The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 55 The University of Chicago Friday, May 7, 1971Steve aokiiik m is 1 ViB i - **• y;. , jKM Lk WTf 'f JmJb| I ^ V >--? FI'■1 w — f ■- *jA DC arrest: a personal accountThe following is a first-hand account ofarrests in Washington this past week byone of those arrested.By FRANK PROSCHANYou meet the nicest people in a paddywagon. Especially when the DC Police arearresting 9000 people in one day. It took ourbus about fifteen minutes to drive fromGeorge Washington University, where wewere picked up, to a football field behindDC Stadium.During the ride, we compared notes andfound that half of us had been picked upeither going to or coming from class, manywith books in their hands. The police hadcircled the university and arrested every¬one inside.When we got to the camp, we weregreeted by at least 1500 people alreadythere. The football goalpost near the gatehad been decorated with a black flag, anNLF flag, and a banner reading “Insur¬rection City.” The goalpost later served asan altar for a wedding for a couple who hadbeen driving to their wedding when thfeywere arrested.Near the back of the field, a giant tarpau¬lin had been raised into a tent. The campwas surrounded by a fence and a ring ofGuardsmen. There were no toilets and nowater and food until about 3 pm or 4 pm.Teargas was in the air; before I arrived,police had gassed inside the fence.Among the 4000 people who spent theirday in the concentration camp were DrSpock and two leaders there in body but notin name. One escaped by walking throughthe gate with two newsmen.Another, badly beaten, was not seen aftera certain hour. Food was thrown over thefences by DC General Hospital workers,until they too were picked up by police anddumped inside. Medical attention was pro¬vided by medics who had been picked upby police.About 10:30 pm, we were bused to the DCColiseum. By midnight police decided tostart. “Processing” (booking) people. At2:30 am they gave us a few blankets, sincethe floor temperature was about 50 de¬grees.People outside sent in oranges, applesand granola, to supplement the bolognasandwiches from the police. Water wasunavailable and there were hour-long linesfor toilets.We soon heard that DC Supeihn CourtJudge Greene (himself a veteran of Nazi concentration camps) had ordered every¬one not booked by 8 pm Tuesday released,so everyone decided to wait till eight.When we awoke Tuesday morning, thingsinside had mellowed somewhat. NationalGuardsmen were sharing food, cigarettes,radios, and their seats with prisoners, andsome contributed to the bail fund.At noon, police announced that if peopledidn’t start volunteering for booking, theywould be forced to process, and theybrought in Federal Marshalls.By then, I was feeling pretty sick, so at 4pm, 30 hours after my arrest, I was offi¬cially charged, mugged, printed, postedbond, and left. At 8 pm, Judge Greene or¬dered everyone left released (to makeroom for 3000 more arrested Tuesday.) Over 600 were released without bond, al¬though they had to submit to mugging andfingerprinting. Then, the court of appealsstayed Greene’s order until Wednesdaymorning when they upheld it. Another 200processed and left.At least 300 who refused to be finger¬printed were still in the Coliseum Thursdaymorning. By that time, 1100 more peoplehad been arrested, bringing the week’s to¬tal to 13000.We must not forget the Washington Thir¬teen Thousand. Bail money and lawyers’fees are urgently needed. In the words of *the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW),“They are in there for us. We are out herefor them.”Frank Proschan is a college freshman.CAPITOL BUILDING: Mayday tribe gathers for civil disobediance. SG suedin a newSFA caseBy STEVE STRAHLERThe student faculty administration (SFA)court will meet Monday to decide on a com¬plaint that at least 68 Student Governmentdelegates violated SG election rules.SFA justice Martie Carpenter, has with¬drawn her name from an injunction, soughtby Paul Collier ’73, who was defeated in therecent elections, which enjoins SG fromconducting further business pending a deci¬sion on the complaint. SG will continue tofunction normally pending the decision.Collier has charged that seven newly-elected members of SG had failed to filevalid candidacy forms or petitions. He hasalso charged that 12 other members failedto file an acceptance of election before thefirst meeting.In addition he said that 68 representa¬tives had failed to file a copy of their finan¬cial records of campaign expenses.He asked that the court declare theirseats vacant in the assembly and invalidatethe 1970-71 election and rules (E&R) com¬mittee’s improper certification and seatingof these members.To fill the possible vacancies, Collierwants the court to ensure that these va¬cancies be filled by the next runner-up inthe April 14-15 elections. He said that thecourt should also set a date and choose amoderator for a new assembly meeting toelect officers from the proper assembly.He further maintains that the present ex¬ecutive committee is improperly con¬stituted and that a new one should be re¬elected.In an answer to Collier’s complaint filedby E&R chairman Cynthia Ward, it wasexplained that the plaintiff is appealing anaction of the election and rules committeeon the grounds of evidence which was nev¬er presented before the committee.“Since the election and rules committeehas taken no action on the basis of the evi¬dence presented in this dispute, either dur-i n g certification proceedings or sub¬sequently, the plaintiff has no grounds uponwlrch to present his case,” she said.She said that the cases are the most ob¬vious example of the application of a tech¬nicality. “The relief applied for is ex¬cessive in light of the nature of the mis¬demeanor,” she went on.Furthermore, Miss Ward charges thatthe plaintiff violates the Student Bill ofRights, Article 9, which states, “The rightto maintain democratic student govern¬ment.” “The relief called for by the plain¬tiff would create disruptions in SG whichwould be quite out of proportion to the of¬fense committed,” she said.In conclusion she stated, “The electionand rules committee reiterates its willing¬ness to clear up irregularities and makesure that all representatives are properlyseated.”Chief Justice John David Stone of theSFA court said that the case was partiallya reaction to the last case brought beforethe court, which involved invalid candidacyforms of seven members of SG.Although some justices of the court ques¬tioned the validity of this case, Stone saidthat he would “hesitate for a long time be¬fore refusing to consider any case.”The informal meeting Monday is a re¬sponse to the wishes of the defendant for anearly meeting to clear up the matter.OmissionThe article on resident masters which ap¬peared in Tuesday’s Maroon should havecarried the byline of executive editor Au¬drey Shalinsky. We regret the omission.CollegecurriculumBy GORDON KATZIn the year since College dean Roger Hildebrand urgedthe faculty to “rethink the entire College curriculum,” anumber of significant changes have emerged from deliber¬ations, changes that may dramatically change the natureof undergraduate education here. Foremost among themare proposals which would allow students to receive a jointdegree (BA-MA, for example) in a shorter period of timethan it now takes.Particular changes in the curriculum have been “modestthis year,” said Hildebrand, but “what will be accom¬plished by fall 1972 will be more significant.In the following section, the Maroon will examine thecurriculum changes to be enacted next year in each of thecollegiate divisions in the hope that it can explain thesechanges to college students who will begin pre-registrationMonday.The curriculum changes involve introduction or dis¬cussion of several new majors, among them public citizenin NCD and letters in humanities.Of more importance are the joint degree proposals. Atpresent there are only two professional options: businessand library science.A BA-MA degree in economics has already been ap¬proved, and discussion for joint degrees in mathematics,law, and medicine are going on, with committees exam-NCDSteve AokiCharles WegenerIn the new collegiate division, plans are underway tocreate a new BA department, tentatively called “publiccitizen,” which, according to NCD master Charles Wege¬ner, would combine areas of study in the social sciencesand the law school.“It’s now a question of what else you put into it besidesa quickie course in the legal process,” Wegener explained.“We would want to exploit the kind of intellectual skills insocial sciences, not from the point of view of research, butfrom the focus of practical possibilities.“What is likely to emerge are presently existing courses,and probably also courses specially invented — not nor¬mally part of the law school curriculum — or, perhaps,courses law students could take,” Wegener said.Since the law school faculty is currently heavily en¬gaged, Wegener does not foresee the program’s creationbefore autumn 1972.In addition to the proposed “public citizen,” however,there is a good chance that the professional option betweenthe college and the law school will be revived in the nearfuture.Common in the past, the professional option amountsto early admission in the law school and entails enteringthe law school after three years of college and receiving aBA degree after one year of legal study.“There’s a general feeling that people are in school toolong and if we could relieve the expense we’d be doingstudents a service by saving them around $5100,” saidNicholas Bosen, dean of students in the law school.“The program could take effect as early as next fall,”Bosen added. The College plans to act on the professionaloption proposal later this quarter, according to Collegedean Roger Hildebrand.2/The Chicago Maroon/May 7, 1971 ining all of them. At the moment joint degrees in historyand English are being discussed, Hildebrand said, althoughhe has received no recommendations on these.There is also discussion of the possibility of shorteningthe time it will take to get a BA degree, said Hildebrand.Among the proposals under consideration are awarding adegree on the basis of exams, reviving the associate of arts(AA) degree, which would be granted after years in theCollege, and a degree in general education, which would beawarded after two years, which idea was proposed by Uni¬versity President Edward Levi in a speech last January.The faculty committee, chaired by new collegiate divi¬sion master Charles Wegener, is now attempting to developa consistent policy regarding the “second quartet” — thosecourses such as Western Civ and “non-verbal” arts whichare taken after the common core.“We’re asking ourselves whether we can set any generalrules to make it resemble its original educational pur¬pose,” Wegener said. “Maybe the idea (of a second quar¬tet) will be abandoned. That’s what we want to find out.”In addition to examination of the second quartet, thefaculty and student committees on curriculum will consid¬er the common core offerings as well as individual majorsand course offerings, with an eye towards further improve¬ments and reform in 1972.HumanitiesJon YuenWarner WickThe most important change in the humanities colle¬giate next year will be the establishment of a major en¬titled “disciplines of the humanities” or “letters” whiichwill concentrate around the methods of several academicareas.Explaining the program, master Warner Wick said it“is designed to do two things that students and faculty areconcerned about.”“There are a lot of students who would like to special¬ize in the humanities, but not a particular department,”Wick said. “Moreover, many faculty members have en¬couraged a department that would emphasize the arts andskills of the discipline rather than just the materials.”Unlike the general studies major, the new departmentwill “provide a system of organization” instead of revolv¬ing around a specific student’s particular interest. “Theidea is not supplant the old, but to illuminate the old andgive it meaning,” Wick remarked.“For the most part, the new department would useexisting courses. It does not involve the creation of newones,” he said.Presently the proposal authorizing the initiation of thediscipline is before the committee of the College council.“If it is approved this year, we’ll probably be able to gointo it next year,” Wick predicted.Elsewhere in the division, no significant changes areplanned.The 107-8-9 sequence is-going to be “by far the big¬gest” of the common core variants, but there will still bevariants that deal exclusively with Greek and Americanmaterials, Wick commented. BiologicalsciencesArnold RavinThe most active of the collegiate divisions in the areaof curricular reform, the biological sciences collegiate divi¬sion will now grant a BA degree in “biology” alone, studythe possibility of a BA-MD joint degree, and re-examinethe common core and second quartet courses.Biology majors are now required to major in one ofseven fields. The new system will allow a student to forma program tailored more to his individual intellectual in¬terests, according to master Arnold Ravin.A student will have three options open to him: he couldtake a general program of studies that may range overseveral fields of study, he could take a concentration pro¬gram which focuses upon a particular biological disciplineor problem, or he could take a research program underthe supervision of a faculty sponsor.Next year there will be 13 three-quarter sequences thatstudents may take to fullfill the common core requirement,many of them new and dealing with such subjects as “ex¬periments on the development of the nervous system” and“human origins.”A decision should be made later this month on whetherscience students will be required to take a particular se¬quence. “It’s something that has concerned us since westarted the new program two years ago,” Ravin said. “Atthat time we decided not to discriminate among scienceand non-science students,” he continued.While adding a substantial number of new advancedelective courses to next year’s biology curriculum, somefaculty members have proposed a pure lab option which,according to Ravin, “would offer the didactic part of thecourse either a quarter before or in advance of the labora¬tory work.”Another proposal still “at the talking stage” is the planto offer a joint AB-MD degree in conjunction with thePritzker school of medicine. Such a program might cut thetime needed to receive an MD degree by one year, saidRavin.“It would not be a standard pre-med program — youwould not have to be a bio major to take part in it,” Ravinremarked. He described the program as being “an in¬tegrated way of combining an AB degree that meets thestandards of the College and the practical training of thePritzker school of medicine.”“What we are trying to do is to find a flexible programfor people interested in human biology, particularly forthose students in biology, chemistry, and social scien¬ces,” said William Baker, chairman of the department ofbiology and of the committee formulating the joint degreeproposal.“There presently is flexibility in the medical schoolcurriculum, but no one is taking advantage of it,” Bakercommented. “This is because so many of the med schoolcourses are electives as are the advanced courses in biolo¬gy”Under the proposed program, according to Ravin, astudent might receive his AB after five or five and one-halfyears while beginning to take med school courses as earlyas his third year.The deliberations on the proposal are expected to becompleted by early this summer, after which it will besubmitted to deans Jacobson and Hildebrand for their ap¬proval.Reviewing the second-quartet requirements in socialsciences and humanities as possible models, the curriculumsub-committee of the governing committee of the divisionhas made several recommendations that will take effectnext year.The requirement in social sciences beyond the commoncore urges the student to take three courses which consid¬er the development, causation and change of major socialinstitutions over a period of time.In humanities, students are now required to take twoof thp thrpp cpmnd-quartet courses in “non verbal” fieldssuch as music and art.Physical sciencesIn the physical sciences collegiate division, discussionsare proceeding about establishing a joint BA-MAT degreein mathematics, some common core sequences may bedropped, and several new 200 level courses may be added.Explaining the joint degree proposal, mathematics pro¬fessor Alfred Putnam said, “There are some very promis¬ing developments in this direction which we hope will bearfruit.” If adopted, the program could shorten the time ittakes to get the degrees by one year.In the common core, no charges have been instituted,although master Robert Clayton feels “It is conceivablethat there may be another variant” and several sequencesmay be dropped.In a survey taken of phy sci students by the physicalscience collegiate division student council last quarter,“vast dissatisfaction” was found with the present commoncore phy sci courses. “Most people, it turns out, go toclass, but they’re essentially bored with it,” said KevinMarkey, 71, a member of the student council.“Given the current mediocrity of the course, the onlything that makes them decent, particularly in the case of‘rocks and stars,’ (Phy Sci 108-9-10) is the attitude of thefaculty,” Markey observed. He described the problem asone of “getting courses interesting to the student and thefaculty.“We want to open up the very restricted outlook ofwhat a phy sci course should be,” Markey said. Althoughthe student committee’s report has not been completed, itwill be recommended that the Phy Sci 101 and 105 se¬quences be dropped.The committee will suggest that additions and im¬provements be made to already existing courses, and thatthere should be no labs except where absolutely necessaryfor the course.“Most labs now have to be done by the student, he getsnothing from them, and they could be done in a lecturedemonstration,” Markey pointed out.Also to be recommended is the establishment of agreater variety of types of common core phy sci courses.There are plans to create variants, some of them one quar¬ter courses, dealing with physical ecology, electricity andmagnetism, and methods of scientific inquiry.“What we want to do is essentially what the biologicalsciences did; that is, to use a number of different vehicleswhich are appropriate to a number of students and facul-Social sciencesvSteve AokiArcadius KahanIn the social science collegiate division next year,changes will be made in the common core, a number of 200level electives will be added, a new joint degree programin economics will go into effect, and there might also be anew collegiate department of human development.The social science common core will consist ex¬clusively of the 111-2-3 and 121-2-3 sequences with a num¬ber of variants in each. The Soc 141 “modernization” se¬quence as well as the Soc 151 “law and social order” se¬quence are to be incorporated into Soc 121 as separatevariants.In Soc 111, law professors Harry Kalven, Allison Dun¬ham, and Norval Morris are developing a variant which,according to Arcadius Kahan, master of the division,“might build a bridge between law and social sciences.”Next year will also see the addition of several newABORTIONcan be less costly than you maythink, and pregnancies of up to12 weeks can be terminated for$175.00including doctors fees, labora¬tory tests, all medication &referral fee. Hospital and Hos¬pital affiliated clinics only. 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Will shareprofits.CALL KE-8-6739 Bruce RabeRobert Claytonty,” Markey said.The committee, in addition, will suggest that an ele¬mentary elective course in physical mechanics be offeredas a preparatory course for the Physics 151 sequence. “Outof the 50 people who entered physics 151 winter quarter lastyear, there are now eight in 155,” Markey noted.“Essentially the 151 sequence is strictly for physics ma¬jors; it’s too long and there is too much extraneous mate¬rial for anyone else,” he added.Among the additions to the planned physical sciencecurriculum for next year, according to Clayton, will be new200 level courses in physics, as well as a new informationscience course, and “a substantial revision of the subjectmatter of the Geophysics 131 sequence.”social science electives. Among them will be a course incriminology taught by Hans Mattick, a director of the lawschool’s Center for Studies in Criminal Justice, and severalnew courses exploring the relation of the scoial sciences toenvironmental problems.Also under contemplation is the creation of a seniorseminar which is intended to “build what we call a roofover the common core by integrating material after spe¬cialization,” Kahan said. It would be taught by JosephSchwab, Harper professor of natural sciences, and RogerWeiss, associate professor of economics.The public affairs program will institute a seminar forthird year students next year with its emphasis on re¬search techniques. Kahan urges students in general to takeresearch courses whenever possible.“The idea that research is something done only in thelaboratory is outdated,” Kahan said. “Research providesthe opportunity for undergraduates to work with specificfaculty members and achieve more interaction than ineven the classroom,” he continued.In economics, a proposal for a joint BA-MA degreeprogram has been approved for next year. According tothe program’s director, Joseph Zecher, assistant professorof economics, “participants in the program would registerboth as graduate and undergraduate students, and presum¬ably they would pay graduate fees for 300 level courses,and undergraduate fees for 200 level courses.”Zecher expects only a few students to participate inthe program.Although plans were well underway for the estab¬lishment of a collegiate department of human develop¬ment, the College curriculum committee unexpectedlyturned down its proposed creation April 29.The program in human development would have fo¬cused upon the study of develpoment and change throughthe life cycle, and it would emphasize the importance ofunderstanding human behavior from an interdisciplinaryviewpoint.The future of the proposal is unclear at the presenttime. “We can’t really know if it ends here,” said Mrs.Bernice Neugarten, chairman of the committee on humandevelopment. “I hope it doesn’t.”CUSTOM CRAFTEDJEWELRYWedding BandsIndividually DesignedSilver from $20Gold from $40You are welcome to visit me at myworkshop for a unique gift for anyspecial occasion, at a price thatsuits your needs.CALL BASH A 337-B715Days or Evenings FUTURE CPA SLEARN NOW ABOUT THENEXT CPA EXAMNOVEMBER 3-5, 1971TRE BECKERCPA REVIEW COURSEChicago(312) 236-5300Our Successful Students Represent1/5 OF USA[Next Course Begins June 5,1971| G6fDby CAR REPAIRS /SurjfcA tfe...BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO ££fWiC£4401 8. 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SAT 10 to 6THURSDAY 10 to 9SUNDAY 12 to 5 PINE TOY BOX15X15X30”Reg. $16.95 Now $13.95TODAY'S YOUR LAST CHANCE TO BUYBEFORE THE PRICE GOES DOWNTomorrow Cooley's will celebrate Mother's Day with Special Priceson select items including:Passion PadsWall HangingsStrobe CandlesSteel Trout PansGolden Rattan Storage Chest Czechoslovakian Enamel wareItalian La CottaRegal ReproductionsSpiro Agnew ClocksWrought Iron Planters• Water Beds (Reg. 70.00)$ 10.00 off with this AdYou must bring copy of this ad in order to participate fn this special4/The Chicago Maroon/May 7, 1971 HOURS:Tuesday & Wed. 9:00-5:30Thurs. & Fri. 9:00-9:00Saturday 9:00-6:00Sunday Noon-5:30Closed MondaysLaw students petition over grading systemBy FRED WINSTONOver 75 percent of the 160 first year lawstudents have signed petitions requestingthat their grades be withheld from theirofficial transcripts to protest the gradingsystem.According to one first-year law studenthelping to organize the petitions and wish¬ing to remain unidentified, the currentgrading system is “unrepresentative” be¬cause it reflects training for private law.All of a student’s course grades are com¬piled into one percentage figure calcu¬lated to two decimal places, according tothe law student.What the first-year students signing thepetitions want, according to the student, is“some sort of pass-fail system that will notput so much emphasis on one grade for allcourses and which will also include workdone outside of regular courses, such aslegal aid.”The grading system, the student said,“doesn’t grade everything the students feelshould be graded and should include morevariables.”The law student complained that studentshad to work too hard to achieve a highgrade in their regular courses, most ofwhich were conservative and aimedtowards entering practice.SG donates office space to Gay LibGay Liberation will open an office in IdaNoyes tonight, although their request thatthe University provide them a room hasbeen denied.“We just made an agreement with GayLib to share our office,” explained StudentGovernment President Dave Affelder.“They’ll be using one corner of the office... including a desk, part of the book¬shelves, and one of the phone extensions.” Edelman ’71, Gay Lib member. “It will bea place to rap for anyone who wants it.”The phone number of the office is 753-3247.Gay Lib had submitted a request to deanof students Charles O’Connell and directorof student activities Skip Landt that GayLib be permitted to use room 306 in IdaNoyes, currently assigned to CharterFlights.“I’d be perfectly willing to share the of¬fice” said Leslie Linton, Charter Flights’secretary. “I can only use one desk at atime. There’s no reason why they couldn’t put a phone on the other side of the office.”“Sharing offices often runs into prob¬lems,” said Landt. “But that’s a separateissue. There are a good number of organi¬zations that have requested office spacethat have not yet received it. I don’t seehow Gay Lib has distinguished itself fromother organizations who want a place forpeople to come around.”“Landt does not seem to understand howGay Lib is unique in a very human way,”said Edelman. “Gay people have absolute¬ly nothing on this campus. We need a meet¬ing place and particularly a telephone.“After last week’s article about Gay Libin the Maroon, for example, we received alarge number of calls from students andfaculty who were having trouble dealingwith gay feelings, and wanted someone totalk to about it. But it’s very difficult toserve the people from private homes.”“If we could create space we could haverooms for organizations that now needthem,” said Landt. “I’ve talked with theUniversity architect, exploring the possi¬bility of providing additional office space inIda Noyes by walling off some of the openarea on the third floor.”“Landt and O’Connell can’t relate to ourneeds as human beings,” said Edelman.“They don’t understand that gay people arefaced with discrimination all their lives,which has led to gay people hiding theirtrue feelings and identities.” The student added that “many coursesare not taught well,” and that there is onlyone course offered in poverty law, and onlyone quarter course in trial practice.He said that the withholding of grades is“tremendously symbolic” and that the stu¬dents are “willing to risk a lot.”According to the student, a meeting offirst year students today at 11 am in room 2of the law school will elect a committee offour to six people to propose a rough draftof a new grading system.The first year class will vote on the pro¬posal and if it is approved it will bepresented to law school dean Phil Nealalong with a request for a meeting withfaculty to discuss a new grading system.Dean of students of the law school Nich¬olas Bosen said he would “make no com¬ment about anything” since he has re¬ceived no notification of the number of stu¬dents signing the petitions.The law student said the grading systemis the “only issue that could be dealt withright now.”He said he hopes, however, “there beginsa real interest in things like curriculumchange, and that the faculty will negotiateand try to understand.“In the past everything was done infor¬mally,” the student said. The students“want to get some of their own ideasacross. We are testing ourselves. It’s thestudent body who’s saying this,” he added.According to the student, the second yearstudents have their own petitions circulat¬ing but “they already fought last year andlost.”“The office will be open and staffed 7 pmto 12 pm every evening,” said MurrayTHE PRODUCTION OFSACCO & VANZETTIBYTHE COLLECTIVEWill take place at the 1st UnitarianChurch at 57th & Woodlawn, not atthe Blackstone Church, as reported bythe Student Activities Calendar. LOOKING FORSOMETHING REAL?Than taka another look at Jew*Sunday, 10:00 a.m.CORNELL AVENUEBAPTIST CHURCH8200 South Comoll Avo.Call 667-7632 for a ride.HAPPYBIRTHDAYBAZOOMSSOCK HOP - PHIL & THE FASTBACKS8:30 Sat. May 8 Ida Noyes 25cMALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILY DESKS -BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDEQUIPMENTf BRAND 1 11D *SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Qiicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00RE 4-2111Immediate DeliverySpecial Discount for Studentsand faculty with I.D. card A bicycle puts youclose to nature - Thusspake ZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh, Robin Hood,Falcon, Peugeot, Gitane,Mercier, Radius and Daws.Factory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spasmod¬ically. Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12: OO-ft 30; SAS 10-8The cjrpetba^prn from Old Town EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372PREGNANT?Need Help?For assistance in obtaining a legalabortion immediately in New YorkCity at minimal costWORK DURING SEMESTER BREAKSORCAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. CANOE TRIPSPlan an exciting canoe trip intothe Quetico-Superior Wildernessfor the highpoint of your summervacation! Rates you can afford.For information write BILL ROM'SOUTFITTERS, F'y. Mi"" ELIZABFTH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288 2900 . Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856 CHICAGO (312) *22-0777CALL: PNILA. (215) S7S-S800MIAMI (365) 754-5471ATLANTA (404) 524-4711NEW YORK (212)5124740I A.M.-10 PJL—7 DAYS A WIIKABORTION REFERRALSERVICE(ARS), INCMay 7, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/5The Chicago MaroonPAUL BERNSTEIN, MITCH BOBKIN, CON HITCHCOCKCo-editors•DON RATNER SUSAN LOTHBusiness Manager Senior Editor•JUDY ALSOFROM, Managing Editor AUDREY SHALINSKY, Executive EditorFRED WINSTON, News Editor GORDON KATZ, Contributing EditorNANCY CHISMAN, Executive Editor STEVE AOKI, Photography Editor•USA CAPELL, JOE FREEDMAN,, KEITH PYLEAssociate Editors•RICK BALSAMO, FRANK GRUBER, LESLIE LINTON, BRUCE RABE, STEVE STRAHLERStaff•STEVE COOK DIANA LEIFEREditor Emeritus Assistant Business ManagerFounded in 1692. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Wednesdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303, 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 40637. Telephone (312) 753-3263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per yearin the United States. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, Illinois.Curriculum reformFor years students have been complaining about the quality and therelevance of the college curriculum. Finally a committee has proposedsome worthwhile changes in it that will be implemented next year, andwe welcome their conclusions.As College dean Roger Hildebrand admitted this week, the Wege¬ner committee’s present recommendations are “modest.” But we hopehe is also right in saying that “what will be accomplished by fall 1972will be more significant.”The specific reforms — the introduction of new programs andmajors, an increase in 200 level electives, and a long-needed revision ofthe common core — are welcome. We are glad that a high level of atten¬tion is being given to the so-called second quartet — that series ofcourses such as western civ, non-western civ, music and art, and so forth— which comprise most of one’s second year. The value of this quartet isquestionable, and we look forward to the committee’s explanation of itspurpose and whether it should be retained .Even though these reforms are important, there is a much moreserious body of proposals that has emerged from the deliberations oncurriculum: joint degrees, which would allow a student the option oftaking a BA and an MA or another advanced degree in at least one yearless than it now takes.University President Edward Levi has been a long and ardent ad¬vocate of the theory that it takes too long to get an education, and thisview is shared by many students. It is very heartening to see that sev¬eral of these joint degree proposals have already been accepted by de¬partments and that others are drawing up their own programs for futureimplementation. We hope that many other departments will enable stu¬dents to get an advanced degree in a shorter period of time — without,of course, diminishing the quality of the education received.But efforts to shorten the time of education should not end here.Undergraduate education itself should be shortened, and fortunatelyways of offering degrees in general education (another of Levi’s propos¬als) are under consideration. This topic is worthy of more study andpublic debate than it has received to date.We shall watch with interest any plans and ideas on curriculumput forward in the next year, and we hope that there will emerge somesolid proposals to improve the quality and the length of University ed¬ucation.SG againLast week we wished the new Student Government and its presidentwell. Since that time another student faculty administration (SFA) courtsuit has been filed, this time against the new SG, and a temporary injunc¬tion has been signed by three of the justices halting its proceedings.Until student politicians give up childish theatrics, we can see noway in which SG will ever be a respected organization on this campus.There were hopeful signs with the election of David Affelder as presi¬dent that SG might have been approaching maturity, but steps in thatdirection have been stunted by this new suit. ‘Petty individual gripesshould not be brought before the SFA court in quasi-legal terms todisrupt the functioning of student organizations. It only makes the organ¬ization and the individual filing the suit look underhanded and small.A campus like this one should be able to avoid allowing small peopleto monopolize its activities. We hope that SFA throws this newest suitout on the grounds that it is basically composed of trivial points thathave little to do with the functioning and effectiveness of the new SG.Unless these suits are stopped and student politicians around this placegrow up, SG will continue to be politicians’ kindergarten.6/Tue Chicago Maroon/May 7, 1971 "Now with these claws I'm a tiger."ABOUT THE MIDWAYLibrary unionSome 40 University library employeespicketed the annual law school alumnidinner last night, in the aftermath of adismissal of their petition to the NationalLabor Relations Board (NLRB) for libraryunionization.University President Edward Levi at¬tended the dinner. The speaker was GeorgeShultz, director of the federal office of bud¬get and management and former dean ofthe University’s business school. His re¬marks were made off-the-record.The employees plan to picket Regensteinlibrary today from 11:45-12:45 pm. PatCoatsworth, chairman of the library organ¬izing committee, said the picketing was anattempt “to draw attention to the fact thatUniversity library employees want to bedealt with as a union.”The petition was dismissed by the NLRBbecause of the involvement of supervisorypersonnel in union organization. Super¬visors are considered by the NLRB to bemanagement, and thus on the University’sside in union disputes.According to Mrs Coatsworth, the libraryworkers have decided “to press for repre¬sentation anyway,” and termed the picketlines “a show of strength.”An important issue in the question ofunionization is that of student representa¬tion. Mrs Coatsworth called the possiblebarring by the University of students fromthe union “a denial of student rights guar¬anteed in the Bill of Rights, which it (theUniversity) is so proud of.”Oaks namedLaw professor Dallin Oaks has beennamed president of Brigham Young Uni¬versity, Provo, Utah.This appointment brings to 141 the num¬ber of University of Chicago alumni andfaculty who are now serving as Universitypresidents. Oaks chaired the disciplinary committeeafter the 1969 Dixon sit-in, which expelled42 students and suspended another 81. Hehas many ties to BYU, being a native ofProvo, having married a Provo girl, andhaving received a BA from BYU.BYU is the largest private university inthe country by full-time student enrollment,with 25,000 currently enrolled.Oaks will replace Dr Ernest Wilkinson,72, who resigned as BYU president March9, who served in the post for 20 years.The announcement was made in Provothis week at a BYU devotional assemblyattended by Joseph Fielding Smith, presi¬dent of the Church of Jesus Christ of theLatter-day Saints, which commonly knownowns and operates the University.Oaks, 38, graduated cum laude from Chi¬cago law school in 1957, and served for oneyear as law clerk for former US SupremeCourt Chief Justice Earl Warren.He was appointed associate professor oflaw in 1961 and named professor in 1965.The figure of 141 presidents is close tobeing exact, but a correct figure is hard toget, said Anne Grant of the public informa¬tion office as “it’s a transitory occupationalcategory.”New med chiefDr Irwin Rosenburg, associate professorin the department of medicine, has beennamed chief of the gastroenterology sectionof the department of medicine in the biolo¬gy division and the school of medicine.He succeeds Dr Joseph Kirsner, Blockprofessor of medicine, as chief of the sec¬tion. Dr Kirsner will remain active in thegastroenterology section and will continueto see patients in its clinic, according to DrAlvin Tarlov, department chairman.Dr Kirsner was recently named chief ofstaff of the University hospitals and clinicsand deputy dean for medical affairs in thebiology division and the school of medicine.Speakers demand ending the war at serviceBy KEITH PYLEAbout 200 people attended a “memorialrally for the Kent State, Jackson State, andAugusta martyrs” Wednesday afternoon atRockefeller chapel.The memorial service, held to com¬memorate the killings a year ago of stu¬dents on three American campuses, includ¬ed speeches by several local anti-warspeakers, including Dean of Rockefellerchapel E Spencer Parsons, and a few folksongs by someone introduced only asSteve.“You who are here have not forgotten,but today is almost a loney remembrance,”Rev Parsons said. “A year ago the chapelwas filled.”“What does it take for us to be moved?”he asked. “The pressure must continue tomount before we destroy Vietnam and our¬selves.” Speaking on “our commitment toa world without war,” Rev Parsons saidthat “the peace movement has been be¬witched and confused by the rhetoric fromWashington” involving two major issues.“I believe we’ve got to call the govern¬ment to account on these two issues: Viet-namization ... and moral duplicity.”“Vietnamization is just an excuse forWestern racism,” he said. As moral dupli¬city he cited the administration’s “talkabout winding down a war while raising thelevel of total destruction.”The next speaker was a member of theUnited Women’s Contingency, who spokeon the struggle for women’s rights in rela¬tion to the anti-war effort. She also calledattention to some of the victories of thepeace movement, saying, however, that“we must still redouble our efforts to de¬mand an end to the war.” A representative of the People’s PeaceTreaty Collective followed, speaking onthe problem of racism in the anti-warmovement.“We must spread militancy,” he said,and no longer “wallow in moralism andself-pity.”Len Radinsky, a University professor ofbiology who had been demonstrating inWashington Monday, spoke next, asking forcontributions to help pay for bail for thosearrested.The next speaker was the one-time headof Veterans for Peace and former Chicagoalderman A A “Sammy” Rayner.“I cant get too excited about the murdersat Kent State because no one got excitedabout the murders at Orangeburge,” Ray¬ner said, referring to killings last year ofseveral students at South Carolina StateCollege. “The masses have not been touched bythe peace movement,” Rayner said.“Peace in Vietnam is too remote for us tobe concerned.”A1 Booth of Business Executive’s Move¬ment for Peace urged his listeners, espe¬cially those in the 18 to 21 age group, toregister and vote.“The only thing congressmen understandis votes,” he said, and that 18-21 year-oldscould have a significant impact in futureelections.The final speaker was Lynn Henderson ofthe Chicago Peace Action Coalition, whoobjected to the pessimism of the otherspeakers, citing some of the advances andaccomplishments of the peace movement.After the memorial service about 60people left from Rockefeller chapel to par¬ticipate in demonstrations at the civic cen¬ter and Federal building downtown. E SPENCER PARSONS: Spoke at memo¬rial service.Married students protest rent hikesThe married student housing tenantsunion (MSHTO) has chaiged the Universitywith failing to follow agreed upon proce¬dures prior to the University’s announce¬ment of a 10 percent rent increase twoweeks ago.A statement issued by Stephen Stroh,president of MSHTU, said “The Universityagreed, in the Elson report last spring, todisclose full information on the income andexpenses of the married housing system tosupport any future rent increase.“After many requests for that data bythe union, management now has evaded itsresponsibility to the tenants by flatly andunilaterally declaring a sizeable rent in¬ crease.“This move comes without prior con¬sultation with the tenants and without sup¬porting data aside from vague claims of in¬creased costs.”According to attorney Alex Elson, Uni¬versity representative in discussions withthe MSHTU, he met with MSHTU repre¬sentatives on April 14 and at that time in¬formed them of the rent increase and ex¬plained that economic pressures necessi¬tated it.Elson said he also told MSHTU represen¬tatives that they would be sent data on in¬come and expenditures as soon as it wasgathered and that the rent increases could again be discussed at a later date.The date the union wanted, Elson said,was sent out Monday, but the mailing was“not in response to the release.” As ofThursday afternoon, Stroh had not receivedthe data.Gilbert Lee, vice-president for businessand finance, said that University represen¬tatives “had been meeting with thesepeople (MSHTU representatives)” and thatthe University had never agreed to meetwith the MSHTU to clear a rent increase.Stroh said that the union “has been ask¬ing for information for a year. Now they’rejust giving it after a rent increase, whenit’s entirely after the fact.”Contemporary European FilmsAnnounces Schedule Changes:1. MEDIUM COOL added on Sunday May 16 at 7 & 9:15 Law School2. Doc Films presents the ONLY Campus Showing of Z this Saturday3. A major motion picture for CEF on June 5 to replace Z.Note: CEF season ticket holders may see either Medium Cool or our June 5 selection for free, but notboth. CEF cards are not good for Doc's showing of Z. If you have not gotten your money's worthof the Card by June 5, you will get $1 back.Emily Bronte’sdefiant young loverslive again in anew and differentlook at animmortal classic.JAMES H NICHOLSON and SAMUEL l ARKOFF presentANNA CALDER-MARSHALL TIMOTHY DALTONas Cathy as Heathcliffm EMILY BRONTE’SUkriq HeightsAiso starring C1970 American International Picture*. IncHARRY ANDREWS • HUGH GRIFFITH • IAN OGILVY • JUDY CORNWEFLScreenplay by PATRICK TILLEY •From the novel by EMILY BRONTE- Produced by SAMUEL Z ARKOFFITT) and JAMES H NICHOLSON • Executive Producer LOUIS M HEYWARD• Music by MICHEL LEGRANDDirected by ROBERT FUEST • COLOR by' MOVIELAB • An American International PictureNOW i AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL RECOBOSl.at THEATERS & DRIVE-INSALL OVER CMICAGOLAND- PlAYUCrS ALL- NIGHT ihOHPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREMay 7THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR12:15,2:00 A.M. May 8THUNDERIALL YOU ONLYLIVE TWICE12:15. 2:30 A.M.May 14IF12:15,2:00 A.M. May 15LET IT BEHARD DAY’S NIGHT12:15, 2:00 A.M.May 21PUTNEY SWOPE12:15,2:00 A.M. May 22KING OF HEARTSTOM JONES12:15 A.M.. 2:00 A.M.May 28MAGIC CHRISTIAN12:15.2:00 A.M. May 2^MONTEREY POPDON’T LOOK BACK12:15, 2:00 A.M.June 4 'KAMA SUTRA12:15. 2:00 A.M. June 5THREE IN THE ATTICTHREE IN THE CELLAR12:15, 2:00 A.M.■ ncim JIM MWhere are the 3 largestwedding ring selectionsin Chicagoland?FINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARS119 N.' Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA >°Yrc.cA° • ce^- a nNMay 7, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/7PREGNANCYPROBLEM?THERE IS NO.CHARGEFOR OURABORTIONREFERRAL. WHY SPENDMONEY NEEDLESSLY?OUR PROFESSIONALSERVICES ARE FREE.CALL (215) 722-53607 DAYS 2k HRS.Get the bookEugene McCarthycalls: “a discerning anduseful guide... It ismy hope it will bewidely read.Winby MichaelWalzereditor of Dissent magazinePaperbound $1.95also available in cloth. $5.95!El QUADRANGLE BOOKSCHICAGO. 60611r "Cut out and save this ad: “'Don’tCallYourTravelAgent!When you want the mostcharters available forSummer 1971, Call212-697-3054As a student at thiscollege, YOU may beeligible for our low, lowcost fares. Flights fromNew York to all majorEuropean Cities.Weekly departures.Flights under the auspicesof World StudentGovernment Organization.Send coupon ... call, writeor visit. >W.S.G.O. please send□ Travel bulletins□ Application tor InternationalStudent I DName C/aAddressCityState Zi p_SchoolCharter & GroupTravel Specialists60 East 42nd StreetNew York 10017Call (212) 697-3054 SSSSSS"'The Cor*W^jkcnmg 11oven ' ,, | scd* P0"1^Ihf Deg',in,n^°ril, joted St^es. ;trie ^ tfv ardi destroy •——','*1Holt PaperbacksTRIALby Tom Hayden. “One of the few radical writers tooffer vivid and thoughtful alternatives to our oldinstitutions."—library journal.HR W 1 $1.95WAR CRIMES AND THEAMERICAN CONSCIENCEedited by Erwin Knoll and Judith Nies McFadden.“The most important volume on Vietnam in printtoday."—james reston, jr., Saturday review.HRW 4 $2.95FACE OF NORTH VIETNAMby Marc Riboud. Text by Philippe Devillers. "MarcRiboud has beautifully photographed the essen¬tial Vietnam. . . . 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S3*dSDS and SMC scuffle in downtown rallies' By USA CAPELLVerbal clashes between Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) and the StudentMobilization Committee (SMC) marreddemonstrations at the civic center andfederal building Wednesday afternoon.Between 300 and 400 people attended therallies despite intermittent heavy rainfall.SDS did not have a speaker scheduled forthe federal building rally, yet according toSDS members they had asked SMC at thecivic center rally if they could have a girl' speak, SMC denied their request.A scuffle ensued at the speakers platformat the federal building when SDS tried tohoist Marty Feef onto the speaker’s plat¬form. After some struggle she was per¬mitted to get on the platform and SylviaKushner of the People’s Coalition for Peaceand Justice yielded to her.> Comments from demonstrators rangedfrom “it’s ridiculous. We have to get to¬gether,” to “it’s like Vanity Fair; everyoneauctioning off his ideology.”> “There has never been an anti-war rallywhere SDS or any anti-imperialist groupcouldn’t speak. I assure you there will beevery organization represented,” said JackSpiegal, co-chairman of the Chicago PeaceCouncil. Speigal, thrown off the platform inthe fight to put on the SDS speaker, plead¬ed for order.The march from the civic center was’ peaceful as was the whole demonstration.The only threat of disruption came fromorganizations within the rally.The first few speakers reflected this by1 asking for unity. One speaker said “As rev¬olutionaries we can’t fight over pettyideology. Let’s wait until the revolution isover to fight. Not now!” Among the speakers was Bobby Rush,Black Panther Party official and BillyHampton, brother of Fred Hampton, slainPanther leader, and a member of the May-wood Community Organization. “We theBlack Panther Party would like to givemore support to the anti-war movement,but we have our own war at home,” saidRush.James Clafferty, National Co-ordinator ofthe National Peace Action Coalition, ex¬pressed optimism for the continuation ofthe anti-war movement. “We’re the stu¬dents, women, gays, straights, workers,we’re the people and the majority and weFriday, May 7FOTA: Chalk-in, Hutchinson court, noon.FOTA: "Sacco and Vanzetti" a play by the collec¬tive, First Unitarian Church, 5650 Woodlawn, 8:30pm. Admission $.50.LECTURE: Marilyn Hammersley, University of Lon¬don, "Hot Gods: The Ritual of the Yoruba," Cobb425, 3:30 pm. ,FLICK: Strike, first of Eisenstein's revolutionary films,Quantrell, 7:30 and 9:15 pm, SDS.GAY LIB: Office "move in," Ida Noyes 28, 7-12 pmCOFFEEHOUSE: Jazz and folk music, Ida Noyeslibrary, 8-12 pm.LECTURE: Rabbi Moshe Bernstein, "Judaism-A'Classic' Religion," Hillel, 9 pm.TRAVELOGUE: Greece, Yugoslavia, home room. In¬ternational Huse, 8 pm. Studeonts 50 cents thers $1.LECTURE: Professor Fre Mackenzie, NorthwesternUniversity, "The History of Sea Water," at Hindslaboratory. 5734 EHis, 4 pm. Tea at 3:30 pm, room176.SLIDES: Zinia da Costa, "Views from India," Cross¬roads student center, 5621 Btackstone, 8 pm.CONTEST: Florence Adams poetry reading contest, COP: Chicago’s finest at rally downtown.preliminary competition, Bond, 3 pm.LECTURE: Dr Robert Klebe, The Salk Institute,"Mapping of a Human Regulator Gene," Ricketts 1,4 pm.LECTURE: Daniel Gorenstein, Professor of Mathema¬tics, Rutgers, "Finite Simple Groups of Low 2-Rank." Ecktvart 133, 4 pm.FLICK: City Lights, DOC, Cobb, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.BLACKFRIARS: The Democratic Way, Mandel, 8:30pm.UNIVERSITY THEATER: Little Murders, directed byRobert Hopkins, Mandel, 8:30 pm.Saturday, May 8BRIDGE: Duplicate, East lounge, International House,2 pm.BLACKFRIARS: Two Democratic Way, 8:30 pm.FOTA: "Sacco and Vanzetti" a play by the collective.First Unitarian Church, 8:30 pm. Admission 50c.FOTA: Sock hop with Phil and the Fastbacks, IdaNoyes, 8 pm. Admission 75c free with greased hairor bobby sox and pony tail.FOTA: William McKinley Jazz Group. Quantrell, 8:30pm. said April 24 that we are not going to besilent,” he said.Marty Reef of SDS attacked SMC and theCommunist Party saying “We should rejectthe sellout SMC and CP leadership.” Shesaid the only communist party in the coun¬try now is the Progressive Labor Party.“It’s really terrific that you all are here,”she said.“One month, one week, one day more inVietnam is too damn long. This war hasgone on for too long,” said a member ofSMC. His remarks were greeted with ap¬plause as he echoed the theme of the dem¬onstration.GAY LIB: "Thing" at the Sock Hop. Ida Noyes, 8:30pm.Sunday, May 9SERVICE: Howart Thurman, Dean Emeritus, MarshChapel Boston University, "Dilemmas in the Wilder¬ness," Rockefeller, 11 am.FLICK: The Passion of Anna, CEF, Cobb, 7:00 and9:15 pm.UNIVERSITY THEATER: Little Murders, directed byRobert Hopkins, Mandel, 8:30 pm.FILM: Impossible on Saturday, Hillel 8:30 pm.RIDING: University Riding ciub meets in front ofGordon's at 1 pm. Call Pat 667-3321 for information.Monday, May 10FOTA: Cello recital by Kai Moser, University ofTexas, Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.CONCERT: Hans Treichler, Swiss folksinger, Germanand Swiss folksongs. f^as\er‘s lodge, Pierce Hall,8 pm.DISCUSSION: University Baha'i Fellowship, Ida Noyes,7:30 pm.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFOTA presentsThe Collective in SACCO AND VANZETTI May 7-8-9, 14-15-16First Unitarian Church$.50 at the doorDELIGHT MOM ON HER DAY WITH A SURPRISEFROM HYDE PARK’S LARGEST SELECTIONOF SCANDINAVIAN GIFTS COLLECTORS’ ITEMS!MOTHER'S DAY PLATESDESIGNED FOR 1971BY BING & GR0NDALJENSENcontemporary shops5300 S. Lake Park, Chicago, Illinois 60615 20*70 DISCOUNT-except for fair-trade itemsPHONF- 667-7000May 7, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/91THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE68 VW Bug Must Sell 324-2457. CONSOLE PIANO: Chickering 1947in superb condition both outside andIn. Will haggle fr $900 (moving in¬cluded). 955-6330. Belly Dance Lessons & Dance atBanquets. Kahraman 493-8626.40 Assort. Briar Pipes. Finest Quali¬ty. Smoked Gently. 30% of orig.price. 477-8846. Portable electronic organ $150 643-0741. "If it had not been for these thing,we might have live out our life talk¬ing on street corners to scorningmen" -Sacco and Vanzetti THE playby The Collective May 7-8-9-14-15-16.Tape Deck Sony 350 3 heads. Nearlynew. Best Offer. Also recordingtape: Sony 150, Scotch Dynarudge203, Low noise, 1800 feet. Factorysealed. Call Carl, 668-5012. Used Dunhill, Sabinelli, Viggo Niel¬son, etc. pipes from $5 at RADICALRAGS.55031 Hyde Park. MANAGER WANTEDCoffee and snack shop and campusinstitution needs manager for 1971-72school year; flexible hours, but shopIs open primarily in the evening,Salary $50-$80 depending upon ar-view.rangements. Call 753-3593 for inter- WANTED WOOF plays it again-OPEN partvFrl-May 7-5639 University-UCIDGrad cpI needs rm Jun 1-14 ex¬change food or services (Babysit,cook, clean, etc.) 752-7152. Informal Bible Study, Sunday FVPnings at 8pm, Call 667-7632.Teacher wants a summer job. Childcare or tutoring 667-7085.Camera Accessory Case: Large, tanleather; Mint. $25 . 477-8846. Shipment of Levis just arrived.Jeans, $5.50. Jackets $7.98. John'sMens Wear 1459 E. 53rd.WALLACE BERRY, Superman &Women's Lib shirts at RADICALRAGS. Check us out. Give freaks achance. 5503) Hyde Park Blvd. Falcon '66 2 tone 6cyl stick runsperfect 24mpg AM radio w-winttires Best Offer 643-0749. MASSAGE FOR MALE 8. FEMALEHawaiian, Scandinavian, and Mid-Eastern massages — all three com¬bined into one very satisfying mas¬sage. Call BOB, 326-4739 anytime. 2 Rmates needed in AIRCOND APT578.Dorctotr own rm mod kit&bath$65mo AvI June 1 Call 493-8845.Busboys-full or part time. Uniforms,meals and insurance provided. Ap¬ply in person before 4:00 Baumy's,5700 Kenwood. Temp. Home needed for well-be¬haved cat. June 1-Oct. 1. ExpensesPaid. 643-4894. FOTA Chalk-In Today, Hutch CourtRIDE WANTED: to Near North —Lincoln Pk area, Thursday after¬noons, around 4:30 p.m. Call Diana,X3-3263 days. Tonight and TomorrowBlackfriars PresentsTHE DEMOCRATIC WAYMandel HallTickets at the door $18<$2 w-lD iSCENESThe Maroon has 14 editors 8, 4 sitaffmembers. Da Daily Granite has oneeditor and no staff.THE DEMOCRATIC WAY Fri 8.Sat. Large dining room table. Can re¬move slats for small cozy table.Handsome large carpet. Call Norm— 752-6286. PEOPLE WANTED RUSSIA Camping Jul 31-Aug 13Need one person for a group of 4.Cheap. Call 684-7994. Film evening at Hillel Sun., IMPOS¬SIBLE ON SATURDAY 8:30 p.m.Students $1.00, others $1.50. FOTA Young Artists Series£eJ!°„Recital by Kai Moser Monday8:30 Bond Chapel FREE4 Can* t Oak chairs — $30. Vacu¬um cleaner-$25. Stiffel Pole Lamp-$20. Naugahide Reclining Chair-$50.Toaster-$8. Etc. 477-8846. Golden Retriever. Best Friend Twoyear old $65. 955-7583.Furniture TV Guitar Camera etc.Books Records. Tel: 955-7583. Thirteen years ago Danny and theJrs. did it. You can too at the Hop!Sat. 25cents or free with greasedhair, pony tall, bright red lipstick,saddle shoes, letterman's jacket, orbobby sox. Any 2 of these 8, you'reIn FREE. THE DEMOCRATIC WAY Fri 8.Sat.Wanted : Coordinators For HighSchool Study. Must be 21-30. GoodPay. Temporary Job. Call SusanFirestone NORC 684-5600. Remember Mother at CalvertHouse's Outdoor Mass, Sunday 10:30in Quadrangle behind Social ScienceBldg. Radio Odyssey-Midnight Sunday onWHPK FM Requests Taken til 3THE DEMOCRATIC WAY FriSat. &Have they fried Sacco 8, Vanzettiyet? FOTA presents The CollectiveIn THE play. FOTA. Rabbi Moshe Bernstein (Dept" Clas'sics U. of I.C.C. will speak at Hill¬el House about JUDAISM — a"CLASSIC" RELIGION, at 9 oop.m. tonight.Portable Typewriter, Olivetti. GreatShape $45. 477-8846. USED Jeans $2 — Overalls $3 —Shorts $1, at RADICAL RAGS.1961 Triumph Tiger Cub 200cc En¬gine Reblt, overhauled Call 363-9115. 63 CORVAIR, needs small repairs.$75 Call 874-9611. PAUL.Best Waterbeds In Town $29.95 ForKing Size, 5 yr. guar. $29.95 8i Cus¬tom frames, htrs, at Dr. Feelgood's,State 8> Chestnut. 1963 Dodge 6 cyl Good ConditionCall 643-9455.FOTA Art Exhibit, Pierce Tower. 1968 Pontiac 4-dr Executive V8 pow¬er steer-brakes air cond. Low mil.excel, cond. $1650 Day 753-8102. Eve-wknd 363-3717. Blackfriars Presents At Mandel HallTHE DEMOCRATIC WAYFri. 8:30 Sat. 7 & 9:15 Tickets at door $2.50, $1.5050c UofC discountBass Viol w-case $150. 955-7245.Free Shoe Check at the SockHop 1964 Chevl, 6 cyl, low mileage.Cheap to run. 752-7273. WNTD: Rock, bolk, blues, |azz.Country Western Band to appear ina movie. Write Byron Productions4037 N. Major Ave, Chicago, 60634.65 VW Camper. Westphalia, PoptopClen. For delivery June 5. $975 or'best offer. Fan, 9000cfm, 1 yr old:$45. Emerson Am-Fm Radio(31T56), new: $65. St. steel torchlo-mp: $35. Hshld. furniture. 288-6218. Stereo Headphones: ProfessionalBeyer-$45. Like New. 477-8846. Sacco and Vanzetti — THE playMay 7-8-9-14-15-16, 1st UnitarianChurch 8:30, 50 cents at the door.CHEAP Furn. Dbl bed, rug, couch,dresser, lamp 5383454-3245339. FOTA Sock-Hop Reruns of LoneRanger, Lassie Sgt Preston and TheUntouchables. Ida Noyes.Tired of long hair, blue jeans, 8>bra-less broads? You can weargreased hair 8< leather to the FOTASock-Hop Saturday — 8:30. FOTA presents The Collective in"Sacco 8> Vanzetti" 8:30 May 7-8-9-14-15-16, 1st Unitarian Church admission $.50 at door. WAITRESS WANTED: Apply inperson 1321 E. 57th St.Water beds from $70, health food,old furs, and other discoveries atPRESENCE, 2926 Broadway. 248-1761. Couches, dinette, pots, pans SellingCheap; books, more. Some imagina¬tion 8< some cash makes it yours.731-4073 after 7:00 p.m. Receptionist-typist with light book¬keeping for warehouse showroom.Call 667-7000 Mr. Ranvik. SUMMER JOBSInteresting, challenging jobs for col¬lege girls and teachers are availableat ELAINE REVELL, INC. You canmake good money while working forERI on temporary jobs as a typist,clerk, steno, dictaphone operator,etc. Apply at ELAINE REVELL,INC. CHICAGONorth — 4832 N. Lincoln LOl-2696Loop — 230 N. Michigan ST2-2325Hyde Pk — 1525 E. 53rd St., 684-7000 OAK PARK — 944 Lake St.AU7-6888 DES PLAINES — 2510Dempster 774-9625.SKOKIE 5200 Main St. 679-1550. CRAFT COOP features prints, tiedye, leather, macrame, and otherhandcrafts, all done by local artists.Visit us Mon-Fri 11:30-2:30 ThursNite 7-9 in the Blue Gargoyle 57th AUniversity. PASSION OF ANNAYoga Poses Concentr. Medltatn.Beg-Adv. Single-Group Classes SRINERODE OF INDIA DO 3-0155 If you missed Bergman's best filmof the last 5 years during its ex¬tended 12-day Chicago summer run,this may be your last chance everto see one of last year's finestfilms, and most powerful dramasSunday at 7 & 9:15 at Cobb $1CEF.WOOF plays it again at an OPENPARTY at 5639 University-UCID. CPA REVIEWSave $$ on Dual KLH, Scott, AR,Dyna, at MUSICRAFT. On CampusBob Tabor. 363-4555. Schiller, Goethe Must Go. My Ger¬man Library, that is. Bibliophiles,Achtung. Call 731-4073, after 7:00pm. Need 2 people to share sublet w-stereo, bike & girl. Mid June-mid-Sept. 6) big rooms-$185 53rd &Woodlawn. 363-8835. 15 Min Research Proj 643-5169-Grace, or 752-7011-Gene. FREEPACKETTES OF CIGARETTS. The Collective does better musicalsthan Blackfriars. If you don't be¬lieve it Come to Sacco & Vanzetti8:30PM May 7-4-9-14-15-16 1st Unita¬rian 50 cents. BECKER CPA REVIEW COURSE— new term begins Wed., 6-2. Halfof all successful III. candidates areformer students. 346-7742.You don't have to take off yourclothes to get into the SOCK-HOPfor free.Eccentric but impecunious Britishstudent wishes to sell inimitableanomalous British Taxi. I willhaggle around $1200. 493-2237. PEOPLE FOR SALE STAFF, STUDENTS. SUBJECTSNEEDED FOR SPEECH EX¬PERIMENT. ONE HOUR'S WORK,$1.75 Cash. On Campus. Call X3-4710for an appointment. I don't want to do it to them, but ifsomeone doesn't take them ... KIT¬TENS 753-3583 (days)Summer Roommate. Beginning JuneOption of whole apartment in Fall.*53 & Greenwood. $68. Large, newpaint, sunny. Separate bedrooms.955-9595. BLACKFRIARS PRESENTSTHE DEMOCRATIC WAYFri. 8:30 Sat. 7:00 & 9:15 MendelSCM250 Elec. Typewriter $40, 2SAAB Snowtires, 6000 mi. $25. 536-1039. Student Wife-B.A. Eng, Pol. Sci,^&Ed.-fluent German, Hebrew, Alsodoes typing. Seeks Job. Call a.m. &evenings. 643-7503.N;ed a band. Call Joe 447-5091. People to sublet for summer withoption for fall lease in enormous 7room apartment in E. Hyde Park.Woodburning fireplace, 2 baths,closets galore. Call 667-6130 after 6p.m. Faculty Chaperones at the Hop! Chalk-in, Noon, Hutch Court FOTAAMBITIOUS MEN of all trades,north to ALASKA and YUKON, ar-round $2800 a month. For completeInformation write to JOB RE¬SEARCH, P.O. Box 161, Stn-A, To¬ronto, Ont. Enclose $3 to cover cost. "VIEWS FROM INDIA" Slide pre¬sentation by Zinia da Costa atCrossroads 5621 Blackstone 8pmTONIGHTDoc Filmsis pleased to present anExclusive Campus ShowingofCosta-Gayras'Doc.Films Saturday May S5:30,8 00,10:30 Cobb Hall $110/The Chicago Maroon/May 7, 1971 Native or longtime resident of Kan-to or more northern areas to pro¬vide familiarization in Tokyo or re¬lated Hogen on a weekly basis. Call667-5944 or after 3pm 686-2124. FOTA Young Artists Series CelloRecital by Kai Moser Monday 8:30Bond Chapel FREELast Chance to See-On Stage!THE DEMOCRATIC WAYA Musical Production8:30 Tonight,7:008.9:05 Sat.tileHandk out /VTlIIf8Knit ShirtA closely ribbed knit tie-up ShirtPuriton in porple or pink.*IHMorvg-ou* is o port of Cojrm £ SternHyde Pork Shopping Cet)T*r/55tJ> £ -0*° Park Starts ToniteMALTESE FALCONStarringHumphrey Bogartand Peter LorreplusBORDERTOWNStarring Bette Davisand Paul MuniTHE BKH5RAPH THEATRE2433 N. Lincoln Dl 8-4123Plan to visit us soon. Admissionat all timas is only $1.25. Bringyour Frionds.The road.Play it, feel it,know it, sense it,command it.Take of it whatit has to offer.The Renault 16. Front-wheel drive.4-wheel independent suspensionTorsion bars. Rack and pinion steer¬ing. Front-wheel disc brakes.Up to 30mpg. Top speed, 90 mphNet effect: Total adhesion tothe road and a whole new way tocommunicate with it. $2,49.r>.jdeslvfimports,2347 S. MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO, ILL.TFL 326-2550SCHEDULE CHANGES: CEFCEF announces the addition to ourschedule of Haskell Wexler classicMedium Cool on May 16. CEF alsowishes to announce that those whodo not wish to wait until May 25 toZ free at NU should go to the Docfilms showing this Saturday. Due toa rearrangement of our programdoc will be showing this film listedto us for June 5. We In our turn arehoping to be able to present a verymajor motion picture on June 5 Inits place (to be announced Sunday).Those who have season tickets mayeither use them to see Medium Coolor our June 5 films, but not both,and not for doc's showing of Z. If,when June 5 rolls around, you re¬fuse to see the film we have chosenfor that date, and haven't used upyour money's worth of the card, youwill get $1 back.angolaREPORT FROM ANGOLA-slidest i . d-1 liber a led zone by Buba-Kar Adjali, Algerian journalistTues May 11 7:30pm InternationalHouse (Heme Room) Welcome!GAY LIBThe GAY LIB Office Rm 218 IdaNoyes will be open every day 7 pmto 12 am! Our Ext is 3-3274.GAY "Move-In"! Help set up ournew office Rm 218 Ida Noyes 12-12E59St Fri, 5-7, 7pm to 12am.Let's do our thing at the SOCKHOP Sat 5-8 at Ida Noyes and dropby our office-Rm 218 for son . cof¬fee and to rap.SOCIETYDr. Sidney Camras is relieved toannounce the forthcoming marriage(FINALLY!) of his daughter, Linda,to Mr. Jerome Seidenfeld. Mr. Sei-denfeld received his Masters inPederasty at the University of Chi¬cago while Miss Camras majored inExistential Anxiety. The coupleplans a two-week honeymoon in Tia-juana. Contributions will be grate-fully accepted. PRE-NUPTIALCELEBRATION AND JAMBOREESun. May 9, 1-6PM on the HitchcockQuad. Music by John Wolfe 8<Friends. Punch by SVNA. FREE.Y'all come now!ABORTIONSWHY PAY for abortion counselingyou can get FREE in Hyde Park?NY abortions from S150 Call ClergyService, 667-6015SUMMER SUBLETSpacious House w-yard. Nr Park,shops, campus. June-Sept 643-3717.2-Bdrm apt 54th & Harper with op¬tion for fall. 643-7887.1-3 girls to sublet 6-71 Option forfall. 1400 E 57th 324-8930.The Sharpest Girl will be crownedQueen of the Hop.Kimbark & 53rd Ige turn effic. June15-Oct 1. $107; 667-2154. June 15 to Sept 15, 58 & HarperFour bedrooms with big windowsSun Porch Completely furnishedCall 752-8459.Sum Qtr $135 Mo, Ige 2 bdrm So.Shr Furn apt Nr Lke on CampusBus Tre. Air Cond, TV. Pref GradCple. x 34014 Day, 978-C842 Eve.Roommates or sublet starting June1 option to lease spacious SouthShore apt. 3 bdrms, 2 baths, closeto 1C. George 752-1429.SPACEHyde Park 6 rooms-3 bedrooms,clean building, adults, immediateoccupancy $160 BU8-8349.2 furn rms in apt for 2 fern rmts568<Blackstn. Avail June. $65 mo.667-3321.2 8, 3rm furn apts for June occ-up.5405 S. Wood I awn Ml 3-2760, 667-5646.Furn 4 rm apt, grand piano hifipartly air conditioned. For one yearfrom June 15 to responsible couple$225-mo. Call 643-3429.Mod. Bid. 1 bedrm w-carpet. 50th 8<Dorchester. $155. 538-4717.Fern Rmt wanted June 15 or Sept15 . 56 8, Ujliv. Call 288-2315.Da Daily Granite presents the con¬tinuing adventures of QOZ.Female Roommate Starting Mid-June Own Room $52-month 56 8,Drexel. Call 955-8247.FOTA Exhibit of Student Art PierceTower Till May 14th.Townhouse So Shore 5 rm 11 bathbsmt, 1 blk to Campus Bus, 1C, 11blk to lake. Child, pets OK. Avail.July 1 About $200. 221-5035.The Collective In "Sacco and Van-zettl" 1st Unitarian Church May 7-8-9- & 14-15-16. 50 cents FOTA.CHICAGO BEACH HOTEL5100 S. Cornell DO 3-2400Beautiful Furnished ApartmentsNear beachi>ark-I.C. trains U of Cbuses at door Modest daily, weekly,monthly rates.Call Miss SmithSTUDENT ROOMATE WANTED forapartment close to campus. Rentreasonable; Kosher available. Don'tcall after 11 pm. 324-3060Apartment near Unique Deli $170Available June 1,3 bdrms 2 baths, 7rooms nice big sunny privacy Call667-549? MWF AM or late PM.APARTMENT WANTED1 REALLY NEED TO FIND ALARGE APARTMENT FOR NEXTYEAR. IF YOU KNOW OF ONE,PLEASE CALL AND TELL MEABOUT IT. CALL FRED, 236 BJ,753-2261 or 752-9538.PARK DESTRUCTION?What Nefarious Plot is Being H-at-ched Concerning the Nice LittlePark North of Regenstein? CHILDREN'S SUMMERART WORKSHOPAges 4-7 Arts-Crafts, Music andD-mce. In Harper Court. Call UP8-5267 or 955-3544.LOVEABLE NEWSSTANDHyde Park's most loveable news-stand-Bob's Newsstand 51st 8< LakePk now carries over 1000 differentMag titles plus 40 different under¬ground comixl Hours: Mon-Fri:6am-6pm; Sat: 6am-lam Sun 7am-4:30pm. Sun N.Y. Times on saleSunday 8:30am. Shalom!ISRAELI DANCINGIsraeli dancing returns to HillelThurs., May 13th at 8 p.m. 5715 S.Woodlawn.CITY LIGHTSRemember the Gold Rush? Laughand cry with Charlie ChaplinTonight 7:15 8, 9:30. DOC FILMS.BLACKFRAIRSBLACKFRIARS PRESENTSTHE DEMOCRATIC WAYFri. 8:30 Sat. 7:00 8, 9:15 Mandel.PERSONALSFREE: Lovely 3mo old Siamese kit¬ten female 324-6872 after 6.THE DEMOCRATIC WAY Fri 8,Sat.You don't have to be Jewish To bepregnant but If you are Call the"Ark" 463-4545 4-10pm.KING KONG WATERBEDS 6x7$40+Dn10 Year Guarantee Liners-$8Cail-Archimedes at 493-8451. “ *• “VOTE NOWFACULTY-STUDENTADVISORY COMMITTEE ONCAMPUS STUDENT LIFERETURN YOUR BALLOT TODAY!(Faculty exchange boxes are in all departmental and Deans'otfices.)=H==X= M 1 M M MIda Noyes25' LET'S GO TO THE HOP ldaNo’wSat., May 8, 8:30Prizes - Contests - Free Grease - Costumes - Fun - Gum 25'Live in Berkeley for Summer!!2-3 bdrm house. Sublet $180-mo sun¬ny, yard, nr. campus. Write T.Wolfe, 1524 Hearst, Berkeley, CA.94703.SUBLE T-June-Sept, 2-3. Air-cond.Bedrms, $53 mo. Ea. — 955-9126.Necking will be allowed In the backrows during the TV reruns at theSock-Hop! Sat., Ida Noyes.Spacious 3 rm nr Pk. Graciouslyfurnished. Quiet. Lots of workspace. J un-Oct. $150-mo. 955-7245.Furn. light, airy 2 rm apt. Util incl.$85 avail June 15, 6045 S. WoodlawnApt 3C, 363-3972.Jr. High was a Gas! Do it again atthe FOTA Sock-Hop.1 bdrm apt. Furnished $185. Facultywishes to sublet to responsible partymid June-Dee. 4 large, bright rms.Newly decorated. 5300 Block Dor¬chester. 955-0159.Smr. Sblt. Spacious room in Madi¬son Park. Call^24-3005.2 or 3 people to sublet rooms Inlarge 7 rm apt. in E. Hyde Park,with option for fall lease. 2 baths,woedburning fireplace, built-in book¬shelves and cabinets, friendly neigh¬bors. Call 667-6130 after 6 p.m.No, not another apartment for sub¬let, but a garage, just what youneed to protect your great mobile.At 53rd and Greenwood. Call 667-0082 or 753-3269. We are asking only$15 per month.2 or 3 girls to share apt. at 56 8tUniv. From Mid-June to Mid-Sept.Call 955-4182.SUBLET Apt. Immed. Occup. HydePark 21 rms. $105 Furniture option¬al, 538-3454 or 324-5339.Furn. 1 bdrm apt, summer $65-MaleRmmate or $130-Couple 493-4843.2 bdrm apt SUM SUBLET w-option5137, 55 8. Ingleside 493-9846 aft 5.HSE Summer Sublet with option fornext year. Any sex 493-3721.* June 12-Aug 29, Air con-“1,V°n.ed' furnished, 1 bedrm apt.$140 Mo. 324-3974.Immed Occup or Summer Subletoption for fall. 2 bdrm apt, $15563 Ingelside, 363-6354.SUBLET June-Sept. 58th 8, Mary¬land Big a, Inexi- jnsive. 684-7994.»fc 1 Lar0® House Near CampusCall 363-7631. ICAMTSmS WITH SH0WMS SHOPS |I IMS MSIIUMNTS POOIS ITC ITHROUGH EUROPE WITH AUTO TOURSMOST Of OUR COMPf TlTfON WENT OUT Of BUSINCSSLAST YEAR BUT AS fAR AS WE RE CONCERNED WITHTIN YEARS OF AUTO TOURERS BEHIND US NEARIYHAlf COME BACK FOR A SEC OND TRIP NOT ONLY THAT- WE PUT YOUR MONEY IN ESCROW SO YOU IL HAVENO HASSLE THERE TALKING Of MONEY PRICESRANGE FROM $210 FOR THRU WEEKS TO $618 FORTIN WEEKS (THE TEN WICKER INClUDES AN 8 DAYGREEK ISLAND CRUISE) FURTHER TO WHICH IfYOU RE NOT ALREADY CHARTERING OUT TO LONOON(BY THE WAY All TRIPS START ANO FINISH THERE)I ■ HAVE A EEW WORDS WITH ■■ ■—I inter re sled 11?HE S OUR MAN ON THE SPOT HE Will ALSO GIVEYOU OUR BROCHURE ANO IS PRETTY CLUED UP HE SALSO GOT A FEW OTHER SCENES GOING TOO If THISISN T YOUR BAG SO WHY NOT GET IN TOUCH ANYWAY’(EG LONDON. MOROCCO ITALY GREECE INDIA AFRICA. FAR EAST. ET Al ) REDUCTIONS I OR GROUPS’NO WAY (WE WANT INDIVIDUALS)EUROPE IS YOUNG PEOPLE. INCSO E 42 ST.. NEW YORK N Y 10017. TEL 212 986 6656FOLLOW SMOKEY’S RULESORATORIOFOTA presents the Midwest Pre¬miere of Handel's Oratorio Theo¬dora. Sunday May 16th, 3PM Rock¬efeller Chapel. Professional Orches¬tra and Soloists featuring Met. Op¬era Audition winner Barbara Pear¬son. General admission tickets $3 atWoodworths Bookstore, ReynoldsClub 8. TICKETRON. Students $1 atReynolds Club Desk.zTomorrow Cobb 5:30, 8, 10:30 OnlyCampus Showing $1 DOC FILMS. THE DEMOCRATIC WAY Fri.Sat.Mr. and Mrs. A.J. Aszman areproud to announce the engagementof their daughter Barbara Anne toMr. John David Stone, son of Mr.and Mrs. Edwin H. Stone.Kuku, Lulu Kabob. Foreign FoodsIn a Foreign Language.Ahmad's. 1450 East 57th StreetOmbudswoman?Blow your mind with good music.Lowest prices on all stereos at MU-SICRAFT. On campus, Bob Tabor,363-4555.Interested In starting your own busi¬ness this summer with a new na-11 o n a I I y-known product WriteR.A.H. Distributing Company, Suite14, 4820 Sahler Street, Omaha, Nebr¬aska, 68104 or call 402-455-3995 (nocollect calls)Don't move that bar! You'll be alimbo star! At the Hop!OlMBUDSWOMAN!No daddys to come 8> take yourgirls home. You can make it big inthe still of the night. At the Hop!Sat. Only 25 cents.Great balls of Fire! All the big boysare layong on their tans for theFOTA Sock-Hop!ASTROLOGY — Personal con¬sultations are now offered to stu¬dents at a special student fee. Con¬cerned about career selection, jobopportunities, love, and your realself . . . Call 723-1363 Jo Mitchell,D.F. Astrol. S.Very Cheap flights to Europe 8.Asia. Contact 922-0723.LOST PUPPY — 3 mo. old, partG e r. Shephard. No collar. Nothouse-trained. Lost at Harper Ct.Sat Eve May 2. HY3-7592.FOTA: Wm. McKinley Jazz GroupSaturday 8:30PM Quantrell.LOSTOnly copy of Master's Thesis dis¬appeared from bookdrop area atUniversiy Bookstore. Reward of¬fered by haofctfw. PImm e#UBookstore or Sharon Weitzman, 955-6587. SUPER PERSONALSF k the Collective. CollectiveWhat? Collective Coprophaglcs.USED CAMERASANDLENSESMWwIta SRT101M.4 Blackbody w/caw $175.00MIRANDA Stmmi 91.4 withcaw $1«0.00NIKON F. BODY P*rf $139.00NIKON FT BODY $150.00MKKORMAT FTN Body P«rf... $120.00NIKKOR 50mm f 1.4 lam $ 89.00OCAROORF View Cam.ro 5x7. $199.95EXACT A-AUTO 50mm 12 8Auto VUItor 35mm f2.8Auto VMtor 135mm 13.5 ......EXFOSUNMiTM PLUS $175.00MINOLTA 139mm F2.Bw/caw & shad*. Pwf $84.00MINOLTA 39mm (2.8 w/cawl ihod* Itorf $ 69.00MINOLTA 16mm w/cawPwfect $139.00KAUOAR 135 f2.S Itontax Ml.Caw $ 30.00NEWHONEYWELL PENTAXSP0TMATICSPECIAL PRICEw/f2.0 Supur TokumorHONEYWELL Auto SlrobonorsMmM 350 list 984.50 $49.95MmM 450 lift $109.50. $ 59.95MUM 550 $149.50 Spm: $69.95NIKON FTN Body Black Only Iunit at this pric* $213.00NIKKOR 50mf2.0 torn only Iunit at this prire $ 56.00ARKIY DRYBS A WASHERS1 of uadi modd at 25% offARGUS COSMA w/CopolSquare Shutter Black Body f 1.8tons 6 Caw $123.00IN STOCKHAW CONTROLNEW UNICOLOt CHEMISTRY ADARKROOM AIDSPATTERSON DARKROOM ROLAPMENTCANON FI AAGFA COLOR PAFK■ IN lOshwt pockogusMODEL CAMERA1342 E 55th StNew Hours 8:30-6:00 p.m. SUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCould you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their newdisability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you'renot able to.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J.W000, Jr.CUIOne N. LaSalle St.Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470 mmMay 7, 1971/The Chicago Maroon/UA MAJOR HAPPENINGFROM NEW RELEASESEdgar Winter’sWhite TrashIntroducing Jerry la Croixincluding:Where Would I Be/Let's Get It OnKeep Playin' That Rock N’ RollDying To Live/Save The Planet LiveJohnny Winter Andincluding.Jumpin'Jack Flash/Good Morning Little School GirlJohnny B.Goode/Great Balls of FireLong Tall Sally/Whole Lotta Shakin'Gom'OnBoz ScaggsMomentsincluding:Moments/We Been Away/Hollywood BluesI Will Forever Sing, We Were Always SweetheartsDouglas 7^This Is MadnessThe Last PoetsCHASEincluding:Get It On/Open Up Wide/Hello GroceriesBoys And Girls Together/Handbags And Gladrags ^Johnny Otis ShowLive At Monterey!The Historic Rhythm A Blues^Extravaganza That Rocked The 1970Monterey Jazz Festival!withJohnny Otis/Shuggie Otis/Little Esther PhillipsRoy Brown/The Mighty Flea/Ivory Joe HunterBig Joe Turner | Roy Milton/Eddie Cleanhead VinsonMargie Evans/Mighty Mouth Evans/Pee Wee CraytonA specially priced 2-record set EG 30473 alkoopernewyork city(you re a woman)including:the ballad of the hard rock kidcan you hear it now 500 miles'/nightmare *5iithn the bantist i hoi > iohn I / come do* n in t imeC 30506*LEONARD COHENLOVE ANDHATE^^HINCLUDINGAVALANCHELAST VEAR S MANSING ANOTHERSONG, BOYSJOAN OF ARCFAMOUS BLUERAINCOATC 30103 »S S8QKSSS SSftS&NIINCLUDtNGDOWN ON ME/BYE, BYE BABYCALL ON fcE /COO COO/ THE LAST TIMESLY & THE FAMILY STONEGREATEST HITSI WANT TO TAKE YOU HIGHERTHANK YOU Falettmme Be Mice Ell AginDANCE TO THE MUSIC/STAND1 EVERYDAY PEOPLEKE 30325 withpurchaseof2LPs(Limit - 1 per customer) DIFFERENT STROKESBIG BROTHER AND I HI HOLDING COMPANY REDBONEITS A BEAUTIFUL DAY BAL LIN JACK THE HOWESTHE NEW YORK ROCK ENSEMBLE THE HOCK SPIRITElVIN BISHOP GROUP FRASER A OEBOUBiU PUKA SOn MACHINE Your ownPortablePop Festivalby 19ContemporaryArtists!% SPIRITTWELVE DREAMS OF DR. SARDONICUSINCLUDINGNATURE 'S WAY/MORNING WILL COME MR SKINWHEN I TOUCH YOU/ANIMAL 200E 30267/MFG. L9ST vs. LOWE S PRICE2.98 1.79 6.98 ....4,193.98 2.39 9.98 ....5.984.98 ....2.99 10.98.... ...6.585.98 ....3.59 11.98.... ...7.54 JAMS JOPLINPEARLINUl/UINC:Ml AND HOHHY Met It / A WOMAN III IIOMIVHAII MUON / t HY BAHV / Ml HM III S HI N/KC 30322CHARGEWITHOUJ&I, RECORDSOPEN SUNDAY 12 TO HYDE PARK1444 E. 57thMU 4-1505Volume 3, Number 26 Friday, May 7.1971THE GREY CITYThe Chicago Maroon Magazine of the ArtsDrawings by Peter Salt(top and center right),Dudley Huppler (centerleft), and Marion Siref-man (right).Enigmatic ArtBy Susan LeffPhotos by Steve AokiDrawing is often regarded as the step-daughter of painting. People considerit a preliminary art; a technique to form sketches and models. However, there isalso a tradition of magnificent drawings which are final works in themselves.Many artists, in fact, prefer drawing because of its precision, meticulousquality and immediacy. Artists will frequently instill their drawings with apersonal, subjective quality that we do not find in their paintings.The exhibition called “Drawings” at the Bergman Gallery offers us theopportunity to view some drawings which are, as a group, particularlysubjective and expressive. Nine artists have contributed to the show, so there isa wide range of styles and themes represented. These diversities areunderstandable as the artists themselves are very different from one another,varying greatly in age and background.These artists are: Vincent Arcilesi, Virgil Burnett, Michael De Porte,Dudley Huppler, Serene Flax, Karl-Heinz Meschbach, Marion Serif man, PeterSolt and Bonita Versh. Seven of them live in Chicago, and two of them (VirgilBurnett and Michael De Porte) teach at UC.De Porte began drawing casually. He teaches English and is untrained asan artist. His first drawings were doodles. “Then,” he says, “I began to see thatI could make things that look like things, only in wierd ways.” About two yearsago he began to take his work more seriously and since then it has evolved andbecome more sophisticated.De Porte works with a rapidograph pen and India ink, although some timeago he did try oils. “I like the precision of line,” he explains. His drawings showgreat control and exactness in their complex linear patterns, but beneath thefacade of order lies fantasy, the bizarre, even the sinister An export onmadness in literature, DePorte has drawn faces and forms which expose theineffable emotions of hatred, cunning, madness and deep introspection. He remarks, “I keep finding myself fascinated with all kinds of faces.” Hisfascination reveals itself in his unique portraits, including those of authorsSterne, Byron, and Swift. Eyes are his focal point and they flame with life.Mouths, too, are explored in detail and express the human personality in a fewtelling lines. One form will often grow into another, as when we see a faceflowing into breasts and legs, with no torso to separate them. His work can seemfluid and almost passive until we are jarred into response by a disconnected andwildly staring eyeball.De Porte’s latest work is a series of color drawings, done in black pen overcolored India inks. Each line is painstakingly applied, creating a visualharmony of pure colors and curvaceous forms. These works are evocative of thejungle or an exotic garden, with their dense foliage and many-hued creatures.Burnett’s drawings show a very different kind of fantasy. He is fascinatedwith myth and metaphor and all his drawings evoke dreams of a non-existantage when life was always romantic, beautiful, and gracious. His women wearintricate hairdos and clothes and are remotely sensual. Many of them areunusually strong and Burnett frequently portrays Amazons with bulging armsand faces full of forceful resolution. All his characters are aristocratic; theysuggest emotion rather than impersonate it and they maintain a safe distancefrom the viewer. Although the figures are usually in a state of motionlessrepose, this contrasts strongly with their energized hair and clothing. Burnettfashions everything so that it reflects the elemental force which propels it, andthis is true for the inanimate as well as the living. Each strand of hair, eachpiece of cloth, each shell, rock and wave has its own character and seems to bealive.We can see these things in a drawing of a scene from “Don Giovanni.”Donna Anna is confronted by the ghost of her father, cunningly depicted as asoldier whose lower torso dissolves into bones. Donna Anna is regal: sheappears frail supervicially, but is actually very powerful. The epitome of thesophisticated intellectual artist, Burnett finds satisfaction in working withContinued on Page FourDANCEHarlem Rhythm:Freedom in DanceIn 1968 choreographer Arthur Mit¬chell opened the doors of the Church ofthe Master on 122nd Street in New Yorkto the children of Harlem. Hundreds ofyoung blacks enthusiastically besiegedthe Morningside Heights Church fordance lessons. The calibre and devo¬tion of the students encouraged Mit¬chell to take twenty-eight of his bestpupils and form the Dance Theater ofHarlem — the first permanent, classi¬cal, professional academy-centeredblack ballet troupe. The company hassince received the dancer’s dream, arare combination of high professionalacclaim and bountiful financial aid inthe form of huge grants from the NewYork State Council on the Arts and theFord Foundation.Mr Mitchell, the founder and artisticdirector of the Dance Theater of Har¬lem, studied ballet and modern danceat the High School of the PerformingArts in New York and then danced withthe New York City Ballet for twentyyears, where he became the first blackprincipal dancer with a major classicalcompany. Mitchell’s associate artistic directoris Karel Shook, who gave Mitchell hisfirst ballet instruction when Shook wasteaching at UC-alumnus KatherineDunham’s school. Mitchell and Shookdo the majority of the teaching withassistance from moderij dancers MaryHinksa of the Grahmam Company,Thelma Hull of the Ailey Company, andTanaquil Le Clerq, a former ballerinawith the New York City Ballet.The idea for a black company wasconceived after the assassination ofMartin Luther King, Jr, when Mitchellreturned from organizing a nationalballet company in Brazil and wanted to“do something in my own country.” Heformed a board of directors which washeaded by Lincoln Kirsten, co-directorof the New York City Ballet. The boardmembers included George Balanchineand black actors Brock Peters andCicely Tyson.Their programs at the AuditoriumTheater on Sunday and Tuesday nightswill include classic works by GeorgeBalanchine and Jerome Robbins as Ensemble of the Dance Theater of Harlem in thepractice room; Arthur Miller in the foreground.well as some choreography by Mitchell or line that I would like to develop forcombining the classic and ethnic the company. I want to take all thingsidioms. One of the pieces that will be inherent to black dancers — rhythmicperformed is “Rhythmetron.” quality, attack, feline quality, a certain“Rhytmetron” is a three-part primi- freedom — and to combine them. Puttive Afro-Caribbean work for per- these things in the confines of balletcussion with music by the Brazilian and you have something very exciting:composer Marios Nobre. “Rhythmet- classical ballet with soul.”ron,” says Mitchell, “is the basic style —Paula Meinetz ShapiroSpringtime Showers With FOTAModern BalletTuesday night FOTA aponsored a lecture-demon¬stration by Sybil Shearer, Chicago’s most famousdancer, on “The Art of Dance.” Miss Shearerproposed to explain “how choreography is done” to afull house at the Cloister Club. But as in every artform, dances grow out of various inspirations and areeffected by a special genius: a “how-to” art lecturepresents some major difficulties. On the theoreticalside Miss Shearer offered some broad definitions ofdance supported by her personal conception of dancehistory, and on the visual side she presented excerptsfrom two of her dances.The definitions with which Miss Shearer openedher lecture were more exhaustive than informative.Not distinguishing between ballet and modern dance,Miss Shearer defined a ballet as a group dance, incontrast to a solo. She spoke of modern dance interms of the modern dancer who is, according to MissShearer, a living dancer. She considers herself amodern dancer in the romantic tradition rather thanin the classic tradition. After her slightly confusedcategorization of dance styles, Miss Shearer demon¬strated what she calls the twelve qualities ofmovement between complete tension and completerelaxation. These qualities include swaying, bounc¬ing, vibrating, pulsing, etc. Once Miss Shearer began performing her unique and fascinating movementsthe lecture-demonstration proved highly enjoyable.After the demonstration Miss Shearer answeredquestions from the audience concerning her cho¬reographic techniques. One can best learn about adancer’s choreography by attending his concerts, butthe hour with Sybil Shearer did at least reveal howshe thinks of dance in formal terms. And theaudience appreciated her graceful demonstrationseven if they were none the wiser about her techniqueafterwards.—G. H. LewisPiano and OperaIf the calibre of tne opening events of the FOTAMusic Program is any indication of the overallquality, future concerts should be most gratifying.On Saturday afternoon, Alberto Reyes, a pianistfrom Indiana University, initiated The Young ArtistsSeries. Mr Reyes’ credentials include an extensiveand impressive list of prizes awarded at some of theforemost music competitions in the world.For his program, he chose music of Beethoven,Liszt, Chopin and Ginastera. An examination of theLiszt’s Sonata in B minor provides insight into theartist’s capabilities. The work is a tour de force, butone in which the pianist cannot rely solely on hismuscular pyrotechnique. Although cumbersome and slightly overlong, the piece requires a master’stouch. In his execution of the “tailspin” chromaticscale passages, each note stood out clearly; mostpianists reduce such passages to a blur of sound. Andhis sense of phrasing and interpretation is precise.The momentum of this first performance contin¬ued with the appearance of the Cameo OperaCompany Sunday. This group, composed of fourteensingers from the Chicago area, offered a program oroperatic scenarios, in full costume. Such consistentlyexcellent diction, dramatic sense, and downrighttalent in a group as large as this one is rare. Althoughthe entire company deserves praise, Beverly Hoff¬man, Laury Christie, and Emilie Miller must besingled out as special talents. In a scene from DerRosenkavalier by Richard Strauss (Act III, Trio andDuet) in which all three appeared, the sumptuoussound that they produced was superb. It would not bean exaggeration to state that this trio of womenequaled the one that appeared in the production ofDer Rosenkavalier at the Lyric Opera of Chicago.The attendance at these two concerts was verypoor but hopefully, this will not continue. It is onething to trudge downtown and pay exhorbitant pricesfor musical events, but it is quite another to have freeevents of equal calibre right here on campus.—Thomas SokolowskiContemporary European FilmsINGMAR BERGMAN SPASSION OF ANNASunday, May 97 & 9:15 1 of the year's 10 Best FilmsCobb Hall THE HOUSE NEAR THE PRADODR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-6363 mmmJETTOm^EUROPE& ISRAELInexpensive flightsthroughout the yearLowest Fares, choice of1 wpy or round tripSTUDENT HOLIDAYS40 EAST 54th STREETNEW YORK, N.Y. 10022212/832-6844 PLUS: "WE A FAMILY’Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 12 10Fri. & Sat 12 12C loot'd Monddvc. o'd & Hvd'-1 Pc'i. FUvr955-2999 / LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK33*2113INTERNATIONAL CRAFTS SALESunday, May 16, 11 A.M. - 10 P.M.At K.A.M. Temple930 E. 50th St. KE 8-33002/Grey City Journal/May 7, 1971Comical Fare by FeifferJules Feiffer’s Little Murders was performedmeticulously last weekend at the Reynold’s ClubTheater. Under the precise direction of RobertHopkins, the detail necessary to give such a play lifewas carefully chosen and very well executed. Themovement was fluid and uncluttered on that smallstage, with not a moment of clumsiness or staginess.The casting too was good and where the problem ofplaying middle age arose it was handled well. Inshort, this was funny, well-executed theater.But the play itself is not really very good. Itshows a family under seige in New York City. Theyhave already lost a son to sniper fire and will lose adaughter in the same way in the course of the action.They end up taking revengeful and gleeful pot shotsat passers-by. But for the satire to work, there mustbe some connection with reality. The people must bepsychologically consistent if one is to accept the playas a comment upon urban existence.'As it is, thecharacters have no depth, their words seem to hangin the air, or (since this is Feiffer) to be printed inneat capital letters by the side of their faces.They remain thin line drawings with nothingbetween the lines. Even this would be acceptable — asort of updated drawing room comedy with deathrather than adultery the mindless concern of theparticipants — but Feiffer seems to want more. Thesecond act begins by suddenly requiring the audienceto empathize with these nonentities. They philo¬sophize (terribly) and discuss their own motivations,but it would not matter if the father, mother, brotheror boyfriend were killed rather than the daughter.None of them has been more than a mere mouthpiecefor jokes and neither we nor the rest of the family canreally know or care what kind of person has beenkilled.But now to the redeeming features. It is veryfunny a great deal of the time and the productionmore than does it justice. Edward Gorman playedthe younger brofher with the right degree of fey ness,remaining comical rather than grotesque. The moth¬er and father are reduced by Feiffer to a couple whorarely mouth anything but suburban (metropoli¬tan?) cliches. It is hard therefore to give them areality behind their disjointed public positions andpronouncements.It was here that the detail of direction and A scene from University Theatre production ‘‘Little Murders”performance was particularly important. CarolineHeck flounced about very well indeed and was near toshallow tears and shallow anger whenever Feifferdemanded them. Neil Nathan created a nice nervouscharacter. Pat Prinz was fine as the daughter. Shehas to dominate her family and her boyfriend andthis was done both outrageously and subtly. Theboyfriend is an apathetic hulk who lets himself bebeaten up by kids in Central Park. His dazedindifference to the world was marvelously capturedby Robert Keefe. The transition to energetic aggres¬sion after the death, of his new wife was also wellhandled.Finally, the appearances of Judge Stern (Ber¬tram Schwarzschild), Reverand Dupas (J DavidCope), and Lieutenant Practice (August Kolich)were so well handled that the dangers of such broadcaricature were largely avoided. Mr Schwarzschild made an excellently subtle judge, his accent waver¬ing between the Bronx and New England as theoccasion arose. Joel Cope pointedly characterized aminister totally unperturbed by anything — least ofall the commission of sins. Augustus Kolich wasexcellently nervous and paranoid as the Lieutenant.But here a little makeup (say a moustache) or thewearing of a hat would help to age a man on the vergeof an ulcerous collapse.Technically, things went very well. I particularlyliked the set by Jeff Howard. The lighting wasproperly unobtrusive and the sound effects good, butsometimes a little too loud. The costumes, though nottoo difficult a problem, were well chosen.Go to see Little Murders. It may not make youthink, but it will certainly make you laugh. It playsagain this weekend at the Reynolds Club Theater.—D. N. RudallDemocracy!Irving Klutz (of Reader’s Digest fame) aspires tothe Presidency of these United States. He presentshimself to PR Jones and staff of Jones, Jones, andJones Inc. for molding into the appropriate imagewhich will garner votes for his election, and isthereby caught in the madness of the marriage of thepublic relations world and a presidential campaign.Sounds like just another real-life saga from the worldof American politics, including a Pattcnesque Gener¬al and a money-slinging Politico as opponents in therace with Klutz (whose name is changed to F JacksonCraig). The Blackfriars Society’s presentation of theDemocratic Way has a good vehicle in the form of awell-written script provided by Mike Dorf and MarcPrimack, and an able cast which obviously enjoys itswork. To be sure, this not a slick, professional show— there are plenty of rough places — but there arealso some delightful spots in the program.Dorf and Primack have written a quick-pacedshow, and liberally laced it with puns, satire andinteresting characters. Perhaps the excellent lyricsoverride the objection that the music is not original,but mostly borrowed show tunes. Freed from thereally monumental task of writing original tunes, thewriters came up with some very good songs.However, the objection is still valid: one expectsoriginal music and lyrics to come out of a Blackfriarsproduction and is a little startled to hear the ghost of“Guys and Dolls” being shuttled about, disguisedwith new lyrics. Still, the songs are well worthlistening to, and quite imaginative.There are some weaknesses in both singing andacting abilities in the cast, but there are also somevery good character-actors who carry off their roleswith flair. Phil Stafford who plays Irving Klutz-FJackson Craig is especially pleasing with his abilityto move well on-stage and deliver a song in a veryappealing manner. Rick Rayfield as PR Jones does aremarkable job getting around the stage on crutches,and gives a good performance as the wiley publicrelations man. Judith Perlman as Dum-Dum is a gas,and Evelyn Wagner who plays F Jackson Craig’scampaign wife combines a nice voice with a good dealof stage presence. Paul Gassert, who plays Calvin —Klutz’s son who is obsessively sympathetic withpachydprmc and imagine® him<jp1f to Hp nnp —undoubtedly steals the show whenever he lumbersout in his scout uniform, bent over, one arm waving Singing is ‘‘The Democratic Way”as an elephant’s trunk. And Pat Cox as Cunthia, oneof F Jackson Craig’s campaign children, amazed mecommendably capturing the role of a toothy, smiling,incredibly sugar-sweet brat. Larry Clary’s technicalwork was on the mark, and Bob Ashenhurst’s pianoplaying kept the show moving at a good pace.The musical could well gain some polish by theremoval of an attitude of self-and audience-con¬sciousness. Two or three University of Chicagoreferences seemed obligatory, and clobbering theaudience with the fact that this is a Blackfriarsproduction only seemed awkward, and both wereunnecessary in what is actually a rather goodprogram. One enormous problem, however, doesexist for The Democratic Way, and that is audiencesize, which is no fault of Blackfriars. Musical comedysuffers mightily at the hands of forty-five peoplehuddled together in the gloom of Mandel Hall; thecast seems to contain more people than the audience.Hopefully, more support can and will be found fortheatrical ventures at the University of Chicago, andthis will then generate more experiments andsuccesses in theater here. In any case, The Demo¬cratic Way deserves an audience and a big hand forproviding a bright and entertaining evening — andPat Paulson doesn’t stand a chance against FJackson Craig in ’72.'—Gwen Dietmann THEATERA Wooden“Forest”Lillian Heilman’s Another Part of the Forest is astudy in lifelessness. Miss Heilman facilely maneu¬vers her characters through their various crises butendows them with woodenness instead of life. As aplaywright, she has the remarkable but in¬appropriate skill of a puppeteer.Watching the play, I became acutely aware that Iwas in the audience. The stage didn’t expand andtake me with it. I felt imprisoned by Row F, Seat 7.Heilman’s ghost ruled the evening. She seemed topinch her characters into saying gags because itoccurred to her that the audience might be in themood for a laugh. *The story concerns a Southern family living inthe 1880’s in Alabama. That they don’t get along verywell is made overabundantly clear. In one of thesubtler moments of the play, Ben, the eldest son, says“You’re not in love; I don’t think anybody in thisfamily can love.” Heilman wants us to know thatthey’re like us. We’re all in one big forest. Get it?Even Stanislavski couldn’t exhume this play, sothe actors were in trouble. Given the deadweight ofthe script, they did quite well. Harriet Hall asRegina, the willful daughter, and Nancy Coleman asLavinia, the mentally troubled mother, both excel.Lavinia is a crazy lady (just what this play needs!muses Heilman). Coleman plays her anguish full¬blown but we never get a chance to see how itblossomed. Mark Lamos as Oscar, the youngest son,is miscast. He walks onto the arena stage looking likeRomeo with an Elizabeth Arden haircut and proceedsto do Hulkleberry Finn with a limp.Director George Keathley didn’t pace his actorswell. The first act seemed interminable. Part of thefault lies with Heilman. She uses the first act to fuelher robots with background information they can useafter ingestion. Given that the actors are called uponto say these unfortunate lines, Keathley should havelet them speak quickly.As for the set, it was wooden. Perfect for the play.— John Del PeschioMay 7, 1971 /Grey City Journal/3Eroticism and Surrealismcontemporary intellectual poets. He explains, “Just by nature I am opposed tothe idea of the dumb artist. Intellect is not all in the realm of the scholar; thereare working intellectuals.”In a drawing for Daryl Hines’ poem “Charm,” Burnett shows av hermaphrodite surrounded by various unpleasant creatures. He is suggestingthat the person with charm seems to offer something for everyone but when heis barren of other qualities his charm actually masks an elemental viciousness.You have to view Burnett’s drawings at close range, for they are very beautifuland subtle in their portrayal of different objects and textures. Upon closeexamination, we can see that Burnett works in the time-consuming, butinfinitely precise manner of constructing shapes and shadows from tiny dots.Burnett gave up painting in 1960 and since then has devoted himselfcompletely to pen and ink. His drawings are never studies for paintings, for heconsiders “drawing to be as different from painting as poetry is from prose.Drawing is a lot like lyric poetry,” he adds. The other artists in the show exploreother realms of the fantastic. Many of them are concerned with eroticism, andthis interest manifests itself even in the abstract landscapes by MarionSir ef man.Much more overt sexuality is seen in Bonita Versh’s tiny drawings.Delightfully decorative, these works are extremely explicit, reaching back tothe ancient Eastern tradition in style and theme. Far more than just a visualKama Sutra, this art projects fantasy more than actual sexual episodes. Rocksmake love to trees and rivers, marvelously tatooed men caress plume-coiffedwomen, and wild patterns embrace everything in sight. The delight in the graceof line and the charm of design overcome any full three-dimensionality. Whatspiritual beauty of erotic art . . .” The other artists show interest in variousthemes in their drawings. Serene Flax’s work is a terrifying vision and an overtIn explaining the purpose of art, Versh states, “I hope to raise the level ofconsciousness by bringing that level of awareness to the physical as well as thespiritual beauty of erotic art . . .” The other artists show interest in variousthemes in their drawings. Serene Flax’s work is a terrifying vision and an overtplea against the pollution (all sorts) of our world. Dudley Huppler, too, is concerned with nature’s beauty, but expresses this in a much more gentle way.He exclaims, “I adore drawings; almost obsessively I draw, and the interestheightens, not slackens with the years.” This love is reflected in his work.Vincent Arcilesi’s drawings are also gentle, but in a different way. They arelife studies of young girls. In them he explores the possibilities of the figurestudy in several ways. Some of the girls are nude and some are clothed. Thenude studies are openly sexual and show a fascination with the female body. Theclothed girls are superficially more innocent, but actually convey a muchdeeper sexuality. Arcilesi’s drawings are ambiguous in a way, because at firstglance they seem no different from so many other classical figure studies. In asense they are timeless, for artists have always studied the female formsearching for ideal beauty and divine grace.Another motif of the exhibition is surrealism and pop culture. This is bestexemplified in the drawings of Karl-Heinz Meschbach and Peter Solt. The workof both carries an aura of high-gloss. Meschbach deals with hard forms andopen space; he cares a great deal for the pure shapes of geometry. A frequentmotif in his drawings is a beautiful, long and lithe woman, with vacant, sensualeyes. Her face is unreal in its perfection and is characterized by the detachedpose of a high-fashion model. When depicted alone these mannequins are of littleinterest, but Meschbach has often fused them with art deco backgrounds, sothat the human form ultimately melts into a fascinating pattern of circles andlines. This technique of releasing the human form from any realistic setting andmerging it with 2-D patterns is often jarring, but yet alluring, as Meschbachhandles it with great coolness and precision.Solt’s work also shows the influence of his culture: comic books, s.ciencefiction, and movies. His images tend to be bizarre and sometimes futuristic,bringing to mind things like the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey. There is afascination with ruin and destruction as seen in drawings of decaying buildingsand rats parading across the barren landscape. However, there is another sideto Solt’s work, and that is one of comparative decorativeness and quiet. Thesedrawings are very delicate, like reflections of a passing vision of other-worldlybeauty. Like all the drawings in this show, they are enigmatic.CANON F-l or NIKON FTNSee Them Together at Model Camera1342 E. 55th St.493-6700cAlaryGraversFormerly of Peter,Paul & MaryIN CONCERTORCHESTRA HALLSAT.. MAY 8—8:30 P. M.Tic kefs; 5.50, 4.50, 3.50Box officeNo* open ^-7 6 KIMBARKLIQUORS»WINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTsrJv^ifSfcS^IMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC1214 L 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355 THE 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 PRESS211 Madison Avenue • New' York. N.Y 10016iprizAiPLATTERr-i■•PLAIIBK;J Pino, Fried Chicken J* Italian Foods Jj * Compare the Price! |! 1460? 53fd M3-2B0C 1I j GESTALTGROUPSWeekend A evening groups nowforming for. personal growth &learning. Experienced leaders.Scholarships available.INTERCHANGEHOUSE752-2707 LET US HELP YOUCall us now (collect) andone of our dedicated staffwill answer your questionsabout placement in Clinicsand accredited Hospitalsin New York City.LOW COSTSTRICTLY CONFIDENTIALAVAILABLE 7 DAYS A WEEKCALL ANYTIME (collect)(212) 371-6670or(212) 759-6810WOMEN’SPAVILIONINC.515 MADISON AVENUE, N Y.100224/Grey City Journal/May 7, 1971Tristana: Sublimely SurrealTristana (Catherine Deneuve), a run-away, with her itinerant artist loverHoracio (Franco Nero).There have been many good filmdirectors, and a good number of greatones, but when one pares the list downto the barest few, Luis Bunuel’s nameis bound to be there. Critics may argueover the stature of Fellini, or Hawks, orRossbllini, but on Bunuel, as withRenior or Dreyer, there is little dis¬pute. Bunuel’s latest film, Tristana, iscurrently running at the Cinema (Chi¬cago and Michigan), and he claimsthat it is his last. Tristana may or maynot be his greatest film — but it isundeniably his crowning achievement,the culmination of a glorious careerthat has provoked riots and generatedcontroversy ever since the first un¬spooling of his first film, Un ChienAndalou, in 1928.Despite a period of enforced in¬activity for nearly twenty years (heleft Spain in the wake of Franco),Bunuel’s total output (including TheExterminating Angel, Nazarin, andLos Olvidados) constitutes the mostfiercely individualistic body of work inall of cinema. Tristana is the best filmin town — it may only be May, but thebest film of 1971 is here already.Tristana is that rare kind of film thatcan be seen again and again — as withCitizen Kane, The Rules of the Game,or Rio Bravo, to penetrate its beautiesand mysteries is to make our livesricher and our existence more com¬prehensible.Criticism of Bunuel has dealt ratherthoroughly with his anti-clericalismand with his Freudian imagery(knives, priests, and masturbation arehis trademarks), but it has fallen shortof dealing with his humor, his anarch¬ism, his formal precision. Perhaps thegreatest artist that the Surrealistmovement produced (and certainlytheir greatest filmmaker), Bunuel hasan incomparable gift of creating im¬ages that reverberate with both psy¬chological and moral overtones — im¬ages that shock, prod, and disconcert;playful, offhand, coarse images ofdreams, reveries and obsessions. Bun¬uel can switch with jarring abruptnessfrom squalid realism to parables todreams to unexplained surreal sym¬bols with an ease and assurance thatmakes them seem continuations of oneanother, barely differentiable.These nightmarish shiftings of gearsare symptomatic of Bunuel’s world,where neither evil nor good exist in anyseparate way, but are wholly in¬distinguishable. Moral anarchy envel¬ops Bunuel-land. Interchangeable at amoment’s passing, good and evil be¬ come irrelevant to our decisions, ouractions, and our lives.Bunuel’s films, over the years, chro¬nicle a progress toward a “total liber¬ation of the sensibility,” to use Breton’sphrase. Indeed, anything that con¬spires to divert, or block, or co-opt thisprogress toward liberation is regres¬sive, and fair game for mockery andsavage attack, be it the Church, Chari¬ty, or the Laws of Man, God or State. Itis in this light that Bunuel’s anti¬clericalism ought to be regarded.In away, it also accounts for his apparentsoftening in the last two films, TheMilky Way and Tristana. Bunuel haschanged far less than his institutionalnemesis.Tristana is a young orphan (Cath¬erine Denueve) who is taken in by heraging rake of an uncle, Don Lope(Fernando Rey). A proud libertinewith a dogged sense of honor, Don Lopefalls in love with Tristana and theybecome lovers. But Tristana makes nocommitment to Lope, and when shemeets a young artist, Horacio, (FrancoNero), she abandons the old man.When Tristana falls ill, Horacio bringsher back to Lope. After one of her legsmust be amputated, she marries Lope,dominating him with greater cruelty ashe mellows somewhat with infirmity.Finally, when he calls for a doctor fromhis deathbed, she only pretends tophone one, in a final, gentle act ofsadism.The key scene in Tristana comeswhen she is sitting at a table, eatingnuts. She explains that although all the nuts appear identical, she can alwayschoose one nut over another. “Thisone,” she indicates, “is the one Iprefer.” With nuts or any object, orwith any “choice” at all, Tristana canalways pick, regardless of whether ornot there are any grounds to make arational decision. Bunuel is saying thatthere are in fact no bases for ourdecisions at all, and yet we are alwaysmaking them, compelled to makethem, eager to make them. Tristana,cold and sadistic, teasing and distant,is Bunuel’s ultimate image of the moralchaos of the world — a fact she bothrecognizes and embodies.If Tristana is Bunuel’s most ex¬pressive representation of the world,Don Lope is the closest of all hischaracters to Bunuel himself. Thecomparison cannot be taken too far, froDon Lope is seen with no less irony anddispassion than say, Viridiana, or Sim¬on of the Desert; but the particulars ofhis viewpoint, and the intensity withwhich he is presented, mark Don Lopeas Bunuel’s only legitimate portrait-of-the-artist.Bunuel even introduces an uncha¬racteristic note of pity for Don Lope, avalid expression of concern and sym¬pathy ultimately denied but neveractually denounced. Pity has been afavorite Bunuelian target: FranciscoRabal, in Viridiana, buys a sufferingdog being dragged helplessly behind awagon, but he fails to see, as he travelsoff quite proud of his noble deed,another wagon passing with yet anoth¬er dog dragging behind. But if Bunuel inevitably imposes on Lope the con¬sequences of passion, principle, andthe simple passing of life, he nevercondemns Don Lope for his franticefforts at happiness. There are scenesof humored reminiscence in Tristanathat evoke a sterner, less stout, Fal-staff.Like other Bunuel films, Tristanashows a character coming to termswith the world by recognition of themoral caprice of it all, but sig¬nificantly, this is the first time that thistenuous peace comes without a finalcapitulation. Lope may be humiliated,but he doesn’t give in. Don Lopecertainly isn’t right in his view of theworld — Tristana’s final action, unseenby Lope, proves that he is deluded. ButDon Lope has attained a limited emo¬tional grace, nonetheless.Bunuel has frequently been saddledwith that terrible aphorism, “ThankGod, I’m an atheist,” but he invariablygoes far beyond social institutions inhis films. He has always refused to gogentle into that good night, but ratherthan rage for a light that never lived,his fury flies against all that wouldlimit freedom of being, in the fullest,most spiritual sense of the word. “Mor¬ality”, in any set or static sense,militates violently against the un¬bridled soul.Although Belle de Jour is formallyhis most perfect film, its “open” en¬ding closes off Catherine Denueve’simpassive countenance from the au¬dience. Tristana, on the other hand,concludes with a few short shots thatretell the whole story backwards, en¬ding on the green football field where itall began. But the recapitulation en¬snares us, and circumscribes our liveswith the endless possibilities anddearth of alternatives available to us,to Lope, and to Tristana.This progressively elliptical natureof the later films makes their cameramovements meaningful in context, andall technique, no matter elegant orsloppy (Bunuel has been accused ofboth), serves the significance of hisideas. Beyond all the absurd post¬urings of a Catholic Church, or theridiculous gestures of an old man’sdignity, lies the infinite expansion ofSpace, curved and sealed in upon itselfA man who has lived in the eternal half-light of Bunuel’s world can have littlefear of the anarchy beyond that life.Perhaps Bunuel, at seventy-one, hasfinally achieved a kind of precariouslyprecious peace.—Myron MeiselDANCESwish and SwivelPhooey. The audience unanimouslyand spontaneously gave Tommy, a so-called “rock opera spectacular” astanding ovation at the Opera Houselast week. But Tommy and the opening> piece, Hip and Straight, performed byLes Grandes Ballets Canadiens andchoreographed by Fernand Nault,were the most unimaginative and tritepieces of choreography to pass throughthis great city of ours in many a moon.Tommy, a recording by the Englishrock group, The Who, tells the story ofa boy who becomes blind, deaf andmute after he sees his father murderhis mother’s lover. Thereafter he iskicked around by his peers, molestedsexually by his uncle, given drugs by agypsy queen, and eventually made areligious icon by the young people. Butin the end he is once more scorned andrejected.The score is a powerful one, oftenmoving and dramatic, and the storylends itself to a visual (i.e. dance)interpretc.tion. But in order for a rockballet to work, the choreographic effoi tshould equal the score in power andenhance it by adding a new dimension. It fails on both accounts in Tommy.The light show is well done, the youngdancers are energetic and proficient.But the choreography ranges fromboring to unappealing. Often it isswishy stuff in which the male dancersstrut around, swivel their hips, or forma Rockettes chorus line wearing pastelcostumes. The choreography is occa¬sionally a cross between June Taylorand Taylor Mead.Alexander Belin, who played the titlerole on opening night, was expressivein his emotions, but he didn’t do muchdancing. He was usually being draggedaround, kicked, or taunted. John Stan-zel as the lecherous Uncle Ernie didsome fine dancing. But beyond that,most of the fifty dancers seemed tobusy themselves running onto or off ofthe Civic Opera’s stage.It was encouraging to hear someyoung couples agree that the cho¬reography was “pretty bad” after theyhad given Tommy a standing ovation.Perhaps the young audience was ap¬plauding the fact that piuuucei Huw-ard Dando had elevated a rock albumto the role of established culture, performing at the Metropolitan Operain New York and the Opera House here.It was a nice idea to take somethingfrom the rock culture seriously andmake it into a ballet, but it should beobvious that the vitality of the record¬ing wasn’t matched by the dancing,and it appeared as though Mr Dandowas just cashing in on a very success¬ful piece of rock music.Tommy’s choreographic faults werealso displayed in the company’s open¬ing number, Hip and Straight. Thepiece offered an interesting choreogra¬phic challenge in iis attempt 10 inter¬twine ballet and modern dance move¬ments, and show how each idiom might prtray the same basic gesture, such asraising one’s arm. But a good idea waslost in a mish-mash of dancers, enter¬ing and exiting in vast numbers, andstaying on-stage only long enough for aquick bump, grind, or hip swivel. Itseemed like a large scale production ofMiss Foster’s School of Dance yearlyjazz-dance recital. The company danc¬ed on a bare stage in front of a liveseven-piece band, Les Percussions deMontreal. But a ballerina in a daintywhite tutu frantically executing balletleaps to a rock score is pretty silly-iookmg.—Paula Meinetz ShapiroMay 7. 1971/Grey City Joumal/5Culture VulturetThe Chicago Symphony Orchestra presents Beethoven'sConcerto tor piano No. 5 in E-flat, Opus 73 ( ‘Emperor ),and Mahler's Symphony No 3 in E flat. Conducted by GeorgSolti Today at 2 pm; tomorrow at 8:30 pm Orchestra Hall.May 10 the Fine Arts Quartet performs Schuber.t'sQuartet No 14 in D minor ("Death and the Maiden");Goodman Theatre, 8:15.Tonight, FOTA and the Musical Society presents anevening of part songs for small ensembles by Beethoven,Schumann, Schubert, Brahms, and others conducted byRobert Holst. Bond Chapel; 8:30 pm.Sunday the Musical Society presents May Musicke,including madrigals by Morley Wilbye and de Lasso andworks by Frescobaldi and Byrd, Pierce Tower; 3 pm.Monday, May 10 FOTA presents in the Young ArtistsSeries a cello recital by Kai Moser; works by Bach andKodaly, Bond Chapel; 8:30pm. .Wednesday, also part of the Young Artists Series, FOTApresents a recital by pianist Deboral Moriarty, Works byMozart, Beethoven, Debussy and Schumann. Mandel Hall; 4Thursday, FOTA's Young Artist Series presents Renaissance music on Oud, Lute, and Guitar by Deborah Minkin.Bond Chapel, 8.30pm.Saturday night, in Quantrell at 8 30 pm, FOTA presentsthe William McKinley Jazi Group.DANCE .•The Dance tneatre ot Harlem at the Auditorium Theatre,May 9 at 8 pm and May 11 at 8:30 p m ; Tickets S3.50 to 9.00Louis Falco, Jennifer Muller, and Juan Antonio, membersof the Louis Falco Dance Company will be at Mandel Hall,May 20 at 8 pm in a lecture demonstration sponsored byFOTA Free; public is welcome.The Dance Troupe, a company affiliated with ColumbiaCollege, will present "Journey" and "Three Folk Pieces"every Wednesday, beginning April 28 and through May 26;Columbia College Center for Performing Arts, 1725 N Wells;contribution SI.50.A Dance Workshop by Ronny Kaye will begin May 3 andrun 8 weeks at the Kingston Mines Theater, 2356 N LincolnAve. Classes are Monday nights, body movement 7 8:15,modern jazz dance 8:15-9:30. $2 per class. 525-9893.A complimentary copy of the Feb Chicago Dance Paper isavailable by writing to the Chicago Dance Foundation, 4949S. Woodlawn, Chicago, 60615. The subscription rate is $2 peryear for this monthly on Chicago dance.THEATER.Thursday, May 13, the De Paul University Drama Grouppresents The Death of Andy Warhol; Woodward CourtCafeteria, 8 pm.The Collective will present Sacco and Vanzetti thisweekend (tonight, Saturday and Sunday) and next weekendat the First Unitarian Church (57th and Woodland) at 8:30pm. Admission$.50.The Ivanhoe presents Another Part of the Forest through June 6, Written by Lillian Heilman. 3000 N. Clark. Tuesdaythrough Friday, 8:30 pm; Saturday, 6 pm and 9:30 pm;Sunday, 7 pm. . , ...Robert Hopkins directs University Theater s productionof Jules Feiffer's Little Murders, May 6 9, in Reynolds ClubTheater at 8 30. Tickets $2, $1.50 with student ID, availablein room 304 of Reynolds Club. Reservations 753 3581.The U of C Blackfriars Comedy Society presents its 1971production, The Democratic Way, May 7 and 8 in Mandel.Friday performances are 8:30; Saturdays, 7 and 9:15.Tickets available at Reynolds Club desk.The Goodman Theater presents Anouilh's Poor Bitos,continuing through May 16. A comedy probing the roots Ofman'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. Studentsmay purchase tickets for $3 a half hour before curtain time,Tues Fri performances at 7:30 pm.Chekhov's The Seagull is being performed for free everyFriday and Saturday at 7:30 at the Columbia CollegePerforming Arts Center, 1725 N Wells. 944-3756.Free Theater will present through May, William Russo'sAesop's Fables Sunday at 7 and 9, Monday at 7:30 and 9. Atleast through the end of the month, they will also presentRusso's Civil War on Saturday evenings. Call 929 6920 formore information. The theater is at 3257 N Sheffield.Obviously, admission free.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 7890Grease, a 1950's rock musical, continues at the KingstonMines Theater, 2356 N Lincoln.ARTThe Renaissance Society Gallery will show "ChinesePainting at Mid Century" May 4 through June 12, 108Goodspeed Hall.The Bergman Gallery presents "Erotic and FantasticDrawings by Nine Artists" (arranged by GCJ art editorSusan Left) May 4 through June 5. Cobb 418.FOTA's Art Show will be held in Pierce Tower throughMay 14. 'Friday, May 7, or May 10 if it rains, there will be a Chalk-In and Music at noon in Hutch Court.Paintings and Prints by John Carlander at the LutheranSchool of Theology through May l5; 1100 E 55; weekdays 96; Saturday 9 noon; closed Sunday.The 31st Society for Contemporary Art Exhibition at theArt Institute continues through May 30; Montgomery WardGallery. /A Harlem Theatre DancerPaintings by Daniel Lang are at the Fairweather HardinGallery and will continue through May 22; 101 E OptarioPaintings by Mary Kenna at Center for ContinuingEducation through May 16. Irish artists Patrick Hennessy and H Robertson Craiaat Guildhall Galleries, Lts., 406 S Michigan, through Ma’v 2,The Hyde Park Neighborhood Club will have a Teen ArtFair April 24 25from 16 pm. Further infoM13 4062"Multiple Art" by Karl Gerstner at Deson Zaks GalleryInc, 226 E. Ontario St, through May 15.The Ceianne Exhibit at the Art Institute will run throuohMay 16."49th Parallels," an exhibit of New Canadian Art winal the Museum of Contemporary Art April 3 May 16 ’Harriet M Harris Center offers very inexpensive coursesin drawing, painting, leathercraft, macrame etc hpm.nApril 12. Call 955 3100 for intoFILMOn campus this weekend:Doc Films presents Charles Chaplin's City Lights at 7 isand 9:30 tonight, and Costa Gavras' Z (he lives') at 5 30 »and 10:30 tomorrow night.CEF is showing Ingmar Bergman's The Passion of Annaon Sunday evening at 7 and 9 15 (in color) All three in Cobband all three are $1 This will be the only campus of ZMonday night the Humanities Division is showing TonvRichardson's film of William Faulkner's Sanctuary free at8, starring Yves Montand and Lee RemickTuesday Doc's feature is George Cukor's Let's MakeLove, with Yves Montand and Marilyn Monroe, at 7 30(Montand is also Z, so he's really living this week )Wednesday, at 7:30, Josef von Sternberg's first talkie a1929 gangster film called ThunderboltDowntown and recommended Don Siegel's The Beguiledis at the Roosevelt; Robert Mulligan's Summer of '42 at theUnited Artists, and Bunuel's Tristana at the CinemaAlice's Revisited, 950 W Wrightwood, presents films everyTuesday. May 11. American Revolution II, story of themaking of the Uptown Young Patriots; 8 pm and 10 pm torinfo cal I 528 4250FOTA POTPOURRIFriday, May 7, (Monday, May 10, if it rains) 12noon—Hutch Court—Chalk in, music.Saturday, May 8, 8:00 pm—Ida Noyes Hall, FOTA SockHop Music by Phil and the Fastbacks, 1950's TV f ims(Lassie, Lone Ranger, Sgt. Preston and more); 75 cents,free with greased hair or bobby sox and ponytailWednesday, May 12 10 00 am—Ida Noyes, Flowerarranging demonstration by Madame Sieko ArakawaExhibit on view to 4:00 pm8:00 pm—Law School Author, Anthony Burgess, 'TheLimits of Obscenity," co sponsored by Vaughn Moody FundThursday, May 13, 8:11 pm—Law School Vagn Steen,Danish concrete poet reading his poetry, with slides andtranslation, co sponsored by Vaughn Moody FundThemurder ofFred HamptonA MOVIESTARTS TODAY at 6:00-8:00-10:00Three Penny Cinema, 2424 North Lincoln Avenue; S28I ?6ROCKEFELLER MEMORIALCHAPELSunday May 9, 1971 11:00 A.M.HOWARD THURMANDean Emeritus, Marsh ChapelBoston University"Dilemmas In The Wilderness"Tuesday, May 11, 12:15 p.m. Lecture-Demonstra¬tion at the Console, Edward Mondello, UniversityOrganistWednesday, May 12, 12:15 p.m. Carillon recital,Robert Iodine, University Carillonneur. USC CO-OP955 2220tojvc toslrurhoninstrurnertfs hAW and USED and aguitar and drum repairKNIfBSIX TO TEN EASY LESSONSDAY AND EVE CLASSESCreate things to wear, for the homeor tor gifts. Join our small, intimateclasses and we’ll show you how muchfun learning can be. In addition toprofessional instruction, we offer con¬genial atmosphere,colorful classrooms,creative associates —and free refresh¬ments! Call for phone enrollment, orwrite for descriptive literature Don’tdelay. Our deliberately small classesfill quickly.NEXT SESSION BEGINS MAY 3rdTEXTILE ARTSUNLIMITEDCRAFTS SCHOOL"E"Phone: 928-920813739 SO. LEYDEN STREETRIVERDALE, ILLINOIS 60627Go all the way...PICK A RAIRIn brewing Budi, our choice is to go allthe way. We hope beer matters enoughto you that you too will go all the way. . . to Budweiser.And right now, that goes double:Pick up two 6-paks of the King of Beers •It’s the smart way to buy.WHEN YOU SAYBudweiserYOU VE SAID IT ALUANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC • ST LOUISCHARLES CHAPLINCITY LIGHTSDoc hlms lomght 7:15 and 9:30 $1.006/Grey City Joumal/May 7, 1971Fine RockIt never rains but it pours. For weeks, no albumsworth mentioning come out, and then, in one week,there is a veritable avalanche. Witness: StickyFingers by the Rolling Stones (Rolling StonesRecords COC 59100):It has been over a year and a half since the RollingStones put out their last studio album, Let It Bleed,but let it not be said that they were just sittingaround. This new album explores some new areas forthis very established group, particularly in someslower, less frantic songs. The best of these, “WildHorses”, which is the album’s best cut, features avery subdued Mick Jagger singing slowly, butemotionally. Jagger has always struck me as beingas good at ballads as he obviously is a rockers. “WildHorses” proves it.If you do like the fast stuff though, there is morethan enough of it on this album. “Brown Sugar”,“Bitch” and “Dead Flowers” are the best fast songson the album, containing the typical Stones tightrhythm section and fine guitar work from KeithRichard and Mike Taylor. The sleeper on the albumis “You Gotta Move”, a slow, bluesy number withgreat vocal work by Jagger. The Stones havereturned, and it’s fine.4 Way Street by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young(Atlantic SD 2-902):This album was over a year in coming and some ofit is well worth the wait. The album is a two recordlive set, one acoustic, one electric. The acousticrecord is very successful, featuring a large numberof new songs or songs that members of .the group didon solo albums. By far the most successful materialis Neil Young’s. His version of “Cowgirl in the Sand”,seven minutes shorter than the original, is chilling. Itis followed by “Don’t Let It Bring You Down” whichYoung does on his latest solo album, After theGoldrush. Here it is more fully developed, moreimploring.Also well done acoustically are Crosby’s “Triad”and “The Lee Shore” and Stills’ “49 Bye Byes” whichmelts into the old Springfield tune, “For What It’sWorth.”The electric album is a bit sloppy. The best electriccuts are short “Ohio” and parts of the 13-minute-long“Carry On.” The rest is either repetitive of theoriginal versions Qr too long. Even so, this albumfeatures some fine material and some equally fineperformances. It is a pleasant way to await the nextCSN and Y studio album.Mud Slide Slim by James Taylor (Warner Records2561):James Taylor is the darling of the undergroundpress, the Sunday supplements and the nationalmagazines. Surprisingly, he is also a fine singer andsongwriter, and Mud Slide Slim should be anenormous success.Much of this album seems like an extension ofSweet Baby James, Taylor’s last album, with theexact same people (Carole King, the members of JoMama, Russ Kunkel and a few others) playing back-up and James singing in the same relaxed rfHflTnerthat made Sweet Baby James such a good album.The songs also are similar to his previous material,reflecting his personal anxieties and the traumas ofbeing a singer.Picking out favorites on the album is impossible.As anyone who knows anything about James Taylorwill testify, he grows on you over months of time.Mud Slide Slim sounds like it will be just that kind ofrecord.An interesting note: Joni Mitchell sings back-up onthree cuts and her voice is chilling, especially on“Long Ago and Far Away” where the message seemsdirectly pointed at Joni, James’ current love. It is atouching, personal moment that all can share.— The Great PumpkinMOTHER KNOWS BESTPlants Alive!largest variety of exotichouseplants in Chicago - andfine pots.Some Exquisite Blooming Things, too.5210 Harper Ave.667-2036TAhSAM-YMtfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 8:30P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU4-1062 ABORTIONpregnancies up to 12weeks terminated from$175.00Medication, Lab TestsDoctors fees includedHospital & Hospitalaffiliated clinics.(212) TR T 8803if4 nours-/ uaybPHYSICIANS REFERRALWe know we can help you. even ifit's just to talk to someone. James Taylor — Darling of the press1920 KillingsTonight, Saturday and Sunday, and next week¬end The Collective will present Sacco and Vanzetti.The play is being done in the First Unitarian Church(57th and Woodlawn) at 8:30. Admission is $.50 at thedoor, and free to anyone without the money.The Sacco-Vanzetti case spans the twenties,beginning with the killing of two payroll guards atSouth Braintree, Massachusetts in April of 1920 andending with the electrocution of the two anarchists in1927. The play is based on the writings of the pair, thetrail transcript, and material taken from thetwenties.The Collective is a grorp of students andcommunity people who came together last year forthe first time in their production of They Shall NotPass, a play about the Spanish Civil War. The aim ofthe group is to find a method of working which allowsmore freedom f6r the individual actor and a kind ofinterplay of ideas that is not possible under thetraditional director.The material used is always drawn from the“newspaper memory” of the audience, that is, anevent for which there is nevertheless removedenough to retain objectivity and freedom of handlingthe material.Modes of presentation are taken from popularmedia (circuses, radio, comic strips) as well asstraight theater. The group’s goal is to discover akind of theater which will have a potentially broad-based audience for whom the theater is moreavailable both in terms of subject matter andpresentation.— Christopher Lyon Holst, Handeland ProkofievHOLST: The Planets,, Op. 32. London PhilharmonicOrchestra and John Aldis Choir; Philips 6500072.Of numerous new releases of The Planets,conductor Bernard Haitink’s alone deserves anunqualified recommendation. The performance sur¬passes even the older Angel recording led by SirAdrian Boult, who has been associated with the piecesince leading its first performance in 1918. Haitink’sperformance has the edge on Boult’s in both spiritand precision, and those who are accustomed toBoult’s way with this work are in for some pleasantsurprises. Haitink’s slower tempi in the Marsmovement have a bite and sinister power that arealmost completely lacking in the older recording.Venus, however, loses the warmth that Boult impartsand becomes more ethereal, effective in its own waybut still somehow, disappointing. In the remainingmovements the choice seems to lie between Haitink’sstrongly extroverted reading and Boult’s moresubdued but equally effective one, with the exceptionof Uranus.The Uranus movement is without doubt the highpoint of the Philips recording. Haitink’s performancecaptures both the humorous and diabolical elementsof this movement as has no other with which I havecome into contact, and on this basis alone I wouldstrongly recommend this disc. The clarity of therecorded sound is truly exceptional, and the qualityof the pressing is excellent.HANDEL: Sonatas for Violin & Continuo. Op. 1, Nos.3, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15. Susanne Lautenbacher, violin;Hugo Ruf, harpsichord; Johannes Koch, viola dagamba. Nonesuch H-71238.Although designated Opus 1, these sonatas werein fact written at a time when Handel was well-established as an outstanding composer, and show nosign of being youthful works. The music is delicateand subtle, and is well-realized in this clear andpolished performance. The present recording is theonly currently available recording to retain the violada gamba part, essential to the structure of theworks, £nd is commendable for this reason as well asfor the thoroughly competent instrumental work.Embellishments ornament rather than obscure theline of the music, which retains Handel’s simplicity.Violinist Susanne Lautenbacher’s performance isparticularly noteworthy, displaying considerablesensitivity to eighteenth century performing prac¬tices. The recorded sound is good but somewhatdistant, the pressing excellent.PROKOFIEV: Sinfonia Concertante, Op. 125. RoyalPhilharmonic Orchestra, Sir Malcolm Sargent cond.Seraphim S60171.Prokofiev’s later compositions have never en¬joyed the popularity of his early and middle work, sothis re-release of one of his last major orchestralworks is a welcome one. The composer mellowedconsiderably in his later years, and this work is no' soimmediately striking as those works which led u-> tothe popular fifth symphony; however, it is ifanything richer and certainly undeserving of theneglect which it has received.The performance is what one would expect fromthe combined efforts of Rostropovich and Sargent —brilliant! One could hope for no more qualifiedinterpreter than Rostropovich, the soloist for whomthe work was composed, and Sargent matches nimmeasure for measure. Although the recorded s< undshows its age it is quite satisfactory, and the pressingis acceptable.— MyshkinHYDE PARK THEATRE #1 HYDE PARK THEATRE #253rd & Lake Park NO 7-9071 5238 So. Harper 493-3493HELD OVER4TH BIG WEEK \Kohlberg Theatres| STARTS FRIDAYMAY 7THROTTONPOPULAR PRICES!C»t **iV‘ ‘f*M« ftCMTH FIIMUM I SOUFT.t. rWODCTM* jcpj. jay. K9ALSOLARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSENwe$ent KEN RUSSELL'S Mm ofD. H. LAURENCE'S"WOMENMLOVTCOLOR by Deluxe“ ‘M' A'S H’ is whatthe new freedomof the screen is all about.”—Richard Schickel, Life ALSOGLENDA JACKSON OSCAR BEST ACTRESSMay 7, 1971/Grey City Journal/7THE WORLD IS FULL OF BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE AND PLACES.To help you get there,TWA introduces the Getaway* Program.It you could dig hitch-hiking across Spain orcamping along a road in England. Staying at achateau in France or living near a beach inCalifornia. TWA brings you Geta.way.First there's the Getaway* Card. With it, you cancharge airfare, hotels, meals, cars, just aboutanything just about anywhere. And then take up totwo years to pay. •There's also the Youth Passport* Card. It lets youfly at 33’/t% off on all domestic flights on a standbybasis.It also gives you reduced rates at many placesyou'll be staying.Youth Passport is good on 20 other airlines. 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