licago MaroonThe University of Chicago Friday, October 26, 1973New College complex is rededicatedBy MELINDA KANNERThursday afternoon the official re¬dedication of Harper Memorial Library andWeibolt Hall was held. Attendedpreponderantly by benefactors of theUniversity and department heads, theceremony possessed all the diginity andgrace of the tradition which it represented.The event served as an opportunity for thesegenerous and many benefactors to see towhat purpose their generosity has been put.The afternoon commenced with briefintroductory remarks by former Collegedean Roger H. Hildebrand, dean of studentsin the College, Lorna Straus, and RobertStreeter. This was followed by the re-openingceremony, presentation of the key to thelibrary, and a general tour of the renovatedfacilities. The occasion marked a newmilestone for the University.Roger Hildebrand, “erstwhile Dean of theCollege” delivered the opening remarks and“with contrite heart’’ saluted thebenefactors who “with no guarantees, nopowers to manipulate” have supported theUniversity. Hildebrand termed theceremony a rare gathering of “genuinebenefactors,” the kind of people who, since1892 have kept the University on its finincialfeet.After Hildebrand’s remarks Lorna Strausgave a brief historical perspective on therenovation project and its necessity. Theaudience to whom she spoke was peopledwith vaugely familiar faces, reminicent ofthe “old university” feeling.Of several incidents Straus cited, one wasparticularly noteworthy. Harper was builtbetween 1910 and 1912. During construction,the west tower completely collapsed. Due tosorely insufficient funds, the steel supportsfor the building had been eliminated, and intheir stead reinforced concrete was used.There was a simple stuctural problem ofeach floor not being able to support its ownweight, let alone the weight of the floorsabove. The final construction of the roof was too much, and the tower collapsed. The easttower had been similarly constructed,without steel support, but at it did not fallunder the pressure, it was left as it was,Lorna Straus unhesitatingly added that aspart of the renovation the east tower has been strengthened. Load limits and spatialregulations were established for each roomand office in Harper.Robert Streeter, former dean of thehumanities division, spoke with fondmemories of the University days gone by, of the “Doric period of the college, the period otseedy elegance—without the elegance—atime that was relentlessly educational, atime of intimacy, informalitys of sheerusuability.” He talked of the seductiveness ofthe University atmosphere and declared there-opening a “triumph of academicecology.”The Cobb assembly was followed by aceremony on the steps of Harper. The smallgroup of faculty members and benefactorswalked across the quadrangles to WilliamRainey Harper Memorial Library. Theprocession was slow. A kind of quiet dignitythat is always present on campus prevailed.In the background the Lower BrassConspiracy played clear crisp strains ofHaydn. The gathering stood in the cool lateafternoon October air as the key waspresented. The words spoken by EdwardLevi, President of the University, CharlesOxnard, Dean of the College, EmmettDedmond, representing the Board ofTrustees, and Karl Weintraub, dean of thedivision of humanities, were, with slightmodification, the words spoken at theoriginal dedication in 1912.The renovated Harper and Weiboltbuilding will function in a multitude of wayswith particular concern for the college. Itwill now accommodate a College Center, theundergraduate library, faculty studies,seminar and class rooms, student loungesand the offices of the Dean of the College andthe Dean of Undergraduate Students. The oldstructure has been preserved “architecturalecology,” in Lorna Straus’ words windowsand light fixtures that have been out of usefor some twenty years have been reac¬tivated. Portraits of Harper and Rockefellerhave been restored under aid from CharlesPercy.Dedmond presented the key to Levi whopresented it to Oxnard. Levi said knowledgewill be enriched and life enobled. Oxnardopened the door.Impeachment attempts continuedBy MICHAEL SUSSMANof our Washington bureau.WASHINGTON—Despite the decision byPresident Nixon to turn over the Watergatetapes to federal judge John J. Sirica, movesto impeach the President plowed aheadunhindered in the House of Representatives.Currently, a number of resolutions onimpeachment including one by Rep. PeteMcCloskey (R-Calif.) have been introducedin the House and referred to the JudiciaryCommittee, headed by Representative PeterRodino (D-N.J.). Rodino has announced thathearings will be held on the resolutions nextweek, with an eye towards assembling a billof particulars upon which to impeach thePresident, as is required by law.Samplings taken of opinion on the 35-member committee show that there is adefinite bloc of liberals, such as CharlesRangel and Elizabeth Holtzman, bothDemocrats of New York, who are definitelycommitted to some sort of impeachmentresolution. There is also a smaller bloc ofconservative members who are against themove.However, the decision may well rest with agroup of representatives, both Democraticand Republican, who are currentlyundecided. They have not taken any setpositions but are waiting for response toimpeachment moves from their homeconstituencies. According to informedsources, they would attach great weight toletters from people who are from their homeslates ui districts. The list of waverers includes both liberalsand conservatives and hails from everysection of the nation. In particular, two whoare important are two Illinois Republicans,Robert McClory of Lake Bluff, in suburbanLake County (the 11th district) and ThomasRailsback of Moline, who represents thenorthwestern part of the state (the 19thdistrict). undecided. They are Representatives DonaldDennis of Indiana, Wiley Mayne of Iowa andThomas Keating of Ohio.Dennis represents the tenth district ofIndiana in the eastern central part of thestate and hails from the city of Richmond,Indiana. He is best known on the JudiciaryCommittee for trying to aid formerchairman Emmanuel Celler (D-N.Y. 1923-72) Mayne, from Sioux City, Iowa, representsthe sixth district in the northwestern part ofthe state. He is rumor ad to be in trouble withhis constituents and thus willing to listen tothem, while Ohio’s Keating is known to havevery conservative views. However, he too isundecided about impeachment.On the Democratic side of the committee,the list is longer and more varied. Includedon it are representatives Jack Donohue ofMassachusetts, Jack Brooks of Texas,Robert Kastenmeier of Wisconsin, WalterFlowers of Alabama, Paul Sarbanes ofMaryland and Edward Danielson ofCalifornia.Massachusetts’ Donohue representsMiddlesex, Norfolk and Worcester countiesin the Boston suburbs, while Paul Sarbaneshails from polyglot one-third black, one-thirdethnic, one-third Jewish district in thesouthern suburbs of Baltimore. Brooks ofTexas is one of that group of Texans whohave been in Congress since God-knows-when and accumulated much power. Herepresents Galveston.Kastenmeier, a liberal from Watertown,Wisconsin, represents Madison and thesurrounding area while Flowers is a youngconservative congressman from a districtwhich includes Tuscaloosa, pieces ofBirmingham and Selma in Alabama. He waskey man on George Wallace’s legal team in1968. Both are undecided about impeachmenteven though Kastenmeier consistentlyopposed the administration during the pasttwo years, while Flowers just as consistentlysupported Nixon administration policies. Notmuch is known about Hungate save that herepresents the ninth district in thenortheastern part of Missouri.jj^^ '{ (frtneil *?(&UAt |{ 1643E.33TH STREET «** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 S£ Phones FA 4-1651 J^jc9|C9|C9|C3|C9fnfC9|C9|(9§C9§C9|C9iLSt. Gregory of Nyssacelebrates The Reformation.The mass for Sunday will beDr. Martin Luthers Deut¬sche Messe (Celebrated inEnglish translation). Comeana hear what liturgicalrenewal was like in the 16thcentury. Coffee at 10:00,worship begins at 10:20 at5757 S. University.Friday,October 26 1973By MIKE McMAHONJohn D. Rockefeller IV, great-grandson ofthe founder of the University and JaneOverton, granddaughter of William RaineyHarper, the first president of the University,unveiled the portraits of the two gentlemenWednesday afternoon in Harper Library.The ceremony marked the opening ofrededication of Harper as the new center forthe College. The portraits were restoredthrough gifts from Mr. Rockefeller and Senator Charles Percy, both Universitytrustees. Both Rockefeller and Percy werepresent at the unveiling of the portraits,which decorate the east wall of the mainreading room in the library.An unembarassed usr of superlatives inreference to the two founders and to theUniversity was begun by Universitypresident Edward Levi. Similar themesechoed throughout the cermony, whospurpose, said Levi, was “to honor the twoWhat prominent band includes 1)A songwriter for the Chambers Brothers, 2)Asaxophone player who learned from CharlieParker, and played with Billie Holiday, 3)Apercussionist who was on the latest“Weather Report” album and wasnominated for down beat drummer of theyear. 4)a mouth-harp player and vocalistwho toured with Curtis Mayfield and hasbacked up Stevie Wonder, the Supremes. andthe Temptations?The answer is “Muruga”, one of the groupsdoing a full show at Ida Noyes Saturdaynight. “I think it is one of the most excitinggroups I have heard in a long time,” said TedKurland, who accompanied them to a recentperformance at the University of Illinois inChampaign. “They have been doing a lot ofdances recently but they also play rock andjazz concerts. Most of what they will do onSaturday will be danceable music, but I amsure that “Sharma” will throw on one of hisspectacular drum solos.” (He added that thepercussionist had done a long drum solo inDetroit when he introduced Grand FunkRailroad)The personnel is really incredible,” headded. “Sharma himself played with TimHarding at Woodstock; parathodes (whoplays lead guitar, mandolin, and electricviolin) played with Jerry Jeff Walker, (theauthor of Mr. Bo jangles) and the BluesProject. Add to that “Braham” on sax andEubie Crawford on bass and vocals, then youhave an incredible sound.”Muruga is only one of three performancestaking place at Ida Noyes Hall; there will be a dance in the “three-and-one spectacular.”Performances will be taking planosimultaneously in three different roomsthe first floor of Ida Noyes Hall; there willa dance in the Cloister Club, a rock concertthe gymnasium, and a folk concert in tlibrarv-lounge area.“The idea is that for one dollar you agetting to attend three separate eventssaid a spokesman for the Student ActivitiOffice. “Each of the musical programs wbe done in three sets; our guess is that maipeople will sample all of three performancduring the course of the evening.”Sanctuary, the group doing the ro<concert features the Mellotron, similarRobert Moog’s synthesizer. “Some peopthink of a Mellotron as a kind of organ,” sa;Sanctuary’s keyboard man Erik Bikale“but that’s all wrong.” To play it you haveconceive it yourself as a whole symphoiorchestra.You cannot, for example, play somethirviolins, cellos, flutes, trumpets, or piporgan can’t play. On the other hand what ycget is a richer, fuller sound.” (The Mellatrchas been more popular with Englisperformers than with Americans. MoodBlues has a specially built mellatron that ismajor component of its unique sound).The folk-concert will include “Queen of tlTinkers” (Pub Singer) Margaret Berry, arGeorge and Gerry Armstrong who perfori..on bagpipes and other instruments.The three-in-one will commence about 8:30in Ida Noyes, I D. required. Admission willbe $1.Dance Contents*. 3 rtcTS3-IN-ONE MargaretBerrySanctuary I D ANOYESHALLJ/BRICATES-CLEANS-POUSHESDC id required8:30p,m. Armstrong personalities who made this University. Itsfoundation, has been called the greatestevent in the 19th century with regard tohigher education.”Among those who addressed the crowd ofabout 70 faculty and friends was GaylordDonnelley, chairman of the University’sboard of trustees. Donnelley recalled thehistory of the founding of the University andthe personalities of the men responsible.“They were certainly contrastingindividuals,” he noted. “Harper, the earnestscholar, physically unimposing.Rockerfeller, tall, distinguished,businesslike, the richest man in AmericaO ri H . m A r» A « rvt «\ w t n rt tPERCY: University trustee SenatorCharles Percy provided part of thefunds for restoring the Harper portraits. philanthropist.”Scholarship and philanthropy were brouthtogether in 1887, Donnelley contineud, by acommon interest in education. “Harper wasdedicate^ to the discovery of new ideas, newknowledge and interested in creating arevloutionary university in the Midwest,which he considered fertile soil for new ideasto grow.”Rockefeller was interested in a school inNew York, but found it impossible to refuseHarper. Through his “magnificentgenerosity,” said Donnely, in 1891 Harperwould lead “a university offering leadership,setting the pace for other universities.”In tribute to the endurance of these goalsand their active pursuit in the history ofChicago, Donnelly recalled Rockefeller’sstatement that “it was the best investmenthe ever made,” and concluded, “TheUniversity is today an exceptionally stronginstitution, and a symbol of the greatenduring relationship between philanthropyand scholarship.”Other speakers included John RockefellerIV and Ms. Overton, a professor of biology.Rockfeller spoke in high praise of the presentcreativity and serious innovative endeavorsof the University, and asserted that “mygreat-grandfather would be even more proudtoday than when he participated in itsfounding.”Overton claimed to have a “feeling for thethings that were the most important” to hergrandfather, William Rainey Harper. “Firstof all, some conception of the fascination thatlies in the search and teaching.” She hopedthat the students who shared these facilites,referring to the modernized and expandedlibrary, could also share the fascination andenergy that characterized Harper.Senator Percy was the final speaker. A1941 alumnus of the University, he echoedRockerfeller’s thoughs and noted, “Both ofthese distinguished Americans could notpossibly be more fulfilled in their wishesthan with the present grandeur, the presentleadership and the present scholarship at theUniversity of Chicago.PARADE TODAYThf parade In celebration af the Harper-Wieboldtdedication will begin at 1:30, headed by Walter Jeschke,retiring night guard and major dome of Ida Noyes. It willinclude the Edward Levi Brigade, which will be handingout sample bow-ties.The route will begin at Ida Noyes, move north onWoodlawn Ave. to iith St., west on SBth to University,south on University to 50th St., west on 59th St. to Ellis,north on lllis to 57th St., 57th east to Hull Gate, throughHull to the Quadrangles, out to University and northdown University to the Field House where there will bea Field Pay and 5* refreshments.WHERE A COMPLETE DINNERFOR TWO IS STILLUNDER $5.00311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W of McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysNew security regulations initiatedBy KURT HANSONDORMS: New security regulations have closed the doors in the University housingsystem.Three rapes and a slugging last year haveprompted the University to institute anexperiment in dorm security that willprobably cost “several thousand dollars,”according to Edward Turkington, director ofstudent housing.The experiment includes new doorlocks—activated by magnetically-codedcards and a four-digit combinationnumber—at Snell Hall and Woodward Court,the residence halls where last year’s threerapes occured. At Bufton-Judson Courts,where the assault took place, presumablyduring a robbery attempt, a new nightadmittance system has been put into effect.There is also a new locked door leading to thePierce Tower dorms.Students reaction to the new securitymeasures is varied. Many students feel thatthe precautions are reasonable andnecessary; others look at them as atroublesome inconvenience.Security at Snell is as tight as anywhere.There is an attendant at the door twenty-fourhours a day, watching who enters. Guests ofSnell residents must be escorted from thedoor into the building and back to the doorwhen they are ready to leave.But the new measures are looked atbenevolently at Snell, perhaps because therapes are still in the minds of many residentsthere. Eileen Leatherman, who lived in Snelllast year, noted, “I don’t think I’m paranoid,but I think reasonable securityprecautions—like the new outside lock andlike secure window screens—are called for.”Woodward Court has the same lock systemas Snell, but its effect seems different in theeyes of the students there. Because of thelarge number of people passing in and out ofthe door, from the central unit to thecourtyard, “anyone can just walk in if theywait a little while, ”4n the words of freshmanJoan Christ. She added, “Right now, themoney’s wasted, because all you have to dois wait for the door to be opened and then goin through the tunnel.”Carol Wilinski, another resident ofWoodward Court, said, “I don’t see anyalternative to that problem, but I know that right now the system is not working. Wedefinitely do need some kind of securitythere, however.”“We haven’t had any experience until thisquarter with this type of electronic lock,”housing head Turkington told the Maroon.“The new locking systems are part of thelarger project whose objective is toimplement the general policy that the dormsare open to residents and their specifically-invited guests.“In other words,” Turkington said, “ifyou’re a resident of Burton-Judson or PierceTower, I don’t think it’s your automatic rightto walk into Woodward Court any time youfeel like it.”Many students here would disagree withTurkington on this point. As Pierce resident Jim Nachbar put it, “I think most studentsfeel that any University studentsurrendering proper indentification to thehouse’s front desk should be able to get intoany of the campus dorms.” Turkingtonsstand is, nevertheless, how official policynow stands.As to what prompted the innovations atthis particular time, Turkington said,“Before last year, the biggest problem wehad in the housing system from a securitystandpoint was theft from unlocked rooms.“Last year, though, we had severalincidents of physical attacks. As far back aswe can remember—ten or 20 years—no onecan remember similar incidents.“There was a good deal of student reactionto the incidents last year,” Turkington said, “requesting that the University do more toprotect them. We feel that it is a Universityobligation to provide the most effectivereasonable security measures possible.“We can’t guarantee that our policies willprevent such incidents from reoccuring. Butwe’ve tried to do everything we think we cando to make the houses safe as well aspleasant places to live.”DomonitzThe First Unitarian Church is currentlyholding an exhibit of the works of artistShlomo Domonitz. Mr. Domonitz hasdeveloped an artistic form known as the“perceptogram”. He is internationallyknown and has been featured by both localtelevision and newspapers.The show is open every Sunday beforeservices from 10:00 to 10:30 and after from12:00 to 2:00, and will run through the end ofOctober. The First Unitarian Church islocated at 5656 S. Woodlawn.SkopecCxechoslovakian photographer RudolfSkopec, one of the world’s foremost photohistorians, will give a public lecture spon¬sored by the photography department ofColumbia College at 7 p.m., Friday,November 2. The lecture, open to the publicat a charge of $1 per person, will be held atThorne Hall (Northwestern Universitydowntown campus) at 740 North Lake ShoreDrive.Skopec, world reknowned as an engagingand witty personality even after he istranslated from the Czech language, willgive a lecture and slide show November 2.The slide show will emphasize his particularknowledge of Eastern Europeanphotography.For further details on Skopec’s lecture,phone the Columbia College photographydepartment at 467-0430.College grew in University cracksBy JONATHAN ROBINSONThe college of the University was formallyrededicated today. Because it has main¬tained a low profile few people know how toanswer the question: “What is the College?”But there seems to be a widely held intuitiveunderstanding of what it is.Dean of undergraduate students LomaStraus explained in an interview that thecollege maintains a low profile, first,because it is smaller than the rest of theuniversity. “The university is made up ofthree equal parts, the college, the graduateschools, and the professional schools.”Second, there are no clear cut distinctionsbetween the college and the rest of theuniversity. Graduate and undergraduatestudents are often taught by the sameprofessors and will even take the samecourses together. Also, campus activities arerun by and for students from the wholeuniversity, not just the college.The college’s low profile may be anecessary aspect of what Dean of the College Charles Oxnard called the college’s attemptto “acquire, examine, and teach knowledgeat a time in the history of Americaneducation when it is not popular to do so.”According to Dean Oxnard there has been, inrecent years, a “knowledge explosion.”Disciplines are expanding, and distinctionsbetween disciplines are disappearing. Thegoal of college education is no longer to teachinformation, but to teach concepts by usingmany kinds of information. “In the biologicalsciences division there were once separatedepartments within the discipline. Now thegreat majority of biologists could be in anydepartment.” The result has been first thatthe biology departments are fusing together.Second, the teaching of biology in the collegehas been reorganized along divisional ratherthan departmental lines. “The studentcarves out for himself the education he wantsin biology.” In the physical and socialsciences, and in the humanities, integrativecross disciplinary programs are beingestablished. “The college is reaching out toevery part of the university in this. At the same time the graduate and professionalschools actively want to reach into thecollege. The college gives them a broadcontext in which to explore and evaluate thenew knowledge.” The “knowledge ex¬plosion” has led to a re-evaluation of theboundary between undergraduate andgraduate education, and the realization thatintroductory, advanced, and research workshould not necessarily be limited to un¬dergraduate, graduate, and PhD studentsrespectively. Some products of this re-evaluation and of attempts to reduceredundency in education are the professionaloption programs and the joint BA-MAprograms with the graduate schools.Assistant dean of undergraduate studentsMaynard Krueger, who joined the universityin 1932, saw the college’s low profile as anaspect of its historical place in the univer¬sity. “The college grew in the cracks be¬tween the graduate and professional schools,and it thrived in those cracks. I suspect thatthe university, without the undergraduate body, would become increasinglydisassociated from the uses of the disciplinesto which it wold devote its time. There ismore life in undergrauduate than inprofessional or graduate students. The un¬dergraduates are more teachable, andthey’re open to learning more importantthings. I’m not at all sure its good for thecollege to have a home, it may cease to takefull advantage of living in the cracks.”“The college is a place for students to learna variety of things, all of them important,”said Dean Straus. “The college gives abroader view of the capacity of knowledgeand intelligence, and enables students toasess where they fit into the academic world.It is a place to build a foundation offamiliarity with the world of ideas.” Anundergraduate student, Scott Phillips,echoed that description in his ownassessment of the college. “Many collegestry to be the end of your education. But theCollege tries to be the beginning, the foun¬dation upon which all further education willbe based.”National photo contest announced by NikonStudent photographers at the Universityare among those eligible to compete for up to$1,000 in Nikon photography equipment, firstprize in a new amateur photo contes^.an¬nounced by Nikon Inc.Students will be competing for over 150prizes totaling $7,600 in value in the firstannual Nikon/ Nutshell Student PhotoContest, now underway on 165 collegecampuses throughout the nation.The contest is sponsored jointly by Nikonand Nutshell magazine, a network oflocal/ national educational publicationscurrently being distributed free to 820,000 new college students.^‘The purpose of the Nikon/ Nutshell photo^contest is to encourage college students toexpress themselves creatively throughphotography,” stated Myron Charness,director of public relations for Nikon. “At thesame time, we want to recognize and rewardyoung talent in the photography field. Forthis reason, there is nothing to buy to enterand students may use any type camera in thecompetition.”The theme selected for the contest is theCollege Experience, Hp added“Winning photos will be those that capture and communicate effectively a story orstories about college life,” Charness ex¬plained.First place winners in each of the twocontest categories (black and white andcolor) will receive $1,000 in Nikon equip¬ment. Two runnersup will each win $500 inequipment. Winning entries will also bepublished in the 1974 editions of Nutshellmagazine. Minimum prize value is $25.The contest runs through January 10,1974.Only amateur photographers enrolled atschools where the 125 editions of Nutshell arebeing distributed this fall may enter. Copies of the entry brochure containingcomplete details and official entry forms areavailable around campus and from ModelCamera Shop, local participating Nikondealer.Nikon, Inc. is a subsidiary of EhrenreichPhoto-Optical Industries, Inc., Garden City,NY. EPOI also conducts the Nikon School ofPhotography, a traveling weekend shortcourse in 35 mm techniques.Nutshell is published by Approach 13-30Corporation, Knoxville, Tennessee, a five-year-old firm which specializes in service-oriented educational publications for the 13to 30 age group.The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 26, 1973 -3rV ♦ iwStudent unions advoca NSABy RUSSELL FAEGESMeeting at Miami Beach this summer, theNational Students Association’s annualCongress endorsed the concept of a nationalstudents union for the third straight year.Their resolution called the unionization ofstudents to be a top priority issue. It alsoestablished a three member task force “toinvestigate and work towards theunionization of all colleges and universitiesthat express interest in unionization.”Incoming association president LarryFriedman, of Queens College in New YorkCity, suggested that as a step towardsunionization “model ‘contracts’ betweenstudents and their schools” be drawn up tohelp give students ideas for dealing withtheir schools.Most European countries already have thistype of “individual-member” student union,which in some ways accounts for thestrength and vigor of the student movementsin those countries. Many delegates to theCongress felt that besides enabling studentsto improve their positions within theirschools, a student union could help toinvigorate the American studentmovement, dormant since the Cambodianinvasion and Kent State. Protagonists of unionization expressedconcern that the growth of collectivebargaining by faculty groups could bedetrimental to student interests. As put byAlan Shark, chairman of the student senateat the CUNY, “There is nothing in facultycollective bargaining that involvesprotecting students. Faculty unionization isto protect faculty rights.”Shark suggested that students couldnegotiate over such issues as student’sevaluation of faculty members, grievanceprocedures for students treated unfairly byprofessors or administrators, gradingpolicies, class size, and academic freedom.Israel Kugler, sent to the congress by theAmerican Federation of Teachers, tolddelegates that students and faculty sharedsuch areas of common concern as class size,physical facilities and the overuse ofgraduate teaching assistants. He reportedthat the AFT “advocates that studentsorganize and bargain on their own overissues that concern them.”Support for unionization of students wasvery broad among the delegates but somequestioned the appropriateness of the NSA asthe vehicle of unionization.Since 1967, when it was revealed that theNSA received money from the Central Intelligence Agency, the association hasbeen racked by continual financial and unitycrises. Although, it is now down to $25,000,the NSA’s deficit has been as large as$500,000 in recent years, and the finances forthe group are still unstable. Out goingpresident Tim Higgins maintains that theassociations fiscal position allows it toundertake only the barest program ofactivities.Some critics blamed the failure to move onunionization during the past two years on theassociations leadership. Higgins respondedby charging that the proponents of the unionidea had not been willing to do the worknecessary for a project of this magnitude.There were some, however, who detectedsigns of progress. This year’s Congressmanaged to end with a decree of harmonyunknown in recent years, and there appearedto be a general agreement on the necessity ofa union.There has been strong sentiment here inrecent years to break with the NationalStudent Association. In last springs electionthere was a resolution on the ballot whichwould have withdrawn the University fromNSA.The results of the election were overturnedby the Student Faculty Administration Court, due to a requirement that fifteenpercent of the student body must cast ballotsfor a vote to be valid.Dennis Hinkson, SG representative fromTufts, asked whether the idea of a studentunion would work from a practicalstandpoint. He wondered if “students wouldhave effective bargaining power.” Hisconcern was this : After paying tuition theadministration would have what it wanted,and we would be the ones to suffer in a strike.Hinkson also referred to the student sit-inwhich resulted in the expulsion of severaldozen students.Students are divided on the issue ofunionization. When asked “What would youthink of a student union?,” most responded,with “It’s a good idea, we need someplace oncampus to buy beer.” After an explanationthat it wouldn’t be that kind of student union,pro and con responses were even in number.Those opposed felt that a union would notbe an effective method of expressing studentinterests, because the student position wouldnot be strong enough to bargain effectivelywith the administration. Many also rejectedthe idea of students organizing along thelines of the United Mine Workers or theTeamsters.Racism committee to hold teach-inBy CLARA HEMPHILLThe University of Chicago CommitteeAgainst Racism (CAR) announced itsprojects for this fall at an organizationalmeeting Tuesday. Sunday, the Committee’snational resolution will be printed in the NewYork Times, along with the names of all the University professors who signed thestatement last spring. Beginning Monday,November 5, the Committee will sponsor afive-day “Teach-in Against Racism” oncampus. Later in the month, a conference on“Racism and the University” will be held inNew York.CORNER OF HYDE PARK BLVD.& LAKE PARK AVE.IN THE VILLAGE CENTER(NIXT TO THI A4P)SERVING THE WORLD'SFINEST PANCAKESAll batter med* from quality ingredient* blanded into au¬thentic recipes that have been carefully collected and *•'•<*-ed from the very best of each country or area of origin.PANCAKES FROM THE WORLD OVER7:00 AM TO 9:00 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK1517 E. Hyde Park Blvd. Photo by Frank Gruber. The CAR was organized two years ago atthe University of Connecticut and here atChicago last spring in response to academicracism and the theories of Arthur Jensen,Hans Eysenck, Richard Hernstein, andWilliam Shockley. The CAR has beenworking to expose “the unscientific nature ofracist ideas.” The resolution, to be printed inSunday’s Times, states: “New studiesclaiming to demonstrate “scientifically” theold notion that black people are inferior havebeen rapidly spreading in professionalliterature, texts, and respectable popularmagazines . , . (racial inferiority) is nowbeing taught as fact in classrooms across thecountry.”About 50 faculty members signed theresolution. Several commented on theimportance of the resolution and the CAR.“It reflects the growing awareness,” saidRichard Levins, professor of biology, “thatbiological determinism is a strong forcewhich is being used not only against blackpeople, but also against working classpeople.” Levins stated that the priority ofCAR is to watch whether the ideas of Jensenare carried out, in the field of education, inthe behavior of social workers, in courtdecisions concerning integration, and inobligatory genetic testing.The professors interviewed stressed both the importance of the resolution, which urgesthe university senate to adopt measures toeliminate classroom racism, and the teach-in, which will describe the types of classroomracism which appear. Leonard Radinsky,professor of anatomy, commented, “Since somuch of the so-called life of the mind hererests on pontoons of racism and sexism, I’msure we could all learn from this teach-in.”Barbara Foley, student organizer of theteach-in, said that one purpose of the teach-inis “to acquaint people with the intellectualdishonesty which is necessary to give ascientific appearance to racist ideas.” Theteach-in, combined with other activities,Foley said, will help make the CAR “apowerful anti-racist organization ofintellectuals” which will “stem the alarmingadvance of racist theories and practices inthe University and in the society as a whole.”The teach-in will include a lecture oneugenic legislation by James Bowman,director of the sickle cell center; a lecture onracism in school tracking by Kenneth Kaye,professor of education; talks about the racistuses of standardized testing, genicidalaspects of family planning, the United FarmWorkers and Chicanos, and racism andwomen. There will be movies about Atticaprison, welfare, and the Farrah pants strike.Brent House Institutefor Intergroup CommunicationPanel DiscussiononWHAT IS HEALTHY SEXUALITY?E. Spencer Parsons, Dean of Rockefeller ChapelDr. Anne Seiden, Asst. Professor of Psychiatry,University of IllinoisMarilyn Moore, Director of TrainingDrexel Family Planning ClinicCharles J. Donnelly, Ph, D., Asst. Professor inPsychiatry Northwestern Univ. and U of CFriday, October 26 Follow-up WorkshopS p.m. at Brent House Saturday, October 27,5540 Woodlawn 9:30-4:00Cost Including lunch $2.50For further information cal!John W. Pyle, 753-339239b GIRLSEARN UP TO*50 PER NIGHTASAYou must be at least 19 years oldand be able to work two (2) or morenights per week.CALL MISS SHARON ROBERTSATCENTURY PRODUCTIONSWii. 66446051:304- The Chicago Maroon - Friday October 26,1973cSSrt?EDITORIALS LETTERS TO THE EDITORImpeachmentEditor’s note: The following editorial, which is being circulated nationwide amongcollege and university newspapers, is in fundamental agreement with the viewsalready expressed by the Maroon.Constitutional government in the United States may have been suspended at 8p.m. last Saturday night. Richard Nixon now rules by fiat and force. He is no longera legitimate leader.With callous disregard for his oath of office and the intents of Congress and theJudiciary, the President first refused to abide by a court order to produce Watergatedocuments. His later turnaround defused the immediate confrontation, but cannotobscure his repeated abuses of power. He then forced the resignation of the AttorneyGeneral and fired his Deputy and the Watergate special prosecutor when theyrefused to condone his conduct. Moreover, the President abolished the office ofspecial prosecutor and dispatched the FBI to seal off its records. These decisive andunprecedented actions represet the tactics of a military coup. They are anathema toa rational democratic policy.Even before these steps were taken, public confidence in the Nixon Ad¬ministration’s ability to govern was at one of its all-time lows. Now this support willdeteriorate still further. The mandate of 1972 has been buried in a legacy ofillegality, hypocrisy and deceit: San Clemente real estate deals, impoundment ofCongressional appropriations, widespread wire tapping, covert Cambodian bom¬bing and all of the ramifications of the Watergate affair — milk kickbacks, ITT, theEllsberg burglary.When elected officials violate the sacred trust placed in them by the people, theConstitution provides means for them to be impeached and, if convicted, removedfrom office. These procedures are very difficult to implement and are seldom used.But if ours were a parliamentary system of government, the Nixon Administrationwould have fallen months ago.Mr. Nixon cloaks his actions in a veil of legality, but his record as president bareshis intentions to foresake rule by law. The President must be impeached. Whileother judicial and legislative measures should be pursued, no amount of legaldouble-talk of political timidity can obscure this fact.There is a real question whether the Congress and the Judiciary can force RichardNixon to deal with them within the confines of the law. But our actions, for themoment, must be based on this premise. Members of the academic community havea special responsibility. They must not simply react to the latest outrage. Thisserves Mr. Nixon’s purpose. Instead, they must articulate the fundamental prin¬ciples which are at stake. They must impress upon congressmen and other nationalleaders the gravity of the situation and their duties under the Constitution. Mostimportantly, they must communicate the strength of their convictions to the public-at-large and join with others in a nationwide struggle for the preservation ofdemocratic rule.The methods of response are numerous. Now more than ever, we must write ourcongressmen. The balance of mail over the next few weeks will be critical. Sustainedpublic expressions of dissent — not matter what form they take — is equally im¬portant. A massive national student effort is essential.The weeks ahead could represent either the redemption of American democracyor the prologue to its collapse. We remain silent at our own peril.Endorsed to date by:Amherst StudentBucknellianChicago MaroonDuke ChronicleDaily PrincetonianThe DartmouthDickensonianClark University ScarletGrinned College Scarlet and BlackHampshire ClimaxHaverford-Bryn Mawr NewsIowa State DailyKansas State CollegianKentucky Kernel Michigan DailyMIT TechNIU Northern StarSmith SophianStanford DailyTrinity TripodUnion ConcordiensisU of Massachusetts Daily CollegianU of Rochester Campus TimesU of Virginia Cavalier DailyVassar MiscellanyWesleyan ArgusWilliams Record-AdvocateWisconsin Daily CardinalYale Daily NewsHarperThis weekend’s rededication of Harper Memorial Library as a College center is anhistoric campus event. The Harper events are evidence of a new commitment on thepart of the administration to the undergraduates. A college center is physical proofof the presence and the importance of the College on this campus. Undergraduateshave often complained that the University caters to graduate students at the ex¬pense of those struggling towards their bachelors degress.The “life of the mind” is a noble pursuit. The University of Chicago is noted for itsacademic excellence by those twin towers of research and scholarship. While thesegoals receive greater emphasis in the professional schools we are pleased that theUniversity is committed to its undergraduate population.We hope that after the speeches are given and the fanfare has ended that thiscommitment will remain. It is disturbing that some of the institution’s mostdistinguished faculty do not teach any undergraduate courses. The fostering ofacademic excellence deserves support from the beginning of a scholar’s sojourn inHyde Park. We believe the centralization of College offices in the Harper complexwill promote a more positive preoccupation with the desires and problems of theundergraduate student. MinibusIt is not surprising to me that a Universityminibus has finally been involved in anaccident, after having ridden them and seenthe gross disregard of the drivers for normaltraffic safety and courtesy. The driversusually travel at the maximum speed thatstreet conditions permit, leaving little, ifany, leeway for emergency situations. Theirspeed limit never seems to be dictated by the30 MPH city maximum. Up until now, theresult has just been hair-raising cornering,stripped transmissions, screeching brakesand ruined suspensions. Now we havepersonal injuries.The University is supposed to be concernedfor the students and the Hyde Parkcommunity. Now that there has been anaccident, maybe bus service will improve. Ifnot, the next stop would seem to be forindividuals to file complaints with the City toforce a crackdown on speeding, unsafebusses.Respectfully,Benjamin L. Blaneygraduate studentRacismRecent press coverage of a series ofapparently unrelated acts of violence inBoston, the actions of Boston Mayor Whiteand the comments of local police officialscould not have produced more anti-blackhysteria had they intended to do so.Each event has been distorted and blownup to make it appear part of a pattern or“wave.” The awful murder of Mrs. Wagler isportrayed as an act of racial violence solelyon the allegations that she had been asked toleave a mainly black area of Roxbury.Mayor White promptly offered a $5000reward for information about the murderers.Yet about a month ago there were seriousstabbings of black youths by whites at theRoosevelt Towers housing project inCambridge. Before that we had the slaying ofa black youth by a gang of whites in the “D”Street housing project in South Boston. Onlylast week during these other incidents, agroup of white youths waited for blackchildren from Columbia Point housingproject, causing the busses to be re-routed,and a policeman fired into the same projectlast Wednesday wounding a black teenager.All these acts were brutal and“sensational,” yet there were no bannerheadlines proclaiming racially motivatedincidents, no rewards offered, no “humaninterest” stories.The terrible stabbing death of Mr. Barba isgiven banner headlines as a mass stoning by50 youths. Even when it is shown to be the actof a few isolated individuals, it is still talkedabout as part of a “wave”. Finally, therobbery-murder of the cab driver isproclaimed to be more evidence of a wave.As cited above, there are hundreds of acts ofviolence against blacks in Boston, some ofthem clearly racist, which receive no suchattention and are not labeled “raciallymotivated” even when they are.Another feature of the recent events is thatevidence of black-white unity has beenplayed down. For example, the BostonGlobe’s coverage of the events at DorchesterHigh failed to point out the substantial unityof students. Some black students evensuggested changing the name of blackstudies courses so that more whites wouldtake them. And all students were united inopposition to the rotten conditions in theschool.As educators we have to oppose theirresponsible and dangerous attempts ofmen like Arthur Jensen to portray blacks asgenetically less intelligent, to cite oneexample among many of the recent upsurgein press and city officials worthy of thesharpest condemnation. We recommend thatthe city officials and press pay full attentionto improving schools in which our childrenare not taught to read, housing among theworst in the nation, and growing black-whiteincome differences rather than to making“waves” where none exist.Yours truly, Prof. T.J. Anderson,Music, Tufts;Prof. Seymour Beilin,Sociology, Tufts;Prof. Norman Daniels,Philosophy, Tufts,Committee Against Racism;Prof. Ali Banuazizi,Psychology,Boston College;Prof. Seymour Leventman,Sociology,Boston College;Prof. William Ryan,Psychology,Boston College, author,Blaming the Victim;Prof. Charles Smith,Urban Education,Boston College ;Prof. Douglas Davidson,program director,Afro-American Studies,U. Mass, at Boston ,Prof. Monique Garrity,Economics,U. Mass, at Boston;Prof. Raynomd Torto,Chairman,Economics II,U. Mass, at Boston;Prof. Charles Betsey,Economics,U. Mass, at Boston;Jonathan Kozol,author,Death at an Early Ageeditor’s note: Professor Lewontin was aprofessor of biology here until the end oflast year.SoccerI found the Maroon soccer article (October23,1973) both amusing (in an ironic way) andirritating, and having watched the team fortwo years, I would like to make a few com¬ments at this time.I think it only fair to rectify the epithet“inferior” in describing the ITT team. In thefirst place, anyone who knows anythingabout soccer could see that the ITT team,although a rough-playing team, was anobviously better team than the Maroonswere. Coach Vendl’s comments were par¬tially correct—the team did overratethemselves and underrate the opponents, butas far as a unrealistic Through the LookingGlass vision: the Maroon team, contrary toMr. Vendl, was extremely fortunate to scorethe two goals they did score. If it weren’t forthose penalty kicks, the Maroons probablywouldn’t have scored at all.I respect Dennis Ball’ skill in soccer im¬mensely and it is clear even to one whodoesn’t know anything about the game, thatthe man knows what he is doing. One can beContinued on page 6Prof. Richard Lewontin,Genetics, Harvard University,Committee Against RacismWesley Profit,Afro-American Studies,Harvard UniversityThe Chicago Maroon - Friday,The Chicago MarooneditorMark Gruenbergmanaging editorJeff Rothnews editorTim Rudybusiness managerRich Bakerassoctet* editor*Stave Durbin Clara Hemphillphotogrephy editorJohn Voilsports editorMike Kraussassistant business managerAnn ThornestaffDave BlumbergRalph BrunswickJoon CecichRobert ChorkovskyKurt HansonJim IhdeJoel JotterJim KaplanMelinda Kanner Mike KlingensmithBrian McGaheyDavid McGovernMike McMahonJonathon RobinsonMichoel RudyBarbara Shapi. oMark SpeiglanNorma BuchananWcsh>ngtor, bureauMichoel SussmcnOctober 26, 1973 -5TRB from Washington: What's next?WASHINGTON, October 23 — RichardNixon has thrown away his election mandatemore quickly and completely than any otherPresident in history. It is something toconsider as the anniversary of his greatpolitical landslide approaches.Mr. Nixon’s trouble is self-induced unlikethat of the unfortunate Herbert Hoover whowas rolled over by the 1929 depression.Unlike Hoover, Nixon did it alone andunaided. This is no mean feat for any man.Generally, election winners makeconciliatory statements and try to healwounds. All the more reason for Mr. Nixon tohave done this in 1972 because those of theleectorate who bothered to vote showed bygiving Democrats control of Congress thatthey didn’t care for him very much. Butbeing magnaminous isn’t easy to do whenyou live in a mansion that is like a besiegedpalace and when you consider your criticshave bare motives. In a historic interviewpublished on the heels of his victory, Mr.Nixon continued his attack on the"breakdown” of "the leadership class,”characterized the "average American” as“just like the child in the family, ” and gave apromise of a “strong” foreign policy (whichrather makes you shudder in today’s MiddleEast war).Mr. Nixon misinterpreted the mood of thecountry and his own election mandate. Hehad a chance to end his isolation, to disbandhis conspiratorial clique and to mellow in victory. He didn’t. He was as aloof as ever,held no more press conferences, let fewcongressmen past his guards.In short, the Haldeman — Ehrilichmanregime was stronger than ever. ThePresident showed a kind of zest in provokingformer opponents. He seemed eager to hitCongress before it hit him. He put forwardextraordinary claims of inpoundment and ofexecutive privilege, and without waiting forthe consent of Congress undertook theconsolidation of the Cabinet into super-postswatched over by agents from the innernetwork.It wasn’t really Watergate that toppled theapplecart, I think; it was a manifestation ofthe spirit that surrounded the wholeadministration. You can pick out your ownexample. The claim of John Mitchell of"inherent right” to tap wires without judicialapproval (thrown out unanimously by theSupreme Court); the argument by attorneygeneral Kleindienst that none of the 2.5million federal employees need testify toCongress “if the President so commands”;the activities of eager little Howard Phillips, acting director of OEO, to dismantle thatpoor-man’s agency before Congress couldstop him.What a change in one year. Who could havebelieved it then? Mitchell, Stans,Ehrlichman, Haldeman all gone. TheAgnew. I pasted up on my wall a page from anewspaper, date May 26, with pictures of thewhole Watergate crew. One by one Icrossed them out with a red pencil. Eighteen—all gone. Some are awaiting trial, someindicted, some in jail.It began before Watergate, however;before the election. Jimmy Hoffa had hissentence suddenly commuted by thePresident; the Teamsters made nicecontributions to the campaign. There wasITT, the dairy case, the delivery of $200,000in cash by an agent of international financialfreebooter Vesco. The wiretaps, the break-ins, the sneaky bit of telling the judge in theEllsberg case that he was being consideredto be FBI chief. It went on and on.The public is sick and tired of it. It wantsout. A year ago there was a cheerful reactionas there is after every election, and many Democrats joined in. The atmosphere hadcleared, they said, and the nation could goback to normal things. It didn’t turn out thatway. Think of the extraordinary tableaux wehave had recently.Elliott Richardson, the Boston blueblood,on national television, praising Agnew forresigning as though he were a publicbenefactor instead of a crook...Mr. Nixonfestively announcing the name of JerryFord, as merry as a jog on a coffin. (ThankGod, the Supreme Court stayed away). Afterthat, Ford himself in various interviews —the likeable Congressional second-rater, whowill never overshadow the President norworry about the poor. Most recent scene-thefinal pathetic, boring speech of broken SpiroAgnew.You say to yourself, this can’t last, this isover now; thak heavens we are through thewoods! Not at all, I am afraid, The thingstretches ahead. All the trials of theWatergate crew; the business with Agnewover his income tax penalties; the prospectthat the Supreme Court will slap Mr. Nixondown on the tapes as two lower Federalcourts have already done. It’s a suspensedrama; we should get that Supreme Courtepisode fairly soon.That isn’t the end perhaps. Questions, likeflies, swarm around Mr. Nixon’s finances.The sullen, cynical public is ready to believeanything now.COMMENTARYLETTERS TO THE EDITORContinued from page 5thankful to have such a player on a team. Butwhen a man is "the entire offense” in a gameand scoring is largely a matter of “anamazing individual effort,” one tends towonder where the rest of the team is.Because I follow the team rather closely, Iknow that there is good material onthis soccer team, but good material withoutskill, training and discipline doesn’t help anyteam much. Let’s face it. We have a betterteam than we had last year, but we still donot have a good team. We’ve won most of thegames because the other teams were thatmuch worse than ours, not because we aresomething magnificent to behold on theplaying field.When this team sees itself as it is, a lot ofindividuals playing on the same side (andsometimes I wonder about even that much),it will be in a position to do something aboutit—if it has any kind of pride in what they doat all. Maybe next season it can win becauseit deserves to win. „ . „E.L.G. Spieglan replyI would like to reply to the letter fromMarjorie Feren of Women for Peace aboutmy article on their nuclear energy seminar.I agree completely with her complaint thattheir vote to support Sen. Mike Gravel’snuclear plant moratorium bill was notreported; actually, this was included in myarticle but was edited from it; the Marooneditorial staff will have to accept respon¬sibility for this. As for my article being “one¬sided,” space in the article was allotedroughly in proportion to the length of eachtalk, and Lee Botts was preceded by twospeakers, both of whom talked longer thanshe. Nevertheless, I felt I treated Ms. Botts’points with at least as much seriousness asthose of the other speakers.Since Ms Lens made it clear at the startthat Women for Peace does not trust theAEC, and since Mr. Gardiner repeatedlyclaimed that he spoke only for himself, I didnot consider subsequent debates about theAEC’s credibility to be of crucial im-portance. Nor did repeated accusations that Commonwealth Edison seeks to make moneylead to a particularly enlighteningdiscussion. Mr. Downey’s attempts to por¬tray his company as a public benefactorwere at worst laughable, but they had little todo with the issue of nuclear safety. It seemsto me that if nuclear plants are dangerous,they ought to be banned, and if they are safe,they ought to be built, regardless of thecompany’s motivations. But perhaps I haveonce again “missed the point.”I need not apologize, I think, for excludingindividual points in the interest of makingthe article hang together, but if I left outsome points against nuclear plants, I also leftout of the very valid point made by a research¬er from Argonne that if there is a riskfactor from nuclear plants, there is also aclearly established increase in the death rateattributable to air pollution from coal-firedplants. Nor did I mention that Women forPeace had clearly decided what conclusionswould be drawn from this “seminar” beforeit ever began. The hostility shown the pro-nuclear speakers was striking. And in heropening denunciation of nuclear power plants, Ms. Lens included, incredibly, theNational Accelerator Laboratory. In caseanyone besides Ms. Lens doesn’t know, thepurpose of NAL is elementary particlephysics research, not fission powergeneration.As it was edited, the article was concludedwith a quote from Ms. Botts criticizingdependence on nuclear power, and nowheredid I try to give the impression that nuclearpower is safe or inject any personal opinionsat all. I do not write this letter to defendnuclear power, about whose safety I remainunconvinced, but to complain about theclosed-mindedness of many members ofWomen for Peace. There is no “play-it-safe”energy policy, as the current Mideastsituation should convince us. Whatever ourdecision, it should be dictated not by AECbureaucrats or noisy crusaders, but bycareful study of all alternatives and, as Ms.Botts rightly pointed out, by asking thepeople.Mark J. SpieglanThe Adventures of A<HAIA<LAU»(pronounced: AH-HI-YA KLAUSS) From the prestigious vineyards of Achaia Clauss comes CASTELDANIELIS, the dry, vintage red wine of Greece. This excellent tablewine should be served at room temperature.WhilleS,HAVE YOUEVER TASTED\CASTEL DANIELISREP TABLE WINE YES,18/)TH£IN IT,...\ I CLIMB INTOA WINE GLASSEVERY NITE. EXCEPTFOR MYHB£L>ITS TOUGHT0 6ETYOURWHOLEBODYINTO AWINE GLASS. EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESKURT ROSENBAUMOptometristCEF presents Saturday, Oct. 26 1.00Cobb Hall MY NIGHT AT MAUD'S 7:00 & 9:156- The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 26, 1973ABOUT THE MIDWAYPhilosophy clubThere will be a meeting of the newly-formed undergraduate philosophy club at4:30 on Thursday, November 1, in theClassics hall philosophy commons room.Faculty guests will be invited, and there willbe a discussion of some activities planned bythe club. The activities will include films, apublication, colloquia and lectures by bothmembers of the University community andby outside speakers. All students in theCollege who have an interest in some aspectof philosophy are invited to attend.Refreshments will be available.BandThe University of Chicago MarchingHundreds Band is looking for new members.We need trumpets and all that brass,woodwinds galore, and anything else thatcould be defined, however loosely, as amusical instrument. Organizational meetingwill be Sat, the 27 at Stagg Field at 1:15.Bring that old instrument out and playaround!Freshman electionsThere is still time to run for a freshmanseat in the SG assembly. Candidacy formsare available at the student governmentoffice or at the student activities office in IdaNoyes. Any freshman who wishes to runmust return this form with his signature andthe signatures of 10 other freshmen to the SGoffice by Wednesday, October 31. The SGoffice is open from 11:30 to 1:30 weekdaysand will be open all afternoon Wednesday the31st. The elections themselves will be heldThursday and Friday, Nov 1 & 2.GuardianTwo representatives of the Guardian, aradical newsweekly centered in New York,will be in Chicago today and this weekend topromote the organization of a Chicagobureau for their paper and to recruit newreporters.Barbara Dane, folk singer of “people’ssongs of struggle,” and Irwin Silber,executive editor of the Guardian, will speakin an open session and answer questionsabout the format of the paper and the paper’sposition on political issues. Dane and Silberwill be at Circle Campus today at noon, atWellington Ave. Church (615 W. Wellington)tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. and at NortheasternUniversity Monday at 1 p.m.The Guardian, which has been published inNew York for 25 years, is now organizingbureaus in several cities across the country.Richard Remenih, organizing the Chicagobureau, said that the paper is intended “toprovide a platform for left wing criticismand debate.”The paper has traditionally reportedworking-class movements, strikes, politicaldemonstrations, and “world-wide strugglesagainst imperialism. The paper crusaded forschool integration, against the McCarthywitch-hunts, and, in more recent years, hassupported the women’s movement, Blackliberation, Chicano, Puerto Rican, and In¬dian movements, and prisoners’ rights.The Guardian is independent of any onepolitical group, and reserves the right to allyitself with—or oppose—any particular group. ExhibitsYEARBOOK: Sign up now to get your copy of the 1973-74 revival of the yearbook.Photo by Mike Haisten.of the American Red Cross, and theSuburban Community Chest Council with 92of its member Chest funds into one annualFor further information, write the Chicagobureau at post office box 30031, Chicago60630, or call Remenih at 721-84%.ParadeWith the Lower Brass Conspiracy, a bagpiper, a sixty-five piece marching band, anda calliope providing musical ac¬companiment, the Harper-Wieboldt Paradewill weave its way across the campus thisafternoon. The display of muscle will beprovided by participating plant departmentvehicles, including lawnmowers withmowing bars raised in salute, a streetsweeper, an almost obscene leaf vacuum,and other units of plant department armour.Other highlights will include a facultybicycle corps, baton twirlers, the giantkazoo, a vehicle sent by the “UniversityNational Bank and Storm Door Company”(what other bank would do something likethis?), and several student organizations,including Zero Population Growth pushingan empty baby-stroller. Beginning at 1:30,the parade will end up at the Field Housewhere the Men’s and Women’s PhysicalEducation Departments are running a fieldday comprised of frisbee throwing contestsand similar frivolities. All students and staffare invited to participate in the parade andthe field day. Nickel refreshments will beoffered during the afternoon. campaign.Seven of the priority services whichreceive Crusade funds through the Com¬munity Fund of Chicago are: foster care forchildren; family and individual counseling;social rehabilitation services for youth;home health care services; day care; groupcare for aged and chronically ill people; andservice to the handicapped child.The goal for the 1973 Crusade of Mercycampaign is $36,800,000, and increase of $4million over last year’s goal. In addition to the many widely publicizedevents surrounding the Harper rededication,there are some interesting exhibits ondisplay about the college. These are intendedto serve as indications of how the college haschanged over the years.A photography exhibit is now on display onthe first floor corridor of Harper Library.Ms. Janet Kravetz has spent the last monthcompiling over sixty photographs portrayingthe humor, the changes, and the attitudes ofthe University over the last eighty years. Thematerial, gleened from the archives inRegenstein, is all college oriented and waschosen on the basis of its visual explicitness.Kravetz obtained the aid of the biologicalsciences division audio-visual department inrestoring some of the material. Someexcellent reproductions were made fromfaded and deteriorated copies of oldyearbooks, alumni magazines, and otherphotographic collections.In the Bartlett Gym trophy room an exhibitof undergraduate athletic accomplishmentswill be on display, largely commemoratingthe accomplishments of James Alonzo Stagg,the athletic director of the University forover forty years. Stagg, who was with theUniversity from 1892 until 1932, was the firstto hold faculty rank as physical educationteacher.The exhibit consists of trophies that peoplein the college have won as well as notes,trophies, and other articles of Stagg’scareer.A third exhibit, on the second floor ofHarper, is a display of student art. It consistsof the works of undergraduates at theMidway art studio. There willapproximately twenty-five works ofranging from prints to sculptureceramics to painting.All of these exhibits explore some area ofundergraduate life, in particular the changesand accomplichments of the last eightyyears. beartandCALENDARFriday, October 26MercyBob Hale, WMAQ-TV personality, will bethe guest speaker Monday, October 29, at akick-off program for the University’s par¬ticipation in the Crusade of Mercy.Hale will speak at 4 p.m. at the Univer¬sity’s center for continuing education, 1307East 60th Street.The Crusade of Mercy is the largest andmost inclusive charitable drive in the city. Itcombines the appeals of the CommunityFund of Chicago, the Mid-America Chapter Colloquium: "Cycling of Elements Through Geologic Timeand Controls of Atmospheric Oxygen." Robert M. Garrels,Department of Geological Sciences, NorthwesternUniversity. 3:30 p.m. Auditorium, Henry Hinds Laboratory.Refreshments at 3:00 p.m. Common Room.Music: Jim Post sings and plays at the Blue Gargoyle.Admission: $1.50 8:30 p.m.Postponed: Ess talk. See Tuesday, Oct. 30Saturday, October 27Football: Maroons vs. Oberlin College. Celebrate HarperVent, join the Kazoo band. Stagg Field, 1:30 p.m.Cross-Country: See 75 runners reach the heights of ecstasyand the depths of despair. University of Chicago Invitational4 mile run. Washington Park, 11:00 a.m. date for Palestine." Kelly 413, 4:00 p.m.Chess Class: Ida Noyes 2nd floor, 6:15 p.m. Basic OpeningPrinciples.Chess Tournament: Round 2 of USCF rated event. Entryfee: 25c plus $3 club dues plus USCF membership. 7:15 p.mIda Noyes.Perspectives:Review: "The Way We Were, "Barbra Streisand's andRobert Redrord's new film for Columbia, now playing atoutlying theatres, is looked at by Marsha Dewell, Lecturerin the University of Chicago Extension. WBBM AM 3:18p.m. WHPK FM (88.3) 8:00 p.m.Tuesday, October 30Sunday, October 28Sunday Seminar: Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. ChapelUndercroft 9:45 to 10:45 a m. Discussion led by TheReverend Lawrence M. Bouldin, United MethodistChaplain.Reformation Sunday: University Religious Service,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 am. Preacher: TheReverend E. Spencer Parsons, Dean of the Chapel. "ToTrust or Not To Trust"Monday, October 29Lecture: Jehuda Karmon, professor Hebrew University."Political and Geographical Background of British Man-KIMBARKLIQUORS•WINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to youlINI ONLY TME WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARK53RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 E. 53rd St.53-Klmharh Pia«i NY 3-3355 LUNCHEONALLYOU CAN EAT$275BREAKFASTSERVIOFROM 8 A M. PER PERSONSOUTH SHORE DRIVE RESTAURAHT(Formerly MORTON'S)5550 So. Shore Drive 643-8181-2 Spanish: For all levels of conversation or reading skills,meet at Room B, International House, 6:30 p.m.Review: Comedian Don Rickies and singer Enzo Stuarti,now appearing at Mill Run, are talked about by JaySchleusener, Assistant Professor In the Department ofEnglish. WBBM AM 3:18 p.m. WHPK FM 8:00 p.m.UNICEF: The Friends of UNICEF will be collecting contributions in Cobb Hall and Mandel corridor during themorning and afternoon.Lecture: Professor Joseph Van Ess, Department of NearEastern Studies Tubingen University. "Heretics andSkeptics in Islam." Pick 319, 4:30.Recital: Mr Edward Mondello, University Organist willgivea lecture recital at the Choirloft Console, 12:15p.m.Meeting: Astronomical Society meeting, Eckhart 209, 7:30p.m.It always seemed to me that our fellowshave two passions: ideas and for¬nication. —Camus.BRENT HOUSESUNDAY SUPPER - DISCUSSION’’A PERSONAL STATEMENT ON TRANSCENDENCE"byProfessor Karl F. MorrisonChairman, Department of History6 PM SUPPER $1.00 7 PM PROGRAMALL WELCOMEThe Chicago Maroon-. Friday, October 2©. 1,973-7Harper renovation and rededicationThe University’s new College center,Harper Memorial Library, was officiallydedicated yesterday afternoon. Originallybuilt in 1912, Harper was renovated at a costof $2.6 million provided by the Kresge,Mellon, and Gulf Oil Foundations.Many of the College’s administrativeoffices have already moved to the renovatedHarper and Wiebolt buildings. The centerwill contain the offices of the dean of theCollege, the dean of undergraduate studentsin the College, the advisors, Collegeadmissions, and College financial aid.Photos by Susie Lyon.HAVILL'SRADIO, TELEVISION& HIGH KIDKI.mSALES SERVICE & ACCESSORIES/t-nilh — /'an«<»ni(Mnxieruurk — Kill1X1 E. 53rd, Chieagt 6X15 • PL 2-780045 Years Serving Hyde Park• EYE EXAMINATIONS• CONTACT LENSES• PRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDDR. MORTON R. MASLOVDR. AARON ZIMBLERHyde Park Shopping Center1510 E. 55th St.i 363-63638* The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 26, 1973 BRIDALSHOWERSBride Dolls with Candle Holders.Umbrella and Sprinkling Cans,Nut cups and Fovors' Gift wrap and BowsBndol Shower Gifts tor the brides maids to give Bride s Filebox with 200 cards Book on the Ceremony of the BridalApron Ring Pillow Garters Assortment ot Brides Books.Bow Bag Money Bog -Prom GartersWedding invitationsSpecial Student DiscountsSpecial! 100-SIG.tSCAROLYN CREATIONS17 N. State St 641*1955 Suite 1312 JAMESWAYPETERSONMOVING & STORAGECall 6465f411646-1234 free estimatesCompletePre-Planned Moving ServiceLocal e Long Distance e Packing e CratingImport-ExportContainerized StorageFormerly el General OfficeVy/ 53th A Cllls 12*55 So. Dotyresults in a center for the College. Professor Mary B. EmeryUNIVERSITY OFSANTA CLARASCHOOL OF LAWtwill be on campus for law school in¬terviews on November 1, starting at 9:30A.M. For an appointment please contactCareer Counseling and Placement. ROCKEFELLER MEMORIALCHAPELREFORMATION SUNDAYOctober 28,1973 11:00 a.m.E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the ChapelMTO TRUST OR NOT TO TRUST"SUNDAY SEMINARRockefeller Memorial Chapel Undercroft9:45 - 10:45 a.m. Piscussion: “Reality Prin¬ciples: Demythorogizing vs. VisionaryKnowledge" Leader: The Reverend LawrenceM. Bouldin, United Methodist Chaplain. IIBeat your friends to the lop.The Swiss Alps, top of the world forskiers, and Swissair Jets you to the slopesSOFA gives you your pick of the peaks.Davos, Klosters, Leysin, Scouls, Verbier, AZermatt Top mountains. Top conditions. MTop lodgings. Spend a week withstudents from all over the world. _ T*_lBreakfasts and dinners to keep |you going day and night. I Vwi II fc9^l i%WI MTransfers, taxes and tips, too.A top-flight deal for as lowas $313. Stay a second weekfor as littie as $50. Details in w. . cncA. ioCThe Student Skier. > M Sk' ™w New York 10022 (212) PL 1 -8000(wthSOFARush coupon today.$33 mName _Address.City/State/Zip.Date of BirthThe Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 26, 19/3-9Student Government: a woeful taleBy DAVID SOBELSOHNthe loser in last year's SG election.Statements in Tuesday’s Maroon by MarkBrickeU and Tom Cook (President and V.P.of SG), made the best comic reading of theday, outside of the Chicago Tribune editorialpage.First, if Mr. Brickell is requesting any lessmoney for SG this year based on theassumption that there will be a few SFACourt meetings, he is sadly mistaken. I donot believe that those of us in SG who see hiselection and the election of many membersof his “Reform” slate last Spring assomething less than fully legal will let thematter drop so quickly. Only a view that SGis worthless and should be disbanded (a viewperhaps not without merit), would promptsuch gross neglect on our pent.I pay little attention to Brickell’s“humorous interjection” about “scalpingballots”. I’m not sure how humorous that is,considering he’s making light of what wasprobably a criminal offense cm his part.It is interesting, however, that Brickellsees no “reason to meet” for the SGAssembly. Often, in the past, the Assemblyhas met to approve the recommendations ofthe Elections and Rules Committee con¬cerning elections. Granted, most of the timethis has proved no more than a “rubberstamp” of the E & R Committee’s decision.Last year, however, this was seldom thecase. Furthermore, such a review should beuseful in preventing fiascos such as lastyear’s freshman elections.“No pressing business, except for . . . thespeakers fund”, he says. I imagine thoseorganizations seeking allocations from thefund see it as somewhat more than in¬consequential.Of course, the SG Constitution requires atleast one SG Assembly meeting per month.On the other hand, I expect this to make littledifference to Mark Brickell. It’s funny thathe calls for “constitutional changes”. Heseems to have managed quite well lastSpring with the present Constitution; hesimply ignored it!The most amusing part of the article wasBrickell’s announced support for a Con¬stitutional amendment to “allow studentrepresentatives who move out of their constituencies to continue to represent thatsame constituency”. If this had been in effectlast year, Aimee Grieb (SG Treasurer),Scott Williams (Sec’y of the UndergradHouse), and Anita C. Jarmin (Chairman ofCORSO and thus perhaps the most, or maybeGADFLYthe only, powerful individual in SG), amongothers in the “Reform” party, would likelyhave not run for a seat in SG, since they alllived (and at least Ms. Grieb and Ms. Jarminstill do), in Shorey House, Brickell’s ownconstituency, and from which he was elec¬ted.These “Reform” party members were allelected from the “Other College” con¬stituency, while, of course, actually residingin Pierce Tower (some on Brickell’s ownfloor, I’m told). “No representative shall beelected from an electoral unit unless he is avoter in that unit”, states Article II, Section4. “Other College” includes specificallythose college students not residing in theHousing System. Don’t ask me what hap¬pened, ask Brickell; the SFA Court is stilltrying to figure it out.So Brickell wants to improve the “qualityof life” of the graduate students? “They havebeen neglected by the SG in the past”, hesays. Or taken for granted by certainmembers of SG. There was reasonablesuspicion, last Spring, that John Jensen, aBrickell supporter in the Business School,had simply written in the names of fivefriends of his as candidates for SG from theBusiness School, without bothering to letthem fill out their candidacy forms bythemselves. For example, one of the“signatures” was misspelled! What abrilliant way to, as Brickell says, “fill thatgap”!Tom Cook, SG Vice-President, made aparticularly funny contribution to the article.What SG needs, Cook pointed out, quiterightly, is “a start towards getting morestudents interested in SG. That means alarger student vote . . . and more studentsinterested in working for SG.” May I humblypoint out that students need to know SG1SIDDHARTHAis an exquisite movie!■ —net neeD Syndicated Columi r"Both in music andvisible beautythe picture is acontinuing delight.”—nncHen winstln. n y Pott"Impossiblybeautiful to theeye. Visuallyexquisite.”—BERNARD DREW. Gannett News Service"A visuallyexquisite film...an unusual andwelcomeexperience.”—WILLIAM WOLF, CueCOLUMBIA PICTURES PRESE MTS CONRAD BOOKS Hf OMANN MfSSf SMOOMARTKA - STARRING ShaShi KAPOOR S'M'GAREwa,PROOuCEO D'RECTCO AMO WRITTEN EOR The SCREEN 0r CONRAD ROOKSphotographed er sven nykvist ».n»v.son» ,,,,,,,,,, »"A special film for specijaudiences, for devoteesof Hesse’s novels, foradmirers of the exotic,and for everyonewho wants to beadventurousin film going.” ial-Gene shalit wnbc-tvMIDWEST PREMIERE TODAYUA MARINA CINEMAS WILMETTE HOMEWOOD UA CINEMA 2 400M«rm« City Wilmette Homewood Oak brook 6746 N Sheridan *d exists (many don’t!), in order to become“interested” in SG? May I further suggestthat perhaps leaving the SG office in IdaNoyes locked during Student Activities Nightthis year (Brickell was “busy” elsewhere,and “so much recent bad publicity aboutSG” had made it unfair, in Brickefl’s eyes,for “forcing” anyone but himself to sit in theoffice and speak tc students), was not quitethe best way of helping to accomplish thatmonumental task of getting this campusinterested in SG?“In all my years in SG”, Brickell declares,“I haven’t seen voting along lines of con¬stituencies.” Residence makes little dif¬ference, he claims, and “voting falls alongparty affiliation”. What a joke! The“Reform party” might be more accuratelytitled “The Shorey House Party”! With partylines formed along residence lines(specifically contrary to the Constitution ornot), I guess from Brickell’s personal ex¬perience, party makes at least as great adifference as residence!Brickell’s observation strikes one as evenmore ludicrous, considering that parties inSG are usually formed for the expresspurpose of getting one particular slate ofcandidates elected to the Executive Counciland CORSO, and very frequently dissolvesubsequently, seldom, with only one recentexception (OBS), voting with any kind ofcohesion through the year.But by far the most outrageous, most in¬conceivable statements made by Brickell inthe entire article were “If we can get theassembly to quit squabbling among them¬selves, we have a much greater possibility ofbecoming a lobbyist for student needs”, andthat the “general failure” (the words ofSteve Durbin, the writer of the article), oflast year’s SG was a result of “too muchdissension among the assembly members.Nobody recognized ... we all wanted to . . .improve student life.”It’s absolutely incredible that MarkBrickell could say that! Much of last year’s“squabbling” was participated in, and en¬couraged by, Mark Brickell himself!!Brickell was a driving force behind the “impeachment” or “removal from office” ofRon Davis, last year’s E & R CommitteeChairman. I vigorously opposed this move,cm the grounds that members of SG were notelected to play stupid games, but to getsomething done! And when Brickellprevented the reinstatement of several SGmembers suspended for missing meetings, Istrenuously argued that having been dulyelected, and being present at the meeting,they deserved a voice in the proceedings.“Getting more students interested in SG”!What bullshit! Here, one of the few reallyimportant meetings of the entire year, andBrickell spearheads the drive to preventelected representatives from exercisingtheir vote!! This encourages interest?!It’s all so ridiculous. Brickell gave aspeech last Spring, at the meeting where hewas elected, in which he praised last year’sSG president, Tom Campbell. Later on, in aMaroon interview, he stated that Campbellhad performed admirably under favorableconditions. “Under unfavorable conditions”,meaning not having an Assembly thatagreed with his every move!! In my speech,last year, I described Cambell’sadministration as “ineffectual”, and aswasting too much time on internal bullshit,and not enough time on the students of thiscampus. I accuse Mr. Campbell of being onemajor cuase of last year’s “squabbling” and“dissension”. Campbell and Brickell, as wellas Campbell’s disciple, Dinnis Navarra, allhad great fun playing at “parliamentarydemocracy”. As if SG existed just for suchcrap!! As Steve Durbin pointed out in thearticle, Brickell once said that SG’s primarypurpose was “keeping student politicians offthe streets and out of the Administration’shair.” Damn it, the only place for “studentpoliticians” is on the Administration’s hair!!How else can the student body here everaffect any changes??I readily agree with Mark Brickell. Hisfeelings “don’t always match reality”. Infact, I would say they seldom do. Maybe he’llhave fun again this year, but it doesn’t seemas if he’ll ever be helpful in SG “workingtogether smoothly”.And furthermore, if you are especially adeptin certain foreign languages, the NationalSecurity Agency is ready to give youimmediate language assignments, advanced,refresher, or special vocabulary training ormay even train you in an entirely newlanguage.Career language positions are available in thefields of translation, transcription, analysisand documentation. Fluency in speaking is notessential, but knowledge of idiomatic,colloquial and dialectal variations is desirable.LANGUAGE AiAJGRSNSA speaks your languageAt NSA you will be joining an Agency ofnational prominence—a unique civilianorganization responsible for developing"secure" communications systems to transmitand receive vital information.NSA offers you this opportunity to furtherbroaden your knowledge of modern languageor area studies, and to use your talents in achallenging and rewarding career while youenjoy also the broad, liberal benefits of Federalemployment. In return, we ask that you notonly know your language, but that you beflexible, naturally inventive and intellectuallycurious. That's a lot to ask.Do you fit the picture? Where to go ... what to do: Languageapplicants must take the ProfessionalQualification Test (PQT) as a prerequisite toNSA interviews for employment. Pick up aPQT Bulletin at your Placement Office, the.sooner the better. It contains a briefregistration form which must be received inBerkeley, California by November 21 forthe December 1 test.College Relations Branch, National SecurityAgency, Fort George G Meade, Maryland20755. Attn: M321. An equal opportunityemployer, M/F.FOLLOW THE PARADE TO THE HELD DAY10- The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 26, 1973MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS► CLASSIFIEDSU.C. people SO'/llne; 40'/line repeorNon U.C. people 75'/llne; 607line repeatCall 753-3266 for information.The Maroon officewill be CLOSED thisafternoon—-I ncelebration of thefirst U. of C. paradein 3D yearsl SPACE WANTEDWanted to Rent: March 1 to Oct. 30.House or apartment for VisitingProfessor and family. 753 8621.SCENES"Healthy Sexuality" discussion atLuther's Table Talk 6.00 Mon.Gargoyle.Who but Jim Post would recordRattlesnake—See him live? Sanetuary, Thurs., 8. Fri. 8:30, $1.50.Astronomical Society meeting Tues.,Oct. 30, 7:30 p.m. in Eckhart 209. Allinterested students invited.SPACE You've loved him at The Earl of OldTown, mobbed him at Am-zingrace— Jim Post groupies UNITE!Sanctuary, 8:30, Friday.Live in gracious Kenwood Room torent for amiable student. 548 4748.Will share our house with anotherurban-oriented family to childrenabout 7, on terms to be resolved, 8.structure desired. 721-7165.Replacement wanted for dorm space.Any single student - will do. Call 2883025, evening.Deluxe 5 rm apt. on beautiful PaxtonAve., 6900 S. 2 bdrm., balcony, newlydecorated, carpeted, $200.WE'LL PAY $15 APIECE for any 2warm bodies who want into U of Chousing. Contact 915 E. 53, Rm. 105 or208. 753 3562 & 3563.Hyde Park COOP FOR SALE, 5rooms. Large well-kept backyard, newrefrig. Wail-to wall carpeting, din 8>liv. room. 947 6451 Mon.-Fri., 9 5.Garage 5508 Cornel 180 yr 18 Mo.Wilson.Female roommates wanted for largeEast Hyde Park apartment. Phone955 3808 or 924 9824.CHICAGO BEACH HOTELBEAUTIFUL FURNISHED APARTMENTS Near beach, parks I.C. trains,11 mins to loop U of C and loop buses atdoor. Modest daily weekly monthlyrates. 24 hr desk. Complete hotelservices. 5100 S. Cornell. Miss Smith,DO 3 2400.TENANT REFERRALREASONABLE RENTALSDESIRABLE APARTMENTSFurn. and unfurn.Lake Front CommunitySouth Shore Community Services 2343E. 71st St.See Monica Block667 2002 or 2004.PIONEER Co op 2 bedrm, garden apt.overlooking Ige lawn. Mod elec, appl.,off st. prk, free laundry, htg. Protectedplay area, gd. transp. Apt. equityabout $10,000. Low assessment. Tel.643 7732.Moving? Hire my van and me. CallAlan at 684 1175. Women'sGargoyle rap group 5:00 Sun.Cass is coming' Who? See Next Thurs.8. Fri. SANCTUARY. 8.30JIM POST Sanctuary in theGargoyle. Thurs. 8. Friday. 8:30 $1.50.Ken Bloom plays almost every in¬strument known to man. See himbacking up Jim Post - Sanctuary.Thurs. 8. Fri. 8:30. $1.50."A World Without Jews? TheChristian Dilemna." Talk by Prof.Coert J. Rylaarsdam, Friday at 8:30 atHillel, 5715 Woodlawn.PEOPLE FOR SALEExp. typist manu. diet. etc. IBM selec.947 6353, 779 8034,TYPIST exp. Call 752-8119 after 6 PMExpert Selectric Typing Free Pick Up8, Delivery Mss, Etc. 374-0081.Prof. Typing. I.B.M. Euip. 8. Diet.Reasonable Re-Types N.C. 734-7661.Experienced manuscript typing onIBM Selectric. 378-5774.Like Julian Bream's music? ForCLASSIC GUITAR STUDY 262 4689.Exp, typing. Neat work 947-0033.Russian by Exp. Native teacher. Triallesson no charge. 472-1420, CE6-1423.PEOPLE WANTEDRide wanted to Billings daily fromRiverdale 8 or 8:30—5. Parking paid 8<exp. Call 849 1260 after 6 p.m.Photographer needed generous salaryfor one job. Contact B. Jenkins, ph.753 3775.Students for part time contact work.Flixible hrs & good pay to those whoqualify. 736 9408 for interview.PORTRAITS 4 for $4 and up. MaynardStudios. 1459 E. 53, 2nd fl. 643 4083.Pierson to translate English toJapanese, part time, Mike, 263-0991.Female subjects between 21-29 yrs oldneeded to participate in research onthe behavioral and biological effects ofTHE VERSAILLES5254 S. DorchesterShort term leasesavailable. Well main-tained, securebuilding. Attractive1 Vi and 2 Vs roomstudios. Furnished orunfurnished. $124 to$172 utilities included.At campus bus stop.FA 4-0200 Mrs. Groakl THE FLAMINGOON THE LAKE5500South Shore DriveStudios from $158One bedroom from $170[Furnished or unfurnishedShort term leases752-3800Mrs. AdalmanJoe Louis Milk anesthetic drugs. Studies will takeapproximately 10-12 hours time inl3sessions over the course of 1 week. $75.For further information call Ann at947 6475.\ TYPIST - part-time, wanted to typeletters from drafts and manuscriptsfor publication. Accuracy important.50-60 words per minute. Good paybenefits. Located on U. of C. campus.Call Ms. Smith at 324 3400, Ext. 172.I TYPIST - for secretarial staff ofprogressive international association.Job involves typing letters from draftsand manuscripts for publication aswell as general office duties. Accuracyimportant. 50 60 words per minutetyping speed a must. Good pay andbenefits. Located on U. of C. Campus.Call Ms. Smith at 324 3400, Ext. 172.FOR SALE67 Mustang white, good condition,$425. Call after 6 PM 493 8783Leaving country—'66 Plym Fury, new,Aut. transm.—Call Leal 363 4300 $206.Garage and Bake Sale. Sat., Nov. 35710 Woodlawn Ave. 10 2 PM.CHANDLER'S, INC. ANNUALTEXTBOOK WAREHOUSESALE—Our entire warehouse stock ofover one million textbooks—new andused—both hardbound and paperback—current editions and out-ofprints—50% or more off list price.CASH AND CARRY ONLY. All salesfinal. Monday thru Saturday, October29th to Nov. 3rd, 9 A.M. to 5 P.M.,Chandler's, Inc. Textbook Division,New location at 1019 University Place,Evanston, Illinois. One block South ofEmerson and 1/2 block West offMaple. Directly across from the.Evanston city yards.For exotic art lovers? Nepalese andTibetan silk screens and wood cuts,reasonably priced. Call 241-6055 toarrange for a private showing.LOWER BRASSDidn't you just hate marching band inghig school? Get back at them! Bringthat instrument to the game! NOISELOSTOfficial UC Santa Calus beard andbelt. Lost last yr. Anyone with pertinent info call 3-3591. NO QUESTIONSASKED.GCJGJC ediotiral meeting at 7:30, Nov. 5.Maroon office.INT. FOLK FESTIVALInt. Folk Festival. Concert Sat. Nov. 38:00, Mandel Hall, $2 students, $2.50other. AlsoScandanavia, Romanian, 8,General Balkan dance workshop, IdaNoyes Fri. Sat. 8, Sun. Nov. 2 4, $1.50Student, $2 other (per workshop) Sat.8< week end rates available. For infocall Janet 955-8184 or Rachel 3 2233(426),CONSPIRACYDon't let Michigan State show us up!Join the U of C Marching HundredsSat. 1:30 at Stagg Field.FOLK DANCING8 PM at Ida Noyes Hall Sunday(general) Monday (beginners).Friday (requests) 50e donation. Forinfo call Janet 955 1499.HILLEL CLASSESYiddish now meets at 6:30 Mondays.u 20% DISCOUNTon Film andEnlarging PaperMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th493-6700Most Complete PhotoShop on South SidePRIDE YOUCAN POUR. The football games need more noise.Bring that old trumpet sax clarinetwhatever to the game Sat.CALL 373-0989Happiness is learning Needlecraftfrom Gunvor Refetoff. Work from ownDesigns Hook u Rug Knit or Crochet.Meet a new art Crewelpoint. Specialclasses for Children age 5 and up.REFRIGERATORRENTALMinifrige: Pennies a day, Billedmonthly. Call Swan Rental 721 4400WANTEDSmall one room humidifier. Call 9550818.FIREWOODSeasoned and Split hardwood. 1,1/2, or1/4 ton. Bsmt 8. upstair Del. 241 5430.SPANISH INTEREST?Exp Prof Native Inst Gd. Ref. COMETO Rm. B Int. Hse TuTh 6:30 PM orWRITE Box 19 Maroon for othertimes.MEDITATIONRuhani Satsang meditation groupevery Wednesday 8:00 Ida Noyes 213.STUDENT DISCOUNTWeeknights at the Efendi! 955-5151PLAY TENNIS6 Indoor courts, 3 outdoor courts.Private and group lessons availableSouth Side Raquet Club, 1401 E. Sibley,VI 9 1235. Americans for Freedom Chapter isforming. Organizational meeting:Monday, October 29, 4 PM at 5649 S.Dorchester. Call 947-8357 for moreinformation.BABY SITTERSNeeded for hosp staff. Days, eves. Call947 5217.FOLK DANCING8 p.m. at Ida Noyes Hall. Sunday(general), Monday (beginners).Friday (requests) 50c donation forinfo Call Janet 955 8184expeditionsEverglades wilderness boat trip xmasone week. Hickory 324 1499.STEP TUTORSStudent Tutoring Elementary Projectneeds volunteers to tutor biweekly.There are a lot of children who coulduse you help. If you are interested,please call Jay Sugarman at 947 8804or Mary Lou Gebka at 643 8266.PERSONALSE and L. Gibbon Where were you?We were there. Were you monkeying around with someone else?Who Ever You Were Com Tonite I'lllook for you at the door between 8 30and 8:45. E."Let knowledge gro from more tomore and so let human life beenriched." Guru Maharaji Ji. Want toshare freely with you the Knowledgeyou can't get from studying what isaround you, the Knowledge or consciousness of the peaceful centerwhich is the real you. This Knowledgeis discussed each night at 7:30 at 5026Greenwood. And this Knowledge istree. Really.PREGNANCY TESTING every Sat 104, 5500 Woodlawn. Cost $1.50 Bring 1stmorning urine sample.Feeling hirsutulous lately? Visit theReynolds Club Barber for immediatecure.Got a problem? Need information?Just want to talk? Call Changes 9550700 M-F 6 12. Blue GargoyleWRITERS' WORKSHOP (PL 2 8377)YEARBOOKBuy your copy of the 1974 cap andgown yearbook Wednesdays andFridays from 11:30-1:30 in the Quads.GAY LIBERATIONPROTEST NBC's recent anti Gayepisode of Sanford 8, Son TODAY 12:00noon. Merchandise Mart. Part of anation wide zap at anti Gay attitudesand their perpetuation in the minds ofour straight fellow people by themedia, et. al.The Chicago City Council will voteshortly on the repealing of the corss-dressing ordinance and on the creationof a new ordinance guaranteeing civilrights for gays. Call or write youalderman and ask him to vote in favorof these measures or call 947 9346 forinfo.Leave your sexist problems benind.Cheap thrills at the Gargoyle. Gay LibCoffeehouse. Beautiful people. Boogiemusic. Gourmet snacks. 5655University, 8-12.Office open Sun. thru. Thurs 7:30 to11:00 Ida Noyes 301. Come up or call753 3274.Sexual identity discussion Group - 7:30Thursdays Ida Noyes. Straights,Bisexuals, Gays, undecideds,welcome.YAFAttention all Conservatives andLibertarian! A U of C Young40% offon these specialsatTHE BOOK NOOK]"Across from the Co-op"THIS WEEK!new Neil Youngnew Elton Johnnew Islev BrothersLOUIE S BARBER SHOPWill style your hair as youwould like it done.1303 E. 53rd St.FA 4-3878/ (' 1 H ** , "V \£/ r s-.VV.X ^ V* ^ wwL' L JESSELSON’SI^FRESH FISH & SEAFOOD732-2870,732-8190,363-9186 -1340 E. 33rdBring iton home.Visit theColonelYou can pick up Col. Sanders' Kentucky Fried Chicken at:1513 E. HYDE PARK BLVD.ELECTIONSNominations openuntil Oct. 31Electionsto be heldThurs., Fri.,Nov. 1,2The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 26,1973 -11.'"lit • ! r<.K'!'3ft cnjiui O-ji' f 01THE LARGEST COLLECTION OFVINTAGE PORTiPort is at its best about SO years after it is bottled. Motevery year is a vintage year, nor are all vintage years ofequal quality. Our selection of vintages are as follows:1890-*50°°1900-*35®°1920-s25°"1984.*15°*1935.'ir 1941-*13°°1944. *5»»1955- *8“Vermont 3 year old Cheddar 99Dewars White LabelSehlitz Halt Gallon * 1 059With This Ad * *24 -12 oz> Cans *429Army and Navy Stores Ltd. . . . . ,na ^ u o r,, « . Unblended $1A5014 year old from Glen Grant Scotch lvFrench Sparkling BurgundyFrench Cold DuckFrench Sparkling White Wine 99Each112 Oz.Demi-JohnsAchaia Clauss Roditys With This Ad OnlyComplete PartyService From2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210 INFANDEL351 East 103rd Street508-1811Daily:9am-10pm Sunday: Noon-9pm12- The Chicago Maroon - Friday, October 26, 1973THC GOCONTOT — PdG€ 3CONTGTTOUR MILYBRG4D: 19IT dVMIWBL€111 HYD€ MRK?By LESLIE KOHNIn many respects Hyde Parkers are a demanding group ofpeople. They know what it is that they like, whether in termsof books, art, music, food, etc., and they are willing to exertthemselves in pursuit of their desires. In one respect,however, it would appear that they have knuckled under tothe increasing trend toward automation and mass productionat the cost of quality. What I refer to here is bread and otherbaked goods. These cannot be purchased in Hyde Park, as welack a bakery in the traditional sense of the word. This articleis, therefore, the kickoff of a campaign to acquire for HydePark a real bakery to fill in this visible gap in ourcommunity.Let me begin my argument with several illustrations.First: A good friend of mine celebrated his birthday twoweeks ago. His parents wanted to surprise him with a cakeand called his girlfriend, asking her to order a big cake and tosend the bill home. She didn’t realize that there wasn’t abakery of any sort in the vicinity until she got off thetelephone. In her mind (as in mine) Burny Brothers isn’t alegitimate bakery, it’s a glorified frozen food cabinet. Evenwhen Burny Brother’s was an independent store in HydePark it was a travesty. My memories of it are not fond.Anyway, after considerable inconvenience a cake wasordered and picked up at “Jansma’s” in South Holland (seelist following article). It was delicious, but who the hell wantsto travel 20 miles in each direction anytime a cake is needed?Such is life.Second, it is impossible to get any type of fresh bread inHyde Park. One of the great pleasures of a Sunday morningat home was knowing that the local bakery had fresh rollsevery hour. The same holds more or less true for dinnerevery night. I was always responsible for bringing home afresh rye home every evening. On the one day a week thatthis bakery was closed, I walked around the corner andpicked up a warm, crusty loaf of Italian bread. I had the ryebread sliced for me and thus consumed one third of it on theway back home. In contrast, here in Hyde Park hot bread hasbeen replaced by a product that was frozen one month beforethat one can shove in the oven until it’s crisp (burned).The sad state of supermarket bread is noted by John L.Hess, food critic of the New York Times: “Well, time ismoney. Modern plants make'bread’ by a continuous processthat uses chemical to dispense with kneading and ‘proofing’of dough. With their vats, rolling and extrusion mills andtunnel ovens, they resemble a plastics factory more than abakery” (N.Y. Times, 10/ 15/ 73). We should think about thiseven more seriously in the light of the Food and DrugAdministration’s order requiring bread to be fortified withtwice the present amount of iron. How much of a loaf ofsupermarket bread is really bread at all and not vitaminsand preservatives? I’ll take my chances with “One-A-Day’s.”It is my feeling that I am not alone in my vexation on thissubject. As I prepared to write this article, I solicited theopinions of a sample of Hyde Parkers. Almost all werefavorably inclined toward my proposal. Personally, Iwouldn't mind trading in one of the myriad “pseudo¬boutiques” that infest this area for fresh bread. I havescented soap and fondue sets coming out of my ears. A poll isbeing run along side this article, deaiing with popular support for a bakery. I urge the reader to fill it out and MAILIT TO THE MAROON OFFICE, 1212 East 59 St. The smalleffort involved may help us get fresh baked goods in HydePark for the first time in recent memory.One final note: A major reason for the demise of the localbakery is financial. When one buys fresh baked goods, onepays for the privilege. Fresh ingredients are more expensiveand labor costs are higher. These higher costs havesometimes led to decreased patronage, as customers mustsurrender to inflational pressures. I do hope however, thatHyde Park, a community of 40,000 plus, is willing and able tosupport such an enterprise. I wish us good luck!This list is not meant to be comprehensive, it is acompilation of some bakeries that I know fairly well or havebeen recommended to me. It’s a pretty motley collection, Iadmit. Any additional suggestions will be highly appreciated.Send these to the Maroon at 1212 E. 59 St.A GUIDE TO BAKED GOODS IN CHICAGO EMERGENCY EDITIONIN HYDE PARK -Not much to speak of, as the article implies. HydePark Co-opBAKERY POLLPlease return to Food Editor, Chicago Maroon, 1212 E. 59St.1-Do you believe there is a need for a bakery in HydePark?2-Would you support it by patronizingit?3-What would you be most willing topurchase? :a-bread and rollsb-pastryand cakesc-special orders4—How much do you think you might spend weekly in abakery with high quality merchandise?a-under $1..b-$l-$2.c-$2-$5d-over $55-Is there any type of baking you especially prefer? (e.g.-Italian, Jewish, French ) carries Burny Brother’s merchandise which doesn’t tasteany different than the stuff on the grocery shelf. In otherwords, it stinks. I also question the freshness of S. Rosen andGonnella products stocked in the Co-op. I am told that arecently purchased loaf of Gonnella’s Italian bread broke inhalf after hitting the floor. Unique’s, 53rd & Harper-Uniquegets a “daily” shipment from S. Rosen Co. The merchandiseisn’t really that fresh, but it beats the grocery shelf. Onionrolls aren’t bad, but none of this stuff is on a par with freshbaked. Deli-Dali-51st & Harper in the Village Centre-Sametype of deal as Unique plus some mediocre to good pastry.One Hyde Parker noted that bagels are “like rocks”.Campus Certified, 57th between Kimbark and Kenwood-They “import” baked goods (note the island mentality) fromNorth Shore Kosher Bakery, 2919 W. Touhy. This stuff isconsiderably better than grocery type bread and cake and isdelivered every day or so. Challah is 59* per loaf and is themost authentic in Hyde Park.OUTSIDELithuanian Bakery, 2450 W. 59 St.-This small bakery hadgreat dark rye bread (not to be confused with Jewish rye)and good cakes. Especially recommended are the CheeseBabka ($1.25) which is a cross between bread and danishpastry, and the cheese cake ($.95 a cut) which is deliciousand somewhat lighter than the average cheesecake. Theseare 5/ 73 prices.Bon Ton, 1153 No. Rush—Excellent continental pastry,including Dobosh-Torte and miniature pastries such as a“chocolate moose” (chocolate mousse covered withchocolate on a marzipan base in the shape of a moose, whichis extremely rich and delicious and costs 40*).Litberg’s, 1519 W. Devon-A Chicago-stvle bagel factory(egg bagels, not water bagels) which also makes excellentrolls.Bloom’s, 2500 block of W. Devon-A good all-around Jewishbakery. Good rolls, including egg twist,pumpernickle, andsalt sticks, all 10* each.North Shore Kosher Bakery, 2919 W. Touhy-I am told thattheir products are excellent when fresh and that they willdeliver to the South Side on large orders.New York Bagel and Bialy, Inc., 4714 W. Touhy,Lincolnwood3550 W. Dempster, Skokie8794 W. Dempster, DesPlainesAbsolutely the best bagels and bialys in the Chicago area.The store was formerly located at Jerome Ave. and MosholuPkwy. in the Bronx. This would have been good enoughrecommendation for me even if I hadn’t tasted the bagels.Apple and cheese strudels, 75* a cut are good, brownies, 25*each are OK. Their bagels are sometimes available at the Co¬op (frozen), but these can never compare to buying a fresh,hot bagel at the factory.Jansma’s, 16059 So. Park, South Holland-An excellentplace to go for cakes for special occasions. They also have anice selection of sweet rolls and the like. The spareness ofthis list proves my point to some extent (I think!) I wish toacknowledge at this point the valuable assistance of thefollowing in helping me prepare this article: MarilynCoopersmith, Alice Brooks, Steve Shapero, Niki DeWitt, LizRussc, and Barry Kaplovitz.& *GRAND OPENINGWe're celebrating all month! Come on over and enjoy the fun and. . . .discoverthe world's finest high fidelity stereophonic sound equipment.• mcintosh • bozak • thorens • epi • kenwood• TEAC • ORTOFON • AKG • MAXEL • SHURE • PHILIPSGET IN THE MISTLETOE MOODAstro has it all for the holidays—thebest gift for someone you love or foryourself!• MASTER CHARGE e BANKAMERICARD e EasyFinancing • Lay-a-Way PlanOwners: FLOYD "BULLET" BUTLERSTAN CARTWRIGHT ^Tsarosoundsystems OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEKMonday through Friday 10 to 7Saturday 10 to 6Sunday 12 to 51216 E. 53rd StreetKIMBARK PLAZA955-32002- Grey City Journal - October 26, 1973WTI on B£ IBTOSQT£D BUT H£ OT1 ri£l€R B£ £TRA€DUT LCTIG US H£ £41 LOOT in TH£ MRO - 41D L4JGH. RC B£SS£This is a world in which there is never "something for everyone". Man is en¬slaved by his animal lusts, his sordid politics, his insatiably perverse thirst forknowledge. It is the day in, day out competition of the rat race which mires us inthe bog. The only cure is a contest contest, a competition competition, to puteverything in perspective.The contest contest is very simple. Contests of any ilk—word games, trivia,physical prowesses, cow-chip tossing—any sort of competition may be entered.All competitions will be judged solely on their ability to relieve the strain of thelife of the mind.The winners, losers, most ingenious or stupid—all are liable to be published atany time. If the entries permit it, a contest of some sort may be run continuouslyfrom now until some later time. The rules for entering the contest are below, ex¬plained very simply. There will be awards made to the winners, losers, everybodywe can give awards to: but we won't tell you what the awards might be. The con¬tests in the contest may carry their own awards, but they will be provided only byagreement with the contest creator.RULES:1) Participation in the contests submitted must not require violations ofthe law by the contestants as an-essential part of the game.2) No special skills or trainirjg, whichwould give select persons an unfair ad¬vantage may be required (thus no detf£sea diving, only swimming, for in¬stance). Any equipment needed mustbe reasonably available to all con¬testants.3) Contestants must not be requiredto place themselves in unreasonablephysical danger.4) Any of the above three skills may be violated by cheaters, if they can getaway with.5)Contest Contest entries should besubmitted to the Grey City Journal, IdaNoyes Hall. Only one contest to an en¬velope; all envelopes must be markedou tee outside with contest contest".,isAH*entries must be accompanied by in-' formation identifying the contestcreator: pseudonyms may be used forpossible publication only if the realname is also submitted. All entries mustbe received in the Maroon Grey CityJournal office no later than 6 PM, Wed¬nesday, November 28th. The names ofthe winners will be announced in theissue of December 8th; the contests themselves will be reserved forpublication at the discretion of theeditors.6) All entries become property of theGrey City Journal, and can be returnedonly under extraordinary circumstancesand by personal application to theeditors.7) .This contest is open to everyonewho reads this paper. It is void whereprohibited by law or fate. Stores, in¬stitutions, and other corporate en¬terprises may enter, but are not eligiblefor the rewards and must provide somemanner of reward for the winners ofthe submitted contest. Relatives of thewinnina contest contest contestants are ineligible contestants.8) Awards are guaranteed to *otal atleast fifty dollars worth of cash, mer¬chandise, or prestige. Corporate en¬tries—especially if they are sufficient innumber to warrant a separatecategory—will receive the equivalentof at least fifty dollars of advertisingthrough publication of their contests. Acontest does not have to be a grandprize winner to receive an award; awar¬ds will be made at the discretion of thejudges, and the awards offered will bedetailed in upcoming issues.9) Any questions should be directedto the editors of the Grey City Journal,3-3265.Grey City Journal - October 26, 1973 -3flGGfRIQ) rtT TH€ OP€MBy DIANE WONIOOne of the largest projects an operacompany can undertake is the production ofa Wagnerian opera. To produce Wagner’sRing cycle is the largest of theseundertakings. Wagner wrote Der Ring desNibelungen on a truly epic scale; theproduction of the cycle as Wagner imaginedit will probably never been seen — unless aCecil B. DeMille style movie is made of it.Until then opera designers literally aroundthe world will be regaling us with myriadinterpretations of the four operas comprisingDer Ring.The Ring cycle — using Germanmythology to tell the recurring story of thetriumph of love over the evil of absolutepower — is a minimum of sixteen hours in itsfinished form. When you add to that thehours of rehearsals, set designing andconstruction, lighting arrangements, etc.,you are left with no wonder that an operacompany commissions only one new Ringopera per year when they desire a new cycle.Lyric is no exception. Last year Lyric’snew production of Die Walkure was for me (aWagnerphile) the treat of the season. Thisyear their new production of Siegfried,designed by Ekkehard Grubler and directedby Hans-Peter Lehmann, opens onWednesday, Oct. 31; and with all the spiritsand sprites that will be about it should be afitting night for confrontations between ahero and a dragon, dwarfs, and the not soimmortan gods.Siegfried is actually a rather simple storyabout the power of love over evil; yet the plotis made complex and thrilling by Wagner’smaster pen. Created by the gods (hisgrandfather was Wotan disguised as the“mortal” Wanderer) to retrieve theNibelungen fashioned Ring of Power,Siegfried is a being totally separated fromthe gods whose own power depends onSiegfried’s success. (Contradictory? Yes,but Erda has told Wotan that only one whoknows no fear — either of men or gods — canfree the world from the threat of rule by the Nibelungen.)This paradox is echoed in the leitmotifs,musical character symbols which weremuch used in Wagner’s time. But the geniusthat was Wagner wove a tapestry of symbolsthat transcended all previous uses of theleitmotiff. The melodic essence of Siegfried,which includes passages from theWanderer’s signature, is heard in DieWalkure, as is the leitmotif of Needful, hissword, when Brunnhilde tells Sieglinde thatshe carries the hope of the world; her son willbe a hero.The intricate weave of leitmotifs is notconsciously remembered. The beauty ofSiegfried and the other Ring operas is thethrill that prickles the hair on the back ofyour neck. The opera unfolds, the orchestrateils the story and your subconscious recordsand remembers the leitmotifs, thrilling youwith half felt prophecies as the phrases forSiegfried, Needful, the Ring, the Tarnhelm,the gloom and grandeur of the forest,Brummhilde, the Magic Fire around hersleeping form, the glory of Valhalla,Siegmund and Sieglinde, and the fate of theworld flow over you.Wagner’s use of leitmotifs was so skillfulthat one who really knows the opera canfollow the Ring’s story without the lyrics.The lyrics Wagner wrote with (not to) hismusic reflect the music and often enhance it,but it is the score that carries the subliminalinformation and raw emotions of the cycle.Since Wagner also wrote the stagedirections and basic design descriptions forthe cycle, the whole is masterfullyintegrated. This forces the modern operaticdesigner to use his own creative genius to thefullest. Producing this epic on a stage wherefire is prohibited, where flying horses are ararity, and where rivers with floodstages areinherently messy, the designer must rely onintricate lighting techniques, multilevel,often modular sets, evocative costuming(and his skill in putting these elementstogether), and both excellent acting by thesingers and an audience willing to lose itselfvia imagination in the earliest days of “middle earth.”Wagner buffs eagerly supply the necessaryimagination. And with as accomplished aBrunnhilde as Birgit Nilsson to lend strengthand reality to the scenes, an involvedaudience is insured, as is the success of thisseason’s Siegfried at Lyric.Ms. Nilsson is being joined by a Volsung,Siegfried (tenor Jean Cox); Nibelungen,Mime and Alberich (tenor Gerhard Ungerand baritone Gustav Neidlinger); a giantcum dragon, Fafner (bass Ottokar Schofer);a couple of gods, the Wanderer, Wotan (bass-baritone Theo Adam), and Erda, the EarthMother (nezzo-soprano Lili Chookasian);and an informative forest bird (soprano JanRedick).Ottokar Schofer is making his AmericanDebut. Theo Adam, a veteran of many Ringperformances, especially in Bayreuth (thetheater which was built especially for Wagner), is making his Lyric Debut. Adamhas sung Wotan opposite Ms. Nilsson’sBrunnhilde at the Metropolitan. Ms.Chookasian, a native of Chicago, has gracedmany stages both here and abroad. She hasalso appeared in Met productions of theRing.Jean Cox is one of the four or five heroictenors of our times. He is an American butbegan his major career abroad, as manysingers have done. His Europeanexperiences have given him a depth andrange which has enabled him to sing manyWagner heroes with great success.Siegfried will be reforging Needful on Oct.31, Nov. 3, 6, 9, 12, and 15. And because afourth of this epic is still an epic, theperformances begin at 7:00 p.m., an hourearly. If you have tickets, write yourself aBIG note. Conductor Ferdinand Leitner willbegin the overture on the hour.ONLY 60 DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS!Only 2 weeks to sign up for theUniversity of Chicago charterflight program's Christmasbreak 1973 charter flights.LONDON-ROMEDecember 15 to January 4Chicago-London-RomeRome-London-Ch icagoAlitalia$232 round trip plus $3airport taxFinal payment date November 7SAN FRANCISCODecember 15 to January 5Chlcago-San Franclsco-ChlcagoUnited$ 174 round trip adults$100 children 2-12Infants under 2 freeFinal payment date November 6 THE JEWISH CONGREGATIONOF HYDE PARKinvite all friends and neighborsto join in study and fellowship with3 WORLD-RENOWNED SCHOLARS:PROF. HAIM HILLEL BEN-SASSONof Hebrew University, JerusalemPROF. MICHAEL A. MEYERof Hebrew Union College-Jewish In¬stitute of Religion, CincinnatiPROF. GERSHON WINERof Citizen's Advisory Board of IsraelPROF. WINER will spend the weekend ofOctober 26-28 at CONG. RODFEI ZEDEK,5200 S. Hyde Park Blvd., addressing thesubject:THE WORLD OF SHOLOM ALEICHEM-IS IT LOST?The public is invited at the following times:Friday-8:15 p.m., Saturday-1 2:30 p.m.;Sunday-10:00 a.m.PROF. BEN-SASSAN will spend the weekend of November 2-4 at K.A.M. ISAIAHISRAEL CONG. 1100 E. Hyde Park Blvd.,addressing the subject:JEWISH MESSIANIC MOVEMENTSEligibility is limited to U of C students, staff, and faculty(spouses and dependent children). Parents of the above,residing in the same household, are eligible for the SanFrancisco charter. $50 deposit per seat required.Charter Flight Program1212 E. 59th St.Ida Noyes Hallroom 306 Chicago, III.60637753-3598 weekdays 2 to 7 The public is invited at the following times:Friday-8:15 p.m.; Saturday-10:00 a.m.;Sunday-10:30 a.m.PROF. MEYER will spend the weekend ofNovember 16-18 at Chicago Sinai Cong.,5350 South Shore Drive, addressing thesubject:IDEAS OF JEWISH HISTORYThe pulic is invited on:Sunday-11:00 a.m.For further information, call:CHICAGO SINAI CONG.-BU 8-1600CONG. RODFEI ZEDEK-PL 2-2770K.A.M. ISAIAH ISRAEL CONG.-WA 4-12344- Grey City Journal - October 26, 1973C90 BGGIN9 9C/190MBy TOBY LOU HOFSLUNDWere you wondering whether the ChicagoSymphony season would ever get off theground this year? Well, it did, finally, just intime to prevent the cancellation of all fiveweeks’ concerts to be conducted by musicdirector Sir Georg Solti. Any furtherprocrastination on the part of musicians andOrchestral Association would havejeopardized the entire season, futurerecording dates (to include all the Beethovensymphonies except the Ninth, the MissaSolemnis, and the Saint-Saens ThirdSymphony), and the most valued Easterntours.All seems well now, at least on the surface.So it’s back to work. And the black demon ofsalary increases and union bargaining hasbeen buried, but only for the next threeyears. And starting with the fourth year,chances are that there will be yet anotherfinancial crisis threatening the veryexistence of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra.Chicagoans—at least those fortunateenough to have purchased season tickets(and the entire season is virtually a sellour)— can settle down in Orchestra Hall andenjoy performances of mostly standardrepertoire including a lot of Beethoven and asprinkling of Mahler, Debussy, andHindemith. This week subscribers will hear one of the season’s few world premiers, therediscovered Martinu Violin Concerto, plussome of Solti’s supercharged Strauss. Nextweek: Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis, whichthe orchestra plans to record in Vienna nextfall during its European tour. Solti’s firstvisit concludes (November 8, 10, 11) with arepeat of his highly acclaimed Mahler Sixth.If you were also wondering about thoseconcerts missed during the lockout, they willall be made up in the course of the season.As for last week’s belated opening, Solti,with only three days rehearsal, whipped theorchestra into midseason form resulting inan impressive concert of Bach, Ruggles, andBeethoven. His distinctive style—decisiveand energetic—shaped Bach’s Suit No. 3,Ruggles’ Men and Mountains, andBeethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony with hisown special care and dedication. Each onecame across as a carefully thought out, andpaced statement moving from starting pointto final cadence with conviction and impact.Bach’s Suit No. 3 (performed by 17 strings,2 oboes, 3 trumpets, harpsichord andtimpani) provided a relaxed, festive opener.The familiar Air which follows the Overturedisplayed the craftsmanship we have cometo associate with Solti. The strings caressedthe melody and built up by means of agradual crescendo. Here Solti was allrestraint. Later in the Gavotte, Bourree andGigue, he almost mimiced on the podium the same rollicking, rolling dance movements hewas getting out of the orchestra.A very full orchestra joined this pareddown Baroque remnant for the Ruggles andthe Beethoven. Ruggles’ Men andMountains, based on a line from WilliamBlake: “Great things are done when menand mountains meet”, received its mostrecent performance last season by the CivicOrchestra of Chicago, but that was theoriginal small orchestra version. Solti andthe Chicago Symphony performed the 1942revision for large orchestra.The contrast it achieved with the Bach waseffective and impressive. For a while itseemed as if the stage could not hold all theinstruments and players. As they tuned andpracticed bits and pieces of the score, theygave away much of the idiom (such asdissonances, tone clusters) that was tofollow. But that didn’t matter. The power ofthe opening chords in the first and lastmovements — “ Men : A RhapsodicProclamation” and ‘‘MarchingMountains”—and the extremes of volume andpitch created an impact. (The work oftensounded like a collision between two Macktrucks.) These “Mountains” were biggerthan “Men”. “Lilacs”, the reflective secondmovement scored for strings, was allmystery and repose. Solti and the orchestragave it a razzle-dazzle performance.Solti’s approach to Beethoven’s “Eroica” Georg Solti directs...at lastSymphony, which concluded the concert,was unusual (to say the least) butdistinguished. Everything was crisp andclean, highly organized, orderly; sometimestoo fast, and sometimes—as with the funeralnarch—too slow. No matter. The total effectwas grand. Solti’s Beethoven is moreMahlerean than Mozartean.So it wasn’t Classic. I liked it anyway.MOL TO MCHMU9IC hOT05‘ TdLK Of TH€ TOWMBy TOBY LOU HOFSLUNDNow is the time for all Baroque choralmusic freaks to take notice of what Chicagohas to offer. Both local and touring groupswill present concerts of works by Bach,Handel, and Haydn this month.What promises to be one of the most ex¬citing events is the first visit of the LondonBach Society under the direction of founderPaul Steinitz. He and his company of 80musicians and singers will appear at theAuditorium Theatre in an afternoon concerton Sunday, November 4, at 2:00 p.m. Theworks: Bach’s Cantata No. 8, “Liebster Gott,wenn werd ich sterben?Handel’s WeddingAnthem, “Sing Unto God;” Mozart’sCoronation Mass; and three songs by thecontemporary British composer,Christopher Brown.The London Bach Society, a small choirspecializing in Bach and modern composers(especially British ones), has made ex¬tensive European tours and has only once,since its founding in 1947, been in the UnitedStates. Steinitz, one of the leading authoritieson Bach, has his own orchestra, the SteinitzBach Players, whose members play originalBaroque instruments. Soloists for thisconcert are soprano Sandra Wilkes, mezzo-soprano Shelagh Molyneux, tenor NeilJenkins, bass Stephen Roberts and organistJohn Birch.Baroque music is also a part of the HydePark and University scene.This Sunday afternoon, October 28, at 3:30p.m. the Rockefeller Chapel Choir opens itsOratorio Festival with Handel’s Israel in£gypt> a musical setting of the Exodus story.Soloists will be Carolyn Staley, soprano,Phyllis Unosawa, contralto, and GeraldScott, tenor. Richard Vikstrom, Director ofChapel Music, conducts the choir and or¬chestra made up of members of the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, the ContemporaryChamber Players at UC, and select playersfrom the faculties of Roosevelt and Nor¬ thwestern Universities.Tickets are $6 for reserved seats; $5.50 forChancel seating; $5 for general admission;and $2.50 for University of Chicago students.Attending this concert will probably be morerewarding than their standard Messiahscheduled for December 2 and 9. The ChapelChoir plans two more concerts, February 24and April 7. The works are yet to be chosen.Watch for the opening of “Music of theBaroque,” a concert series every HydeParker can be proud of. The choir of theChurch of St. Paul and The Redeemer andOrchestra under the direction of ThomasWikman will perform Haydn’s Lord NelsonMass and the Bach Cantata 02, Ich hatte vielBekummernis, Sunday, November 18, at 3:30p.m. The concert features numerous well-known Chicago singers (tenor William Wah-man, baritone Arthur Berg, soprano SarahBeatty, and contraltos Sharon Powell andIsola Jones, to mention only five).Wikman, founder of the New Court Singers(who toured the Midwest in ’67) and theTudor Singers, has recently gained areputation as a Renaissance and Baroquespecialist and has conducted some out¬standing performances.A donation of $3.50 is asked and ticketsmay be purchased at the door. Mark yourcalendar and don’t miss it.Great Momentsin GraffittiIf you voted for Nixon, don’t shithere—your asshole is in Washington.—Seen in a men’s room somewherebetween Hanover, New Hampshire andNew York City. By LOLA ROSEWhat has money and fame given BetteMidler? As she sees it, not a hell of a lot.While here in Chicago two weekends ago, shegreeted well wishers in her dressing roomwhile she combed out her hair with a smilefor all and a well chosen word. Outside thestage door, the Divine Miss M faced at leastone hundred groupies, quite the unisexedcrowd, with a trench coat over her head.Standing at something under 5’1”, she waseasily buried between her writer andmanager as they wisked the lady into herlimo, driven as it is for all stars in Chicago,by Doc, a delightfully tough but sweet ArchieBunker type.That hair that she combed out was in direneed of a touch up. After reaching a hairdresser and arranging that it be done in thehotel room, an excited young man, withchemicals in hand, arrived, ready to make itall one. Who knows what illusions whereshattered when he opened the door, found thelovely lady wrapped in a towel sitting in frontof the TV with friends, waiting for a latenight movie. Looking up from her glass filledwith Dom Perignon she said, “Well, honey,believe me, this is as good as it gets.”* * *Speaking of lovely ladies, Chicago will hostthe Pointer Sisters soon. Something along thelines of Miss M., these four sisters have re¬worked the Andrews Sisters vocal approachand have some very hot numbers to sing.Basically a creation of their manager, theyare, none the less, one of the up and cominggroups with a hit single and hot album.* * *If you’re willing to take a chance, youmight hold off picking up your PointerSisters tickets until after the winners of theBistro door prize are announced. That’sright, on Halloween, the Bistro is charging athree dollar door which gives you a chance atwinning two Pointer Sisters tickets as well asseeing what will be the costume event of theyear bar none.With a grand prize of a round trip toAcapulco, one hundred dollars for best dragand fifty dollars for best comedy, whowouldn’t come out of the closet? The Bistro,if you didn’t know, is the gay bar of Chicago with weekend lines around the block. See youthere.* • *Wedding bells will ring this June foranother lovely lady and her “Most ProlificBlond Cupcake”, a student here at theUniversity of Chicago. This lady is thedaugher of a writer who since his first andhighly successful novel has, in his daughter’swords, “suffered from constipation of thepen,” although a film and not so successfultheatrical adaptation of his novel havefloated him through these quiet years.In a letter to her blond cupcake, shewrites: “Having waited for over one yearnow for the light steps of the postman todeliver me some words of love from you, Iam now quite overcome with joy, and theexquisite knowledge that you adore me as Ido you. Certainly you are aware, my elusiveand conquering hero, that a letter such asyours, received by a young maiden of theJewish faith, between the holiday of YouKippur and the last day of Succus, is tan¬tamount to a proposal of marriage. I havetherefore taken it upon myself to set a datefor the event (June 13, Friday) at midnight,at the Holy Cross Graveyard, Rosalyn, N.Y.Dearest, the guest list exceeds twelvehundred—no more, as I have always hopedthat we would ■■ njoin ourselves to a small andquiet, intimate ceremony. I hope this meetswith your approval. My mother, ten auntsfrom Sheepshead Bay, and my grandmotherwill all be in touch with you shortly. Oh, theperfumed sweetness of our existence! Theconnubial bliss that awaits us! I am fairly ina swoon when I allow myself to wonder inanticipation.”* * *Now I’ve told all I know. But if any of you,my well wore but devoted and loved readers,should have any news or gossip that mightlighten the day of your fellow readers, don’thold back. You know that in my book, theofficial language isn’t English, it’s goddip.And I can’t wait for the hot dish to fill up mymailbox at the Maroon, or leave a messagefor me at 324-1924.And if you’ve got a problem and needsome insightful advice don’t hesitate towrite.Want A Sports Car, New or Used?CALL REGAL MOTORS Enjoy the Warmth of aSmall Congregation .mr«H authorized jLinANO UL sales & service636-0200 5000 W. 95th ST. OAK LAWN Church of the Holy CitySports Cor Sales and Service (Swedenborgian) 312-mi 3-3113FIAT-ALFA ROMEO Services 11 AM'70 Flat Rdstr * 1095 '69 Flat Rdstr *895’68 MGS Rdstr *1 195 every Sunday " foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.• 4 cnnth Limharlf avomio • Chicago 60616Grey City Journal - October 26, 1973 -5TOM dND LOUI9€ dhD RIOMRD 4NDMdRMN dND HAROLDBy MEREDITH ANTHONYIn the middle of Father’s Day, at theIvanhoe, Chita Rivera confesses that shekeeps a copy of Krafft-Ebing by her bed:“You can’t walk down the street withoutmeeting a case number.” One of theproblems with Oliver Hailey’s play is that it,too, is a kind of compendium of cases, adivorce manual.He has tried to show us as many of thepotential complications as he could possiblycram into the lives of three divorced couplesand reveal in a single afternoon. But ifFather’s Day is only a catalog, it is a wittyand entertaining one.Hailey set himself strict limits in time,space, and cast. The action takes place onFather’s Day afternoon of this year on a sundeck of an apartment building in Manhattan.The occasion is a little get-together for threedivorced couples after the fathers havebrought the children back from the ritualouting. Hailey valiantly resisted thetemptation to bring the children, otherrelatives and neighbors, and the variousparamours or second wives into the scenealthoug their existence is constantly felt.Arrivals and departures are monitored overthe rail, an upstairs neighbor lowers a note ina basket, and one second wife even comes tothe door but is not admitted. Theseinterchanges keep the isolation fromseeming too contrived and keep the dialoguecrisp.The play is oriented toward the women; wemeet them first and are left with them at theend. Chita Rivera plays the type of divorceewho has assumed a mask of tough bitchiness.Julie Adams plays the type who has assumeda mask of arrogant bitchiness. They are bothsatisfyingly bitchy. Carol Ruth has the less interesting role of the bewildered newdivorcee who hasn’t learned to be bitchy yet.Robert Elston heads the male cast with adroll portrayal of the debonair swinger who“swings both ways”. He has the best line inthe play when he laments, “My divorce is ashambles.”But although on the surface Father’s Dayis a bright, brittle, sophisticated comedy,there are certain tacit assumptionsunderlying the various relationships thatserve not only to stereo-type thecharacterizations but also to date them. Allthe women want their husbands back, forexample, or at least they need theircontinuing affection for some sort ofemotional security. None of them areinterested in other men; none of them aresuccesses in their careers. The older two areconsummately bitchy and the younger one islearning. The men, on the other hand, are allinterested in other people, all professionallysuccessful and all variously condescendingand pitying toward their femalecounterparts.The play opened (and closed) in the 1970-71season. The Ivanhoe’s program notes givethe time as Father’s Day, 1973. But it wouldtake more than changing one digit and acouple topical jokes to bring Father’s Day upto date. Professor George Keathley wouldhave done better to leave the date alone andlet the women in the audience sigh over it asa historical document and the men, if theylike, indulge in a little wishful thinking.But the playwright himself was the first topoint out that there are two ways to look atthe situation. One wife says, of the father’sday party, “I think its a kinda cute idea.”Chita Rivera snaps back: “I think its fullashit.”PINK CMABl IS of CALIFORNIA - Gallo Vineyards Modesto. CaliforniaGALLOPINK CHABUSOF CALIFORNIAMon than a Rose, our Pink Chablis is a captivatingm combining the delicate fragrance of a superior RonI’d the cnsp character of a fine Chablis. This wine is owd cur most delightful creations. Made and bottled at theCelle Vineyards in Modesto, Calif. Alcohol 12% by xl TIMEMagazinereports:“Gallo’s Pink Chablisrecently triumphedover ten costliercompetitors in a blindtasting among apanel of wine-industryexecutivesin Los Angeles.”Time Magazine November 27, 1972 page 81More than a Rosd ICW99IGIL RGCORD9V.The Flonzaley String QuartetSchuman: Quintet in E-flat, Op. 44, withOssip Gabrilowitsch (piano)Brahms: Quintet in f. Op. 34, with HaroldBauer (piano)Haydn: Quartet in D. Op. 64, no. 5 (“Lark”)RCA VCM-7103 $6.98 (two discs, mono)By BILL LEVINEThere are all kinds of reasons for listeningto historic re-issues on the budget labels. It ishard to argue with an arrangement which sooften gives you strikingly beautiful per¬formances at such a low cost, unless ofcourse you balk at the dubious fidelity of theearlier years of recording. Yet the sound isoften pleasing and listenable, sometimeseven very fine. And there is also the seriousdocumentary value of recordings, which canbring life to musicians who were historicpersonalities in their own right, or providesolid evidence about the stylistic ideals andhabits of previous generations.But there is something that happens onlyrarely with re-issued recordings which is,nonetheless, in its own particular way, theultimate reward for listening to them, andthis happens with the recent re-issue of threerecordings made by the Flonzaley Quartetbetween 1925 and 1928.The recordings are a virtual revelation;they open the heart and soul of anothergeneration to full view, and with them theirdeepest feelings about music and art. Thatmay seem to be an extravagant claim tomake about one and one-half hours of musicplayed by a total of six musicians, but it is noexaggeration. There is something socharacteristic about the performances as awhole, and that something is so distinctivewhen one measures it against what one hearsand feels in more recent music-making (andfor that matter in all art which seemsespecially characteristic of the twentiethcentury), that it is very striking.Of course, it is not unmistakable. In /Saturday Review/ World the reviewerdismisses this quality in the Haydn recordingas the stylistic peculiarity of a period whichdid not know how to play Haydn correctly,and the review in High Fidelity, while veryenthusiastic, noted with approval that theSchumann “could almost pass for a modernperformance.” These critics seem to basethese judgments largely on the presence orabsence of such things as portamento, thetechnique of sliding up or down to importantnotes in the phrase, which is today regardedas sloppy and sentimental. But gat these performances in such apiecemeal fashion leads nowhere.The characteristic quality of these per¬formances is an amalgam of portamento, aspecial way with grace notes, and a generalwarmth of tone and a warmth of interplaybetween the musicians, all of which can bedescribed as affectionate. In particular, it isan affection for the music itself, an open andsincere warmth of feeling, a sort ofdemonstrative fondness.Portamento is itself an affectionategesture, like a caress. But the point is that itis directed toward the music itself, not somuch toward the players or the audience,and not abstractly, but in substance, almostas if the music had a life of its own. It con¬veys a feeling of intimate familiarity with awork of art that has been lived with, and ispart of the very rhythm of life. It is the rhyth-m of the European middle and upper classhouseholds of the nineteenth century, whichsponsored chamber groups, held musicalevenings like the Schubertiads in Bieder-meier rooms, and taught their daughters thepiano. For them, their music and art was acherished possession with sweetened theirlives, and for which they were grateful.The musicians of the Flonzaley Quartetwere prime examples of that kind oftradition, having begun as the private en-(Continued on page 8)ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St.288-2900j PIZZA li platter •I 1460 E. 53rd jJ Ml 3-2800| FAST DELIVERYj AND PICKUPWHEN DID YOU LASTHAVE YOUR EYESEXAMINED?Do it SooncourtesydiscountTo Students, Facultyand all Personnelon PrescriptionEyeglasses•Ask About OurMoney-SavingContact Lens PlanMost Major Charge Cards HonoredAWr Coe• 2374 E. 71st ST.• 330 S. MICHIGAN• 10 N. MICHIGAN6- Grey City Journal - October 26, 1973RECORDSThe Watergate Comedy HourJack Burns, Avery Schreiber, Fannie Flagg,Ann Elder, et alHidden Records ST 11202By TOM BODENBURGAmongst the flood of Watergatememorabilia (histories, bumperstickers,buttons, and yes, even cookbooks) inun¬dating the public these days is a collection ofcomedy sketches entitled The WatergateComedy Hour, performed by that noted teamof Jack Burns and Avery Schreiber, withassistance from Fannie Flagg, Ann Elder,and Frank Welker (portraying PresidentNixon). Unfortunately, this album falls shortof the mark for several reasons.One is the recording date of the album (lastMay 8), which preceded such developmentsas the tape confrontation, the hate list (onecould envision a sketch in which Joe Namathwonders why he made the list, while JimBouton wonders why he didn’t make it), andthe development of the popularity cult ofSenator Sam, thereby giving the album alack of timely essence. Recent events havedevalued such cuts as “Agnew Interview”and “Special Investigator,” making themhistorical curiosities, falling short of theiroriginal expectations of sharp, biting satire.Secondly, the humor of some of the sketchesis not up to the usual standards of Burns andSchreiber. Both “The Meeting,” dealing witha Nixon-Mitchell encounter in a phone booth,and “Hello UPI, Nos. 1 and 2” featuringFannie Flagg as “deah ol’ Martha,” come offas banal, puerlish, forced attempts athumor. Another irritating fault is an ob¬noxious canned laugh track, which couldhave been remixed for a better effect uponthe listener.However, the album does have its funniermoments. The title cut “The WatergateComedy Hour” features Tricky Dick asJohnny Carson in “Tonight” complete withsidekick Doc Kissinger musically ac¬companied by H.R. Halderman and theBuckpassers, and the singing of theWatergate Seven. Dick finishes his “show”with “Keep those telegrams coming...for Ipaid for them!” “The Investigation” depictsJohn Dean as Nixon’s own investigator intothe affair with L. Patrick Gray realisticallyportrayed as the spineless lackey of theexecutive branch. “The Reverend and thePresident” has the tormented President“surrounded by the Philistines and theBernsteins” consoled by his omnipresentspiritual advisor, Billy Graham. “RonZiegler Meets the Press’ and “The Plan” willgladden the heart of any devoted Nixon-hater.Burns and Schreiber have done better inthe past and will do so in the future. They areone of the better, more tasteful comedyteams to hit North American entertainmentscene in some time. In short, despite thepresence of cogently funny material, theflaws of The Watergate Comedy Hourovershadow its merits. The crucial elementof timing is sadly lacking, and their politicalcommentary is for the most part puncturedrather than punctual.If you are a souvenir freak of con¬temporary American history, buy thisalbum ; but be sure you are equipped with amoth and water-proofed storage trunk, forthis album will find its way not on yourrecord shelf, but in your trunk, nestledamong yellowing newspapers and countlessnumbers of dust-laden paperbacks dealingwith the Watergate affair. For this reviewer,repeated listenings evoked memories ofboredom comparable to watchingvideotaped replays of Oswald’s assasinationand JFK’s funeral mass being forced uponby his parents, while he wanted instead toromp as a ten-year-old in the snows of earlywinter.OctoberClaire HamillIsland SW 9331By GAGE ANDREWSWhile America has uncovered reams oftalented woman folk-singers—Joan Baez andMimi Farina, Judy Collins, Maria Muldaur,Joni Mitchell (Canada counts as NorthAmerica), Buffy Sainte-Marie—England’swoman folk-singers seem to have developedexclusively through the English folktradition. Thus Maddy Prior and SandyDenny are madrigalists more than they are “new-style” or “modern” singers.Claire Hamill is England’s first folksingerin the American vein, and has totally ruinedthe above hypothesis.October, Ms. Hamill’s second albumreleased in America, reveals her incredibleprogression as a lyricist. Though the poet’sgifts are sometimes obscured—behind avoice that evokes Carly Simon-Taylor’s face,and an arrangement and engineering job onthis LP that shouldn’t happen toMelaine—Hamill’s songs are the closest I’veheard to capturing the imagetic pain that isJoni Mitchell’s trademark.This album is not a triumph. It is a littlemuddy instrumentally, and the mix is notconducive to the presentation of the lyrics,which are clearly the strongest point of therecord. But the writing has a flexiblestrength that has developed far beyond herfirst album. Perhaps her next album,properly instrumented and showcasing herlyrics, will have the world, instantlydiscovering a “new, major talent ” It’s aninteresting, trying process watching thattalent grow, and it’s all the more frustratingbecause it’s so buried here.ReevaluationSonny RollinsImpulse AS 9236-2By GAGE ANDREWSSince Sonny Rollins’ re-appearance lastyear following his most recent retirement,there has been a massive and deservedresurgence in his popularity. This recordcould count as chashing in on thatpopularity—except that, like almost all hiswork, it is uniformly high quality.Reserved dryness aside, this is one ofabout four complied albums that could becalled his ‘greatest hits’—and none of thealbums overlap the others. This albumincludes “East Broadway Run Down” withFreddie Hubbard, Jimm Garrison and ElvinJones, and “Blessing in Disguise” with thesame trio; Jimmy Cleveland, J.J. Johnson,Phil Woods, Roger Kellaway and KennyBurrel are among some of the musicians whoplay on “Alfie’s Theme” and “On Impulse”.The other four cuts—“Hold ‘Em Joe”,“Three Little Words”, “Green DolphinStreey”, and “Blue Room”—all come fromRollins’ first album on Impulse, released in1966. The backing by the trio of Ray Bryant(piano), Walter Booker (bass) and MickeyRoker (drums) can’t be seriously faulted,but the overall sound is noticeably rougherand harsher than his current material.What else can be said about this record? Ifyou already know Rollins, it is merelyconvenient of me to have listed the songs thatare on it. If you don’t know him, them mytelling you that he is probably the greatestsax man since Charlie Parker won’tconvince you to buy it. I found it to be a greatfiller for my admittedly incomplete Rollinscollection. It comprises an excellent, andfairly priced introduction to 3 years worth ofhis earlier material. A remarkable bargain.Leon LiveLeon RussellBy GAGE ANDREWSThis three record, live-concert set histriggerek a fair amount of controversey.Some people think three-lp sets arepreposterous in principle, and that Russell’sin particular is presumptousThis three record, live-concert set hastriggered a fair amount of controversey.Some people think three-lp sets arepreposterous in principle, and that Russell’sin particular is presumptous. My opinion isthat this is the finest concert album since theAllman Brothers’ incredible Live At TheFillmore.I’m not a Leon Russell fanatic. Carney wasrather a failure, the movie Mad Dogs andEnglishman actually was a failure. Russellcan never resist the temptation to show offand try to steal and show (as in Concert forBangla Desh).On the other hand, he’s an original. He canwrite well, he can interpret decently, he canchoreograph the segments and performers ofhis act to present a show that is moreentertaining than, and certainly far lesslobotomizing than, Alice Cooper. But beyondand more important than any of these,Russell can play an audience with a mastery rarely equalled inside or out of the rockworld.Leon Russell sleeps off the finestconcert album in three years.That ability is exactly what was capturedon this album. All the favorite songs, all ofShelter’s “in-residence-quest musicians,” allthe tricks that Russell has taught BlackGrass after picking up the moves from TinaTurner’s Ikettes. It’s a big package, pacedperfectly, never going on so long in one veinthat it becomes boring. A tender Russellballad, then whip the crowd in a white latherfrenzy.So make a cassette of this on your littleportable cassette machine, and then go seeP.T. Barnum’s “Greatest Show on Earth,”which I believe is hiding somewhere around.The visuals would make Leon Live a totalexperience, the dream of all showmen: aflashy success.Woman Acorss The RiverFreddie KingShelter SW 8919By GAGE ANDREWSFreddie King came into his ownprominence among white audiences abouttwo years ago with his first Shelter lp, TexasCannonball. Although he has been around fora long before that, and for the two yearssince, a lot of people still think of him as the“least talented member of the KingFamily”—you know, BB, Albert, andFreddie.Wrong. Freddie plays the same fast, clean-sweat guitar as the others (who are notrelated), but Freddie plays it harder,meaner, more urgently: better. And her cansing, a lot better than the other two. Which isall to say that with this album, Freddie Kingmoves into his own as “the BEST of the Kingfamily.”“Woman Across the River” is a fineexample of Freddie’s style. He sings, ratherthan shouts—his voice actually changesnotes, instead of just loudness. He rips into“Boogie Man,” and rolls through WillieDixon’s “I’m Ready” with a lowdown, funkygrace.Despite the variety of the songs—by Dixon,Leon Russell, Elmore James and RayCharles are among the song authors—anddespite having the standard Shelter bandbehind him (Keltner on drums, Radle onbass, Preston on guitar, Russell onkeyboards), King manages to adapt to eachsong without losing his personal stamp on it.There is very little sense of strain on thisalbum, not because Freddie is not ambitious,and not because it isn’t hard and he doesn’tfeel the pain. If that happened it wouldn’t beblues.No, the easiness comes because hesucceeds at almost everything he tries.Watch out for him.YESSONGSYesAtlantic SD 3-100 1196By TOM BODENBURGYes - Steve Howe, Jon Anderson, AlanWhite, Chris Squire, and Rick Wakeman.Some critics have likened this British quintetto the Cream, others to the Moody Blues, and still others to Emerson, Lake, and Palmer.But, upon first listening to their music, themost casual of listeners discover that thesound of Yes defies meager attempts atcategorization. The music is distinct,vibrant, refreshing. Yessongs, a three-record compilation from their fall 1972American tour, confirms and strengthens thelatter assumption. In this reviewer’s opinion,this is the finest live recording of popularmusic released this year.All of the material on this album has beentaken from Yes’ last three studio albums(The Yes Album, Fragile, Close to theEdge), in addition to excerpts from RickWakeman’s solo album, The Six Wives ofHenry VIII. To those who have marveled atYes’ virtuosity in their studio work, let mesay that the very essence of the group hasagain been captured on Yessongs, as theirlive performances rival their studio sessionsfor vibrancy and energy.Side one begins in the same way as Yes’concerts began on their last tour - withexcerpts from Stravinsky’s “Firebird Suite”performed by Wakeman on mellotron. From“Suite” the band blasts into “SiberianKhatru”, and the undefinable spirit of Yeshad taken command.Anderson’s vocal range is supurb; heactually sings, not screams, over his vastinstrumental accompaniment. “Your Move”“All Good People” and “Heart of theSunrise” best bear this out. Howe and Squireduel and complement, resembling bull andmatador, on lead and bass guitar, asexemplified by “Long Distance Runaround”and “The Fish”. Alan White’s percussion(replacing Bill Bruford, who split from thegroup in mid-tour, to later join KingCrimson) meets and exceeds allexpectations. His performance is the moreremarkable in light of his limited durationwith the rest of the group before the tour.Wakeman’s performances on the tourconfirm his newly-crowned title of king of theelectonic keyboards (moog and arpsynthesizers, mellotron, electric piano andorgan) surpassing former occupant KeithEmerson in intensity of performance,artistic originality, and cohesiveness withhis fellow musicians.One outstanding cut, both lyrically andinstrumentaly, is Yes’ Te Deum, “And Youand I”, which best captures the intensity ofa mutual love so powerful that itcan”...reach over the sun for theriver...calling over valleys of endlessseas...” Yes climaxes the album with “Closeto the Edge”, an unparalled eighteen-minuteopus, and drives home its music andmessage with “Yours is No Disgrace” and“Starship Trooper”, two first rate rockers.In postscript, although this album wasreleased this past June, it is being reviewedsince it is Yes’ most recent album. Moreimportantly, for those who doubt my words,their live performance on the vinyl ofYessongs will be surpassed by theirappearance in the Amphitheatre this nextThursday, November 1. If you werefortunate enough to obtain a ticket early(since the concert has long been sold out),then you will be treated to a novel soundexperience. It is only a shame that demandand the promoters force the group to play inthe cavernous Amphitheatre, whereacoustical quality is somewhat less than nil.wLOUNGG—IMG IM TOWMBy ELIZABETH RUSSOWhy isn’t there a great restaurant in HydePark? Well, not everyone can have Maxim’saround the corner. But there is hope for theSouth Side. The Cornell Lounge, at 1610 East53rd Street (just east of the IC tracks) maynot offer Beluga cavier and steak tartare,but it does offer a surprising variety of verygood food - and the prices aren’t nearly asstaggering as those black-tie eateries up¬town.Of particular interest in these days ofthinner wallets and depleted bank accoimtsare the Lounge’s specials. Now it is possibleto feed yourself a dinner of soup, salad, anentree, a vegetable, a potato and coffee ortea for less then $3.95 that the Lounge willcharge you. But I defy you to stuff yourselfon the same quality of goodies that they’regoing to give you.Chef Frankie Newell specializes in soupsthat are thick rich, hearty and different.Cream of chicken, an original clam chowder,ox-tail, split pea, mongol, potato andmushroom are some of the best that come tomind.The soup arrives hot and steaming, alongwith the kind of bread basket that used to beseen in many more places before restaurantsstarted cutting corners. (Waitresses Peggyand Nicki are particularly nice aboutbringing garlic bread, too, if you ask. Agenerous helping of cottage cheese with apeach can be substituted for the tossed salad,but the latter with oil, vinegar and gratedcheese is a tangy prelude to the main course.Entrees, in my opinion, are where theLounge really shines and the specials are noexception. I would recommend withoutreservation: baked (or braised) short ribs ofbeef, baked beef pot pie, broiled trout, LakeSuperior whitefish or perch (these three onFridays only), and Frankie’s liver andonions. There is also another calss of specialsat the slightly higher price of $4.25. The in¬crease is readily explainable considering theentrees involved - sirloin of beef, frogs’ legsand roast leg of lamb.(Continued from page 6)semble of Edward J. deCoppet, a wealthyAmerican banker whose wife, a pianist,wanted a quartet to play along with in thefine European tradition. When deCoppetwanted to improve the quality of the en¬semble, its guiding spirit, Alfred Pochon, thesecond violinist, recommended that it bemade permanent, and soon afterward, thequartet became self-supporting by way ofsuccess in the concert hall. Yet it maintainedfor many years its close ties with thedeCoppet family, and thus never lost itsintimate, domestic character.Now it may be objected that modernmusicians and music lovers love their musicjust as much as any earlier generation, but Idon’t believe it. The romantics (for lack of abetter term) not only loved music (and art);they believed in it. Their affection wassincere and given without reservation, withcomplete trust, and this could and did ofcourse develop in some instances into themawkishness which was the death ofromanticism, but at its best (which was notuncommon — witness the massive ac¬complishments of nineteenth century musicand literature) it urged beautiful things intobeing.8- Grey City Journal - October 26, 1973. On the other hand, we may want verymuch to love music and art, but we mostsurely cannot place our unsullied belief inthem. Without that belief, the very best in¬tentions cannot induce us to lavish that kindof affection on any work of art, or to makepieces of music part of our life’s fabric,because to try seems silly and overly sen¬timental.It is almost trivial to say that this warm,intimate way of playing must have been veryclose to the hearts of Schumann and Brahms.The Schumann quintet, especially, feels justright in this performance, although theBrahms quintet is no less extraordinary(though it is less well recorded, being theearliest of the three performances). Theyare poignant and stirring, graced throughoutwith playing of heartfelt expressiveness. TheHaydn quarter performance may not behistorically “accurate” (whatever thatmeans), but it certainly is good fun. TheFlonzaley Quartet didn’t have a tremendousvirtuoso reputation for nothing.In short, these are rare recordings, and ifyou can’t avoid a touch of melancholy whilelistening to these performances from an agegone by, you will be more than repaid bytheir special beauty. t AM. t PM 7 OayiAWMkHYDE PARK PIPE AND TOBACCO SHOfe1552 E. 53rd - under IC tracksAll students get 10% off^ask for “Big Jim''PipesPipe Tobaccos Imported CigarettesCigarsAlso in the $4.25 class is what I consider theLounge’s piece de resistance, a LobsterThermidor which satisfied my East Coastfist cravings as well or better than jaunts tothe Cape Cod Room and L’Epuisette. Co¬owner Julian Krum is baffled every time it’sserved because he doesn’t know how his chefcan put as much lobster in it as he doeswithout breaking the house. I don’t knoweither, but who an I to question Frankie’seconomics? An entire lobster in a delicatecream sauce is easily contained therein, andat $4.25 it would be a bargain even withoutthe rest of the package. (Served on onlycertain Fridays so call 684-6075 before you goif that’s your heart’s desire.)For the more well-heeled, slightly higher-priced fare is available. Prime rib of beef,butt steak, petite sirloin steak, eight-ouncetenderloin steak, large filet mignon, lambchops and pork chops, a spaghetti carusowith chicken livers that my grandmotherwould be proud to call her own, and sauteedchicken livers and onion can be generallyrecommended. Many Gordon, the other halfof the Lounge’s management, had a gooddeal of previous experience with meatsuppliers and is using his knowhow thesedays to assure a steady supply of prime agedbeef.I find the pasta dishes far superior to thetasteless soggy stuff I’ve been served atLaRusso’s, and the poultry dishes in par¬ticular the chicken parmesan - deservemention. Caveats are few and far between,but the broiled chicken may be black on theoutside and you can pass on the shrimp dejonge altogether. But there’s so much else tochoose from that’s good that you shouldn’tmiss a few losers.The Cornell Lounge is also open for lunch,although the menu is more limited. Again, aspecial is offered with salad, a main course,potato and a beverage, this time for $1.85. Iwould particularly recommend the clubsandwich, the open face cheese, bacon andtomatoe sandwich, and the beefburgers andcheeseburgers. Most prices are under $2.00. MALE OR FEMALE STUDENTSEARN UP TO$50OR MORE DAILYDRIVING A YELLOWSPECIAL STUDENT SHIFTSALL YOU NEED IS A DRIVER'S LICENSECALL 225-7440ORAPPLY AT 120 E. 18th ST.WORK FROM A GARAGE NEAR HOME OR SCHOOLTAKCAM-MMCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAmerican dishesOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO *30 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12TO 8i30 P.M.Ordart to toko out1318 East 63rd MU 4-1062 JAMESSCHULTECLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1303 E. 53rd St.752-6933HEADQUARTERSFORPASSPORTPHOTOGRAPHSAPPLICATIONS* PHOTOGRAPHSu in| black & whiteand colorI MU 4-7424 ICorona Studios1314 E. 53RDCharter Groups FlightsORIENTCall Toll Free(800) 227-1969(U.S. except California)(800) 980-5827(California Only)If you plan a trip toJapan, Hong Kong, S.Orient, make sure togive us a call.A BIG SAVINGSGREEK ANDAMERICAN CUISINESPECIALIZING IN• Saganaki• Mousaka• Pastichio• Dolmades• Souvlaki• BaklavaWith a complete“Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner”MenuServed Daily1335 E. 57th St.^(corner of 57th A Kenwood;947-8309 .TV OF CHICAGO\ 08’ •,. fiir J0NES>'a<*LOOM**SPECIAL ®DISCOUNT PRICES© FOR ALLSTUDENTS &FACULTY MEMOERS©As Students or Faculty Membersof the University of Chicago youare entitled to special moneysaving discount prices on allVolkswagen Service Work, allVolkswagen Parts, Accessoriesand any new or used Volkswagenyou buy from Volkswagen SouthShore.Upon presentation of your Univer¬sity of Chicago Identification card,our employees will show youregular price and your specialdiscount price of whatever youbuy.Remember, Volkswagen SouthShore is the closest factoryauthorized full service dealer inyour area. Our Parts Departmentis open Saturday 9 AM to 12noon.Were near the IC or can offer youShuttle Bus Service.$VOLKSWAGESOUTH SHOREAulhorizMl 7234 *. STONY ISLANDVolkswigen Opan Dally * AM lo * PMSeles. Ports end Service DeportmentsOpen Seturdey 9 AM to S PM. Phowot 283-4800