses in all otherschools of the University, including the specializations inCommerce and Education.The University sponsors programs in Spain and France.Write for brochure to Director,Junior Year in New YorkNew York UniversityNew York, N.Y. 10003 "ONE Of YEAR’S 10 BEST!”—Stewart Klein.WNEW-TV -William Wolf. -Joaaph Gelmia.Cue New*day'"THE CONFESSION' IS VASTLYMORE INTERESTING THAN 'Z'l MUCHMORE COMPLEX, MUCH MOREHUMAN! Costa-Gavras is amovie master!" —Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times"BONE CHILLING! A REAL LIFEHORROR STORY. DONE IN THESTACCATO STYLE OF T!"—Kathleen Carroll, N.Y. Daily News"A FASCINATING FILM! YVESMONTAND-A BRAVURAPERFORMANCE! BEAUTIFUL!"—Judith Crist« Pk Mes pievenisA Rooert DorfmonnBertrand Javal Production^Yves MonlandSimone Signoret"The Confession"Gabriele Ferzettu Michel VitoldfcJWO on me Ntirnth** t* f«>*ons LAJwmoro • AOap»c*on ixr) Otxogue t*yLise - Artur London Jorge Semprunc^Xosta Gavraso nr* m ( o Pvoaur •KXHie*s ien*> (ryom lev fwmfcjmwpu kxxj Bomo Bowl KWWHogmlK o Bcjn** K'COOMIDWEST PREMIERETODAYmumRUSH .11 OAK 944 2966 MULTI-MEDIA THEATERin Harper Galleriesin Harper CourtMU 4-11735210 S. Harper AvenueFINAL PERFORMANCESof 3rd CycleTONITE - An Introduction toHypnosis - 7.30 P.M.TOMORROW - Sartre s NOEXIT at 8:30 P.M.STUDENT DISCOUNTStudents — Europe for Christmas,Easter or summer? Employment op¬portunities, charter flights, dis¬counts. Write for information (airmail) Anglo American Association,60a Pyle Street, Newport, I.W.,England.NUDIST CLUB for single women,etc., describe yourself, send 35cents, MYW CLUB, PO Box 1342Aurora, III., 60507The Democratic Way-BlackfriarsComing Soon to your Docal MandelHall.Are you competent? English writingcompetency test April 17. See youradviser for details.Very cheap flights to Europe andAsia. Contact 922-0723.Reexperience the Exodus from EG¬YPT at a THIRD SEDER: Call 346-6700 x421 or 281-7595Student Government is receivingnominations for the University Dis¬ciplinary Committee Student Poolby June 1.Nominations for the OmbudsmanSelection Committee should be sub¬mitted to the SG Office by April 8. ,SG representative elections nowscheduled for 5th week. SpringQuarter. Nomination petitions avail¬able by April 12.The NIGHTHING-Anyone Interestedin an all-night encounter on April 9call any Christian Chaplin.SHIR rehearses every Sunday, 4:15pm at Hillel. All singers welcome.Students for Israel offers an ex¬citing new summer program in Is¬rael for those seriously consideringliving there. Jul-Aug $50 8< trans.(Will offer cheap flights) Will bebased on Kibbutz and will visit vari¬ous Kibbutizim, development towns,urban collectives, etc. ContactMotke 465-6681 for more info.Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus. Bob Tabor,363-4555.MURPHY SCHOLARSHIP APPLI¬CATIONSpring Quarter applications avail¬able in College Aid office, 5737 S.University. Deadline is April 8. Forstudents who contribute to Univer¬sity life through extra-curricular ac¬tivities.FOTA Art Exhibition 8, Contest May1-14 $50 First Prize For more infocall June 684-5720.One month of free drum lessons atLIFE RHYTHMS with every drumset bought.Blow your own, and then blow somefor others. Balloons of course. FATCITY needs your help. April 9. Callx33591. Leave a message for DanWintz.Seder placements and Passovermeal reservations due at Hillel to¬day.. . .LIFE RHYTHMS MUSIC COOPA wide range of sounds. 1701 E 55thArchitecture what you're buildingfor? Mrs. de Blois may know somestepping stones at the SaturdayBrunch, April 3, 11:30 AM IdaNoyes LibraryJORGE, You're the Best.TRAVELS: Aound trip New York-London is $210. Pick your own datesthis summer. Amsterdam is $230.Call ACADEMIA TRAVELS, 753-2240room 1506. We're also reservationagents for SOFA student flights inEurope.If you have moved since Fall regis¬tration and your Passover letter hasnot reached you. We are sorry wedo not have your correct address.See ad in this issue of the Maroonand Stop in at Hillel to reserve Pass-over meals and be placed at a Se¬der.Neale Hunter will give a first handreport on "CHINA TODAY" atDietrich Bonhoeffer House 5554 S.Woodlawn, Sunday at 1 pmSUPER PERSONALSSuperCat Stud Service 324-9723Proven potent in actual test.TO CLAYTON: Warning—There istoo much pot in your house and onyour wife—Goo Shit!TO WAYNE: If you want morearass fnr the court, von can aet itin Upper Flint—S.O.B.'s!April 2, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/7STOCK UP NOWSAVE 40%PRICES GOINGUPSOONALL 5.98 MFG. SUG. LIST 3.59ALL 4.98 MFG. SUG. LIST 2.99SEE THE STONES NEW MOVIE"GIMME SHELTER"4# >yV *amirtl^oar heads _ .mar V TNI ROLLING STOWSITEN YEARS AFTER ifi — &C*PK?ZKSSB9HB1GEORGE GERSHWINi RHAPSODY IN BLUEA AMERICAN IN PARISi A STANLEY BLACK, p.ono COMPLETE LONDON CATALOGON SALECLASSICAL-OPERAINTERNATIONAL-POPROCK* 1 fWlM IWv«4 f Ml.,)•V * jZZZniCD ’gJOF--PWmb.«i* fTTantovoniTodayTAPE SALE 6.98 only 4.95SAVE ON TAPES AT LOWE'SCHARGEWITH Ban. Avt hiCaud-A. At-RECORDSOPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 5HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-15058/The Chicago Maroon/April 2, 1971Candide: Chicago to New YorkPhoto by Steve AokiAfter hearing Candide announce“This is the best of all possible worlds”to capacity houses for 20 weeks, StuartGordon’s Organic Theater believes it,since they’ve been invited to open theiroriginal adaptation of Candide at thefamed Public Theater in New York onApril 9 for a scheduled four-week run.The last artistic export from theBody Politic — Paul Sills’ Story The¬ater — had been in the offing for sometime, but the Organic Theater, true toits flexible tradition, is folding its tentin a few days. Cecil O’Neal, a memberof the nine-man troupe said, “It’s just atypical thing that happened to theOrganic Theater. We thrive on necessi¬ty and energy and the idea that we cando it. It’s nerve-wracking. We all mayhave nervous breakdowns, but we’renuts anyway or we wouldn’t be here.We just want to do a damn good show.”How does a year-and-a-half old com¬pany, whose members are all in theirearly 20’s, make it to New York? Well,as they say, it’s a combination of hardwork and luck. They’ve been operatingon a shoestring, doing their own public¬ity, lighting, sets, etc. and workingtheir tails off on five original produc¬tions with no vacations. But St. Pat¬rick’s Day brought the company a bitof luck in the form of the director of theAbbey Theater in Dublin, Tomas Ma-cAnna, who saw Candide with a mem¬ber of the Illinois Arts Council and toldStuart to call Joseph Papp in NewYork.Papp is the dynamic impresario ofNew York’s Public Theater who oftenproduces four shows simultaneously,as well as directing Shakespeare-in-the-Park. The Public Theater is knownas an innovative bastion of theatrical creativity, and is especially receptiveto new talent.After Stuart, the company’s 23-yearold director, talked to Papp and senthim some newspaper clippings, aboutthe company, Papp sent his associate,Bernard Gerstein, to see Candide.During the intermission, of their lastperformance, Gerstein asked the com¬pany when they would like to come toNew York. Although the company al¬ways felt something would come ofCandide, it still came as a shock —opening in New York on one week’snotice with the Chicago cast.Meanwhile, a representative of theproduction company for Hair was also courting Stuart’s company, but he hada wooden dagger thrown at him by thefickle finger of fate and got his bid intoo late. On Friday a top echelon Hairrepresentative, the third one to see theshow, was hit by the baron’s sword,when it broke on stage during ananimated duel, and he left the theater.But if Hair made an offer, cast mem¬bers say, it would probably haveresulted in a commercialized Candidewhich couldn’t compare with Papp’soffer of total artistic freedom.The Public Theater will take care oftickets and publicity while the com¬pany is performing at the South Hall ofwhat was the old Astor Library. The house seats 150, like the Body Politic,and Stuart was pleased that it hadn’tbeen renovated and was somewhatgrubby, like their old house. However,it has a 32-foot ceiling which will givemore of a feeling of space than theBody Politic, Stuart said.The 10-member company includes anew addition — a stage manager. Theywill have their salaries doubled whenthey open in New York (to $100 a week)and the house gross will be dividedbetween the theater and the companyin much the same way that Stuart hadworked out with Jim Shiflett of theCommunity Arts Foundation for theBody Politic. Stuart said he waspleased that ticket prices, with a $4 topon weekends, would only be $1 morethan Chicago prices he had set.The company has been trying tosupervise the building of a set over thetelephone. Their props and some furni¬ture will be taken to New York afterthey decide which member of thecompany will drive the truck. They’rereporting for their first rehearsal onTuesday, April 6, and open on thefollowing Friday.Chicago is not necessarily losing oneof its finer theater groups to New York,for Stuart, like Paul Sills, is a nativeChicagoan who expects to return.Right now he’s talking about having aresident company at the Body Politicwhose direction he might share withPaul Sills. Moreover, as one member ofthe company said, “Stuart would digcoming back to Chicago a hero, havinggotten New York recognition for thoseand complained but ‘it’s not a realtheater.’ ” Stuart wants “to keep thecreative process in Chicago, to keepChicago theater going.”—Paula Meinetz ShapiroARTLyon ShowsRecent WorkI 1/AII PHOTOGRAPHS 1969-1971IIANN T I I IIhI University of Chicagol#m 111 I !■ I I w Bergman Gallery Mar 30-May 1Danny Lyon considers the fifty images on exhibitat the Bergman Gallery through May 1 his lastcomeback in still photography. Between 1969 and1971, when the images were taken, the former Capand Gown yearbook photographer became increas¬ingly involved with movie-making. “Now my pic¬tures are in my films,” he writes in the introductionto his exhibit, “and that is where it ends.”Some critical observers at the show’s openingTuesday tended to agree. Aghast that Lyon hadn’tdone his own printing, they pointed out evidences ofdusty negatives and dirty camera lenses. Others,familiar with earlier Lyon exhibits and worksconfined to a narrower range of subject matter,complained that they couldn’t view the show as aunified whole.Perhaps the key to unity can be found in Lyon’sintroduction to the show in which he dedicates theexhibit first to Muhammed Ali, “defeated championof his generation”. Of course, the critics could beright — Lyon’s heart may no longer be in such work.One must really see the images, a number of whichare hauntingly powerful, to decide for oneself.Once aware of Lyon’s interest in filmmaking, it isdifficult to view the single-negative photographs outof context from his other work. He interwove wordsand images in his 1966 book The Bikeriders, a volumeof interviews and photographs done while living withthe Chicago Outlaws motorcvcle gang. The photo¬graphs are not mere illustrations for the copy, nor dothe words serve simply as captions for the pictures;the two reinforce each other, as did the books of James Agee and Walker Evans in Let Us Now PraiseFamous Men.Another volume, scheduled to appear later thisyear, further experiments with this interplay. Con¬versations with the Dead is a series of photographs,interviews, telegrams, letters and paintings byprisoners collected during a 14-month voluntary stayin a Texas prison (some photographs of which are inthis month’s exhibit).With films, Lyon has added the elements of timeand sound to those of word and image, so that hisfilmmaking can be seen as an evolution or contin¬uation of his photography rather than an end, as hecalls it. His “Soc Sci 127” and “The Destiny oi tneZerox Kid”, viewed on campus Wednesday night,form part of that continuum. Lyon’s show reveals his heritage as a documen¬tary in the tradition of Swiss photographer RobertFrank, whose 1959 volume The Americans reshapedthe vision of photographers across the country. Lyonseeks many of his compelling images in pool halls,cafes, tattoo parlors, and jails; as with Frank, people(many of whom seem unaware of the camera’spresence) dominate his photographs. Frank, too,turned from still photography to filmmaking; Lyonwho has worked with him, recognizes his debt toFrank in the dedication: “ ‘cause he’s been whereI’m going”.The last 10 photographs in Lyon’s show are amontage of images from filmstrips; ihey representvisually what Lyon wrote earlier: “that is where itends.” Susan LothUnderground New York and San Francisco FilmsFat City, April 9, 8:30Cloister Club, Ida NoyesTHIS MOVIE IS SO POWERFUL BECAUSEIT SHOWS WHAT REALLY HAPPENEDYOU FEEL THE TREMENDOUS IMPACT WHEN YOU WATCH PEOPLECAUGHT IN AN EVENT GONE COMPLETELY OUT OF CONTROL.IT'S ALL HERE. 300,000 PEOPLE WHO CAME TO ALTAMONT,CALIFORNIA, THE ROLLING STONES, THE JEFFERSONAIRPLANE, TINA TURNER, THE HELL'S ANGELS. SOMEONEWROTE IN ESQUIRE MAGAZINE, 'THERE ARE SOME THINGS WHICHAREN’T TRUE, EVEN IF THEY DID HAPPEN. 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PS1620 E. 53rd St. ?88 29002/Grey City Journal/April 2, 1971 Road Runner Cartoons -Fat City, April 9, 8:30Cloister Club, Ida HoyesElaine May and Walter Matthau enjoy a little breakfast.Elaine May’s Superb New LeafIt is one of the very unfortunate facts of life thatthere are very few female film directors. No doubtwomen with directorial aspirations have been dis¬couraged and discriminated against in various ways.Lillian Gish once directed a film (titled, appropriate¬ly enough, Remodeling Her Husband) and declaredafterwards that directing was no job for a lady. Allthis notwithstanding, Agnes Varda, Shirley Clarke,Leni Riefenstahl, and Vera Chytilova have all madesomething of a mark on movie history.Elaine May, who, I fear, is cursed to be referredto for the rest of her life as Mike Nichols’ formerpartner at Second City, has entered the rather selectranks of lady directors with A New Leaf (at the State-Lake Theater). The movie’s overall tone is sweet,charming and gentle — the result, perhaps, of thefeminine directorial touch.A New Leaf also has some of the oddest casting inrecent memory. Walter Matthau, slob par excellence,plays a British nobleman, living in New York, whohas run out of money and must find and marry a richwoman. James Coco plays Matthau’s nefariouscousin, and Jack Weston is cast as a Wall StreetTHE GREY CITYHere is no continuing city, here is no abidingstay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late,and rotten the year;Evil the winter, and bitter the sea and grey thesky, grey grey grey.—T. S. Eliot. Murder in the CathedralEditorsWendy Glockner,Christine Froula and Mitchell BobkinTheater: Associate Editors. . , . ..John Del PeschioFilm: Charles FlynnArt: Susan LeffDance: Paula ShapiroMusic: Mark BlechnerPhotography: Scott CarlsonStaffJack Markowski. Bob Purricelli, MarkSwedlund, Harvey Shapiro, Myron MeiselMarina Baraldini Drew Leff, lawyer. The various players are almost enough togive the film its oddball quality, and Elaine Maycompletes it with her performance as HenriettaLowell, the wealthy wallflower Henry Graham(Matthau) picks to marry. It’s an extraordinarilyprecise job of acting, and May (both as director andactress) is superb at using physical comedy to definecharacter.The first encounter between Henry and Henrietta,for example, begins with her spilling tea, and endswith Henry’s spilling whiskey (deliberately) all overan expensive rug. Another example: Henrietta is acrack botany professor, and spends her honeymoonsearching for new varieties of ferns — her life’sambition being to discover a species of fern that hasnever been classified. Henry, of course, couldn’t beless interested, and there is a brilliantly composedshot that arranges Henrietta dangling over a clifflooking for ferns with Henry looking away. Thetension between the two characters in the shotdefines the relationship.I saw A New Leaf as a sneak preview with LoveStory, but Elaine May’s film is an infinitely moremoving love story than the one-dimensional ErichSegal-Arthur Hiller opus. Love Story is linear andmechanical, its characters never defined at all (sowe can fill them in from our own fantasy lives —precisely the reason for the film’s vast success). ANew Leaf is bizarre, fragmented and zany. Henryand Henrietta aren’t “real” people, but they’refascinating. The movie’s last shot is beautiful:having somewhat reluctantly rescued Henriettafrom drowning in a river in Maine, Henry lets herconvince him that he really wants to teach historyand spend the rest of his life with her. Then, theywalk off into the sunset, surrounded by a deep orangereflection on the camera’s lens. It’s a great way toend the movie.Throughout, cameraman Gayne Renscher (AFace in the Crowd, Rachel, Rachel) does fine work.The whole movie has a misty, pastel look that is justright.A New Leaf is very funny, too, often in ways thatare sweet and nasty at the same time. The title itselfsuggests some of the comic complexity of the film:Henrietta is looking for a new leaf, and by the end,she has persuaded Henry to turn over a new leaf.A New Leaf is such a good movie, it’s probablyeven worth the $2.50 or $3 they’re charging for it inthe Loop. _ Charles Flynn THEATERKingston Co.Returns toGreasy 50’sGrease is the graduate student’s No, No, Na¬nette. For undergraduates, Grease, now playing atthe Kingston Mines Theater Company on NorthLincoln Avenue, will be a bit of light entertainment,but for the old codgers of the UC community — peoplearound 25 or so — Grease is an opportunity to returnto those thrilling days of yesteryear when BillHaley’s Comets were in their heaven and all wasright with the world.In Grease we meet Rydell High School’s class of1960 as they gather for their ten year reunion, and ina series of flashbacks, we relive the archetypalscenes of the Eisenhower years: gangs rumble, boysdream about a chopped and channelled Chevy, girlsworry about getting “p.g ”, and everyone is lookingfor a date to the prom.The book by Warren Casey and Jim Jacobs israther thin stuff. The authors have consistentlywritten themselves into corners, and when they areunable to think up an ending for a scene, they settlefor someone uttering an expletive followed by ablackout. The songs aren’t memorable either, withthe authors torn between parodying and admiringthe “do-wa-wa-wa-a-s” of the Platter. In theatricalterms, Grease is a cheap shot, for there’s no depthbeneath the thick veneer of nostalgia.But all of that is irrelevant if the audience iswilling to believe. Grease is not really a show butrather an evocation of an era, a chance to walk downmemory lane. If the word “skag” brings back fondmemories, if the day the Big Bopper’s plane wentdown is etched in your memory, if Annette Funicellowas your first erection, then you’ll love Grease.It recreates a world populated by Burger PalaceBoys and Pink Ladies. The BP Boys are decked out inblack leather jackets, and shirts with the collars up;or they wear black torso tee shirts, with one sleeverolled up to hold a pack of Camels — and peggedpants above black boots with cuban heels. Atop thatoutfit, each sports a massive pile of hair, not theanarchistic hirsuteness of the 70’s, but the plasteredducktails of the 1950’s. The girls are equally charm¬ing in their beehive hair-does, sweaters that buttonup the back and those pneumatic boobs engineeredby Frederick’s of Hollywood.In addition to the authentic regalia, the cast doesa fine job of conjuring up the gestures and manner¬isms of those days when Nixon was our Agnew. GaryHouston is good as Roger, who is widely admired forthe quality of the “moons” he has thrown. And Patty,the cheerleader, student government leader and allaround straight arrow is admirably portrayed byPolly Pen.Above all, each aspect of the era has beenreconstructed with loving care. There’s the prom,with the boys in their ill fitting sports jackets pressedagainst the walls of the gym. The scene brings backthose awful Friday evenings, when we clods waitedout the “ladies choice” dances, pretending not tonotice that none of the ladies ever chose us._Of course, afficionadoes of the ’50’s will notice afew anachronisms. Wrick Paul’s otherwise admi¬rable sets include a Kentucky Fried Chicken sign,though the old Colonel didn’t really begin unveilinghis secret recipe until the 1960’s. And some of themusic smacks more of Hair than Carl Perkins.But overall it’s a finely wrought reconstruction,something akin to building a ship in a bottle. IfMurray the K and Alan Freed moulded your mindand Dick Clark cleared up your acne, Grease willoffer you irrefutable proof of that wonderous mes¬sage brought to us by the Sha-Na-Na: rock and roll ishere to stay.— Harvey D. ShapiroContemporary European Films Saturday2001: SPACE ODYSSEYMandel Hall 6:45 & 9:30Season Tickets now $4 9RODMcKUENcIqGoi}certOPERA HOUSESUNDAY, April 25 at 7:30 pmTickets SA SO 5 SO 4 SO 3 SO Bo* Office Onens Monday April 12April 2. 1971'Grey City Joumal/3L’il Murders: the New Comic DramaJules Feiffer’s apocalyptic comedy, Little Mur¬ders (currently at the new Marina Cinema down-tonw), is schematic in approach, eccentric in view¬point and hysterical in tone. It is also the mostpertinently funny film comedy in years, and if not acomplete success, it does give the age of the revuesketch style typified in Bob and Carol and Ted andAlice its first dramatic comedy that bears com¬parison with those of Ernst Lubitsch in the 30’s,Preston Sturges in the 40’s or Blake Edwards in theearly 60’s.The story of Patsy the indomitable, who resistsNew York’s implacably persistent contriving to wipeout her smile, and Alfred the apathetic, a passivistwho doesn’t see any point to fighting back at all,expresses vividly the two paths to survival in what iseuphemistically called “the modern city.’’ Lightsspasmodically blinking, toughs and junkies cruisingthrough the garbage piled up during the lastsanitation strike, anonymous phone calls, air pollu¬tion, outrageous living costs, racial tension — Feifferchronicles them all offhandedly, as matters-of-fact,parts of the landscape no longer noticed any morethan the pattern on the wallpaper. Little Murders is acomedy of aggression and defense, where dis¬tinctions of life-style blur, and all roads lead tosnipers on the rooftops. The family that slaystogether.. .The film version is directed by actor Alan Arkin,who also guided the revival of the play in 1969, withsubstantially the same cast (the main addition,Elliott Gould, played Alfred in the first, short-livedBroadway version). The meaning of much of thebantering is clearer in the film, and the relationshipof scenes to the total scheme is less fuzzy. Feifferstructures his play around alternatives of reaction,of explanation, and of survival. The judge rails awayagainst pampered youth; Patsy’s father huffs hissmall, misshapen bulk in an effort at some sem- Elliot Gould fights off thugs in New York Cityblance of dignity. But Feiffer doesn’t always playfair, and the greater clarity of Arkin’s film directionserves to underscore some of the weaknesses of theplay-The major problem in the play is to makeAlfred’s conversion to fanatical energy dramaticallyplausible. We understand Feiffer’s point — that allalternatives extended to the ultimate logical con¬clusion, converge — but the characterization em¬bodying this point remains unconvincing. Arkinmakes a serious mistake in conveying the conversionafter Patsy’s death by visual means alone. Thisobjective is admirable, certainly — but a mute rideron the subway in a bloodstained tee-shirt or spaced-out walks in Central Park make the fundamentalflimsiness of the mechanism painfully apparent.Besides, Elliott Gould, who generally does well withthe part, fails to undergo any visible change, butBootload sole!Of fine Scandinavianand other contemporaryfurniture.Gifts, too.In order to make room for ten containersof new merchandise, we must sell outour stock. 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ILLINOIS 50615COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION!4/Grey City Journal/April 2, 1971 seems instead merely to extend his lack of energy tothe random moral inertia of impersonal violence.Perhaps it is still true that American dramas neverhave third acts.But aside from an embarassing scene added tothe film version where Alfred visits his parents (wholive in Hyde Park and are too much like too manypeople we know — whatever happened to Hollywoodescapism?), nearly every scene clicks with snappylines (rather more like normal speech than Feiffer isgenerally credited) and lots of laughs. Like the bestcomedies, it would be harrowing and depressing ifonly it weren’t so funny. The cast is excellent: fromJon Korkes’ younger brother (a water-closet queenwith every hangup imaginable) and Elizabeth Wil¬son’s mother to the wacky cameos by Lou Jacobi as ajudge, Donald Sutherland as a freaky minister andArkin himself as a widly paranoid homicide lieuten¬ant who theorizes that the wave of unsolved murders(169 in six weeks) is part of a conspiracy toundermine the public’s faith in its law-enforcementofficials.But the most beautiful work of all comes fromVincent Gardenia as the father and Marcia Rodd asPatsy. The two of them, in their unceasing efforts togive their lives just a little meaning, constitute theonly sunny side to Feiffer’s vision. Still, Patsy dies,and her father is seen as basically stupid. The finalbrightly lit image of the family finally united is darkindeed. Even Elliot Gould, if current reports areaccurate, seems to be cracking up. Napoleon XII saidit all: “They’re coming to take me away, ha ha, hoho,heehee.”Incidentally, Little Murders is being produced oncampus this quarter by University Theater. Thework certainly merits several viewings, and underthe circumstances, I would advise seeing the liveproduction first.— Myron MeiselMEDITATIONas taught by Maharishi Mahesh YogiFree Filmsin Social Science 122April 8, 11:30 am, 4 pm, 8 pm.Students' International Meditation SocietyHAriiCVi ALL-NIGHT SHOWRfRFORMRNCFS FRI0RT l SRTUROIr FOLIOHING LAST RtGULRfl FFRTUREApr. 2THE PEOPLE NEXT DOOREli Wallach12:30 & 2:15 Apr. 3GETTING STRAIGHTElliott Gould12:30 4 2:30Apr. 9BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUEJason Robards 12:30 4 2:30 Apr. 10GIANTJames Dean 12:30 OnlyApr. 16TELL ME THAT YOU LOVE ME,JUNIE MOONUza Minnelli 12,2:00 a.m. Apr. 17THE WILD BUNCHWilliam Holden 12, 2:15 a.m.Apr. 23PAINT YOUR WAGONlee Marvin , 12,2:15 a.m. Apr. 24THE ADVENTURERSCandice Bergen 12,3°°a.m.Apr. 30WUSAPaul Newman 12, 2:00 a.m. May 1LITTLE FAUSS AND BIG HALSEYRobert RedfordPHONE 667-7000Mixed Efforts from Some SoloistsIf I Could Only Remember My Nameby David Crosby, (Atlantic SD 7203)and She Used to Wanna Be a Ballerinaby Buffy Saint-Marie (Vanguard VSD79311):These two solo albums are extremelypleasant and professional. Yet bothrecords are somehow unsatisfying andthe problem in both cases is the lack ofhigh quality material. No matter howgood performances are, vocally and-orinstrumentally, nothing can take theplace of superior songs and both Cros¬by and Sainte-Marie have come up withonly passable material here.David Crosby’s album has elevenname stars playing back-up (from JoniMitchell to Jerry Garcia), a beautifullypackaged and exciting instrumentalwork, but none of this can make thisalbum a great one. David’s problemhere seems to be that most of his songsare improvisations, jams; very little ofthis material was composed, so itwould seem, before the in¬strumentalists assembled in therecording studio. “Song with NoWords” and “What Are Their Names”are the worst culprits here — bothsongs depend on instrumental jamsthat are professional but sloppy.Often you can hear two guitarists(Neil Young and Jerry Garcia? fight¬ing for the lead, each without any ideaof what the other is about to do. A groupthat has played together for a numberof years gets to know what each otherwill be doing, but here, the lack ofknowledge of musical styles and tastesoften leaves us with Joni Mitchell andGrace Slick singing back-up to theaforementioned Young-Garcia guitarproblem.However, there are some very nicethings on this record: “Traction in theRain”, “Music Is Love” and “Orleans” David Crosby and Buffy Sainte-Marie in solo albumsare my favorites. They are all short,harmonic tunes with David singing abit more surely and strongly than hedoes on the other songs. All in allthough, I am disappointed with David’seffort. It does not come near the level ofhis CSN and Y mates’ solo efforts,Stephen Stills and Neil Young’s Afterthe Goldrush.Buffy’s album is much less complex.Basically it is Buffy’s voice, a backinginstrument and every now and then, achorus. But even though this album issimpler, it falls into the same traps. Allof the songs that I like on this albumare Buffy originals, but it seems thatshe didn’t have enough material to fillan album by herself, so she performssix songs written by others. All of theseare dull; Buffy’s raspy soprano voiceworks best on songs that she believes in, that she’s written. On someoneelse’s lyrics, she hesitates, and oftenfalls into the trap of interpreting thenon-original material in the same waythat the writer did. Neil Young’s“Helpless” is an example of this.Yet on the other five songs on thisalbum, Buffy shines through. The bestof these are “Moratorium”, “SoldierBlue” and the title cut. If Buffy hadwaited only until she had written somemore songs, the release of this albumwould have been a far more welcomeevent.With Friends and Neighbors by AlexTaylor (Capricorn SD 860) and SisterKate by Kate Taylor (Cotillion SD9045):As Jimmy Durante used to say“Everybody’s tryin’ ta get inta daact!”Culture VultureThings to do while waiting around for FOTA during thisquarter of little studying:MUSICThe Aeolian Chamber Players perform tonight at 8:30 inMandel. They will play Ives' Largo for Violin, Clarinet andPiano, Bach's Cello Suite in G; Schoenberg's ChamberSymphony No 1; Ried's Trio Sonata in E; and Bartoks'Contrasto.The Contemporary Arts Quartet plays music by Tippett,Chausson, Respighi, and Schumann tonight in OrchestraHall at 8 30.The Chicago Symphony presents a Popular Concerttomorrow in Orchestra Hall with music by Berloiz, Liszt,Massenet and Offenbach.Yuriko Kuronuma will give a recital in Mandel Sunday at8 30, playing Beethoven's Sonata in C Minor, Franck'sSonata in A. Mamiya's Sonata for Violin, Piano, Percussion,and Contrabasso, Berio's Due Pezzi, and Szymanowsky'sNocturne and Tarantella. Free.In Rockefeller Chapel Sunday at 3:30, J.S Bach's PassionAccording to Saint John will be performedTuesday in Quantrell at 8, the Contemporary Jazz andimprovisation Ensemble performs, directed by W. ThomasMcKinley.Sunday at the Auditorium at 8:30, the Stuttgart BachCollegium and Kantorei perform.POPAt the Quiet Knight through April 4: Alex Taylor andfriends and Neighbors. April 7-11: Mark-Almond.Jethro Tull will beat the Opera House Sunday.artColor Photographs in Israel, an exhibit by Robert M.Lipgar is at Hillel House through April 30"49th Parallels," an exhibit of New Canadian Art, will beat the Museum of Contemporary Art April 3 May 16.Danny Lyon's Photographs are on exhibit at the BergmanGallery in Cobb Hall. The Renaissance Gallery in Goodspeed presents "Artafter Art."An exhibit of Japanese hanging scrolls and handscrollsfrom 14th through 19th centuries continues in Gallery 116 atthe Art institute.Drawings and Lithographs by Jean Dubuffet cont nues atthe Art Institute in Gallery 107.The Art institute also features an exhibit of Etchings andLithographs by Paul Klee; Gallery 107.Paintings by Miuoko Ito are on display at the Hyde ParkArt Center, 5236 Blackstone.Works by Josef Izsak, a Hungarian refugee who livedthrough the Nazi concentration camps, will be exhibited atthe Harper Galleries, 5216 S Harper through this Sundayonly.The 73rd exhibition by artists in the Chicago area will beat the Art Institute March 13 until April 18.The Art Institute will exhibit photoserigraphs by LarryStark from March 6 through April 25, in Gallery 106.THEATERGeorge M will play April 13 at the Opera House, 20 W.Wacker. Tickets for the play concerning George M. Cohanare S3 7 evenings; April 3: matinee $2-6. FR 2-0566.Buck White is moving to Saint James United MethodistChurch, 4611 S. Ellis Avenue. The all male black musicalplays every Thursday and Friday. Tickets are $2.50 4.50with $1 student discount except on Saturday.You're A Good Man Charlie Brown has opened at theHappy Medium, 901 N Rush for an extended run.Chekhov's The Seagull is being performed for free everyFriday and Saturday at 7:30 at the Columbia CollegePerforming Arts Center, 1725 N Wells. 944-3756.Free Theater will present through May, William Russo'sAesop's Fables Sunday at 7 and 9, Monday at 7:30 and 9. Atleast through the end of the month, they will also presentRusso's Civil War on Saturday evenings. Call 929 6920 formore information. The theater is at 3257 n Sheffield.Obviously, admission free Theater First will present Roshoman starting March 19.For more information about performances, call 463 3099.Marching Song has opened at the Goodman Theater andwill run through April 4. Tuesday through Thursday andSunday at 7:30. Friday and Saturday at 8:30. Thursdaymatinee at 2.Mrozek's Tango will run at The Playhouse, 315 W North,through April, 751-9643.The Me Nobody Knows continues at the Civic Theater,Washington and Wacker. This is the Chicago production ofthe current New York Obie award-winning rock musicalbased on the creative writings of school children from theghetto. Tickets$4 7.50 Call 726-7890.Grease, a 1950's rock musical, has opened at the KingstonMines Theater, 2356 N Lincoln.The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds at the Ivanhoe, 3000 N Clark, 8 pm. Runs through April25. Irene Dailey, star of The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in the-Moon-Marigolds, will conduct seminars about theplay and about theater in general after performances.Interested groups should call 248 6800.Man of La Mancha continues to run at the CandlelightDinner Playhouse, 5620 S Harlem, Summitt. Dinner isincluded and in fact required. Tuesday through Thursday$5, Friday $6, Saturday $6.95 for the first performance and$8 for the second, Sunday $4.50 and $6. Call theater fortimes.DANCEThe Dance Troupe, a company affiliated with ColumbiaCollege, will present "Fossils" and "Double Play" throughApril 14 at 1725 N. Wells.FILMDoc Films presents Cassavetes' Faces at 7:15 and 9:30 inCobb tonight; Tuesday, Cukor's Philadelphia Story in SS 122at 7:30 and 9:30, and Wednesday, Ray's In a Lonely Place inCobb at 7:30 only.Tomorrow in Mandel at 6:45 and 9:30, CEF presentsKubrick's 2001: A Space Oddyssey. Well, here are two more Taylors. Youknow about James and Livingston, buthere are their older brother and theironly sister with debut albums, whichwhile not as good as either James orLivingston’s, are good nonetheless.Alex has many of the same vocalinflections and intonations that Jamesand Livingston have, but unfortunate¬ly, he does not write his own materialthe way his two brothers do. So Alex isan interpretive performer and here, hisversions of James’ “Highway Song”and “Night Owl” and “It’s All OverNow” (the Rolling Stones and RodStewart classic) are bouncy, charmingand excellent. Alex’s voice is moreblues-oriented than his brothers and hecontrols it quite well. This album is alsograced by very fine instrumental workby Johnny Sandlin on bass, Paul Hor¬nsby on keyboards, Tommy Talton onguitar and Bill Stewart on drums. Also,for a great picture of Sweet BabyJames, Alex’s son, see the inside of thejacket.Kate Taylor, on her album, falls intoa trap that Alex avoided. She performstoo many well-known songs here anddoes so in styles too similar to theiroriginal versions. Elton John’s “Balladof a Well Known Gun” and “CountryComfort”, James Taylor’s “Lo andBehold”, Beverley Martyn’s “SweetHonesty,” and Mike D’Abo’s “Hand¬bags and Gladrags” (performed origi¬nally by Rod Stewart) are all on thisalbum and while Kate sings them allstrongly enough, her versions soundexactly like all the originals. This isparticularly striking on the two EltonJohn songs for here, Kate uses femalechoral work exactly the way Elton doeson his Tumblewood Connection album.All the other songs on the album, aremore enjoyable. “Home Again” byCarol King, “Be That Way” by Liv¬ingston, and Pete Dello’s “Do I StillFigure in Your Life” are the best.Kate’s voice is often reminiscent ofLinda Rondstadt, but luckily, sheavoids this most of the time. MerryClayton sings back-up on the albumand her voice is still as strong andvibrant as when she did “GimmeShelter” with the Rolling Stones.Crazy Horse (Reprise 6438):A short note on a good album. CrazyHorse used to back up Neil Young andwhen Neil decided to do solo andCSN and Y work, they went out on theirown and made this album which inmany ways captures the feel of NeilYoung’s second album, EverybodyKnows This Is Nowhere. Crazy Horseplays straight hard rock with ever sonoticeable country overtones. “Down¬town” and “Dance, Dance, Dance” aremy favorite cuts but all of them aregood. Ry Cooder is featured on two cutsplaying slide guitar and his work isquite exciting.—The Great PumpkinSEMINARY COOPBOOKSTOREThousands of titles in Philosophy,Theology, Political Science, etc.5757 S. University(in the basement)> Hours 11-4 Mon.-Fri.Phone 752-4381 Mesdemoiselles et MessieursQue vous manque-t-ildans votre vie?A summer in PARIS with Sarah LawrenceA program designed to involve you total¬ly in the City of Paris when it is at its best... its theatres, galleries, concerts, operain full function ... June 18 to July 29 ...a program for enthusiasts not tourists.Courses in Art History, Literature, Phi¬losophy - (both Modern and Classical) -and an intensive French Language pro¬gram. Field work in Chartres, Mont St.Michel, the chateaux country, and in andaround Paris.Tuition, room, board $850 meal allowanceseach dav for lunch and dinner at restaurants of yourchoiceCharter Flight 4-6 CreditsWrite: Foreign Studies OfficeSarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, New York, 10708April 2, 1971/Grey City Journal/5Homemade Ice Cream - The Lady With A Thousand Pockets -Face Painting - Games - Fat City, April 9, 8:30Ida Noyes Foyer 1 st FloorTW\INTRODUCES1/3 OFWith a Youth Pass¬port card you get 'Aoff on all TWAdomestic flights, on astandby basis. Andreduced rates at manyplaces you'll stay. rwi Youth Passporttwtm rut wnTtriurtM tut urutMiw iu ua u «— PICK OlESKY(plt.M print)MARCH T l<>73Ciplrttloo Dal* (ZiiM •IrtlvUy)SlfMtvr* (CarPttsMir)_ _ _ /Xcceou uMr Color M«l< 5f Ot&uJLth* COAPIUoM M4000274^#«rW,M* Youth Passport cardscost $3 and are availableto students aged 12 thru 21.AND 2 YEARS TO (AYWith TWA's GetawayCard, you can chargeairfare, hotels, meals,cars, just about any¬thing to just aboutanywhere. And thentake two years to pay. The Getaway Cardis available to moststudents in the U.S.A.For additionalinformation contact TWAor your local travel agent.TWA's Getaway ProgramU.S.A./Europe/Asia/Pacific/AfricaPREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining alegal abortion immediately InNew York City at minimal cost24 hours a day, seven days aweek for confidential and per¬sonal service.Cell:(215) 878-5800ABORTION REFERRALSERVICE (ARS), INC.r—*rwzAiPlatter IIIPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsJ Compare the Price!■ 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 !L—.WLefiiVER-,..; LET US HELP YOUCall us now (collect) andone of our dedicated staffwill answer your questionsabout placement in Clinicsand accredited Hospitalsin New York City.LOW COSTSTRICTLY CONFIDENTIALAVAILABLE 7 DAYS A WEEKCALL ANYTIME (collect)(212) 371-6670or(212) 759-6810WOMENSPAVILIONINC.L51S MADISON AVENUE, N Y. .. 10022 ^ KENT STATEWHAT HAPPENED-AND WHYPulitzer-prize winner,James Michener, recreatesthe tragedy at Kent. In aneye opening book conden¬sation he reveals, step bystep, the events that led tothe fatal shootings. It is allhere, including thesurpris- ing reactions from adultsand students across thecountry, and Micheneradvice about handling thedivision between Americanlifestyles. One of 38 articlesand features in the AprilREADER’S DIGEST 9A "AVERY FUNNY, /£?C>VERY Gg,INTELLIGENT, ^VERY AFFECTING MOVIE."-VINCENT CANBY. N Y. TIMES“IT’S A MAD MOVIE, INSANE, ANGRY,DEVASTATINGLY FUNNY ANDCOMICALLY DEVASTATING!"-JUDITH CRIST. NBC TV TODAY20lh Century Foz Presents,ELUOn GOULDDONAU) SUTHERLAND .Ate UMI JACOBI.».mAIANARNN niktOttvOwtIt1 IKS FEIFFER Slittli B _nsR MMl Miton|MMCMROOO MNCMTGMOOM EUZAflfTH NIISON JON FORKSAIANAMQNL*** JACK BRODSKY Jll£S FEIFFER iNow Playinging f G^ARINA CINEMA?)** MARINA CITY—32B*4SB JALL OVER CHICAGOLANDft jfcrLEMDfME VElIfl!JOAN BAEZ-CROSBY, STILLS, NASH A YOUNGJONI MITCHELL- JOHN SEBASTIANAnd IntroducingDOROTHY MORRISONEveryone <M It... lor the sheer love ol It.in snH happened gnin WMlwndbylttsiea.ltd Menn Productions presents « Mm by B«ird Bryant color by Of LUKE* — to. M by 1* Johenne Demetrekes Produced by C«rl Gottlieb «r ■RELlASfO 8y2aSee Matropolifon Papers Movie Ads for theatre nearest yoolMALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSORDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.Free Helium Balloons - With Helium- Fat City, April 9, 8:30 Ida Noyes6/Grey City Journal/April 2, 1971 yGodard’s Transitional VisionJean-Luc Godard’s Two or ThreeThings I Know About Her (at the ThreePenny Cinema) is fairly difficult to talkabout. Less difficult than, say, LaChinoise, more difficult than Mascu¬line/Feminine. Godard has graduallybeen dropping all the little criticalclues and signposts out of his movies,and Two or Three Things (made in1966) is better than halfway there. Itresembles a Cubist painting; definitelyone of Godard’s most visually beautifulfilms, Two or Three Things also hasbits and pieces of overt “content.”There’s even a plot. Juliette Janson(Marina Vlady) is an attractive lower-middle class housewife who lives in ahigh-rise apartment building outsideParis. To earn some extra money, sheengages in prostitution, and sometimesteams up with Marianne (Anny Dupe-rey), who is in a similar socioeconomicsituation. The movie follows Juliettethrough a typical day, at the end ofwhich she and her husband Robert(Roger Montsoret) have dinner and goto bed.Two or Three Things is a transitionalfilm between Old Godard and NewGodard. I think the best things in it areleftovers from Old Godard, and theworst are those which are the begin¬ning of New (Political) Godard. Theattempt at a political and economicanalysis of the urbanization and Amer¬icanization of Paris, certainly a validsubject for concern, is very badlyintegrated into the film. Godard’s criti¬que of the American supermarket cul¬ture that France is blindly acceptingonly comes alive when he presents itvisually, especially in the film’s ex¬traordinary final shot. There are alsosome Brechtian self-questioning pas¬sages — Godard keeps up a constantstream of voice-over commentary — in Godard setting up the final shot in ‘Two or Three Things .which the director questions why he isshooting a particular object or event.I’ve seen the film three times, and thisconcept doesn’t grab me either. Leav¬ing the slates and the shot of thecamera in La Chinoise was a muchmore effective way of doing essentiallythe same thing.What is left of Godard Old in Two orThree Things are things like MarinaVlady’s perceptive, fully-realized per¬formance, recalling Jean Seberg inBreathless, Brigitte Bardot in Con¬tempt, Macha Meril in A MarriedWoman, and of course, the glorious Anna Karina in several other Godardfilms. There are two good scenes incafes, also recalling the older Godardfilms. And Two or Three Things isdominated by Godard’s sense of archi¬tecture — a visual sense he shares withNicholas Ray, Sirk, Vidor, Lang andAntonioni, but which he has displayedonly intermittently.Two or Three Things is such astunning film to look at — each shot isquite striking — that it must be seen. Ithas taken me three viewings and threeyears (I first saw it early in 1968) ofthinking about it to decide that it isn’treally one of Godard’s more successful films. The film demonstrates what anenormously gifted artist comes up withduring a period of great personal andphilosophical uncertainty and transi¬tion, and when he attempts to combinedisparate elements (narrative, sociolo¬gy, comedy — the Raoul Levy sequence— politics). It is interesting that themajor literary reference (a favoritedevice of Old Godard) in the film is toFlaubert’s last, unfinished novel Bou-vard and Pecuchet.Two actors, ClaudeMiller and Jean-Patrick Lebel, havebeen enlisted to play Bouvard andPecuchet, endlessly cataloging booksin a cafe.I don’t mean to suggest that Two orThree Things is carelessly made. Thestructural division into eighteen move¬ments is exact and relevant — to partof what the film is about. But asGodard made the film, he may havefelt that it was to him what Bouvardand Pecuchet was to Flaubert — asearching, ultimately incompletework. The final minute or so of Two orThree Things displays — as does anearlier sequence consisting of a close-up of a cup of coffee — Godard’s greatability with words. Over the coffee-cupshot, we hear: “I must listen ... I mustlook around me . . . Look at the world. . . mon semblable, mon frere . . . thelimits of language are the limitations ofthe world . . . Logical and mysticaldeath will abolish these limitations . ..There will be neither questions noranswers ... All is erased, all is linkedup again.”As Tom Milne observed about Con¬tempt, the output of Godard’s “classi¬cal” period is so much better than thatof his recent political period thatChairman Mao and the Cultural Revo¬lution have a lot to answer for.—Charles Flynn♦ Che CTnioersitu of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59TH STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUE . CHICAGO, ILLINOISX 0. Batl)jSt Jiohn passionTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 27 members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRARICHARD VIKSTROM, Director of Chapel MusicEDWARD MONDELLO, OrganistDONALD DOIG, Evangelist ARTHUR BERG, JesusBARBARA PEARSON, Soprano SUSAN NALBACH LUTZ, SopranoALONZO CROOK, Tenor PHYLLIS UNOSAWA, ContraltoMARK ZOLEZZI, Tenor STEPHEN SWANSON, BaritoneSunday * April 4, 1971 * 3:30 p.m.Tickets: Reserved $5.00 General Admission $4.00UC Connected/Alumni $3.50 UC Students $2.50On Sale: All TICKETRON outlets including Marina Citydial T-l-C-K-E-T-S for informationWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetCooley’s Corner, 5211 Harper AvenueReynolds Club Desk, 5706 University AvenueMail Orders to: Chapel Music Office, 59th Street and Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago 60637Please make checks payable to The University of Chicago and enclose stamped\ self-addressed envelope JApril 2, 1971/Grey City Journal '7Slapstick Comedy -Fat City, April 9, 8:30Bandersnatch, Ida Noyes“A memorable, heart-warming 90 minutes"Who would believe history could beso entertaining and enlightening?"TODTH FAIRYHEADQUARTERS“What happened to your pants “THE TODTH FAIRYJOINS LARRY LUJAaWEEKDAYSBETWEEN 73068AM89WLS "I hope you will replay your special so our parentsmight have the opportunity to see it."THE PEOPLE SAID IT ALL!When it ran before, aflood of letters andtelegrams came pouringin almost the moment“Swing Out Sweet Land’was over.We’ve printed a fewtypical comments above,partly to remind youhow special the showwas, but mostly tomake sure you’rewatching again when ...BUDWEISER.- JOHN WAYNEIN “SWING OUT SWEET LAND”Thursday, April 8 8:30-10 P.M. 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JO'ri Folk Singing at tke Coffee House -Fat City, April 9, 8:30West Library, Ida Noyes■fCy UH^'i/uWr