The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 47 The University of Chicago Friday, April 9, 1971GUGGENHEIM FELLOWSHIP WINNERS.Top: William McNeil, professor of history.Bottom: Yoichiro Nambu, professor ofphysics.Civil protests set forTactics for “Mayday,” the Washingtondemonstrations planned for May 1-5, in¬clude disruptive civil disobedience in thestreets and federal office buildings.On campus anti-war students are organ¬izing a Mayday brigade, training in civildisobedience and selecting targets for dis¬ruption in Washington.At an organizing meeting held Wednes¬day afternoon in Eckhart 133, Candy Fogelof the People’s Peace Treaty Coalition de¬scribed the scenario for the demonstra¬tions.On May 1, demonstrators will move intoRock Creek Park on the northwest side ofWashington. On May 2, there will be a rallydowntown with the Southern ChristianLeadership Council mule train arrivingfrom New York and a student march fromKent State.On May 3 and 4, small brigades of dem¬onstrators will attempt to shut down majortraffic arteries during rush hour at 28 sepa¬rate locations. On May 5, demonstratorswill attempt to surround the Capitol, in sup¬port of the people’s peace treaty.National Student Association and the As¬ sociation of Student Governments havecalled for a nation-wide boycott of classes.A moratorium on “business as usual” onMay 5 in honor of the first anniversary ofthe Kent State killings. “The idea is to sus¬tain pressure against the government,”said Miss Fogel.“A lot of us have realized that simplepeaceful protest is not enough” said DaveMoberg at the organizing meeting. “Thekind of protests Nixon can’t shrug off iswhen the city of Washington is closed off.”Moberg addressed a gathering of about40 students after a showing of “Time isRunning Out,” a film in support of thepeople’s peace treaty.He said that the anti-war movement musttry to force Nixon to choose immediatewithdrawal of troops from Indochina in¬stead of another military plan to end thewar.“The problem we’re facing is proving toNixon that military options are unwork¬able. The Vietnamese are already doingthat, but if we remain silent, it would be atragic error that would contribute sig¬nificantly to the further destrucion of In¬dochina.” 12 professors receiveresearch fellowshipsUniversity alters Extension programSteve AokiSPRING ON THE QUADS: With the advent of warm weather, students forsake theconfines of the library or coffeeshop to study outside. Twelve University professors have re¬ceived Guggenheim fellowships to allowthem to do research during the next year.Fellowships, which come from the JohnSimon Guggenheim memorial foundation,are presented on the “basis of demonstra¬ted accomplishment in the past and strongpromise for the future,” according to afoundation statement.A total of $3.8 million was presented to354 scholars nationwide, who were selectedform 2363 applicants.University professors receiving grantsare:• Charles Bid well, professor of educationand sociology, who will perform studies inthe sociology of education.• Patrick Billingley, professor of math¬ematics and statistics, who will study inthe general probability theory and biol¬ogical stochastic processes.• Raul Falicov, assistant professor ofmedicine, who will work on an experimen¬tal model of acute myocardial infraction.• Grant Gilmore, Bigelow professor oflaw, who will write a biography of JusticeOliver Wendell Holmes from 1882 to 1935.• Philip Gossett, assistant professor ofmusic and humanities, who will studystructural conventions in 19th centuryItalian opera.• Hamlin Hill, professor of English whowill write a critical biography of MarkTwain from 1900 to 1910.MaydayOn Sunday, April 18, the Mayday orga¬nizers have reserved Ida Noyes for a fullday of training in civil disobedience and fororganizing transportation, and tactics forthe demonstrations.The non-violent training center, 5651 S.Woodlawn, holds weekly training sessionson Saturdays.Buses and cars for the Mayday demon¬strations will leave Chicago on April 30;busses for the April 24 rally in Washingtonwill leave April 23.For reservations call Janet Cantride atthe Chicago Peace Action Coalition, 922-1068. Tickets cost $35.In conjunction with anti-war protest, lo¬cal demonstrations will be held. • Charles Long, associate professor ofhistory of religions, who will work on thereligion of Americans of African descent.• William McNeil, Millikan distinguishedservice professor of history, who will studythe impact of Venetian commerce and cul¬ture on the Levant and Black Sea areas,1097-1797• Robert Mundell, professor of econ¬omics who will study the relation betweenmonetary systems and international econ¬omic development.• Yoichiro Nambu, professor of physics,who will work in theoretical studies in ele¬mentary particle physics• Joseph Schwab, Harper professor ofnatural sciences and education, who willwork on current conceptions of curriculumplanning and their reform.• John Simpson, Ryerson distinguishedservice professor of physics, who will con¬duct experimental and theoretical studiesin high energy astrophysics.Of the 354 fellows, 21 are at Harvard, 19at Berkeley, 15 at Columbia, 13 at Yale, 12at Chicago and Stanford, and 10 at Pennsyl-. vania.This year six faculty members receivedGuggenheim foundation awards. The $3.8million awarded this year represents an in¬crease of $1.2 million over last year, mostof it due to a grant from the estate of Gug¬genheim’s widow.Last year 286 scholars, scientists, andartists were chosen by the foundation selec¬tion committee.The Guggenheim awards are consideredto be among the highest honored profes¬sional funding in the country.The six professors honored last year arePeter Dembowski, associate professor ofFrench; Harry Klaven, professor of law;Jerome McGann, associate professor ofEnglish; Leanord Meyer, professor of mu¬sic; Susanne Rudolph, associate professorof political science; and Dr. Samuel Weiss,professor of biochemistry.A local “spring offensive” sponsored byseveral local peace groups is scheduled forLincoln Park Sunday. Although the city hasdenied permission for the event, plans callfor music, theatre, speakers, includingRennie Davis.The last major anti-war protest was inWashington May 9 at the ellipse near theWhite House and was attended by approxi¬mately 100,000 people.Non-degree students will now be able totake summer courses for credit, under anew program at the University Extension.IC Ranlet Lincoln, dean of the Extension,explained that before the change, studentsnot registered for a degree had to apply fora student-at-large status and pay full tui¬tion before they could take a summercourse. Non-degree students normally paya reduced tuition rate.Lincoln sees the new program as benefit-ting both non-degree and regular degreestudents.“We hope the result of the change will bea more attractive summer quarter: more people here, more faculty staying over thesummer, and, eventually, more courses,”Lincoln said.The purpose of the University Extensionis to offer courses for people not workingtoward a degree at the University. This in¬cludes both credit and non-credit courses.Credit courses of the Extension corre¬spond to regular degree courses taughthere on campus. These are taken, for ex¬ample, by students from other institutions,or by students needing to take specificcoqrsps to fulfill admission rpquirpmpntsNon-credit courses involve special pro¬grams and classes taught at the Univer¬sity’s downtown center.Steve Aoki'? IC RANLET LINCOLNDean of University Extension: ■ We're Just Stringing You AlongLAKE COUNTRY STRING BAND CONCERT - FAT CITY - TONIGHTIda Noyes 3rd Floor, 8:30, Admission For ALL Events $1*00Ida Noyes Program Board...... ‘aonenictel-there is the glimmer of hope.tsaBftr**Where ihereistwo nickelsthere isa dime.And where -there's two dimesand one nickelthere's a quarter.And with a quarterthe world is yeur oyster.""How true."THE TOOTH FAIRYJOINS LARRY LUJACKWEEKDAYSBETWEEN 730& SAM89WLS"• * • * * • , • #*N •• • • **r,vAiJUST ARRIVED!OUR NEW ESKIMO ART COLLECTIONOver 500 orginal Eskimo Soapstone Sculptures priced from$5 to $2,000, and over 100 original Eskimo Graphicspriced from $10 to $400.Stye Alaska i>tyujjOf Lake Forest777 Bank Lane. .North; Lake Forest: 295-1910; Hrs.: 10-5 Daily and SundayOin«n, lankAinafkard, Moilti Charge, Amarkan Cxprasi Card* Accepted ♦♦t♦♦t♦♦t♦♦♦♦ by CAR repairs/Sur//cA tfe...BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTD-SEfWlCC4401 9. ARCHER. 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MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO, ILLINOISTEL. 326-2550JOIN ANEXPEDITIONThe American Explorers Association is currently recruitingapplicants for salary-paid summar and fall positions withprivate and institutional-affil¬iated expeditions to North andSouth America, Africa and theFar East.Positions are available forboth experienced and inexpertenced male and female studentsin all fields. Students with interest and/or orientation in Ianguages, engineering, archeology,art, photography, teaching andall natural sciences are of specialinterest.To apply complete a one pagetyped resume that includes thefollowing information, name,address, age, phone, relevantwork or recreational experience,education and/or areas of specialinterest, dates available, name(s)of other students with whomyou wish to work, and any otherpertinent information.In May your edited resumewill be included in our Directorywhich will be sent to over 100affiliated groups, organizationsand institutions actively planning overseas expeditions.Send your resume with $6.00processing fee to:American Explorers AssociationP. 0. Box 13190Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19101Kindly complete and mailyour resume no later than May15, 1971.TONIGHTFOLK SINGING, BALLOONS, LIVE COMEDY, HOMEMADE ICE CREAM, THE LADY WITH 1000 POCKETS,FACE PAINTING, GAMES.Ida Noyes, 8:30, Admission To All Events $1.00, Fat Ida Noyes City2/The Chicago Maroon/April 9, 1971Spring comes to UCin very unusual wayHARBINGER OF SPRING: AH that grass, what more could a body ask for?Math team wins national competitionA team of three College math studentsoutplaced teams from 297 other universitiesfrom the United States and Canada in theannual William Lowell Putnam mathema¬tical competition.Robert Oliver 71, who placed fourth, wasamong the top five individuals in the com¬petition for the second consecutive year.Robert Israel 72 and Robert Tax 72, theother two team members, also finishedamong the top 15 along with David Fried72.Paul Sally, associate professor of math¬ ematics, who supervised the competition oncampus, said the victory is “a tribute tothe fact that we have excellent students inthe College.“This provides a fairly good measure ofthe undergraduate math program,” Sallysaid. “The competition was quite intense.”The competition, which was administeredby the Mathematical Association of Amer¬ica, consisted of 12 problems in two three-hour sessions. The tests were given on theindividual campuses.The four teams who placed behind the By T E BUNNY“I thought it was a mushroom,” the scan-tilly clad student said, “with grass growingat its base.” Mr U of C (Eric Rubin), how¬ever, recognized the object for what itwas, as he happily patted the head of thesix foot foam rubber penis.And so once again spring’s arrival is wel¬comed on the quads. Besides the polyethe¬lene phallic symbol, there were severalhundred people and an infinite number ofhorny dogs enjoying yesterday’s warmweather.Men in white coats from Billings hospitalalso came to check out the scene and weretempted at first to carry off Rubin andcompany. After taking off their shoes, how¬ever, they succumbed to the intoxicatingfumes — of the newly planted flowers.Despite the fact that classes were goingon, people seemed to find time to playgames all afternoon, beginning with the es¬tablished floating frisbee to the newly in-University were Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, second; University of Toronto,third; Illinois Institute of Technology,fourth; and California Institute of Tech¬nology, fifth.Those teams receiving honorable mentionwere University of California at Davis,Harvard University, Princeton University,Reed College and Yale University.The University team receives an awardof $500 and each member of the team re¬ceives $100. augurated game of buck-buck. Also foot¬balls were flying everywhere as well ascroquet mallets and softballs and the tran¬sistorized strains of pop tunes from WLS.If you were able enough to twist yourway through the crowd of bicycles anddripping ice cream cones and harnassedbabies, you might have seen the season’sfirst pair of hot pants. They were a reallynice pair of leather lederhosen on a hairysix foot male. Or you might have bumpedinto one of the circles of friendly peoplepassing chianti or beer, or what have you.Remember Skinny from last month’s no¬torious lascivious costume ball? He toojoined the initiation of spring festivities bydoing his thing (sunbathing au naturel).If you were one of the unfortunates whogot caught in a registration line or attendeda class and missed this afternoon’s activi¬ties, don’t feel bad. You have all springquarter, the tennis courts are open, and themushroom-penis promised to come againshould things cool off.Fixing a hole where the rain came in . . .ABOUT THE MIDWAYFord grantsThe University has received Ford Foun¬dation grants of $490,000 for its communityand family study center, and $150,000 for itscomparative education center.The grant to the community and familystudy center is one of seven awarded by theFord Foundation for work on world popu¬lation problems. The center was estab¬lished with Foundation help in 1963, and isnow a major source of family-planning pro¬grams.Its research has concentrated on commu¬nications among family-planning programs,computer help with analyzing researchdata, and production of a textbook fortraining family-planning workers.The comparative education center willrecieve a three-year $150,000 grant. It con¬ducts research and trains students, bothAmerican and foreign, in the educationalproblems of the developing world. A majorconcern of the center is relating educationalresources to the needs of particular coun¬tries, including the recuitment and train¬ing of teachers.Quantrell awardsThursday is the deadline for letters rec¬ommending instructors for the Quantrellawards for excellence in undergraduateteaching.Students wishing to recommend a par¬ticular instructor should submit a letter toCollege dean Roger Hildebrand in Gates-Blake 132.Four teachers receive $1000 awards an¬nually at the spring convocation. Therecipients are nominated by a committeethat includes the College dean, dean of stu¬dents, and dean of undergraduate students.In an open letter to students, Hildebrandsaid, “We solicit your help in the form ofwritten recommendations for the teacherswho have meant most to you. Such recom¬mendations carry most weight when theyare carefully argued. The effort you givewill be greatly appreciated.”Last year’s winners were Lorna Straus,assistant professor of anatomy; EasleyBlackwood, professor of music, Joseph ROGER HILDEBRANDDean of the CoUegeCropsey, professor of political science; andStuart Rice, Block professor in the Fermiinstitute, chemistry, and mathematicalbiology.Tennis anyone?In its first match of the season Saturday,the tennis team lost 6-3 to Northwestern.Although defeated, the tennis team exhib¬ited its great depth by winning at the no. 5and no. 6 positions. Alex Terras and AllenFriedman were responsible for the wins.Tom McCroskey, no. 1, and Dan Rosen-house, no. 4, each losing in three setsqueakers, almost provided the margin ofvictory. In doubles, one match was won bydefault and two were lost.The team, which has practiced fall andwinter quarters, is looking forward to apromising season and possibly a chance inthe national intercollegiate tournamentheld at the end of the season.The Maroon netmen faced Harper Col¬lege yesterday and will meet Wisconsin atWhitewater next week at 1 pm on StaggField tennis courts. Spectators are wel¬come. { -Dick BarrishRICHARD LEVINSBiology professorScience for VietnamThe Science for Vietnam project is seek¬ing volunteers to contribute research andcollect literature and materials, as part ofits effort to collaborae with Vietnamese inrebuilding their country.The project grew out of a visit to Hanoilast December by biology professor Rich¬ard Levins, who established contacts withthe University of Hanoi and various scien¬tific and educational groups.Research is needed in fields such asmathematical biology, population biology,reforestation, and cellular and molecularbiology.Anyone interested in the project shouldcontact Science for Vietnam, care of Rich¬ard Levins, Department of Biology.Spring convocationThe College Dean’s A .visoryCommitteeis seeking views concerning the structureof this spring’s convocation.Wednesday evening the committee rec¬ommended to Dean of the College, RogerHildebrand that the convocation be a tradi¬tional ceremony, in such a ceremony caps and gowns are recommended but not re¬quired. Anyone wishing to comment on thisplease contact Lisa Capell, 1421 UpperWallace, or Bob Esty, 60 Hitchcock.SG electionsAll petitions and candidacy forms for Stu¬dent Government (SG) elections must beturned in by Monday to the SG office.Single candidates’ petitions need 10 sig¬natures from members of their con¬stituency. Those for slates need 40 signa¬tures from members of the candidates’ con¬stituency.Petitions and candidacy forms may bepicked up outside the SG office, Ida Noyes218.Summer jobsA list of summer job opportunitiesthroughout the United States is now avail¬able from the office of career counselingand placement.The list includes the names, addresses,positions available, and application dead¬lines of more than 100 companies, in¬stitutions, and government agencies acrossthe country who will be hiring colleg stu¬dents this summer. It can be picked up freein Reynolds Club room 200.Spring offenseThe “spring offensive” in Chicago opensEaster Sunday at 1 pm with a gathering ofthe tribes in Lincoln Park. The event,which will feature music, art, speakers andtheater, has been denied a permit by theChicago park district.According to a spokesman for the gather¬ing, the district does not include music andart in their definition of free speech. Anattempt to get a permit was thrown out offederal court on the grounds that the gath¬erings of organizers had not first gonethrough state courts for a ruling on thecase.Rennie Davis is scheduled to speak, but itis not definite whether he will show up.please contact Lisa Capell, 1421 Upperering. Scheduled attractions include Eu¬phoria Blimpworks band, Mountain Bus,Lefy Diez, Davis and Jennifer Dohrn.April 9, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/3The Chicago MaroonSTEVE COOK DON RATNEREditor Business ManagerCON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorJUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, JIM HAEFEMEYER, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate EditorsUSA 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 m 1*92. 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 oncampus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S.Non-profit postage paid at Chiacgo, III.MorgenthauSome wise old sage once said that rules are made to be broken. Itappears that the University has never heard this adage: Hans Morgen¬thau has recently been forced to retire, having reached the University’smandatory retirement age.Once there were good justifications for making people retire at 68.Even 20 years ago, men of 68 had started to lose their verve and spirit.But with the advent of modern medicine, many men continue to bevital, energetic people far beyond their 68th birthday. We think thatHans Morgenthau falls into this catagory.Anyone who has taken Morgenthau’s class this year can attest tothe fact that his wit, his personability, and his intellect have not beendulled by his ever-increasing years. Until he does start to slow down,there are very good reasons to keep him on the faculty. His course inInternational politics is one of the best open to undergraduates. Hislectures on campus are always filled to capacity and he provides anintellectual stimulus to any number of graduate and undergraduatestudents in political science.A society that makes no use of its “senior citizens” (what a horribleeuphemism!) is not using all its available talent. The case of Hans Mor¬genthau is an excellent illustration of why the University should bend itsretirement provisions. Perhaps the University should junk its retire¬ment rules entirely and come up with a new system. Divisional deanscould confer with older faculty members to decide when it would bebest for them to retire. In this way men such as Hans Morgenthau couldcontinue to teach until there was ample reason for them to cease.Activities feeDiscussions are now underway on the idea of a student activitiesfee, and anyone concerned about the quality of student life here hasa stake in them.If every student was assessed $5 per quarter towards the provisionof student activities the current student organizations’ budget of about$40,000 would double, and a considerable improvement in campus sociallife could take place. Groups now operating on a shoestring budgetcould undertake more large scale plans; the way would be opened fornew kinds of events and activities; and more students would have anincentive to participate in extra-curricular life.We think that the idea is a good one, but the problem lies in get¬ting a majority of students to agree. The administration will not approvean activities fee unless it thinks there is support for it; and studentswon’t agree to pay $5 for anything until they think there is something init for them. This is why it is essential that students be presented withsome concrete benefits of the fee before they vote on it, in a referendumthat Student Government is planning to hold sometime this quarter.One proposal for change we support is the election of the com¬mittee on recognized student organizations at large, rather than by theStudent Government assembly. A CORSO which is so closely tied to theinterest of SG, which commands little respect or attention among stu¬dents, should not be responsible for making important decisions withlarge sums of money involved. We suggest that a CORSO elected atlarge would be more trusted and that its institution would make studentsmore receptive to the activities fee idea.Issues such as this must be resolved right now if the activities feeis to have any chance for next year. Some ten students attended a hear¬ing on the fee sponsored by SG this week. If the response is no betterthan that, students have no business complaining next year about Uni¬versity social life. -4/The Chicago Maroon/April 9,1971 Action set up by referendumwill be 'that of judgement'By STEPHEN GABELThe notion of stopping an individual fromdoing a particular kind of research causessome people indiscriminately to conjure upimages of vigilantes and thought police.But these fears are grounded solely in thefact that in a hypothetical extreme casenothing short of physical force can preventa hypothetical “determined individual”from selling his ideas to whomever hewants.Consequently, there is nothing that acommittee or anyone could do about thisguy—except talk about his work. Curiously,force is implied even in the act of exposingwhat was hoped to be kept secret, and talk¬ing about it.Argument has force, or it used to, until itwas replaced by advertising, public rela¬tions (at a distance) and the “image.”Perhaps they reveal more than theymean to when, mesmerized by their con¬fused fantasies of jack-booted students withmatches in one hand, the Red Book in theother, the priests and novices of the shrineof “academic freedom” proudly insist thattheir temple is a “marketplace” and a“testing ground.”If the University betrays a tendency to GADFLYbecome like big business, who would besurprised if occasional members of the fac¬ulty begin to look like organization men,value-free professionals.How quaint it is that car producers, na-p a 1 m manufacturers and academics(among others) use the same argument todefend themselves against charges of com¬plicity in odious acts!Former University President Beadlesummed it up a few years ago when hesaid, “I’m no expert on morality ...”Significance: according to narrow profes¬sional criteria, it is not possible to judgethe true worth of anything, but merely toevaluate its success in the market or inhistory.This is the mentality that opposes thewar only because it is a failure, and placeshigh value on making trains run on time.If professionals cannot or do not considerthe ends for which they work or for whichtheir work is used, perhaps someone elsemust make the attempt, people whose pow-Continued on page 6BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, April 9UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Reverend RalphReynolds, pastor, First Baptist Church, Rockefellerchapel, 12 pm.LECTURE (MICROBIOLOGY CLUB): Dr H E Kubit-schek, Argonne National Laboratories, "ChromosomeReplication and the Division Cycle in B/r," Ricketts1, 4 pm.KARATE CLUB: Beginners class, Ida Noyes danceroom, 6:30 pm.FILM: Zabriskie Point, Quantrell, Doc, 7:15 and 9:30.Saturday, April 10CEF FILM: My Night At Maud's, Mandel, 6:30, 8:30,and 10:30 pm.EASTER EVE VIGIL: Ecumenical Easter eve celebra¬tion sponsored by the Christian community in theUniversity, Easter breakfast following in the under¬croft, Rockefeller chapel.Sunday, April 11UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICF- Ppuerervf FSpencer Parsons, "The Believing People,".Rockefeller chapel, ll am.CEF FILM: My Night At Maud's, Quantrell, 7 and 9:15pm.DOC FILM: The Birthday Party, Law school, 7:15and 9:30 pm.CONCERT (MUSICAL SOCIETY): University BrassChoir, music of Babrieli, Bach, Shostakovich, andHelhybel, Bond chapel, 8:30 pm.TRYOUTS: for Origin 0400 by Werner Krleglsfem,Reynolds club, south lounge, 2 pm, for informationcall 624-3679.GAY LIB: Open meeting and pot-luck supper, IdaNoyes 3 pm.REHEARSAL: Shir, Ida Noyes library, 4:15 pm.Monday, April 12GAY WOMEN: Caucus meeting, Gay Community Cen¬ter, 171 W Elm, 8 pm.MEETING: Ivrit, Hillel, 8 pm. .LECTURE: Center for Middle Eastern Studies andCommittee on Slavic Area Studies, Professor Alex¬andre Benningsen, director, Centre de Documentationsur I'URRS et les Pays Slaves Ecole Pratique desHautes Etudes, "Socialism and National Movementshefnre the Orlntwr Pavnliftinn " Social Science 1«,3:30 pm. iLETTERS TO THE EDITORS■♦«3#*ii*♦yI; Retraction?Last Tuesday I received the following let¬ter:In the Maroon of April 2 you wrote thatI “do studies” for SEADAG (SoutheastAsia Development Advisory Group). Ihave never applied for nor received anyresearch funds from SEADAG, nor haveI ever carried out a study of, sponsoredby, suggested by, or controlled by, SEA¬DAG.I do not know where you get your mis¬information, but unless you write a re¬traction to the Maroon, you may shortlyexpect to be sued for libel and slander.Sincerely,Manning NashProfessor of AnthropologyI have in my possession an article pub¬lished in the series “SEADAG Papers onProblems of Development in SoutheastAsia” entitled “Tradition-Oriented PoliticalValues and Behavior” by Manning Nash.This article was sent, along with some oth¬ers, in response to a request to SEADAGfor a selection of their studies.If my conclusion that Professor Nash“(does) studies for SEADAG” is false, Iwould like to stand corrected.However, I would also suggest that ifProfessor Nash considers it such “libel andslander” to be confused with those who dodo studies for SEADAG, he might ask themto stop distributing his stuff between theircovers.Stuart NewmanNew University ConferenceAccording to Nash, the article mentionedwas part of his own personal research andwas not “war-related per se”. It was deliv¬ered at Florida State University and laterreprinted by SEADAG as part of a collec¬ tion of articles. These reprinted collectionsare available to the public. — Ed.People's peace treatyWe, the authors of the People’s PeaceTreaty Referendum, read the Maroon edi¬torial of April 6 with a mixture of surpriseand revulsion.One would expect the Maroon to attemptto clarify the content of a referendum in¬volving issues so vital as war complicity,lay-offs, and academic freedom.Instead the authors of the lead editorialdid not even take the trouble to informthemselves about the actual content of thereferendum, rather they preferred to un¬critically repeat the distortions spread bythe right-wing Campus Coalition.The editorial states, “We are in strongdisagreement with Part B, which indicatesprovisions to prohibit faculty from doingresearch for the departments of state anddefense.”This is a serious distortion of Part Bwhich only serves to alarm the many stu¬dents who receive federal funds and toscare them into voting “NO” or stayingaway from the polls altogether.Let us state clearly once and for all, PartB does not prohibit all research fundingfrom the state department and the depart¬ment of defense, regardless of the purposeof the research.We are fully aware that most federallyfinanced research is as unrelated to Viet¬nam war as any privately financed re¬search, indeed, two of us three who draftedthe referendum proposal, receive our fel¬lowship money from federal sources.What Part B really prohibits is researchfor “any organ or body of the state depart¬ment, the department of defense, or thevarious national security agencies, whoseoperations expedite the prosection of thewar in Southeast Asia.“Any organ or body of ... whose oper¬ ations expedite the prosecution of the warin Southeast Asia” refers to subagencies,projects, staffs or what-have-you whichwere set up by the state department, etc... in order to prosecute the war.Thus research for the USAF is not bannedby Part B, but only research for thestaff of USAF who are responsible for theair war in Indochina.An example of the latter is Morton Kap¬lan’s research project on the political re¬percussion of the employment of nuclearweapons in Indo China. (Kaplan says thischarge is a “complete falsehood.” —Ed.)This research was done for the policyplanners of the USAF on contract to helpfind the best way to murder Vietnamese.Research such as this, whose purpose isclear, which is contracted by the war plan¬ners, is unambigously directly related tothe furtherance of US war in Indochina andwould be prohibited under the provisions ofPart B.Most research contracted by the USAFhowever is not of this nature, even thoughmuch of it ultimately has some militaryvalue, and would not be prohibited underPart B of the referendum.The Science for the People project, whichis working closely with the People’s PeaceTreaty Coalition, is helping to deal with theproblem of federally-funded research, withthe problem of scholarly research being ex¬ploited by the military without the knowl¬edge or permission of the researchers.We believe much education is neededhere, but vaguely worded prohibitionsagainst allowing research to be used by themilitary in no matter how indirect a fash¬ion are not only worthless, but positivelydangerous. We advocate only the restrictedand specific prohibitions of Part B.The authors of the Maroon editorial ofApril 6 also stated, “The men who are re¬sponsible for the war and for the economichardships that result from it are in Wash¬ ington, not at the University of Chicago.”Dear editors, how much research on thesubject has the Maroon ever done? Areyou so sure or have you just closed yourminds?Part B provides a democratic procedureto find out whether your above statement istrue or false; no one who has not con¬sciously sought to aid the war against In¬dochina need fear a thing.We hope that the referendum will be ac¬cepted or rejected on the basis of a clearunderstanding of its content. We requestthat the authors of the Maroon editorialcontribute to this understanding by retrac¬ting their incorrect reading of Part B.Carlos DabeziesMike DunlapDavid MobergThe Maroon had thought that the word“whose” in the sentence quoted from PartB referred to “the state department, thedepartment of defense, or the various na¬tional security agencies,” rather than “anyorgan or body ” We regret the error andare glad that the authors of the referendumhave clarified the meaning of the sentence.-Ed.Inflexible college?I turn to the Maroon after going every¬where and finding nowhere else to go.In the last four weeks I have discoveredsomething about the administrators of theCollege: their reputation for liberalism andflexibility borders on myth.I came to this conclusion after a long andfrustrating attempt to transfer out of apoorly taught and boring physical sciencecourse (Phy Sci 117) and into a mete¬orology course in another sequence inwhich I am extremely interested (Phy Sci110).Both of these courses are core coursesContinued (Hi page 6THE IDA NOYES PROGRAM HOARDPROUDLY PRESENTSFAT CITYJohnny Little John, Otis Plum, Fuschia, The LakeCountry String Band, Roadrunner Cartoons,Underground & Experimental Films, Folksinging,Live Gangsters Comedy, Free Balloons & Helium,Crafts Coop, Homemade Ice Cream, And One ReallyGood Time.TONIGHTIda Noyes, 8:30 P.M., and Only A DollarApril 9, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5Traditions are not adequate for the timesContinued from page 4'er to judge as human beings has not beendisplaced by a set of professional reflexes.Thus the mode of action of the committeeset up by the referendum will be that ofjudgement.And the criteria of judgement will not bethe narrow professional criteria designedby “experts.” Rather, the criteria will besuch that they offer a challenge to the his¬tory of complicity on the part of membersof the intellectual mass and professors in awar of unquestioned horror and destruction.A word about Campus Coalition: The CCseems to me to be asking us to have tohave an infinite and religious faith in“procedures” and “the academic process.”For, as they see it, these entities arepresently free of “distortions” resultingfrom the pressure of “any particular fac¬tions or interest.”CC denies the possibility that membersand sectors of the University may ever forany social, political and economic reasons “serve the goals of any particular factionor interest” merely through the function¬ing, and not through “manipulation,” of“the academic process.”Its implicit view of the way the Univer¬sity operates is simply far-fetched.Unless it’s that CC secretly believes thatthe initiates of the academy are purged oflowly human qualities and exalted to astate of holiness by the ordeal of the PhDand the sacrament of tenure.I find it very revealing that the self-ap¬pointed defenders of the “authority” of theUniversity, an institution supposedly dedi¬cated to the enlightened pursuit of truth,should be purveyors of this sort of mystifi¬cation.Coupled to the monastic view of the uni¬versity is Joel Guttman’s analysis of “waysof thinking” in his piece in the Maroon(April 2)If I read him correctly, he says thatthere are two ways of thinking. One way isthe one peculiar to the university, “a sanc¬tuary.”KIMBARKLIQUORS»WINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTj0^gs%IMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355 CORDLESS MASSAGERDeep pulsating vibrations bringmassaging relief to aching muscles,stimulates circulation. Batteryoperated. Unbreakable - 7" longUses 2 "C” batteries. $6 w/batt.Add 5X sales tax Elva Co. P. O. Box24471, San Francisco, Ca. 94124 Here the third-rate questions posed bythe right and left do not pollute the air. Theother “way” is “irrational” and is sharedby rascist governors, raiders of researchinstitutes, name-callers ... and supportersof the referendum.Here Guttman transcends himself and in¬vents a new genre: the impartial, value-free smear. (Why don’t I admit I’m an ir¬rational idealogue ...)Guttman is not the first to think of a“sanctuary” in which all values are badvalues, except value-free values. By this stratagem having no values can be madeinto a value. Hence it becomes difficult totake seriously Guttman’s claim to be con¬cerned with “constructive” measures.We need to ask to what temple of author¬ity does he go for the word on what’s con¬structive. Answer: “traditions of this Uni¬versity.” But the whole impetus for the ref¬erendum is precisely that these traditionshave not proved adequate to the times.Stephen Gabel is a gaduate student inhumanities.LETTERS TO THE EDITORSContinued from page 5for humanities and social sciences majors.The professor of Phy Sci 110 told me that Ihad the prerequisites for the course, thatthe course was not contingent upon the firsttwo quarters in the sequence, and that asfar as he was concerned I could enter thecourse.But there was a problem. According tothe administrators of the College, a three-course integrated sequence in Phy Sci isrequired of all students. Therefore nochanges are permissible. This was the re¬sponse of the master of the physical scien¬ ces division, the dean of undergraduate stu¬dents, and the dean of the college.In the words of Dean Hildebrand, “I havemyself been forced into courses which 1found disagreeable and for some of thesethe perspective of time has seemed to con¬firm my initial impression. But for others Ihave gained a delayed but profound appre¬ciation.”I hardly find such a paternalistic argu¬ment valid. Even more, I find such an un¬compromising and bullheadish standthreatening to the College’s capacity forself-criticism and constructive innovationGerry McDermott, ‘74C EMPLOYMENTOPPORTUNITIESCALIFORNIA ARIZONA HAWAIIProfessional / Trainee positionscurrently available in all fieldsFor 1 month’s subscription contaming hundreds of currentopenings and complete jobsearch information package ineluding sample resumes, salary& cost of living comparisons, &area executive recruiters directory, (satisfaction guaranteed)send $9 to:JOBS IN THE SUNBox 133, La Jolla, Calif 92037 DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363Contemporary European Films presentsMY NIGHT ATMAUD’SAcademy Award Nominee One of the year’s Ten Best filmsSpecial Prize at Cannes Film Festival“Best film of the year” Siskel, TribuneSaturday, April 10 Sunday, April 11Mandel Hall Cobb Hall6:30-8:30- 10:30 7:00-9:156/The Chicago Maroon/April 9, 1971THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSt,BIG SALE GOES ON!Student Coop Record Sale2.96 3.59 4.04All Stock and Special Orders. Complete SelectionReynolds Club BasementGETTING MARRIED?Perhaps you would be in¬terested in an individuallycraftedWEDDING BANDIn Silver from $20Gold from $40CALL BASHA337-0715,days or eveningsVisit with me at my work¬shop and see other hand¬crafted sculpture to wear.FOR SALESALE: 1970 Harvard'* "Let's Go-Europe & America" $.25. UofCCharter Flights, 1212 E 59, rm. 306,1-5 pm.'67 OPEL St. Wagon. 643-8451HANDMADE PATCHWORKQUILTS from Minnesota $40-60. 753-4 4 5 9 (days) 643-0613 (eves. 8iweekends).Superb Stereo Component System w-custom-made speakers. $600. 477-8846.SG-NSA Elections April 14 & 15Forms and petitions available in SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 pm.Have to sell unusual desk, air-conditioner, bedroom set, drape,sofa in excellent condition. Call aft5 pm DO3-86301968 VW Bus New tires new batteryclean vinyl Interior radio carpeted$1500 422-3048 eves. RECORDSWe undersell Lowes. 2.96, 3.56 CoopRecords Reynolds Club.WANTEDBICYCLES : one woman's, oneman's, used, lightweight, 3-speed, ingd. condition. CHEAP. 753-3263days, Don or Diana.WANTED: 2 Bdrm Apt in Hyde Pkfor June 15. Call 955-6588Portable electric typewriter in goodcondition. Call 684-3904 Bet. 5:30 8< 7pm weekdays.WANTED: Copies of the 4-2 editionOf the MAROON. Urgent! Pleasebring them to the Maroon office,Ida Noyes, rm. 304.PEOPLE WANTEDTEACHERS/COLLEGE GRADSImmed. full 8i pt. time positionsavailable with educational div. FieldEnterprises. Excellent earnings,flex. hrs. Interviews Sat. April 10,9:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. Hyde Park Co¬op Meeting Room 55th & Lake ParkShopping Center.STUDENTS: Earn a free flight toEurope or cash. Part-time workavailable. Reply to AUS, 400 S. Di¬vision, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104.Student to teach family of 3 rudi-m e n t s of Danish. Arrangementsvery flexible. Call 753-8055 or 324-6067.FLYING ILLINISpanking New SkyhawksBase Midway - Dual Instruction$11.00 VFR - $13.00 Fully IFRClub Rates — Wet — 226-7138Rider wanted to Seattle (Portlandor Vancouver). Share driving andcosts. Leaving Apr. 24. Call Phyllis324-2907. Wanted: Subjects Psychological ex¬periment, 10 days, hospitalization.$100. Call 947-5809RECYCLING CENTER needs you.To help call 752-4077 or 288-7485MEN 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.Std or couple wanted to share SouthShore apt on campus bus rt x33581,1-4, eve. 375-6073 DonWOMEN TO CALLHIGH SCHOOLSPublishing Co. needs phone repre¬sentatives to call social studiesteachers re class subscriptions. 4-5hour shifts. $2.50 hr. 8i commissions.Call immediately 493-2020.TRYOUTSMore people are needed for an ex¬perimental play. DEATH IN THECOMMUNE. No previous act. exp.necessary. Tryouts In Reynolds ClubSouth Fri. 4:00-7:00.PEOPLE FOR SALEMassage for Male & Female Scandl-n a v I a n , Oriental 8i Mid-EasternMassages — All three In one mas¬sage. Call Bob: 326-4739 anytimeRUSSIAN INSTRUCTION by nativeteacher. Trial lesson, no charge.236-1423 or 363-2174.Instruction in French 288-6775I Do All Your Fortran Programs.For information call 288-6775Experienced student painters.Cheap. Call 684-0560. Lincoln Pk-New Town area, $100 21rm 1st fl looks onto garden SUBMay 1st to Oct 1st option to renew.525-5854 or 477-6091SUMMER SUBLET. 6-room 3rd-floor apt. 1 blk from campus. Juneto Sept. Fully furnished, TV, books,stereo, porch 8i tree. 684-3839CRASH BY THE MONTH $30 forfood. 6014 Michigan, bsmt.Furnished Studio Apartments AtCampus Bus Stop$110 to $130FA4-0200 Mrs. MartinCHICAGO 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 SmithFurnished room kitchen use $55Available until October 1. Call 753-3392.SG-NSA Elections April 14 8i 15Forms 8< petitions available in SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 pmFurn apt 4 rms 5635 Kenwood 493-0468 $160 summer only.WATERBED SERVICEAt least two things are better on aWaterbed! King size: $40. Anythingfrom a basic water mattress to acustom walnut installation. Thesebeds are guaranteed! Share yournights with living water — 752-2707.WATERBED LESSONSLearn the secrets of The Bed. An¬cient wisdom 8i power. 752-2707LIFE CAN GROW BETTER TAI CHI CHUANNow is the moment now, to takewhat healthfulness the Gods allow:TAI-CHI CHUANTIME: Sun, 8-10 pm; Thurs 7-9 pmPLACE: Ida Noyes Hall Dance RmMY NIGHT AT MAUD'SEric Rohmer's sensational film wasthe hft of last year's NY Film Fes¬tival. One of the most acclaimedEuropean productions of the year: astrangely appealing cerebral andsentimental film. Nominated lastyear as Best Foreign Film. Nomi¬nated for the Oscar again this year.Special Prize Winner at Cannes lastyear. Starring Jean-Louis Trlntig-nant (Z, Man & a Woman) andFrancolse Fablen (Best Actress atCannes). Listed as one of the year'sTen Best by: Hollis Alpert, PaulineKael, Vincent Canby, Arthur KnightAndrew Sarris, Roger Greenspun,Roger Ebert, Gene Slskel, OrsonWelles, and Richard Shickel. Unani¬mously one of the finest cinematicproductions of the year. CEF Isproud to present the only S. Sideshowing of any kind for this filmthis weekend, April 10 and 11 at ourregular $1 admission price. To ac¬commodate a large city and campustrurnout, showings have been sched¬uled at Mandel at 6:30, 8:30, 10:30Saturday and at Cobb at 7 i 9:15Sunday. All ticket buyers guaran¬teed seats.SCENES CLASSIFIEDSClassified ad deadlines are 10:00AM Monday for Tuesday's Paper,and 4:00 PM Wed. for the Fridaypaper.The cost is 50c/line the first run¬ning and 40* for repeated in¬sertions for University people;75*/line and 60*/repeat line fornon University people.Strictly Per¬sonals are run for everyone at25*/line.Ads must be paid in advance sobring them to our office, Rm 304Ida Noyes, or mail them in with acheck.PERSONALSSG-NSA Elections April 14 8. IS.Forms fc petitions available in SGouter office. Due by April 12 5 pm.The British Tourist Authority saysthat the Anglo-Amerlca Associationis a rip-off. Don't get ripped off.LOST: Grey 8> white male kitten55th & Cornell. Answers to Appleby.363-5912 after 3:00. PLEASE ...Make a revolution in your life —Come to Kibbutz this summer IKittens FREE. Boxtrained andbeautiful. Call 363-3237.2 Siamese kittens, male 8, female —4 mos. Must sell. Gwen 643-6612 af¬ter 4 pm.Save $$ 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.Water beds from $70, health food,old furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2926 Broadway. 248-1761.Shipment of brand name shoes justarrived. Sale priced. John's MensWear, 1459 E. 53rdSG-NSA Elections April 14 8. 15Forms & petitions available in SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 pm.PUPPIES PUPPIESAKC Brittany Spaniels AAAF Dualchampion stock; Ch sire Best ofBreed '71 Westminster. OrSiWhiteClever little beasts do every¬thing: Show, hunt, pet, watch, love.And Its spring 288-6943 anytime EX-DROPOUTS: Unhinged by re¬turn to academia? Let's talk. Pref.Coll st out 2 yrs or more but any¬body welcome. 643-4759.SG-NSA Elections April 14 8i 15Forms 8i petitions available In SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 pm.2 Fern Rmmts wntd: 57 & Drxl. $57mo. Lease June 15. 493-6031Fern roomate desperately neededroom-furnished. $75-mo Must Likeanimals. Call Maggie at 32593 daysor 684-3626 nights.STAFF, STUDENTS. Participate Inan experiment on the perception ofspeech. 1.75 for an hour's work. Oncampus. Call x3-4710 for an appoint¬ment.King Size Water Mattress $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.HOMEWORKERS BADLY NEEDEDAddress envelopes in spare timeMINIMUM of $14 per 1000. Sendstamped envelope for immediateFREE details to MAILCO, 340Jones, Suite 27, S.F., Calif., 94102.SUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCouid you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their new disability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you’renot able to.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH I. WOOD. Jr.CLVOne N. LaSalle St,Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470 Graduate Student will Babysit N07-8643 Apt. 411Exper Flute-Recorder teacher. Prlvlessons 667-0988 Fri-Sun.MOVING?Licensed mover 8, hauler. Call ArtMichener. 955-2480SPACE2 Bdrm apt avail June 7 $150 moFurn for sale opt 643-6577 eves.2 rm apt furnished. 5405 S. Wood-lawn MI3-2760 ; 667-5746Lrg 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. G e s t a I t-Encounter Workshops bytrained, experienced leader. MichaelGoodman works with Body Dynam¬ics, Transactional Analysis 8< more.Marathon Sat 8t Sun April 24-25 limited to 10: $25 Seven Thurseves start Apr. 22: $25. "You areHow you ear'—Gestalt 8> Food.Set & Sun May 12: $25. Call 752-2707GAY LIBWomen's Caucus meets every Monat the Gay Community Center 171W. Elm 8 pm. For further info call678-7575 LESBIAN POWER NOWgay lib meeting and pot-luck sup¬per open to women 8i men starting3 pm Sun 4-11 Ida Noyes For fur¬ther info call 493-5658HAROLD PINTER2 room apt. $150-mo. air cond. 1451E. 55th St. 684-2582.Studio, June 1, E. Hyde Park hi-rise, lease ends Aug. '72. $134-mo.Furn for sale optional (rugs, kitchenset, drapery, big bed). Call 643-0500-leave name and number. Harold Pinter adapts his first playfor the screen. William Friedkin(Boys in the Band) directs sexualinitiation paranoia and weird ritesSunday Law School 7:15 8i 9:30 DocFilmsANTONIONI FREAKSFurn. room, kitchen privileges gd.location, 493-7443; HY3-62274) rm, 76 8< Kingston, 1 block tocamp, bus stop. MARRIED gradstudent preferred. RE4-0450.1 bdrm Apt available June 1. Un¬fur n. Partial lake view. Petsallowed. Ample parking. Lots ofparks. U blks from 53rd 1C stop.5300 S. Shore. 752-8892 after 6.$177.50-mo incl utilities.2 bdrm furnished apt, June 15. Pre¬fer married couple or 2 girls. Goodlocation, 56th 8, University. Call 324-5704.P►►►►►►►► "attention"ALL FEMALESTRY IT!Group &Student RatesSLIMART, INCFIGURE CONTROL CENTER1754 East 55th752-0200Appointments. iiiiiiiiiA Red Desert explodes! The only filmever prosecuted under the MannAct. So way out the uptight criticsdidn't dig it. Tonite.KARATEUC Karate Club Beginners ClassFriday Apr. 9, 6:30 pm Ida NoyesDance RoomFOTA ART EXHIBITIONFOTA needs artists for the Univer¬sity Art Exhibition. All nonprofes¬sionals (UofC students 8t staff) areurged to participate. Entries can bealmost anything, but preferably nosmall 3-D objects. 2D entries shouldhave some sort of backing. Theycan be brought to Pierce TowerApril 14-21 and given to Mrs. North-cott or left at the desk if she isn'tin. There will be a preliminaryscreening by neighborhood artistsJohn Richardson, Cosmo Campoli, &possibly John Carafoli. Prizes willbe awarded to the best 4. The exhi¬bition will run April 28 thru May 14in the Pierce Tower 2nd fir lounge.If any questions, call June, 684-5720HEBREW DISCUSSIONCome speak Hebrew with us Monnights at Hillel 8:00. Both beginning8i advanced groups. Nice people 8<good teachers!UNWANTEDPREGNANCYHAVE A LEGAL ABORTIONPERFORMED IN NEW YORK STATECOSTS RANGE FROM $110CALLLEGAL ABORTION PROJECT312-743-3640or312-743-3388Monday through Saturday9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Music Sacred and Profane: fromRenaissance to Bolts. UofC BrassChoir, Sun, 8:30, Bond.COUNTRY PHOTOGRAPHYWORKSHOP For eye & spirit onWisconsin farm In Summer. 248-9294OPENING DAY SPRING CELE¬BRATIONEuphoria Blimp Works Bend, Moun¬tain Bus, Rising up Angry, GuerillaTheater, People's Art, RennieDavis, Jennifer Dohm, & More.Easter Sunday, 4-11, 1 pm, LIN¬COLN PARK. Rain date April 18.SG-NSA Elections April 14 81 15Forms Si petitions available in SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 pm.Tired of pollution 8> smog? Get outof the city this summer & go toKibbutz $650. Call 761-6152 or 274-1011."Shir" — Hillel Choral Group willmeet in the Ida Noyes Library thisweek, Sunday, 4:05 pm All Inter¬ested singers welcomeSee PHOTOGRAPHS IN ISRAEL —Exhibit In color at Hillel throughApril.SG-NSA Elections April 14 8i 15Forms t, petitions available In SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 pm.Folk Dancing Is Alive and Well InIda Noyes HallSundays 8-11:30 SOcentsINDIAN COOKING CLASSES BeginApril. Contact 955-9812 — morningbefore 10am, or evenings.Treat your GARBAGE right! Bringcleaned cans, bottles to RECY¬CLING CENTER at Gargoyle.CRAFT COOP features prints, tiedye, leather, macrame, and otherhandcrafts, all done by local artists.Visit us Mon-Frl 11:30-2:30 ThursNile 7-9 in the Blue Gargoyle 57th &University.Yoga Poses Concentr. Medltatn.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Classes SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155ABORTION*WHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE In Hyde Park?NY abortions from $150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015TOTAL IMMERSION See the UKRAINIAN EXHIBIT ATRegenstein Library.Very cheap flights to Europe andAsia. Contact 922-0723.Uncle Sam taking too large a shareof your income. Life-time financialplanning service. Call Phil Sldler282-1406.Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU¬SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,363-4555.NUDIST CLUB for single women,etc., describe yourself, send 35cents, MYW CLUB, PO Box 1342Aurora, III., 60507The Democratic Way-BlackfriarsComing Soon to your Local MandelHall."To be deprived of art and left al¬one with philosophy Is to be close toHell."—Igor StravinskyTa Amabam, Tlbl Valedico.Pregnant and distressed?Call 233-0305Students — Europe for ChristmasEaster or summer. Employment op¬portunities, charter flights, dis¬counts. Write for information (airmail) Anglo American Ass'n. 60aPyle Street, Newport, I.W., Eng¬land.Sexist of the Month lives!JORGE: You're the'Best!OPENING DAY SPRING CELE¬BRATIONSpring Bobby! Spring Angela)Spring All Political Prisoners! Lin¬coln Park, 4-11, 1 p.m. Rain date,April 18.SG-NSA Elections April 14 Si 15Forms & petitions available in SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 pm.Students for Israel offers an ex¬citing program for those seriouslyconsidering living there Jul-Aug $450(incl transp.) Will be based on Kib¬butz 8. explore various KibbutzimUrban Collectives, developmenttowns as possible homes. Call 761-6152 or 274-1011.SG-NSA Elections April 14 8. 15Forms & petitions available in SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 pm.SUPER PERSONALSMichael Simon Lecture Series Work¬shop in Photography, weekend ofApril 16-17-18. Emphasis on shootingand developing technique. Portfoliodesirable. Call Pat Remy, 643-7273or Al Gorman 493-6700.LAWYERSVISTA (Volunteers in Serviceto America) needs lawyerswho wish to volunteer ayear of service to helpAmerica's poor in suchareas as economic development, housing, welfarerights, consumer protection,and legal education of thepoor. Slots available in theJune/July training cycles.Call John K. Szabo, toll free800-424-8580. or write toVISTA,NW, SeventeenthWashington, St..2000G(Other skills needed tnn 1 Beware the Golden Jockstrap!SG-NSA Elections April 14 8i 15Forms and petitions available in SGouter office. Due by April 12, 5 p.m.HAROLD P: Re the abridged ver¬sion of your notice In the personals— loyalty forbids me to print theversion as you submitted it, andfree of charge at that. Go bite someother hand.ABORTIONpregnancies up to 12weeks terminated from$175.00Medication, Lab TestsDoctors fees includedHospital & Hospitalaffiliated clinics.(212) TR 7-880324 hours-7 daysPHYSICIANS REFERRAL\AJ„ itMAuu w» ran help VOli FVJO ifit's |Uft to talk to tomtoneApril 9, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/7RADIO FREE NIXONDavid FryeEKS-74085* SIRENEKS 74087TREX NQJUDES £.ROE AWHTTESWAN IMPOSSIBLE?NO! ANOTHER40% SJ sale * LIGHTFOOTRS 6293CRAZY HORSETREXused to be Tyrannosaurus Rex, an Eng¬lish duo of immense popularity thereand almost none here—until the recenthit single, “Ride a White Swan,’’ whichis included in this first Warners albumby Marc Bolan and Mickey Finn, whoareT. Rex (RS 6440).ALEX TAYLOR wm$m ■ • i m; ; . $ mCACTUSOH* V*r ..M ANOTM*'DELANEY & BONNIEMOTEL SHOTAtco SO 33 358 CACTUSONE WAY... OR ANOTHERAtco SO 33-356 CRAZY HORSEwon no small amount of recognition asNeil Young’s backup group in concertand on Everybody Knows This Is No¬where. Their debut album (CrazyHorse, RS 6438) is produced by JackNitzsche; by conservative estimates itis one of our finest this year.ALEX TAYLORWITH FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORSCapricorn SD 860 KING CRIMSONLIZARDAtlantic SO 8276 MOTT THE HOOPLEWILDLIFEAtlantic SD 8284 DAVID CROSBYIF I COULD ONLY REMEMBER MY NAMEAtlantic SD 7203 LAYLADEREK & THE DOMINOSAtlantic SD 2-704CHARGEWITH BANxAvrUiCASOHYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 58 The Chicago Maroon/April 9, 1971THE GREY CITYThe Chicago Maroon Magazine of the Arts Friday, April 9,1971The Career of George CukorBringing Films to LifeBy Charles FlynnWhen George Cukor accepted his AcademyAward in 1965 for directing My Fair Lady it was asmuch a long overdue tribute from his Hollywoodcolleagues for an extraordinarily fine 35-year careeras an almost inevitable reward for guiding JackWarner’s $17 million production of the Lerner-Lowemusical to the screen. Similarly, Doc Films’ retro¬spective of Cukor’s films this quarter — whichincludes such works as The Women, A Double Life,The Marrying Kind and Let’s Make Love — placeshim alongside the other great American directorsDoc has offered for rediscovery: Ford, Welles,Renoir, Hawks, Hitchcock, Preminger, Lang.Cukor was originally a stage director, and he isstill generally regarded for his superb direction ofdialogue and of performers — especially of actresses.Katharine Hepburn in A Bill of Divorcement (herfirst film), Little Women, Sylvia Scarlett, Holiday,The Philadelphia Story, and in Keeper of the Flame,Adam’s Rib and Pat and Mike with Spencer Tracy,Greta Garbo in Camille and Two-Faced Woman,Joan Crawford in The Women and Susan and God,Judy Holliday in Born Yesterday, The MarryingKind and It Should Happen to You and such one-shotsas Jean Harlow in Dinner at Eight, Ingrid Bergmanin Gaslight, Judy Garland in A Star is Born, JeanSimmons in The Actress and Audrey Hepburn in MyFair Lady constitute one of the richest and best setsof performances realized by a single director.George Cukor was originally assigned by David0. Selznick to direct Gone With the Wind, and in factCukor shot the film’s opening sequence of theTarleton brothers and Scarlett on the steps of Tara,as well as a couple of other scenes early in the film.But Cukor was removed, at least partially, it seems,because the star (Clark Gable) felt that the directorwas taking too much time with the performances ofthe actresses.The very next year, James Stewart won an Oscarfor his performance in Cukor’s Philadelphia Story,and in the same decade, Ronald Colman won theOscar for Cukor’s A Double Life. Add to this thebrilliant performances Cary Grant (Sylvia Scarlett,Holiday, The Philadelphia Story) James Mason (AStar is Born), John Barrymore (A Bill of Divorce¬ment, Dinner at Eight) and Spencer Tracy havegiven in Cukor films, and one realizes that he is agreat director of actors as well as of actresses.Many of the “new school” of film critics havebeen accused of paying too much attention to directors and not enough to actors. This attention isin part a reaction against the days when one went tosee a “Bogart movie” or a “Bette Davis movie.” Still,being able to work with actors and get goodperformances from them is at least half the battle fora film director. So, one can’t object if many people goto see Little Big Man because it is a “Dustin Hoffmanmovie,” since more than a few people recognize thatit is as much an Arthur Penn movie.If doing good work with actors is half the battle —one that Cukor has obviously won hands down —what’s the other half? I could cite offhand at least ahalf-dozen directors who do fine work with actors,but who are abysmally incapable of integrating thegood performances they get into any sort of mean¬ingful or coherent structure. On the other hand, theopening sequence alone of Gone With the Winddemonstrates quite powerfully that Cukor had abeautiful and compelling overall conception for thefilm — both stylistically and thematically. The twoTarleton brothers step aside, and the cameragracefully glides into Vivian Leigh, all in white,reconstructing a romantic era of a world long past.For Cukor, Scarlett — a visionary and a romantic —was obviously to be the emotional center of the film.Cukor’s visualization of the opening shot and hisdirection of Vivian Leigh combine to create theeffect.Unfortunately, as we all know, Cukor was notable to realize his conception of Gone With the Wind.Victor Fleming (The Wizard of Oz), one of Gable’sfavorite directors, replaced Cukor, and parts of thefilm were shot by at least three other directors. Theresult is entertaining, but it is a stylistic mishmashand not a work of art by any standard. But it couldhave been. Gone With the Wind, (in some ways one ofthe worst examples to choose of Cukor’s work, sincehe actually directed so little of it), provides a vividcontrast between what he would have done with thematerial, and what less talented directors ultimatelydid.George Cukor is one of the best Americandirectors to choose as a subject for analysis,precisely because his work reveals his personalityand concerns so clearly. Actors have styles. Produc¬ers have styles. Cameramen have styles. Writershave styles. Even studios, in the thirties and forties,had styles. And many directors spend much of theircareers working with one actor or studio or produceror group of technicians. So when one attempts toanalyze the director’s style, one runs into “static”from his actors, writers, producer, cameraman, etc.But Cukor has worked with a vast range of studios,Continued on Page FiveITake Me Out to the Ballgame!Selling stadium red-hots and Jack Brickhouse behind the mike at the openinggame. Photos by Jim Haefemeyer.Major League Baseball has alwaysbeen one of the leading sources for thecreation of American popular heroes,inspiring admiration for the strong butsilent player who can co-operate withothers yet excell individually. It hasbeen an honest game, with affairs likethe Black Sox scandal of 1919 being fewand far between. Like Hollywood, how¬ever, where movie idols have beendecaying for quite some time, baseballis currently in a state of turmoil, tornbetween the romantic legends of BabeRuth and Joe DiMaggio and the start¬ling revelations of Jim Bouton and CurtFlood.But if baseball’s image is tarnished,you would never know it by attendinglast Tuesday’s opening day game atWrigley Field, the permanent resi¬dence of the Chicago Cubs. Indeed, theChicago Cubs could be the last of theold time baseball organizations. Wrig¬ley Field, for example, is one of the fewmajor league stadiums of its kind stillin existence. Cincinnati’s Crosley Fieldhas become the lavish Riverfront Sta¬dium and Brooklyn’s Ebbet’s Field wasdemolished long ago and indirectlytransformed into Shea Stadium. TheCubs’ television announcer, JackBrickhouse, far from being the apo¬theosis of urbanity, supplies a rusticcolor to his commentary that has beengenerally disappearing ever since CBSfired Dizzy Dean from the Game of theWeek.Hero worship is still alive and wellwithin the friendly confines at Clarkand Addison. Several years ago, whenthe Civic Center Picasso was unveiled,one disgruntled Chicago fan com¬mented that it should have been astatue of Ernie Banks. Banks is on thedisabled list until April 21, but ritualdemanded a standing ovation when hewalked across the field last Tuesday..Although it is Banks who annuallyoffers a slogan for the Cubs campaign(last year it was “the Cubs will glow inseven o”; this year Banks says “thingswill be thunderous in seventy won¬ drous”), most of the other stars main¬tain a certain identity as well. Forinstance, you may never know whatpitcher Milt Pappas looks like, butwhen you hear the organist play thetheme from Zorba the Greek, you knowMilt is somewhere on the field. “Rebel”Randy Hundley is the darling of Chi¬cago’s southern white population.Opening day this year had the greatmisfortune of coinciding with electionday. What did this mean? Two things:first, that the bars were closed andsecond, that no beer could be served inWrigley Field. This, of course, did notprevent people from smuggling boozeinto the stands; in fact, flasks were inabundance. Over at Ray’s BleacherBums’, the left field bleacher bumsfavorite tavern, the mood was neces¬sarily sober as the proprietors had tosettle for selling stadium red hots.Most of the fans — and there wereabout 40,000 of them — got to the stadium several hours before the gamestarted. If they didn’t, they watchedthe game at home on television becauseit was sold out at 10:45 Tuesdaymorning. Baseball, unlike other majorprofessional sports in Chicago, allowsthe fan a much greater opportunityactually to witness a game than does,say, football or hockey. Notwithstand¬ing Tuesday’s sellout, 22,000 generaladmission tickets go on sale the day ofthe game at Wrigley Field; and thechances of the White Sox selling out areabout the same as Richard Friedman’schances of being elected mayor.What would an opening day game bewithout pre-game festivities? In com¬memoration of the Chicago Fire of1871, the Chicago Fire DepartmentBand provided the music, and the cityfire chief threw out the first ball. Somefans were not overawed with theband’s performance. “Let’s hear it forthe cow,” said one wryly. But all the fans had one thing in common, whetherthey came from a Boy Scout pack inPeoria or were businessmen from theGold Coast: they were shivering in the }20 mph wind blowing in off the lake.Heilman’s Old Style being out of thequestion, there was a run on thestadium’s supply of Pro’s Pizza, some- ,thing which puts even the strongestgastro-intestinal tract to a formidabletest. In a spontaneous outburst ofgenerosity, one fan bought out a peanut ,vendor’s entire cache, and threw bagsof peanuts up into the crowd.The game was a great pitching duelpitting Fergie Jenkins against BobGibson of the Cardinals. In a dramaticsense, the game was perfect, keepingthe fans on the edge of their seats untilthe bottom of the tenth inning whenBilly Williams put a one-one pitch intothe right field seats to give the Cubs atwo-one victory.—Gordon KatzHarold'Pinter'sTHE BIRTHDAY PARTYstarringRobert Shaw Patrick Mageedirected by William Friedkin( "The Boys in the Band”)Doc FilmsLaw School Sunday, April 11 7:15 and 9:30PlAriiCy'S ALL-NIGHTPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREApr. 9BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUEJason Robards 12:30 & 2:30 Apr. 10GIANTJames Dean 12:30 OnlyApr. 16TELL ME THAT YOU LOVE ME,JUNIE MOONLiza Minnelli 12,2:00a.m. Apr. 17THE WILD BUNCHWilliam Holden 12,2:15a.m.Apr. 23PAINT YOUR WAGONLee Marvin 12,2:15a.m. Apr. 24THE ADVENTURERSCandice Bergen 12,3°°a.m.Apr. 30WUSAPaul Newman 12,2:00 a.m.TKim }I M May 1LITTLE FAUSS AND BIG HALSEYRobert BedfordPLAYBOYT B-4 f A T f P 4 ^I v '4 ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELEASTER EVE VIGILApril 10-11:00 P.M.Easter breakfast followingin Chapel UndercroftEASTER SERVICEApril 11 - 11:00 A.M.Preacher: E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the ChapelTHE BELIEVING PEOPLE'\ \ This is where it's at in carpetingTHE RUG BARN LTD.View our selections of:-Antique Type & Oriental Type Rugs-New & Used Orientals - Fur and Area Rugs-Second Hand FurnitureUse your cash & carry power or try oureasy lay-a-way planOpen Daily10:30 AM-7:30 PMSat. A Sun.10:00 AM -5:00 PM 642-0402245 W. North Ava.OLD TOWN AREATAKCAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUN U AY SAND HO LI DAYS12 TO 8:30 P.M.Orders t» take outJ3l^£asU3r^MlKd^ PREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining a legalabortion immediately in New YorkCity at minimal costCHICAGO (312) W2-0777CAU: PHIL A. (215) 878-5800MIAMI (305) 754-5471ATLANTA (404) 524-4711«WYO»lff?1?l 517-4740I A.M.-10 P.M.—7 DAYS A WEEKABORTION REFERRALSERVICE (ARS). INC.V * » »«> * t *4 '-ARTA Moustache for the Mona LisaDon Baum's “Babies of Della Robbia” in the current Rennaissance Gallery exhibit.MTJSICTalented Performers, Mixed BagArtists have always been fascinated by the work ofother artists. Throughout history the styles andthemes of successful craftsmen have been imitatedby others, and students of art commonly copy thework of the masters in an attempt to perfect theirown skills. It is not unusual then, to find suchcontemporary artists as Lichtenstein, Saul Steinbergand Joseph Cornell rehasing themes first presentedcenturies ago. The Renaissance Society Gallery (inGoodspeed Hall) is now presenting an intriguingexhibition entitled “Art After Art,” which illustratesmany ways in which twentieth century artists useearlier art. The artists of this century differ fromthose of earlier periods in the way they treat theworks of the past. As explained by Karin Rosenberg,director of the Renaissance Society, “In today’sreworkings, the artist’s own vision and formalconcerns take precedence over the image he haschosen as subject matter.”Rather than directly copying the work he imitates,the modern artist will play with its various elementsuntil it may become something even diammetricallyopposed in spirit to the original work. As HaroldHaydon so aptly explained, everything is either a“put-on or a take-off.”A good example is the sculpture entitled “Babies ofDella Robbia” by Don Baum. Luca Della Robbia, afifteenth century Florentine artist, whose work wasgenerally marked by a gentle sweetness and gravity,fashioned reliefs in marble and glazed terra cotta.Baum has exaggerated the doll-like quality of DellaRobbia’s work in creating a composition swarmingwith actual dolls. What was almost angelic in DellaRobbia’s work has become macabre in Baum’s, forthe dolls are a ghastly white, their eyes stare wildly,and their hair is matted and dirty. Their bloody redlips and grasping arms are far from angelic.In a Lichtenstein lithograph of 1969 the facade ofRouen Cathedral made famous by Monet is vaguelydiscernible through a pattern of yellow and blackdots. It is actually a blown-up version of a photo¬screen copy of part of the cathedral painted byMonet.Subtle humor creeps into the show in Saul Stein¬berg’s “Baque Drawing Table.” Here a typicalSteinberg man draws on a table that evolves into anassemblage of Braque-like forms. Also interesting isTom Wesselman’s “Great American Nude 16.” Abright pink nude, vaguely reminiscent of a Matissedrawing, sprawls across the foregound as a girl froma girl from a real Matisse drawing in the backgroundlooks on.The most haunting work in the exhibition is “VanEyck,” an oil on paper by Jose Luis Cuevas. Washedout browns form the Arnolfini bridal couple madefamous by Jan Van Eyck in the 15th century. Thispicture reinforces the somber mood of the originaland radiates the mood of inexplicable discomfortfound in a Kafka novel.On a brighter note, the deviations on Manet’s“Dejeuner Sur L’Herbe” by Wynn Chamberlain andAlain Jacquet are good examples of “art after art”employing wit, talent, and style. Visit the show to seemany more paintings on display; it will be on campusthrough April 17th.—Susan Leff A memorable concert requires two ingredients:great music and outstanding interpreters. Eitherfactor is useless if the other is inferior. The bestmusic can be destroyed by mediocre performers,while bad planning of concert programs can wastethe talents of fine musicians. The latter was the casein Sunday’s recital at Mandel Hall. The program wasstarkly imbalanced.The first half of the program consisted of twoexcellent repertory works. Yuriko Kuronuma playedBeethoven’s Violin Sonata in C minor with incredibleenergy and fine tone. If she was somewhat tense inthe first movement, she relaxed in time to give thesecond movement all the tenderness it deserves. TheSonata in A major by Cesar Franck was also well-performed, suffering only occasionally from conflict¬ing interpretation by the violinist and John Cobb, thepianist. At the opening of the first movement, forexample, the piano introduced the motive very softly,establishing the atmosphere of a reverie. In thiscontext, Miss Kuronuma’s entry seemed too aggres¬sive and full-bodied.The second half of the program took the audienceinto the twentieth century. A double-bass and a set ofdrums and cymbals joined the violin and piano for aperformance of an eclectic Sonata by Michio May-ima. The first movement, played only by the violinand piano, was strongly reminiscent of Bartok. Thesecond movement was the shocker. The concert hallsuddenly took on the atmosphere of a bar ornightclub as the instruments began to play whatseemed like straight jazz. The music bore thesemblance of spontaneity, although all the notes wereprobably written out. It was as though Miss Kuro¬numa, walking through the Village, had encounteredsome jazz musicians and started jamming with themon her violin, trying every so often to create some excitement with harmonics or with the strange soundof bowing sul ponticello (on the bridge of the violin).The music was entertaining for a while, but it soonran out of surprises.Due Pezzi by Luciano Berio was next on theprogram. These two short pieces by the Italiancomposer (who is teaching at Northwestern thisyear) are bright and enjoyable. Berio is an honestmusician who knows what his talents are (they areconsiderable), and his music is rarely pretentious.The Due Pezzi are light music, but filled with freshideas, such as the staccato passages in which thepiano plays in unison with the violin pizzicato.The last two pieces on the program unfortunatelydragged the concert down into the world of bad taste.Darius Milhaud’s Saudades do Brazil, a suite of fourpieces, consisted generally of banal Latin tunes,supposedly made intriguing through bitonal settings.Unfortunately, they had neither the wit nor therhythmic excitement to forestall boredom. (A com¬parison with Stravinsky’s witticisms along the samelines, such as his two sets of pieces for piano duet,would show how much more can be done with insipidtunes).The final work on the program was KarolSzymanowsky’s Nocturne and Tarantella, one of themany pieces written by violin virtuosi which are sodear, unfortunately, to hearts of most violin soloists.SiiftfeT the musical value of this work was question¬able, Miss Kuronuma’s performace of it produced inme a strange blend of delight and disappointment.Delight — in that her playing reached a new height inthis piece; her technique was flawless and herinvolvement in the music absolute. Disappointment— in that, considering the vast body of masterpiecesfor violin and piano, it seemed a waste that suchtalent should be focused on such an unworthy piece.—Mark BlechnerWINGSThe ALL silentclassic of 1927.Starring Clara Bow,Richard Aden, Buddy Rogers.NO Soundtrack. This legendaryfilm will be shown with organaccompaniment by Hal Pearl.Show Times: M-F 7 & 9:30Sat-Sun. 2, 4:30, 7, & 9:30THE BIOGRAPH THEATRE2433 N. Lincoln Dl 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all times is only $1.25. Bringyour Friends.StudentDiscountModelCamera1149 r 55th493-6700Mom complete 'photo shopon South side RODMcKUENilCoqcertOPERA HOUSESUNDAY, April 25 at 7:30 pmTickets $6.50, 5.50, 4.50, 3.50 Box Office Now OpenMoil Ordtn to: 20 N. Wockor Drivt. Endow S«lt-Adr«swd. Stamped EnvelopePostmark No Later Than April 17thFCHICAGO:A school system with a goal: Teaching$8,400 starting salary (10 months)iO Udyb pdiu vaocuioii - 10 Jaycs oiok leave,Paid hospitalizationThe Chicago Public Schools will hove a representative on campuson April 14. Please arrange for an interviewwith the Placement Office. ♦♦I♦ LUNG-HINGa new Chinese-American Restaurant inHyde Park 1435 E. 51st St. 667-1316 ♦♦♦♦♦▲Special Chinese Brunch Service every Satureay & Sundaysa from 11 to 2 p.m. 50c per plate. Items such as a♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ per plat*1. Egg Kow 3. B. B. Q. Pork Bun2. Beef Shui Mai 4. Shrimp ChinAs a SPECIAL FOR READERS OF THIS PAPERBRING IN THIS AD AND RECEIVE:Diced Beef with Almond Reg. $3.30/now $2.90Sweet & Sour Shrimp Reg. $3.50/now S2.95Hong Sue Chicken Reg. S3.40/now S2.85Order 1 day ahead the following:Pekin Roast Duck (half) Reg. $4.50/now S4.00(whole) Reg. $8.25/now $7.50SPECIAL EASTER WEEK. Sunday 1/11 toSaturday 4/17 From 5:30 to 11:30.All you can eat plus 2 glasses of Imported Wine — W hite. Rose" or Red.W ith any of the following: ^ 2 75 ♦♦1. Pekin Beef 3. Chicken Chop Suev or Chow Mein2. Extra Fine Cut Chow Mein 4. Beef (.hop Suev ♦♦♦♦a Cocktail Hour 5-7 Reg. drinks 50* ▲T Banquet Room Available for 30-50 People. T▼ Carry out service also available. Offer Good Till 4/19 ▼April 9, 1971/Grey City Joumal/3Culture VultureDRAMAThe Old Town Rennaissance Consort presents This is theDay, a program of Renaissance music and dance, tonight atBond Chapel, at8. Donation: $1.50, students, $1.The Goodman Theater presents Anouilh's Poor Bitos,beginning Monday April 12 and continuing through May 16.A comedy probing the roots of man's power compulsion.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 Arfs 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 continues with Roshoman. For moreinformation about performances, call 463 3099.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, continues at the KingstonMines Theater, 2356 N Lincoln.The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds at the I vanhoe, 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. Elton John will appear in concert nextweek.Second City presents Picasso's Mustache this month. Callfor times.MUSICMisha Dichter, pianist, performs at Orchestra Hall,Sunday at 3. Tickets range from $350 to $7.50.The Chicago Symphony Brass Sextet perform works by Pezel, Ives, Amram, and Mattern on April 16 at 8:30 inOrchestra Hall. Tickets$1.50 to$3.Gustav Leonhardt, harpisichordist, performs music byFrescobaldi, Couperin, Bohm, and Bach, in Mandel Hall onApril 16 at 8:30. Tickets, $4, can be purchased at 5835University Ave.The International Society for Contemporary Musicpresents a symposium dealing with the music of Alan Stout.The program, with the composer participating, will includea performance of some of his works and a discussion ofhis new Symphony which will be performed by the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra April 17 at 2 pm. Reservations mustbe made in advance. The Newberry Library, 60 W Walton.922 8634DA MOVIESCEF this week presents Rohmer's My Night at Maud.s,Saturday at 6:30, 8:30, and 10:30 at Mandel Hall ANDSunday at Cobb at 7 and 9:15.DOC this week: tonight Antonioni's Zabriskie Point inCobb, 7:15 and 9:30, SI; Sunday, Friedkin's Birthday Party(by Pinter) in the Law School at 7:15 and 9:30, $1, Tuesday,Cukor's Dinner at 8 at 7:30 in Cobb, $ '75; Wednesday,MinnelIi's Two Weeks in Another Town at 7:30 at Cobb, $ '75'Bergman Gallery presents three films by KartemquinThursday in Cobb at 8 for $1. One Shulie, is a sketch of ShulieMay Firestone when she was an art student in the earlymoments of Women's Lib. Another, Hum 225 shows NancyStokely (expelled during sit-in) confronting a film class oneyear later. In What The Fuch Are These Red Squares?,striking Art Institute students meet to discuss their roles inCapitalist Society.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.Damty Lyon's Photographs are on exhibit at the BergmanGallery in Cobb Hall.The Renaissance Gallery in Goodspeed presents "Artafter Art."An exhibit of Japanese hanginq scrolls and handscrollsfrom 14th through 19th centuries continues in Gallery 116 atthe Art Institute.Drawings and Lithographs by Jean Dubuffet continues atthe Art Institute in Gallery 107. The Art institute also features an exhibit of Etchinai AnnLithographs by Paul Klee; Gallery 107. s aPaintings by Miuoko Ito are on display at tne Hyde Pan,Art Center, 5236 Blackstone. a KThe 73rd exhibition by artists in the Chicago area will hoat the Art Institute March 13 until April 18.The Art Institute will exhibit photoserigraphs by LarrvStark from March 6 through April 25, in Gallery 106 ’Harriet M Harris Center offers very inexpensive coursesin drawing, painting, leathercraft, macrame, etc beainninnApril 12. Call 955 3100 for info. y 9Ryder Gallery at 500 N Dearborn presents "the latest inelectronic phototypography and related processes" Dailyseminars will also be held on this material. Open Mondaythrough Friday, 11:30 5:30. yDANCEThe Dance Troupe, a company affiliated with ColumbiaCollege, will present "Fossils" and "Double Play" throuohApril 14 at 1725 N Wells.POPElton John, one of the newest and most exciting talents inrock music, will appear in concert at the AuditoriumTheater April 13 and 14. He has released two very successfulalbums during the past six months, Elton John andTumbleweed Connection. His single, "Your Song", was alsoa smash hit He last appeared in the city second on the bill toDerek and the Dominoes, but all who saw that show canattest to Elton John's charisma and great performinatalent.Dee Murray and Nigel Olsson on bass and drums will backup John.Both shows which will be opened by Ballin' Jack, a newjazz rock group, will start at 8pm. Tickets, availablethrough any Ticketron outlet, cost $6.50, $5.50, $4 50 and$3.50.B.B. King, Curtis Mayfield, and The Last Poets, at theAuditorium Theater tomorrow at 8 and 11 pm. Tickets $3 soto $6.50Radio Free Chicago will "Kick Out the Jams" tomorrownight at the Body Politic, 2261 N Lincoln with WildernessRoad, Mountain Bus, Poncho Pilot and the ChicagoExtension theatre group 7 pm $2 donation.The Quiet Knight, 953 Belmont has Mark-Almond thisweekend and Leo Kottke starting April 14 Every Tuesdaythey have The Siegal-Schwall Blues Band 348 9509HYDE PARK THEATRE #153rd & Lake Park NO 7-9071STARTS FRIDAYAPRIL 9TH Kohlberg TheatresHYDE PARK THEATRE #25238 So. Harper 493-3493STARTS FRIDAYAPRIL 9THMy DIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT!Now For The 1st Time At Popular Prices!WINNER OF 8 ACADEMY AWARDSINCLUDING BEST PICTURESTANLEY HOLLOWAY ■WILFWD WDt WHfTt Mean JHtOOOff BIKf. -k'skbwcsw ma-jCfCuetuob rssrs-—sAtAN JAY IERNER —rJACK t WARNER•—tsGEORGE CUKOR ncHwcoLOR* panawskm* ‘‘KnSycS&SSThe original sound track album on Columbia Records ■OrbFrom 20th Century-Fox.The most spectacular film ever made.The first great ROCK OPERA is nowthe First great ROCK DANCE SPECTACULAROTTAWA: ”A TOTAL THEATRE EXPERIENCE . . . people stood,cheered and applauded until their hands were red ... a resound¬ing 10-minute ovation." —Ottawa CitizenMONTREAL: ’Las Grands Ballets Canadiens’ TOMMY played tosold out houses and cheering crowds . . . and when 3,000 peoplestand en masse at the end of a performance, you know you'vegot a hit.1 —Dance MagazineHoward Dando presentsMusic and lyrics by PETER TOWNSHEND,JOHN ENTWHISTLE and KEITH MOONRecording Produced by KIT LAMBERTINTERNATIONALLY CELEBRATED COMPANY OF 50 DANCERSCINEMASCOPE FILM PROJECTIONS BY THE QUEBEC FILM BUREAUScenery: Costumes: Lighting:DAVID JENKINS FRANCOIS BARBEAU NICHOLAS CERNOVICHSTEREO SOUND RE MIXED FROM ORIGINAL TAPES BY THE WHOCHOREOGRAPHY BY FERNAND NAULT6 perfs. only APRIL 28 thru MAY 2Wed. thru Sun. 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South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with I.D. card4/Grey City Journal/April 9. 19711GEORGE CUKOR FILMS: Top: Rex Harrison, Audrey Hepburn and Cukordiscuss “My Fair Lady.’’ Middle: Spencer Tracey in “Edward, My Son.”Bottom: Katharine Hepburn, Billie Burke and John Barrymore in “A Bill ofDivorcement.”FILMIlluminating Life through FilmsI Continued from Page OneI actors, writers and technicians. And he has never| done anything but direct. He has never (if we are tobelieve his interviews) written a line of script. When II interviewed him earlier this year, I asked Cukor if heever told his cameraman how to light the set. He washorrified at the very thought. “I don’t know enoughabout it,” he said. Yet there are themes and imageswhich recur in his films, made under widely differingconditions with often totally dissimilar stories andscripts. So that from the fifty films George Cukor hasdirected, one can extract a “pure” style.Here I can only begin to talk about Cukor’s style. and vision. His characters are often dreamers,j romantics, even madmen (John Barrymore in A Billof Divorcement, Ronald Colmen in A Double Life).I Actors and actresses often have pretty heavy fantasy| lives (so do directors), and many of Cukor’s filmsdeal directly with actors and the theater. Even theCukor films that don’t directly deal with peopleacting out imaginary roles on stage often touch on thesame subject.Katharine Hepburn spends most of her time*inKeeper of the Flame keeping alive an image and a> memory of her late husband as a national hero, whenhe was in fact a fascist. She is ultimately redeemedthrough her contact with Spencer Tracy, but thefilm’s climactic shot, in which Tracy reveals thev truth to Hepburn, finds her occupying the foregroundof the shot, with him in the background. The; emphasis is on the dreamer, the destruction of theillusion. Cukor communicates quite powerfully in thisj shot (and in the rest of the movie) how stronglyillusions and fantasies affect our lives, and howdifficult it is to abandon them. Another director might well have chosen to emphasize the nobility ofSpencer Tracy’s role as bearer of the truth.The process of making a film is largely one ofselection: of deciding what the audience shall see andhow it shall be seen. We never see the main actionsthat initiate the drama in A Bill of Divorcement andThe Philadelphia Story. As Andrew Sarris points out,the husbands never appear in The Women andEdward never appears in Edward, My Son. Cukor’sselection of what he shows us and how it is seen iswhat gives his films their unique qualities.Simply to say that Cukor’s films usually dealwith ideas of illusion, fantasy, game-playing androle-playing is not in itself, of course proof of theirgreatness or profundity. What is admirable aboutCukor is the beauty of his expression. His actors andactresses are often magnificent and always in¬dispensable, but the ultimate achievement is thedirector’s. There is an extraordinary shot in ThePhiladelphia Story which begins on a shimmeringreflecting pool at night. The camera slowly rises toreveal Katharine Hepburn and James Stewartdancing in a garden. They have just begun to fall inlove, and the rightness of the shot and the scene inrevealing this to us is breathtaking.George Cukor’s films have, all told, given me asmuch pleasure as any other director’s. Judy Garlandsinging “The Man That Got Away” in A Star is Born,John Barrymore as a faded stage star carefullyarranging a lamp to illuminate his profile before hecommits suicide in Dinner at Eight, W. C. Fields asMicawber sneaking into his apartment through askylight in David Copperfield, are all unforgettablemoments that illuminate our lives and a director’sar^‘ —Charles Flynn <ConfessionSurpassesCosta-Gavras acquired an instant reputationwith Z. I found Z heavyhanded and simpleminded.Like Tony (Tom Jones) Richardson, Costa-Gavrasstruck me as a director who chooses potentially goodstory material, great actors, brilliant technicians,and then proceeds to make a mess of the resultingmovie with nervously pointless direction. Each shotin Z seemed a slide, with someone punching thebutton every four seconds. Zip, zip, zip. (Z receivedan Academy Award for its editing.) I suppose myultimate feeling about Z is that it is a Love Story formasochists and political paranoids who think thatNixon and J. Edgar Hoover are out to get thempersonally.Anyway, Costa-Gavras’ new film The Con¬fession, is at the Carnegie, and it is a much betterfilm than Z. It is subtler, truer, and more interesting.Yves Montand plays Artur London, a Czech diplomatwho is arrested imprisoned and tried on fake chargesin 1951 and 1952. It’s basically Darkness at Noon, andSimone Signoret has little to do as London’s wife.Costa-Gavras makes some mistakes in his treatmentof the story — the worst of which are two flash-forwards to London on the French Riviera fifteenyears later, telling the story. This substantiallylessens the impact of London’s return to Prague in1968 to publish a book on his travails — only to findthe city filled with Russian tanks. Those Stalinistskeep coming back.But most of the film is well-observed, and for a138-minute film dealing with a man in prison,surprisingly engrossing. It reminded me of Bresson’sA Man Escaped and Lelouch’s Life, Love, Death.Costa-Gavras is closer to Lelouch than Bresson, and Iprefer Lelouch’s outright romanticism to Costa-Gavras’ politicized sentimentality. But The Con¬fession is, in its own way, compelling.Several of the other people involved in the filmsimply run through acts they’ve done before. Cam¬eraman Raoul Coutard’s work is striking, but belowhis fantastic work for Godard and Truffaut. JorgeSemprun’s script is well-crafted, but it lacks thecomplexity of his La Guerre Est Finie. And YvesMontand has been doing his existential hero sinceThe Wages of Fear, and that was a long time ago.Still, he’s fun to watch: he has one of those great,battered faces that you just can’t resist. Anyway,better to see the poor man running through hisexistential bit than to see him rather limply trying toavoid being swallowed up by Barbra Streisand. Afterplaying opposite her in On a Clear Day, the varioustortures in The Confession must have seemed likechild’s play.Yves Montand, right, under questioning in “TheConfession.”April 9, 1971/Grey City Journal/5 fe’-tANTONIONI'S{ST HR EXS^ E23 CXHE7 EX3 HHBHdiiMi»Bf.H9»HK.R rbDOC FILMS FRIDAY APRIL 9 7:15 & 9:30 COBB $1birth controlISWe believe you’re entitled to your privacy when it comes to buyingid vsex IS YOUR BUSINESSOURSs to buyingcontraceptives. We’re a family planning agency and weoffer you contraceptives through the privacy of the mails. Wespecialize in men's products (including two new European im¬ports*—but we have nonprescription foam for women, too. And awide assortment of books and pamphlets to answer your questionson birth control, family planning, the population problem andecology.You can get our illus¬trated brochure and price list absolutely free—and at no obliga¬tion. Better yet, send us $5 and we ll ship you, postpaid, adeluxe sampler package including the brochure, price list, and3 each of six different condom brands. And we’ll cheerfullyrefund your money if you're not absolutely satisfied. Why wait?POPULATION PLANNING, ASSOC.Box 2SS6-H, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27M4 U. of C. CHARTER FLIGHTSJune 25 Chicago/LondonSept. 9 London/Chicago*255Aug. 9 Chicago/LondonSept. 11 London/Chicago*2361212 East 59th St., Room 306, 1-5 p.m.753-3598, 327271A AIR CANADA71CTWAGentlemen: Please send me:list at no obligaUon,tance enclosed). Your free brochure and priceDeluxe sampler packaged) (remlt-Cttp- Ztp/Grey City Journal/ April 9, 1971 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptomstml(53 Kimbork Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDHONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERVICES ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2A HRS. 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AbortionInformation(212) 271-4401We believe that if you think you arepregnant, you should be able to findout what to do.We believe that if you have confirmed your pregnancy, you shouldbe able to call someone to help youdecide what to doWe believe that if you want an abortion, only the most qualified boardapproved gynecologists should perform it.We believe that you should have theright to decide whether your abortion will be performed In a hospitalor outpatient facilityWe believe that in all cases, thefacility used should be perfectlyequipped and staffed.We believe that you should understand exactly what an abortion pro¬cedure is.We believe that transportation arrangements to New York should bemade for you, as well as accommodations if they are neededWe believe that all of these thingsshould be done at the lowest possible cost to you.We believe you feel the same wayWe know we can Help you, even ifit’s just to talk to someone.IV^ Medref Inc58-03 Calloway StreetRego Park, New York 11368(212) 271-4401• ••••• CLIP AND SAVE ••••••IS MW ERY!Call the people who've taken the chanceout of abortion.(212)490-3600OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEKPROFESSIONAL SCHIOUUNG SERVICE, INC.S4S fifth A*«., New York City 10017• • There is a fee for our service • • All STATEINCOME TAX 5> h mm/I*f tk> timrth tnimiAU STAttTtt Mm mt km tnrm dmkhtf >» fcrf rf )T•MUTT NIARRY OFFICI —LECO SERVICES. UNLIMITEDTtPIRS 6 East Garfield Blvd.(55th & State Street)Chicago, Illinois 60615285-1725FOR OTHER OFFICES(312) 775-0733CANOE IMPSPlan an •Nciting tonoe ♦,:p ,ntnthe Quetico-Superior Wildernessfor the highpoint of your summervacation! Rates you can affordFor information write BILL ROM SOUTFITTERS, Ely, Minn.Jean Cocteau s Stravinsky Composing the ‘Sacre du Printemps’ ” (1913)RECORDSNew Matthew Passion MTJSXCMcKinley Jazz EnsembleVibrancy and BalanceBach: St. Mathew Passion (BWV244)Nonesuch HD73021Here is an excellent recording of theSt. Matthew Passion by the ViennaState Symphony Orchestra which,while possibly not equal to the best ofthe previously issued recordings, iscertainly unmatched at Nonesuch’smoderate price. The spontaneity andsincerity of conductor Swarowsky andthe fine performances by HeatherHarper and Evangelist Kurt Equiluzmore than compensate for the rathersuperficial reading of Jesus’ lines byMarius Rintzler. The choral ensembleslack precision, and tends towardhomogeneity; however, this minor flawitself contributes a great deal to theatmosphere of the recording. The aria“So ist mein Jesus nun gefangen” isparticularly well done, a fine exampleof the spirit which Swarowsky brings tothis release. Recording and pressingquality are excellent — the Nonesuchengineers have achieved a very credit¬able approximation to a live perform¬ance.BACH: Masses (BWV 233-236) None¬such HC 73020.This release of four little-known Bachmasses by the Bach-Collegium is awelcome addition to the catalog, sinceonly two of the works are currentlyavailable in another recorded version.This very good recording stands indanger of being overshadowed by theSt. Matthew Passion reviewed above; Helmuth Rilling conducts perform¬ances which are somew.iat aloof ratherthan personal, and which I can onlybegin to appreciate with successivelistenings.Although the choral passages of thisrecording are somewhat muddied, thesolo performances are of very highquality and are matched by thoroughlycompetent instrumental work; Rillingsucceeds in tying the various elementsof each of these works into a coherentwhole. The recording quality is some¬what harsh but quite tolerable, and thepressing maintains Nonesuch’s highstandards.Beethoven: Egmont, Complete In¬cidental Music. LONDON CS 6675.This recording, by the Vienna Phil¬harmonic Orchestra arouses moremixed emotions in me than any other Ihave encountered recently. While quitemoving, conductor Szell’s performanceseems constrained. Although narrationmay be necessary to maintain thecontinuity of what might otherwiseappear disconnected compositions, Ifind its presence more distracting thanenlightening. Pilar Lorengar barks outEgmont’s closing speech in fuehrer¬like fashion, exhorting the masses tofollow his example in their fight forfreedom.However, with all its flaws, theperformance is quite effective. Lon¬don’s recording and pressing is, ofcourse, excellent.— Myshkin The fact that Thomas McKinley’sContemporary Jazz and ImprovisationEnsemble drew a near-capacity crowdto its Quantrell auditorium concertTuesday evening suggests thatfrequent exposure to jazz is openingmany peoples’ minds to this richest butmost misunderstood of American artforms. McKinley’s third concert herein a year and a half communicated animportant truth about jazz: that thesuccess of improvised music lies in itssearch for a delicate balance betweenthe musicians in an ensemble andwithin each musician individually. Al¬though on Tuesday that balance wasattained only intermittently, thegroup’s unflagging pursuit of its goalmade the evening rewarding never¬theless.McKinley himself exemplifies boththe challenges and the potential of hisensemble’s free improvisatory struc¬tures. He is undeniably a vibrant andexciting musician, whose familiaritywith a wide spectrum of musicalidioms, from rhythm-and-bluesthrough a tonality, continues to impressme.But when his musical energy seemsto get away from him, his versatilityitself becomes a pitfall. Especiallynear the beginning of the concert,McKinley had trouble sustaining any ofhis myriad ideas. As soon as one attackbegan to reveal its possibilities, hewould abruptly switch to another; abluesy line would be suddenly sup¬planted by a cluster of notes reminis¬cent of Stockhausen. The result was agood deal of waste motion and dis¬sipated energy.However, McKinley eventually didget himself together, and the resultwas a realization of the great value ofhis eclecticism. His progression fromstyle to style seemed to flow organ¬ically, and to be integrated with whatthe other musicians were playing.McKinley made more and better usethan I recall in his previous concerts oftechniques such as atonality, which areperipheral to the jazz mainstream. Hisbest atonal passages reminded me ofJohn Coltrane’s sensitive use of thehighest register of his tenor sax in theearly and mid-sixties, when such a technique was similarly rare. Never¬theless, I liked best McKinley’s use ofthe conventional “one-handed” mod¬ern jazz style, somewhat reminiscentof McCoy Tyner, Coltrane’s pianist.A more consistent voice in the en¬semble was that of Rufus Reid, whoshowed why he is the most respectedbassist in the Chicago jazz world.Reid’s ensemble work was impeccable,and often seemed to determine thegroup’s musical direction. But his solosstood out as gems of dramatic formand grace, those essential qualitiesthat only the most gifted improviserscan attain. Drummer Richard Old-erman, on the other hand, seemed less-sure of himself; consequently, his briefsolos seemed dull. His support of theensemble, though, was good; I particu¬larly liked his force-punctuation of oneof McKinley’s brilliant atonal spaceoddyseys in the second set, for whichReid’s bass riff (taken from HerbieHancock’s Ostinato) provided the take¬off point.The form of the performance alsohelped to provide the balance the groupwas seeking. In the first set, freedomreigned, with generally less satisfac¬tory results than McKinley attainedwith a quintet in his February concert.For the second set, some precomposedguideposts were used (three waltztunes, including one written by Reid,and the Hancock riff). These addedpoints of reference helped the musi¬cians to realize their possibilities, bothas individuals and as members of alistening, interacting ensemble.It is to the credit of McKinley as ateacher as well as a performer thatmost of his large audience remained tofollow the ensemble’s two-hour-longsearch for that elusive balance. Thetapestry of sound which they createdwas threadbare in spots, marred byconflict and lack of direction in others.But then simple consistency is not thesign of good jazz. Near the end of theconcert, Reid and McKinley smiledwarmly at each other, dispelling thecloud of grim nervousness that some¬times troubled them earlier. 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Eve's 7:30-9 PMApr. 14 thru Jun. 16Fees: Course $15;Single Admission $2BUDDISTEDUCATIONAL CENTERl-or Information &RegistrationCall 334-4661 The Harper Concert SeriespresentsA Concert of Music forString QuartetMendelssohn’s Quartet #12performed byDan Farkas, first violinPeter Kohn, second violinTeresa Powell, violaRichard Hansen, celloSponsored by the College and theOffice of Student ActivitiesFriday, April 9th, 4 pmHarper Reading RoomSponsored by the College and theOffice of Student ActivitiesTHE BOOK YOU ARE LOOKING FOR!Rudolf Steiner’sKNOWLEDGE OF THE HIGHER WORLDSAND ITS ATTAINMENTPresents in detail the means whereby everyonecan develop a new consciousness.Only $2.25 from your bookstore or write:THE ANTHROPOSOPHIC PRFS^211 Madison Avenue • New York. N Y. 10016 JAPANESE CINEMATHE STORY OF BUDDHAplusChildren by the RiverFrancis Parker2247 !N. 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