The University of Chicago Friday, October 31, 1969Volume 78, Number 17SG Hears PossibilityFor Store Relocation\UTUMN: When yellow leaves or few or none do hang. The student government (SG) assemblydiscussed reopening and relocation of theUniversity bookstore gutted by fire October23 at a Thursday evening meeting. RobertHeidrich, director of purchasing and aux¬iliary services, addressed the assembly andpresented a large number of possible solu¬tions to the bookstore problem.Heidrich pointed out that regardless ofthe temporary solution chosen it would takea minimum of four weeks for the bookstoreto resume normal operations. However, heindicated that certain required books werepresently being made available through in¬dividual professors.Among the sites that he said are underconsideration were for temporarily relocat¬ing the store facilities were Reynold’s Club,the lab next to the Regenstein Library, andthe second floor of the administration build¬ing. He ruled out Ida Noyes Hall sayingthat, “It could not be a viable choice be¬cause it would require displacing too manystudent activities.”Also present at last night’s meeting wasHarlan Davidson, bookstore manager. Heagreed personally to give the names ofthose students employed by the bookstoreto the University personnel office in orderthat they be given priority in finding newemployment.SG elected two of its members to serveon a student faculty committee to decide onpermanent relocation of the bookstore. Cho¬sen by the assembly were Michael Buck-SDS Holds Mill-in Over GE RecruiterSDS has scheduled a rally and skit Tues¬day to build support for the cafeteria work¬ers free meal demand. Details of the-dem¬onstrations were worked out last night at aSDS meeting.According to SDS member Tim Rowton,the petition calling for one free meal pershift for all cafeteria workers has garneredsome 1100 signatures.Faculty AssertTrial Is UnfairSeveral hundred University of Chicagofaculty received a letter last week solicitingsignatures and contributions for an adver¬tisement to appear November 7 in the Chi¬cago Daily News, supporting the eight de¬fenders on trial for conspiracy and the No¬vember 13-15 Washington anti-war rally.The letter is addressed “Dear Colleague”and signed by the Midwest Faculty Com¬mittee on Vietnam, a group formed aboutfour years ago by faculty at various Mid¬western colleges. Leonard Radinsky, assis¬tant professor in anatomy, is the letter’ssponsor at the University of Chicago. Theletter is signed by faculty members at ninecolleges in the Chicago area, includingRoosevelt, Illinois Institute of Technology,Northwestern, and the Chicago CircleCampus.The advertisement, an open letter toPresident Nixon, Attorney General JohnMitchell and Judge Julius Hoffman, reads“We, the undersigned ... vigorously pro¬test the trial of the “Chicago 8” on chargesof conspiring to violate the so-called ‘anti¬riot’ law. The statutes and trial itself areclearly intended to stifle the con¬stitutionally protected freedoms of speech,Continued on Page Three Tuesday afternoon, some 30 studentsforced two recruiters from General Elec¬tric to leave campus. SDS sponsored thedemonstration to “kick GE off campus” todemonstrate support for the nation-widestrike against GE which began Monday,and to protest GE war research.The demonstration began on the Rey¬nolds Club staircase at 1 pm Tuesday. Aftera short speech by SDS-er Kathy Lindsley,the demonstrators charged up the stairs insearch of the GE recruiters.They crowded into the Office of CareerCounseling on the second floor of ReynoldsClub where the recruiters had been holdinginterviews during the morning.When the recruiters did not show up aftertwenty minutes, the demonstrators pro¬ceeded to Searle Chemistry Laboratories(58th and Ellis) where it was rumored thatthe GE recruiters were holding interviews.The students crowded into Searle room157 where one of them threw the recruiters’papers on the floor. Present in the roomwith the two GE recruiters was NormanNachtrieb, chairman of the chemistry de¬partment. After twenty minutes of heateddiscussion, the SDS-ers convinced the re¬cruiters that they would prevent interviewsfor the rest of the day. The demonstratorsthen escorted the recruiters out of Searle toEllis Avenue, chanting “Workers yes, GEno, GE recruiters got to go.”One student called a cab for the recruit¬ers; when it arrived several students heldthe doors of the cab open for the recruiters,then cheered as it drove away.During the “tete a tete” in Searle, thedemonstrators called the recruiters“scabs” for not participating in the strike.One recruiter, identified by Nachtrieb asDr. Israel Jacobs, maintained that the GEworkers were bargaining for better wagesand that the dispute would soon be solved.“We don’t do war research,” Israel ar¬ gued, “we don’t have to go to students toget employees, students come to us forjobs. We are not undercutting the workerson strike; we are not doing the work doneby them.”“But you’re not supporting it either,”countered one demonstrator.As the two recruiters left Searle, Nach-treib warned that, “The moment you layhands on these guys or on me, you are nolonger exercising your right to demon¬strate.” ner, a graduate student and chairman ofSG graduate academic affairs committee,and Eugene Goldberg, third year student inthe College. Due to the lengthy discussionof the bookstore problem, it was decided topostpone consideration of the committee onrecognized student organization (CORSO)and SG budget. It was also decided to delayvoting on students to fill the five vacancieson the student faculty administration(SFA) court. Copies of the report on thecontroversy surrounding former CORSOchairman Jeff Schnitzer were made avail¬able. Discussion on that report has beenscheduled for a later meeting.The election of four students to a faculty-student committee followed a debate on aquestion regarding the manner in which thename of those students selected by the as¬sembly would be submitted to the adminis¬tration. According to a resolution passedlast spring by the SG assembly that bodyclaims to have the right to appoint mem¬bers and not just make recommendationsas has been done in the past.Debate centered around the question ofhow that point should be presented to theadministration. It was decided to let theelected students word a letter to that effect.Those students who were elected are CarolGarstki and Gerard Leval ,second year un¬dergraduates and Steve Weston and EdComer, third year undergraduates.Prior to the SG meeting the under¬graduate house met to elect members toserve on dean of undergraduate studentsGeorge Playe’s undergraduate disciplinarycommittee. The house was unable to com¬plete the electoral process, but the list of 33candidates was narrowed to 18. A final voteis scheduled for the next meeting of theundergraduate house, at which time each ofthe 18 will be expected to file a 50 wordstatement of candidacy.The slate of Students for a Reconstruc-tured University (SRU), the current partyin power in Student Government, gainedonly three seats in the recent SG elections.Twelve independents and all three candi¬dates from the Garden Party outdid SRU inContinued on Page FiveRory DonnelleyMILL-IN: Members of SDS protest recruiting visit by General Electric (GE) duringa strike of 130,000 employees.HSIL.HEROrslornngMichael Douglas -Teresa Wright and Arthur KennedyScreenplay by David Monber From the novel by John Weston Produced by Horold D CobenDirected by David Miller Mus< by Jerome Moross Techmcolor*A Cinemo Center Films Presentation A Notional General Pictures Release g——*^»See it downtownat the UNITED ARTISTSAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYHospital AppointmentF. Regis Kenna has been appointed direc¬tor of the University hospitals and clinics.Kenna, who joined the staff of the hospi¬tals and clinics in 1960, has served as direc¬tor of pharmacy service, administrativeassistant and assistant director. SinceApril 1, 1969, he has served as acting di¬rector of the Hospitals and clinics.Kenna, a graduate of Duquesne Univer¬sity and the University of Chicago graduateschool of business, is a specialist inpharmacology.He was pharmacy consultant to theAmerican Hospital Association (AHA) from1961 to 1965, and is primary author of anAHA reference manual on hospital phar¬macy.Nobel WinnerFormer University associate physics pro¬fessor Murray Gell-Mann was awarded the$50,000 Nobel prize for physics, it was an¬nounced Wednesday.The 40-year-old professor of physics atCal Tech received the award from the Roy¬al Swedish Academy of Sciences for hiscontributions and discoveries concerningthe classification of elementary particlesand their interaction.Gell-Mann, for years a leader in the fieldof classification of elementary particles,helped develop the quark theory.Roger Hildebrand, dean of the collegeand a physicist involved in the study of ele¬mentary particles, said of Gell-Mann, “Heis certainly a rational choice for the prize.He has done magnificent work in the field.We’ve all been expecting this.”Gell-Mann is the 33rd University associ¬ated person to receive a Nobel prize, andthe eleventh to receive it after teaching atthe University.Other UC profs to receive the prize in¬clude Bertrand Russell, Glen T. Seaborg,Conrad Block, Herman Mueller, WernerHeisenberg, and Hans Bethe, who receivedthe prize for physics in 1967. 4.UNCH: Students invade the Banders natch for the noon meal. David TravisConspiracy ConferenceA conference on repression in the con¬spiracy trial will be held this weekend atUniversity of Illinois Circle Campus.Registration will take place at 6 pm Sat¬urday in the Illinois Room at Circle. A ses¬sion in the evening will review the trial,examine the anti-riot act, and will hopefullyhave defendants speak at that time.Sunday’s programs are still tentative, butworkshops on various aspects of the trialwill be discussed.A rally in support of the ‘Conspiracy 8’will be held today at the federal building atnoon.Making ItThe recent appointment of Clifton R.Wharton, Jr., as president of MichiganState University brings to 144 the total ofUniversity of Chicago alumni, former stu¬ dents, and former faculty members nowserving as presidents or chancellors of in¬stitutions of hife^er education.Wharton, who received his AM (1956) andPhD (1958) degrees from the University,will assume office January 2, 1970, asMSU’s 14th president.He is an authority on American foreignpolicy and problems of southeast Asia andLatin America.Following is a partial listing of Univer¬sity alumni, former students, and formerfaculty who are presently heading in¬stitutions of higher learning:Morris Abrams, Brandeis University;Landrum Bolling, Earlham College; ArlandChrist-Janer, Boston University; John Cole¬man, Haverford College; Andrew Cordier,Columbia University; Howard Johnson,Massachusetts Institute of Technology; BobJones, Jr., Bob Jones University; EdwardLevi, University of Chicago; Alan Simpson,Vassar College; David Truman, Mount Hol¬ yoke; Aleen Wallis, University of Roches¬ter; Clifton Wharton, Michigan stateUniversity; Gerald Witherspoon, GoddardCollege; Harris Wofford, Bryn Mawr Col- ■lege. mJohnsonEconomics professor Harry G. Johnson,was recently elected a fellow of The BritishAcademy for the Promotion of Historical,Philosophical, and Philological StudiesThe British Academy was established in1902 by Royal Charter of Edward VII. itsobjective is “the promotion of the study ofthe moral and political sciences, includinghistory, philosophy, law, politics and eco¬nomics, archaeology and philology.” Mem¬bership is limited to a total of 300 activemembers.The British Academy is the equivalent inthe humanities and social sciences of theRoyal Society.Bom in Toronto, Canada, Johnson hasbeen a professor of economics at the uni-versity since 1959 and professor of eco¬nomics at the London School of Economicssince 1966.Round Table.Distortions of news emanating from ourcities “are built into the way we gather andproduce the news,” Henry De Zutter, editorof the Chicago Journalism Review and aChicago Daily News reporter, said Tuesdaynight.De Zutter spoke on “The University ofChicago Round Table” on WTTW-TV(Channel 11). He suggested “a kind of re¬distribution of power within a paper.”“I don’t think we can just accept as giv¬en, the fact that ... a newspaper is a busi¬ness run by a corporation,” he added.Gerald Suttles, assistant professor of so¬ciology at the University of Chicago, andDavid Halvorsen, day city editor of the Chi¬cago Tribune, were also panelists on theround table program exploring “Media andthe Cities.”Page 2/The Chicago Maroon/October 31, 1969♦ ViW/tfrf »»« f-Hjf Vtfy- r , i * tVtVaV AUDITORIUMFri & Sat-Nov 7 & 8TICKETS-$6.50-$5.50-$4.50-53.00Box Office OpenMon. Oct. 13thMail Orders-Make ChecksPayable AuditoriumTheatre - 70 E. CongressChicago, III. 60605Please Enclose Self-AddressedStamped Envelope. <>mown sirarisJ vnu U1AUDHUKIMondel HeN, 57th A UniversitySet., Nov. 1,1HM:00 PMrickets: $1.50 students, $2 JO ethersat hex office er call FA 44200lit. 271 er 451Sponsored by: India Assoc, of U. of CClarkenjoy ourspecial studentrateO C c attimesfor college studentspresenting i d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredaily• open 7 :30 a.m.-lateshow midnight• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 75little gal lery for galsonly• dark parking-1 door90uth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• /.rite for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-2843 I TT2KTT tTPPAfThe generation gap is more thanjust long hair, loud music, or amisunderstanding of idealsbetween father and son.It is a void from whicha new force mustemerge, a new hero!THE WALLER GALLERYPresentingRecent acquisitions oforiginal graphics:Miro FreidlaenderTrevelyan Chagall9:30 to 6, Monday throughSaturday; Sunday by appointment5300 Blackstone 363-7446 The University of OticogoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Wood lawn Ave.SUNDAY AFTERNOON,NOVfMMR 9, SellRICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MuskTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOUWith 50 members ofTHE CMCAG0 SYMPHONY ORCH.Mendelssohn'sElijahTICKETS:U.C. Foe. - Staff $3.00Gen. Adm. $3.50Students $2.50Reserved $4.50ON SALE AT Ticket Central, Ma¬rina City at 300 N. State Streetand all Marshall.Field and Mont¬ome ry Ward stores: Cooley'sComer 5211 Harper Ct.; Rey¬nolds Club Desk.FSACCSL SearchesFor Bookstore SiteTemporary relocation of the Universitybookstore, ravaged by fire October 23, wasdiscussed at an emergency meeting of thecampus student life committee (FSACCSL)Wednesday.The meeting, called by chairman CharlesO’Connell, dean of students, opened with aprotest from student government (SG)president Mike Barnett. Barnett insistedthat the issue of the bookstore’s relocationshould be discussed at the Thursday SGmeeting, not at the campus student lifemeeting. Barnett left and the meeting con¬tinued.Least objectionable locations were finallyjudged to be the biology laboratory onStagg field and the present building at 5800Ellis Avenue. Bookstore manager HarlanDavidson expressed extreme animosity tothe former suggestion on the grounds of thebuilding’s present depressing atmosphere.He said the present structure could be tem¬porarily repaired for $40,000 to $50,000 infour weeks, but even then it might not meetI the standards of the city building code.The major features determining thechoice are cost and degree of interferencewith other University activities, O’Connellsaid. Members of the campus student lifecommittee agreed that moving the book¬store to Ida Noyes Hall or Reynolds Clubwould severely disrupt student life.Director of purchasing and auxiliary ser¬vice, Robert Heidrich, outlined other loca¬tions considered: Walker Museum, the for¬mer drugstore on 57th Street, the Univer¬sity building on 55th Street, the Plaisance,Billings Hospital rotunda, and Jones labwere ruled out because of fiscal limitations.The law school lounge, suggested as a pos¬sibility at the meeting, has not yet beeninvestigated.Although the bookstore occupied 11,000square feet at 5800 Ellis Avenue, bookstoreofficials will have to manage with lessspace, a minimum of approximately 7,000square feet. Stock will be cut to the essen¬tials, books and office supplies, when tem¬porary relocation is first completed. How¬ever, officials are still seeking a way tomake textbooks immediately available tostudents. Some teachers have been giventheir required books for their courses tosell to students.Also involved in the relocation of thebookstore is the question of where the book¬store will be moved permanently. Heidrichand Davidson said that they have been “ap¬plying as much pressure as could be ap¬plied” in the past few years to get the book¬store moved. They appeared hopeful thatthe fire would finally result in a betterbookstore; and indicated in their dis¬cussions of several possible temporary sitesa fear that “if we go there and spendProfs Protest WarContinued from Page Onetravel and assembly — the right of dissentagainst the US war in Vietnam.”The letter attacks Judge Hoffman’s con¬duct of the conspiracy trial, stating thatthe trial has been marked by a consistentdisplay of bigotry and bias towards the de¬fendants and their counsel which makes ita travesty of justice. We demand this trialto be stopped now.”The letter closes with support of theMarch Against Death,” the Washingtonrally organized by the new mobilizationcommittee to end the war in Vietnam.According to Shirley Lens, an organizertor the mobilization committee, this adver¬tisement follows an earlier open letter toPresident Nixon, which the Midwest Facul¬ty Committee placed in the Chicago DailyNews in February. The letter demandedthat the President act to end the war inVietnam, urging that he prove himself inthe first months of his term. This advertise¬ment, according to Mrs. Lens, was signedby 46 faculty members from the Universityof Chicago. Spock Appears at Civic Center Rallyenough money to make it habitable, we willbe there a long time.”Davisdon, responding to a question, said afeasibility study on moving the bookstore topart of the administration building has justbeen completed. The report concluded, Da¬vidson said, that from the point of view ofthe bookstore an ad building location wouldbe quite adequate.The report is to come under considerationby a faculty-student bookstore committee,Davidson indicated. He said that if the adbuilding location is approved speedily, itmight be possible for the bookstore to beoperating there by next September. BOOKSTORE: Students examine book titles before the burning.By Nancy ChismanThe man who has helped raise thousandsof American children stood by them in arally for the Chicago 8 Wednesday.In a ten minute speech before a gatheringrepresenting dissent groups from the BlackPanthers to the North Shore Mothers forPeace, Dr. Benjamin Spock said, “All of ushave to stick together or we’ll be mademincemeat of, group by group, subgroup bysubgroup. Black people must stick withwhite people and white people must stickwith black people. Young people must stickwith old people, but most of all, all peoplemust stick with the young. They are rightand brave to demonstrate against the war,Dow Chemical Company and injustice inthe universities. Who else can lead us into abetter world?”Before Dr Spock came out of the FederalBuilding, where he had attended the morn¬ing session of the conspiracy trial, thecrowd milled around in an almost carnivalatmosiphere, exchanging leaflets and opin¬ions. To one side counter-demonstratorswere painting signs, while vendors of theChicago Seed did brisk business. Behind thethick plate glass windows of the FederalBuilding, a group of deputy marshalls andbusinessmen watched silently.As Spock made his way to the front of thegathering he stopped for a few minutes totalk with a woman holding a small childand doctors of the Chicago Chapter MedicalCommittee for Human Rights here to greethim and to demonstrate for better healthcare in America. The tall New England pediatrician, whowas tried in 1968 for conspiring to advisedraft resisters, said he thought everyoneshould come to Chicago to protest the con¬spiracy trial. “It is outrageous that a fed¬eral prosecutor should prosecute eight menfor coming to Chicago to incite a riot whenthe President’s own commission said theviolence during the convention was a policeriot.”Dr. Spock declared vehemently thatAmerica is a police state. He was inter¬rupted by applause when he shouted, “Itwill become more and more a police stateunless we make it clear that we have theright to protest against the government’sillegal acts.”During Spock’s talk, the crowd listenedintently to his unaided voice while TV cam-Politicos SpeakAbout thirty people heard a seminar onmachine politics Wednesday night in IdaNoyes Hall in a program sponsored by theUniversity Young Republicans.Speakers, all Republicans, were L. Mi¬chael Fultz, assistant secretary to the Il¬linois Racing Commission, Peter Piotrow-icz, 26th ward committeeman, and StanleyStewart, Chicago, division chief of the Il¬linois department of personnel.Fultz, who titled his talk, “the structureof machine politics,” observed, “A machineis a bunch of metal. I kind of like the word era and sound men toed the curb of Jack-son Street in front of the federal buildingplaza in deference to Judge Julius Hoff¬man’s court order that no electronic equip¬ment would be allowed any closer becauseof the trial.Spock protested that the government im¬plied doctors had also conspired to riot in1968 when they came to aid those injured inbattles with police. “The government turnstruth, justice and good sense inside out.”Spock, who spoke at a University count¬er-convocation last spring against adminis¬tration discipline resulting from last win¬ter’s sit in, said in reply to a question askedbefore his speech, “I have a very brotherlyfeeling for the University of Chicago. I’vebeen both a commencement speaker and acounter commencement speaker.”at YR Seminarorganization.” He argued that, in them¬selves, party organizations are necessarythings, and are not necessarily bad. Fultzquoted former Illinois democratic US Sena¬tor Paul H. Douglas: “ ’There’s a greatcontinuing need for ward party organiza¬tions.’ ”“The ward committeeman is the key,”said Fultz, “who’s really got a tough lot.”The committeeman, he said, is the party’sdirect local representative. When citizensdemand action from government or party,“he’s the guy who’s got to get it done.”“When you talk about machine politicsyou talk about county central committees,”he said, pointing out that Mayor Daley ispowerful “not because he’s mayor but be¬cause he’s chairman.” This is where thecentral political leadership is,” said Fultz.“Dick Ogilvie sends his patronage to theCook County central committee.”One of the main incentives in party workis the prospect of a patronage job. SaidFultz, “Patronage means a lot of things:politics and money. Civil service has cutinto them pretty bad, without improvingservice at all. There’s more pressure to getthings done on a patronage worker than ona civil service guy.” “If you take care ofthe party, the party’ll take care of you,”Fultz concluded.Piotrowicz, who jokingly described him¬self as “a pure and simple sheep in theshepherd’s flock,” spoke of the battling sideof politics — the ward organizations, thefootwork, the paperwork, and the toil ofelection day. “It’s not the establishmentthat stinks,” he said. “It’s the people whorun the establishment. To the machine thepublic is a cow to be milked.”CONSTRUCTION: Work continues on the International Relations building. He outlined the racial, ethnic, and relig¬ious structure of his own ward, the 26th,noting all the churches and social organiza¬tions located there. “We got the 3rd highestcrime rate in the city. I don’t know whatthat says for the churches and social orga-Ben Gilbert nizatlOnS. . .”Continued on Page FiveOctober 31, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/Page 3David Travis■ * 22ND CENTURY PRESENTS ^TIM HARDINOCTOBER 31 • 8:30 PMORCHESTRA HALLJOSE FELICIANONOVEMBER 2 • 7:30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATREPAUL REVEREi THE RAIDERSNOVEMBER 9 • 3:30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATREBLEU YARBROUGHNOVEMBER 21 • 8:30 PMORCHESTRA HALLTHE BUDNOVEMBER 21 * 8:30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRETHREE BOB HIBHTTURTLESNOVEMBER 22 • 7:00 & 10:30 IAUDITORIUM THEATREJURIS JOPLINNOVEMBER 23 • 7:30 PMAUOITORIUM THEATRECHICABQ (CTA)NOVEMBER 27 • 7:30 PMAUOITORIUM THEATRERIDQDY BLUESNOVEMBER 30 • 7:30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATREBLOOD. SWEAT(TEARSDECEMBER 9 • 8:00 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRETlckat Prices: $6.50, $5.50, $4.50. $3.50Special ittentiea five* to Mil erdert at22a* Century, 70 W. HekkarS, Chicaca,IIHaais 60010. Eaclata a salf-aOOrassaO»talked eavelefe.Tickets now available at Ticket CentralMontfomery Wards, Marshall Fields andother Ticketron Outlets.LI5TEN TO WCFL FOR LATEST 22ND CEN¬TURY CONCERT INFORMATION AUTHORIZEDDEALERNEW 1970MODELS ARENOWONDISPLAYIN OURSHOWROOMSOUTH IMPORTMOTORS1811 East 71stStreetMonTuesThurFri9:00 - 9:00Wed&Saturday9:00 * 5:00PIZZA 1PLATTER ROCKEFELLER MEMORIALCHAPELANNUAL UNIVERSITYIMEMORIAL SERVICEPizza, Fried ChickenItalian Foods* Corned Diarist ** 1645 E. 55th STREET r . D . . ,* CHICAGO, III. 60615 *| Compare the Price.' ,2 Phone: FA 4-1651 2 | 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800 !jbfcaE !^WEDELiyjR. Sunday, November 2, 1969, 11 a.m.Professor Warner Wick, Department ofPhilosophy and former Dean of StudentsMANY MEMBERS,YET ONE BODYService of remembrance of members ofthe University community who diedduring the past twelve months rtMlVAL 91.25 at all times5 daysonly JEAN-LUCGODARD6 IN PARIS & PETITE SOLDAT(held over)TT 2424 LincolnPark Free528-9126Oct. 29-Nov. 4SIX IN PARiS .Pans Vu S « freewheel-inq sketches made in 16mm color and direc’sound by si* prominent French directors captureParisian l»fc m its many diftcrent face* Jem LucGodard■ an immc love tale rt a girl who th.nksshe has unwittingly switched letters to her twofcov tnends, Jean Pouch ^ chance encounterbetween a disgruntled wife and a romanticpedestrian who is prepared to offer her theworld instead of r-mmtt.ni smCide Jaan-Damel Pollel a prostit ute and her r l.rnt a bash,ful dishwasher, eat spaghetti and say droll thingsto one another. Claude Chabrol a »avage pertrad of a bourgeois couple living m the fashion¬able 16th affonrj.ssemrnt iric Rohmer: ahaberdashery salesman th.nks he has killed aneranged m.an Jean Douchef disillusionmentComes to a naive American girl when she dis¬covers what her •’worldly” one-night-stand fover Jean-Luc Godarddoes for a living.STARTS WEDNESDAY ME AND MY BROTHERJimmy's and theUniversity RoomFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWN JESSELSON’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 - 1340 E. 53rdit had to833b9W5lt6bfeumusebe is -tj> enienk_ft* 5/fkf. awiwA popular theory surrounding many Col¬lege courses is that the student can make ofthem what he wants. But many studentsfeel that the pressure of the grade and therigid structure of many classes often makethis impossible. A new concept in the Uni¬versity of Chicago community, the ChicagoExperimental College (CHEC) tries to putemphasis on unstructured, student planned,non-credit classes to balance regular Uni¬versity courses.CHEC was loosely formed along the linesof experimental colleges at Dartmouth andBerkley, but with special emphasis on theunique needs of the Hyde Park community.Since it opened its doors in dormitorylounges, club rooms and apartments lastwinter quarter, CHEC has sought to bringpeople with ideas and interests together, of¬fering workshop and seminar-type coursesto involve participants in the creative solu¬tion of problems.At the first discussion meetings of eachclass this quarter, interested students usedtheir ideas concerning the courses to set upa program of study. The small group ofundergraduates who worked to bring theexperimental college to the campus sayCHEC is not controlled by any campusgroup, but by the people who participate init. CHEC’s job is to find sponsors and ob¬tain University facilities for courses thatpeople are interested in leading or partici¬pating in. All courses are offered tuitionfree to the entire University community.This year’s program includes eight work¬shops and study groups covering subjectsuntreated by the University curriculum.CHEC backers say they can definitelysense an increase of support and interestover last year’s five courses.Of these courses, only home economics, aprogram in self-survival through the do¬mestic arts, was offered last year. Studentsin the class for the most part want to learnall the aspects of living on their own, andwill help teach each other.Among the newly conceived courses is aworkshop in stringed instruments. SponsorJed Taub hopes to have the class build aharpsichord as a final project.Robert Williams, sponsor of the calligra¬ phy course, summed up the spirit of CHECduring the first discussion meeting, sayingmembers of the class would begin imme¬diately on projects, learning by doing rath¬er than by copying alphabets. He said, “Idislike the word practice, it is better todo.”Other courses offered by the college are on the fallen woman in British fiction, aseminar; computer programming; the de¬vil in music, a study of demonic influencesin composition from the 12th century to thepresent; women’s liberation — the neces¬sary revolution, a discussion and readinggroup sponsored by the Hyde Park Wom¬en’s Liberation Center; and a small work¬ shop in geneology.Although most groups have already be¬gun to meet, it is still possible to enroll.People who want additional informationmay call either the course sponsors as list¬ed in the CHEC catalog, available in theStudent Activities office, or University Ex¬tension 3754 room 219.Republican Challenges Grad StudentsGOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM -2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM -9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese FoodContinued from Page ThreeHe talked of corruption, in parties, ingovernment, and even in “that other civilservice, the church.” Piotrowicz suggested,“Grad students, here’s an idea for a thesis:check civil service, police, and priests andnuns and if one half of one percent of themare registered Republicans, I’ll pay foryour education.”Students ElectedTo Fill SG PostsContinued from Page Onethe first year and vacancies election. Fol¬lowing are the winners in all categories:First Year Constituency: Joshua Fein(Ind); Jonathan Rosenblum (SRU); Al¬pine Jefferson (Ind); A1 Lewin (GardenParty); Sophie Cooper (Ind); Rick Spring-water (Garden Party); Bob Engleman(Garden Party); Paul Collier (Ind); Dav- .id Golstone (Ind); and Thomas Jahnke(Ind).Vacancies: Boucher, Tim Wicker (Ind)and John Kuo (Ind); Eleanor, Carol Heller(Ind); 1400 East 57th Street, Trudy Karl-son (SRU); Greenwood, Eugene Goldberg(SRU); Lower Rickert, Martha Armstrong(Ind); Thompson, Arn Lund (Ind); UpperFlint, Rita Dattola (write-in); and UpperWallace (tie* to be broken by assembly),Norma Fowler (write-in) and Judy Perl¬man (write-in).# #******¥*#.*#Sunday New York Times #8:30 AM (daily loo) wBOB’S NEWSSTAND A machine, he said, needs discipline.“Feudalism. Stevenson (Illinois state trea¬surer, senatorial candidate) says democrat¬ic feudalism is gone. It’s fantastic! In sixmonths they’ve changed — after fortyyears.”Stewart said that “one of the things apolitical machine must have is a govern¬ment.” In power, a party has at its disposal“patronage, power, money-raising ability,and the necessary ability to provide ser¬vices to people.”But, he said, a powerful machinery is notnecessarily bad. “It gives the city govern¬ ment the chance to run the city like a busi¬ness. There is no intermediate layer of animmune bureaucracy. You can elect all themen you want. But if the same people runthe government, you get nothing done. Idon’t know which is worse,” he concluded,“the state system or the city system. Per¬haps you can find the balance. Machinesexist because people permit them to exist.People don’t vote on major issues. The de¬cision is made by the individual voter whenhe stands in that voting booth.”Mused Stewart, “You pays your moneyand you gets what you pays for.”Team Hopes for Third VictoryThe Maroons take to the gridiron tomor¬row against Lake Forest to try to continuetheir two game winning streak. The gamewill be broadcast, as usual, by WHPK, liveand in color.The Maroon defense, which has held itslast two opponents scoreless, will face LakeForest’s single wing which scored 30-oddpoints in its last game (which it lost). Nev¬ertheless, Lake Forest is the only fullfledged varsity team that our varsity playsand will undoubtedly provide a sufficientchallenge.5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) Bolstered by the acquisition of pseudo¬professional equipment, a blocking sled, theTunanyis™ svr* ^ Maroons’ practice sessions have indicated#:3T)am (daily too) * that this game should be the peak of the* BOB’S NEW SSTAND ^ ° .. . ,* 51st and Lake Park * season for the varsity eleven.* Huge stocks of Current Maga- -k* sines, Paperbacks, Assorted* Football freaks have been organizing* p°yrdo*g™MichaeL”e & * buses and cars to go to the game, as they************Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856NEELY’SSTANDARDSERVICETo Our CustomersI have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we cancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and better service.Please join us at our new location.6600 So Stony IslandPhone BIJ 8-9645Thank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard Service BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed ’ coats, long un-derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd St. intend to expose the outside world to theUniversity of Chicago’s brand of partici¬patory football.Bus rides at 50 cents will be available tostudents interested in attending the footballgame against Lake Forest. Buses will leaveWoodward Court parking lot at noon Satur¬day. Students should be there at 11:45 amfor loading. The buses will return imme¬diately following the game, which will be¬gin at 1:30.Elsewhere in the world of sportsThe soccer team will play Notre Dame onStagg field Sunday at 1:30 pm. The Maroonteam, with a 1-8-1 record, has lost twice toNotre Dame in South Bend and won oncehere. The team lost Wednesday to the Uni¬versity of Illinois. Mike BrantFOOTBALL: Referee plays hippie.You don't have to beto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip” TAI-5AM-Y&NRESTAURANTSERVES GOOD CHINESE POODDAILY 11 A.M.-9 P.M.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS OP8N12 NOON - 9 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY288-91001318 EAST 63RD STREET 684-1062October 31, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/Page 5By R. Donnelly and Jay ZhitkinAs a first step in an ongoing fight againstthe University of Chicago’s abuse of itscampus workers, SDS has begun a cam¬paign to win free meals for kitchen andcafeteria workers, C-shop and Hutch Com¬mons employees, and the staff in the Cen¬ter for Continuing Education and LabSchool kitchens. We feel that this shouldhappen without the University raising itsfood prices.This is not a plot “to make the workersfeel exploited’’ as Fred Bjorling, director ofpersonnel, said in a leaflet that was dis¬tributed to cafeteria workers by the admin¬istration. The workers here do feel ex¬ploited — SDS doesn’t have to convincethem! Most cafeteria workers are black,and many of them are women. They earnbetween $2 and $3 an hour, with the greatmajority of them earning a few penniesover $2 an hour. This is not enough to raisea family on!! The government estimatesthat a family of four needs an income of$10,500 a year, or $5.00 an hour to live ade¬quately in Chicago. Many of the workershere work 10 hours and more each day,some work double shifts (16 hour days) atleast once a week, in order to support afamily. Many are forced to pay the expenseof taking buses to work, as they cannot af¬ford a car. Many must pay to have theirpreschool aged children taken care of whilethey work. And many cannot afford to eatat work, because the wages the Universitypays them are so low! The University alsotries to separate black and white workersby having pay differentials between blackand white workers doing the same job.Director of Personnel Fred Bjorlingstated in the leaflet mentioned above that“It is not true that University wages arelow for food service workers.” ActuallyUniversity wages are about average forfood service workers, but most food serviceworkers in other places get free meals, andthe fact that food service workers alwaysget starvation wages does not make it rightfor the University to pay starvation wages.Anyway the wages of these workers are low because most of them are blacks and-orwomen, which gives the University racistand male chauvinist rationalizations, notbecause food service work is easy ordoesn’t require skills. The fact that blackand women workers get lower wages thanwhite or male workers saves the Universityand the business men on its Board ofTrustees billions of dollars a year. Thesepay differentials hurt all workers — black,white, men and women — because theyprevent workers from really fighting to¬gether against the boss. Last year duringthe C-shop bus-boys wildcat strike, thecooks initially didn’t support the busboys student movement. Not only do racism andmale chauvinism divide black and whitestudents, but they also prevent studentsfrom allying with black and women work¬ers, who are now leading the best and mostmilitant struggles across the country. Manystudents feel that improving the material'We think the University will fight hard tokeep the money that it receives from theworkers who must buy their meals, so thatit will take more than a petition to win thisdemand. We think what it will take is a lot ofUniversity students and University workerswilling to fight together.because they resented the fact that the menmade about 5 cents an hour more than thewomen. But this division can be overcome.Last year at Billings Hospital, black wom¬en workers led a wildcat for an end to rac¬ist harrassment by supervisors and higherwages for everyone.Even in Cicero, Illinois where Martin Lu¬ther King was attacked, white workers atthe GE plant there followed the leadershipof a black workers caucus in a wildcatstrike against the racist firing of a blackworker and for better working conditions.SDS feels that unless students reject theracist and male chauvinist ideas in Bjor-ling’s statement, we cannot build a radical conditions of workers — demanding freemeals for instance — is too crass and ma¬terialistic and not worthy of the concern ofstudents. Instead, they feel, students shouldbe concerned with more refined culturaland intellectual problems. We must defeatsuch attitudes so that the students will allywith workers. Without an alliance withworke*-® the student movement cannot winanv*have raised the demand for freemc<t. > in the past, both in union meetingsand in a strike. Last year, the C-shop bus-boys wildcatted over the issue of free mealsand lost. Many workers have signed the pe¬tition SDS is currently circulating, andLetter from the Editor Discusses RecruitingBy Caroline HeckTuesday’s visit to campus from represen¬tatives from the General Electric company,whose workers are presently on strike,drew comparatively little attention com¬pared to the protests that greeted recruit¬ers from Dow Chemical Corporation twoyears ago. Napalm and Vietnam are moreexplosive issues to most students thanworkers worrying about their paychecks,and the support for the demonstrators whomet the GE recruiters was proportionallysmaller than the number of people whowere outraged by Dow’s presence oncampus.The SDS “mill-in” Tuesday was directedagainst GE, not the University, and the is¬sue that was so hot two years ago — justwhat is a corporation doing on a universitycampus — seems to have been forgotten.The protestors attack GE and the GE re¬cruiters as scabs. The anti-protestors at¬tack the protestors as curtailing the stu¬dents’ right to decide for themselves ifthey want to talk to recruiters from Gener¬al Electric. Somehow the institution whichlends its facilities to this whole controversyhas slipped by unnoticed; for once, itseems, no one is going to attack them.Wrong again. The University is involvedin this issue, whether it likes it or not.These recruiters are using University facil¬ities — free of charge — and this involvesthe University in it. Should recruiters usecampus facilities? What is the connectionbetween industries and the University’sjealously guarded academicism? Just hownecessary is the “service” that enables stu¬dents to save 40C I.C. fare by seeing re¬cruiters here rather than at a hotel oroffice downtown, when this “service” se¬riously undermines the University’s muchvaunted neutrality in matters non-academic.The University has hoped to avoid having its own position implied in arrangementswith businesses interested in students bymeans of carefully worded statements judi¬ciously disavowing any approval or dis¬approval of the industries whose visits theyaccommodate. Yet even by accommodatingthose visits the University takes a stance.Just as we have recently learned that ajudge must not only be innocent, he mustEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: David TravisFeat one Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Stove Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Jeoi PondellkSenior Editor: Roger BladeStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, SarahGlazer, Pete Good sell, Stan Goumas, SusanLeff, Gerard Laval, Joseph Morris, FriedaMurray, Ellon Sazman, Audrey Shallnsky,David Stool, Leslie Strauss, Carl SunshinePhotography Staff: Steve Aoki, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, Phil Lathrop,Jerry Levy, David Rosanbush, Paul StetterFounded In 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, 111. 80437. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3243. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions toy mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, ill. Subscribersto College Press Service. be above suspicion, so we now see that forthe University to remain truly neutral, itmust refrain not only from overt state¬ments of opinion on controversies, it mustalso avoid imputations of its opinion by itsassociation with controversial figures.Obviously, the ideal of neutrality willnever be fully realized; to be entirely neu¬tral, the University would have to stop allcontact with anything non-academic, to theextent where the University would be lo¬cated somewhere in the straosphere withunlimited revenues dropping from theheavens. But if the University wants to beas neutral as possible — and though weContinued on Page Nine many more have voiced support of the de¬mand.We think that the University will fighthard to keep the money that it receivesfrom the workers who must buy theirmeals, so that it will take more than a peti¬tion to win this demand. We think what itwill take is a lot of University students andUniversity workers willing to fight togeth¬er. As a beginning, we’re calling a rally forthis Tuesday, November 4 at 12:30 at the adbuilding.We have to be clear, though, of whomwe’re making this demand. There’s a bookthey don’t teach in Hum courses, called“The Statutes of the University of Chicago”and it’s subtitled “An Illinois Corporation.”It explains that this corporation here isowned lock, stock, and barrel by the, boardof trustees, a group of forty or so big busi¬nessmen, bankers, etc. Because they holdthe pursestrings, they have the final say inany matter that concerns the University.It’s true that they don’t have to step in toooften to reverse a decision of the Com¬mittee of the Council, but it’s important torealize that they are the ones who rule theUniversity. They actively participate insome of the major decisions, like what tobuild and on top of whose houses to build it.(the Board has a standing committee oncampus planning)These people don’t just run the Univer¬sity, though. They own, run, and profitfrom some of the biggest corporations inthe country, places like Inland Steel, RRDonnelley and Sons, Lockheed Aircraft,Standard Oil, to name a few. Many of thesecompanies have factories in Asia, SouthAmerica, and other underdeveloped countries. The US government protects them,while they pay their workers wages like$1.50 a day in Vietnam, 35 cents an hour inKorea. We think that this class of people —the ruling class (the 1.6 per cent of the pop¬ulation that owns a controlling interest inthe stocks and all the municipal bonds) —is the enemy of workers around the world.These are the people we oppose when wedemand free meals or anything else thatcuts into their profits.We see this alliance of students withcampus workers at this time as a greatstep forward in opposing them. We see it asthe movement’s reaching out of its studentisolation for the first time — and reachingout to the people with the most potential inthis society, as well as to the people whoare hurt most by imperialism. By this al¬liance, we’re not talking of a top-down al¬liance between SDS leaders and WalterReuther, but a political alliance formed inone to one relationship with people we meeton campus jobs and on campus. We thinkthat on this campus, it’ll only be throughsuch an alliance that we will be able to winsomething as big and as expensive as a daycare center for the employees, students andfaculty of the university.Also, we see this as an important strate¬gy for SDS at this time. The question we reasked most by people these days is “Whatfaction are you?” not “What’s your pro-Continued on Page SevenFriday, October 31 Sunday, November 2BALLET: The Arts Forum of Chicago presents a pro¬gram of Modern dance including a lecture-demonstra¬tion and a modern ballet Blue Gargoyle, 5455 SouthUniversity, 4 pm. Admission Free.LECTURE: Dr. Nils Retter Sundgren, Swedish film crit¬ic. Quantrell Auditorium, 4:30 pm.DISCUSSION: “Is an interracial movement possible intoday's polarized society?" Sponsored by the UCBaha'i Fellowship, Ida Noyes Library, 5 pm.MEETING: The College History Group Council com¬mittee meets to review and make recommendationsconcerning the renewal of the appointment of Mr.Charles Hamilton. Gates-Blake 212. 2:30-4:30 pm.MEETING: Microbiology club Dr. Charles C. Remsen“Some Observations on the structure of Membranes."Ricketts 1, 4:30 pm.FILMS: "The Scarlet Empress", Cobb Hall 7:15 and9:30 pm. 'THEATER: "America Hurrah" University Theater, Rey¬nolds Club Theater, 8:30 pm.RECRUITMENT: New York University law school. Callx 3282 for information.REFORMATION FESTIVAL: Augustana Church, 5500Woodlawn, preacher, Carl Braaten, LSTC, Ambiguityof the Reformation. EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE: Demonstration and woHt-shop in knitting and crochet, 2 pm, 1442 E. 59th 5t.Lounge.FILM: Twelve Angry Men and Animal Farm, Cobb, 9:30pm.EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE: Calligraphy study group,first class, Bergman Gallery, Cobb, 4 pm.CHAPEL SERVICES: Warner Wick, preacher, Rockefel¬ler Chapel, 11 am, topic: Many members, yet onebody.CHURCH: Experimental liturgical event at Brent House,5 pm.CONCERT: Sophia Benney, pianist, Internatinoal House,7:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: INH, 7:30 pm.Monday, November 3Saturday, November 1PARTY: All saints and sinners reformation party andliberation celebration. Bonhoffer, House, 5554 Wood-lawn.RUGBY: UC team vs Milwaukee rugby club. Staff field,2 pm.FILM: Black Conony: The Battle of Algiers and Mal¬colm X, Cobb, 7 and 9 pm. VISA: Two representatives from the state department omental health to discuss location of mental retardatiocenters on South Side. 6:30 INH.MEETING: INH Lounge, 7:30 pm.SQUARE DANCING: INH theater, 8 pm. .CHESS CLUB: Plan for a USCF rated tournamen.Tryouts for the chess team will be held, INH, •>floor, 7 pm. .LECTURE: Stephan Thernstrom, UCLA professor of uban history; men in motion, some data and specu jtion on urban population in 19th century America, «122, 4 pm.SLIDE-LECTURE: "Hieronymus Bosch: a psychoajalytic contribution to the study of creativity." Erir-,Fromm, Judd, 8 pm.Page 6/The Chicago Maroon/October 31, 1969 .1.1 f .' .t A .• I f ; .t .VtltHI-MDonovanBy Mitch BobkinLIVING THE LIFE OF THE MIND is not easy for moststudents, and at times it can even be unbearable. Afterreading ten chapers of Hobbes, two hundred pages ofPlato and a book by Talcott Parsons, most students havehad just about as much as they can take of the intellectuallife. After all, most students are only in their late teens orearly twenties completely ready to give up the carefreeand irresponsible life of children. Existing in a Universitycommunity can be trying; and for undergraduates whohave not completely decided that they are so interested inacademia that they want to spend the rest of their lives inthe study of scholarly pursuits, life here can even be bor¬ing. So, too make life just a bit more bearable, moststudents try to find a completely non-intellectual activityto participate in during their free time. Some turn totheatre, some to the movies, and even some turn to readingMarvel comic books. More recently, others have turned tofootball. The concert behind our version of participatoryfootball comes from the desire of many students to use thefootball team as a release mechanism to relieve much oftheir pent up frustrations.One of the most popular release mechanisms is popmusic. Other kinds of music, including symphonies, operasand even operettas cannot classify as non intellectualpursuits, much the same way that football can be and chesscan’t. These more proper art forms are too cerebral andrefined to truly satisfy the non-intellectual drives of stu¬dents. But pop music contains all the qualities necessaryto provide total escape from Sociology 258 and Physics270. It can make you happy, and when played at fullvolume, it can take your mind off everything else.There are so many different elements to the pop phe-nomonon that the intellectual mind of the college studentdoes not get easily bored with it. There are so manyavenues in pop music to explore and so many new soundsto experience that a thorough knowledge of the field wouldrequire a full-time pursuit. But part-timers can also feelthat they are pop music buffs, for even with a little timedevoted to the subject, the returns in knowledge and eso¬teric remarks is enough to get you through any conversa¬tion with a music enthusiast. After all, music is as much amatter of taste as it is anything else, and as long as youknow what you like and why you like it, you are as mucha follower of the music scene as is Richard Goldstein orJon Landau, two of the more well-known rock critics.Sc much of the music today is produced by youngpeople that students have little trouble getting involved inthe music scene. Without much trouble, you can get toknow people who produce the music and discuss theirExuberance on the football field and the iVetc ReleaseThe singer-poet Donovan in concert Mondaystyles and techniques with them. Obviously you won’tmeet Bob Dylan and the Beatles in your first few weeks,but the rock world is as much the small groups around thecountry who play at high school dances as it is those fewgolden record groups that you see on TV with Ed Sullivan.That’s why pop music is the music of the people, as manyhave said. The big rock performers are not usually ac¬complished, well-trained musicians. Usually they are col¬lege drop-outs or intelligent high school students who, be¬cause of their devotion to their music, decided never to goto college. Because so many of the performers are youngpeople, and for the most part intelligent young people,they have no trouble relating to the college audience. Asquickly as college students change their interests, the per¬formers who appeal to them feel the change and altertheir music to meet it. Often in fact, the performers caninfluence the attitudes of the students who identify soclosely with me. One performer who stands out in thisregard is Donovan, who performed a fine concert in Rock¬efeller Chapel Monday afternoon.Donovan is only in his early twenties, and thereforerelates to the college student’s problems and anxieties.This was apparent in his concert Monday. He seemed toanticipate that many students are tired of the hard rockthat they hear on so many albums and from so manygroups. So, for a change of pace, he didn’t even do manyof his own songs that are close to the rock style. Instead,he performed many tunes with lilting melodies and soft,pleasant words. He adopted this new style because herealized that there was a need for it, and considering thereaction of his audience Monday afternoon, it seems thathe was right.Donovan has had this uncanny ability to anticipate thedesires of his audience for quite some time. Donovanstarted out as a protest singer and was often compared toBob Dylan. But Donovan was softer and more imploringthan Dylan. When Dylan spoke in general terms aboutfrustration and more frustrations, Donovan appealed toend the war in “The Universal Soldier”, Ruffey Sainte-Marie’s song. This theme, of ending war and finding civilrights for all men, was exactly what college students feltstrongly about in the early and irud-SOs.Yet as the ’60s dragged on, more and more collegestudents became frustrated with the seemingly uselesswar protest in which they were engaged. The war stillcontinued and no end was in sight. So, many college stu¬dents abandoned the rebel style and escaped to the worldof drugs. One would have expected Donovan to becomeobsolete when his protest genre was no longer popular, as happened to Barry McGuire of “Eve of Destruction” fame.But Donovan was close enough to the college age then torealize what was happening and change his style. We thenhad a psychedlic Donovan giving us “Sunshine Super¬man”, “Mellow Yellow”, and “Fat Angel,” songs aboutdrugs. He was once again called a spokesman of the “nowgeneration” and his popularity continued for a few moreyears.Yet scientists told us that drugs were not good for usand we began to think that perhaps they were right be¬cause the drugs really weren’t doing as much “enlight¬ening” as people had thought they would. Donovan be¬came a crusader for stopping the use of drugs in hisalbum A Gift From a Flower to a Gis*den. This trendseemed in many ways to be a more personal crusade ofDonovan’s than his recognition of the feeling of the collegeaudience, for drugs are still popular even though Donovantells us that “the natural high is the best high in theworld.” However, whether Donovan has enough influenceto get his message across and effect some change in thelives of his listeners, is yet to be seen.Donovan is not the only performer who has forseeenor effected change. The Beatles, Dylan and the Byrds arealso salient for their ability to move with the times. Thesefew performers and a few others like them identify withthe young audience so much that they are often called thespokesmen of their generation. Most students, when askedwhom they respect or admire in today’s world, are morelikely to answer Bob Dylan or their current musical favor¬ite than they are apt to answer the name of a politician orstatesmen. After all, who could say that they respect JohnLindsay more than Donovan?Not only are the musicians of today the spokesmenand leaders of their generation, but they are also the onlyreal organ of communication of ideas between youngpeople. Books and drama are no longer the medium of theyoung. While movies are becoming more popular, music isstill the leading expressor of the feelings of today’s youth.If anyone wants to find out what young people are think¬ing and saying, he can be assured that he will be able tofind it in pop music.It is for these reasons that pop music plays such alarge part in the lives of many college students. The over¬whelming attendance at the Donovan concert is not sur¬prising when you consider the needs of the average col¬lege students and the role pop music has played insatisfying them.Mitch Bobkin is a second year student inand managing editor of the Maroon. the CollegeMUSIC66 The Dutchman” Flies HighRICHARD WAGNER s Flying Dutchman had its premiereperformance at the Chicago Lyric Opera Tuesday night.To those of your who presently have no plans to hear it,let me suggest that you are missing a fine experience, andthat you should reconsider your plans at once,Naturally, there are always some acute difficulties in¬trinsic to the performance of Wagner’s operas. The Dutch¬man, however, possesses relatively few of the featuresthat contribute to the composer’s fearsome reputationamong those who have to listen to or perform his laterepics. On the whole, both the orchestra, under Christophvon Dohnanyi, and the soloists, presented a fine, thoughimperfect interpretation of Der Fliegende Hollaender.The Flying Dutchman, completed by the 28 year oldcomposer in 1841, shows the influence of the romanticstyle of von Weber, among others. There is also an Ital-ianate element still barely evident in the work. By thetime that Wagner was writing the Dutchman he had moreor less gotten the extraneous and external influences outof his system, and had begun to depend more on his owndeveloping sense of musicianship. However, since Wagnerwas one of the most mercurial figures to appear in themusical world, it is hard to pin one style or period to him.Nevertheless, some characteristically Wagnerian trade¬marks are present in the Dutchman. There is the dramat¬ic use of chromaticism, which is associated with theDutchman, and the counterfoil to it in the treatment ofredemption through love-death (or self-sacrifice). We alsosee the “ewige weibliche” heroine, who becomes a Wagne¬rian “steady” in most of the composer’s later works. TheDutchman’s Senta is the forerunner to Bruimhilde andIsolde. Music, that is, the orchestra, becomes much morean integral part of the whole in the opera, although it isnot yet in the parity position with Word, that is, vocalist,that it assumes in the Ring or Tristan. In the Dutchmanthere is more importance arrogated to the orchestra andthe beginnings of fusion between idea and sound in leitmo¬tiv structure are strikingly apparent, though the motiveslack the flexibility, variety, and compact nature here thatthey acquire in the later music-dramas.Despite its embryonic nature the Flying Dutchman hasmore than its share of difficulties in terms of perform¬ance. Much is demanded of the orchestra, particularly, ofthe horns and violins, and the vocalists must be able tobelt out their lines above the massed sound of the pit.Other problems concern stage layout — how do you trans¬form a stage into a ship in a violent storm, to be joinedlater by another ship which is supposed to be manned byghosts — and chorus utilization and coordination. How¬ever, the Dutchman doesn’t quite tax our credibility asmuch as the Ring, which features occasional rings of Mag-ic Fire, mad horse stampedes presided over by helmetedRUN AMERICA FROM THE MAROON BUSINESSOFFICE!$1.00A 15-word telegram sent to your governor, statelegislator, senator or congressman. Even thePresident is within your reach. These men getthousands of telegrams and every one is read.Use your opinions to make theirs - simple de¬mocracy. The $1.00 charge lets you save $1.25from regular rates. Western Union forms and alist of all governors and U.S. senators andrepresentatives are available in the MaroonBusiness Office, Ida Noyes Hall, Room 304. Fill itout, we deliver it.IdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education forif your Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE OF CANADA heroines, topless Rhinemaidens, gods, dwarfs, giants, amalcontent dragon, and disappearing caps.Perhaps the major draw of Tuesday night’s perform¬ance was Anja Silja in the role of Senta. Miss Silja is arelatively young woman — by Wagnerian standards — andis also extremely shapely for her genre, lacking the usualmonolithic build of the Wagnerian soprano, who usuallybears a striking resemblance to Steve Reeves. Miss Silja,who has been a Bayreuth regular for some time, wasrecently the subject of a scandal at the Metropolitan Op¬era, when rumors of an invitation addressed to her byHerbert von Karajan to perform in the New York Ringproduction caused Birgit Nilsson to cancel summarily hercontract with the Met. An objective appraisal of Miss Siljarevealed many strong points, and a few weaker ones. Al¬though her voice was strong and firm all the way throughthe two acts in which she appears, her control at thehigher register was somewhat less pronounced; her vibr¬ato wavered, and I had the feeling that Miss Silja hasmore to do before she can inherit unquestionably the posi¬tion of Wagnerian soprano par excellence. However, thereis much to commend in Miss Silja’s performance such asher fine job in acting.Baritone Thomas Stewart provided a fine Dutchman toMiss Silja’s Senta, although his voice was occasionallyoverpowered by that of his female counterpart. His actingcould have been a bit more flexible, although he must,through his wooden rigidity, clearly contrast against themore easy-going and lively mortals among whom he des¬cends.Most impressive to me was bass Martti Talvela, whoplayed Daland. He is a giant of a man over six feet eight,with flowing beard and mane. Mr. Talvela sang mag¬nificently Tuesday night. His voice was mellow withoutbeing guttural or raspy, and his sound projected clearlyabove the lower sonorities of the orchestra. He acted thejovial ,good-natured Norwegian captain with brio andadded significantly to the high quality of this perform¬ance.As the Steersman, tenor Robert Thomas performed com¬petently in this lyric role, although his intonation at thebeginning of the aria “Mit Ge witter und Sturm a us fememMeer ...” was somewhat aberrant, as Senta’s unsuccess¬ful suitor Erik, Jean Cox provided a fair performance. Hecould not quite compete with Miss Silja, in terms of pow¬er, and the balance of their dramatic duetin Act II, “MeinHerz voll treu bis zum Sterben ...” was impaired. Final-ly, as Mary, Senta’s nurse, Corinne Curry performed herEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372The Carpet BarnA diomon ot Cortland CarpalWo Kavo on enormous selectionof now and used wall-to-wallcarpetings, staircase runners,remnants and area rugs (a largeselection of genuine and Amer¬ican orientals). Antique furnituretoo.We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 - 4.1221W. Kinsio (at todna)HU4-W 20-2771aFJeveningo^ENTERTAINMENT ATTHE FANTASTICSNOV. 6, 7, 8, and 9»hAT THE CLOISTERClUBTHEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount on Quality-Paperbacks & Hardcovers1540 E. 55th St. -Ml 3-7511 Hold upyour local gasstation.If you’ve got a bit of larceny inyour heart, you’ll love theRenault 10.You see, it gets 35 miles to thegallon.And as far as gas stations areconcerned, that’s highway robbery.So don’t be too harsh when theboys at your local gas station acta little grumpy.In fact,you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suggest they get one torthemselves.After all, they might have a bitof larceny intheir hearts mm2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 role competently, although she did not have very much towork with.Musically speaking, the orchestra under von Dohnanyiwas better than I had expected. In the face of the ex¬orbitant demands Wagner makes upon orchestras, thehorns and strings suffered moments of imprecision, weak¬ness, and suspicious intonation. In view of Wagner’s“brassy” quality, the violins should have been augmentedfor this performance to provide more reasonable balanceCrescendi often lost their impact in diminuendi climaxes,•and the overall dynamics of the orchestra could havestood more careful working. Von Dohnanyi did succeed inimparting a significant measure of vigour and excitementto the music of the Flying Dutchman, and the orchestradeserves a modicum of praise for maintaining this ex¬citement throughout all three acts.The chorus for the most part was unimaginativelyblocked. Every sailor in Act I seemed to do the samething. It is, indeed, difficult to conceive of a group ofadventurous sailors so precisely conforming to each other,even in their facial gestures. The Spinning Chorus, on theother hand, showed more imagination, although the exitsand entrances of both groups could have been more artful¬ly and naturally staged.The sets and costumes for this production were designedby Wolf Siegfried Wagner, great-grandson of the com¬poser, and a stage designer in his own right. Wolf Wagneris continuing a tradition which has already seen Wagner'sson and his two grandsons involved most of their liveswith presenting productions of their illustrious paterfa¬milias. Wolf Wagner’s sets and costumes resembled thoseof his more conventional uncle, Wolfgang, more than thoseof his late father Wieland, whose avant-garde treatment ofWagner were widely acclaimed when first begun at Bay¬reuth in the early fifties. There were some touches ofWieland Wagner in Wolf Siegfried’s costumes, most notab¬ly in the chalk-like masks used to distinguish the non-mortals from their counterparts. On the whole the setswere attractive, although the portrayal of the Dutchman’sship was not very clear, the storm sequence at the begin¬ning of Act I seemed a bit trite ,and the staging of the lastscene was a disappointment.I suggest you go see The Flying Dutchman as soon aspossible at the Lyric. Moreover, if you have already seenit, then, either go see it again, or be philanthropic andgive your ticket to some poor, hungry music-lover thatyou know.Peter L. RatnerCohn A StemGfoum Sc (HamtroaShopLondon Fog tailorsthe perfect campus coatIf you had but one coat, it would haveto be the Andes, by London Fog. Awash and wear blend of Dac-ron/cotton, with a zip out Orion pileliner. You'll wear it 12 months... ev¬erywhere. Black, navy, natural, Brit¬ish tan, $50.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings *V. Page 2/Grey City Journal/October 31, 1969IVK.U .1Sounds From Grace and John andYecchoRECORDS, RECORDS and more records. These com¬panies, I think, have decided to bury me in an avalanchejf new releases. So, to work my way out, here are a few)f the more interesting ones.Volunteers by Jefferson Airplane (RCA LSP-4238):After waiting three months, Grace and company have‘inally come out with their newest. It has been four longjlbums since we have heard songs of such talent andstrength from the Airplane. Only Surrealistic Pillow, one>f the greatest albums of the decade, can be compared toVolunteers, and Volunteers loses out in the comparison.The Airplane, unfortunately, have given up writing lyrical,driving songs in favor of poetic, meaningful ones. The bestof these are “The Farm,” “Eskimo Blue Day,” and “Vol¬unteers.” I would say that the only songs on the last threealbums which compare favorably to these three are“Lather” and “Greasy Heart” on Grown of Creation and“Rejoice” on After Bathing at Baxters.I am happy to report that the Airplane has stoppedemphasizing their instruments in favor of their voices. Ialways thought that the Airplane’s greatest asset wasGrace Slick and the voices of Marty Balin and Paul Kan-tner, especially in harmony. Recently however, they wereperforming loud, raunchy instrumental numbers with voc¬als in the background. They have reversed this trend nowand we can actually hear Grace again. Another treat onthe album is the guest appearances of Nicky Hopkins onpiano, Steve Stills on organ, and Jerry Garcia on pedalsteel guitar.The theme of the album is the demise of America. Thetitle had originally been Volunteers for America until RCAobjected. The record is enclosed in a black sleeve, thelyrics are printed on a newspaper containing snide com¬ments on American life, and the album, when opened up,reveals an open peanut butter and jelly sandwich.Wedding Album by John and Yoko Ono Lennon, (AppleSMAX-3361):Everyone’s favorite new comedy team, John and Yokohave done it again! Remember Two Virgins, John andYoko’s first album? Every one got so concerned with thenude picture on the front and back of the album cover(and they are frumpy looking at that) that most peopleFantasticksHOW MANY YEARS had The Fantastics been playing inNew York — 10 years, 12 years, 14? It’s an institution likethe status of Liberty which all visitors to New York mustvisit. Well some theatrically-minded students have decidedto bring the fantastic Fantastiks here. Their run isplanned to be a little shorter than the New York one —four nights — November 6, 7, 8, and 9 at 8:00 in CloisterClub. The production, directed by Michael Young, starsJerry Troyer, Dennis Hult, and Laura Seligman. Called,‘a parable about love,” some of its more famous songsinclude “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.’Don’t put off for 10 years what you can see next week¬end!FILMThe New and the never found out that the record was lousy anyway. Itwasn’t music, but more like a conglomeration of noisesand grunts and groans. And Apple charged a lot of moneyfor those noises. Well, with the Wedding Album, Apple’sonce more selling pure dribble for some outrageous price, probably between $6.50 and $8.The best part of the album is the junk they charge allthe extra money for. Enclosed within the one-record al¬bino is a copy of John and Yoko’s marriage certificate, atwenty page booklet containing many articles about thefamous cople (in a variety of foreign languages so youcan’t read them all anyway), a twelve pictore postercalled “The Wedding”, a fold-up iartoon drawn by Jonnon one side and Yoko on the other, a postcard picturingthe couple, a strip of 25 cent machine photos of the Len-nons, and a plastic bag, labeled “Bagism” which containsa picture of a piece of wedding cake. Doesn’t all this junkjust turn you on?Tie record is even worse than the extras. One side,called “John and Yoko,” sounds like a camp version ofthat old time favorite, “John and Marsha.” In the origi¬nal, it is funny. On Wedding Album it is dull, because it isIVh minutes long, it is accompanied by a kill frog in thebackground and because John and Yoko are not even at¬tempting to make it funny. It is hard to believe that theyare serious. The other side of the record is called “Am¬sterdam” and starts with John telling Yoko to “take it.”Unfortunately she does, and for too long. She squeals in avoice reminiscent of a pig in a poke. Following Yoko’srecital, we are treated to a press conference given by theLennons in which they relate their philosophy on peace. Itis interesting, but I wouldn’t pay money to hear it.The Great PumpkinThe Culture VultureTODAY IS HALLOWEEN, one of my favorite days of theyear when C.V. can come out of hiding and join the pa¬rade knocking on doors to assuage my sweet tooth. Withall the cats and ghosts and witches on the street nobodywill notiie a bedraggled feathered creature making thepilgrimage from house to house. Do you know whattrouble I usually have? I guess you’ve wondered whyyou’ve never seen me at any concerts, plays or variouscultural phenomena. Well now you know that after beingthrown out of any number of performances because of mydisreputable appearance, I’ve given up altering the masses and instead install myself behind a gargoyle with mydinner in a brown paper bag and munch away as I amwaiting. I swoop in and grab a seat just as the lights aregoing down and swish out just as they are going up. WhatI have to go through!FILM .Tpnight is Josef von Sternberg’s The Scarlet Empresswith Marlene Dietrich. Set in Russia before the Revolutionit tells of a girl’s rise from poor young thing to Empress.(Pretty neat trick.)Saturday night, Black Colony Films presents both TieBattle of Algiers and Malcolm X. The former is a fictionaldocumentary of the Algerian war, one of which mostAmericans are ignorant and the latter obviously dealswith the assassinated black leader. Leave your hold forthis.New New Wave Sunday night Contemporary European films ispresening a double feature, Twelve Angry Men at 7 p.m.and Animal Farm at 9:30 p.m. Tie twelve men of the titleare those who make up a jury and the courtroom dramafocuses on them. The later is a famous cartoon version ofGeroge Orwell’s political satire, one of whose slogans, ifyou remember was “four legs good, two legs bad.”Tuesday night is John Ford’s Wagonmaster. No inat-ter how many Italians make them, there is somethingdistinctly American about a western (is it the slaughteringof the Indians?)- John Ford! (with or without John Wayne)is a grand master of the trade.Wednesday is the first film in Doc Film’s NicholasRay series. It is Knock on Any Door which stars noneother than Humphrey Bogart as a crusading slum lawyer.DANCEThe Blue Gargoyle, cultural haven of Hyde Park ishaving a program of modem dance presented by the ArtsForum of Chicago tonight at 6 p.m. and it’s free. Takeadvantage of the bargain.THEATRETheatre finally returns to campus in the guise of Jean-Claude van Italie’s American Hurrah, to be presentedtonight and tomorrow and next Friday and Saturday at8:30 in eynolds Club Theatre. Directed by William Ravichand Alan Woll it consists of 3 one-act plays, Interview, T.V., and Motel. Van Italie is known to have intimate rela¬tions with something ambigiousJy known as the “NewTheatre.” Parts of the plays seem like a theatrical col¬lage. Treat yourself.THE STYLE OF THE NEW-WAVE and the new-new-waveis currently on view at the 3 Penny Cinema, as Paris VuPar ... (Six In Paris) continues the current narrativeseries.The film is intimately associated with Cahiers du Ci¬nema a magazine as noted for the filmmakers it has pro¬duced as for its critical reevaluation of the world’s cine¬matic output. Andre Bazin, whose explanation of the dy¬namics of the frame and the importance of cutting madehim the most important theoretician in the history of filmcriticism, served as the critical mentor for the group.Except for Bazin, the people on Cahiers were all strivingto make films, writing criticism only so long as they wereunable to obtain backing for their projects. The first roundof Cahiers critic^ became the first major group of film¬makers to start as critics, a background which has contin¬ually infuenced their work.About four years ago, a compilation film entitledParis Vu Par ... (literally “Paris as seen by .. . ”) wasorganized. By including three established directors (Cha¬brol, Rouch, and Godard) along with three young directors(Douchet, Pollet, and Rohmer) and by shooting in 16 mmrather than the more expensive 35mm, an economicallyfeasible means was found to give the second generationCahiers critics a chance to follow the path of the first. Theresult is ruprisingly successful. Two films — by Chabroland Rouch can only be termed monumental. Two films —by Douchet and Rohmer are honest and successful in asmaller way. Only those by Godard and Pollet disappointmore than they interest.Claude Chabrol’s “La Muette” is a work as preciseund beautiful as any of his features. Chabrol deliberatelymodified his style to suit the limitations of a 16 mm cam¬era and a film stock whose grain texture cannot hold thedetails that commercial 35 mm film can. Thus the frames do not have the astounding depth and dominance of . back¬ground objects which are associated with recent Chabrol.At the same time the frames retain a three dimensionalquality and a precise interaction of parts that has beenthe basis of Chabrol’s work. Unline Godard who uses shortfilms merely for diversionary anecdotes, Chabrol has usedthis short film for a major statement on the content of hiswork.The young boy who is in the center of the film iscaught in a home of pervading ugliness and static emo¬tional vacuity. Trapped in the background at a dinnertable which serves only as a battleground for his parents(a grotesque self parody these since they are played byChabrol himself and his beautiful actress wife StephanAudran), he tries to escape first by minor acts of destruc¬tion and finally by plugging ears. After he does so, Cha¬brol repeats scenes we have witnessed earlier, only thistime without sound. As expressed by a slightly closercamera, the visual ulginess which lurks beneath the mo¬nied elegance of the boy’s surroundings becomes all themore pronounced. The boy finally retreats to his room,with which he has no rapport, and cuts himself off fromanything else happening in the house. Unfortunately, hismother has fallen down a long flight of stairs. No longerable to hear, the boy descends in an elevator, unaware ofhis mother’s dying moans. In the final sequence Chabrolcuts from the flashing light by the elevator’s door to sim¬ilarly flashing street lights. The camera moves away fromthe boy and toward an ever-growing city.Chabrol has been far too often accused of being amisanthrope, and concerned only with pople who are eviland ugly. Chabrol shows that to ignore the evil and ugli¬ness around us becomes an act of unwitting moral dege¬neracy, emphasizing this by the final analogy between allContinued on Page Four H6REYCITYjoornjlHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.IU the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralMunchkinsJessica SiegelJeanne WiklerStaff ExtraordinairePeter RabinowitzT. C. FoxStaffGregory FergusonChristopher LyonMyron MeiselThe Great PumpkinPeter RatnerPaula ShapiroThe 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.I * M » I v < •• t October 31, 1969/Grey City Journal/Page 3rm Lots and Lots of HairI *7 OO rvwvor* if ^ tVlP fallltv OAfltHALLOWEEN CAME EARLY to Chicago. October 22,there was a party. The guests wore Prussion Army hel¬mets, Indin headbands, old British army tunics, and bedspreads. There were tuxedos of varying styles and fabricsand feathers of all colors and origins. Some poor ostrichhad fulfilled his destiny by providing the plumage to deco¬rate a suburban head. Flags were flying, two spotlightsshot beams into the sky, and disies were everywhere.It was, of course, the opening night of Hair, now play¬ing at the Shubert Theatre downtown. Hair, the “triballove rock musical,” ostensibly hangs together on a flimsyplot; Claude, one of the tribe, gets drafted and eventuallyis killed in Viet-nam. But it is not a musical based on astory, but rather a happening covering many topics be¬sides Vietnam, such as pot, race, love, sex — bisexual,heterosexual, and auto-sexual, as well as the generationgap, established standards, etc.The talented cast — all young recruits from Chicagoauditions — are honest, vibrant entertainers. They believeHair will make a difference and help people to love oneanother. “I believe in love,” they sing, and act like they mean it.Whether the audience will love one another because ofthe show is a question open to speculation. Seeing theseperformers of varying colors, background, and dispositionwho thoroughly enjoy each other and work together for awell-fashioned happening, you cannot easily forget this ex¬cellent company who beg you to “Let the Sun Shine In.”The freshness of the cast waters down the bite of whatmight otherwise be too much for a Chicago audience toswallow. For example, the “Be-In,” simulating a pot par¬ty, has all the wholesomeness of a Boy Scout Jamboree. Itis announced as “turne-on, and freaky-outie time.”The zeal of the cast extends to the 11-piece band whichis seated onstage in a truck chassis. The band leaderoccasionally bursts into free-form, swaying movements, asdo members of the cast even when they are backstage.We even glimpsed the swinging feet of a cigar smokingstagehand.The book and lyrics by Jerome Ragni and James Radohave something to say: it is a shame that about 80 percentof the lyrics are unintelligible because of poor diction andFILMA French Flic FestivalContinued from Page Threeof Paris and the house of “La Muette.”Of the other films, Jean Rouch’s “Gare du Nord” isperhaps equally stunning and disturbing. Rouch, who,along with Chris Marker, invented cinema-verite, is amaster at forcing an audience to change its sympathies.Fantastically aware of the possibilities of a frame, Rouchcan totally confuse a complacent viewer by having anactress turn slightly and in so doing undermine her earliersympathetic position. In “Gare du Nord” these abruptshifts of sympathy are used to tell the story of trappedpeople. (Obviously, American romantics who think ofParis as a city of escape and freedom will find no supportin this film.) We first see a wife arguing with her hus¬band, both of them trapped within a tiny but status situ¬ated apartment. After running out she is accosted by aman who, using the same banal fantasy she had earlierexpressed to her husband, tries to induce her to run awaywith him. This dialogue takes place on a bridge over¬looking the yard of the famou strain station. The bars ofthe bridge reinforce her own knowledge that the freedomshe might feel would soon dissipate into a new version ofher present life. The man finally tells her that if she doesnot go away with him he will commit suicide ,that it wasTICKETS $1.50PLAYBOYT M E ATE R V.1204 N OlARBORN • PHONE. 44 3434HYDE PARK THEATRESTARTS FRIDAY OCT 31 stSELMUR PICTURES in collaboration withROBERTSON ASSOCIATES presentsCLIFF ROBERTSON** CLAIRE BLOOMTECHNICOLOR TECHNISCOPEFROM IB CINERAMA RELEASING CORPORATION moments earlier. After she refuses him once more, hejumps off the bridge, leaving her screaming behind itsbars, trapped finally by her surroundings and her ownbody.Of Paris Vu Par’s younger directors, Jean Douchet ismost successful with a story about an American girl who,after trying to “find herself” through adventures withParis and two boys, is forced in a final frontal heado-nshot to confront herself.Paris Vu Par will continue at the 3 Penny Cinemathrough Wednesday. Also on the program is Le Petit Sol-dat, a fine and fascinating early Godard starring AnnaKarina.TC Fox the faulty control of the hand-mikes which are used exten¬sively. If you’ve heard the lyrics before seeing the showthen everything falls into place; if not, you are reallyshort-changed. Two of the cast members stand out in theirprojection and use of the hand mikes: Hud, played byJames 0. McClode.n a former systems analyst who sportsa big afro, and Sheila, played by Rosemary Llanes.The direction provided by Tom O’Horgan is well-done,especially the smooth and quick transitions between thesongs. He uses aislehopping, rope-swinging, strobe lights,flash lights, audience participation, and a brief nude scene— all reminiscent of Julain Beck’s Living Theatre andnow routine baggage for all new theatre companies. Beckused these devices to bombard you, and having his pimplyderriere in your face was no treat, whereas O’Horgandeftly manipulates these devices as he did in Futz andTom Paine in New York. —The direction is enhanced by Julie Arenal’s choreogra¬phy which is best apprecited from n erial perspective.In the orchestra seats, you get a feeling of people — all 28of them — moving naturally, but somewhat haphazardly.From the balcony you can appreciate the form and partialstylization of movement. Among some original sceneswere “White Boys are So Pretty,” in which three singersin bouffant wigs, miming the Supremes, were all in onepink sequined dress. In “Abie Baby,’ Valerie Williams, ablack girl from the West Side, recites the Gettysburg Ad¬dress while a white girl shines Abie’s shoes with her longblond hair.The cast sings against materialism, yet the irony isthat millionaire Michael Butler is producing the show, andseats are going for the highest price of any musical inChicago’s history. Perhaps Butler envisions himself, cladin his deep blue velvet floor-length coat, with silver bro¬cade and sable trim, ushering in the Age of Aquarius withhis red Rolls Royce.It is difficult to assess who more thoroughly relishedan evening of Hair: the band, the cast, or the audienceThe experience of Hair includes some old tricks and somenew tricks, but the result is a treat.Paula Meinetz ShapiroCMARLENEDIETRICHPLAyDCy’S ALL-NIGHT SHOWPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREOft. 31 Nav. 1Oscar Waraar Jaaaaa liaraaa Ofijml and mkv9JULES AND JIM KING KONGNav.7 Nav. •Orsaa Wallas Gayal'sCITIZEN KANE THE OVERCOATNav. 14 Nav. ISDavid laaa's <—lr FaHiai'sOLIVER TWIST LASTRADANav. 21_ Nav. 22lab Dylan Aataaiaai'tDON'T LOOK BACK L'ECLIPSENav. 21 Nav. 29WACKY WORLD OF - _ SANTA CLAUSMOTHER GOOSE 1 LL CONQUERS THEMARTIANS von Sternberg^FridayOctober 31Cobb Hall7:15 and 9:30seventy-five centsDOC FILMSPage 4/Grey City Jonrnal/October 31, 1969HPKCC Seeks DelayFor Colonel's Ch ickenThe Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference (HPKCC) has asked the ArthurRubloff Co., the mangement of the HydePark shopping center, to postpone its plansfor the development of a Colonel SandersKentucky Fried Chicken franchise at 54thand Lake Park.In a resolution adopted at its Octoberboard meeting, the conference recommendsthat “the effort of the Goldschmidt surveyto develop a plan for the 53rd Street LakePark commercial area should be seriouslyconsidered before committing the site to aparticular solution.”The Goldschmidt survey was undertakenby the 53rd merchants’ association becauseof a deficiency of commercial space in theHyde Park area. The plan involves survey¬ing the area in terms of the commercialinterests of its residents. It will be com¬pleted in about two weeks.The resolution also states that “given thedeficiency of commercial space in the HydePark area, the relocation of existing busi¬nesses to be affected by the demolition ofthe Alport building should be the first prior¬ity in considering the development of newcommercial space.”The Alport building is an apartmentbuilding located at 53rd and Harper. TheDepartment of Urban Renewal (DUR) hasordered its demolition.The Rubloff Co. and the franchisee have met all the stipulations of DUR, and areprepared to move ahead on the devel¬opment. According to Robert Adams, mem¬ber of HPKCC, there is no legal recourseavailable to the conference if Rubloff be¬gins building the franchise.Adams stated that “we don’t know whattheir response will be. But they are awareof the negative reaction to the plan amongmembers of the community.” He addedthat the Hyde Park Co-op, an importanttenant in the shopping center, was stronglyopposed to the franchise.According to Adams, there is no deadlinefor the beginning of construction, but theColonel Sanders Co. has put pressure onRubloff to proceed with the development ofthe franchise, he said. David Travl*53RD STREET: Colonel Sanders Chicken may be blocked from moving here.November Moratorium Plans SetPlans for November anti-war activitiesare being finalized on campus. The Univer¬sity moratorium committee has chosen No¬vember 9 and 13 for its days of activity inthe community, by supporting anti-warcandidates A1 Raby and Ed Warman. Italso plans to participate in the November15 march on Washington.The Moratorium will meet at 10:30 am inIda Noyes, Sunday, November 9, where itSDS Says "We're Not Crazy"Continued from Page Sixgram?” Right now, we have a chapter of 40to 50 people, including eleven people in theworker-student alliance caucus, and oneperson in the Progressive Labor Party(PLP). People from the RevolutionaryYouth Movement II (RYMII) faction cameto the first meeting, but decided not to stayin the chapter to fight for their ideas. Theseare the two groups that walked out of theSDS convention last June. But it’s impor¬tant to realize that SDS is not a coalition offactions. SDS is an organization of peoplecommitted to fighting racism, male-chau¬vinism and imperialism.Although we’re no smaller than we werelast year, we think that a lot of people havestayed away from SDS meetings becausethey feel that you have to belong to a fac¬tion before you’re eligible to join SDS.That’s not true! SDS remains an open orga¬nization. Also, after all the publicity thepress gave the Weathermen last week, a lot[model CAMERAI LEICA NIKON| PENTAX BOLEXI 1342 E. 55th! HY 3-9259—t — ^ Student Discount of people think SDS is just a bunch ofcrazies. The only way we can show peoplethat we’re alive and kicking is to kick hard— to launch a campaign that will bring usinto alliance with campus workers aroundthe demand for free meals, to start a move¬ment that will build support, and that willwin. '>For people that want to add their opinionor hear more there’ll be petition tables inMandel corridor all week. SDS meetingsare every Monday night at 7:30 in IdaNoyes, and the Committee to Ally withCampus Workers meets there too, at 7:30Thursday evenings.R. Donnelley, a graduate English student,and Jay Zhitkin, a second year undergrad¬uate, are members of SDS.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevant to the University com¬munity. The opinions of the guest colum¬nists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit¬ting columns should contact the editor. will hear guest speakers and then partici¬pate in a mass door-to-door canvassingcampaign in the Hyde Park-Kenwood andSouth Shore communities. Students willhave a choice of canvassing for either Con-Con candidate Raby, or Democratic con¬gressional candidate Warman.On Thursday, November 13, there will bemore leafletting and mailbox stuffing onthe South Side for Raby and Warman, fol¬lowing a convocation at 9 am in Rockefel¬ler chapel.Guest speakers in the convocation mayinclude Cesar Chavez, nationwide leader ofthe Mexican grape boycott, and CharlesEvers, mayor of Fayette, Mississippi, thefirst black mayor of a southern town.There is also the possibility of city wideactions on November 13, but plans havenot been finalized yet.Two sets of buses will leave campus forWashington, D.C. Friday, November 14.One set will leave Washington Saturdaynight, after the March, and the other willleave Sunday night.Bus tickets are $25' round trip for stu¬dents, and $30 for non-students. They maybe purchased in the SG office 1 to 5 p m.Next week, they will also be available inthe Mandel corridor box office from 11 to 1pm.The moratorium committee feels the suc¬cess or failure of the march on Washington,in which at least half a million people areexpected to participate, will reflect on themoratorium.The committee believes that the goal ofcommunity involvement can best be servedthrough support of Raby and Warman, who have both actively supported the morato¬rium and related the war to broader issuesaffecting their communities.The moratorium believes that as a dele¬gate to Con-Con, Raby will work to changethe closed political process that has mademoratorium demonstrations necessary. Anexample of the effects of this closed pro¬cess was the selection by Daley of mostdelegates to the Democratic conventionthat voted against peace and McCarthy.Warman, an advocate for an immediateend to the war, is running against warhawk Phil Crane in a race that is drawingnational attention as a referendum on Nix¬on’s war policy.Another campus anti-war group, theCommittee to End the War (CEW), is sup¬porting the moratorium committee’s activi¬ties and also planning further actions.CEW will present a rally in Kent 107 at 8p m Wednesday. Guest speakers includeAndrew Pulley, black anti-war GI and oneof the Fort Jackson 8 and John Froines, oneof the Conspiracy 8 defendants, among oth¬ers.CEW is calling for a boycott of classes onthis campus Friday, November 14 in con¬junction with an international studentstrike against the war in Vietnam, calledby the Student Mobilization Committee.Anyone interested in working for CEWshould call MO-7-4700, x-8572, or contactRick Feinberg at 939-2667.For those who are not going to Washing¬ton on the weekend of November 14-16, Uni¬versity Theatre is presenting an anti-warplay, “We Bombed in New Haven,” Friday,Saturday and Sunday nights.D4TE-d-ij&Heliminates trial l error dating!Now let the Date-A-MatchComputer enable you to meetand date people that arereally in tune with you!Call or write today for detailsand free questionnairePhone: FR 2-0555 (24 hra.) You're under 25but you drivelike an expert.Why should youhave to payextra for yourcar insurance?DATR-A-MATCH SYSTEMSN. Wabailv—Suit* 822-TChicago. III. 60S02Piease send me information aDoutDate A-Matcn and a fr#e questionnaire Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRYINSURANCE 2nd EXPLOSIVE YEAR!•EO««K i. MARIENTHAl 1 1W PRODUCTIONS INC. pnMntNEW YORK’S SMASH HIT MUSICALi/dcquetBfefit df ivednd upland living in p&r/srues.. WRD.. THU8S. •« 9; FRI. A SAT., tail P.M., SUN. 4 4 9"•*■****' Medium thratrr, mi m. bush st•m OBm Opan m* % P.M.DR 7-1444. CROUP TMIATBK PARTIRS-AN 1-4914TICKETS ALSO AT WARDS FIELDS end CRAWFORD STORESHey, Paisano!Cheeses and spicesAnd everything nicest.That’s what ourPizzas are made of.Italian Fiesta Ml 4-3262We deliver!October 31, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/Page 7id ; latltl HI n" •1Grand Opening!LONG GROVE ROUGE2001 South Michigan Avenue'just minutes from the Loop30 stories of modernhigh-rise livingat down-to-earth rents1-BEDROOM $118.502-BEDROOM $139.003-BEDROOM $160.00The perfect residence for singlepersons, young couples, familieswith children, senior citizens. Nowyou can enjoy living in a brand-newapartment building designedespecially for those with moderate-incomes. So close to the heart ofeverything ... and with magnificentviews of Lake Michigan and theLoop. Just look at these wonderfulfeatures:• Huge raised recreation plaza• Day nursery• Indoor game rooms• Supermarket on premises• Beautiful laundry-lounge• Spacious apartments• Plenty of closet space• Ceramic tile baths• Free cooking gas• Deluxe kitchens, with refrigerator-freezer, gas range and oven,counters and cabinets• Clean radiant heat• Master color TV antenna• Telephone jacks in every room• Free parking• Bus stops right at the doorDramatic furnished models now ondisplay. Come out to see for yourselfsoon—choice apartments stillavailable!Hours: Noon to 5 p.m., includingweek-endsTelephone 225-6300BAIRD & WARNER A typical Long Grove House floor plan—this one of a two-bedroom layout—shows the well-designed traffic pattern,the especially large bedrooms, spacious living-dining room,and abundant closet and storage space. One- and three-bedroom apartments are also available, all at extremelymodest rentals. Long Grove House children canattend the nationally-acclaimedSouth Commons-Drake publicschool— offering an integrated,innovative educational program inthe new South Commons CommunityBuilding and the modernDrake SchoolWant to see something really special? Then visit thethree tastefully furnished model apartments at LongGrove House. You’ll see rooms like this one, drama¬tically showing just how wonderful these residencesare. Modern and traditional furnishings are mixed har¬moniously to create "now” living settings.. Page 8/The Chicago, Maroon/October 31* 1969Rugby DemonstratesAthletic, Social SkillBy John StevensRugby School, England, 1850: A soccerplayer, William Allis, showing “a fine dis¬regard for the rules,” picks up the ball andruns with it to create the game of rugby.University of Chicago, United States,1969: The Rugby Club, showing a similarlyfine disregard for the ascetism of mostsports goes on winning and partying in thefinest tradition.Rugby is familiar to few Americans and,if at all, is referred to simply as a “reallyrough sport.” Rugby has its real roots insoccer and through the addition of time¬outs, countless technicalities, voluminouspadding, blocking and the forward passAmerican football has evolved (touchdownand scrimmage, or scrummage, for ex¬ample, originated from Rugby).In rugby, there are 15 men on each team:eight forwards fight for possession of theball and seven backs run with it. The teamadvances down the not-to-exceed 120 yardfield carrying, kicking and lateralling therugby ball, or it can be punted forward. Noblocking. Forty minute halves are playedwith no timeouts. No substitutions.Only the ball carrier can be tackled andhe tries to pass it before being broughtdown. Each team works for a try, or atouchdown, which means not only crossingthe opponent’s goal line but also touchingthe ball down for the three points. A suc¬cessful try is followed by a two point con¬version attempt, either in the form of aplace kick or a drop kick. Field goals, re¬sulting from penalties, can also earn threepoints.One setup, a tight scrum, provides one ofthe most amusing scenes in rugby. As thetwo teams face off, eight forwards, aver¬aging in the University team’s case about210 pounds each, form two or more rows inpushing position. When the ball is in¬troduced into the scrum along the line ofscrummage, the pack of forwards tries topush over the ball or pass it back using thefoot so that the halfback, called a scrumhalf, can pick it up. A loose scrum isformed when players from each side closearound the ball when it is on the ground.After a player is tackled, he must let theball go free as soon as possibleThe University of Chicago rugby club,now in its sixth year, has had its share ofdefeats in the past: no powerhouse butnonetheless a formidable opponent. Butthis year things have changed: after sevencontests the team’s record remains flaw¬less. Unscored upon in three games, includ¬ing an unheard of 33-0 win over the QuadTIm University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Wood lawn Ave.SUNDAY AFTERNOON,NOVf«KM,k3lRICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MusicW ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CNORWith 50 members ofTHE CMCAGC SYMPHONY 0RCH.Mendelssohn'siEltjahTICKETS:U-C. Fac. - Staff $3.00Gen. Adm.StudentsReserved $3.50$2.50$4.50ON SALE AT Tidiet Central, M"no City at 300 N. State Sh%and all Marshall Field and MotWard stares: CooleyCower 5111 Harper Ct.; Re"olds dub Desk. Cities, the team has now allowed only 18points. Chicago has maneuvered for a totalof 105 points, and only twice has an oppo¬nent crossed their goal line.The University rugby team, registeredwith a formal rugby union organization,plays in the spring and fall. The cosmopoli¬tan nature of the club gives the group aflair few other campus organizations canboast. The club, heavily graduate studentswith a nucleus of business and law stu¬dents, features players from the US, Eng¬land, Australia, Argentina, Canada, andWales.David TravisFIGHT: Members of the University rugby club vie for the ball in a recent contest.Students Could See RecruitersElsewhere Than on CampusContinued from Page Sixmay not approve of it, that’s what the Uni¬versity says it wants — then these recruit¬ments visits from non-academic institutionsmust cease.If students want to talk to General Elec¬tric, or Dow Chemical ,or Mattel Toys,that’s their business. They should not behindered from doing so, and as long as theUniversity continues to have recruiters oncampus, students should be allowed tospeak with them. But because it is reallythe student’s business, not the University’sthese meetings could better be conductedoff campus.The boundaries as to what is “Universitybusiness” are, admittedly, unclear. Thereis an office of career counseling that helpsstudents locate job opportunities and ar¬range interviews. This is not academicwork, and if the University were to adherestrictly to its conception of itself as an aca¬demic institution, such an office should notexist. But clearly students want such a ser¬vice, and it helps them enormously — if notas students, then as people — so the Uni¬versity offers the service. The same couldbe said for the on campus recruiters, buttheir presence carries the process fartheralong, carries it along to a point where theUniversity’s neutrality is violated. To ex¬tend — free of charge — University facil¬ ities to non-academic institutions is not neu¬trality.Putting a stop to on campus non-academ¬ic recruitment would be no great hardshipto the parties affected. Students who wantto talk to the companies can go downtownto see them. The companies can afford totake a hotel suite or use office space fortheir interviews. The University will be re¬lieved of the embarrassment of appearingto be the sponsor of General Electric com¬pany, with all the implications such a spon¬sorship carries.The only way out of this dilemma is toend all such visits; for the University se¬lectively to allow some companies and notothers would only embroil it further andfurther in the non-academic value judg¬ments it says it seeks to avoid. In contin¬uing these visits, every day the Universitybecomes more and more vulnerable to thedisaster that could follow such demonstra¬tions and misunderstandings as might takeplace if, for instance, Dow Chemical shoulddecide to make another recruiting visithere. For its own sake — for the sake of itstranquility and its integrity — the Univer¬sity should re-examine its policy toward re¬cruiting visits and, hopefully, change it.Caroline Heck is the editor of the Ma¬roon. A letter from the editor does notnecessarily reflect the opinion of theMaroon’s entire editorial staff.Big Wheel Bike ShopSALES - SERVICE - RENTALSAuthorize uNORTHSIOL RaI LK.M &Robin Hooo Di ai.khsilk 2935 N BROADWAYIf RALSICMTOf PHONE: 348-'*31 3EXPERT REPAIR WORKON ALL MAKESAL HIRTCONCERT M. BERG CLEANERSFree Pickup & DeliveryCovered by InsuranceUnclaimed used Furs, $25 to $100. Settle Forcharges, values up to $1000. Also Fabulous minkcoats and stoles. Tremendous values. We alsoclean suede coats and knitted goods.! 1819 East SSth Street 493-9413Rather than the glory, since spectatorturnout for practices on the North Fieldand games on the new Stagg Field is at aconstant ebb, it is the chance for exerciseand the opportunity for fellowship that at¬tracts people.In a game as violent as Rugby, heavyemphasis must be placed on sportsman¬ship. And so it is especially with the clubhere where fly half back and ‘backfieldquarterback’ Rod Thomas flatly declaresthat violence remains impersonal and thatdeliberate violence against another oppo¬nent is never condoned. The sportsmanshipemerges at the end of each game too, wheneach team cheers its opponent three times,and the winners clap the losers off the field.The spirit of the game, its epitome — thesocial life — makes Rugby what it is. “Youmight be kicking some guy’s teeth in outthere on the field, but after the game youget together and have a beer with him.”The bitterness so characteristic and ex¬pected of most competitive sports does notexist with Rugby. Beers and good talk areexchanged as often after the game as theball is passed on the field. A host team’sproviding the correct post-game atmos¬phere seems almost as important as ar¬ranging for ,a playing field. This sharplycontrasts with the strict training rules im¬posed on players in most sports. In Rugbyyou drink, smoke and can be out late aslong as you perform on the field.To maintain a fast moving game likeRugby demands teamwork, not the kindfound in building an entire team around an0. J. Simpson. The kind of individualismpermitted also reminds the players thatthey are part of a team. “You’re not just acog in a machine,” explained Thomas,“you’re an intelligent cog in a machine.”The University of Chicago Rugby teamwill be pitted against Milwaukee on newStagg Field at 2 pm November 1. Then onSunday the club travels to South Bend for aconfrontation with Notre Dame.HELP US RUNAMERICA&30 PMNovember 7thMedinah AuditoriumBenefit forYouth Guidance$10.00 $7.50 $6.50 $4.75TICKETS ONSAUATAUSEARS STORESor 427-1086 SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DnvoOctober 31, .1969/.The Chicago Maroon/Page 9LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONBuzzAfter being a student at the University ofChicago for a couple of years, I have be¬come aware of certain verbal character¬istics that are peculiar to the academic $Qnrl $community, and specifically to our campus. * *Many terms are used indiscriminatelyand inappropriately, one result beingthat these “buzz phrases” become am¬biguous and tend to lose their semantic sig¬nificance. demic experience,” (638). at the Universityof Chicago.Kirby Ross Hindin, 71LinguisticsI believe that this situation is not neces¬sarily a hopeless one. I have uncovered amethod whereby we may all share in thisconfusion, and transform frustration intosatisfaction (verbalization-wise). Use thechart below to generate “buzz phrases.”Drop them into your coffee-shop conversa¬tions, add them to your research papers.No one will know just what you are speak¬ing about, but then again, you won’t either.Systematized University of Chicago BuzzPhrase Generator0 meaningful 0 rational 0 dialog1 relevant 1 intellectual 1 discourse2 critical 2 coherent 2 concept3 fundamental 3 academic 3 structure4 significant 4 aesthetic 4 analysis5 rigorous 5 logical 5 method6 scholar iy 6 philosophical 6 relationship7 problematic 7 ethical 7 approach8 formal 8 cross-cultural 8 experience9 creative 9 inter-disciplinary 9 entityInstructions:To generate a suitable buzz phrase,choose any three-digit number from 000 to999, then select the corresponding buzzwords from the respective columns. For ex¬ample, to use a U of C favorite, 001, “mean¬ingful rational discourse.” One can alsoemploy a blank in positions one or two, 2b4:“critical analysis,” or b56, “logical rela¬tionship.” These basic 1200 buzz phrasescan also be negated: -437, “insignificantunacademic approach.”It is hoped that this “relevant intellectualstructure,” (113), will provide a basis for afuller understanding of our “scholarly aca¬ In 1946 Jerry Voorhis, an incumbent con¬gressman in southern California, faced achallenger named Richard Milhous Nixon.Through the studied use of the smear, Nix¬on drove Jerry Voorhis right out of Con¬gress.Richard Nixon, as we all know, went onto bigger and better things. First HelenGahagan Douglas, then the vice presiden¬cy, then the world.But what of Jerry Voorhis? Now a lawyerin Chicago, Voorhis this week sent the U ofC Vietnam Moratorium Committee a $10check. He knew we needed money.If you can help, checks should be madepayable to the Vietnam Moratorium Com¬mittee and sent c/o the Student Govern¬ment Office, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E 59thStreet, Chicago, Ill. 60637.John Siefert, 71Civil LibertiesTo anyone who hoped that the New Leftand its anti-democratic practices had leftcampus for more “relevant” battlegrounds,Tuesday’s SDS demonstration to chase theGeneral Electric recruiter has the harshring of reality. To argue that GE “exploits”its employees is to state a truism, and GE’sbargaining practices during this strike onlyreinforce the obvious.It takes a great leap of the (lack of)imagination to go from an acknowledgmentof the union’s grievances against GE to anassumption that it is legitimate to prohibitGE from recruiting prospective employeeson campus. The denial of free speech is aserious matter to most of us, though SDS nolonger is concerned with “the civil liber¬tarian argument.”CARPET CITY4 6740 STONY ISLANDf 324-7998^Hos what you need from a $10▼used 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in RemnantsMil returns at a fraction of the^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with this$Ad.t FREE DELIVERYCUT OUTfor me*Only as a ME* membercan you take advantage ofspecial evenings and dis¬counts. For only $2.00,(which is redeemable), youcan join ME* and discoverevenings at London House,Mister Kelly's and theHappy Medium Theatre.Clip this ad, fill in the cou¬pon, enclose your $2.00and mail to:ME*London House360 N. Michigan AvenueChicago, Illinois 60601NAME_ADDRESSCITYPHONE Furthermore, such a demonstration is inno way helpful to the striking workers atGE. Instead of parading proudly to supportGE workers by denying the right of freespeech, University students should try tounderstand why workers need unions andthe right to strike, and send money in sup¬port of the union if the spirit so movesthem. Even a demonstration against GE islegitimate and useful, but we can not affordto surrender our own or other people’s civilrights, whether it’s SDS or Judge JuliusHoffman who wants to deny them.Deena RosenbergYoung People's Socialist LeagueShedding LightOn the morning of 28 October (the daythe GE recruiter came on campus) I chan¬ced upon an awakening revelation in theSDS bulletin urging us to participate in the“Mill-In” in order to interfere with the re¬cruiter’s interviewing of three students.As I remember, the bulletin announcedthat approximately 20% of GE’s productiongoes to Vietnam. Since I am a veteran ofVietnam I can certainly attest to the vera¬city of this astounding atrocity. Why, lateststatistics reveal that of the 24 possible flu¬orescent light bulbs employed in my officeat Bien Hoa, a staggering 83.3% bore theheinous GE label! Furthermore, these im¬perialistic, capitalist war-mongers slylyduped me into purchasing a GE radio,causing me to stay up at night listening toit, and THUS USING MORE GE LIGHTBULBS!! But, faced with such revoltingdocumented evidence, let us not let queasi¬ness stop us short of the most hideous of allobliquities: a full 100%, yes, 100% of ourone refrigerator had been produced by thewar machine of General Electric!Think of it. Even the name implies mili¬tarism. Why is it not Civilian Electric? No,the discerning citizen is readily aware thatthis corporation’s name betrays its partici¬pation in the industrial-military complex(along with other clandestine chiefs-of- staff, General Mills and General Foods, toname a few).Students, do your part! Next time youshed light on any subject, ensure that it isnot GE’s. Use a candle.Charles V. ChaseBrave New WorldThe Bureau of Social Science Research inWashington, D.C. is currently conducting apilot study of “campus unrest” for theAmerican Council of Education. Whenquestioned by a Maroon reporter about theuses of the study’s data, Prof. M. BrewsterSmith, chairman of the U of C departmentof psychology and member of the study’sadvisory committee, is quoted in the Ma¬roon as saying, “I think a good part ofwhat’s going on is going to succeed.”Just what is going on? What is the pur¬pose of this study? It clearly doesn’t in¬vestigate the nature and scope of the issuesof protests. Rather, it seeks to determinepersonality characteristics and belief sys¬tems of those who participate in them andof the teachers who foster the beliefs thatunderlie protests. It seeks to determine therelationship between administrative tacticsand the outcome of protests.The suspicion arises that a purpose ofthis study is to refine a measuring in¬strument to help reduce the number of pro¬tests by selecting certain types of studentsand faculty for institutions. It is clear fromthe political and ethical implications of thisresearch that it has no place within freeinstitutions.All students should beware: The question¬naires of the ACE ask for incriminating in¬formation. ACE statements to the contrary,there can be no guarantess that this infor¬mation will not be used for “intelligence”purposes by either the military or the aca¬demic establishments. Students who wantto maintain free universities should not co¬operate with these studies.Richard C. WestonBRIGHTON FOREIGNAUTO SERVICETune-up Your V.W. For Winter NOW!ALL WORK GUARANTEEDWe service and repairall mokes of foreign cars4401 S. Archer AvenueTelephone: 254-3840PSYCHEDELICSALE!OCT. 31 - NOV. 951»t nearharper NEED MORE MONEYto help you enjoy your collegeyears?Have a better car, finerclothes, extra cash, etc. HOUSEOF WRAY of Phoenix, Dallas &Philadelphia are expanding toyour area with a proven way foryou to earn between $5 and $10per hour in your off-studyhours. Part time earnings of$500-$l,000 per monthpossible. For personal interviewapply in person evenings 8 P.M.(except Friday and Sunday)HOUSE OF WRAY, ProfessionalMall, 251 LawrencewoodShopping Center, Niles, Illinois. FUNNY YOURE A 6/RL...ONCE A MONTH YOU FEEL LIKE AYou’re not as mini as usual? It’s only temporary,you know. A monthly problem. But who cares whenyou have that puffy, bloated, "Oh, I’m so fat feeling”?TRENDAR, that’s who. TRENDAR’LL help keep youslim as you are all month long. Its modern diuretic(water-reducing) action controls temporary pre-men-strual weight gain. (That can be up to 7 pounds!) Starttaking TRENDAR 4 to 7 days before that time. It’ll helpmake you look better and feel better.TRENOARl.ITMAKES YOU GLAD YDUkE a muCHGO'S OWNSWINGERS CLUBSEND $1.00 FOR 64 PACEILLUST MAGAZINE, 100s OFPERSONALS. NHS, BOX3806. CHOP 60654Our thing is your ring —w/lltrfhsfbHN» JfWflftS IOt J* V|US119 K. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA A bicycle puts you closeto nature - Thus spakeZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh, Robin Hood, Falcon,Peugeot, Gitane, Ylercier,Radius and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. Used bi¬cycles spasmodically.Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 • 8:30; SAS 10 - 8The carpetbagger* from OM Tow, IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift acijusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.ige 10/The Chicagp Marppn/Qctpber. 31, 1969 , , >(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)take these sunken eyes and learn to seetrick OR TREAT FORUNICEFTRICK OR TREAT FORUNICEF GAY POWER IN 69-70 Anyone in¬terested in joining the Hyde ParkHomophile League formed last qtat UC write Box 69, c/o MaroonReplies kept confidential.Costumes et at. Woodward Court 7PM Tonight. Over in t.me for PierceParly.AMERICA HURRAHJoan Claude Van Itallie'sAMERICA HURRAH 8:30 Oct. 31,Nov 1, 7-8 Rey Club Theater Stu¬dents St: 50 Others $2.00.instant theaterNOFBCP GOES BUMP IN THENIGHT! FRI-SAT, 9 & 11, 5238HARPER, $1 IMPROVISATIONS-harper theaterSCENESHIERONYMUS BOSCH: A PSY¬CHOANALYTIC CONTRIBUTIONTO THE STUDY OF CREATIVITYA SLIDE LECTURE BY ERIKAFROMM NOV 3 8:00 JUDD HALL.THE FESTIVAL OF THE RE¬FORMATION Service at AugustanaChurch. 5500 Woodtawn, 7:30 p.m.itonite. Preacher: Carl Braaten,LSTC The Ambiguity of th« Re¬formationWHAT'S THE SCORE? UC THEJEWEL LIVE BAND HITCHCOCKTUFTS 9:00 TONIGHT Pierce Dung¬eon Witches Free Warlocks 75c ID's.The Profane: Sanctify or Abandon?The problem of meaningful SabbathObservance on Campus. Open dis¬cussion—Hillel—Tonight—8: <5 PM.Dance—LIVE BAND HITCHCOCKTuft Oct 31 9:00-Untll? Pierce Tow¬er, Women Free Men 7Sc ID's.AMERICA HURRAH tonight; 8:30Reynolds Club Thea. Also Nov. 1,r, 8. $2.00, student $1.50.DanceLIVE BAND HITCHCOCK-uft Oct 31 9:00-Uotll ? Pierce Tow-r. Women Free Men 75c ID'S.UNDAY. Margaret's Church — The Episco¬pal Church of South Shore — 2555 E.'3rd St. (corner Coles)7 30 am Holy Communion9:00 am Family Eucharist &Church School! 1:0Q am Choral Eucharist Coming Soon; A funny Thing Hap-pened On the Way to the Forum.Save Your Pennies Kiddies for thisbig date this qtr. Live appearanceby MS Bedford.PRE MED CLUB MEETINGBillings M-137, Thurs, Nov 6, 7PM. Election of officers. And ProfJack Cowan, Mathematical Biol.,on neurological modeis. PEOPLE FOR SALE"May We Do Your Typing?" 363-1104.Expert' typing. 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm's & weekends.HOUSE FOR SALELUELLA NEAR 78th $900 Down, 3Bdrm brick, 2-garage, enclosedporch. Mr. Moore DO 3-6672.SILVERWOOD, INC.SKIING FOR SALE Baby gerbils, delightful and free,call 493-9265 after 6 PM.Wollensak T-524 Tape Recorder 7"Reel Mono 4 Speeds (15/16-7'/a Ips)plus Accessorie Cords $70 or OfferCall ES 5-9235. Perfect Condition.DISHWASHER IN PERFECTWORKING ORDER. RCA WHIRL¬POOL. $25 Call 643-0770.FOR RENTFOR RENT 3Vt RM FURNISHEDAPT VERY NICE S150-MO. 731-7304.Students can see AMERICA HUR¬RAH FOR only 150 crummy capi¬talist cents. SKI CLUB WINTER TRIP-ONEWEEK VAIL, COLORADO BY AIR.Leave Dec 13—Return Dec 20.Reasonable cost—Marty 324-8930. ROOM FOR RENT: Quiet, Sunny,Bath, Refrig, 57 & Blacksfone, RentReas Call DO 7-7507.ROOMS $55/MONTH 5714 WOOD-LAWN PL 2-9647.ALL SAINTS AND SINNERS RE¬FORMATION PARTY AND LIBER¬ATION CELEBRATION, Sat. Nov.1, 8 pm, Bonhoeffer House, 5554Woodlawn. All are welcome. Freefood and Wittenberg Beer.CONSPIRACYNeed sleeping accommodations forstudents coming to Conspiracy Con¬ference (Sat Nov 1st only) anyspace call 427-7774.7th INTERNATIONALFOLK FESTIVALFri Nov 7 Performance 8:15; SatNov 8 Dance Workshops 2:00, FolkDance Party 8:00. All events atInt House 59th A Dorch. Ticketsat Stud. Activities Office, x 3594.RUGBYIT TAKES LEATHER BALLS TOPLAY UC vs MILWAUKEE RUG¬BY CLUB SAT AT STAGG FIELD2:00 PM.PEOPLE WANTEDCo-op middle school (11-13 yearsold) needs volunteers with skills inmechanics, sciences & music. CallMrs. Davis. 363-5810.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 U.C. MORATORIUM COMMITTEENEEDS YOUR HELP. VOLUN-TEER—CALL MIKE FOWLER 935-0425 LEAVE NAME or 206-5248.BASS PLAYER & DRUMMERWANTED FOR BAND. ROCK, C&W,R8rB, FOLK ROCK BAG. SHOULDHAVE OWN EQUIPMENT & EX¬PERIENCE. WE WOULD PREFERSOMEONE WHO CAN AT LEASTSING BACKUP, HAS PRO EXP. &IS OR CAN BECOME UNION.CALL BOB 643-0741 EVENINGS. FOR SALETWIN BEDS—ELEGANT CARVED,COMFORTABLE. I PD. $35 EACH.CALL JAYME EVES HY 3-4567 OR955-0725.H EL P W ANTED: PLEASANTPART-TIME WORK IN YOURspare time. 363-0838.WANTED: 2 rides to Ann Arborthis Weekend. Diana x3776.Mate or female wanted to teachgym, 1-3:15 PM, M-F, at school foremotionally disturbed children, ages6-15. Experience with groups ofchildren necessary. $150/mo. Phone643-7300 for application.WANTED: Paid medical examinersfor insurance exams. Resident typedoctors preferred. Full professionalfees paid by nationally known in¬surance firm. Ralph J. Wood. FR2-2390. PERFECT ELEC DRYER. YRGUAR $80, BEST OFFER. 667-0840.VW 61 2 Snow Tires New BrakesRuns Great, Negotiable, 324-5355."AMERICA HURRAH ticketsTRey-nolds Club desk. 2.00, 1.50 students.Xerox Copies 9c,7c,5c,8.7c,5c,3c $10runs, 10% Dicount on 9c7c5c rate:MODERN IMPRESSIONS1031 West Polk at UICCPhone: 829-0248.HARMON-KAROON 120 WATT AMPAND PRE-AMP EXC CONO. $150363-6190.CHEVELLE - ‘65-4 d7-AT-PB-Extragood condition but needs body work$250 NO 7-3106. ROOMMATES WANTEDMature fern grad wanted to shareFANTASTIC APT 5 rm 22 fl LakeView modern bldg E Hy Pk $90-100after Nov 1. 643-3714.FEM GRAD STUDENT. MOVE INNOV 1ST. 54 8. HARPER, $55/MO363-0715.Grad (Pref Physics) TO SHAREHd Pk Apt w/2 OTHERS. OWN RM$51.50. 752-6151.Mature fern grad wanted to shareFANTASTIC APT 5 rm 22 fl LakeView modern bldg E Hy Pk $80-100 after Nov l. 643-3714.DESIGN CONTESTFENDER elec 12-string w/cast $200HEATH 120 watt trans amp $125Mike Brant 752-9538.SUBSCRIBETHE CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ido Noyes Hall,Chicago, IllinoisMaroon issues for the remaining academic year (69-70) can be sent anywhere inthe country for $8.00. For an additional $1.00 we throw in the June 6 YearbookIssue last year.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, impress yourfriends.NAME.address ZIP.' 1 year subscription $8.00Yearbook Issuo $1.00's.rr - - — — — -j1 —.a n jf. sl.tj STUDENTS, FACULTY, ANDSTAFF are invited to submit de¬signs for a symbol for the 1970Festival of the Arts. It may usethe old phoenix, it may includethe words, FOTA '70 or Festivalof the Arts, it may be anythingyou want. (By the way, this isFOTA's tenth anniversary.) If youlike, make sketches of ways thesymbol could be used in promotion.Send art fo: FOTA Design Contest,Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59thStreet, Chicago 60637. For informa¬tion, call Roger Black, 955-4706. Con¬test deadline is Tuesday.MARCH ONWASHINGTON.NOV 15thCharter Buses Leaving Friday fromMain Quads. Students-$25 Adolts-$30. ROU NOTRIP—Buses Will Leave D.C. Both SatAND Sunday Eves. TICKETS ATIDA NOYES RM 218 1-5 PM ForInfo X3273-4.TENANT UNIONANYONE WHO WISHES TO WORKON TENANT UNION ORGANIZINGOR WANTS ADVICE OR ORGAN¬IZING ASSISTANCE IN THEIRBUILDING SHOULD CALL S. G.BETWEEN 1-5 MON-FRI or 493-4148 PERSONALNEVER OVERESTIMATE THEVIRILITY OF A U.C. MALE.MAE D. HEADRichard Nixon will not be affectedby AMERICA HURRAH!LOOKING FOR GIRL FOR MEAN¬INGFUL SEX RELN. SD 1-9636.AFTER 6:30 PM. BE THE FIRST ON YOUR BLOCKTO ORGANIZE IT—CALL SG.Gueen Refrigerator and King Ka¬zoo reign!—SVNA.A. C. Tappman:I Yearn For You Tragically.Gabby Hayes eats at the PierceTower Snack Bar. So does hishorse.Need sleeping accommodations forstudents coming to Conspiracy Con¬ference (Sat Nov 1st only) anyspace call 427-7774.Jean-Ciaude van Itallie is not aWASP.So who is?AMERICA HURRAH this weekendKAZOO AT RUGBY HALFTIME???LOFTY the righteous pacifist; thedeath toll holds him high.Come Rejoice! A now time for aCelebration of Ecumenical Liturgy.Brent House, 5 PM Sunday Nov. 2.My country 'tis of thy People you'redying. AMERICA HURRAH.Jerry Lipsch eats at the SnackBar and who is a bigger experton food?Owner of Honda 160 Call SamDillion 46 Hitchcock I Lost YourPhone Number.FESTIVAL OF ALL SAINTS. Gra¬ham Taylor Chapel, 5757 Univ.Sunday, Nov. 2, 10 am Wayne Saf-fen on Sainthood as a Profession. APublic Service of Sf. Gregory ofNyassa Lutheran Parish.When on tour the intellectual eliteof Albania eats at the Snack Bar.AMERICA HURRAH! Life beforethe revolution. Found & available for adoptionyoung, red tomcat Please call BU8-3472; he's so friendly.John Reed, Norman Mailer, andnow Jean-Claude van Itsllie. CanHarvard do no wrong?Did I say that?RENAISSANCE PLAYERS organiza¬tional meeting. Thursday, November6, 8:00 pm, 5615 University Ave.See a real middle class! See amiddle class reel! See AMERICAHURRAH!Lascivious patriots: We lied. Theyonly have to stay up till Nov 8.HURRAH AMERICA!Disaster of the Great Chicago Fire—the only place to buy ModerneErzahler IV for German 201 wasthe Bookstore. Help! will buy bor¬row or Zerox a copy. Call Frantic375-4786."I was exceptionally impressed byAMERICA HURRAH. It's possiblethat "Mitel" is the best one-actplay I've ever seen."-^Norman MailerFirst the Bookstore, then the goalpost , . , SVNA.Come to the Snack Bar and seeJerry Tullis order twinkles, watchMarv attack customers, and con¬sort with Albania wits.AN UNDERGROUND SPORT^ATUCGET RUCKED ... OR JUSTWATCH . , . SATURDAY ATSTAGG.FANTASTICKsTnOV. 6, 7, 8, 9 ATCLOISTER CLUB TICKETS ATREYNOLDS CLUB $2.00, $1.50 STU¬DENTS.Halloween is eatin Banderrnats.Spiro Agnew burned his compli¬mentary ticket to AMERICA HUR¬RAH. Find out why tonight.ABSENT MIN DED? TEN PROFES¬SORS RETURNED TRAVEL PLANSTO THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONUNSIGNED TO LET US KNOWWHO CALL MRS KIFER x 4291. AMERICA HURRAH! Life beforethe revolution.Marv Waschke, the man and themyth. See him Fridays at theSnack Bar.Satan laughed his unkind laugh toa finish; then he said; "It is aremarkable progress. In five orsix thousand years five or sixhigh civilizations have risen, flour¬ished, commanded the wonder ofthe world, then faded out anddisappeared, and not one of themexcept the latest ever invented andsweeping and adequate way to killpeople. They all did their best—to kill being the chiefest ambitionRational Discourse? Community ofScholars? SVNA.FREE KITTENS 7 WKS BL & WOR GRAY M & F 324-8173.AMERICA HURRAH is coming!AFTER SDS—WHAT?There IS a radical, original, indi¬genous, creative alternative to theadventurist elitism of WEATHER¬MAN AND the stale, sterile, ir¬relevant sectarian dogma of RYMII. It is called the NEW PATRIOT¬ISM, a new political tendency basedon the concept of a PERMANENT,ONGOING AMERICAN REVOLU¬TION! For free tracts and/or freespeaker, call JUDY 2-6:30 pm at247-6646, or write Johnny Apple-seed Box 50393, Cicero III. 60650. of the human race and the earliestincident in its history—but only theChristian civilization has scored atriumph to be proud of. Two orthree centuries from now it will berecognized that all the competentkillers are Christians; then thepagan world will go to school tothe Christian—not to acquire hisreligion, but his guns. The Turkand the Chinaman will buy thoseto kill missionaries and convertswith."—Mark TwainWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL2-8377)BLACK-CAT BONE BLUES BANDMAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th SI., Chicago, 60637OATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free.£ $* JEFFERSON AIRPLANEVOLUNTEERSLED ZEPHELINIIonly$3.29as are all 4.98 albums:STUDENT CO-OPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENTAMERICA Oc' • A 9Ar *\*# A* cv»x*e1'October 31,‘ 1969/The Chicago Maroon/Page 11AWEDNESDAYNOV. 59 P.M. ESTCBS-TV It’s new...it’s Sinatraall the way.BUDWEISER® • KING OF BEERS« * ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. LOUISNEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA * HOUSTON • COLUMBUS • JACKSONSVILLE Good Housekeeping'sFIRST SPECIALCHRISTMAS BOOK!NEARLY 200 PAGES OF EXCITING IDEASON CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS,GIFTS, HOLIDAY ENTERTAINING.FREE TO OUR CHRISTMAS CLUB MEMBERS.UNIVERSITYNATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREET TELEPHONE MU 4 1200CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615strength and serviceDEPOSITS INSURED UP TO SIS.000member FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION CHICAGO CLEARING HOUSE ASSOCIATIONFEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEMSUPPORT YOUR LOCAL FESTIVEL!5TH CHICAGOINTERNATIONALFILM FESTIVALNOVEMBER 8-20VILLAGE THEATRECLARK STREET & NORTH AVENUEKEEP YOUR EYES WIDE FOR COMPLETE FESTIVALSCHEDULE...COMING NEXT WEEK!ADMISSION $1.50 WITH STUDENT I.D.Non-Profit Org.U.S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931