A special section-ar»*I•rr-, -*• i,>r.-a Tenant unions in Hyde ParkSee page 2The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 13* The University of Chicago Friday, October 16Senate stalls sanctionon Neugarten reportBUSINESS EAST: Demonstrators protest outside of Business East daring meetingof council of the University Senate on the Neugarten report. By PAUL BERNSTEINThe council of the University senatevoted Tuesday to postpone consideration ofthe Neugarten committee report on Univer¬sity women, in order to hear the views of agroup opposed to its passage.The seven-member committee of thecouncil plans to meet with a delegationfrom the ad hoc anti-sexist committee, todiscuss its objections to the Neugarten re¬port.The ad hoc committee includes membersof the New University Conference (NUC)and the campus chapter of the ChicagoWomen’s Liberation Union (CWLU). NUChas published a 45-page critique of the Neu¬garten report that charges it with over¬looking a substantial amount of UniversityAron finishes survey on campus opinionBy PAT COXIs the University of Chicago really a radi¬cal school? Do students here feel violence isnecessary to effect change? How do stu¬dents view the University?William Aron, a graduate student in soci¬ology, has tried to answer those questionsin a survey of student attitudes, “RadicalIdeology on the University of ChicagoCampus.”Aron found that most UC students “har¬bor severe criticisms of American society,advocate major social and economicchanges, and exhibit a high degree of dis¬content with the status quo.”The survey’s four major areas in¬vestigate attitudes on “Conditions in Amer¬ican Society,” “Outlook for the Future,”“Acceptability of Violence,” and, ‘the Uni¬versity.”According to Aron, one survey flaw is thelack of questions concerning the women’sliberation movement. He found that at¬tempts made to probe aspects of malechauvinism against women in our societyin the pretest were seriously deficient andhad to be eliminated.Results on questions in the first sectionshow that students appear to be sympa¬thetic with revolutionary ends and stronglyradical in their ideology.Aron states, “Two things are clear: onthe campus, there is no ‘silent majority’ aspopularly defined today; and the majorityof students advocate changing much inAmerica’s foreign and domestic policies.”Two-thirds of students surveyed felt thatAmerican society is “bad” or “very bad.”Only one student felt American society is“very good.”More than 50 percent of the students arelooking for major changes in society andmore than 70 percent believe man is “justi¬fied in defying the law to get it changedwhen his beliefs are in conflict with thatlaw.”The majority of students polled feel thatour society has been getting worse duringthe last decade, and that political polariza¬tion is growing.Outside the campus culture the questionof violence as a means for change has beena unifying factor for many who would oth¬ erwise have little in common, and cause forsome “bitter factionalism” inside of it. Un¬fortunately, there is no clear picture ofwhat students think of acts of violence,Aron said.“The dominant theme,” Aron said, “is aspecial kind of ambivalence: not wantingviolence but willing to accept and under¬stand it.”On student attitude towards the Univer¬sity, the survey points out that generallystudents are content, but there.is a substan¬tial minority who aren’t.There are major changes students wouldlike to see accomplished. For example, 80.3percent felt no war-related research shouldbe conducted on campuses, 75.4 percentwant more black studies courses offered,and 72 percent feel there should be no clas¬sified (secret) research on campus.“However,” asserts Aron, “any attemptto predict the future of protest at the Uni¬versity would be foolhardy. The issues, grievances and dissatisfactions are there,but there are a great many timely and un-predictable variables: apathy, thespontaneity of special events, the conflict¬ing demands on student time, the level ofcommitment to ideological and moral justi¬fications of the use of violence, connectionsbetween the University and the cause of theprotest, and the generally reactive natureof the protest.”The results specified here are only a pre¬liminary report. The detailed analysis ofthe data may be found late in the dis¬sertations for which the survey was con¬ducted.However, since the students interviewedwere willing to take time for a lengthy in¬terview in the aftermath of the Cambodianinvasion and the killings at Kent State Uni¬versity and Jackson State College, and thepressures of finals, Aron and his staff feltobligated to reveal as soon as possible theresults. discrimination against women.The Neugarten report, submitted by a 13member student-faculty committee lastMay, was to have been considered by thecouncil at last Tuesday’s meeting.Shortly before the meeting, however, twonumbers of the ad hoc anti-sexist com¬mittee asked Gale Johnson, spokesman forthe committee of the council, to introduce amotion to delay that consideration; the mo¬tion was then passed by the council.Critics of the Neugarten report believe itsrecommendations to be inadequate, andwill suggest to the committee of the councilalternative programs to end an alleged pat¬tern of discrimination against women bythe University. They also intend to dis¬tribute to it copies of the NUC critique.During the council meeting in BusinessEast, some 75 demonstrators gathered inthe lobby to oppose passage of the Neugar¬ten report.Amy Cedarbaum, told the crowd that theNeugarten committee had contributed tothe perpetuation of discrimination againstwomen by adopting a male chauvinist biasin its investigation.She called for an equal number of menand women faculty, a University day-carecenter, and a program of women studies.Seven demonstrators dressed as witchesrecited in unison a protest against the al¬leged discrimination women face. Explain¬ing that they were dressed in black “tomourn the death of our sisters,” the groupclosed by chanting “we share a dream ofliberation, an new world of our own crea¬tion.”A “sexist of the month” award was givento Fred Bjorling, director of Universitypersonnel, as the person “who best ex¬emplifies sexism on campus.” A studentannouncing the award said that Bjorlingwas responsible for an advertisement thatmade the nature of women’s work at theUniversity appear interesting.Neugarten refutes recent criticism on reportRecent criticisms of the Neugarten com¬mittee report on University women do notcontradict its recommendations and shouldnot delay their implementation, accordingto Bernice Neugarten, who served as chair¬man of the committee.Commenting on a 45-page critique of theNeugarten report published by the NewUniversity Conference (NUC), Mrs. Neu¬garten said “It is not asking for anythingcontrary to what our report asks for; itonly wants it to go further.”Mrs Neugarten expressed concern overthe delay of the council of the Universitysenate in considering, the report. She saidshe was urging that the council hold a spe¬cial meeting to act on it, before its nextregular meeting on November 10.“The Neugarten committee regarded it¬self as a major first step, and by no meansan end to the investigation of women’s posi¬tion in the University,” she said. “I feelthat it opens up further steps.”Mrs Neugarten mentioned that her com¬mittee had recommended a standing Uni¬ versity committee on women’s affairs.“Groups like NUC ought to have a place tobe heard properly; if such a committeewere instituted, any group with a grievancewould have a place to take it.”One of the charges made by the NUCcounter-report is that the Neugarten com¬mittee omitted consideration of Universitystaff when investigating the amount of dis¬crimination against women.Mrs, Neugarten said that while dis¬crimination against women staff “could bean extraordinarily important issue,” “wedid not have the mandate to go into thatarea; we were a committee of the council,and the council’s responsbilities are withinthe academic community only.”The NUC counter report also chargedthat the Neugarten committee did not dis¬cuss the issue of women’s self-image asformed through socialization. According toMrs Neugarten “an analysis of women’sposition in society was not a feasible task,”because of the committee members’ oppos¬ ing views on the subject.Mrs Neugarten also criticized some ofthe NUC recommendations. She said sheobjected to a quota system in the accept¬ance of students and hiring of faculty, be¬cause “hiring people because they arewomen hurts the University and sets up apotential second-class citizenship.”BERNICE NEUGARTEN: Committeechairman responsible for report on women.Tenants unionize in Hyde Park, nationBy Allen FriedmanMany community residents, students andnon-students alike, share a common prob¬lem: how to get landlords to repair crackedwalls, peeling paint, plumbing leaks, bro¬ken windows, hot water that runs cold inthe winter, piles of debris, broken side¬walks and missing locks — some of the va¬riety of ailments that plague many areaapartments.In recent years growing numbers of ten¬ants throughout the nation have begun toorganize into tenant unions to press forgreater landlord responsibility.A national conference on tenants’ rightsand housing held in Hyde Park in January,1969 led to the birth of the National TenantsOrganization (NTO) last October.But the real tenant ‘awakening’ in Chi¬cago can be traced back to the visit of thelate Dr Martin Luther King Jr to Chicagoin early 1965 and the actions of the ChicagoFreedom Movement, an association of civilrights oriented groups.Southside groups like those in East Gar¬field Park and Lawndale have been ad¬vancing tenant complaints, particularlythose of tenement dwellers, for severalyears.Some 18 months ago the impetus to orga¬nize reached Hyde Park. Tenant unions cannow join the Tenant Union Organization(TUO) of the Hyde Park Kenwood Commu¬nity Conference (HPKCC), in the YMCAbuilding at 1400 E 53rd St. According toTUO director, Bob Adams, they are doingso in increasing numbers.TUO, a member of the NTO, was createda year ago from the HPKCC’s ad hoc com¬mittee on tenant unions. A1 Raby, ex-UCgrad student and former Illinois Con¬stitutional Convention delegate from the24th district, is chairman.The TUO will sponsor a panel discussion,“Tenant Like it Is”, Thursday, October 29from 7:30 to 10 pm at the Lutheran Schoolof Theology, 1100 E 55th st, to discuss waysto deal with housing problems.From some 75 attempts to unionize build¬ings, 18 fully organized tenant unions witha total membership of about 250 people nowbelong to the TUO. The organization assistsunions in arranging the filing of griev¬ances, building inspections, legal coun¬seling, rent strikes, and arbitration and col¬lective bargaining with landlords.Legal services are donated by a group ofabout 40 attorneys interested in buildingthe tenant union organization.TUO’s goal is to make landlords recog¬nize the basic rights of tenants to fair, equi¬table treatment and the landlord’s respon¬sibility to provide the services and stan¬dards in apartment necessary for decentliving.Thus TUO seeks not only physical repairsof a building, but also the negotiation of acollective bargaining settlement which dis¬tributes power more equitably between ten¬ants and landlord.“The backwardness of Illinois law”presents difficulties for tenants, as fifthward alderman Leon Despres noted in anarticle in the August 12 Hyde Park Herald.The last major change in leases was madein 1677.•V # ’• Furthermore, the lease puts no legal lim¬itation on how much a landlord may in¬crease rents, and a tenant is obliged to payfull rent even if the landlord does not makerepairs on the property which the lease ob¬ligates him to keep in good condition.When a tenant union decides to register acomplaint, TUO’s first helps each tenantcomplete a four page check-off list of hous¬ing code violations in his or her apartment.A consolidated report is compiled and sentto the city building department with arequest for inspection.If the building department finds appro¬priate cause to act (and it is not obligatedto take action) the city can file suit againstthe landlord to have the whole building cor¬ sity student housing whose rates did notincrease this year. Though not a memberof TUO, MSHTA did receive support fromTUO last year-Continuity in action and solidarity amongtenant union members is crucial to the suc¬cess or failure of their cause, Adams noted.He has found landlords are willing to se¬riously negotiate with tenants “only whenthey have been forced to.” A complaintagainst a landlord may drag out for manymonths and the tenants must stand firm ifthey hope to win.Two TUO tenant unions indicate how suc¬cessful a properly run case can be, andhow disastrous a poorly run case can turnout."Continuity in action and solidarity amongtenant union members is crucial to the successor failure of their cause.... A complaint againsta landlord may drag out for many months, andthe tenants must stand firm if they hope to win.Know your unionized buildings //rected. Should this line of attack prove un¬successful, the tenants add additionalgrievances to the list, such as rent increas¬es and personal treatment, and present itto the landlord.If there is still no response, or one ofincreasing hostility to the tenants involved,the tenant union members must decide ifthey are prepared to take stronger action,such as suing for a new contract in Chicagocircuit court or starting a rent strike.Unions resort to a rent strike only whenall efforts to negotiate with the landlordhave been exhausted, no correction ofbuilding code violations has been made,and the actions of the landlord himself in¬dicate that he is becoming increasinglyhostile to the union or to individual tenantsinvolved.In a rent strike, tenants pay their rentsinto an escrow account held in a bank un¬der court jurisdiction. The account repre¬sents the tenants’ good faith to pay rent,but also their refusal to do so until the land¬lord fulfills what they believe are his re¬sponsibilities.Often, landlords respond with evictionsummonses. But the trend in Chicagocourts this year has been not to evict rentstriking tenants in buildings where land¬lords have been charged with building codeviolations.To join TUO, an individual union mustenroll more than half the total number oftenants in each building it seeks to organ¬ize. Each tenant contributes one percent ofhis rent as dues to help defray die ex¬penses of the non-profit organization.None of the 18 unions contain a majoritywho are students, although in severalunions students are a plurality.The only organized tenant group in Uni¬versity student housing is the Married Stu-dent Housing Tenants Association(MSHTA). Theirs was also the only Univer¬ The disaster was the effort of membersof the tenant association in the building at5330 Blackstone to gain some voice in rentincreases, to ensure appropriate repairsand to set up a system to handle com¬plaints involving leases and other matters.The association members began a rentstrike last April, putting their rent in anescrow account in a bank.The key to a successful rent strike,Adams said, is that “the people have torealize that they must trust each other andstay together.” Of some 20 original stri¬kers, however, several withdrew their mon¬ey from the escrow account when they leftHyde Park early last summer.Another faction of the strikers droppedtheir fight and agreed to pay bade rentwhen the landlord brought charges for thethird time, even though Adams said, theeviction charges had been dismissed incourt the two previous times on technical¬ ities.In early June another group “allowed”themselves to be evicted, Adams said, bynot moving themselves back into theirapartments.It costs the landlord money to file foreviction, move out a tenant’s furniture andbelongings, and hire a lawyer to handle theproceedings. Tenants who embarass a land¬lord’s eviction efforts by moving them¬selves back in, Adams said, have suc¬ceeded in the past in discouraging furtherevictions.Furthermore, of about 100 tenants whohave thus far resisted evictions with theassistance of TUO, not one was eventuallyforced to move out against his or her will.Because the 5330 Blackstone group splin¬tered, the action against the landlordsfailed and the withheld rent was released.Yet when planned carefully and carriedout patiently, a case can yield great suc¬cess and lead to a non restructuring of thetenant-landlord relationship.Tenant association members of a build¬ing at 5327-5335 Dorchester succeeded ingetting their landlord to sign a new con¬tract with them, making a broad redefini¬tion and recognition of tenant rights andlandlord obligations.The agreement has four sections basifc tothe goals of tenants, Adams said.• Tlie landlord recognizes the tenants as¬sociation as the sole collective bargainingagent of its members.• The contract includes the housing codeof Chicago and the state of Illinois, and arequirement that the landlord comply withall the regulations and requirements of theagencies with any jurisdiction over thebuilding.• That rents for apartments of about thesame size and condition should be equaland a limitation placed on the maximumpercent to which rents may be increasedeach year.• The creation of a procedure to faciltatediscussion and settlement of grievancesconcerning the obligations of the landlord,the tenants and the tenants association.The 5327 Dorchester contract, signedApril 16, is effective through April 1, 1971.Continued on page 5Unions not necessary,most realtors maintainBy Jim HaefemeyerUNION TARGETS: peeling paint and cracked plaster can be foughtcollective actions, tenant unions have found.2/The Chicago Maroon/October Ifi 1970 Bruce Rabethrough Building management has reacted to thegrowing tenant union movement by callingit “unnecessary” and by refusing to recog¬nize unions as the sole bargaining agentsfor a building tenants.Many realtors refused even to talk abouttenant unions. “We don’t believe in them,”was all one realty office manager said.But those who did talk argued that noproblem exists if realtors—and tenants—act responsibly within current laws.“Adequate enforcement of current hous¬ing law is sufficient,” said Ed Ryan, apartner in Kennedy, Ryan and Monigalrealtors, 1461 E 57th. “There’s no need fororganized opposition to ‘nothing’.”Ryan characterized tenant unions as pri¬marily a “student phenomenon” or “learn¬ing experience,” and said that their activi¬ty has been centered in university commu¬nities.‘‘Students are hypersensitive aboutthings that apply to everybody,” he said.Noah Mulstein, chairman of the ChicagoReal Estate Board’s rental and property di¬vision, also thought tenant unions unneces¬sary.“If I can’t talk to my tenant directly,then I shouldn’t be around the business. Idon’t need to talk to some union orga¬nizer,” he said.Both Ryan and Mulstein recognized thatsome owners let their buildings run down,but both said that a responsible realtor willnot manage such buildings.“If the owner refuses to make moneyavailable for repairs, then the realtorsshould dump him,” said Ryan. “We’vethrown a half dozen such owners out of thisfirm.” Mulstein said that his firm simply re¬fuses to deal with such owners.Under currently common contracts, if anowner does not maintain his building, thetenant’s only recourse is to file suit and tocollect damages. Supporters of tenantunions have argued that lawsuits are tooslow and too costly.When asked about this, Ryan shruggedand said that the tenants have the samerights in court as he landlord does.“If either they or the landlord violatesthe lease,” he said, “they’re under the pro¬tection of the law.”So far no realtor has recognized a tenantunion as a legal force. Perhaps McKey andPoague came close in working with theKenwood Tenant Union to settle a recent20-week rent strike, but the realtors wouldrecognize only that they were dealing with“elected representatives of the tenants,”not with a union, according to one tenantunion member.Kendall Cady, director of Universityhousing and real estate, said that in dealingwith the Married Student Housing TenantUnion, the University has not accepted theunion as a bargaining agent for all resi¬dents.But, he said, “If a student wants to ap¬point someone to represent him, we’ll dealwith that person. However, some of thethings they (the union) brought up weagreed were for the benefit of all stu¬dents.”Mulstein said that he did not think thatunions should be bargaining agents. He ar¬gued that tenant unions are groups ofpeople organized to better their position,not legal forces.Ryan said that tenant unions were notconsistent with the concept of private prop¬erty.TUO, head Adams discusses tenant powerIn March of 1969 The Hyde Park-Ken-wood Community Conference (HPKCC) es¬tablished an ad hoc tenant union com¬mittee. Within seven months the quicklygrowing group had created the TenantUnion Organization of the HPKCC.Bob Adams, then a divinity student in theUniversity’s DMn program, began full-timework on the TUO in June, 1969. Now TUOdirector, Adams here discusses with Ma¬roon executive editor Sue Loth the past,present, and future of tenant unions inHyde Park and the nation.Have tenant union tactics changed overthe years? Have you been learning fromyour experience with the courts, police,and landlords?Well, a lot of smaller tactics change aswe learn more, but the basic tactic has not.That is the recognition that the most impor¬tant tool that tenants have going for themis when tenants can come to the point ofunderstanding their rent other than that thelandlord has an absolute right to it: in oth¬er words, the rent strike. That is still themost fundamental and most potent tacticthat any tenants organizing collectively communication between tenant uniongroups.There are also concrete things that theNTO has been able to do. Over the sum¬mer, the NTO has been negotiating withHUD and with the National Association ofHousing and Redevelopment Officials to re¬form the leases which exist and which aremandatory in all public housing unitsacross the country.In other words, since all public housingis subsidized by HUD, NTO wants HUD toenforce a reform lease on all these peoplethat provides for things like tenants’ rights,strikes out all the negative clauses, andprovides for tenants’ grievance proceduresand tenant decision-making powers.Unfortunately over the summer, whenthey had the big conference at which theywere supposed to sign this new lease agree¬ment, the housing and redevelopment offi¬cials backed out of it then, so they had abig confrontation down at the PalmerHouse here in September.The NTO came into town, and publichousing tenant organizations all over thecountry began to lean on HUD for doingthat. Again, that was a first year’s effort.//■//'The tenant's obligation to pay rent shouldbe a conditional one, based on the landlord'sadequate response to the tenant's needs ...have.Our point of view is that the rent strikeshould be recognized as it is in the laborsector, as the rght of working people towithhold their labor when they’re not get¬ting adequate value for the labor thatthey’re giving. The tenant also should havethis as a basic right.The tenant’s obligation to pay rent shouldbe a conditional one, based on the land¬lord’s adequate response to the tenant’sneeds for safe, habitable housing, hous'ngthat’s up to code, for wfrch the tenant paysdecent rent and has a decent relationshipwith the landlord.To continue the labor metaphor, theHyde Park tenant unions run an “openshop” — not everyone is forced to join.Could you explain that?It would be impossible to force people tojoin the tenant union. What sanctions do wehave? Membership in the union is totallyvoluntary. Our basic objective is that inany given building a majority of the unitsform the union, so that the tenant union isin the posture of speaking for the majorityof the tenants and therefore, for the build¬ing itself. To that extent, there are 19 build¬ings now organized with a majority of thetenants established into a union with signedauthorization cards. The percentage varies,the strongest buildings have 100 percentmembership, or close to it except for thejanitor’s unit; some are at just a little over50 percentIn those 19 well-established tenantunions, how many “victories” would yousay you have achieved? Or can you consid¬er organisation itself a victory?Our criterion of success is any time whentenants acting collectively do get a re¬sponse from the landlord on a situation.Our basic criterion is when tenants achievea collective bargaining agreement with thelandlord and establish a totally now rela¬tionship between landlords and tenants.to thnteftdt ere hand sohtcdit teee writ¬ten oeMectlee her gaining agreements withlandlords in the past year and a half. Wehave achieved a number of informal agree¬ments with landlords settling court cases orrent strikes or other kinds of things.Presently, the HPK-TUO is serving as anumbrella group for these individual unions,organized building by building. Is under¬based tenant union action possible? Or canit only serve as an educational or informa¬tional body? For instance, has the NationalTenant Organization (NTO) yet been ableto score any net ion-wide victories?One thing to understand is that the NTO,this November, will end its first year ofexistence. In that first year I think theyhave achieved quite a bit- A large part oftheir efforts the first year were to establisha nationwide, regional, local network of How does tenant power hit landlordshardest? Is it the political push that comeswhen landlords are pulled into court, theeconomic drain on their pocketbooks, orthe psychological impact? ,That’s a difficult question. There aresome landlords who economically have cutoff their nose to spite their face, that havespent great amounts of money fighting thetenant union instead of putting it into re¬pays on the building. An example of this isthe building at 1221-23 E 57th St, the Beech-wood Tenants Association.They have a litigation against the land¬lord which the tenants started over specificissues in the building and also over con¬stitutional issues, such as the basic equityof the lease and the relationship of thelandlords and the tenants-. The landlord is spending quite a bit ofmoney on lawyer’s fees, court reporterfees, and so on. He will not settle with thetenants, and he still has not repaired thecode violations in that building.In other cases, landlords will deal with itas a strictly economic issue. They clearlyunderstand that litigation costs them mon¬ey, that their attempts to stop the tenantunion are going to cost them and definitely cost the building much more than to dealwith the tenant union ...... Although a lot of them care not toadmit that there are such things as tenantunions They like to say “We’re dealingwith individuals.” The individuals just hap¬pen to be the stewards of the union.That does happen, as it did for'the Ken¬wood tenant union. The collective bargain¬ing agreement they negotiated with thelandlord, in that case McKey and Poaguerealty and the owners of the building, istechnically called a stipulation between therealty agent and every single member ofthe tenant union — which was just aboutevery tenant in the building — as individ¬uals, right? But we all know how that cameabout.The third aspect of it, and this was whatI was just going to get into, is that land¬lords are kind of amazing people.Understand first of all that “landlord” isactually the term that they prefer. You cancall them real estate agents, or managingagents or equity holders of the property,but “landlord” is the term that really de¬scribes them, what they’re about, and thenature of the way they deal with theirtenants . . .. . They are “lords of the land” .. . . Yes, with all the perogatives, thearbitrary powers, that come out of theirbehavior with tenants. We can imagine howa feudal lord would respond to a serf whostood up to the lord.Although they are constrained somewhatby law in the amount of physical abusethey cangive the tenant, they are not con¬strained in terms of verbal abuse or in¬timidation.Some landlords see that property as ex¬tensions of themselves, so that any ques¬tions raised about the operation of thatproperty is questioning their whole exis¬tence, their whole world view, their wholeunderstanding of themselves.To that extent, there is a very importantpsychological element in tenants dealingwith the landlord’s self image.Al Raby, coordinator of the HPK-TUO,has called tenant union organizing a modelfor interracial, cross-class cooperationWhat further reforms do you see the tenantunion movement bringing about, beyondthose of rents and building conditions?That one principle, that tenant unions area way for people of different races and ofdifferent economic classes to relatedirectly over the concerns, and not in¬directly over their guilt or their con¬sciences, we have found to be one of themost significant things about the organ¬izing that has gone on in Hyde Park- BOB ADAMS: Tenant Union Organiza¬tion director discusses the how, what,and why of tenant unions.Hyde Park has an amount of racial in¬tegration; it also has a smaller amount ofeconomic integration, despite all the effortsof urban renewal.Tenants have been able to deal directlywith each other across class and race linesbecause they in fact are tenants organizedaround similar things.This is not to say that the level of desper¬ation faced by different classes and racesis the same. It’s very different for people innorthwest Hyde Park than it is for peoplein the so-called “Golden Rectangle” areabehind the University.There are three other principles basic toour program to organize tenants in HydePark-Kenwood.The second principle deals with the needfor people to relate to each other in an or¬ganized manner across community “turf”boundaries. Now people can develop coali¬tions around specific issues, such as actionsagainst a landlord operating sub-standardbuildings in several communities.The way people in Hyde Park can relateto the struggle of people in Woodlawn orKenwood-Oakland against a particularlandlord is to organize against that land¬lord in Hyde Park, creating a more honest,more political basis for coalition.The third principle is that when tenantsorganize collectively around tenant unionissues the impact of their collectivity canContinued on page 5Married students unionize UC housingBy Nancy ChismanIn the brief history of tenant unions inHyde Park, the Married Student HousingTenant Union (MSHTU) has shown perhapsthe greatest degree of success In tenant-landlord negotiations.The union was organized last Januarywith a statement of support from 10 per¬cent of some 2000 tenants in married stu¬dent apartment buildings. With their con¬sent to act as a bargaining agent, MSHTUnegotiated a new lease contract with theUniversfty and its agent University RealtyCompany.A rent Increase, in aone eases * to 15percent, leveled on all other Unhwnity stu¬dent housing this year was deferred for oc¬cupants of married student housing.When the dean’s budget committee re¬leased this decision April 14, 1970, a spokes¬man for the committee said that in light ofstudies being conducted by MSHTU, a rentincrease might be premature.However, union members think thethreat of an organized rent strike may havealso played a role in the committee’s deci¬sion.Rent, which ranges from $80-116 for stu¬dio apartments, $95-134 for one bedroomand $113-159 for two bedroom apartments,will remain an issue this year as well, ac¬cording to 1970-71 president and law studentSteve Stroh.A consensus of MSHTU members at anorganization meeting October 11 agreed that action should be taken to force Univer¬sity Realty to disclose a full financial re¬port of operating expenditures and reve¬nue.Stroh explained that before they acceptany rent increase, tenants want to deter¬mine if they are helping to subsidize otherareas of the University in financial trouble.The grounds for a request of a full finan¬cial disclosure stems from a recommenda¬tion made by Alex Elson, a veteran laborlawyer secured by the University to arbi¬trate between MSHTU and the Universityon the prepend lease.Tbat loaae, in effect this fat, replaces aVmteaUy Realty farm deecrfced by Strehas “even worse than the Chicago Apart¬ment Association lease.”The new lease deals with building condi¬tions and tenant-landlord responsibilitiesand relations. Its foremost innovation, how¬ever, is a grievance procedure clausewhich instructs the tenant to put any griev¬ance in writing and allows him to carry itto arbitration if necessary to receive satis¬faction.The first step in the procedure is to dis¬cuss the grievance with the area manager.If the grievance is not settled at this point,the tenant may appeal to the manager ofmarried student housing. The next hearingfor an unsettled grievance is with the deanof students.If the University is unable or unwilling tonegotiate some form of compromise or set¬tlement with the tenant, the lease contract specifies arbitration, conducted by a mem¬ber of the American Arbitration Associ¬ation.Stroh said tenant union members winsoon test the grievance procedure by press¬ing an actual grievance through the pro¬cess. The MSHTU will also conduct a cam¬paign to inform all tenants in married stu¬dent apartments of the grievance proce¬dure.The union will investigate two area man¬agers who inmI dis¬cretionary power in deter mteteg whteh ten¬ants to help.A mute! <1 procedure band on —■bora’ experience will he praptfbd for mar¬ried student housing tenants to informthem of the rights they can expect fromUniversity Realty personnel.Kendall Cady, director of Universityhousing and real estate, said in a telephoneinterview Wednesday, “Nobody has full dis¬cretionary power in a chain of power.” Heexplained that the area managers do havea great deal of power, but that their use ofit is limited.Cady believes that the grievance proce¬dure, which was designed by the tenantunion and the University, will work-“That’s what it’s there for,” he said. “Ihave no idea if the union has any griev¬ances it can test, though.”Cady said any disclosure on UniversityRealty’s financial status would have to bemade by the University.October 16, 1970/Tbe Chicago Maroon/3The Midwest Premiere ofJEAN-LUC GODARD’SWIND FROM THE EASTdoc films Sunday Oct. 18 7:15 & 9:30 Cobb $1.00BEERTALKby Ed McMahonIn which the candid connoisseuranswers questions aboutBeer, and the drinking of same.DEAR ED: Every now and then,I see guys putting salt in theirbeer. What'sALFIEDEAR ALFIE: I’ll tell you whatit’s about... it’s about to driveme crazy! Now, I have nothingagainst salt. On hard-boiled eggs.Or french fries. But not in myBud®.Putting salt in beer, some say,perks up the head... or livensup the taste ... makes the beer“drier.” With Budweiser, though,all salt can do is make it salty.Because Bud is already just aboutperfect.So save the salt for the popcorn, please. We put heart, soul and our exclusive BeechwoodAgeing into Budweiser. AH you need to enjoy it is a glass ... or drink it right from the can,if that’s your bag ...Beer questions? Write: Ed McMahon, Anheuser-Busch, Inc., 721 PestalozziSt., St. Louis,Mo.631I8BudweiserKING OF BEERS.ANHEUSER-BUSCH INC . SE LOUIS > NEWARK . 10S ANGELES . TAMPA • HOUSTON • COLUMBUS • JACKSONVILLE • MERRIMACK “★★★★...I LOVE IT... JOE' IS ABOUT 1970, AND..JOE IS THE MAN OF THE YEAR.”— Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times“INGENIOUS AND ENTERTAINING”—Gene Siskel, Chicago TribuneA funny and terrifying motionpicture if ever there was one.|Ofigmal Sound TrKk AlbEjm availabt* on Mercury Recofds » . |COLOR BY DELUXE A CANNON REL£ASEAdults only by order of the Chicago Censorship Board.PLAYBOY VTH EATE R 9120* N DEARBORN • PHONE 944 3434 THEEUROPERound-trip DC-8 JETfrom New YorkFor only $210* round trip,Icelandic Airlines flies you di¬rect to Luxembourg in the heartof Europe for best connectionsto everywhere. Daily jets. Nogroups to join. Stay one day orup to 45. Fly Icelandic—for low¬est fares to Iceland, Luxem¬bourg, England, Scotland, Nor¬way. Sweden and Denmark.Special fare* for students andgroups remaining overseas morsthan 45 days. Major credit cards—or Pay Later Plan. Mail couponthen call your travel agent.‘Add $20 one way on Fri. and SatTo: Icelandic Airlines630 Fifth Ave., N.Y. 10020(212) PL 7-8585Send folder CN on Lowest JetFares to Europe □ StudentFares □J Name-J Street _! City—ii State — .Zip.My travel agent isICELANDIC ArnlUeTC LUsfLdimnAIR FARESTO EUROPEof any scheduled airlineROCKEFELLERMEMORIALCHAPELOctober 18, 1970Sunday 11:00 a.m.CARL A.NIGHSWONGERChaplain. University Hospital and Clinicsa The Valley of Death”Sunday Seminar. 9:4.5 to 10:4.5 a.m.,Chapel Undercroft, led by Bernard O. BrownWeekday Chapel MusicTuesday, October 20,12:15 p.m., Organ RecitalEdward Mondello,University OrganistWednesday, October 21,12:15 p.m., Carillon RecitalUniversity Carillonneur BARBRA STREISANDHELLO, DOLLY!aZero Mostel * Harry BelafonteTH€ onRNGGL LCVING"ELUOn GOULDMASH H.iniCAFFENRICO1411 E. 53rdThis Week OnlyPitcher of Michelob50* 64 oz.Discount WithThis CouponReg. Price $1.75“Good Till I2/I/7(T/The Chicago Maroon/October 16, 1970 Work for Dovesduring Interim?Hear why!ABNER J.MIKVAspeaking atMandel Hall7:30 PMSun. Oct. 18Sponsored byUC-MNC WELCOMESTUDENT & FACULTYVisit the WALLER GALLERY for an exciting ex-perience. Posters galore - Fine original graphics& Custom Framing.Prices that you can afford.WALLER GALLERY5300 Blackstone AvenueDO 3-7446Itey you among thetrees and grass,bicycling gives you apiece of mindCheapest prices for CarIton, Raleigh, Robin HoodFalcon, Peugeot, CitaneMercier, Coppi and DawsFactory trained mechanicsUsed bicycles spasmodically. Fly - by - nightrentals.Tirii Bicycle Coop2112 N. dark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; SaS 10-8JESSEISON’S**7-2*70, 752 t!9Q, 363-ttM -1340i. iinwv' • "V•l **u.'1 Contracts seek new landlord-tenant relationsContinued from page 2It is the second of three agreements suc¬cessfully negotiated and signed by tenantunions with TUO’s help. The first was in abuilding at 837-842 E 52nd street signed lastDecember, and the third last August by theKenwood Tenant Union, 53rd street andKenwood.The Kenwood union demonstratedagainst its landlord, McKey & Poague,when several members burned their leasesin protest outside the company’s local of¬fice last June.After numerous meetings between unionand realty representatives, the union’s Oc¬tober 3 strike report said the legally bind¬ing agreement was “hammered out in itsfinal form on August 6, 1970 at a 13-hourmarathon meeting.”The Dorchester contract typifies theways in which new contracts sought by theunions supercede the traditional lease. Inthe standard lease now in use in Illinoisand other states, a tenant waives his rightto legal representation if charged by thelandlord with violating the lease.The tenant in effect agrees to plead guil¬ty in advance to any such charge broughtby his landlord (paragraph 17 of apartmentlease form 12) and gives the owner or hisauthorized agent free access to the apart¬ment at any time. Thus, for example, atenant could be found guilty in court forbringing in his groceries through the frontdoor, which is a violation of the lease.The fifth article of the Dorchester con¬tract eliminates these and other clausesConsidered inequitable and unconstitutionalby the tenant union.Article six requires the notification of atenant before he can be evicted. Formerly,a tenant might not learn of his eviction un¬til he found his furniture piled up on thesidewalk.The seventh article recognizes a tenant’sright to withhold rent in certain cases — ineffect, legalizing the rent strike.After the contract was signed, the Dor¬chester tenant union members took theirlandlord, Gordon W. Thomas, to court for alleged violations of the contract and thecity building code. The Hyde Park Heraldreported that building court judge FrankMaehala, in an August 14 ruling, grantedThomas 60 days to make the necessary re¬pairs.The tenant union is in its fifth month of arent strike, pending the binding decision onthe case of the American Arbitration Asso¬ciation (AAA), to which both parties sub¬mitted voluntarily. This is the second arbi¬tration case of its kind handled in the Mid¬west.Adams said he expects a decision by theAAA this month. Arbitration is much better than litigation, he contended. As support hecited efforts by the Kimbark Tenant Asso¬ciation to win their case in court. The law¬suit was initiated in August, 1969, yet so faronly the preliminary groundwork has beenlaid. The judge has yet to decide if thecourt will even rule on the case.TUO has also improved relations with theChicago Corporation Counsel, the city’s le¬gal branch. Adams criticized the counselfor having been “lenient on landlords in or¬ders for repairs” in the past, “coddling andcajoling” them to observe building codes.A meeting with Corporation Counsel as¬sistant Timothy O’Hara August 6, and in- Ccreased communication between the coun¬sel office and TUO have helped to speed upthe processing and investigation of tenantcomplaints, Adams said.When asked if the TUO planned any leg¬islative lobbying to press for updating thestate’s archaic tenant codes, Adams saidthat the HPKCC, a non-profit tax-exemptorganization, was prohibited from lobbying.But even if it wasn’t, he believes the TUOshould continue its present activities withthe goal of “demonstrating the politicalpower of grass roots groups.” Change inthe laws will come “only because of massdemand for it,” he said.Adams notes tenets behind unionsContinued from page 3be extended to any issue that deals with thequality of life in the community.It is a logical extension in a person’smind when he becomes concerned aboutthe peeling paint and cracking plaster in¬side his apartment.After he talks to other tenants he be¬comes concerned about the peeling paintand cracking plaster in other people’sapartments, and maybe their lack of win¬dow shades and their bad plumbing, andalso about the paint and plaster, bad light¬ing, and lack of security and intercoms forthe common areas of the building.The next step outside of that may be forthe tenants to become concerned aboutwhat the furnace in their building, which isbelching high-sulfur coal is doing to theirsurrounding neighbors.These tenants can become concerned, be¬cause of their collective organization,around the issues of the schools, of youth¬serving facilities in the community, of daycare issues, all the issues of quality of lifein any given community.We believe that the tenant union is a basefor people to naturally extend their con-MUSICRAFT FOR SO USD ADVICE/fllfFAMOUS NAME BRAND RECEIVERSKENWOOD KA2500STEREO AMPLIFIER• Solid SUIt UAUI• 70-watt nWW• Twi* piano inpu-j «AAQC• Ml provision, tor flt)3Tapt ftccord ft 119Playback SONY RECEIVER• SONY *0*0 Roqalar price• 00 watt ttoroa amplifier CIO. at• fall praoifiaas far tanrocarOar and playback MOW• AM/FM Stacoa tuner 1a Crystal filtor la tbe taaara S year transistor yoaranta*• 3 yaar lobar taarantea *279" HARMON KARDON• HARMON KARDON 120 R^.lair price• ,mf rt*"* «** «a Maafet FM Stereo Taaar NOW• Previsions far two tape ”recorders• Two year factaryavoraatoe *169"KENWOOD• KENWOOD KR70 P_rie*• 73 weft IHF Amplifiere FM FM Multiplexe AM/FM FM Multiplex• Two yeer facteryfluarautee $199.95NOW MIDLAND• MODIL If.S4fe Midalande 30 watts IHF amplifier• All setid state• AM/FM FM Multiplex• Walnut cabinet Regular price$149.95NOW*99*AluiiCtaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak S».—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th Sf.—779-6500 cerns from what they are doing at one mo- ress they make to make it a permanentment to what other people are doing in oth¬er sectors of the community, city, and soon.The fourth principle that we try to workout in our program, which deals with“movement” people, is that social changecosts money- Most of the movement in thelargest sense in this country in the pastdecade has been largely a protest move¬ment.Yet people have to find ways to in¬stitutionalize their struggle and the prog- factor in their lives.To pay for these institutions, people canno longer depend upon angels and liberals.People have to depend upon themselves. Inother words they have to find ways thatthey, no matter what their level of means,can pay for social change on a systematicbasis.In the tenant union program people dothat by paying one percent of their monthlyrent to the tenant union organization asdues for services — not as charity, a contri¬bution, or any kind of a guilt debt.Know your unionized neighborsThese are the member unions of the • 5310-46 HarperH P K C C ’ s tenant union organization • 5117-19 Kimbark(TUO): • 5136 Kimbark• 5200 Blackstone • 5140 Kenwood• 5330 Blackstone • 5234-45 Kenwood & 1350-58, 62-68 & 53rd• 5462-70 Cornell • 5701 Kenwood• 5000-12 Dorchester • 5339-45 Woodlawn & 1210-16 E 54th• 5118 Dorchester • 5430-44 Woodlawn & 1170-72 E 54th• 5327-35 Dorchester • 825-33 E 52nd• 5411-21 Ellis • 837-47 E 52nd• 5454 Everett • 1221-23 E 57thDEBATE-Final Call-*Anyone interested in debatingfor the U of C in inter-colle¬giate competition must attenda meeting Mon., Oct. 19, 4:00in Ida Noyes.Varsity positions are still avail¬able.If you can't attend, but wantto debate, leave your nameand phone no. in the Forensicsbox at Ida Noyes. This year'stopic is wage and price con¬trols. pay for 3the 4th onefree!PRINTS FROM SLIDESIt's easy to get colorprints from your slides.Come in and prove itto yourself during ourspecial and we'll giveyou free prints, too.One for every threeyou buy. No bettertime to get those printsyou've always wantedof your favorite slides.Hurry in today! 2R -3R - 3S ' sizes only.Offer expires Novem¬ber 9, 1970.ANCHORCAMERA1S23 i. 53rd Street752-2228Far East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 12 -10Fri. & Sat. 1 2.-12 ’Closed Monday (1654 E. 53rd.955-2229 Work for Dovesduring Interim?Hear why!ABNER J.MKVAspeaking atMandel Hall7:30 PMSun. Oct. 18Sponsored byUC-MNCOctober 16, 1970/The Chicago Marooo/5Mikva speaks hereurgingpoliticalactionBy BARRY KELLMANSecond district Democratic congressmanAbner Mikva will speak at Mandel HallSunday at 7:30 pm to kick off the final pushfor recruiting students to work during theInterim.Mikva, an outspoken critic of the war inVietnam and increased military spending,will speak on why students should work fordoves in senatorial and congressional elec¬tions.Illinois MNC plans to work in variousmidwest campaigns, especially for IndianaDemocrat Vance Hartke’s senatorial cam¬paign. Illinois MNC volunteers will be sentto Lake County, which includes Gary andits suburbs. Lake County is predominantlyDemocratic, but its conservative party or¬ganization is not giving Hartke, a notedanti-war senator, much help.UC-MNC plans to provide students cam¬paign volunteers information on trans¬portation, food, and housing for volunteers.' Students wishing to work for any peacecandidate should contact MNC as soon aspossible.UC-MNC will begin final recruiting andsign-ups for the interim work with Mikva’sspeech.Recruiting will continue through theweek with MNC students canvassing dormsand other student housing with informationon interim work opportunities. Tables setup throughout campus will also serve torecruit students who are not canvassed.Mikva will be followed Tuesday by stateRep Robert Mann for a sherry hour atPierce Lounge at 8 pm. Mann, authored anunsuccessful attempt to have the state gov¬ernment protect Illinois draftees who re¬fuse to serve in Vietnam.MNC believes that students can make adifference in ending the war. They havemade the open invitation to any studentwishing to work for any peace candidate tocontact them 316 Foster, ext. 2945.by CAR repairs/SurjfcA tfc. * -BRIGHTON'Foreign auto4401 S. ARCHER A/E.i# Service"call254-3840 254-5071 254-5072ATTENTIONVOLKSWAGENOWNERS!!!Continental blackwall tires $24.00 plus taxContinental whitewall tires [ >26.00 plus taxContinental snow tires $24.00 plus taxRear Bumper... up to 1968 \ >32.00 installedFront Bumper... up to 1968 * i34.00 installed(For you Do-it-yourself fans, deduct $6.00 from theabove bumper prices for labor!)SERVICE YOUR CAR NOW!!!!DON'T WAIT TILL YOUNEED A TOW TRUCK!!!! THE HEAD RESTTHE HEAD FEST features• jumbo Dacron-filled floorPILLOWS• authentic rustic barrel furniture• fur-covered BEANBAGCHAIRS (a luxuriously-comfortable item, "sex-to-study")2574 N. Lincoln Avenue(Look for the big sign with bluelights at Lincoln and Wrightwood,across from "Alice's Revisited")549-8448The Freer Brothers cordially inviteyou to our Grand Opening. 10%discount for students with this aduntil Nov. 31st.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 33rd St.684-6856--l.J JBX g|i pizza ;PLATTERI Pizzo, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsAldermanLEON DESPRESspeaks on“CHICAGO POLITICS ASBIG BUSINESS”Friday, October 16 8:00 PMCrossroads Student Center5621 BlackstoneWELCOME! f v;v •UC PRESS BUILDING: Future home of the long displaced bookstore.Bookstore to occupy press buildingI Compare the Price! II I11460 E. 53rd 643-2800|I WE DELIVER II- —I By LISA CAPELLThe University bookstore will move fromStagg Field Labs to the second floor of thePress building during the interim.Stagg Field Labs will be torn down Octo¬ber 25 at 7 am. After the wall is demo¬lished, the land will be seeded. Accordingto Napthalo Knox, director of physicalplanning and construction a lack of fundshas limited the landscaping of the entirearea around Regenstein.The land in front of Regenstein and onEllis up to the fWTnis Courts has been seed¬ed and as many trees as funds allow have been planted. The tennis courts will re¬main.The strip of land which the tennis courtsoccupy were supposed to be included in thegeneral landscaping for the Henry Mooresculpture. Knox said the funds for thememorial were used up in the sculptureand surrounding plaza.The relocation of the bookstore is part ofa general reshuffling. The editorial officesof the press currently on the fourth floor ofthe ad building will remain. However, themarketing and journals offices now on thesecond and basement floors will be movedto the third floor in 1971.SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates for Students and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin & doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestOffice Space nowavailable for immediateoccupancy- Please call Mr. SchwartzPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveFar East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD& COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fri. & Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd.955-2229Straight Talk: |Your diamond is at... . Attention - Men Under 25Save $$ On Auto Insurance.$23,000 At. and P.D. $1,000 Madicd Royand Uwinwd Mo«oftoH ProtectionSingle MaleAge 21-25- 2139 SIXMO.Married MaleAge 21-25- 276 SIX MO.WITH GOOD STUDENT &YOUNG DRIVER DISCOUNTINSURANCEShflJsmSbI 1 lFINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARS j119 N. Wabash at Washington 'NGI Fwonn EVERGREEN fLAZA^| Jim Crane238-0971REYNOLDS CLUBBARBER SHOP5706 University"directly across from theQuadrangle Club"Appointments if desiredX-35736/The Chicago Maroon/October 16, 1970V-*4' Disagreement splitsUAW-student rallyBy SARA BEEBEViolent accusations and heated argu¬ments disrupted yesterday’s student rallyin support of the auto workers strike, trans¬forming the meeting into a divided, loudsoap-box hour.The Progressive Labor (PL) faction ofthe SDS and more moderate studentsshouted at each other over the right of thelabor union to settle the United Auto Work¬ers’ (UAW) strike.The rally which developed into a chaotic1 free-for-all, opened with a speech by SDSerBarbara Foley, who criticized the inactionof students in supporting the workers. Shestated, “that both students and workerswere combatting the same imperialist ene¬my (the big corporations)” and urged stu¬dents to raise money for the strikers.Jesse Rios, auto worker, spoke next,presenting the demands of the auto work-Benton heirs give2 million for studyThe children of former Senator WilliamBenton have given the University $2.06 mil¬lion for the study of teaching and learningat the elementary and secondary levels.Helen Benton Boley, Charles, John andLouise Benton donated the money in theform of Encyclopedia Brittanica stock. Thegift establishes the Benton EducationalFund.Charles Benton is a trustee of the Univer¬sity and a member of the visiting com¬mittee in the department of education. Wil¬liam Benton, father of the donors, servedas vice-president of the University from1937 to 1945. He was a US senator fromConnecticut from 1949 to 1953.The Benton gift is the fourteenth largestsingle contribution to the University. ers and describing life on the assemblyline. His audience was quiet, until he ex¬pressed a certain faith in the union leaders’settling the strike. PL interrupted Rios ac¬cusing him of not being a true representa¬tive of the auto workers. They called unionleaders “enemies of the worker” sinceleaders “were selling out the workers” intheir bargaining with GM. These remarkswere countered by moderates defending theunion management and accusing the PL ofdividing the students on an issue wherethey should be united. Counter attacks fol¬lowed, and the argument monopolized theremainder of the rally.In addition to the rally, auto strikersspoke to classes Wednesday and Thursday.They presented their demands which in¬clude: better and safer working conditionsin the factories; a retirement plan wherebya worker could retire with a full pensionafter 30 years of work; a wage increasewhich would correspond to the rising costof living.Monday, a canned food drive will belaunched in order to provide food to stri¬kers’ families, now living on $40 a week. Ameeting is scheduled Monday at 12:30 inReynold’s Club for those interested in par¬ticipating in the drive.Auto workers currently make $3.70 anhour which means an income of $7,000 ayear, and according to Nixon $10,000 isneeded to support a family of four in themetropolitan areas of the country. Top ex¬ecutives in GM earn about $280,000 a year.Mr. Roach, chairman of the board at GMmakes about $600,00 a year including hisbonus. Striking workers are only paid $30 aweek if they are single, $35 if they are mar¬ried and $40, if they have families. This in¬sufficient wage will expire in a few weeks,forcing auto workers to obtain a quick set¬tlement with GM or face looking for otherjobs.jt mmysthe university roomf <#t)■ -L« OUR NEW FOODHAMBURGERCHEESEBURGERSWISS BURGERROAST BEEFBARBEQUE BEEFBAKED HAMHAM AND CHEESECORNED BEEFRUBEN SANDWICH MENU INCLUDES:SALAMILIVER SAUSAGEPOLISH SAUSAGEHOT DOGKRAUT DOGAMERICAN CHEESESWISS CHEESEHOME MADE CHILIFRENCH FRIESrv*, I... 'i ALSOOUR WEST ROOM IS AVAILABLE FOR PRI¬VATE PARTIES OR BUSINESS MEETINGSMONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY BETWEEN12 NOON AND 9 P.M. AT NO CHARGE.SCHIUTZ ON TAP. ALSO A FINE SELECTIONOF DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED BOTTLEBEERS.ACCORDING TO ILLINOIS LIQUOR LAW; YOU MUST BE AT LEAST 21YEARS OLD TO ENTER OUR PREMISES. f.-C- -vHi f JtM f ' EH § vfmft 541 ;> 1||M i m i\Lm W m VBRIAN FLANAGAN: Yippie political candidate trying to put it all together this fall.Flanagan runs for sheriffon Yippie ticket this fallBy KEITH PYLE“And if I’m elected sheriff, all of my dep¬uties will constantly be stoned, and packwater pistols loaded with acid. These pigswill shoot upon request only.” $o promisedBrian Flanagan, candidate for sheriff ofCook County.Running on the Youth International Par¬ty ticket, Brian is waging a write-in cam¬paign against Democrat Richard Elrod andRepublican Bernard Carey.It’s not the first time Elrod has facedFlanagan: the last meeting between thetwo opponents was in a courtroom August21, where Flanagan was acquitted ofcharges of aggravated battery stemmingfrom a fracas in the Loop last October 11 inwhich Elrod was seriously injured.Brian spoke Tuesday evening at the BlueGargoyle before a crowd of almost 200, in¬cluding a pig-faced effigy of Elrod, donatedby Frank Malbranche of Students for Vio¬lent Non-Action (SVNA).An aspiring young meteorologist, Flana¬gan outlined his nine-point program for re¬form, which includes freeing all politicalprisoners; locking up the true criminals:Nixon, Agnew, Rockefeller. Elrod, MarshallField, etc.Also, sharing the graft, by giving patron¬age jobs t<T fellovTrevolutionaries; usingsheriff’s troops to support all peoplesstruggling for liberation; and endorsing Mayor Daley’s proposal to bring the Demo-c r a t i c and Republican National Con¬ventions to Chicago, in order to “provideyoung people with the opportunity to dealwith American ‘Democracy.’ BOOM POW¬ER TO THE PEOPLE!!!”In a more serious tone, Brian urged hislisteners to unite and join the “Grant ParkNation” of activism and opposition, forsak¬ing the old “Woodstock nation, where allanybody did was listen to music and getstoned.”The 23-year-old New Yorker went on tosay that we must “pull together to form amass movement to sustain the armedstruggle against racism, sexism, and impe¬rialism everywhere,” dedicating ourselvesto build “a network of free communitiesacross the country.”Flanagan concluded with a plea for ac¬tion, appealing to his “brothers and sisters(to) put your whole lives into the politicalstruggle and into developing a culture oftotal resistance.”Brian’s appearance was sponsored by theBabylonian Vandals, a “super-left revolu¬tionary socialist youth army on the SouthSide.”When asked why he decided to enter therace for sheriff, Brian replied, “BecauseElrod is running for sheriff, and I wanted arematch to give him another chance to lookgood in front of his children.”LETTERS TO THE EDITORSHildebrand on interimIn response to many questions I want toassure you that the College will provide forstudents who intend to remain on campusduring the October 24 to November 3 inter¬im.Students living in the dormitories willcontinue to be accommodated. The cafe¬terias and health services will continue innormal operation. The departments ofphysical education for men and women willcontinue intramural programs (if there issufficient interest) and recreational facil¬ities will be open on a regular schedule.The libraries will continue to operate atsomewhat reduced schedules to be an¬nounced.Although we plan no special College-wideactivities, the physical sciences collegiatedivision is arranging an academic programof general interest (watch for notices), andthe resident masters have indicated theirwillingness to help students who wish to ar¬range other activities.1 wish each of you a satisfying interimwhether you choose to campaign, or to visityour family, or study, or simply relax.Roger HildebrandDean of the College An open letter to Frank Easterbrook:I was somewhat surprised at your letterin the Maroon of October 9 concerning thePennsylvania state scholarship and loanprogram, chiefly because your under¬standing of the arrangement that had beenreached between Swarthmore College andthe Pennsylvania higher education assis¬tance agency differed considerably frommine.If indeed it were possible for an in-s t i t u t i o n simply to supply the com¬monwealth of Pennsylvania with the namesof Pennsylvania scholarship or loan holdersin attendance, and all further correspond¬ence would be between the Commonwealthand the students, I know of few institutionsWhich would object to cooperating.That arrangement seemed unlikely tome, however, if only because the one pieceof information the Pennsylvania higher edu¬cation assistance agency was unlikely toneed was the names of its own scholarshipand loan holders.The arrangement you speak of was, as amatter of fact, one of the proposals Swarth¬more did make to the PHEAA. The propos¬al was rejected, however, as not con¬stituting compliance with the legislation.Continued on page 10October 10, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7\» . .». <> ■ y.- .JIM I HENDRIX 18" X 30'POSTER $2.50PICASSO - BLUE NUDE10" X 14" MINI FRAMEDFLUSH MOUNTED - $4.75CHOOSE FROM CHICAGO’S LARGESTSELECTION OF CONTEMPORARY PRINTS OFFAMOUS PAINTINGS, POSTERS, GRAPHICART, AND MINI-ART. AT THE LOWESTPRICES.CALL OR STOP INFOR OUR NEW,COLORFUL, EXCITINGFREE CATALOG TODAY!!NORTH-2709 W. DEVON937-0565SOUTH- 5300 S. LAKE PARKHYDE PARK BANK BLDG.324-1223MERIT ISNOT ON STRIKE!SAVE NOW ON LARGESELECTION OF 1970 CARS!PLENTY OF QUALITY USEDCARS FOR LESS1am-WE’RE DELIVERINGTHE 71 \/EGA NOW! ?-wmm ©. mu4-0400merit*#*72nd and STONY ISLANDOpen till 9 Weekdays—Sat. & Sun. till 5 p.m.———— Phoenix Eye Viewof Writersand WritingCHEKHOV: A BIOGRAPHYErnest J. Simmons“A fully authenticated biography, its historicalaccuracy illuminated by the author’s^ compas¬sionate understanding of his subject.” — Satur¬day Review. “A remarkable, probably uniquebiography.” — New York Times. $3.95GIRAUDOUX: THREE FACES OF DESTINYRobert CohenThe first book in English to deal exclusivelywith Giraudoux’s plays. Cohen analyzes thedramaturgical technique and the intellectualstructure underlying the stylized plays of thisprecursor of the existentialist theater and the theater of the absurd. ISMOVINGAROUNDTHECORNER!$2.45SIR THOLTAS BROWNE: SELECTED WRITINGSEdited by Sir Geoffrey KeynesA single volume selection of Browne’s writings responding to the growing interestin his work and times. Keynes has chosen from his own edition of Browne’s com¬plete works both the well-known shorter works ar d extensive samples of lesserknown writings. $3.25The University of Chicago PressPhoenix Paperbacks Order Tickets Now!SHUBERTTHEATRE22 W. MONROECE 6-8240THRU SAT.,OCT. 17thTickets Available atBox OfficeBLACKSTONETHEATRE60 E. BALBOCE 6-8240FROM TUES.,OCT. 20thTic kata Availableby Mail•pedal Considerationter Group*Phone Mary Martin•41-5933“Great movie making.The Perrys’ best film!”—Roger Ora ana pun. N.V. Timee sANOW WORLD WIDE !f THE MAIL BOXSUPER DISCOUNT SOUNDSLowest overall prices anywhere on 8-tracktapes, cassettes, & provocative & groovyposters at super—low discount prices. Speed¬iest delivery & completely guaranteed. Sendfor our current catalog of selections & theirlow prices. We have a complete line of rock,pop, blues, soul, country-western, folk, jazz,classical, gospel & soundtrack. For free cata¬log mail your request to:The Mail Box, P.O. Box 2417San Francisco. Calif. 94126 4*ideasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CIUOne North LoSolie St., Chic 60602 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by ApptFR 2 2390 — 798-0470SIJN LIFE OF CANADASTUDENTS WANTEDClassic & Folk Guitar Paino-Beginnersthrough Advanced, Private InstructionHYDE PARK MUSICandRecording Studios5240 S. Harperneat to Harper Court955-8318 DESKS -BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDC BRAND EQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00Wed. -9:00 p.m.RE 4-2111Immediate Delivery * *AUDITORIUMSUNDAY, OCT. 187<30 P.M.$6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50BOX OFFICE OPEN 10 A M. to t P.MTickets also at all Ticketron outletsand all Montgomery Ward stores.BANDERSNATCH LUNCHES - KOSHER SANDWICHES, SWISSBURGERS, CHICKEN12 - 2 Mon. - Sat. IDA NOYES HALL e.r- *12 - 2 Mon. - Sat *: >•llIII |lngmar Bergman’s]PERSONA IBIdoc films fri, Oct. 1 <> 7:15 & 9:30 Cobb $ 1.00 i8/The Chicago Maroon/October 16, 1870ABOUT THE MIDWAY* * it-Hr Nader to speakRalph Nader, nationally famous con¬sumer crusader, will speak in Mandel HallSaturday at 8 pm, in an appearance by theEnvironmental Law Society.Both Nader and Bess Myerson, New YorkCity consumer commissioner, will be oncampus for the annual meeting of theUnited Stales Consumer’s Union at the Cen¬ter for Continuing Education.Workshops; on consumer problems arescheduled from 8:30 to 11:30 am Saturday.> Miss Myerson will be the featured speakerat a noon luncheon.At 2 pm, the Consumer’s Union of theIllinois federation of consumers will meet.All interested students are invited to at¬tend.SMC to demonstrate} The Student Mobilization Committee toEnd the War in Vietnam (SMC) will hold ademonstration Tuesday night when VicePresident Spiro Agnew speaks at the Con¬rad Hilton hotel.The demonstration is the first of SMC’sactions scheduled for this fall. It is alsoplanning an anti-war march through theLoop October 31 to coincide with marches’ in other cities throughout the country.The October 31 march is scheduled to be¬gin at Wacker and State at 1 pm. It will endat the Grant Park bandshell, where tradeunion spokesmen, returning GI’s and stu¬dents will address the crowd.Kickers boot 17 goalsWhile the football team has been bootingaway games, the Maroon soccer team, un¬heralded and unnoticed, has booted 17 goalsto win their first three games of the season.Last year the soccer team had a roughtime going 1-10-1.The Maroons opened their season, com¬ing from behind, with a victory over Trin- MAROON FOOTBALL TEAM:Marquette tomorruw at 1 p.m. The varsity team will look for their first win againstity, 5-3. The following weekend, they demo¬lished Shimer 7-0, and last Wednesday theytied Purdue in goals, 5-5, but won on cornerkicks, 11-4.Coach Bill Vendl attributed the amazingsuccess of the team primarily to the greatbench strength, lacking in the past. “Lastyear if someone was injured we would haveto play him despite his reduced efficiency,because we had no one else. This year ifsomeone gets hurt, he can be replaced by aplayer of equal caliber.”Another factor in the ascendency of theMaroon fortunes is the fact that Vendl beatthe registrar to the freshman. Vendl ex¬plained that in the past, freshmen weretrapped early by the wily registrar, andended up in sections conflicting with soccerpractice. This year more freshmen canmake it to the practices.One factor that Vendl did not mention, but which is obvious watching the team, isthe enthusiasm and spirit of a winningteam.When asked about the chances of histeam going undefeated and getting into thenational playoffs, Vendl responded illegiti-matia non carborundum, “We won’t let thebastards wear us down.”The next soccer match is Tuesday at 4pm on Stagg Field against Judson college.Rosenberg's workshopMilton Rosenberg, professor of psy¬chology and co-author of Vietnam and theSilent Majority, conducted the second of aseries of political action workshopsWednesday.As Rosenberg explained it, a hawk mustbe shown that the war is not consistent withhis own values; anti-communism, spread¬ ing the American system and military hon¬or.Rosenberg advised campaigners to followfive points for maximum efficiency.“Don’t lie,” he began. “The listener willbe able to tell, and you will lose your case.Next, be symbolically acceptable; if youcan’t trim your beard, go somewherebeards are normal.”“Use the person’s values even if they arenot your own,” Rosenberg continued. Hesaid that arguing from facts, especkllywritten facts and quoting favored personslends credibility to a presentation.Rosenberg noted, however, that J‘in elec¬tions, name identification, and getting fa¬vorable votes to the polls is more importantthan convincing citizens that the warshould end.“This is a privatized nation with smallinterests working for their own ends,”Rosenberg concluded. “Mass participationin politics is absurd because of indiffer¬ence. Thus American politics has little ifanything to do with public opinion. Ameri¬can democracy is the sum of powerful lob¬bies.”Two more workshops will be held in Cobb102 Saturday from 10 am to noon andWednesday from 7:30 to 9:30 pm.SG meetingStudent Government (SG) will bold itsfirst meeting of the quarter Monday at 7:30pm in Business East 103. All newly electedrepresentatives are asked to attend.The meeting will include special electionsin cases where an SG member is no longerliving in the dormitory he represents. Itwill also discuss plans for job and housingplacement services.Abortion conferenceA state-wide abortion conference aimingat repeal of the Illinois abortion law hasbeen called by TRIAL (Total Repeal of II-Contintted on page 10C E F Presents 7 - 9:15JULIET of the Spiritsa film by FelliniCobbSaturday, Oct. 17'V COMPARE PRICESf Help beat the Establishment!Corola Pinto Volkswagen Vega* *1942“ *2292” *233445 *2628IS(Volkswagen 1970 price; all others 1971 price)u*^The Corolla price includes only stan¬dard equipment; the other prices in¬clude options whiwS must be udded to• bare cars to make them equal to theCorolla, such as whitewall tires, wheeldiscs, tinted glass, reclining seats,•^opening rear vent windows, bumperguards, tool kit, etc.ON WESTERN INC6941 SO WESTERN 776-4016 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESOR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUALITY. CLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 D & S BellShell ServiceTune-ups -Brakes -MufflersTires -Batteries -AccessoriesTowing & Road ServiceMechanic on DutyUntil 10 P.M.“Buy Shell from Bell”5200 S. Lake Park493-5200 RIOT INGRANT PARKJackson Park ForestPreserve - the woods areaflame in a riot of color.Capture the beauty of fallon color film. All makes,sizes at reduced price.24 - 48 Hour qualityprocessing atMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th St.493-6700MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. LLArDCrS ALL-NIGHT IhClVPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREOct. 16Julie ChristieGeorge C. ScottPETULIA Oct. 17Steve McQueen Faye DunawayTHE THOMAS CROWNAFFAIROct. 23Peter Sellers1 LOVE. YOU,ALICE B.T0KLAS Oct. 24Haskel Wexler'sMEDIUM COOLOct. 30Bergman'sSHAME Oct. 31.Peter FondaJane FondaSPIRITS OF THE DEADNov. 6Malcolm McDowellIE. Nov. 7Candice BergenTHE ADVENTURERSNov. 13Michael CaineShelley WintersALFIE Nov. 14Jane Fonda Gig YoungTHEY SHOOT HORSES,DON'T THEY?1 neats uso 1■>V» r i . <* u i r n r r i r ff • • "/If:n/i.ti . . fm . «• r*r Hr*r rr * ’■ * “ t* ' • ? r f rf er ft ft.tr . i, i i » • • i * < * • • y y ,f l i « » « • . t.i .t, . .‘.Vt . *«• X. October 16, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9. . .\\\\ v ,v/.\ v •’vf *4 > / * ’ r? I ’ * •*. ,— — —■miimiii—«—MiOXFORDPUBON DRAUGHTGuiness StoutBass AleHarp IrishIrish WhiskeysWarm Fireplace and Hot Rum DrinksCOCKTAILS & GOOD FOODOXFORD PUB2263 N. LINCOLN AVE.CHICAGO, ILL.477-5146 l_ _____ _ COUPON — 1I GOOD FOR ONE FREE DRINK PER |I PERSON WITH THIS COUPON. I1 PURCHASE ANY BEER, ALE, OR I1 STOUT & RECEIVE SECOND ONE I1 FREE. TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE. Ii OXFORD PUB “YOU MUST BE OVER 21” 12263 N. LINCOLN, CHICAGO, ILL._HAVE A DRINK ON THE HOUSE ABOUT THE MIDWAYthe committee on southern asian studiespresents 'The scared dance-drama of KeralaKERALA KALAMANDALAMKATHAKALI COMPANYin aKathakali performance of the Mahabharata storyMANDEL HALL, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25,8:00 P.M.“terrifying, funny, deeply touching. . . ”BALLET, London$2.00 general admission, $1.50 student/facultyAvailable: Foster 106 and at the door. Continued from page 9Illinois Abortion Law) and will be held atthe University of Illinois Chicago CircleCampus on October 16,17, and 18.The symposium will begin tonight at 8pm with a talk by Nancy Stearns, staff at¬torney for the New York Law Center forConstitutional Rights, on her fight to abol¬ish the New York abortion law.Saturday’s activities, starting at 10 am,will include panels and workshops pertinentto abortion law repeal, a plenary session toplan statewide activities for the fall, and aparty.On Sunday there will be workshops toplan implementation of proposed action,beginning at 10:30 am.There is a registration fee of $2. Housingand child care are available. For more in¬formation about the conference, call theTRIAL office at 248-1600 or 935-0364.FSACCSL meetingThe faculty-student advisory committeeon campus-student life (FSACCSL) willhold its first meeting of the quarter todayat 4 pm in the office of the dean of stu¬dents.Students on the committee are EugeneGoldberg, ’71, Gary Nakarado, 71; TomBiersteker, 72; Irvin Kaufman, biologicaland physical sciences; Douglas Adams,humanities; Giorgio Piccagli, social scien¬ces; Howard Smithson, business; and Paul RALPH NADER: The champion of con-^sumer rights will speak on campus Satur¬day.Stokes, law. AOther members are Isaac Abella, assis¬tant professor of physics; Lorna Straus,assistant professor of biology. William Me¬yer, professor of mathematics; Ralph Ler-ner, associate professor off political sex¬tant professor of physics; Lorna Straus, as-ence; and Charles O’Connell, dean of stu¬dents.LETTERS TO THE EDITORSContinued from page 7In response to my request, the office offinancial aid at Swarthmore has sent mewritten information about their arrange¬ment. Swarthmore signed the agreementwith the Pennsylvania higher education as¬sistance agency, but accompanied thesigned agreement with a letter approved inadvance by the agency, outlining the proce¬dure it is now following.That procedure is described in a memo¬randum, dated September 25, 1970, to allSwarthmore students holding Com¬monwealth scholarships and loans:When Swarthmore finally signed theagreement, it was with the understandingthat our students would provide the Col¬lege with the required information so thatthe College could then, if it judged thatthe conduct was such as was proscribedby the law, forward the information tothe Agency, (mine) You may still think, of course, that this,arrangement has the virtue you ascribed tothe quite different procedure outlined inyour letter to the Maroon.It is a considerably different procedure,however, and the University of Chicago has4, ’<preferred simply not to sign the agreement.We shall make every effort to see thatPennsylvania students enrolled in the Uni¬versity do not suffer because of the Univer-*>sity’s decision.One more point of possible interest: yourletter states that “all Pennsylvania univer¬sities but three have signed; very few nork .Pennsylvania institutions have assented (tothe Agreement).” My latest information —dating from this summer — is that 1,237 ofthe nation’s institutions had signed th*Pennsylvania agreement, whereas 24 hatdeclined.Charles D O’ConnellDean of StudentsBULLETIN OF EVENTSSatvraby, October 17 Sunday, October 18CHANGE-RINGING: MitcheM Tower Betts, beginners11 am, intermediate and advanced 12 neon.LECTURE: India: Writings on the Sand, Krishan Hak-sar, Research Specialist Family Planning Program,Blackstene Branch Library, 4904 S. Lake Park Ave.,2 pm.LECTURE: The European Experience, BlackstoneBranch Library, 2 pm.UKTOftp: U.S>.: Seeds of Change, Blackstone BranchLibrary, 1 pm.LECTURE: Ralph Nader, AAandal, I pm. SERVICES: University Religious Services, Rev. CaRA. Nighswonger preacher, Rockefeller Chapel, tl amJAZZ: Multi-Media Jazz Celebration, University Church.5655 University Avenue, 11 am.FLICK: Wind from the East, Quantretl, 7:15 & *:30pmMEETING: Jewish Radical Action Group, HUM House,5715 Woodtawn, 7:30 pm.MEETING: Chess CliA meeting, Ida Noyes East IcungEto organize a team for the Chicago InferceUegiaIt¬ches s Hague, 7 pm.MEETING: Gey LG study group,565B, • pm. for Me. caN 4*3&*■'P ‘ >7^ 5fsa*STEVE COOKEditor DON RATNERBusiness ManagerCON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorJUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate EditorsRICK BALSAMO, SARA BEEBE, LISA CAPELL, PAT COX, REVA FREEDMAN, ELSA H'ERSH, MITCHKAHN/ BARRY KELLMAN, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE, JOE SARTORELLI, FRED WINSTONStaffCAROLINE HECK DIANA LEIFERSenior Editor Assistant Business ManagerFounded in 1092. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mall $8 per yearin the U.S. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III.2»»‘ '*10/TTie Chicago Maroon/October 16, 1976CURTIS! DON'T FORGET THE KEY LARGO AND MD 20-20THE KINGOF HEARTSwith ALAN BATESandA THOUSANDCLOWNSwith JASON ROBARDSShow Hmoi:Fri., Mon., Tims., Weds., Thors.King of Hearts 7:00 & 10:451000 Clowns 8:45Sat. & Sun.King of Hearts 3:15, 7, 10:451000 Clowns 1:15,5, 8:45Student Rates $1.25 at all timesNOGMPN THEATRE2433 N. LincolnFOR SALE'64 OLDS. Engine Excellent, needstrens. $100 or offer.Cell XKG-GIRLTRIUMPH HERALD SEDAN 1963.Body awful, engine excellent. Under30,000 miles. Good car for HydePark use, not longer commntes.$3SO. X4708 days. 752-0180 eve.Brown coffee table $5. Almost newvac cleaner $20. 643-5473'64 Ford Galaxie 500, V8, auto, pb,r&h. $225. Call 288-4512 eve.1970 unused Ency. Britannica; rea¬sonable price. Call x35551Large double chest (antique green)and matching vanity with mirrorand vanity seat. Also large walnutchest with mirror. Call 324-3205 or4482Portable typewriter $30; vacuumcleaner $5. Karen, X2949Mattresses and Box SpringsSTUDENT SPECIALSBring your I.D. CardDressers, Odd ChestsFor your convenienceOpen Sundays 12 to 5 P.M.3150 W. 63rd St. 434-5815MGTD 1953 Red Resprayed re-cbromed. Probably Best TD in USOffers over $1700. FA 4-8200, x764.STEREO COMPONENTS at lowestprices. Save up to 40% on Sony,Kenwood, KLH, AR, DYNA, & Dualat Muslcraft. Campus rep, Bob Ta-bor, 363-4555.10 rms. 3Vi baths, 2 car gar., byowner. Ask $34,500. 752^4)1.5 rm. coop $10,000 full price Asses61.25. 55-Wdln. 667-7009Nikomat 35mm camera with 43-86mm Nikkor Auto-Zoom lens. $85. 210mm Sun auto-zoom lens $335. CallChaibo, x6357 63 KARMAN GHIA New paint job,new '70 engine. Call Gene 752-72131967 Rover 2000 TC, mag sheets, lowmileage, $1650. Call MU 4-6100 ext6204, between 8:30 am and 4:30 pm.SPACEFurn apt 3 rms suit for two. Utl. &garage incl. $30 week. Also 1} stu¬dio $18 wk. SO 8-8265Sublet 3 bedroom apt. Dec 7, 56th &Dorchester. 493-5473A large master bedrm In largemod apt avail, from now thru win¬ter qtr. Elev, air cond, laundry inbsmt. $65 mo inclu. util. #704, 1400E. 57th, 667-3531.South Shore area, near Lake &University bus. Deluxe 4Vj rms,tile bath, modern kitchen. Availablenow. $145. FA 4-3344.Young married couple want to rentroom in big beautiful S. Shore apt.Nice Situation. Call 721-95475 room apt 57 8i Kimbark sublet 1year. Washer, dryer, dishwasher,radio, tv, piano, $225. 685-6814Rooms available at The Fiji House,5615 S. University. $55 a month andup. PL 2-9874PEOPLE WANTEDWANTED: Male subjects 21 yrs. &over for medical expt. concerningdrug effects. Must have two four-hour periods per week for twelveweeks. CaH x5871 Mrs. Uzzell. 9-12.1-4:30. $240.Staff, Students, Participate in ex¬periment on the perception ofspeech. $1.75 for an hour's work.On campus. CaH x4710 for an ap¬pointment.Research subjects wanted: colorblind persons wanted for color vi¬sion testing. About IMS hrs work.$1.75 per hour. Call X6039.PHY SCI COLLEGIATE COUNCILis seeking interested Phy Sci ma¬jors (2nd year college and above)for membership in Council, Inquireat G-B 128, x2826, by Tues, October20, 5 pm.Girl to share Ig. mod. apt. Ownroom. $65/month Air cond, util,elevator. 1400 E.‘ 57th. 667-3531.Female roommate wanted. Ownbedroom, 1700 55th, 72.50. Mary 493-2741 or 493-4739. TV, Rec Plyr.Wanted: Girl Part-time about 15 to20 hours per week, typing required.Apply in person. Cohn & Stern, 1502East 55th St.Wanted: Young Man part-time salesand stock work. Apply in person.Cohn & Stern. 1502 E. 55thPilot will fly 3 round trip to NYC.Leave 10-26, return 10-29. Share ex¬penses. $45-$50 Each. Call Bill 285-3042Roommate wanted. Own room inspacious Hyde Pk apartment. Call363-6337 any timeHAROLD’SCHICKEN SHACK No. 141364 EAST 53rd STREET 667-9835OPEN SUNDAY THRU FRIDAY12:00 P.M. TO 2:00 A.M.SAT.—12 P.M. TO 3 A.M.MENU(Tax Included)Vt Oticken. $1.25 Small Order of Gizzards SOChicken Sandwich 80 Order of Livers 1.45Order of Gizzards 1.25 Small Order of Livers 90The most intensive study ofthe black worker in Americaever undertaken.The complete records of the historic Fair Employ¬ment Practices Committee...now available on micro¬film.Created to prevent discrimination in essential World WarII defense industries, the FEPC interviewed approximately14,000 minority-group workers. More than 80% of themblack.The result: dramatic, original source material that willopen new doors to the teaching and study of the black man’srole in U.S. industry.In page after page, black men and women reveal theirpersonal experiences with discrimination and prejudice-both on the job and in their daily lives. They talk about theirwages and working conditions...their unions and laborleaders...their ideals and aspirations...their problems andfrustrations.The entire FEPC microfilm collection includes approx¬imately 200 rolls of 35mm film, a separate hardcover indexand a guide.For further information on this collection-and on out¬standing newspapers, magazines and historic documents onmicrofilm-write to Microfilming Corporation of Amer¬ica, 21 Harristown Road, Glen Rock, New Jersey 07452 Print Project-AMERIKA, a new stu-d e n t-published magazine, needswriters, researchers, typists, phone-callers. Our first issue, December,will be distributed free to about150,000 students. If you can help,please call 643-5863.Girt to sublet & share Ig. E. H. Pk.apt. 643-6612 after 12 noon & wkds.$100-mo. 11-1PEOPLE FOR SALEFrench & Sp. tutor U of C MA, con¬versation or readg. X35551For. Stud, needs cash. Fluent inGerm, span., Eng., Tutor, Xlate, ??Call Bruno 752-3415Synapse Editorial Service. Profes¬sional editing, revision, proofread¬ing, critique. Mss, articles, theses5 years experience. Phone 281-1366.WANTEDI want to rent a garage In HydePark. Call Dave, 288-4192Room needed In apt or quiet hsenr campus. Elyse 679-8992.My motorcycle needs a winterhome. Will you rent me space inyour garage? 752-6440 eves.RIDE WANTEDFrom C I a r k-Fullerton area tocampus, must arrive at campus at8:30 am, Monday through Friday.Ride back at 5 pm would also beappreciated. Call Cherie at exten¬sion 4206 during the day, 281-7456 atnight.Ride to and from Rogers Park. Willshare expenses. Call 743-0922 Eve¬ningsGoing to Denver over interimbreak? I need ride — will share ex¬penses. Call Bill Hansen, 752-9601RIDE NEEDED: 3000 N. Clark tocampus. 1 or both ways. Will shareexpense. CaH 525-4827 evenings.SCENESTHE NIGHT CLUB, THE NIGHTCLUBSat Nights 9-1:30 Ida Noyes Faculty,Students and ShadowsStudents Faculty and Families Tunein and be cool! Join us and build asukkah in the woods. Everyone wel¬come. Sunday Oct. 18, 9:30 am.South Side School of Jewish Studies.For info call Fred, 288-3946Try our peach sweet rolls. NonesuchCoffee Shop, WB407See Sooon Rvr Anth. Inf 374-7230SKYDIVING? Contact Brian Smithat Law School or BU 8-1100 x206Non-Violent Sicilian Leader DaniloDolci at Roosevelt U. 430 S. Mich¬igan tonite 8 pm free.THE NIGHT CLUB is open everySaturday Night 9-1:30 am. Free mu¬sic, how food with nee INFRA REESYSTEM. Excellent place for afterflicks, plays.»The Joseph R. Shapiro "Art to LiveWith Collection" is now on displayin the Cloisters Gallery of IdaNoyes Hall. The distribution ofworks will take place Friday, Octo¬ber 16th between 4 and 6 o'clock.Distribution will be according tonumbers, which will be given outFriday morning at 8:30 am. Thecollection is open to all students andstaff with ID cards. A fee of $1.25will be charged.LUNCH at the BANDERSNATCHCharcoal grilled food. Deli sand¬wiches, freshly sliced, & seatingwhile you wait.YOGA single/group Exerc. Mdtn.Contrn. Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155.INTRODUCTION TO ENCOUNTEROct. 25, lOam-lOpm. $10 Limited totwelve, Lorrie Peterson, exp andEsalen trained. 288-3541 or write1451 E. 55th, #228. The 25th INTERNATIONAL EXHI¬BIT of COLOR SLIDE PHOTO¬GRAPHY Will be shown at Museumof Science 8i Industry, Sun, Oc*. 11& again Oct 18 at 2:30 pm. FreeSee Internationally acclaimed ex.cellence in photography.The NEW BANDER5NATCH is nowopen for LUNCH 12-2: — daily in¬cluding Saturdays. Quiet 8< relax¬ing with new Paging units.PHY SCI COLLEGIATE ADVISORYCOUNCIL is sponsoring annual pic¬nic, Sunday, Oct. 18, 1 pm in HutchCourt, Small reservation fee re¬quired (69c). Further info at G-B128. 2828. Faculty and studentsinvited.LEON DESPRES "CHICAGO PO¬LITICS AS BIG BUSINESS" Fri,Oct 12 at 8 pm, Crossroads, 5621Black stone."ARMED STRUGGLE IN MOZAM¬BIQUE" Talk by S. KHAN of FRE-LIMO. Tues, Oct. 20, 4:30 pm. GAR¬GOYLE, Don't miss itThe BANDERSNATCH features foodfor you - cooked to order, 8, Keptwarm by INFRA-RED for pick-up.LUNCH every day. Sat. too.Good food, good conversation. Sun.Suppers at Calvert House. 6 pm,$1.00 — every SundayOutdoor Mass with guitars, etc. Sun¬day 10:30 — east of Business East.Bad weather — Business HallGay Liberation Coffee Hours, Thurs¬days from 8 pm. For info on thisand other meetings, study group, orjust to talk to someone, call 493-5658Travel 2000 miles to answer thephone ... American Airlines makesit possible during the election inter¬im. Call campus rep. Jim Sack, 684-6667"Death to Bourgeois Art!" WindFrom the East. Sunday 7:15 and9:30. Cobb Hall. Doc Films"Smash Nixon-Paramountl" WindFrom the East. Sunday 7:15 8, 9:30Cobb Hall Doc FilmsThe only Bonanza pin-ball machinein Hyde Park is at THE PUB.Come show solidarity with RedPower Movement by shooting a fewcowboys.(Say, what ever happened to thatmaddening crowd?) Nonesuch CoffeeShop, Wieboldt 407Canvass for Doves!This WeekendMeet at the Blue Gargoyle57th 8. UniversitySat. Oct 17 9 AMUC — MNCPERSONALSVediamo Danilo Sta SeraAGNES, Que font les autruches?HELP DUMP DALEYELLIOTT FOR MAYOR 955-7083.LOST SOULful DOGYellow Labrador - Name Raga.Call 538-7810. REWARD.GESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPv 8 weeks, $20. Begins Oct. 19, 7-10pm. Lorrie Peterson, 288-3541 orwrite 1451 E. 55th #228.It1$ easier with Good MusicLH 23 $109UAL 1212 $ 59.25R 4X $ 42.95iDC 303AX $ 77.77Save on all components.All #t Musicraft. Campus rep BobTabor. 363-4555.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)THE PUB(formerly Smedley's)5239 S. Harper Ave.HARPER COURTHOME OF THE LARGE PITCHER BEERScMitz Light & DarkBASS ALE - GUINESS STOUTON TAPSTUDENT NITESMon. Tues. & Wed.All Student O C CDrinks with I.D. card ZO eaStudents also welcome Thurs. Fri. Sat. & Sun.Fish and ChipsSteakburgers, PizzaSpaghetti, ChiliSPECIALBONANZA PINBALL MACHINE& JUKE BOXAll the Peanuts you can eatcompliments of the House.MAKE US YOUR STUDENT HEADQUARTERS Announcing LUNCH at BANDER-SNATCH every day. Fresh sand¬wiches & no lines. INFRA REDWARMERS. Remember to meetEVERYONE here after flicks everynight.Students-Europe for Christmas,Easter or summer? Employmentopportunities, charter flights, dis¬counts. Write for information (airmail) - Anglo America Association.60a Pyle St. Newport, I.W., Eng¬land.Dump the Incumbent of your choicethis month. American Airlines takesyou to either coast to do it. CallCampus Rep, Jim Sack, 684-6667Gay Lib group being organized byand for those new to gay life. Forinfo call 493-5658Ballots for BIO Col. Div Sac elec¬tion available in GB 107. If you didnot receive one by mail. Due backby October 19thUp the classics elevator! NonesuchCoffee Shop, Wieboldt 407Film evening at Hillel Sun.,GREEN FIELDS. 7:30 pm StudentsFree others $1.00"The Mind Boggles!" Paul Preston,famous UC bird on Jean-Luc Go¬dard's Wind From the East. Sunday7:15 & 9:30 Cobb. Doc Films Octo¬ber 18THE PUB has pitchers of Schlitz(light and dark) for LESS. Compareour prices.Far from the maddeningcrowd. . .Nonesuch Coffee Shop,Wieboldt, 407.Canvass for Doves!Tt»is WeekendMeet at the Blue Gargoyle57th ^UniversitySat. Oct 17, 9AMUC-MNCHUNGRY STUDENTSYou are Invited to partake at aBrunch Orgy, Sundays from 2:30 to4:00 pm.We don't guarantee a full selectionof goodies, however, there will beample garbage to gorge yourself.All for $2.60 plus tax. (Show yourstudent ID).COURT HOUSE RESTAURANTHARPER COURT HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ask - Birch$45/TON DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDEUVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMECnarifil f *---i s Pui^.jpacim jTvovni vcotvscorns 4#* mm m mmLetters, For mi. Reports, Bulletins.Duly 8 30 t.m - 5 pm.Cash with ordera- ^ M7 MSOATV 1ITTCB A MINIMA SOVtCS1950 EAST 75th St. (At Jtffary!PHILIPPINOSFELLINIFlies high in Juliet of the Spirits atCobb, Saturday. Bring a friend &float along. Wanted: Tutor for Tagalog, Jan. toMarch. Pay, Must Life In HydePark. Meet 2-3 times weekly. Havetests. Loyd, B08-1518.LIBERATION MOVEMENTSReps from three communes to dis¬cuss communal living. Also tapefrom Esalen with Robert Rimmer.Bonhoeffer 5554 S. Woodlawn, 6:30Sunday Oct. 18.LITERARY MAGAZINEUniversity Literary Magazine —First Meeting Wed. 21, 8 pm in IdaNoyes East Lounge. For more infocontact Frederick Kravitz 340A BJ(Ml 3-6000).FOUR PLAYS OFFANTASY ANDTHE UNUSUALFri, Sat, Sun. Oct 16-18 at 8:30 Rey¬nolds Club Theater.SKIINGSki club meets 10-21 at 7:30 pm inIda Noyes library. FilmSTUDENT GOVERNMENTSG ASSEMBLYMonday, Oct. 19, 7:30 pmBusiness East 103RUNAWAY?Family Problems? Call the Depot955-9347.CEFShows Felinni's Juliet of the Spiritsat Cobb, Saturday 7 8.9:15 MULTI-MEDIATHEATERin HARPER GALLERIES,5210 S. HarperMU 4-1173Mon: Eyen's “The WhiteWhore & The Bit Player.Tues: Beckett's "Krapp'sLast Tape. Wed: Folksinger& Lightshow. Thurs: Sensi¬tivity Group. Fri: 7 Playets.Plays at 7:30 4 9 $ .50WE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTERwith a rank ofDOCTOR OF DIVINITY"And ym shall know the truth and the truthshall make you Free"John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who. believe as wedo, to join us in the holy search for Truth. Wb believe thatall men should seek Truth by all just means* '(As one of ourministers you cans ■1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for ex¬emption from property and other taxes,3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ec¬clesiastic powers.4. Seek draft exemption as one of our workingmissionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, the¬aters, etc., give reduced rates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $19410Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinityand I.D. card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use whenyou wish to ordain others. Your ordination is completelylegal and valid anywhere in this country. Your moneyback without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send yourOrdination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND NOW TO: missionaries of the new truthP.O. Box 1393, Dept. 66Evanston, Illinois 60204October 16, 1970/Hie Chicago Maroon/11A1 (r, //| , » •J a « ; a.j s jiFIJVAL DAY!THANK GOODNESS TODAY IS THE LAST DAY FOR GEN¬ERAL SALES IN THE TEMPORARY U. of C. BOOKSTORE.SO IF YOU NEED OFFICE SUPPLIES, CANDY, A WATCH, ASHOT GLASS, SWEATSHIRT, TRIVIA, OR A NOVEL FORTHE WEEKEND, COME IN BEFORE 5:00 TODAY.THE TEMPORARY STORE WILL BE OPEN FOR TEXT¬BOOK AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES SALES ON MONDAY,TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY NEXT WEEK.THE NEW U. of C. BOOKSTORE WILL OPEN AT 5750ELLIS AVE. ON NOV. 2nd. WE THINK YOU WILL LIKEIT.WHILE THE MAIN STORE IS CLOSED FILM PROCESSINGMAY BE DELIVERED AND PICKED UP IN THE EDUCA¬TION BRANCH STORE, 5821 KIMBARK AVENUE.TODAY IS THE LAST DAY FOR FILLING REQUISITIONSUNTIL THE NEW STORE IS OPENED ON NOV. 2nd.STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF HAVE BEEN REMARK¬ABLY GOODNATURED ABOUT OUR SHORTCOMINGSDURING THE PAST YEAR. THE U. of C. BOOKSTORESTAFF IS GRATEFULL AND WE WISH TO THANK YOU.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE •A>f*»- jNlv.* .u12/The Chicago Maroon/October 16, 1970Volume 3, Number 4 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of the Arts Friday, October 16,1970Eclats de Godard et TruffautBy Charles FlynnThere are reportedly graffiti around Paris (in themen’s room at the Cinematheque??) saying “Godardis the most boring of the Swiss Maoists.” The slogan isa neatly aimed crack at Godard’s impeccable Swissbourgeois upbringing, his recent conversion frompersonal drama to political activism, and his penchantfor airing his political views at length in his recentfilms (La Chinoise, Weekend, Sympathy for theDevil).Godard’s most recent feature opus, Wind from theEast, which will be presented this Sunday in Cobb Hallby Doc Films, is likely to re-open the Godard debate.Re-open, but not advance. At this point, after 18features in 10 years, I can’t imagine either the pro orthe anti faction having much of anything new to say.Wind is clearly conceived as a didactic, politicaltract. It has no “plot,” no “characters.” The actors init act out a series of tableaux, while a narrator recitesa dogmatic, Marxist political diatribe. The rap on thesoundtrack is occasionally interrupted by songs,conversations, letters, phone calls, quotations andslogans. And indeed, the film would be worth seeing —or perhaps listening to — for the soundtrack along. Itis a fascinating collage of contemporary sounds.The images of the film are something else.Godard, in speaking of the visual asceticism of hisrecent films, says: “In America, there are manyimages and one sound: imperialism. I would ratherhave one image and many sounds.”Wind is the working-out of this technique. Eachshot is used as a slide, often remaining on the screenfor several minutes while the narrator speaks. InGodard’s films from Breathless (1959) to La Chinoise(1967), one senses a certain sympathy betweenpurpose and effect. Godard’s performances, storiesand visuals seemed to be in tune with his personalvision. But as he has been getting older (he turned 40earlier this year), Godard has appeared to be takinghis political pretensions more seriously. The furtheraway he gets from the under-30 student revolution¬aries represented by Danny Cohn-Bendit (who co¬scripted Wind), the more desperately Godard tries toemulate and join them. It’s uncomfortably close tobeing a European intellectual’s equivalent for theaging Hollywood glamour queen’s facelift and hair-dye.I hope I don’t seem to contradict myself when Isay at this point that I like Wind from the Eastenormously. It is an extraordinarily beautiful film,thanks entirely to Godard’s great genius for organ¬izing movement and color. Wind from the Eastobliterates content: it is a pure stream of images.Around the middle of the film, Godard includesClaude Monet in his critique of bourgeois art (a bitlater, a girl reading Proust is attacked with a hammerand sickle while our helpful narrator repeats “Deathto bourgeois culture”). It seems that in 1903, MmeMonet wrote a letter to Le Figaro complaining thatstriking workers had prevented her husband fromentering the St Lazare railroad station to paint.Although Godard means to ridicule Monet, hisdevelopment as an artist has been strikingly similar toMonet’s. One can follow Monet from his rathertraditional, representational pictures of the late1860’s, through his gradual rejection of all externalrules and considerations, until we arrive at his finalworks: Les Nympheas, one of the high points ofWestern art, and, like Wind from the East, a puresymphony of color and form. Godard, too, hasdiscarded all of his (and our) preconceptions aboutfilm until we arrive at Wind, a “less is more” movie.While I can sympathize with Godard’s call in thisfilm to throw a monkey wrench into the machinery ofthe technological system he so brilliantly described inAlphaville, if Proust and Monet represent “bourgeoisculture,” I think I’ll hang on to them in preference towhatever Godard and his comrades have to offer. ButI refuse to reject Wind from the East as a workbecause of its addled message: we must learn, asProust and Monet themselves did, to transcendcontent and revel in the glories of fragments ofbeauty. "Painting” from Wind from the EastThe Wild Child — Jean Pierre CargolTruffaut as Dr. Hard By Myron MeiselFrancois Truffaut’s new film, The Wild Child (L*Enfant Sauvage), which opened last Wednesday atthe Cinema Theater, Chicago at Michigan, is the bestfilm in town. It is only here for a few weeks, andalthough it will surely be around again someday, TheWild Child is a film not to be missed. It is a modestfilm, discreet in its ambitions and reserved in itsexecution. It is Truffaut’s best film in five years.The Wild Child's opening shot immediately placesus in another world. The camera irises-in on astrikingly sunny forest, glistening with rich naturallight. (An iris-in, an old silent film device, consists of adarkened screen which opens up a small hole of thepicture, that small hole enlarging eventually to fill andreveal the entire screen.) Soon we see a strangecreature that looks like a child, but has talons forfingernails, and animal-like movements. A womannotices the creature and runs off screaming. A littlewhile later, a crowd of frantic men trap the child, bysmoking him out of his underground lair. About twelveyears old, the presumably deaf, dumb, and moronicboy is taken prisoner and placed on public display.However, a scientist in Paris, Dr Jean Itard, playedperfectly by Truffaut himself, hears of him anddecides to take the boy under his charge in order to seeif he can educate him. The time is about 1800, andRousseau is in the air. (The story, by the way, is true,and most of the narration is taken from the famousjournal kept by the scientist.)We follow along with Truffaut and his pupilthroughout a long and arduous task of learning to eatwith utensils, to recognize objects, to feel as sensi¬tively as civilized humans, to associate letters, andfinally, to develop a rudimentary moral sense. (Itardpurposely punishes Victor, the child, for doing some¬thing good and proper, to see whether he hasdeveloped a sufficient sense of justice to righteouslyrebel.) There are superficial similarities to ArthurPenn’s The Miracle Worker (which Truffaut hadwanted to do), but where Penn examined the relation¬ship between the student and teacher, and theirrelation to the community, Truffaut emphasizes thelearning process itself.His visual style reflects this theme. The cameranever makes statements until near the end of the film,but rather parallels in its style the gradual awakeningof awareness in Victor and of knowledge in the Doctor.It simply observes or follows the action; it nevermoves independently, making statements about theactions. Significantly, Victor, who cannot commu¬nicate to the world, never has his point-of-view takenby the camera. And when at last Truffaut does movehis camera, he attempts to reinforce his passionatebelief in the need for civilization. (Some people havecontended that the film is ironic, and that Victor wasbetter off left wild where he was fully adjusted. This ofcourse ignores the fact that he was in eternal dangerin the forest where he did not belong. The difficulty ofthe removal from the forest is never minimized, butthere is never any doubt — and Truffaut himself hasstated as much — that the civilizing of Victor isimperative.)Truffaut has stated that when he saw Pasolini’sGospel according to Saint Matthew he was dis¬concerted by the visuals, as “they hadn’t any zooms inthe days of Jesus Christ.” Appropriately, Truffautsuccessfully conveys a long-ago period by technicalchastity. The black-and-white cinematography,simple camera setups, irises, and unprogrammedmovements all create a perfect impression of periodas well as any amount of detailed costumes or setswould.The picture, like its modest Doctor Itard, succeedson many levels. It is fascinating as an enactment of aclassic of educational psychology; it is beautiful as awork of film expression; it is compelling as a filminfused with a love for the civilizing potential of man(and also intelligently aware of the pain and difficultyof his advancements). In the end, Victor runs away,but finds that his old wild life is now impossible. Hereturns, to the restrained delight of his Master, to theContinued on Page Two i*:Burrito Bros., Rush RevitalizeLast Saturday’s concert in Mandel Hall was afrustrating experience for Revitalization, the studentorganization that brings rock groups and other formsof popular entertainment to campus. Hoping to attractboth country-rock and blues appreciators, Revitaliza¬tion booked a country group (The Flying Burrito Bros)and a blues band (Otis Rush) to appear on the sameshow. This well-intentioned combination, however,proved to be self-defeating: neither the country-rocknor the blues enthusiasts sufficiently valued the groupplaying their type of music to endure the otherperformers. As a result, fewer than 500 peopleattended the concert.Also contributing to the financial loss were 50-100gate crashers, who had no intention of paying for theirentrance. Thus, Revitalization suffered a blow to bothits morale and its pocketbook, which may severelylimit its future campus activity.The financial problem was only the first in a seriesof frustrations. A rented sound system, which greatlyimproved the tone quality of the music, did notprevent other equipment failure during the BurritoBros’ set. Another problem was that Otis Rush did notappear with his usual group. Performing with newsaxophone and trumpet players, his band lacked thetogetherness that is one of its greatest attributes. Otishimself played a fine blues guitar, but somehowlacked the vibrancy necessary to make the bluesexciting. Overall, his set was not much more thanadequate.But despite all these adversities, the concert was aMore on RestaurantsStation JBD, which was criticized in the Journalgustatory guide for being crowded and noisy, hasallievated that problem by opening a new, large roomthat not only makes JBD worth going to, but returns itto near the top of the Hyde Park eateries.The Gold City Inn, serving the best Chinese foodnorth of the Midway, has a 10 percent studentdiscount. Also, if you call a few days in advance, theywill prepare any dish you want.Sadly, Hyde Park’s touches of France and Mexi-co, La Grenouille and El Taco have both bit the dust.sssssss The Burritos with Gram Parsonmusical success. This was entirely due to thewonderful performance by the Flying Burrito Bros.They exhibited a musicianship, professionalism, andstage presence unsurpassed by any group withinrecent memory at Mandel Hall. They turned potentialdisaster into triumph, and made the whole eveningworthwhile.Each member of the group played his roleperfectly. The former Byrds, Chris Hillman andMichael Clarke, were quiet but not aloof during theperformance. Clarke was quite competent on thedrums, and he never forced himself into the fore¬ground. Hillman was excellent on bass and with thevocals. His many years with Roger McGuinn wereevident in his appearance and mannerisms, but unlikeMcGuinn, Hillman expressed friendliness rather thandisgust toward the audience. “Sneaky” Pete Kleinowwas the self-satisfied professional, who seemed aspleased as anyone else with his amazing work on pedalsteel. Bemie Leadon on lead guitar acted as spokes¬man for the group. A new addition was Rick Rogers onacoustic guitar. Rogers shared the lead vocals withHillman, and his sweet voice was especially nice in“Wild Horses” and “Colorado.”Although Gram Parsons has left the Burritos, hisinfluence was felt in many songs of which he is theauthor. With the departure of Parsons’ piano, thegroup played with three guitars and a pedal steel. Thisarrangement, which made them sound much like Poco, was complemented by a smooth-Byrds-likeharmony. Perhaps the best songs were “Cody, Cody”and “Hot Burrito No. 2.” Both of these Parsonscreations featured beautiful harmony, a driving bass,and an amazing pedal steel.The only possible complaint about the BurritoBros’ music was that most tunes followed the samepattern, with the only instrumentals being containedin short sprees in the middle of each song. This,however, was corrected by the failure of the ampli¬fiers. When the broken amps threatened to halt theconcert, the Burritos merely put away their electricguitars and drums and played an acoustic set.Hillman, Leadon, Leinow, and Rogers played mando¬lin, banjo, bass, and acoustic guitar while theamplifiers were being repaired. Starting with “FoggyMountain Breakdown,” they played three pieces inwhich the instrumental work of Hillman and Leadonwas astounding. This was undoubtedly the highlight ofthe concert.The trying conditions spurred the Burritos to theheight of their performance. Hopefully, Revitalizationcan follow their example in the face of its manyproblems.Jack MarkowskiProfound SimplicityContinued from Page Onepromise of continued lessons. Yet for all the sadnessand resignation of the moment, it is above all atriumph, and our last view is of Victor ascending thestairs in the 'arms of Doctor Itard’s loving house¬keeper. To understand the world about us, to recog¬nize love, to begin to feel the elementary delicacies ofheat and pain, to say the monosyllable “milk”, to formrelationships on any level: there are worth the price ofany forfeited primeval existence. Freedom meansnothing if a human being has not the capacity to actfreely, the film implies. Gentle but never soft, didacticbut never deficient in charm, investing crude visualmeans with the grace of profound expression, TheWild Child is masterwork that is all the more masterlyfor its minor key.11<THE GREATESTMUSICIAN-ARTISTWE KNOW"The Washington PostJENNIEIOURELSINCEand talks about singingNOV. 8, 10, 15, 17Mandel HallUniversity of ChicagoThe ART of the SONGFour Evenings WithJENNIE TOURELTicket Information call:Ml 3-0800, extension 3139 JAPANESE CINEMALatest SamuraiRelease!THE AMBITIOUSAli Star Cast KINNOSUKE NAKAMURATOSHIRO MfUNETATSUYA NAKADAILow ranking samurai attempts to abol¬ish the caste system in a blood-drenchedprocess, in the War of Restoration.Co-feature: BRAVO YOUNG GUYStarring YUZOKAYAMAFrancis Parker School 2247 N. ClarkOct. 17 & 18 Saturday 7 pm. Sunday 2 & 7 pm//m ren/Uif' ll/pul/p /linhiinn.\A hint fieri/>(/ Ulondcfhivtledhj /InnHie '/rn{llnirvlnii (hInfer in, / )o-/o<i>(/(('/Holds (tub /vannp< bnnduj, (U loin r/ n,(/frit no(<l. i /hih /hadre(/(h.s for y//////, ) furn/PH(nrlortnume dnh \ \Mnnnlfcu\ >>y . / v -{< lull mud /resound Ihhoi/iP ' authentic• Dinners• Late Snacks• Private PartiesMake your New Year'sEve ReservationsDistinctive, handsomeroom atop the Hyde ParkBank Building.Exceptional anddelightful selection ofMid-East food, delicacies,cocktails, and wines.Ample parking. Tues. -Sat. 5 to Midnight; Sun.1 - 11.1525 E. 53rd St.Just Off Outer DriveAtop TheHyde Park Bonk Mdg.REST AURA NT A LOUNGi955-5151EfendlTuesday NightTuesday Night15% DiscountFor the U. of C. Students;Faculty Members and Per¬sonnel. Bring this ad fordiscount.! I Pi'fu J'S j/.-‘ . *./ • U f i fARTContemplations and HallucinationsVaFs TheaterA Valiant TryThe Harper Court Multi-Media The¬ater at Harper Galleries, 5210 Harper, isone result of George Val’s love oftheater, of combining light and sound,of doing “what he likes.” A resident ofHyde Park for nine years, Val hopes hisnewest venture will energize HydePark’s after-dark scene and break thefamiliar syndrome of going primarily tothe Loop or Near North Side for enter¬tainment.Val’s program of theater, encountergroups, folk singing, and light showsseems too ambitious to bring off. Howcan a man afford to produce five showsa week for seven weeks with plans for asecond season of six weeks crystalliz¬ing, and at the same time supporthimself financially and oversee theaesthetic quality of the whole project?Val seems, under difficult circum¬stances, not only to be surviving buteven managing to give birth to goodtheater.I have seen the Monday and Friday[shows — “The White Whore and the Bit[Player” by Tom Eyen, and “SevenPlaylets Concerning the Human Condi¬tion” by Feiffer, Rechy, Larson, andothers. The first play is very wellperformed. Two players, Janet Bremerand Margie Stosur, representing alter-egos of a tormented, near-suicidal girl, explode their way through a funny-sadscript. The Seven Playlets are lesspleasing. Some of the actors’ pacingwas off, a few lines were dropped, andone or two of the troupe were too self-conscious to be effective. However, oneof the pieces, a hilarious monologuedelivered by Marion Scott revealing heras the archetype of the deluded hen-pecking wife and savage over-protec¬tive mother, is quite fine.Val manages to support himselfthrough his work as music director andorganist at St. Ita, a church at 5500 N.Broadway. Though a musician by train¬ing, Val has explored his theatricalinterests for several years. From begin¬nings in musical comedy direction forthe employees’ musical groups of Loopbusinesses (like the Illinois CentralRailroad Company and Continental Na¬tional Assurance), his energies even¬tually turned to the avant-garde. Loopbusinesses no longer cared for his styleand he found himself without an artistichome. Val felt that his kind of theatermight be appreciated in two Chicagocommunities — the Near and Mid Northarea and Hyde Park. Since the NorthSide seemed saturated with ex¬perimental theater, he approached theHarper Court Foundation with his ideasfor a season of happenings. After some — Scott Carlson“The White Whore and the Bit Player”— Val’s Monday Night Show.slow starts, and, more recently, a happyassociation with Jan Messinger, theowner of Harper Galleries, Multi-Mediagot off the ground. Norton Knopf, anoth¬er Hyde Parker, now helps Val on theproject.With only a 50 cents admissioncharge, one is correct in assuming theactors are amateurs. Some come fromHyde Park but a surprising number arefrom the North Side. Val also notices that his audiences areas much from the North Side andsuburbs as from Hyde Park. As forUniversity students, hardly a one. Per¬haps we enjoy being captured by theconfines of a reading list but for 50 centsone would think a few more studentsmight give Val the courtesy of seeingwhat’s up.John Del PeschioWalk across the windy Midway some¬time before the end of November to seethe 58 engravings by George Rouault atthe Center for Continuing Education,1307 East 60th St. This series, entitledMiserere et Guerre, illustratesRouault’s song of compassion for manand the ultimate fate of mankind.Executed in the years 1918-1928, theengravings portray man’s feelingsabout the turmoil of the times.Rouault’s men seem to be asking “Whoare we? Have we not deluded ourselves,believing our condition of life to bebetter than it really is?” Rouault’sengravings of people who are veiled in a“false happiness” are particularly dis¬concerting. These people smile, heads{uplifted. Yet something is wrong. Theblack in the eye is too dark, the musclesfin the neck are strained. Altogetherthese “happy people” make one shiveruncomfortably. They are the epitome ofapathy; shallow, unconcerned, andblinder than one who has no eyes at all.Rouault takes uplifting and reas¬suring passages from religious andancient Greek writings to title hiscompositions. Beneath an engraving of a woman one reads “ .. . and Veronicais still among us with her veil ofcompassion . . .”. However, com¬passion does not seem to be enough;man still goes on crying and pleading.His titles may be reassuring, but theengravings fail to evoke any reas¬surance of a better future. In thedemeanor of Rouault’s characters, oneonly finds resignation; drooping heads,limp arms and hands. The eyes inRouault’s engravings are alwaysclosed, downcast, or expressionless.(Perhaps this is a sign that man refusesto see the truth.)Rouault is an idealist, searching for abetter life through the beauty of art. Hisengravings express the feelings hewrote about in a poem entitled Song:There is nothing to do but singin these times of universal hatredso often hidden . . .even if you die tomorrowcomplaining is still singingfor fear of a repressed sigh . . .Melinda Silver A stretch of wildly painted corridorleads to the Bergman Gallery on thefourth floor of Cobb Hall. Inside: aboutthirty works of graphic art for sale.Almost all of them are silkscreens, therest lithographs and etchings. Most areabstractions; still, despite the sim¬ilarity of medium, there is variety in thecollection.In most of the numerous geometriccompositions, the strict formality ofhard edges is offset by hot, pulsatingfluorescent colors. Harris Barron’s“Chord Fourteen,” a flaming red silk-screen-on metal, is the most striking ofthe geometries: the single figure pro¬jects a strange depth.Contrasting such simplicity with anintricate, inside-outside detail is “Hal¬lucination V” by Christine McGinnis. Itis a clear, black and white engravingwhich looks like seaweed and microbesmooshled together under a microscope.Like “Hallucination V” in its wealth ofdetail, but rather less exciting, is arippling “Indian” poster-type lith¬ograph called “Mandala.” Its psy-Originals from UTUniversity Theatre presents as itsfirst production of this quarter “FourPlays of Fantasy and the Unusual.” Theevening consists of four short playswhich were adapted from fantasy andother fiction stories. Director RobertHopkins has written a preview of theplays:“The Time of Going Away” waswritten by Ray Bradbury, author of“The Martian Chronicles” and “Fahr¬enheit 451.” The story concerns an oldman somewhere in Illinois who one daygets a premonition that he is going todie. Nathan Davis and Rhoda Reighardare the play’s only actors.“Examination Day”, by Henry Sle-sar, is a story whose purpose is to — Scott Carlson“The Time of Going Away” —Nathan Davis and the Rhodar Reighard provoke thought, and it does so verydirectly, without frills. The cast in¬cludes Pat Billingsley, Enid Rieser, andDanny Greenwald.“Untitled” is a piece of theater andpossibly nothing more than that. Thestory has no pretentions because itsimportance lies in the “now” of whathappens on stage: it is an experience ofthe moment, although the story has akind of framework setting. The eightcast members are all students.The last story is “In the Ruin”, byRoald Dahl, author of many shortstories that have been produced ontelevision. “In the Ruins” is a calamitystory of human survival in Hie Rums. Inthe cast are Joel Cope, Jeff Howard,and Isabel Guzzman-Barron.L******** fe u» * At i» *■ A J i'j (- Jt* OH ££ Jtftb chedelic^ style offers little more to theeye than an inexpensive headshop post¬er.The exhibit also includes severalportraits. The simplest is LaurenceTobe’s “Frog” — a plain, happy, deco¬rative, green and orange frog. The othertwo are pop-arty and resemble high-contrast photography. One portrays thelarge heads of two innocuous adoles¬cents. The other is “Three Beatles” byBob Stanley, a red and purple silk-screen depicting the Ringo, John, andGeorge of about ten years ago. (Unlessyou like the high-contrast portraiture orare an old old Beatle fan, it doesn’tseem worth the $75.)Three of the most interesting items inthe gallery escape strict classification.Carol Sousa’s “Imaginary Landscape”is as simple as a kindergartener’sdepiction of earth and sky, but the colorand texture of the intalgio etching isunusual and absorbing. In a dark cornerof the gallery is “Antithesis” by LeslieKramer: a blue space deepens to yellowthrough a square tunnel of thin, blacklines; a dark nebula drifts under, over,around, unconfined by the lines. Aroundanother corner is a white-on-white em¬bossed engraving, a leaping, layeredfree form that is soft and oddly restful.“Sea Forms III” by Beatrice Berlinevokes sea moods.Rojer La Pel’s two works also avoidclassification. “Kwuf Kwabul GafnitSpurdal Nug” looks exactly like what itsays. Some extra staring reveals atheme of progression, and if you like tosweat out your artistic appreciation, it’sfine. But “Dril Grilgring Rila Grim” isworse. The dizzy, disjointed pieces don’teven have the last saving grace of beingpleasant to look at. La Pel’s use ofnonsense titles to attract attention to hisnonsense shapes is great showmanship,but doubtful art.Most of the pieces were brought herefrom the Ward-Nasse Gallery of Boston.They are sold non-profit by the BermanGallery to provide inexpensive originalart for students. Most pieces run from$20 to $50 (cheap). The graphics will bein the Beigiiictii through November 7.Pua Fordt , t i t t • i r , t l i i | t tOctober 16, 1970/Grey City JounuU/3^1Kick It With Your MindRobert Maynard Hutchins and the life of the mindto the exclusion of the life of other human partsnotwithstanding, football is back at UC. You all knewthat. You probably also know that The World’sLargest Kazoo marches at half-time, that there arefive honest-to-gosh Maroon cheerleaders, and that theMaroons themselves are the hottest team betweenhere and the outer limits of the campus bus route. Buthave you ever been moved to go watch an actualgame?? Well, believe it or not, they’re a lot of fun—would an experienced and discriminating CultureVulture mislead you in matters concerning yourentertainment? The mood of the crowd is excitinglychangeable, ranging from deafening bursts of wildenthusiasm to downright apathy; the bouncy, con¬ventional-looking cheerleaders fake you out withcheers at once inspiring and edifying; and sometimesthere is even a touchdown. Well, don’t knock it till youtry it; besides, who wants to go through an entirecollege career without ever having seen his belovedinstitution battling it out on the field?If you disapprove of my attempts to find unusualcultural cuisine for you, if you prefer movies, artexhibits, and the like, okay, okay. A number of filmshave opened downtown this week: Truffaut’s The WildChild at the Cinema, Chicago at Michigan; TheLandlord, directed by Hal Ashby, with Beau Bridgesand Pearl Bailey, at the Woods, Randolph at Dear¬born; Frank Perry’s Diary of a Mad Housewife, withRichard Benjamin and Goodman Theater’s CarrieSnodgrass, at the United Artists Theater, Randolph atDearborn; Borsalino, directed by Jacques Deray,with Jean-Paul Belmondo, at the Shangri-La, 222 N.State; and Seymour Robbie’s C.C. and Company, withthose all-time greats Joe Namath and Ann-Margaret,at the Oriental, Randolph near State.But save Saturday for Fellini’s Juliet of theSpirits, presented in Cobb by CEF. And save Sundayfor Godard’s Wind from the East, with Gian MariaVolonte and Anne Wiazemski, to be presented by DOCfilms, 7:15 and 9:30 in Cobb.DOC’s other offerings for the week includeBergman’s Persona tonight in Cobb at 7:15 and 9:30;Fuller’s China Gate Tuesday in Cobb at 8; and StanleyDonen’s musical Funny Face, Wednesday in Cobb at8. At the Art Institute, “Drawings and Lithographsby Jean Dubuffet” and “Etchings and Lithographs byPaul Klee” are in Gallery 107, and Japanese TheaterPrints in Gallery 114. Also, if you have not yet seen theItalian exhibit, get there before it closes on November1.The South Shore Commission Art League Galleryhas a photography show through November 12. It’s at6930 S. Shore Drive; call 955-7055 for more informa¬tion.The hologram exhibit at the Museum of Contem¬porary Art continues through October 25th. Both thismuseum and the Art Institute are open until 8 onThursdays.This Monday at 7:30 there will be a paneldiscussion on “Rouault’s Meaning for Today,” to beheld at the Center for Continuing Education inconjunction with the Rouault exhibit currently ondisplay at CCE. The discussion will be led byProfessor Jonathon Smith of the divinity school, theRev Richard Douaire of Loyola University and JosephR Shapiro, president of the Museum of ContemporaryArt. A reception will follow the discussion and allstudents are invited.Don’t miss the “Four Plays of Fantasy and theUnusual,” directed by Bob Hopkins and presented byUT in Reynolds Club Theatre October 16-18 at 8:30.Tickets are one dollar at Reymonds Club desk.You may also be interested in the GoodmanTheater’s production of The Threepenny Opera.A master class in modern dance with Ray Cook,dancer, choreographer and teacher formerly with theAnna Sokolow Dance Company, will be held tomorrowfrom 10:30-12am, in Ida Noyes gym. It is free for UCstudents with IDs, and $1 for others. The class issponsored by the Modern Dance Club; for more infocall extension 3574.Music on campus this week includes tonight’sSidney Harth Chamber Music Recital at 8:30 inMandel; University Organist Edward Mondello’srecital in Rockefeller Chapel, Tuesday at 12:15; and acarillon recital by Robert Lodine, University carillo-neur, emanating from the Rockefeller Chapel towerbeginning at 12:15 Wednesday.At the Syndrome 1513 N. Wabash tonight at 8 is theGrand Funk Railroad,_along with Humble Piej. Beethoven and Chase; at the Auditorium Theater, 70E. Congress, Laura Nyro tonight and Guess Whotomorrow.Judy Collins comes to the Auditorium Sunday at7:30; next Saturday, October 24, Leon Russell andTurley Richards will be there at 8:30.The University Literary Magazine will hold itsfirst meeting Wednesday, October 21, at 8 in Ida NoyesEast Lounge.And last but not least, here’s a way to help saveyour trees and environment by saving your news¬papers and bringing them to the large box at the Northend of the Coop Parking Lot. They will be baled andsold to the Container Corporation of America in aprocess employing 20 ghetto breadwinners, for recycl¬ing; for every ton of recycled paper, 17 trees arespared.THE GREY CITYHere is no continuing city, here is no abidingstay.Ill the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late,and rotten the year;Evil the winter, and bitter the sea and grey thesky, grey grey grey—T.S. EliotJVlurder in the CathedralMitchell Bobkin, EditorsChristine Froula and WendyGlocknerAssociate EditorsTheater: John Del PeschioFilm: Charles FlynnArt: Sue LeffDance: Paula ShapiroMusic: Mark BlechnerPhotography: Scott CarlsonThe Grey City Journal is the Chicago Maroon’sweekly magazine of culture and the arts printedevery Friday. Offices, Ida Noyes 303,1212 E 59thSt, Chicago 60637, Midway 3-0800 ext 3269.accent4U933D ACCENT/SHOP Inc.53RD ST AND BLACKSTONE (I4»7I. SSffO ST )October10% Student Discounton cash Sales• Lamps• Furnishings• Gifts(Sorry no discount on toysJPlease Show I.D. Ml 3-7400 STARTS TODAY!Truman Capote'sTRILOGYHYDE PAM THEATRE53rd & Lake ParkNO 7-9071Student Discount - Sunday Matinee $1.504/Grey City Journal/October 16, 1970 GOLD 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 Food5228 Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient lake-out orders.) CHECKERTAXIHASTHE IDEAL JOBFOR THECOLLEGE STUDENT• WE CAN ARRANGE AWORK SCHEDULE TO FITANY CLASSROOMSCHEDULE• WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS 2 TO 6 PER WK.• WORK CLOSE TO HOMEOR SCHOOL AT ONE OF 9GARAGES• WORK DURING SUMMERVACATION, SEMESTERBREAKS AND HOLIDAYS• EARN AS MUCH AS FULLTIME WORKERSMALE OR FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 18APPLY845 WASHINGTON8:00 to 4:30 DAILY8:00 to 11:00 SAi ■CALL 421-1314