Untv. of Chgo. LibraryPeriodical RecordHarper M-22 ® OCT 131263 IS \vC^cjo. _ a9^MAFtOONVolume 77, Number 8 Chicago, Illinois, October 4, 1968 12 Pages, 2 SectionsSDS ProposesGroup on HousingMaroons Mace KendailFirst goal leads to 3-1 victory over Kendall College in the first soccer game of the sea¬son Wednesday: Wing Pete Richardson and forward Craig Cook move in on Kendall goalieas goal is scored.Lasts 23 MonthsBoth Sides Like B&GBuilding service workers and Universitymanagement alike seem pleased with theterms of the new 23-month contract ac¬cepted Monday.The workers, members of Local 321 of theCollege, University, and School Employees’Unions, AFL-CIO, voted 162-4 to adopt thecontract, product of all-day Monday nego¬tiations between eight representatives ofthe University and a 14-man union negotiat¬ing committee.The unions’ enthusiasm for the acceptedcontract contrasted Local 321’s reaction tothe University’s earlier contract offer. For¬mer union steward and negotiating commit¬tee member Fred Copp, who said Saturdaythat janitors “should not be condemned” tothe wage increase then offered by Univer¬ sity management, said that the contractaccepted Monday was “a very fair and re¬spectable package for all concerned.”“There has been disagreement amongsome of the janitors on campus,” Coppadded, “but the majority are pleased withthe contract.”Director of personnel Fred Bjorling saidthe University suggested that the contractbe limited to 23 months (rather than 24) fortwo reasons. First, he said, it made thecontract more acceptable to the union; sec¬ondly, by moving the contract’s expirationdate from Sept. 31 to Aug. 31 of 1970, it willrelieve the University from negotiating atan already busy time of year.Henry Gozdecki, president of Local 321,estimated that it will take the union at least By Caroline HeckAbout 60 people attended a meeting onhousing Wednesday afternoon which re¬sulted in the formation of a student steer¬ing committee on housing.Discussion centered upon a set of sixproposals formulated by an housing com¬mittee of the students for a democraticsociety (SDS). The meeting had been calledby various independent student groups,but SDS was the only group that outlinedany definite suggestions.Some of the issues SDS raised, and whichthe steering committee will consider, dealtwith destruction of buildings in the southcampus area (60th to 61st streets), electionof a representative student group to havethe say on planning student housing, andUniversity underwriting of student leases.Students discussed the alternatives opento the University for constructing studenthousing, including the proposed StudentVillage dormitory complex, which has notyet been funded and tax problemsconnected with building non-dormitoryhousing.Contracta month to ratify the contract. Firsthe said, proofs of the contract must go outto the union and its members. Eventually,all members of the negotiating committeewill sign it.The agreement brought wage increasesof 31 to 62 cents for the first year, and in¬creases of 11 to 23 cents the second year.The University agreed to an additional fourpercent raise for night shift workers and tomove Blue Cross and Blue Shield benefits.The new contract allows four week vaca¬tions for 15-year employees, and makes itpossible to reach the top of the pay scalein 12 months instead of 18. The Universityalso agreed to sit down with workers to de¬termine job classifications that will be in¬cluded in the union’s next contract. THEHOUSINGCRISISNancy Stokely, 69, who presented theSDS proposals, stated, “We would ideallywant housing for students and families inthe same building. If the University hastax problems, that’s their business.”Student Action DiscussedAnother topic of discussion was past Uni¬versity responses to student actions onhousing. The last item of the SDS housingstatement said, “We don’t want to see anymore than ten pages, especially when theseconsist of appendices of past responses.”Arthur Hochberg, ‘70’ vice-president ofstudent government (SG) stated, “We’retalking about a change in priorities. TheUniversity tries to avoid discussing generalpriorites, instead talks to us about moneyand feasibility.”The SDS proposals did not originally in¬clude any mention of the student village,because, according to Judy Clark, ’71, atthe time the proposals were made, thestudent village appeared to be a deadissue.At the Wednesday meeting, students sug¬gested that the proposals be expanded toinclude recommending that any plans forconstructing housing, in particular the Stu¬dent Village, be subject to students’approval.One proposal added during the meetingsuggested that students have access to fileson student and community housing and ur¬ban renewal.The SDS guidelines were not decided uponas the final demands to be submitted tothe University. Rather, the steering com¬mittee plans to use them as an indicationof issues that must be dealt with.The steering committee will hold an openmeeting to discuss housing further thisSunday at 2 pm in Chapel House.Continued on Page ThreePines Resigns IHC Post,Asks Full-time PresidentMitchell Pines ’69 resigned Wednesday aspresident of the Inter-House Council (IHC),claiming “that IHC needs new ideas andnew leadership at this point.’Pines also stated that he is involved inmany other activities and he feels thatsomeone who can devote full time to theIHC should take over.A new president will be elected by thecouncil within a week.Pines, who served as president for threeBeware of NarcSince the beginning of the sum¬mer the unofficial count for studentdrug busts in the area is nine.There is a narc on campus — socool it. The narc has been knownto have worked on other campusesin the Midwest. More specific in¬formation will be available to thecampus in the next few weeks. quarters, instituted several reforms in theIHC, including the establishment ofcommittee system to provide the IHC withthe information it needs to make decisionsand recommendations on dormitory prob¬lems. The committees cover 9 broad rangeof dormitory interests; among them:•The Residence. Halls and Commons’ op¬eration of board contracts;•The establishment of co-ed dorms oncampus;•The Student Village;•A speakers program which, according toPines, will expand the IHC into a serviceorganization.Pines is also chairman of Revitalizaton,a student servce organization and a repre¬sentative to dean of students Charles D.O’Connell’s Faculty Student Advisory Co¬mmittee on Campus Student Life.Pines explained that “the IHC is a youngand flexible organization; however, most ofwhat it can accomplish will depend on howwilling students are to work on it.’ HOUSING MEETING: Students concerned about the shortage of University housinggather Wednesday afternoon in Ida Noyes Hall to discuss six proposals advancedby members of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS).Another Confrontation Ahead for Columbia U.NEW YORK (CPS) — Amid occasionaloutbursts of violence and periods of fitfulindecision, the elements of a new confronta¬tion at Columbia are quietly beginning tobuild.Two weeks ago, in a relatively peacefulaction, campus radicals led by Students fora Democratic Society closed down the open¬ing day of registration. Then last week ac¬tivities escalated when seven people werearrested by city police on the opening dayof classes, following a noisy march andbrief stoning of the university’s chief ad¬ministration building.In the process, the participants, many ofthem veterans of last spring’s rebellion,have begun to rediscover their former mili¬tancy. But the search for that more elusivecommodity—a strategy that can transformthese random actions into a sustained rev¬olutionary movement—still continues.Thus for many people, the struggle atColumbia is in transition. The immediatetask is to recoup the strength won in thespring, refocus attention on the itemsthrough new sets of confrontations and hopethat out of all this a new direction willemerge.But the revolution, in contrast to its sup¬porters, did not return from summer vaca¬tion invigorated. The voice of God, for ex¬ample (or some other more charismaticfigure), has not been raised in condemna¬tion of the administration for its racist andimperialist policies at any of the rallies.What’s more, those speakers who have ad¬dressed the crowds have so far been un¬able to capture the attention of the massof campus moderates, whose support sixmonths ago was largely responsible for thecontinued success of the strike. Mean¬while the administration, though slandereddaily by its detractors, has moved effective¬ly to further cool the dissatisfaction throughseries of conciliatory actions offering rein¬statement to 42 suspended students andasking the city to drop charges againstnearly 400 students arrested.Radical leaders, reacting against thisnew tactic, at first sought to create somekind of immediate confrontation in an at¬tempt to bring at least the excitement, if not-the substance, of the previous struggleinto the present events, but even here, theadministration has shrewdly backed off.“No repression whatsoever,” acting pres¬ident Andrew Cordier has promised. Trueto his word, the only police attending ral¬lies these days are those wearing businesssuits—or beards.In this period of temporary calm, the ac¬tivists are conducting a careful re-evalua¬tion of their movement’s present statuswhile seeking a consensus on where itshould go from here. In the interim a num¬ber of things have once again become clear.Crowds do not necessarily represent con¬cern. Confrontation is not always creative.Rebellion doesn’t always result in revolu¬tion.On the broader questions of strategy, however, the radicals remain openly divided.A small but vocal minority of SDS, mostlymembers of its labor committee, arguedlong, and at time persuasively, that thecampus struggle should be linked this fallwith the plight of the city’s working class¬es. That position was eventually defeatedin favor of keeping the focus centered onthe university, but as one student said. “Weexhausted ourselves settling it.”The same lines of division have been evi¬dent in recent discussions of future actions.Labor committee supporters are backing aproposal for a mass trial at which both thestriking students and the administrationwould present their cases before a jurycomposed of students, faculty and membersof the Momingside Heights community. Ifthe administration refuses to appear, theradicals would present their charges any¬way in a mock tribunal which would leadultimately to a finding of guilt and “expel¬ling and stopping the trustees.”Those opposed criticize the proposal asbeing unnecessarily theatrical and simplyunworkable. They support instead the pat¬tern followed last year in which people wereorganized through educational programsand mass rallies around the dominant cam¬pus issues: secret defense research, expan¬sion into the community and repression ofthe student movement.The same internal rancor evident on theCohn & SterntUmmt Sc (EampusShopLAMBSWOOL SWEATERIN 15 COLORSOur classic V-neck, lambswool sweaters come from AlanPaine of England. We have them in every imaginablecolor ... 15 of them to be exact. $16.HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER • 55th & LAKE PARK HOW MUCH YOU MAYSAVE ON YOUR CARINSURANCE WITHSTATE FARMFrank Spinelli1369 E. 53rd ST.955-3133STATE FARMMutual Automobile Insurance CompanyHome Office: Bloomington, IllinoisAEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESopen Thursday & Friday eveningsJimmy’s;and the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FORUNIVERSITY RLIENTELEfifth-fifth & WOODLAWN DR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 campus was also reflected at sessions ofthe International Assembly of RevolutionaryStudent Movements which was sponsoredhere by Columbia SDS during registrationweek. About 20 leftist students from Cana¬da, Mexico, and a number of Europeancountries joined several hundred Americanstudents, mostly from New York City, fora week of discussion on the state of themovement internationally.The meetings, generally characterized bylimited planning, frequently broke downinto shouting contests over technical ideo¬logical points. One session which beganwith expressions of solidarity with studentsunder attack from the army in Mexico Citywas completely overturned one hour laterafter the discussion turned to bitter argu¬ments between French students over thespring rebellion in Paris.Below the confused surface of the pro¬ceedings, however, one could clearly detecta growing sense of urgency in students andan increased willingness to take more des¬perate actions.That certainly is the pattern emerging indevelopments at Columbia. The current ad¬ministration policy of non-confrontation,which at first seemed to undermine themilitance of many students, now seems to be having the opposite effect. Last weekstudents were willing to stone a buildingwhereas the week before they stopped atsimply blocking a doorway. The power vac¬uum created by the administration is nowdrawing into an atmosphere of permissive¬ness which is challenging the students tomore and more dramatic action.Thus spontaneously and without any realdirection, the students are drifting on acollision course with the university. Event¬ually the administration will be forced tomake a response.When that moment arrives, the movestoward conciliation being taken now appearpart of a startegy to discredit and isolatethe radicals from potential future supportof sympathetic moderates. If the strategy issuccessful the administration could controlthe situation to the point that it could evencall in police to crush a confrontation be¬fore it could develop into anything moreserious.There are signs, however, that the pres¬ent soft-line policy has not been a total suc¬cess. Many students remain angered by thecity’s refusal to follow through on the uni¬versity’s request to drop some of thecharges.EncounterFor those interested inexploring Sensator; a-wareness first hand agroup oceanic experiencewill occur at the Mc¬Cormick YWCA, 30WestOak, Auditorium, 2ndFloor.$2.00 contributionPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800DiscountArt Materials• school, office &filing supplies• drafting materials• mounting - matting -• framingDuncan’s1305 E 53rd HY 3-411 IBe Practical!BuyUtility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, d_evis,”etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd. St.Playtex invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent... it even protects onyour first day. 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So the chance of a mishapis almost zero!Try it fast.Why live in the past?2 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 4, 1968 ♦ # * • - •Deans Memo Cites Housing ProblemContinued from Page OneThe steering committee, which consistsof interested persons who attended Wednes¬ day’s meeting, includes Judy Baer, SusanBraude, Louise Brotsky, Lenny Carrel,Dan Cohen, Joyce Fingeroth, Len Handels-man, Michael Krauss, Jerry Lipsch, JodyRenewal Takes SpaceIt does not appear as if private housingin Hyde Park will be able to alleviate thethe congested northwest comer of thenear future.Existing housing space is scheduled to betaken away under a proposal by the city’sDepartment of Urban Renewal to deal withthe congested northwest corner of theneighborhood.The area around 47th and Ingleside calledthe “canyon” has for years many build¬ings in which the original seven-roomapartments were cut up into three andeven four small apartments. The planwould “deconvert” many of these units.Lewis Hill, commissioner of urban re¬newal, in July estimated that the 577 unitsin the 34 buildiings in the 4700 blocks of Drexel, Ingleside and Ellis should be re¬duced to about 211 to make the arealiveable.BULLETIN Sakolower, Paula Szewczyk, Janet Tenney,and Sally Yagol.When students arrived at the meeting,they found there several hundred copies ofa memo from Dean of Students Charles D.O’Connell.The memo, which was dated October 1and addressed to students of the uni¬versity, dealt with off-campus housing, thestudent village, the University-funded stu¬dent housing research project, and faculty-student task forces doing research onsouth campus and Woodlawn for the modelcities program.The housing section of the memo con¬ tained an explanation of the immediatehousing problem, mentioning the un¬expected return of graduate studentswhose education was not interrupted by thedraft as they had anticipated.O’Connell stated in the memo, ‘"Hiehousing problems that some students havefaced this fall are a direct result of thesehighly unpredicable conditions.”The memo then summarized the materialpresented in last week’s housing officestatement on student housing accommoda¬tions presently available. The details of O’Connell’s memo were not discussed at themeeting.Murphies -Murphy Scholarship forms will beavailable in the College FinancialAid Office, 5737 S. UniversityAvenue, today through Wednes¬day. The deadline for completedforms is Friday, October 11. Friday, October 4LECTURE: (Hillel Foundation) "Moral Problems inSocial Science Research," Herbert C. Kelman,Social-Psychologolist, Harvard University, Hillel,5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.SUKKAH: (Hillel Foundation) "Building the HillelSukkah," Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn, 8 am.DANCE: (The Committee) Sunshine Gospel Mission,Ida Noyes Hall, 8:30 pm.Saturday, October 5REHEARSAL: University Chamber Orchestra, Lexing¬ton Studio, 10 am.FILM: (Contemporary European Films) "Morgan!"Cobb Hall Auditorium, 7 and 9:15 pm.RUGBY MEET: (Rugby Club) Rugby Club vs. Chicago!Lions, Washington Park, 2 pm.Sunday, October 6SUKKAH: (Hillel Foundation) "Decorating the HillelSukkah," Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn, 10 am.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Preacher, Rev¬erend Spencer Parsons, Dean of the Chapel, "TheFatal Cleaver," Rockefeller Memorial ChapeL 11am.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes, Cloister Club. Beginners,7 pm; intermediates, 8 pm; requests, 9-11:30 pm.CAMPAIGN: (McCarthy-Kennedy Committee) Canvassfor Bill Clark for Senator, bring cars. ChapelHouse, 5810 Woodlawn. 11:30 am-5 pm.DISCUSSION: (Brent House) "Racism as a UniversityProblem," chairman of discussion Nicholas Holt,5540 Woodlawn, 6 pm supper; 7:30 pm discussion. Democratic ConventionDemonstrations andDisordersWitnesses and participants are needed to tell theirstories to The Commission on The Causes and ThePrevention of Violence. Call and we’ll interview you.Bill SilvermanExt. 2392 or363-5930 evenings. . . La protection financier© que vouidonnez a votre famille aujourd'huidevra lui 6tre procur6e d’une autrefa<;on demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certainement accomplir cettetiche a votre place.En tant que repr£sentant local de la Sun“■•I I* -l.lt.. A UK mAlHUli devotre choir?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 - FR 2-2390Office -Hours 9 to 5 Mondays t FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYLehnhoff Scholl of Music & DanceMusic Instruction By An Outstanding FacultyPrivate lessons in: Cello, Clarinet, Flute, French Horn, Oboe, Piano, Trumpet,Violin, Vivla, VoiceClass lessons in: Recorder Chamber Music - meets twice monthly - alternate weeks(rehearsal at studio) Instruction by Sheppard Lehnhoff and Don Molineof Chicago SymphonyDance: INSTRUCTION BY FACULTY OF DISTINGUISHED PERFORMERS ANDCHOREOGRAPHERSJazz & Ballet by Low Conte (formerly with Theatre in the Round - also Broadwayshows. Special courses for Actors and those interested in Theatre.Wednesday & Friday.MODERN - by Joanna Hall, Master in Dance, University of IllinoisInstructor at University of IllinoisMens & Women — Beginners and AdvancedTuesday & Thursday eveningsLjj8 E' 57th ST- BU 8-3500CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILT3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41s! STREET Read: “A Plan of a PeaceOffice for the UnitedStates” (Dr. BenjaminRush, 1799)Write: Congressmen, candidatesSupport: HB 19650-offered inthe House Tuesday,Sept. 10, by Represen¬tatives Seymour Halpern (R,NY) andGeorge Brown Jr.(D,Cal) and manyothersS. 4019 - offered inthe Senate Wednesday,Sept. 11, by SenatorsVance Hartke, MarkHatfield, RalphY arborough.For information, bumper stick¬ers, peace medallions, write:Another Mother for Peace407 N. Maple DriveBeverly Hills, Cal 90210INTRESTED IN THESTUDY OF LAW ?A representative of the Wash¬ington U. School of Law (St,Louis) will be on campusWednesday, October 9, 1968at 9:00 A.M. to talk to Studentsplanning to enter law schoolupon graduation, or thinkingabout it. Make appt. with theoffice of Career Counselingand Placement, Reynolds Club,Room 202. You dontetobe e>to drinkoiis lift.Justin'.October 4, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.. i # * « » * ITV* * * 1 • * » • A |i,« '» i •,)EDITORIAL War Crimes StandardsNot Applicable to US.?Housing MeasuresThe housing crisis persists, and if you don’t see studentssleeping in the gutter, it doesn’t mean they have found placesthat are clean or dry or warm.The University is pretty happy with the way it met the crisis.It underestimated by about 500 the number of students that wouldbe returning (a “highly unpredictable situation,” says Dean CharlesO’Connell), and it has found places for most of them. It is true,the rent might be high, the rooms might not be close to campus,there might be six other people in the apartment. And of coursea number of freshmen are doubled up in small single rooms. Butall in all, everyone has been crammed into some place. And thedraft will eventually solve the problem anyway.It is a question, really, of the quality of living on the thiscampus. Some students get involved enough in their work to beable to ignore their surroundings. But even the most dedicatedstudent becomes aware, sometime in the middle of the winterquarter, that the cold greyness of the campus (grey walls, greysky, grey snow) is getting into him. There are so few diversionsaround campus (never mind in all of Chicago), that an inadequateplace to live becomes very hard to bear.It becomes unacceptable when it is combined with the Uni¬versity’s general disregard for building some kind of communityaround itself.But what can be done about it? The Administrators readingthis editorial column (as they profess to do) will now begin tocluck about the financial crisis, the library that has to be built,the neighborhood that has to be cooled, the faculty that has to behumored and encouraged in their various research endeavors.But it is a matter of priorities. All of these things are crucial to theUniversity. Until very recently it was the faculty which receivedpredominant attention. (The University worries about the “securityproblem” because it is scaring professors away. It is building alibrary because it is badly needed for research.)The students, except as they relate to research, have beenrather the stepchild of the University. One wonders if their com¬plaints and demands would receive much attention at all if studentshad not proved their ultimate power at Columbia.But the University is still committed to education, and inthe long run education suffers with the quality of our environment.In practical terms, something is wrong if the students are so angryabout the lack of a community (and the housing shortage is justa part of this) that they take time from their school work to con¬sider radical action to change things.The housing situation is critical now and it will be two yearsbefore decisions made today to alleviate the shortage can befully implemented. The bureaucracy is slow and getting slower.But unless some steps toward solving the problem are taken now,the patience (or apathy) of the students is not likely to endure.These decisions should be made:• First the chief administrators should be invited to move intodormitory rooms and Hyde Park student apartmentts for a periodof about a month. And the Maroon staff will be happy to arrangean exchange program.• Enough money should be appropriated so that the StudentCo-op can set up a complete central clearinghouse for studenthousing information.• Working drawings should be prepared for the Student Villageas quickly as possible. The current plans should be modified sothat at least 90 per cent of the dormitory rooms are singles. Thereare enough one-room doubles on the campus as it is.• Planning should begin for a major, economical (henceprobably high-rise), student apartment development. By Michael KrausAnother attempt to bring the issue ofUnited States war crimes in Vietnam be¬fore a federal court failed this week asRobert Freeston, a member of ChicagoArea Draft Resistors (CADRE), was foundguilty of refusal to submit to induction intothe armed forces.Freeston was convicted after three hoursdeliberation by the jury and was immedi¬ately sentenced to three years imprison¬ment by Judge Richard Austin. He is pres¬ently free on a $5000 appeal bond pendingthe scheduling of a new trial.In June 1967 Freeston quit his job as ateacher for the Chicago school system todevote his time to anti-war and anti-draftactivity with CADRE, thereby relinquish¬ing his occupational deferment. Before hebegan teaching he had been a volunteerin VISTA and a student before that holdingdeferred classifications the whole time.When ordered to report for induction lastMarch 15 he requested the signatures ofPresident Johnson, Lewis B. Hershey andthe commandant of the induction center onan affidavit guaranteeing that if he enteredthe army he would not be required to com¬mit war crimes as defined at the Nuern¬berg trials after World War II. The Presi¬dent and Gen. Hershey did not reply at alland the commandant. Major Richardson,flatly refused to sign so Freeston declinedto begin his processing for induction andeventually went home.Freeston’s lawyer, Frank Oliver, saidthat treaties and pacts to which the UnitedStates is a party had which have been rati¬fied by Congress are the law of the land,binding upon individual U S citizens andthat a citizen may be prosecuted for break¬ing them. In fact, at Nuermberg the UnitedStates insisted upon the responsibility ofindividuals to refuse to comply with suchcriminal actions even if ordered to do soby their government. ANALYSISOliver called Steven Goldberg, whoserved in Vietnam with the InternationalVoluntary Service (IVS), and Vivian Roth-stein, a Chicago resident who recentlyvisited North Vietnam, to testify to thebrutality and illegality of U S military ac¬tivities in Vietnam. Their testimony wasruled irrelevant.The jury was sent from the courtroomand that part of the trial was not includedin the court record. U S courts have per¬sistently refused to consider evidence ofthis sort.Oliver also established the technicalitythat Freeston never actually reached thepoint of refusing induction by failing totake the mandatory step forward becausein fact induction was never offered to him.The technicality was discounted by theprosecutor and later by Judge Austin inhis instructions to the jury when he askedthe jury to consider only whether Freestonwas indeed willing to submit.In his concluding statement Oliver of¬fered the jury the opportunity of decidingbetween good and evil and to “send a mes¬sage to Washington”.Oliver has a son presently stationed inVietnam and his emotional comments onpatriotism were very moving.The prosecutor’s remarks brought every¬one back down to the events and madeguilt or innocence a simple matter of blackand white. Austin’s principal concern wasthat laws be respected and that offendersbe discouraged by stiff and speedy pen¬altiesABOUT THE MIDWAYHeart GrantThe National Heart Institute (NHI) haspresented the Billings Hospital with a$550,000 contract to be used in an intensivestudy of acute heart attacks and theircomplications.The NHI announced the contract, whichcalls for a program to be conducted in theUniversity’s hospitals and clinics and thePritzker School of Medicine, for the es¬tablishment of a two-bed heart attack(myocardial infarction) research unit inthe hospital’s cardiology center, one offour new units to be established across thenation.Researchers in the cardiology section ofthe department of medicine will utilize theunit to conduct several studies during thefirst year of a proposed five-year researchproject.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board: Wendy Glockner, Caroline Heck,Timothy S. Kelley, Paula SzewezykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaContributing Editor: John MoscowProduction Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,Cameron Pitcairn, Howie Schamest, LeslieStrauss, Bob SwiftFounded in 1892. Published by University ofChicago students on Tuesdays and Fridaysthroughout the regular school year and Inter¬mittently throughout the summer, except duringthe tenth week of the academic quarter andduring examination periods. Of flees in Rooms303, 304, and 305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3265. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. Agnewl Gesundheit. Porter LecturesThe humanities collegiate division opensits newly-instituted series of lectures on“African and Black American Humanities”Monday and Tuesday with two lecturesand a discussion by James A. Porter, headof the department of art, college offine arts, Howard University.On Monday at 8:30 p.m. Porter will talkon “The Traditional and ContemporaryArts of Black Africa. The place is to be an¬nounced later.On Tuesday, at the same time, he willpresent a lecture on “The Prolongation ofAfrican Art Traditions into Certain Com¬munities of Latin America.”Porter will also participate in aninform-al discussion of “Contemporary Afro-Amer¬ican Art,” Wednesday evening in Classics21 in which interested members of the Uni¬versity community are invited to join. Ad¬mission to the lectures and to the discussionis without ticket and without charge.Porter will also participate in an inform-em Negro Art” (1943) and a co-author of‘The Images of Dignity: The Drawings ofCharles White” (1967), and has written sev¬eral monographs and numberous articleson African and black American Art.Free Tripto WashingtonAttention, all Yippie leaders, theHouse Committee on UnamericanActivities (HUAC) is looking foryou. For an all expense paid tripto Washington D.C., write toHUAC, Washington D.C. and insistthat as a Yippie leader, you havea right to be investigated.til*4 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 4. 1968ELECTRONICSPRESENTSTHE ELECTRONICNOTE BOOKTHAT DOESN'TFORGETit Solid StateCircuitif CapstanDriveCASSETTETAPE RECORDERPOP IN - POP OUTTAPE HANDLINGNO THREADINGSALEMCE©FOR ALLU of C STUDENTSSTUDENT SALE ONCASSETTE TAPE CARTRIDGES60 min $1.10 EA. 90 min $1.99 EA.- NOTICE -WEDNESDAY OF EACHWEEK IS STUDENTDISCOUNTDAY!OLSON ELECTRONICS123 N. WESTERNCHICAGO, ILL.HA 1-3533STUDENT VALUES AVAILABLEONLY AT THIS OLSON STORE Listen. It’s called Let’s Go—The Student Guide to Europe,written by Harvard students. And it’s full of the real stuff.Like how to pour Spanish cider by holding the jug over yourshoulder and the glass behind your back. And the most successful(fully researched) ways to hitchhike in Germany. Spain. Everywhere.And, of course, places to eat and sleep that only a student could love.Take a peek for yourself. Send one little buck with coupon below.Offer good while stocks last.Oh. By the way. If you dodecide to get a student’s-eye-view of Europe, you’ll fly thereon a U.S. airline, right? Somake it TWA. The airline thatknows Europe like a book.Need further info on travelin U. S. or to Europe? Checkyour travel agent, or yournearest TWA office! TWA, Dept. 208, RO. Box 25, Grand Central Station, N. Y. 10017Here’s my check to TWA for $1.00. Quick. Send me myLet’s Go—The Student Guide to Europe in a plain brown wrapper.Name.Address.-State. .Zip Code.My travel agent is-upup andaway IHTA•Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc.Pssst.Wanna buy a revealing glimpseof student life in Europe for a buck?ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER OFFERGREAT NEW ggfi 25000* • Regular list price $250• Full 12” carriage with Auto Return• All repeat functions• Students and Faculty oniyFOR INFORMATION CALL 928-7829♦This offer good only through J & R Office Machines,authorized distributor office typewriter division. SENSITIVITY -t- GOSPELYou are invited to participate ina Christian Friendship Weekendon October 11-13 at the CursilloCenter, 1300 S. Wabash Avenue.The purpose of the weekend isto explore your problems, seehow the gospel relates to them,and together form a Christiancommunity. Registration for theweekend can only be madethrough:Father Robert B. Perry, O.P.1909 S. Ashland AvenueChicago, Illinois 60608Phone: M0 6-4500 or CA 6-0074Read the ISRAEL andMIDDLE EAST NEWS¬LETTER. For info andsample copy send $1 toP.O. Box 2331, Sunnyvale,Calif. 94087m ffioro OX>•acGOANDERSON’SBULKOSERVICE STATIONHIGHEST QUALITY GASOLINEAT LOWEST PRICESFEATURING THEBULKO PANTRYA complete Grocery StoreOPEN 24 HOURS57th & COTTAGE GROVECARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a$ioused 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants & Mill returns at afraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discount >with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY The University of Chicago BookstoreSells All Required & RecommendedBooks & Supplies♦Stationery ♦Reference Books *Gifts♦Typewriters ♦Photography Supplies♦Magazines *Newspapers *Snack BarHOURS:Fri. Oct. 4 - 8:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M.Sat. Oct. 5 - 8:30 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.Mon. Oct. 7 - 8:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M.Tue. Oct. 8 - 8:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M.THEUNIVERSITYOFCHICAGOBOOKSTORESEMINARY COOPERATIVEBOOKSTORE, INCtheology •philosophy• political scienceand related fields• course books in philosophyand political science5757 So. University Mon.- Fri. 12 noon • 4 P.M.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.JESSEISON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870. PL 2-8190, DO 3-9i86 1340 E. 53rdTMF CHICAGO MARQON foreign car hospitalservice ff-, r t ~i rln rf-1 nln rfnrln^1^ -0-^nSpecial!For Back-toSchoolStyle Cut —Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristprescriptions fillednewest styling inframesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644Same Day 5 Hr. CleaningNo Extra ChargeCustom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd. 752-6933• •. big selections in stocknow for thobiko riding sooson!RALE/&HiSPORTS! $65.00 LIGHTWEIGHT RACERMore quality,more value, more fun5424 kimbark ave. mi 3-31 13LUCHINOSTUDIO OF THE DANCEFLAMENCO — PRIMITIVEMODERNMU 4-1173 In Harper Court 5210 Harper • Sturmey-Archer 3 speed hubwith trigger control• Brooks leather saddle• Dunlop Amberwall Tires• Front and rear caliper brakes• All steel tubing construction• Three-point chain guardanchorage• Shock stop grips• Boy's and girl's modelsavailable• Double rear mudguard staySee the DL22 today.You'll know quality whenyou see it. BUY NOW ON $EASY TERMS 44 95The Schwinn Racer is an ideal tour¬ing model at a low budget price. VjLightweight styling, Schwinn tubu¬lar rims, sports touring tires andfoam cushioned saddle. Schwinnquality throughout.Only a Raleigh is really a ft RaleighART'SCycle &Hobby Shops ART'SCycle &Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th ST. 363-75241710 E. 87th ST. SA 1-5883 1636 E. 55th ST. 363-7524 ,1710 E. 87th ST. SA 1-5863. October 4, 1968 fMAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 28 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mailwith payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over thephone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BEIN BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUSTBE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO3:30 P.M. DAILYFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3266.FOR SALE8mm MOVIE CAMERA, projector,editor, splicer 8> bank of flood-j lights—$150 or best offer. 684-4071,I keep trying.STEREO EQUIPMENT SALESherwood BOW receiver, NEW: $229Sherwood 140W receiver, NEW: $229Scott 344C NEW: $229.95Scott S9 speakers, NEW: $25Marantz 8B used: $145| Garrard A70 with cartr. base 8.dust cover, used: $145Knight KG895 ampl. used: $99I and many more . . .AUDIO CONSULTANTS, 864-95651517 Davis St., Evanston up. Free gas and elec. Clean.Quiet Williams, 6043 WoodlawnCONDOMINIUM. 5537 Hyde ParkBlvd. 6 rm. 3 bdr. 2 bth. Bldg. &apt. comp remod $22,500 poss. now.363-6842.HOUSE FOR SALE8211 Crandon. Custom built. 8 largerooms. 3 Good-sized bedrooms, 1 Vibaths, full basement, gas heat. 2natural fireplaces, 2-car garage.$29,500 by owner. ES 5-6938.WANTED TO RENTVisiting professor desires furn. apt.or hse. Spring Qtr./69. possibletrade for hse in London. Call 285-6238.Vis. Prof, wants apt. or house.Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3883.JOBSFREE rm/brd . . . live 8800S,2200E. Companion for 10 yr. old.ES 5-1346 or Helen at KE 6-6112.BABYSITTER, 5 afternoons, ap¬prox. 20 hr/wk. For infant in SouthShore, student wife preferred. 768-6180.WANTED — Articulate SCEPTIC,to present his case and answerquestions informally for an eveningwith Christian College students.Send brief of position and qualifi¬cations to Dr. C. Seerveld, Dept,of Philos., Trinity Christian Col¬lege, Palos Heights, III. 60463.Assist grandmo with girl, 5: boy1965 VOLKS, sq. back, fine cond.$1250 or best offer. 324-9444.MOTORCYCLE: 1966 Norton 750 lowmileage. Good condition. Best offertakes. 375-9623.YAMAHA 80, 4,000m. Great shape.$150 684-5722.MOTOR SCOOTER: Allstate Vespa.$75 or best offer. 324-9444.12-string GUITAR. Beautiful sound.Brand new with hard case. $100.694-5722.AMPEX MCRO 20 Cassette rcdr/plyr/tp. dk. 8 mos., exc. cond. $75or bst. ofr. Moore: 373-1133Biba of Georgetown U.African & Indian clothesbedspreads — sandals, etc.22 East Elm 10%discountCAMPINGTents, sleeping bags, stoves, lan¬terns, other equipment FOR RENT.Contact: Hickory at Ext. 2381 or324-1499.PUCES TO LIVE2 fern, undergrads want 3rd tojoin in attempt at living humanly.$45/mo. 643-9834.ROOMMATE needed immediately| to share unusually comfortable,1 well-located furnished Hyde Parkj apt. with another woman grad stu¬dent. If you like quiet and conveni¬ence call PL 2-1900, #907.|3'A room apt. 1334 — 2 Hyde ParkBlvd. Married only. 752-3644. $104I month.TENANT REFERRAL SERVICE.Reasonable Rental? Desirable Apts.Lake Front Community Excellent| Transportation. UC bus direct tocampus. Efficiencies from $85. One, “edroom from $110. Furnished andUnfurnished. Also Large DeluxeApts. South Shore Commission ANon-Profit Community Organizationi at 7134 S. Jeffery. NO 7-7630.INDEPENDENCE In private, furn-'shed inexpensive rooms and suiteswith home-style cooking, recrea¬tional facilities, etc.—in our ownjriendly building at 56th and Wood-''®wn (NE corner). Stop by or call752-9704 or 493-7102.NEARBY, economical, newly dec.“ unfurn. apts., 2 and Vh rms. *77.50 PERSONALS switches to Far Eastern studies.Giddy, hyena laugh up front./ "I'mfree!" a short applause — a lonebearded figure slinks out of line,clutching a small packet of cards.The BLUE GARGOYLE CoffeeHouse, at 57th and University, re¬opens Monday, October 7, withfood, drink, entertainment, andpeople.It's crackers to slip a rozzer thedropski in snide.Quitting school?Be sure to check the monthly"Vocations for Social Change"magazine. Community organizing,underground newspaper, resistance encourage Laziness and Immoral¬ity.7. Cut Taxes by Cutting Out Waste¬ful Government Spending.8. Repeal the Destructive Deci¬sions of the Supreme Court.9. End the Viet Nam War Quicklyand Honorably.10. Restore Local Control toSchools, Labor Unions and Busi¬nesses.VOTE-GEORGE C. WALLACE FORPRESIDENT. The American Inde¬pendent Party.What this society need is a hugepropalyactic.Andy Warhol at UC? Yes! FridayNight.4, approx, one weekend per mi-,live in. Child care only. Driverslie. desirable. Work or personalref. req near UC. Ml 3-1181.SERVICESMinnette's Custom Salon. Alter¬ations, DRESSMAKING. 1711 '/a E.55th. 493-9713.Term Papers, theses typed. IBMElec. 40c/pages. Mrs. Cohen, 338-5242 evngs.XEROX cheap! 6c/p.—Books 4c/p.—loose sheets. Extras—3c/each.324-8622.Dresses, shirts, jackets made toorder or altered by expert DRESS¬MAKER and designer. 5425 So.Woodlawn, apt. 1A. 324-6672.A/lay I do your typing? 363-1104.MUSICDRUMMER and BASSIST neededfor rock group (formerly The MeatMarket). Contact 141 B.J.AUDITIONS: Chicago pop musicmanagement company holding audi¬tions. Talented singers, vocalgroups, bands call 332-0616, PeterShelton, 10:30-5 (M-F).JAZZ FANS. No admission fee orcover charge at the Telar SupperClub Oct. 1 thru Oct. 6. ElvinJones trio. Bring your ID.VIOLINIST wishes to play 2nd ina good quartet. Walter: 493-1548,evngs.SUPPORT THE GRAPE BOYCOTT.You mean no more Thunderbird?Found—white & tiger male cat.643-1820.EAT LIVERPat'e—Harper Theater CoffeeHouse.Ha Ha Stern.The scene is a track encircled,people-strewn corner of Bartlettgym; final day of registration, orshould I say planned exasperation.The floor is littered with timeschedules, catalogues, butts, applecores, and a weary queue of last-ditch registrants in various skewangles of disrepose.Scores of solicitous eyes peerat the chicken-scrawled roster ofclosed sections. Pervading the airis a plangent hum — garbled in-qiries mingling with distraught ex¬clamations of disbelief."How can they close all myrequired courses?"A disillusioned chem major 8< other movement job listings.Available at Reynolds Club 8.Careers & Counselling.Eat only at Ahmad's. 10,000 hungryPersians can't be wrong.We are equally unhappy when weare deeply in love and when wehave no lover at all.When you really want automation,there's nothing like people.LIVING DOUBLE?Meet at Harper Theatre CoffeeHouse.SWINGING COUPLE wishes tomeet same. Objective: intensehuman communication. Box 3317,Cicero.Did you know that CANADIANSpicketed supermarkets in Torontocarrying California grapes? Whythe hell aren't you doing some¬thing?"Life is one long dinner with thefamily." — J. Anouilh.The Fall of the House of Usher.One of three films at DePaul U.,Oct. 8, 7 p.m. Center Theatre, 25East Jackson.S. Stuart: Pine box addressed toH. Hartstone. 955-5036. Reward forreturn.My uncle is in there.I saw that movie.There is no hope.Decorate the Hillet Sukkah — Sun¬day, Oct. 6, 10:00 AM.The "Establishment" invites Uni¬versity of Chicago students to en-joy classical guitar music sixnights a week, pitchers of beerfor $1.25, late dinner steaks for$2.50. In case you didn't read theMaroon's Restaurant classification,the "establishment" is Hyde Park'slargest financial supporter ofMcCarthy — The Court House.CHICAGO PREMIERE! Warhol'sBIKE BOY. Friday, Cobb Auditor¬ium.Come to a dance! The SunshineGospel Mission is here.Only George C. Wallace has con¬sistently said:1. Prosecute Criminals, Not thePolice.2. Repeal the Federal "Open ous-ing" Law.3. Get all Communists out of ourdefense plants and schools.4. Cut off Foreign Aid to AllCommunist Countries.5. Register Communists, Not guns.6. Revise Welfare Programs which Potted Palms and Parfaits.Harper Theater Coffee House.Canvass for Bill Clark for SenatorSunday Oct. 6, 11:30 AM.. ChapelHouse, 5810 Woodlawn. Bring cars.Return 5 P.M. (SPA)SHISH KEBOB at Ahmad's"Your last issue has helped medecide to not renew this year. No-here in that issue (9/27) did 1see any mention of the other sideof the picture. The Chicago policecertainly were asked to put upwith a great deal of abuse beforethey took action. Otherwise Igenerally have enjoyed your paper.Yours truly, Robert A. Samson,Vernon Center, N.Y."SEND A SUBSCRIPTION HOMETODAY. Bring $7 to the MaroonBusiness Office and help this pa¬per to survive.From a SEED Editor: "Of course,your Classified Ads are better thanours!" The Chicago Maroon, theonly College Newspaper with Un¬derground Classifieds.The Mission is to dance-tonight at8:30 in Ida Noyes. Men 50c Womenfree.I'll take three.I did not shoot Any Warhol—Viva!Das Court House ist masche.Last call for meals in the HillelSukkah.YOGA—meditate, relax. Hatha. SriNerode DO 3-0155.Lenny Bruce is the alter ego ofthe Maroon Business Office.The GOLD CITY INN got fourstars in the Eat article last Friday.It deserves it. Fine, fine, food.WRITERS' WORKSHOP — PL 2-8377.THE BLUE GARGOYLE IS BACK.I'm ready."Those who possess drugs on cam¬pus also possess an awful powerto injure the entire college. Ifyou moke pot or use drugs, please,move it off-campus. This is nota game." Editorial in the studentnewspaper of Webster College, Wis¬consin.Former C.A.P. member? Presentmember? Just interested? CallPam-Woodward Court 2302.RUSSIAN taught by native teacher.Rapid method. Free trial lesson.CE 6-1423, 9-5.The Chicago Literary Review,written and distributed on over50 campuses coast-to-coast, witha circulation of 478,000 is the mostwidely read student publication inthe nation. Wow! The presenteditor (who serves a good cup oftea—KS) rose to his position fromthat of delivery boy. You too canrise from among the ranks. INH305 or Ext. 3276.The Maroon Business Manager can'tguarantee that you too will riseamong the ranks here, but you canDELIVER THE MAROON, on Tues¬days and Fridays, early morningto about noon. MAKE A WHOLEPILE OF MONEY, (about $3-7/hour.) We need a reliable, repeat,reliable, student with a 4-door carof stationwagon. Come immediatelyto the Business Office, Ida NoyesHall, room 304, or call Ext. 3265.Or call 324-9358. SRH—I just don't understand. JHS.Expand your world with MarcoPolo (Travel Service, 1552 E. 55th,288-5944).Tonight in Ida Noyes — a dancewith the great Sunshine GospelMission.STAND UP FOR AMERICA!The maker of NUDE RESTAU¬RANT, MY HUSTLER, and THECHELSEA GIRLS proudly presentsanother extravaganza of eroticism,a veritable tour-de-flesh, undoubtedlythe funniest thing since cannedheat . . . BIKE BOY! An AndyWarhol Production.The Maroon Restaurant classifica¬tion sucks.The ad above was paid for by oneof Hyde Park's sore losers.MORAL PROBLEMS N SOCIALSCIENCE RESEARCH. Lecture byProf. Herbert C. Kelman, Social-Psychologist, Harvard University.At Hillel, Friday, Oct. 4th, 8:30P.M.PICKET of Neighborhood storesthis Sat., Oct. 5, in support ofGrape BOYCOTT (Farm WorkersOrganizing Comm.). HELP NEED¬ED. Call 684-7938 or UC Ext. 3274.TONIGHT! Meet Andy's Gang atCobb Hall.THE GARGOYLE IS BACK. DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION DEM¬ONSTRATIONS AND DISORDERS— witnesses and participants areneeded to tell their story to theCommission on Violence. Call andwe'll interview you. Bill Silverman,Ext. 2392, or 363-5930.HORSEBACK RIDING. Those inter¬ested in excellent instruction, callJ. Katz, 375-2636.CONTEMPORARY EUROPEANFILMS. Get tickets at Cobb HallAuditorium Saturday night whenyou go to see Morgan! at 7 or9:15.It's a great flick.Jazz and Blues.Harper Theater Coffee House.The New York Daily News and TheChicago Maroon both rate restau¬rants with stars.I'm trying to get in touch withJanet who I met at Mrs. Connor sguest house in London around themiddle of June. Janet, if you readthis, please drop me a line. JoeyNgudic, 866 Val Park Ave., ValleyStream, N.Y. 11580.Fetish Festival at Cobb Hall?Be there, 7:15 8< 9:30, Tonight.Disregarding my life.I did it out of self-interest, notaltruism.Munchabunchawhat?NOW!WHPK-FM 88.3FIRST ON YOUR RADIO DIALOperated By Students At TheUniversity of ChicagoSATURDAY2:30 The Flea Market—a diverse magazine of muscial andspoken art.5:45 Comprehensive Critic5:50 Campus News and Events6:00 More Flea Market, until 2:30 AM (News at 8 and 11)SUNDAY2:30 Conversations at Chicago3:00 Sunday Soul Session5:45 Comprehensive Critic6:00 African High Life and Calypso8:00 News—Evening Report8:10 Sweet Sound of Soft Soul10:00 The Om Point (News At 11)12:00 Joint SessionMONDAY7:00AM-10:30 Am Happy Wake Up Service2:30 Classical Music5:45 Comprehensive Crit ic5:50 Campus News and Events6:00 South Side Soul8:00 News—Evening Report8:10 Community Viewpoint9:00 jazz11:00 News—Late Report11:05 Monday BluesTUESDAY7:00AM-10:30AM Happy Wake Up Service2:305:455:506:008:008:109:0011:0011:05 Classical MusicComprehensive CriticCampus News and EventsSouth Side SoulNews—Evening ReportCommunity ViewpointJ azzNews—Late ReportThe UndergroundWEDNESDAY7:00Am-10:30Am Happy Wake Up Service2:30 Classical Music5:45 Comprehensive Critic5:50 Campus News and Events6:00 South Side Soul8:00 News—Evening Report8:10 Community Viewpoint9:00 Jazz11:00 News—Late Report11:05 The UndergroundTHURSDAY7:00AM-10:30AM Happy Wake Up Service2:30 Classical Music5:45 Comprehensive Critic5:50 Campus News and Events6:00 South Side Soul8:00 News—Evening Report8:10 Community Viewpoint9:00 Jazz11:00 News—Late Report11:05 The UndergroundFRIDAY7:00AM-10:30AM Happy Wake Up Service2:30 Classical Music5:45 Comprehensive Critic5:50 Campus News and Events6:00 South Side Soul8:00 News—Evening Report8:10 Community Viewpoint9:00 Jazz11:00 News—Late Report11:05 The Underground\ October 4, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONDISAPPOINTED?(A message to THE THINKING STUDENT)This time there’s no alternative.Perhaps you were committed to the compassionate, sometimes wistfulintensity of Robert Kennedy before an assassin’s bullet dashed yourhopes.Or perhaps you believe in the understated eloquence'^of EugeneMcCarthy, the quiet man who has shaken up and inspired a nation.This time your hopes were snuffed out with ruthless efficiency by acold, impersonal, largely discredited political machine.The people voted for Gene McCarthy in the primaries.But the people couldn’t get through the barbed wire barricades outsidethe International Amphitheatre.The people voted for Richard Nixon, too, in primaries stretching acrossthe continent from New Hampshire to Oregon.His party listened, and now Dick Nixon is on his way to the WhiteHouse.Hopefully, with your help.Dick Nixon offers an alternative to what happened behind the barri¬cades in Chicago.He’s no glamour boy-you’ve been told that often enough. He’s no spe¬cialist with the fast quip or the extravagant promise.Dick Nixon, simply, is the new leader, the man of experience, brains,and tested ability who will restore stability and harmony to our torn andand troubled land, the one who will lead the way to peace and progressat home and abroad. Hear him out. Listen to what he says-not what someone says he says.Measure him with your mind open.You’ll find a man strikingly unlike the crude caricatures, a man who iscalm and strong and confident. You’ll discover a man who couples com¬passion with firmness, candor with courage, experience with innovation.It started as a trickle before the conventions; but now thousands uponthousands of Students—Democrats and lndependents--here in Illinois, allacross America-are taking a good, hard look at Dick Nixon and joiningto support him.This time, right now, we invite you to do the same. This time, join thecrusade for all Americans, the crusade for new leadership, new ideas,new hope.This time, there’s no alternative.TO: Illinois Youth for Nixon/Agnew22 West Madison; Room 214; Chicago, III., 60602Dick Nixon will get my vote Nov- Name**,__,**——ember 5. We need a change.Add re s s _**_******■■*■□ I’d like to help elect Dick Nixon.Call on Me.City 7inI want to know more. Send me aI I thoughtful Nixon statement on an Phone«*^*«**^*urgent issue.I’m a—JDemocrat^JIndependent^^RepublicanIllinois YOUTH forNIXON/AGNEWThis advertisement paid for by Illinois Youth for Nixon/Agnew22 West Mafdison Street; Room 214; Chicago, Illinois 60602RALPH HAHN DAVID L. BOWERSChairman Executive Director* THE CHICAGO MAROON October 4, 1968ANGELS AND VILLAINSSALVATION AND SUICIDEBY T. C. FOXPart One of Two PartsT. C. Fox is a student in the College and a filmmaker.His first feature film, “Bring Down Darkness,” will beshown late in the quarter.WHEN I WAS FOURTEEN and published what I pre¬fer to think of as my first piece of writing (in a jour¬nal of extremely limited circulation), I decided thatmy first name followed by my last simply did notlook good in print. A mixture of early pretention,laziness, and an inability at the time to recognize mymiddle name led to my siigning “T. C. Fox,” and Ihave continued to sign that way since. Last year a per¬verse devil at whichever advertising agency is employedby the film company Twentieth-Century Fox beganto run a series of film ads entitled “Notes of a FilmFox” in magazines that they thought would reach“young people” and signed these ads “TC Fox”! Forreasons. of sheer stubborn tenacity I intend to keepsigning my reviews in that manner, declaring, however,that I have not been nor intend to become a publicityagent for Twentieth-Century and asserting my completelack of responsibility for anything published under theabove-mentioned title.Meanwhile: notes, reflections, and rash commentsfrom the Sixth New York Film Festival, a festival thathas finally recognized John Ford, King Vidor, andHoward Hawks (and that almost recognized NicholasRay), and that says more about movies than any othersingle event in my memory.MouchetteRobert Bresson’s Mouchette is an extremely un¬fashionable film, and, although I believe it movedits audience greatly, it is very unlikely that it shallgain an American release in the near future. Thefilm is ostensibly the story of a fourteen-year-old girlnamed Mouchette, but like Bresson’s previous filmAu Hasard Balthazar which was ostensibly about a don¬key named Balthazar, this immediate subject has littlerelevance. The film is about attempts by various people,most notably Mouchette, to find salvation in other peo¬ple. What makes Mouchette important is that she real¬izes that salvation through other people is impossibleand almost immediately thereafter commits suicide.The idea that salvation through others is invalid isin itself a very antimodern idea; the implication ofthe brutal last shot that Mouchette’s suicide is withoutmeaning even in a religious sense makes the film al¬most impossible to stomach.Yet Bresson is such a great artist that he isthoroughly convincing, at least for a full day afterviewing the film. Unlike Balthazar, which was shotalmost entirely in ethereal whites, the majority ofMouchette resembles the dark and murky night sceneof the earlier Dairy of a Country Priest. After Mou-chette reallizes that salvation through others is notpossible (following her mother’s death of tuberculosis,an event forewarned in the first shot of the film)the images shift to light, but it seems a measure ofBresson’s growing pessimism that this change makesalmost no difference. A study in the unrelentingnessof a straight line of dramatic motion, Mouchette alsoseems to indicate clearly a cruelty one had not previous¬ly associated strongly with Bresson. The only scene ofrelease, a magnificently edited crash-car ride, is endedso brutally that the audience actually feels the painof a slap in the face. Bresson is one of the few trulygreat men alive today, whether in film or otherwise,\ ti\ * Vi *and his work must be viewed and reckoned with, nomatter how unpleasant it may appear to us. FrederickBatholemew, lecturing to a class at Oberlin I accidentlyaudited, defined great art as that which enriched one’ssoul. No matter how pessimistic Bresson’s film maybe our souls are the greater for it.While Jean Renoir cannot get the financing to makea new film, we have slowly been receiving his earlyfilms for the first time in this country. Two years agoDan Talbot, who is much too large to be an angelbut who is certainly an agent of heaven (the ownerof the New Yorker theater and the only truly decentdistributor in the country), gave us Boudu Saved FromDrowning.ToniNow the festival has Toni made in 1934 and thefirst of what Pathe-Contemporary promises to be aseries of never-before released Renoir movies.Toni is the story of several people in a recentlyindustrialized area in the south of France. Becauseof this and its avowal to be based on an actual eventthe film has been erroneously labeled as a predecessorof neorealism. Renoir’s peasants, however, act muchmorejike his aristocrats than like Visconti’s fishermanand tt makes a lot more sense to talk of Toni interms of Les Regies du Jeux then in terms of La TerraTrema.The film is somewhat unconventional Renoir in anumber of ways. For one thing there are in this filma villain and an angel. True to Renoir, however, thevillain is not a real agent of the devil and the angeltends to act in his own interests, although alwaysputting friendship first. (While he takes Toni’s wife,he does so only after giving Toni every chance to goback.) More important, however, is the way in whichcombinations of people are dealt with in this film.The opening shots of the movies suggest the kind ofinfinite combinations of people so often present in Re¬noir. This film, however, ends up by delineating betweencorrect and incorrect combinations in a manner verymuch unlike the rest of Renoir. The combinationsthat we associate with the later Renoir’s love affairs,exist in this film only in the male friendships. Itwould be extremely interesting to view the films thatimmediately precede and follow Toni in this light.A good deal of the film consists of a study of therelation between the industry, the land, and the peo¬ple, and here Renoir’s camera motion, characteristi¬cally at once heavy and poetic, becomes the mostimportant stylistic element of the film. Especiallybeautiful are the opening and closing shots whichmove of arriving groups of peasants into a static shotwhich encompasses land, water, and railroad tracks.Despite my acknowledgement of the reservations ofsome of the people I most respect, Orson Welles’ite Welles and thus one of my favorites of this festival,it Welles and thus one of my favorites of this festival,The film is a fable and is perhaps about the tellingof fables, containing both the lack of suspense and theextreme tension of Greek tragedy. The title is, perhaps,misleading. This film has nothing to do with organizedreligion; the “immortal story” is one told perenniallyon ships and concerns a mythical sailor who is paidto screw a rich merchants wife, thus providing themerchant(played, of course, by Welles) who decides tomake this story come true.Shot for French television and lasting only 60minutes, the film rests largely on close-ups, shallow-focus, and the eye-level shots that at once fit the subjectContinued on Page Four iJeanne Moreau and Norman Ashleyin “The Immortal Story”Anna Karina in “La Religievse”Stephen Andrian and Jaqueline Sussard in “Les Biches”andy warhol'sBIKE BOYFriday, Oct. 4. 7:15 & 9:15, Cobb Hall Auditorium. A Doc Films Presentation.par anOf ct*(AifOU C4M AtwiOHC (At ^Mtt(deuticeU quitanUUi* alt dAicaqa ...*%07tSS TZeAteuviaitt5211 Saudi Ptanfit* @awit667-4002ko mitimutH c^tex (At ctiHHtn, haur NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYPRESENTS:THECHARLESLLOYDQUARTETTickets $3in advanceat Scott Hall$3.50 at the door 8:00 P.M.Sat., Oct. 5Northwestern U.Cahn Auditorium600 Emerson St.Evanston, Illinois"Kubrick provides the viewerwith the closest equivalent topsychedelic experience this sideof hallucinogens!"^:^ "A fan¬tastic movie about mansfuture! An unprecedented psy¬chedelic roller coaster of an ex¬perience !,,~Magoz.ne'Kubrick,S '2001'is the ultimate trip!\n —Christian ScienceMonitorGOLD CITY INNCompletely Remodeled"A Gold Mine of Good Food”IO %Student DiscountHYDE PARK S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT Orders MGM presents* STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION2001space odyssey NOWJEANNE MOREAU."THE BRIDEWORE BLACK”Deeded byFRANCOIS TRUFFAUTCOLOR by DeLuxeTHREEPENNYCINEMAMETR0C010RWitzie i 3lower SL“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS"1308 EAST 53rd STREET MI 3*4020 2424 N. Lincolnat Fullerton-Halstedone block east ofFullerton "El" stopTei.: 528-9126FREE PARKINGat 2438-40 N, HoistedCINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganEBERT SUN-Times****“It should win an AcademyAward"LESNER NEWS“A Treasure”TERRY TRIBUNE“Film is a Smash”MARSTERS AMERICAN“Everyone Should See It”JUDITH CRIST N.B.C.TV TODAY SHOW“I Love This Movie”(t *theTVYOofUiStudents SI.STT^vith ID CardGood every day but Saturday2 GREY CITY JOURNAL October 4, 1968WITH THE OPENING of its first production, Rich¬ard Strauss’ Salome, the Chicago Lyric Opera has putits most ambitious foot forward. .(Its last staging of theopera — with Inge Borkh, in the 1950’s — was, by re¬port, a failure due to the inadequacy of the orchestraand since I wasn’t around for that one I must take it onfaith that the playing is much better this time.) Salomeis a problem both for the orchestra that must negotiateits fiendishly difficult music and for the singers whomust make themselves heard above the clamor in thepit. Obviously, it is not realistic to go into the theaterexpecting to hear the balance typical of a recording, forunless you have a Nilsson and her like, up and down theline, the voices will get swamped. But if a certain limiton audibility can be accepted as a necessary corollaryto “live” conditions, poor musicianship cannot. The Ly¬ric’s 1968 Salome has a number of fine elements forwhich it should be seen, but its virtues do not sufficientlyconceal a number of black deficiencies.Unfortunately, the orchestra must once again beara great share of the blame. Improvement may be notedin that large chunks of the score were rendered accept¬ably; but faulty rhythm, mistakes in timing (especiallyin synchronizing with the singers), and lapses in en¬semble and technique (predominantly in the brass sec¬tion) were too frequent to be passed over as inevitableperformance mishaps. The tempi chosen by conductorBruno Bartoletti seemed sensible enough and the per- Musicformance given to the Dance of the Seven Veils was, or-chestrally, the high point of the evening. I would person¬ally prefer less of a relaxed, soft-center Salome, but itwould be difficult to say how much of this was the re¬sult of his men’s working away at the music.I also have reservations about some aspects of thestaging. No fault is to be found with Rudolf Heinrich’sset (borrowed from the Metropolitan Opera) nor withcostuming, lighting, etc., but some of Virginio Puecher’sideas about the drama are open to question. Jokanaanmay be wasted away, but to send him flopping all overthe stage as Mr. Puecher does seems to be at odds bothwith the music and with the dramatic situation. Salomeis impressed, after all, with the prophet’s appearance— and she is a bit afraid of him too (“His eyes aboveall are terrible,” she says, “They are like the black cav¬ern where the dragons live.”) In this Salome there isno mystery: Felicia Weathers is first made to woundJokanaan by thrusting a spear into his cistern, then tomanhandle him shamelessly when he rebuffs her. Theseantics are irrelevant and obscure the central dramaticpoint — namely, that it is the prophet’s asceticism whichattracts Salome to him, and this reaction she can¬not help but translate into sensual terms. It is his refusalto play her game (i.e., to allow her to touch him) thatbrings on her obsession. By ignoring this, Salome emer¬ges deranged from the outset (something which neitherStrauss nor Wilde wanted). Aside from this unfortunate1| LAST SATURDAY night Paul Butterfield and his seven-man band played a hell of a concert. Their nearlythree-hour-long performance shocked all those at Man-del Hall who’d only heard them on records, or at theold New Dorms twist parties, or with the earlier But-terfield-Bloomfield-Bishop sound. On Saturday, the But¬terfield Blues Band played with a new mind.The band’s first two numbers were a little loose;guitarist Buzz Feton broke a string, and everyone elsewas warming up. They opened with a straight shuffle,“Everything’s Gonna Be All Right,” which had a nicesolo by Paul, with the band playing stoptime rhythmbehind him. But the drummer, Phillip Wilson, wasclowning around a bit, and the second number ... aversion of Little Milton’s “More and More” — wasn’treally together until Wilson and bassist Bugsy Maughwent into a rhythm conversation in the middle of this.By the next number, “Drifting Blues,” the band wasroaring.“Drifting Blues” is a fine example of Butterfield’sversion of a straight Chicago Blues. Dave Sanborneplayed beautiful fill-ins on alto sax behind Paul’s sing¬ing, and the band did some tight building and subsidingbehind Buzz’s solo. The solo itself was very fine; Buzzis very proficient technically as a blues guitarist, andat the concert was usually tasteful, if a little too con¬cerned with playing as many notes in each measureas possible. Occasionally, as in “One More Heartache,”Buzz will tend to sound English and Claptonish, whichseems very easy for him. But his solo in “Get Out MyLife Woman” was very fluid and swinging, and fittedin well.The night’s only instrumental came in the concert’sfirst half: an amazing shuffle done at breakneck speed— sort of a cross between Ornette Coleman and standardblues form. It was based on blues changes, but thelines were all in the ‘new thing’ bag; all in all a beau- Poptiful example of the blues — jazz fusion that Butterfieldis working towards.First came Sanborne’s piercing solo. Then Wilsongot into every nook of his drum set’s sound, and GeneDinwiddle took a powerful ‘new thing’ styled solo (ac¬companied only by Buzz on Conga drum). When thebells with his feet. The first half of the concert endedwith nine people up on stage harmonizing behind Paul’sgospel-based “In My Own Dream,” with Gene playingdown for this number (even having just played “RunOut Of Time” and “Bad Sign”) and Sanbome’s gentlesoprano solo was in perfect taste with Paul’s hymn.But the band was only getting revved up for theconcert’s second half. By now most of the audiencewas with the band, and although they seemed to diga sloppy rendition of “Knock On Wood” more than theband’s newer, more radical pieces, by the time the bandplayed their reworked version of the old Bloomfield-Bishop-Butterfield beauty “Got A Mind To Give UpLiving” the whole house was with it. This new versionfeatured a beautiful Butterfield solo — Paul made hisreally fine solo, with only Wilson and Maugh under¬neath.A word here on the rhythm section. Bugs Maughplays with such taste that his lines often go unnoticed,but they fit each number’s sound beautifully. He did asolo number that hushed the hall (“It All Comes BackTo Me”), and then gave a few quick examples of hisalmighty falsetto on “Driving Wheel”.But it’s the drummer who steals the show. PhillipWilson is the greatest, most versatile drummer on thecurrent blues-jazz scene. Saturday night he didn’t evenget down to business, but he was still fabulous. He wasworking with Roscoe Mitchell, one of Chicago’s ‘newthing’ Jazzmen, when Butterfield asked him to join, andhis incredible command of his drum set enables himto wrap himself up in a web of complex drum passages bit of business Puecher’s direction is quite adequate, al¬though his blocking of the action rather encourages thesort of posing that passes for operatic acting (only As-trid Varnay’s Herodias is free of it).The singers constitute a better than average Salomecast. The only disappointment is the Herod of HansHopf: his voice, getting increasingly baritonish withyears, is a pleasant one, but he lacks imagination andlets one of the juiciest character roles in the repertorygo right by him. Varnay is a marvelous Herodias — hercharacterization, with the implicit mother-daughter ri¬valry in the forefront, is great fun to watch and shesings out with plenty of authority. Gerd Nienstedt, theJokanaan, also makes a positive contribution. His pro¬nouncements from the cistern are hugely amplified, thusenabling him to sing beautifully and still be heard. Con¬sequently, when he emerges, the loss in volume and res¬onance is disconcerting (through no fault of his: theorchestral accompaniment to his outbursts is fairly loudand he is called upon to use his lower and middle regis¬ters throughout most of this music). On Monday eveninghe resorted to some transposing (upwards) and a lot ofbellowing in an effort to make himself heard during hisbrief sojourn on stage. It didn’t work and, hopefully, fu¬ture performances will be without it. Among the support¬ing singers I would mention Harry Theyard’s impas¬sioned Narraboth (it will be even better once his Ger¬man improves); Arnold Voketaitis’ impressive voicingContinued on Page Fourand excursions — while keeping the beat for the restof the band at the same time! It is almost like playingtwo instruments at once. Whether Wilson drives, asin “Get Out Of My Life” or “Born in Chicago” (theband’s worst number of the night, but an obvious crowd-pleaser) or softens down to the gentlest drum rolls andcymbal rings, he captures all the sounds of the ocean.In fact the whole band is into changing soundsheets and textures. On one of Paul’s new composi¬tions, a C & W flavored song with a I-VII-IV baseand latin horn lines and bridges, the driving begin¬ning fades into Gene on flute with Buzz playing har¬monics, and Phillip running soft rolls underneath. Thisfree form passage then gets more intense as the hornstake over— soloing or droning all at the same time.I’ve heard the band develop this into a three-way con¬versation between Wilson and the two saxes, whichthey unfortunately didn’t get into at this concert; theywent back to the first part again fairly quickly. Butpieces like these, and the types of free-floating supportto solos that the band is now stressing, are the moststriking things about the new Butterfield band. Forgetabout their albums; Elektra has always done a shoddyjob of recording Butterfield as he and his music hasdeveloped.His early albums always leave me with the feelingthat the engineers did their best to take the punch outof the B-B-B powerhouse. The “Pigsboy Crabshaw” al¬bum has Wilson just keeping time, and the arrange¬ments on it are mere shadows of the way the bandworks with those tunes now. Even the new album isonly a taste; it’s maybe 15 minutes per side, and hasrelatively tame Elvin on it. To know this band, yougotta see them in person (they’re best at a club, pref¬erably after their first set); Saturday night the bandswung!Andy Polon3 THE CHICAGO SYMPHONY season took flight with un¬expected rapidity last week. No fanfares, no flourishes:yet, within the first five measures of Mozart’s Thirty-Ninth Symphony, we were suddenly transported to mid¬season, with all that wintry grey which seems to infecteverything that doesn’t escape Chicago by Christmas.Mid-season drabness exuded on two levels. First, theprogram was distressingly conservative. Besides theMozart, it included Schubert’s Ninth and the suite fromBartok’s Miraculous Mandarin — all heard frequentlyTHE GREY CITYJOURNALMichael Sorkin, EditorContributing Editors: Rachel Karlin,Susan Slottow, Michael Andre, Ken ShermanJhe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall. Music(even recorded) by the orchestra. Bartok’s ballet of bes¬tiality, in fact, was a specialty of the house during theMartinon regime, and if it is not yet a war-horse, it hasat least re-appeared with enough regularity to have re¬placed The Firebird as Orchestra Hall’s twentieth cen¬tury homing pigeon.It would be foolish to deny the status of any of thesegems individually: but as a group, they glow with some¬thing less than the dizzying dazzle a season opener oughtto have. There was nothing new, nothing festive. And ifthe season’s hors-d’oeuvres, rather than sharpen our ap¬petite for the next twenty-nine weeks of the sason, sim¬ply blend blandly into memories of hundreds of otherconcerts—well, that’s a downright depressing w’ay tostart the year.Such unpromising fuel, of course, could have been ig¬nited by a property fiery conductor. Istvan Kertesz, how¬ever, hardly qualified as that: if anything, he threw wat¬er over the whole proceedings. The Mozart, in particu¬lar, was uniquely uninspired. The grating dissonances which make the opening adagio one of his most an¬guished inspirations were diluted to a near pablum; thelast movement was as flabby as a three-day-old balloon.And while Kertesz wisely reduced his string section toallow him to expose the wind parts, the only time heseemed to avail himself was in the minuet, where thestrings’ melody was suddenly hushed so that he couldbe treated to an endlessly repetitious accompaniment.Indeed, accompaniment is a key word. It seemed asif Kertesz were conducting the orchestral part of a con¬certo. Dynamics were kept between mezzo-piano andmezzo-forte, contours wese blurred, brilliance mbs smoth¬ered in a thick orchestral sound. It was as if he weretrying not to distract us—as if our attention was intendedto be elsewhere than on the orchestra. A lot of peopleread their program notes.The rest of the concert was less insipid, but not quiteflavorful enough to cover the slightly nerving after¬taste left by the Mozart. The Schubert came off best: abig, but not over-ripe, reading, abetted by unusually mel-Continned on Page FourOctober 4, 1968 GREY CITY JOURNAL 3Culture VultureFOR THE MOST PART, even aCulture Vulture takes the writtenword with a grain of salt. Butwhen the written word purportsto be a personal statement of howsomething happened, I like tothink that there's both a forthrightand a biased—yes, I mean biased:a reflection of someone's own feel¬ing—significance. Anne Gottlieb'sexplanation of her collection (TwoYoung Collectors in the BergmanGallery in Cobb Hall) clearly tellshow she feels about collecting:"Museums and galleries maintaina splendid isolation ... It is veryhard to relate the special experi¬ence ... to the mundane experi¬ence of everyday life . . . Thegreat value of a personal collectionis that it . . . becomes a part ofyour life, not separate from it." This personal collection is nowhung publicly in the hushed gal¬lery of Cobb Hall. It's a remark¬able collection, remarkably contem¬porary: seven Warhol silkscreens(including four-count 'em-four ofthe Self-Portrait), four somewhatmessy and confusing Rauschenberglithographs, four lovely Josef Al¬bers silkscreens, half a dozen fier¬cely political lithographs From aPatriotic Portfolio by Bill Weege,and quite a number of other as¬sorted contemporary works. It isa distinguished collection, gracious¬ly lent by two young collectors.Miss Gottlieb and Sharon Avery.I find it difficult to imagine howit arrived there, but I can onlyrecommend you stop in and see it,soon, in Cobb Hall. FILMSThis week's recommendationsfrom T. C. Fox: "Doc Films beginsits season with Andy Warhol'sBike Boy. Warhol has certainlyemerged as a major film artistand this, one of his heterosexualtrilogy, promises to be one of themore enjoyable Warhol.In between the Hawks is a horrorseries opening with the TV classicKing Kong. Faye Wray gets rapedand buildings tumble and it isn'teven on the tube anymore.DOWNTOWNMeanwhile downtown the Clarkhas a weekend of Godard films,none of which are rare but almostall of which stand up to repeatedviewings. Friday is Alphaville andThe Married Woman, Saturday Vivre Sa Vie and the ubiquitousBreathless, Sunday Une FemmeEst Une Femme and Masculin-Feminine. Belle du Jour continuesat the Playboy. It is Bunuel athis most commercial and certainlynot his best, but it is probablythe best film around by far. Evenwhen not at his best Bunuel isfar and away above nine-tenthsof the rest of the cinema. Rachel,Rachel is at the Esquire; PaulNewman directs. Opening Wednes¬day is Franco Zefferelli's Romeoand Juliet. Reports are excellentand review will appear."THEATERThis is the final weekend forThe End of the Line, a new playby William ^ederer at Hull HousePlaywrights' Center, 222 W. North Ave. Friday and Saturday only,there are performances at 8:30 pm.The Jane Addams Theater offerstwo one-act plays by Israel Horo-vitz: The Indian Wants the Bronxand It's Called the Sugar Plum:Friday and Saturday 8:30, 7:30Sunday.Goodman Theatre opens its 1968-69 season this weekend with theworld premiere of Lisel Muellerand John Reich's translation ofHugo von Hofmannsthal's TheSalzburg Great Theatre of theWorld. Though still unreviewed, theplay promises to be excellent.Tuesday through Thursday andSundays, 7:30; 8:30 Fridays andSaturdays.MUSICLos Paraguayos, billed as "South America's leading recording art-ists," appear Friday and Saturdayat the Auditorium Theatre, Con¬gress at Michigan, at 8:00 pm. Thecompany of six performs folk-musicof their native Paraguay and otherLatin countries plus many of theirown compositions. These should beexciting concerts.The Tejar Supper Club, 1321 sMichigan, announces a special tocollege jaiz fans during John Colt-rane Memorial Week, October 1-6there will be no admission or covercharge for students with identifiestion. Appearing this week will bethe Elvin Jones Trio, featuringElvin on drums, Jimmy Garrisonon bass and Joe Farrell on saxand flute.Watch the World Series, too, thisweek.FestivalContinued From Page Oneand admit a humility not often associated with Welles.Even the color, perfect as it is, is not pretentious.Most interestingly uncharacteristic of Welles is the lead¬ing of the audience to believe that three is a secretat the center of all this and then the discovery thatthe only secret is that of story telling, something thatwas presented from the start. Secrets having been soimportant to Welles before Falstaff we can perhapssense a new direction in his work.Three shots towards the end of the film must notgo unmentioned because of their great genius andwisdom. The young sailor who plays the leading rolein the inner story emerges from the bedroom in themorning and turns to Welles. He tells him that al¬though he knows the young lady with whom he hasspent the night is rich and not his own he wishesto leave her a present, a rare shell. He procedes tohand this to Welles to give her when she comes out.The expected shot is that of the broken shell on thefloor expressing Welles’ death. When Welles dies twoshots later we see the shell unbroken on the floor,a shot that for me provides the perfect release for thetension of the film and reasserts Welles’ absolute mas¬tery of film.SalomeContinued from Page Threeof the First Nazarene; and Deborah Kieffert as thePage.The production’s Salome is Felicia Weathers. To de¬ scribe her work as “promising” would be not only gra¬tuitously insulting, but inaccurate; for although she hasnot yet worked out viable solutions to all the problemsof the role, hers already is an accomplished perform¬ance of it. She does not have the power nor the evenscale that would be ideal, and her present inability tosing softly yet audibly (again, Strauss’ orchestrationdoesn’t help) compromises what could be some ravish¬ing moments in the final scene. But there are too manyfine things here to dismiss this performance as an earlyeffort by a young soprano. The voice is not only handledwith assurance, but with definite interpretive aims inmind: I recall especially her arching pianissimo on“Lass mich deinen mund kussen. Jochanaan” at the endof the third scene — a chilling effect — and the author¬ity with vVhich she demands the prophet’s head from herstep-father. The firmness of her phrasing shows com¬plete mastery of the musical side of her assignment. Insum. Miss Weathers has an abundance of good ideasabout this role, and she possesses the vocal equipmentto make them work. Strauss’ specification of “a sixteen-year-old with the voice of an Isolde” finds her leaningtowards the side of the sixteen-year-old, and with nocomplaints from me. Hers is a believable, always tech¬nically proficient Salome, often more than that — def¬initely worth the trip to the opera house.SymphonyContinued from Page Threelow playing from the unpredicatable horns, and welcomerestraint by the often over-enthusiastic trombones.There were, to be sure, a few interpretive gestureswhich seemed out of place. It’s not that I oppose the prin¬ ciple of emphasizing usually buried contrapuntal lines inan over-played work: it’s often the only way to make usre-think the music and hear it as something new. ButKertesz’ decisions to spotlight such totally uninterestingmaterial as the trumpet part in the middle of the secondmovement were often more outlandish than enlightening.And what was the musical justification for the inap¬propriately sudden diminuendo on the final chord? Rath¬er than fade out gracefully, the massive climax of thecoda simply shocked; it was as if, just as you were bask¬ing in the glory of the sound of the full orchestra, anirate downstairs neighbor had barged in and turneddown the volume a fraction of a second too early. Oneleft with the unsettling feeling of having missed theend of the concert.As for Bartok’s sweet-and-sour sauce (an odd com¬bination of the delightful and the perverse)—it is, ofcourse, second nature to the orchestra. The percussioncrashed and banged, the trombones gleefully growledtheir glissandos, and everyone else made as much noiseas the occasion demanded. But it was just too lightheart¬ed: it lacked that razor edge v.*hich gave Martinon’s in¬terpretation its undertaste of terror. Perhaps my expec¬tations were too high; but if Kertesz has the bravado toopen a season with the piece de resistance of the orches¬tra’s previous music director, he is surely promising toserve up something spectacular.JM1 in all, it was a so-so concert: not unenjoyable, butI wouldn’t really have minded missing it. Unfortunately,such evenings only make unenthusiastic audiences, andunenthusiastic audiences only engender further dull per¬formances. Let’s hope we haven’t already fallen into oneof those periodic ruts so characteristic of the past fiveyears.Peter RabinowitzAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cards PizzaHY 3-8282Italian 8c AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry-Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd LIBRARY HELP WANTEDl i.-Both full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 COTTAGE GROVE AVENUE955-4545NOW ONSTAGE’WORLD PREMIERE IN ENGLISH!HUOO VON HOFMANNSTHAL SFESTIVAL PLAYJZesIvj imports,W • C Miruir AM A\/CExpert foreigncar service. 2235 So. MICHIGAN AVE.^P^Tel. 326-2550 THES71LZBURCCRejrTHemeOFTH6WORLDSTARRINGEDGAR DANIELSWITH DINA NALPERNAND MAURICE COPELANDNightly excpl Mond through Nov 2.Mai* 2 00 pok Thins, Oct 10 A 17Goodman TheatreZOOS. Columbus Drive CSniralfi-JM?Chicago TicketCeowsl: 2\iU Michigan AveFoodDrinkPeople311 E. 23rd Street•2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400j&merfeTAWAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYSi; TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out13 18 East 63rd MU4-I062 6 AlliedProducers,Ltd. 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