The electionsNews: page 3Faculty reaction: page 5Editorial: page 6 j jSteve AokiThe Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 16 The University of Chicago Friday, November 6, 1970breve AokiNEW! IMPROVED! Students examine books in the new bookstore in the Press build¬ing, 5750 Ellis. The old bookstore was located at Stagg Field Labs, iwhich were torndown during the interim.Boucher will open pool,gym for community use Wandering bookstorefinds permanent siteBy FRED WINSTONFinal plans for the opening of BoucherHall recreational facilities to communityyouths as part of a neighborhood youthprogram are nearing completion.The male dorm will open its gym andpool areas to neighborhood children, Fri¬days from 5 pm to 10 pm and Saturdaysfrom 10 am to 5 pm, by December 1.In addition to the opening of Boucher, theBlue Gargoyle (in the Disciples of ChristChurch) and the First Unitarian Churchwill participate in the program, the FirstUnitarian Church specializing in choraltraining.The YMCA is also a probable participantand inquiries are being made about otherneighborhood organizations.“Hopefully the young people will travelto sites and pick and choose as they seefit,” said Herbert Smith, program directorand University lab school teacher.Smith sees an operation, because Bou¬cher is a male dorm, initially aimed atboys, with some co-ed activities such assplash parties.“The type of program should be dictatedby the participants,” Smith said. “Startingwith a constructive, meaningful program, Ithink we can do a lot of spin offs such astrips and lectures.” Community basketball tournaments are another possibility, hesaid.Smith believes that the University, inopening the program, “sees a problem andinstead of sitting back and talking, sets thewheels in motion to do something about it.”He is hopeful the program can “redirectthe problems of Hyde Park youth.”All youths who registered for the “Sum¬mer 70” program, which allowed them useof recreational facilities at Ida Noyes lastsummer, will be already registered for thisprogram. Others will have to obtain theregistration cards which are necessary forin^hrance to cover accidents.Plans are for the registration cards to behonored at the YMCA on certain “commu¬nity nights” and allow holders to partici¬pate in activities there.Smith foresees an initially large cost forthe purchase of equipment but afterwardsa small operating budget. A volunteer andpaid staff of five to seven people will runthe program at Boucher.Money for the program will come fromthe University’s general fund, according toWalter Walker, vice-president for planning.The cost has not yet been determined.The program will continue throughout thesummer, returning to Ida Noyes after thespring quarter. By NANCY CHISMANAfter years of waiting and wandering be¬tween temporary locations, the Universitybookstore has'finally found a permanenthome.Situated in the former University of Chi¬cago Press building after a whirlwind moveduring interim, the store occupies twofloors or one-fourth of space in the 5750Ellis building.Bookstore manager Harlan Davidson ex¬pects the rest of the five floor structure,now occupied by the University’s printingdepartment to be available for expansionwithin two years.Green grass now covers the bookstore’sprevious locations. After a fire last spring,the original 70-year old structure, reputedto be a faculty stable during the 1890’s, wastorn down. A temporary store was set uplast year in the former Stagg Field labs onthe 57th St side of the Regenstein librarysite.Working under a tight schedule, employ¬ees began moving the contents of the 57thSt store to the press building October 22.Within an hour after the moving job wascompleted the next afternoon, destructionof the Stagg Field wall began. By the fol¬lowing Monday, the site was part of Re-genstein’s front lawn.Davidson said he was very relieved to bein the new building. “I’m quite pleasedwith the way the store turned out. Weworked under a very tight budget.”Bookstore employees are overwhelminglypleased with the move. Most said the newstore is cleaner, brighter and less crowded.One lady noted that the student customersseemed much more congenial than theyhad been at the other stores.Employees are requested to observe adress code in the new store, including acandy-striped coat they wear as a uniform.One woman, pleasantly unenthusiasticabout the jacket said it was easy to cleanbut thought it clashed with the bookstoredecor.The first floor of the new location is en¬tirely dedicated to books, with textbookstacks occupying half of the area. For thefirst time in bookstore history, stacks areseparated by five-foot aisles and adequate¬ly lighted.All other departments of the store, in¬cluding the snack bar and general officeare located on the second floor.Both floors are carpeted and painted white with bright accent colors and op-artdesigns on the walls.Davidson noted that the store is still ad¬justing to a serious logistical problem. Alldeliveries of books and supplies had to bedelayed until after the move to the newstore and consequently stocks are low. Da¬vidson admitted going to book wholesalehouses every day in his station wagon andbringing back loads of books for the store.Davidson worried aloud about the lack ofstorage space within the store and the stillcramped book display space. “The chiefdifficulty is the quarter system,” he ex¬plained. “About 565 courses with an aver¬age reading list of 10 books are offeredeach quarter. We stock 100 percent ot theestimated demand for each course. By pre¬registration of each quarter we have tomove all the books from the previous quar¬ter out and all the new books in.” The storehas no place to put books while rearrangingthe stacks.Davidson said when the bookstore ex¬pands to fill the whole building, two or twoand a half floors of the five floor structurewill be used solely for books. “No othermajor university has a bookstore thissmall,” he said, speaking of the present sit¬uation.Law and medical stacks will be increasedand a larger stock of books kept on theshelves. “We are able to stock most of thetitles people on campus need, but in smallquantities. We often run out.”Davidson said that the current annual in¬come of the bookstore is over $3 ¥2 millionbut estimates after the bookstore expands,the annual volume will be almost $8 mil¬lion.New phonesOn December 19, a Centrex telephoneservice system will replace the Univer¬sity’s present one.With Centrex, each extension will have adirect line to the outside and its own phonenumber. Intra-campus calling will remainthe same.To allow time for the changeover, norequests for changes to existing phone willbe accepted after November 6. This in¬cludes relocation of telephones, adding ordeleting lines, or other routine service rear-rangments.For further information call Gerald John¬son or Mary Anderson, ext 3041.THE NEWU. of C.BOOKSTOREwill be open tomorrow,Saturday, Nov. 7th9:00-3:00Free CoffeeServed Until NoonRegular Hours8:00-5:00 M-FENJOY GRACIOUS LIVINGAT 56th & THE LAKEThe SHORE DRIVE MOTEL has recently set aside several choicerooms for semi-permanent living on a month to month basis at lowattractive rentals, which include parking in our indoor garage, 24hour a day switchboard and desk service and all customary motelfacilities.Rooms are beautifully furnished and carpeted with attractivebathrooms, televisions, and individually controlled heating and air-conditioning for every room, and are the ultimate in comfort andconvenience.Conveniently located near several of Hyde Park's large shoppingcenters (as close as one block), the low monthly rental also includesfree parking, a beautiful pool, free TV, free ice and complete motelservice.One of Chicago's finest Restaurants is located on the premises.LIVE HERE in a friendly relaxed atmosphere with all of the luxuriesof motel service for less than you would pay for an unfurnishedapartment.STUDENT & GUEST RATESLEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 CARPET BARN WAREHOUSENew and Used CarpetsRemnants and Roll EndsOriental ReproductionsAntique French WiltonFur Rugs & Fur CoatsINEXPENSIVE ANTIQUE FURNITUREOpen Tues. thru Sat., 9-4Sunday 10-31228W. Kinzie 243-2271PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEAVERSCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 TCHICAGO:A school system with a goal: Teaching$8,400 starting salary (10 months)10 days paid vacation • 10 days sick leavePaid hospitalizationThe Chicago Public Schools will have a representative un caihpuson November 17, 1970. please arrange for an interviewwith the Placement Office. "I want to serve the country in thebest way I know how'-andystappAndy Stapp joined the Army with the avowed purpose ofchanging things radically. Out of it came constant harass¬ment, two court-martials, an undesirable discharge and theAmerican Servicemen’s Union.Here is Stapp’s story of how the ASU was organized as healmost single-handedly took on the biggest non-union shopof them all — the U.S. Army.‘One suspects that the AmericanServicemen’s Union will make enor¬mous waves throughout the militaryEstablishment... Stapp’s account ofthe officers’ Pig Parties at Fort Sill,Oklahoma, is worth the price of thebook.”—JOHN LEONARD,The New York Times'‘Stapp’s account of this war againstthe Brass makes inflammatory read¬ing that will enrage conservativeswho cannot share his glee at hisbrass-baiting, and may shock others with its depiction of raw anti-Com-munist hysteria among high officerswho repeatedly put him on trial onwhat he insists were trumped-upcharges.” —Publishers’ Weekly‘The account of Stapp’s checkeredArmy career is light acJ lively, theBrass comes off looking incrediblydull-witted and frighteningly auto¬cratic, and readers who support thecause will love the story.”—The Kirkus ReviewsUoAgainstn The ^Brass The amazingstory of thefight to unionizethe UnitedStates Armyby Andy Stapp$1.95, paperback; $4.95, cloth • Simon and SchustermmAbortion Counseling, I\fokm\tio\And Referral ServicesAbortions up to 24 weeks of pregnancy arenow legal in New York State. There are noresidency restrictions at cooperating hospitalsand clinics. Only the consent of the patientand the performing physician is required.If you think you are pregnant, consult yourdoctor. Don’t delay. Early abortions aresimpler and safer.If you need information or professional assist¬ance, including immediate registration intoavailable hospitals and clinics, telephone:The Abortion Information Agency, Inc.160 WEST 86th STREETNEW YORK, N. Y. I0024212-873-66508 A.M. TO 10 P.M.SEVEN DAYS A WEEKHAROLD’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)Vi Chicken $1.25 Small Order of Gizzards 80Chicken Sandwich 80 Order of Livers 1.45Order of Gizzards...*--.^.... 1.2S Small Order el Livers .90 ShouldStudentsSharemePower?A Study of Their Role inCollege and UniversityGovernanceby Karl J. McGrathFrom a man who has spenthis career in seats of academicpower comes an enlightenedconsideration of ways in whichstudents can be admitted to aresponsible share of thatpower. Earl J. McGrath hasbeen university dean, pto-fessor, president, chancellor,U.S. Commissioner ofEducation under both Trumanand Eisenhower, consultant tocollege presidents. His prac¬tical suggestions may raiseacademic eyebrows andstudent spirits. Paper $2.45T"empleUniversity PressPhiladelphia, Pa. 19122MINOLTA demonstra¬tion by factory repre¬sentativeSaturday,November 7MODELCAMERA1342 East 55th St.403-47002/The Chicago Maroon/November 6, 1970MmUkaftFeaturing Chicago's Largest Display of KLH Music SystemsNOW IN STOCKTHE NEW STEREO TAPE DECK USINGTHE DOLBY NOISE REDUCTIONSYSTEM IONE OF THE TWO NEWGREAT LOUDSPEAKERSFROM KLH — PRICEDFROM 55.00 TO 190.00 INBOOK SHELF UNITSNEW319" ITHIS K1H IS THE BIST BUY IN THE AUDIO INSUSTRVOLD!!199” OLD! BUT STILLTHE BEST PORT-ABLE YOUR MONEY CAN 8L'V•MttoiCiaftrON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—OE 7-415D 2035 W. 95th St —779-6500 IJ Phoenix Eye Viewvmj °f the^ways of Man Indians of North AmericaHarold EDriverINDIANS OF NORTH AMERICASecond Edition, RevisedHarold E. DriverDriver describes the cultures of American In¬dians from the Arctic to Panama. In this newedition of his standard text and reference work,he has added extensive new material on the rela¬tions between Indians and whites in the post-Columbian years, particularly in the 1960s.$6.85THE SAVAGE MINDClaude L6vi-Strauss“Eveprone interested in the history of ideas mustread it; everyone interested in human institutions should read it.”—J. H. Plumb,Saturday Review. “No precis is possible. This extraordinary book must be read.”—Edmund Carpenter, New York Times Book Review. $3.25THE MIND OF AFRICAW. E. AbrahamA Ghanian philosopher’s account of the Akan, the most important of Ghana’s linguis¬tic groups, offers insight into African society and ideology. “Probably the most impor¬tant book written by an African in the last ten or fifteen years.”— David Apter. $2.95The University of Chicago PressPhoenix PaperbacksSHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates for Students and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin & doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestOffice Space now Please call Mr. Schwartzavailable for immediate PL 2-1000occupancy* 5454 South Shore Drive Congressional seats wonby 33 MNC candidatesSteve AokiDEFEATED: Senator Charles Goodell (R-NY), who. finished third in the race wonby Conservative James Buckley. Steve AokiVICTORIOUS: Senator-elect Adlai Steven¬son III (D-Dl), who turned back incumbentRalph Smith.By CON HITCHCOCKOver 30 of the Congressional candidatesendorsed by the Movement for a New Con¬gress were victorious in their races Tues¬day.Out of 59 endorsed candidates, 33 won, 25lost, and one race is in doubt. Those en¬dorsed were 57 Democrats, one Republican,and one independent.Some 200 University students cam¬paigned during the interim, according toIllinois MNC coordinator George Cantonis.Of these 70 worked in Indiana for SenatorVance Hartke.The race between Hartke and his Re¬publican opponent, Rep Richard Roude-bush, is too close to call and a recount willdetermine the winner shortly.Cantonis called this student effort a“relative success in terms of this fall, butdisappointing in terms of last spring.” InJune the University, in response to de¬mands for time off before the election toallow students to work for candidates,agreed to the proposal. The interim lastedfrom Saturday, October 24 to Tuesday No¬vember 3.According to one University official, 70percent of the students left campus, al¬though an overwhelming majority of themdid not campaign.MNC endorsed 27 incumbents for seats inthe Senate and House of Representatives.Of these, 24 won and three were defeated.Those defeated were Sen Joseph Tydings(D-Md), Rep Allard Lowenstein (D-NY)and Rep Daniel Button (R-NY).Of the Senate races, which attracted at¬tention by President Nixon’s efforts to gaina Republican majority, MNC candidates victorious include John Tunney (D-Calif),Philip Hart (D-Mich) Harrison Williams(D-NJ), Quentin Burdick (D-ND), FrankMoss (D-Utah), and William Proxmire (D-Wis). Of these all are incumbents exceptTunney.MNC candidates losing were Joseph Duf-fey in Connecticut, Howard Metzenbaum inOhio, and George Rawlings in Virginia. Allare Democrats, none incumbents.Locally, many students were active inthe election bid of Adlai Stevenson III, whoswept to victory over Republican in¬cumbent Ralph Smith.In the controversial New York Senaterace, MNC declined to endorse either Re¬publican incumbent Charles Goodell orDemocratic challenger Richard Ottinger.The race was won by Conservative partycandidate James Buckley.MNC was founded at Princeton Univer¬sity during the student strike of last May inan effort to elect peace candidates to Con¬gress. MNC chose to involve itself in raceswhich it considered marginal and thought itcould make a difference in the outcome.The apathy among students caused manyobservers to discount thh importance ofMNC in swinging elections one way or an¬other.In the elections, Republicans gained twoseats in the Senate, with one still in doubt.The lineup is 52 Democrats, 45 Republicans,two independents, and one race still indoubt.In the House of Representatives, Demo¬crats have 265 seats, and Republicans 180,a net gain of nine for the Democrats.Democrats also picked up 11 governors’chairs from the Republicans, bringing theirtotal to 29.Carnival atmosphere prevalentat Grant Park march and rallyBy JUDY ALSOFROM“SEED! Only a quarter.”Blue hard hats.“Buy a button for peace. Only 35 cents.”Blue jeans and suede fringes.Leaflets in colors as abundant as thecauses they espouse.“Buy a balloon for peace. Only a quar¬ter.”The scene was not a carnival, but theOctober 31 peace march and rally, spon¬sored by the Peace Action Committee(PAC).The marchers had assembled at the cor¬ner of State and Wacker to start marchingat 1 pm. The operation was well organizedwith an equal number of marshals, medics,signs proclaiming “Support the Kent State25”, and bull horns for everyone from ca¬dence callers (“2, 4, 6, 8, we will not nego¬tiate”) to General Motors strike supporters.A copy of the lawfully permitted routewas passed to everyone, and the crowd ofabout 2000 gathered into the various contin¬gents to head for the rally at the GrantPark band shell.fTV contingents — labor, GI’s and veterans, women, college and high school stu¬ dents, third world groups, religious organ¬izations, political groups, and “peacegroups” (some were bewildered at this de¬signation) — were all united to demand“immediate withdrawl from EoutheastAsia.”Somehow this demand became lost in theconstant cadency of “Support GM work¬ers”, “Abortion is a woman’s right”, “Sup¬port the United Front of Cairo,” and “USImperialism-out of the Middle East.”But the march was peaceful, despite thevarious factions and the “America” —Love it or leave it” contingent who follow¬ed along the route to the band shell, flash¬ing fingers and American flags.The rally consisted of some “radical”guitar music, speakers including a studentsenator from Kent State, a GM rank andfile worker, the ubiquitous Sidney Lens anda Vet for peace who “wanted peace — so,give ’till it hurts.”By the time the third speaker was up, thecrowd started to leave in droves, and if thethought of peace did not stick in theirminds, the SEED salesman was still hawk¬ing his wares at the park gateway to re¬mind them.November 6, 1970/The Chicago Marooo/3« *« p R O F I L ETHE MEASURE OF MAN-1 S # **^5Erik H. Erikson “How else, for example, canpsychiatrists comprehendthe behavior of a Marinecorpsman who charges intoa nest of enemy mines toalmost certain death? Hecannot be called ‘suicidal,’as would a patient who hadbeen depressed for a long timeand finally decided to endit all with a bullet, a leap, orsome pills. Instead, the Marinewould be thought of as noble,courageous—a hero. Why thedifference—if both men areknowingly embracing death?To answer such a question,psychiatrists have to take noteof the values and normsthat nations, churches, andcommunities provide.”Robert Coles,in a two-part Profileof Erik H. Erikson,beginning this weekin The New Yorker.Yes,The New Yorker.doc films Sun., Nov. 8- 7:15 & $:30 $1.00 CobbGIO.CI CUKOS'S film .f LMV.KNCI DU ..ILL'SJUSTINE4/Tbe Chicago Maroon/November 6, 1970Faculty members view outcome of electionBy GORDON KATZAlthough last Tuesday’s election was pro¬ceeded by as much campaign activity asany off-year election, there were no greatsurprises according to five University fac¬ulty members.“I will not be surprised if the net shiftnationally was about one percent,” saidTheodore Lowi, professor of political sci¬ence. ‘‘The two parties are so alike,” headded, “that they’ve managed to kill thetwo major issues war and race aspolitical issues.”Lowi attributed the landslide victory ofSenatorial candidate Adlai Stevenson III tothe machine politics of the Illinois Demo¬cratic Party. “The best vote-getter in thecountry,” he suggested, “is Mayor Daley.”Despite victories in the House and theUniversity President Edward Levi hasproposed major reforms in higher educa¬tion, including awarding college degrees ingeneral education after two years of study.His proposals were outlined in an interimaddress entitled “The Roads and Pur¬poses,” before the annual meeting of theAssociation for General and Liberal Studiesat the Center for Continuing Education.Levi characterized the present period asone requiring “a reexamination of under¬graduate education.” He said, “The burdenon undergraduate education has greatly in¬creased. It is engaged in mass education toan extent never before true, and because itis now mass education, perhaps its pur¬poses must be more diverse than ever be¬fore.”His proposals for reform included• The reintroduction of a degree for gen- acquisition of 11 new governorships, Lowisees the national Democratic party “still aspoverty-stricken as they were before No¬vember 3.” He considers Edward Kennedyas the leading Democratic Presidentialprospect, but thinks that Sargent Shrivermay run instead with Kennedy’s blessing.It seems, says Lowi, that Shriver heavilycontributed to the campaigns of some 100Democratic Congressmen, and the politicaldebt that he has amassed may provide theimpetus for his candidacy.The biggest loser of the election, accord¬ing to Lowi, is New York’s mayor JohnLindsay. Lindsay, he asserts, “would havebeen the most prominant Democratic can¬didate in ‘72 had his endorsement (ArthurGoldberg) won over Rockefeller.”Political science professor Morton Kap-eral education after two years of collegework.• The rearrangement of professionaland graduate work so that they can beginafter this two-year period.• Further reduction in time of muchgraduate and professional work, and the in¬troduction — through joint arrangementsamong some colleges or universities — ofnational examinations administered by anindependent agency, “with the hope thatthese examinations might be sufficientlyuseful so that students and non-studentswould find it desirable to take them.”• Development if many more kinds ofinstitutions, and much more flexibility inthe kinds of programs and means of in¬struction.Levi said, “The colleges and universitiesmay have become the escape and substi¬tute for life, but we should have some way lan, who generally supports the President’sforeign policy, commented that “Nixonmade the mistake of not playing politicswith the war issue.” Republicans were hurtin votes on the economic issue, he said, but“the fact that they lost the elections in theMidwest was due to their abysmally poorcandidates.”Kaplan does not see the President’s chan¬ces for re-election significantly blunted byTuesday’s results. “If Nixon has turned thetide of the economy by ‘72, then there willbe nothing anyone can do,” he said.Commenting on the possibility of substan¬tial progressive inroads within the Daleymachine in light of the Stevenson election,Kaplan noted that “Daley is one of theshrewdest operators that I’ve ever seen.”“If reform is to come,” he continued, “itof saying this isn’t the only way to get aneducation ... the lack of much ex¬perimenting with the opportunity to usenew techniques for instruction seems par¬ticularly surprising.”He added, “ ... We have not achieveddiversity by an institutional approach, andthe attempt to introduce diversity throughthe forced feeding of subsidies for the kindsof programs government and foundationsare likely to favor has probably often re¬duced quality.”He concluded “A more open system hasrisks, but it could reassemble to greateradvantage the strength which is there. Ob¬viously, such an open system, with nationalor independent examinations, with shorteralternative roads, and with the ability toaccommodate more to the student’s ownpace, will not, itself, substitute for the helpwhich education requires at many levels.” will have to be done by someone more in¬telligent than Adlai Stevenson.”The war issue in this election was ex¬cluded by the Administration but accordingto Milton Rosenberg, professor of psy¬chology and a co-author of “Vietnam andthe Silent Majority,” “it’s pretty damnclear that the public wants out.”“Obviously Nixon has defused that oppo¬sition to the war by Vietjiamization and hisfive-point plan,” he observed. “But the waris still very much an issue maybemore than we know.”On the general outcome of the electionnationwide Rosenberg theorized that “withtimes as bad as they are, with such nation¬al disarray, people might vote negativelyevery two years against the party in pow¬er.”John Hope Franklin, Manly distinguishedservice professor of history, describedPresident Nixon’s campaign efforts as “agood example of the President attemptingto purge the Senate.'‘’‘But it is not unusual for Senate purges tobe unsuccessful. Franklin Roosevelt’s pres¬tige was greater than this man’s, but hecouldn’t pull it off in 1938.”Franklin termed the attacks of Vice-President Spiro Agnew against Adlai Ste¬venson and Charles Goodell “obsence,cheap, and tawdry.” “Harry Truman ‘gaveem hell,’ ” Franklin added “but he didn’thave the same tone nor was he as per¬sonal (as Agnew).”The Democrats victory in the Midwest aswell as in other areas is interpreted byAristide Zolberg, professor of political sci¬ence, as a confirmation of the view that“the Democratic party is still the party ofeconomic concerns.”And although the issues of crime and eco¬nomics were predominant in this campaignyear, Zolberg believes that voters “are be¬ginning to be concerned with values otherthan traditional American values.”“To take the election as saying nothing ishappening would be entirely wrong,” Zol¬berg maintains.Gen ed BA in 2 years?Levi sees need for education reformsThe Sidelong GlancesofaPKeonKfckerMeet Jonathan.The very day he graduated Princetonhe became a New York taxi driver.(Then, he met Jennifer.)MGM presents a Saturn Pictures-Lois Holland Callaway ProductionStarring Jordan Christopher JM O’Hara Robert WaldenFeaturing WMam RedfWd Kate Raid Lola NotHelon Bonl Enten Melba Moore Elaine StrRcbNovel by David Royer Screenplay by Ron WhyteExecutive Producer WMiem P. WNeon Produced by Richard Lewie Directed by John DexterCINEMA mMMMMII 7*7-0722 NOW PLAYING5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113 f\ FEi ENRICO* 1411 E. 53rdjl 10%^usriiMUAuTj ■ Discount on* foreign car hospital j Sunday Dinner: “Good Till 12/1/70” ’EY DUCKY! GETYOUR THANG TO-GETHA'ONSTUDENT NITESMON., TUES., WED. FROM 5 PMALL DRINKS WITH I.D. 25*mixed drinks 50cHUGE!PITCHERSof Schlitz Lightr& Dark-Bass Ale-Guiness Stouton Tapm FISH & CHIPSChicken, Pizza,Steakburgers,Spaghetti & Chile.All the peanuts you can eatcompliments of the House.”11you see nothingelse this year,you must seemms pieces.It will not, I think,ever fade frommemory!"—RICHARD SCHICKEL. LiltCOLUMBIA PICTURES Presents a BBS ProductionJACK NICHOLSON * FIVE EASY PIECES ..... Karen Blackand Susan AnSpaCh • Screenplay by Adrien Joyce • Story by Bob Ra<eison and Adrien JoyceProduced by Bob Rafeison and Richard Wechsier • Executive Producer Be*! SchneiderDirected by Bob Ra»eison • COLOR .«»»»»» .„.... . ~A WALTER READS THEATREw ^squire Today at 2:15,4:15,6:15,8:15,10:15 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.ANCHORCAMERA1523 E. 53rd Street752-2228Starts Friday, Nov. 6Bergman'sPERSONA, 7 & 10:30&Cassavete'sFACES, 8:30 pm.Starting Friday, Nov. 13MATA HAM (1931)•tarring Grata Oarfca4wee VS. SCCtETARY (1934)BIOGRAPH THEATER2433 N. LincolnDl 8-4123November 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5The Chicago MaroonSTEVE COOKEditor DON RATNERBusiness ManagerCON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography EditorJUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISMAN, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate EditorsBICK BALSAMO, SARA BEEBE, LISA CAPELL, PAT *COX, REVA FREE OMAN JIM HAEFEME YER, ELSAHERSH, MITCH KAHN, BARRY KELLMAN, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE, KEITH PYLE, JOESARTORELLI, HOUSTON STEVENS, CARL STOVALL, FRED WINSTONStaffCAROLINE HECKSenior Editor DIANA LEIFERAssistant Business ManagerFounded in 1692. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices Inrooms 301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Ml 3-0600, Ext. 3263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per yearin the U.S. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III.The electionsand beyondLast may, when plans were being drawn up for a student blitz ofthe voters for peace candidates, it seemed that Tuesday’s election couldbe a national response to Kent State and Cambodia. Back then, itlooked as if students could confront the nation within the boundariesof the electoral process. The idea was popular enough to warrant spe¬cial election interims at many schools, including this one.In the intervening months between May and November, the focusof many crucial races turned from Vietnam and Indochina, from themurders of students, from the anti-black “Southern strategy” of theNixon administration, to the issue of “law and order.”Students were thrown from the offensive to the defensive in thewake of a widely heralded backlash, and it is not surprising that fewwere enthusiastic about supporting candidates who did not speak outagainst the anti-student hysteria. The Democratic party, conceding“law and order” to the Republicans, brought up the state of the econ¬omy as an issue, and the fervor of May got lost in the shuffle.The election results are inconclusive; the voters gave no clearresponse to the students, nor to Nixon. Peace candidates who were sup¬ported by student volunteers fared differently in different races fora variety of reasons.What is clear is that the Movement for a New Congress failed inits attempt to organize students into an effective political ‘bloc. MNCwanted to be in a position to give favored candidates massive studentvolunteer labor. It didn’t happen, because the students lost interest.We hope that MNC can be effective in the upcoming mayoral andaldermanic races in Chicago, especially if Reverend Jesse Jackson en¬ters the contest for mayor. We hope that MNC has better luck in 1972,because it is a last chance for rapid change within the electoral process.Kent StateIn Kent, Ohio, 25 students have been indicted by a special stategrand jury investigating the fatal shootings last May. At least 11 ofthose students, including Kent’s SG president, h!ave already beenarrested.No National Guardsman has been charged in the incident. It isstill standard practice for the Ohio guard to carry loaded weapons oncampuses, and it is still standard policy to call the guard or the policeonto campuses during demonstrations.Kent State was allegedly an “accident.” It would be easier to be¬lieve that if it hadn’t happened before. We remember a similar incidentlast winter on Chicago’s West Side. Two black men were shot in theirapartment; one of them still in bed. When Fred Hampton and MarkClark died, their comrades were indicted, and their killers went free.The logic which finds the innocent to be the murderers and letsthe guilty go free somehow escapes us. We cannot believe that therewill never be another Kent State, or Jackson State, or Hampton-Clarkstyle killing. We are not convinced that they were freak accidents whilethe guilty go free.It is time to realize that those who call for the arrest of Kent stu¬dents call for future killings. The guilt lies not only with those whopull the trigger, but also with those who encourage them.Student Government is sponsoring a fund-raising effort to raisemoney for the legal defense of the Kent students. A small contributionis the very ieast we can do.6/The Chicago Maroon/November 6, 1970 Jackson expected to announcecandidacy in next mayoral raceBy CARL STOVALLRev Jesse Jackson, national director ofOperation Breadbasket, will announce, pos¬sibly as early as next Saturday’s meetingof the organization, that he will run formayor of Chicago in April.The announcement is expected in spite ofthe fact that many of his closest friends,including Rev Edward Reddick, are knownto be against the move and are counselinghim to hold out and run for some nationaloffice — possibly the vice-presidency.News of the move by Jackson, which hadlong been rumored, and which Jacksonstopped short of announcing on last Satur¬day’s broadcast, was delivered to politicalleaders last Sunday by a well known concon delegate.The Jackson spokesman sought to deter¬mine how receptive other politicians wouldbe to his candidacy and learn what kind ofsupport he could expect from each.Insiders are saying that Jackson’s can¬didacy will be a key element in a strategyby a liberal, independent and black coali¬tion aimed at breaking the hold MayorRichard Daley now has on politics in thisstate.This coalition maintains that the Daleymachine is as weak now as it has everbeen. They say Daley is grooming his sonto succeed him as mayor, but has neglectedto bring any fresh talent in to take over atother levels of his organization — and thatthey must act now to prevent him fromshoring up his defenses for another longsiege.The anti-Daley forces, which will report¬edly receive quiet support from Senator-elect Adlai Stevenson and US Representa¬tive Abner Mikva, point out that blacks,among whom Jackson is understandablyquite popular, now comprise over forty per¬cent of the registered voters in Chicago.They maintain that if Jackson can pull alarge portion of this vote, and win over siz¬able number of liberal and independentwhites; and if the Republicans run a credit¬able candidate who can capture the Polishvote and some of the conservative votefrom the northwest and southwest sides,then he has a better than average chanceof winning.On other possibility is that Jacksonwill run and be beaten by Daley ANALYSISbut will nevertheless demonstrate thatblacks, like other minorities, must be se¬riously dealt with by a politician whoseeks power in the future.The loss by Jackson would still set thestage for a liberal or black candidate totake over when Daley’s new term expired.In order to make a serious run Jacksonwill have to raise around a million dollarsand bring together a campaign team com¬posed of all the powerful forces in theblack community.The feeling among politicians is thatthere is enough hate money and moneyfrom Republicans and others with an inter¬est in defeating Daley that the right candi¬date should have no problem on that ac¬count.Working from his power base with Bread¬basket then, and with help from Playboy’sHugh Hefner, Mayor Stokes of Cleveland,and big money interest from the East, itseems certain that Jackson will raise themillion.But pulling the black community togetheris thought to e a different story. West Sideblacks do not know Jackson nearly as wellas they should if they are to give him mas¬sive support.Jackson’s appeal thus far has mainlybeen to blacks on the South Side and in afew near northside housing projects. TheContract Buyers League feels that he didnot do all he could for them when sheriff’spolice were evicting them in wholesale lotslast spring.Further, Rev Jackson and the sud¬denly powerful independent state senator,Richard Newhouse (24th), who has put to¬gether his own campaign organization, willhave to reach some kind of understandingif Newhouse is to support Jackson.The Jackson campaign, coming in earlyspring, is expected to attract large num¬bers of area college students who areknown to be generally anti-Daley.The nationally prominent Jackson, afriend of the late Rev Dr Martin LutherKing, is quite popular with students be¬cause of his speaking style and anti-estab¬lishment rhetoric.LETTERS TO THE EDITORSMaroon sexism?We the undersigned members of the dele¬gation from the Chicago Women’s Liber¬ation Union and the New University Confer¬ence to the Committee of the Faculty Coun¬cil take strong issue with the October 20Maroon editorial on the Neugarten Report.We recognize the prerogative of a freecampus press to take a stand “pushing theacceptance of the Report.” However, it isgrossly unfair to charge “that the net effectof the criticism by the New University Con¬ference has been to delay acceptance ...(emphasis added).”We point out that not only NUC but alsothe Women’s Union and other campusgroups and persons are concerned with theReport’s shortcomings.The temporary effect we have had is todelay codification of an official Universityposition on the status of women. We opposepassage of the Neugarten Report becauseits analysis and recommendations are tooinadequate to break through the prevailinginertia about the problems of all Universitywomen.The Report pledges the University to nostructured guarantees that the dis¬crimination documented in the Report willbe corrected. Its charge to a standing com¬mittee on women is abysmally vague.Our proposals to the Committee of theCouncil, which we hope to bring to the fullCouncil, are a modest attempt to amelior¬ate the problems. These proposals are not,by any stretch of the imagination, flamingradical proposals.Hpoop our efforts rporogont a npooccarydelay. It purpose is to allow proper deliber¬ ation upon issues and perspectives of gravemoment to a whole generation of womenfaculty and staff and several generations ofwomen students.The net effect of the NUC summer ofanalysis of the Report and months of inde¬pendent discussion in the Union will be tosuggest concrete beginning steps to meetthe needs of women here.We should like to point out that strongerproposals are advocated independently bythe Women’s Union in their petition whichhas already received several hundred sig¬natures. Comprehensive child care, gyne¬cological care, women’s studies, and ad¬missions and hiring parity are proposed inthis petition.It is available in the Mandel corridor orthe Blue Gargoyle. The growing support forit is proof many persons, not just “somecampus radicals,” object to the flaccidityof the Neugarten Report recommendations.In closing we want to say that to suggestthat the net effect of our efforts is a need¬less delay is to refuse to recognize thegravity of the situation. Such a refusal im¬plies there is sexist bias among the Maroonstaff. We trust that unbiased readers willagree.Candy FalkSara HeslepMarge WittyEditor’s note: It seems incredible that wecould be charged with sexism for support¬ing the Neugarten report.In that report, great differences werefound in the numbers of women employedas faculty compared to men, in the num¬bers nf women receiving financial aid, andContinued on page IV'.Vir.L v :c i > v •.*.». .».*■ -* tri n • * ;ABOUT THE MIDWAYFaculty grantsTwenty-two members of the faculty inthe College have been awarded researchgrants for 1970-71 from funds provided bythe Inland Steel-Ryerson Foundation.The grants will enable three of the facul¬ty members to be relieved of their teachingduties for one academic quarter to conductresearch.Four other faculty members have re-cieved summer quarter research grants of$1,000 to $2,200. Others will receive grantsof $200 to $600.The funds for the grants are part of theInland Steel-Ryerson Foundation’s $500,000pledge to the University announced on Feb¬ruary 7,1966.The three recipients of the one-quarterout-of-residence grants are Donald Shee¬han, assistant professor of English; Rich-art Taub, assistant professor of sociology,and Reuben Smith, assistant professor ofhistory and dean of students in the divisionof the social sciences.Sheehan will devote his time to a study ofcontemporary poetry.Taub will study the implementation ofgovernment programs in India and thequestion of local compliance or noncom¬pliance with these programs.Smith will begin work on a comparativestudy of Muslim local governments in themedieval period.Hospital grantA $50,000 grant by Standard Oil (Indiana)Foundation to Chicago Dr Frederick Zus-pan, professor and chairman of the depart¬ment of obstetrics in the Pritzker school ofmedicine, was announced recently.Dr Peter Wolkonsky, representing thefoundation, said the grant was made “as aninvestment in human resources, to helpChicago lying-in hospital continue its pro¬ grams of medical care for all women re¬gardless of financial means, race, creedor color.”The grant is unrestricted, Dr Wolkonskysaid, except that it may not be used forendowment purposes.In accepting the grant for Chicago Lying-in Hospital, Dr Zuspan said, “This granthelps enable us here at Chicago lying-inhospital to continue our traditions ofpatient care, education, and research be¬gun 75 years ago by Dr Joseph BolivarDeLee, founder of the hospital.”College evaluationsThe first college-wide course and teacherevaluation, covering spring ’70 quarter,was distributed this week.Issues will be put out quarterly with backcopies available on reserve in the library.This quarter, questionnaires will be dis¬tributed during the ninth and tenth weeksof classes.Four students were appointed by dean ofthe College Roger Hildebrand to managethe evaluation: A1 Shpuntoff, ’71, HollyHartstone, ’71, both of whom are on thedean’s advisory committee; Janet Pine, ’73and Phil Burstein, ’71.The first issue, although the copy wasready September 1, had publication diffi¬culties. The examiner’s office, which pub¬lished it, lacked the facilities to prepare thematerial in the planned two weeks, saidShpuntoff.In a meeting Wednesday the committeewill decide who will publish the evaluationnext quarter as well as review the issueand the questionnaire.If a faculty member wishes to see theactual response forms, Shpuntoff said, theyare available at the committee offices. Re¬sponses submitted confidentially will not bereleased.Continued on page 9Joan Baez SingsSTARTLING INTIMACY ABOUT THISEXCELLENT PORTRAIT OF JOAN -.AND HER HUSBAND THEY AREBEAUTIFUL PEOPLE ("-Judith CnstA TREAT FORTHE BAEZ BRIGADE!"— Bob Salmaggi, Group W NetworkDavid Harris Raps:“IT MUST BE A MILESTONE... AMOVIE FULL OF YOUNG PEOPLEWHO DISCUSS REVOLUTIONWITHOUT PROSELYTIZINGFOR DRUGS AND SEXI”—Bract Willitmton, Playboy“THIS SHOULD BE REQUIRED VIEWING ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES THIS FALL,REQUIRED BY REVOLUTIONARY LEADERS, BECAUSE IT IS ONE OF THE MOSTPRACTICAL, EFFICIENT, UNHOKED-UP FILMS EVER MADE I" -John sci.ub.ck. wabc-tvHenry G. SapersteinpresentsThe New Film CompanyProduction DavM Harris MC&ffy it @11 ” MAIN STREET, ILLINOIS: A familiar scene while traveling downstate. steve Aok;as taught by Maharishi Mahesh YogiIntroductory meetingMon., November 9 8 pm.SOC. SCI. AUDITORIUM Consideryourselfa crateof eggs.As a crate of eggs, there’salways the danger of becom¬ing an omelet. But in aRenault 16 you wouldn’t haveto worry. It has a unique 4-wheel independent suspensionsystem that has caused RoadTest Magazine to write: "theride of the Renault 16 can becompared only with that ofthe Rolls Royce, Mercedes, orCitroen.”Which should be of greatcomfort to any crate of eggs,let alone ahumanbeing. RENAULT#!STARTS WED.(Now showing: 5 last daysJon Voight inTHE REVOLUTIONARY)2424 N. Lincoln ooemy Student RateFree Parking $1. 50Tel.: 528-9126 KM 1 KJ at all times Students' International Meditation Society“SENATOR CHARLES ‘Three’s-a-Crowd’ Percy says he will sponsora bill in the 92nd Congress to limitthe number of income tax exemp¬tions for children to two, becausewhat with the population explosionand the pablum shortage two chil¬dren p?' family should become ‘away of life in America.’ SenatorDooley Mossback (I., Confusion),meanwhile, will propose legiststion requiring t/ieCgovernment toW0' ° fr” ‘°P» ofminditsowngod-W»*l'°"“. . ,, BVIEW, writ.: D*pt.dam business. ■„ lj0 ( 3J Str„,N. Y. 10014. say“i love you”with a diamond fromL 0*MrJJUJJLFINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARSU9 H Wibisl! 3t WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA Jceilu-3mport5,Jrnc.2347 So. Michiganfei. 326-2550November 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7mmmm free ,fs:K Nrst-DQy.rnryo/H Unijf sx^onoc >°ona HBSyiwWSSst, ®'°n rT^excr.Lm.ui..t.i"<t>^. /P*>P 0/?%vL Vi,*; ^ | On Friday, November 20, l| there will be a discussion for || all U of Chicago seniors on |? "Professional and Graduate || Opportunities". The discussion || will include information on ap- | MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILY| plications, requirements, || deadline dates, financial aid, |V . ^ | and information for minority f1 AmCuriousblue' § group students. § DRIVE A YELLOW“You’ve seen Curious (Yellow),but you haven’t seenANYTHING till you’ve seenCurious (Blue) ’’plus second big featureThe Affairs ol Aphrodite” | This meeting will be held from || 12:00-1:30 pm in the Reynolds || Club, Mandel Hall, located at || 5706 South University. | Short or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. If you know a girlconsidering anABORTIONthis message mighteven save her life!It is no longer necessary for unfortunate girls to be ruthlessly exploitedfor profit by quacks and inept butch¬ers. Now they can have perfectlylegal abortions under strict hospitalcare. The new California TherapeuticAbortion Act provides that all services be performed by physicians inaccredited hospitals.Last year it is estimated some700,000 illegal abortions were performed in the United States. Almostwithout exception exorbitant priceswere charged, hospital facilitieswere not available and a completemedical staff was not present tocope with emergencies.Some of those girls died unnecessarily. Others suffered severe mfections. Still others will never againbe able to bear a child due to incompetent treatmentThe National Abortion Council forTherapeutic Abortions and FamilyPlanning wants to make sure thatall girls receive humane and samtary treatment YOU CAN HELP.If you know of a pregnant girl whois considering sneaking off to haveher abortion in a germ infectedapartment or office tell her to callus. Our counseling service is freeWe recommend only:the most reputable physicians; doctors offering fair and reasonableprices; services which will be com¬pletely within the law; services per¬formed at accredited hospitals.PHYSICIANS WITH A GENUINEAND HUMANE INTERESTPhone: (213)464-4177NATIONAL ABORTION COUNCILfor Therapeutic Abortion* andFamily Planning1717 North Highland AvenueHollywood, California 90028GOOD SKATSAT BOX OFFICtCroat Jala*: fN*,Mary Marlin. Mt-ml■LACKSTONE THEATRE*0 I. Seiko Cf MHOKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.684-68568/The Chicago Maroon/November 6, 1970ABOUT THE MIDWAYContinued from page 7Science workshopThe third in a series of three public con¬ferences and workshops dealing with thesocial implications of science will be heldSaturday at 2 pm in Mandel Hall.The program theme is “Science, Societyand Survival: A Long-Range View.” Theconference will begin with formal state¬ments by three scientists: Kenneth Bould-ing, economics professor in the Institute ofBehavioral Sciences at the University ofColorado; Gerald Feinberg, physics profes¬sor at Columbia; and Stephen Berry, pro¬fessor of chemistry and in the JamesFranck Institute at the University.Some of the questions will include:• How can science and its consequencesbe assimilated into society without destroy¬ing values and quality of life?• Should we establish institutions tocope with these problems and what sort ofinstitutions might they be?• What kind of life style is compatiblewith planning?• What kind of life style is compatiblewith our survival?Admission is by ticket. Free tickets areavailable at the information desk in the adbuilding.Enrollment figuresUniversity enrollment reached a peak of7658 registered students the third week ofthis quarter, and will decrease to between7500 and 7550 students by December, ac¬cording to dean of students CharlesO’Connell.O’Connell explained that a decline in en¬rollment usually takes place during the sec¬ond half of a quarter, because more stu¬dents are dropping out than are registeringlate. A final count will be made at the endof the quarter.The enrollment figure for December 1969 was 8163. Budget calculations of lastJanuary were based on an expected enroll¬ment of 8300, and the decrease has createdsevere financial difficulties.The enrollment decrease has been mostnoticeable in the graduate divisions.O’Connell said that the number of new stu¬dents in the divisions had actually in¬creased, but that a suprisingly large num¬ber of returning students had not regis¬tered.O’Connell speculated that many graduatestudents with high lottery numbers werenot registering because they no longerneeded draft deferments.He said that doctoral candidates in par¬ticular could do their research without reg¬istering by paying a $15 per quarter fee forthe use of library facilities.He added that he would try to establishwhether there had been an increase in thenumber of persons paying the library fee.Council delegationA delegation opposed to the passage ofthe Neugarten report on University womenmay be allowed to testify before the councilof the University senate Tuesday when itmeets to consider the report.The delegation includes members of theNew University Conference (NUC) and theChicago Women’s Liberation Union(CWLU), who have criticized the report be¬cause it allegedly failed to uncover a largeamount of discrimination by the Universityagainst women. They had asked the com¬mittee of the council that they be per¬mitted to testify against it at the councilmeeing.The committee agreed Wednesday to rec¬ommend that the group be allowed topresent its arguments at the meeting.The delegation also plans to put forwardproposals at the meeting. These include theelection of a standing University committeeon women’s affairs, a University day careStation JBD Restauranthappily announces a new(5500 S. Shore Drive) andfreshly decorated location(Flamingo Hotel).Our Roast Prime Rib ofBeef has pleasfed the HydePark community since 1944.Our Red Snapper in capersor wine sauce is only one ofour fish specialties. HotCrabmeat au Gratin willreally challenge your appe¬tite AND your taste buds.(If you know a GOODcocktail when you taste it,you only need to tell us howyou want it.)Reservations are recom¬mended, but not always nec¬essary.'■^station Call BU 8-9241I!"flnnouncuuf..THE BESTFOOD AND DRINKSIN TOWN Buss BartoStation JBD center, a women’s studies program run bywomen, and a greater percentage of wom¬en faculty in each department..These proposals must be made by a coun¬cil member before they can be voted upon.A petition being distributed by CWLUcontains stronger proposals. It demandsfree gynecological and obstetrical servicesfor staff women, paid maternity leave, andparity in admissions, faculty appointments,and the granting of tenure and financialaid.Students' rights“Students’ Rights — or Wronged Stu¬dents?”, a forum sponsored by the HydePark-Kenwood Chapter of the ACLU, willbe held this Sunday at 3 pm in the LutheranSchool of Theology, 55th Street and Univer¬sity.Robert Mann, State Representative, willmoderate the forum. Darlene Cathcart,part of an American Bar Foundation re¬search team inquiring into the legal prob¬lems of public education, and FrancisSchrag, assistant professor of education atthe University, will be featured speakers.Four others will join these for a paneldiscussion.For more information call: Sue AnnSpencer, 288-8679 or 726-3378.Booth contest winnersFour freshmen have been awarded mone¬tary prizes in the Wayne Booth recovery ofmeaning contest.Booth, Pullman professor of English andformer dean of the College, offered $25 tothe freshman who wrote the best 250 wordprecis of his Aims of Education speech.Booth as contest chairmen and sole judgeawarded $25 each to Rachel Turner andDan Abraham. Abraham’s summary wasin the form of two sonnets.David Kalow and Douglas Unger re¬ceived $5 consolation prizes. SportsThe Maroon varsity soccer team scoredanother victory Wednesday, beating Du-Page College 3-2, and making its seasonrecord five wins, three losses, and two ties.The team, which has only four up¬perclassmen, could develop into one of thefinest ones in the 24-year history of varsitysoccer here, according to coach Bill Vendl.It has already broken 14 team and individ¬ual records.The next soccer game will be againstTrinity College, Tuesday at 2 pm on StaggField.Meanwhile the Maroon football teamwent down to its fifth defeat against onlyone win Friday, losing to Northeastern 14-12. Bob Sullentrap and Larry Wooddellscored the Maroon touchdowns.The team’s next game will be at Wheatontoday. The last game of the season will beat home on November 14.Theater of possibilitiesThe Theater of all Possibilities, a SantaFe based group currently on a nationaltour, is presenting three plays in Chicagothis week.Next Sunday, Wednesday, and Saturday,November 14 they will stage Moliere’s“Don Juan.” They will present a new-agedrama “Tamarand” Monday and Thurs¬day, and another new-age drama “Guru”Tuesday and Friday.They will be shown at 8:30 pm at theKingston Mines Theater, 2356 N Lincoln.Admission is $2.50.This Friday at 8 pm the Theater of AUPossibilities will perform both “Tama¬rand” and “Guru” at Roosevelt University.Admission is $1 for students and faculty.India Association PresentsAn Award Winning MovieSAHB BIBIAUR GULAMFriday, Nov. 6, 7:30 pm atMandel HallCOMPARE PRICESHelp beat the Establishment!Corolla Pinto Volkswagen Vega*1942” $2292K *2334“ *2628,s(Volkswagen 1970 price; all others 1971 price)The Corolla price includes only stan¬dard equipment; the other prices in¬clude options whiJi must be added tobare 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 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.November 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/9O 1 OlA'Ot'V « !-LETTERS TO THE EDITORSContinued from page 6in the status of women in the University ingeneral.We feel, as we have stated before, thatthe Neugarten report does not close thedoor to further demands for dealing withthe needs of women, but that it is an im¬portant first step toward defining the prob¬lem.To imply that the staff members of thispaper are biased due to an editorial posi¬tion is a grave charge. We would expectthat such an allegation had further proof.As it stands, it is our policy to be as fair todifferent positions as facilities permit, re¬gardless of the editorial stance of the Ma¬roon. Frederika's buildingIn the Flynn-Daly Show on television(ABC — Channel 7) at 6 and 10 pmWednesday, following an interview byFrank Mathis, a “spokesman for the Uni¬versity of Chicago was quoted by Mr Dalyas making the statement that “the Univer¬sity is in compliance with the law” with-reference to the taking by the City of Chi¬cago of the 60th to 61st Sts — CottageGrove to Storny Island Aves redevelop¬ment project, and of the parcels therein, as“slum and blighted” under eminent domainfor the benefit of the University.I would like to suggest that the Univer¬sity of Chicago please support this state-BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, November 6MUSLIM PRAYERS: Dr Fazlur Rahman, professor ofIslamic Studies, will lead regular Friday prayers,room A, I House, 1:10 p.m.MEETING: Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars,5736 Wood lawn, 4 pm.SEMINAR: Prof Soewito, "Islamization of Indonesian-Malay Literature," South Asia Seminar, FosterLounge, 4:10 pm.FILM: "Sahab Bitoi Aur Gulam," India Association,Mandel, 7:30 pm, members 75c, others $1.25.DISCUSSION: Henry Bucher and Wandile Kusa, U ofWise., "Israel and South Africa," Crossroads andUniversity African Studies Group, 5621 Blackstone,8 pm.TRAVELOGUE: "The Eastern Mediterranean," Inter,national House Ass'n, Home Room, 8 pm, students50c, others $1.ART EXHIBIT: "Tzedakah: Justice—the Eternal Chal¬lenge," Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn, now untilNovember 21.REPORT: by William Aron of Community and FamilyStudies, available free to students, SocSci 312.Saturday, November 7WORKSHOP-CONFERENCE: Al Raby, "Schools: In¬novation through Action," Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Conference, lounge of Lutheran School ofTheology, 9:30 am to 12:30 pm.CHESS: tournament, UC vs Roosevelt U, and clubmeeting, Ida Noyes East Lounge, 1 pm.PERFORMANCE: San Francisco Mime Troop, Mandel,8 pm, students $2.50, others $3.50.Sunday, November 8UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Prof FazlurRahman of University department of near easternlanguages and civilizations, sermon: "Moral Tension and Human Conduct in the Quran," RockefellerChapel, 11 am.REHEARSAL: Carmina Burarta (worldly songs of themonks of Benediktbeuren, setting by Carl Orff), BlueGargoyle, 2 pm, all welcome.LECTURE: S N Joshi, "Classical Music of India,"Assembly Hall, International House, 7 pm, free.FILM: "The New Jewish Radicals" with discussion,Jewish Radical Action Group, Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn, 8 pm.DRAMA: "Don Juan" (in English), "Tamarand" and"The Guru," Theater of All Possibilities, KingstonMines Theater, 2556 North Lincoln, 525-9893, 8 pm,today through November 14.Monday, November 9MEETING: to organize tennis club, open to staff,students, and faculty, Bartlett Gym, 4 pm.MEETING: to plan intramural chess tournament, 2ndfloor Ida Noyes, 7 pm.REHEARSAL: Allegro Conspirito practices sight read¬ing, all singers welcome, Brent House, 5540 SouthWoodlawn, 7:30 to 9:30 pm.MEETING: introduction to Transcendental Meditation,Students International Meditation Society, Social Sci¬ences auditorium, 8 pm.DISCUSSION: Aaron Segal, editor of Africa Report,"Portuguese Colonial Wars in Africa: How long CanPortugal Hold Out?," Gates-Blake 321, noon, bringyour own bag lunch, coffee available.Tuesday, November 10RECITAL: Edward Mondello, "Backstage with theOrganist," demonstration and recital. RockefellerChapel, 12:15 pm.DISCUSSION: Muriel Beadle, "A Child's Mind," SinaiSisterhood, 5350 South Shore Dr. 12:30 pm, $1(dessert luncheon).MEETING: Outing Club, to plan backpacking trip toOzarks over Thanksgiving, Ida Noyes library, 8 pm.Cliff's Notes always the rightprescription when you needhelp in understanding litera¬ture Prepared by educatorsEasy to use Titles available nowcover nearly 200 frequentlyassigned playsand novelsLookfor theCliff s Notes First AidStation whereverbooks are sold Cnly $1 each. from lop to bottomAn absolute casser of a sweater...pure Shetlandwool...over the most improbabU patterned wash pantsever devised bv man. The sweater-in cork, raspberrv.loganberry. SIT: the frieht pants. b\ H.I.S..810In the Hyde Park Shopping Center55th & Lake Park Phone 752-8100weekdays & Saturdays 9 to 6Thursday 9 to 9 Fridays 9 to 710/TTie Chicago Maroon/November 6, 1970 ment by informing us with which law forthe taking of “slum and blighted areas”under eminent domain it is in compliance.I in turn stand ready to cooperate byshowing through the columns of the Ma¬roon or in public debate with representa¬tives of the University of Chicago and/or ofthe corporation counsel of the City of Chi¬cago that the only laws governing the tak¬ing of “slum and blighted areas” undereminent domain have apparently beenoverlooked in the condemning of the 60th —Cottage Grove strip and of its parcels,thereby violating the Constitution of theUnited States and of Illinois.This would seem to make the taking ofthe strip null and void and therefore im¬proper for Federal funding.I am making these suggestions throughthe Maroon because of the Maroon’s oppo¬sition over the years to the unfortunate re¬sults of the extensive demolition as suf¬fered by students and blacks.Now it seems that the eviction of some6600 Chicago citizens for displacement, al¬legedly into slums, has been illegal, andtherefore immoral, and so in violation ofthe pronouncement and policy of PresidentLevi that basic morality is an in¬dispensable foundation for the intellectualworth of a University.Frederika BlanknerFrederika Blankner, an alumna of theUniversity and a retired professor fromAdelphi, is the landlord of the apartmentbuilding at 6043-5 Woodlawn, the last onestanding on that block. Over the past two years she has beenwaging a battle against the city and thedepartment of urban renewal in her effortsto keep them from tearing it down.She claims that for DUR to tear downbuildings, relocate residents and sell landto a private institution (in this case, theUniversity) under the power of “eminentdomain” is unconstitutional. She chargedthat the city has tried to “railroad” her byoffering less than adequate compensation,for her building.The case is now before the Illinois su¬preme court, and Miss Blankner filed herbrief yesterday on the appeal to save herbuilding, which was ordered condemned bythe lower court.Help Kent 25First they came for the radicals, but weare not radicals, so we did not protest.Then they came for the students, startingwith Greg Morgan, president of the StudentGovernment at Kent State, and 24 others.Next they will come for the faculty. Andperhaps the faculty plan to wait until theIllinois legislature once again appoints in¬vestigators to sit in on their classes.But for those who don’t want to wait,your help is needed now. Contributions canbe made payable to the Kent Legal defensefund and be sent to Student Government,via faculty exchange.NSA DelegatesMichael Fowler, John Siefert,David Bensman, Mike Rainey,Verne CulbersonFar East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fri. & Sat. 12-12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd.955-2229***************** ********** TWO INTERESTING SELLING IPOSITIONS FOR WOMAN'S *SPORTSWEAR AND BOU-*J TIQUE MERCHANDISE. $* PART TIME. APPLY MR* STEPHEN******* SEDER'S, INC2327 EAST 71 ST STREET SimcaSunbeamAdlwhWSoki&Wvk*New & Used CarsExpert Body & Fender WorkComplete Foreign Car ServiceQuick Dependable MechanicalServiceDaily 8:30 - 8:30Sat. 8:30 - 6:00Sun. 12 noon - 5:00HYDE PARK AUTO IMPORTS6900 S Cottage Grove 643-6100D & S BellShell ServiceTune-ups -Brakes -MufflersTires -Batteries -AccessoriesTowing & Road ServiceMechanic on DutyUntil 10 P.M.“Buy Shell from BeT5200 S. Lake Park493-5200:********** **************$©Phoenix Eye Viewof Times Past vtcioffltn KxxrpeopleVICTORIAN PEOPLEA Reassessment of Persons and Themes1851-1867 Revised EditionAsa Briggs“The historian, and the general reader willequally enjoy this book, from the pages ofwhich the high noon of Victoria’s reign shinesforth into our less confident age.”—Hans Kohn,New York Times Book Review. $2.45THE WESTWARD CROSSINGSBalboa, Mackenzie, Lewis and ClarkJeannette MirskyA narrative account of three episodes in the exploration of North America whichhas become a primary source in American history. “Has the freshness and vigorwhich comes from enthusiasm combining with intellectual mastery of the subject.”—E. B. Garside, New York Times. $3.45TO THE ARCTIC!The Story of Northern Exploration from Earliest Times to the PresentJeannette MirskyThe wealth of the North, the hope of a northern passage to the Orient, and thecuriosity of the explorer have drawn men to the Arctic. Miss Mirsky chroniclestheir adventures and discoveries from the first earthbound expeditions of the an¬cient Greeks to the early flights of the 1940s. $3.45The University of Chicago PressPhoenix Paperbacks(The Maroon Classified Ads)HARRY WILSON! WHERE WERE YOU WHEN WE NEEDED YOU.HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - BirchS45/TON DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESpecial Student RatesFOR SALE3 bedroom house, 6 mi. SE Univer¬sity 138 mo. Assume 1961 mortgage.$1700 Down, 221-7784Blue Cadel Coat complete withbrass — big heavy, warm. Call 493-1403. Price Negotiable.Black leather coat $25, SA 1-6157Free Kittens, 7 weeks, male & fe-male. Trained. 684-0753Biggest Jean selection, wranglers$4.98, turtlenecks $1.99. John's MensStore. 1459 E. 53rd.'49 NASH - EXCELLENT CONDI¬TION40,000 MILES - $550. 2 LEATHERJACKETS SIZE 42, $20 EACH.CALL CHUCK UP 8-7846^ARStor the musicrecords/tapes/and so forth2201 north sedgwtckChicago 60614/312-S2S-982S|uat around the comer. STEREO COMPONENTS at lowestprices. Save up to 40% on Sony,Kenwood, KLH, AR, DYNA, & Dualat Musicraft. Campus rep, Bob Ta¬bor, 363-4555.DISPLAY COPY SALEThe Student Coop sells new recordsat good prices. You can order al¬most any record in print or selectfrom our modest but interestingstock.W e display stock bv removingrecords from their jackets and put¬ting the jackets in bins. The recordsare never handled before you getthem. Any record (ordered or fromour stock) which is defective maybe exchanged for another copy ofthe same album. These displaycopies get shopworn from handling. . . the records are new. To rotateour displayjackets , we are havinga sale of these pop. blues, and jazzissues. You might find a recordyou've been looking for. $5.98 to$3.39. $4.98 to $2.80. STUDENTCOOP REYNOLDS CLUB.CATSTwo affectionage, cute 1-year-oldcats need new home (or homes)Call Wendy at 955-0348. Leave mes¬sage.PEOPLE WANTEDPAINTING WANTED by ex-perienced student. 955-5014, ask forVicPart-time work available for am¬bitious college students or organiza¬tions. For information write CMR,P.O. Box 20377 Indianapolis, In¬diana, 46220.SEEK CAMPUS REPS — CARS INEUROPE. Students 8. campus orga¬nizations to represent U.S. firm forrental and purchase of tax free carsin Europe for students and faculty.Earn flat fee. Substantial bonusearnings plan also available. Forapplication write: Dir. Student-Fac¬ulty Programs, Car-Tours in Eu¬rope, 555 Fifth Ave., NY NY 10017. Will do minor alterations, zippers,hems. Efficient 8< reasonable. x6487'Days only.RUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EX¬PERIENCED NATIVE. Trial lesson— no charge. Days Call 236-1423.Eve. 363-2174I babysit in my home during aft.,only 2 childrn,-over 2 yrs. Call aft.5pm, 324-2329. Also tutor Span, read-ing and conversation.SPACEApt. to Share; own large bedroom.Suitable for single or couple. Nearcampus, stores, $58-month & Utili-ties. 955-8137Swell 3J room apt $95-month, greatlocation, available Nov. 1 Call 955-0848 anytimeSUBLET Sunny 4 room apt. near54th 8< Harper. Available Dec. 1BU 8-3281 REPORT"Radical Ideology on the Universityof Chicago Campus". Free copy toStudents. Soc Sci 312MIKLOS JANCSOEastern Europe's finest living direc¬tor. See his best film. The Red 8cWhite, at Cobb on Saturday at 7 8c9:15 by CEFKAZOO FEZZESSCENESWomen's Place From A Chauvin¬ist's Point of View. The MimeTroupe performs Saturday at 8."ISRAEL 8. SOUTHERN AFRICA"discussion of political 8c economicrelationships. Tonite 8 pm at Cross¬roads. 5621 S. BlackstoneSUNNY EASTERN MEDITERRA¬NEAN Films, International HouseAssn 1414 E. 59th, 8 pm, Nov 6. Stu¬dents $.50, others $1.00The Original Guerrilla Theater SanFrancisco Mime Troupe.GAY LIB CHICAGO CIRCLEAnnouncesThe FALL DANCEfeaturingTHE TELSTARSaturday, November 149 pm to 1 am$1 Illinois Room663-2645 750 S. Halsted"PORTUGUESE COLONIAL WARSIN AFRICA" by Aaron Segal, ed."AFRICA REPORT" Mon. Nov 9,12N Gates-Blake 321. Bring yourlunch.Come and see The San FranciscoMime Troupe eat the rich and freethe poor. Mandel. Sat 8 pm "Chicago students are — how doyou say — yellow bellied Reds"— Unknown PasserbyNow, one time only, sumptuous offi¬cial red fezzes with yellow tasselsfor students with kazoos or other fit¬ting instruments, planning to par¬ticipate in the display of kazooistryat the Nov. 14 game. Free to thosebringing instruments — 50 cents toothers. Available Nov. 13 Rm 209,Ida Noyes, 9-5.FOOTBALL OPRESSIONIn 1969, UC was smotched by aheartless Lake Forest team. No al¬lowance was made for our defense—or offense, either — and the team,alas, was afforded no protection bythe dreaded Kazoo Marching Band.The resulting score has been lost tohistory, expunged from the officialrecords. Don't let this happen again.The Kazoo Band marches again atthe last game of the season. Sat.Nov. 14, 1:30 pm, against the unrea¬soned oppression of the Lake ForestNeanderthals.PERSONALSLost KittyKat. Large Male Siam.Seal Pt. "Soren", lost beg. interim.Reward. HY3-8085.Coming to Blue Gargoyle Nov 9thCraft Coop. Mon-Wed-Fri 3rd fl.Open 11:30-2:30. Info-PL 2-4953.What does THE PUB have that theothers don't? How about FREEPEANUTS and a large pitcher ofSchlitz for $1.75!!! WE'D LIKE YOU TO JOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITHasan ORDAINED MINISTERWITH A RANK OFDOCTOR OF DIVINITY'And y* shall know tho truth and th* truth shallmako you frto' John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who believe as we do, to joinus in the holy search for Truth. We believe that all men should seekTruth by all just means. As one of our ministers you can-.1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for exemption fromproperty and other taxes.3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiasticpowers.4. Get sizeable cash grants for doing our missionarywork.5. Seek draft exemption as one of our working mis¬sionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, theaters, etc.,give reduced rates to ministersGET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinity and I.D.card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use when you wish to ordainothers. Your ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere in thiscountry. Your money back without question if your package isn'teverything you expect it to be. For an additionaPSIO we will sendyour Ordination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHBox 1393, Dept. G9, Evanston, III. 60204Name.Address.City StateZip..$10 end. □ (no frames) $20 end. □ (frames)Contemporary European Films present: Saturday, Nov. 7Cobb Hall THE RED & THE WHITEA Story of the Bolshevik Revolution7:00 & 9:15Double Bed — 1 week old. Orig. $90• Now $60. 643-8170Component System 2ADC303A spksGarrard Lab 80 Turntable Olson 60watt Amp 8< AMFM Receiver Circa$325. Call Jerry 752-6422 Also '65Ford Galaxie. Haggle. Around $850Will Bargain — ArgueCapro Super 8 Movie Cam-E. Eye,4x1 Zoom, 3-speed, case 8. strap.$160 or best. 288-0436 eves.Free baby Gerbils. 324-1172'65 SUNBEAM Imp. Rec. eng., o.h,new clutch. Runs great. Best Offer.SO 8-8013.TIm URivtrstty sf GkloagcROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59fh Sfroot at Waodlow* Av*.Sunday • Nov. 15 • 3:30 P.M.SiettteEm IrittarlffBfiwptkm*Johannes BrahmsRichard vikstromDirectorTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 50 members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRABARBARA PEARSON, SoprenoARTHUR BERG, BaritoneTICttITS: Reeerved $8.00$4.00UC Connected*3*°UC Students *250On sale at:ReynoldsChib Desk57th Streetand UniversityCooley’s Corner5211S. HarperWoodworth’sBookstore1311L 57th Street Need part-time aft. ass't. in Dentaloffice. Will train qual. person. HPBk. Bldg. Ml 3-9607.Wanted: Consequent Secularist whothinks science has the answer to hu¬man trouble — to defend his posi¬tion before Christian students. Mustbe antichristian and articulate. Noagnostics need apply. State creden¬tials and main tenets briefly. Sendto Dr C. Seerveld, Trinity Col.,Palos Heights, III, 50463Expienced bookkeeper wanted partor full time. Scandinavian ImportSystems, 5300 S. Lake Park, 667-7000.1 or 2 roommates wanted to shareDelux So Shore apt. Avail. Jan 1,rent $185. Bob 221-5842Weekends-must have real estateand/or sales experience. Assist man¬ager with model home traffic. Sala¬ry or commission, excellent oppor¬tunity. Call Mr. Rothberg after 12noon, 538-8597AMBITIOUS STUDENTSEarn $$$ in spare time. Sell 8 trackstereo tapes. Lowest prices ever.Campus Tapes, Ltd.588-3212 9-5Staff, Students, Participate in ex¬periment on the perception ofspeech. $1.75 for an hour's work.On campus. Call X4710 for an ap-pointment.Subjects needed for eye test. $5 forone hour. Ext 5650SITTER NEEDED. Mother with 4-5yr. old girl to sit for same MORN-INGS. Call 955-9519 eves.WANTED: Someone to take mydorm contract (in any dorm) so Ican get out. Linda x3776, Rm 304TWO STUDENTS to work with Chi¬cago Rep. 5-10 hr/week.Travel-car provided.Send resume by Nov. 11 to:George Ladner5540 Hyde Park Blvd. Suite 732Challenging work — $3-hr. and up.Further info: 288-8627PEOPLE FOR SALEAWAY WINTER QTR? Very reliablestaff couple will look after yourHyde Park apt. x8473Moderate moving 8> redecorating.Call SA1-6157 COFFEE HOUSE, 9 pm & follow¬ing. Sit, talk relax. BonhoefferHouse 5554 S. Woodlawn. Saturdayevenings.A New Exhibit at Hillel. TZEDA-KAH: JUSTICE — THE ETERNALCHALLENGE Graphics in allmedia, all tor sale. Until 11-21 only.YOGA single/group Exerc. Mdtn.Contrn. Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155.INDIAN COOKING CLASS — $40 —8 weeks. Contact 955-9812Allegro Conspirito invites you tosing with us. We will learn to sight-read, and try anything you like.Brent House, 5540 S. Woodlawn 7:30Mondays.First Concert-Musical Society, Hild-ner, Vasquez, Libin Trio. French-English Baroque. Friday Nov 6,8:30. Bond ChapelAMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIESUNION Willard Lasser will talk onacademic freedom and the politicalnature of the university. BonnoefferHouse, 6:30 p.m., Sunday, Novem-ber 8, 5554 S. Woodlawn.Everything you wanted to know butwere afraid to ask about the Catho¬lic Church. Calvert House, Tuesdayevenings, 7:00 Come with your ques-tions.SYNCHRONIEZD SWIMMINGGROUP BEING FORMED. Womenundergraduates and graduates.Meeting to discuss’ organization andpermanent meeting time. Thurs,Nov 12, 5 pm at' East Lounge, IdaNoyes or call MI3-0800 X3574CIVILISATION ON TV has featureda lot of Gregorian Chant. Want totry it yourself? Calvert House Tues-days, 4:00 p.m.25 cents a shot. 25 cents a beer. 25cents for a mixed drink. On studentnites only at the PUB. The onlylimit is your capacity for sopping itup.LIBERATION MOVEMENTSChicanes: November 20, 8 pm atBonhoeffer House, 5554 Woodlawn. 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. It's easier with Good MusicKLH 23 $i09DUAL 1212 $ 59.25AR 4X $ 42.95ADC 303AX $ 77.77Save on all components.All at Musicraft. Campus rep BobTabor. 363-4555. Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)RUNAWAY?Family Problems? Call the Depot.955-9347.CEF PRESENTSPREGNANT?NEED HELP?Pregnancy Council Ser¬vice will provide totallyconfidential alternativesfor your pregnancy.Minimal cost and delayTaking calls24 hours a day(215) 878-5800 "The Red 8. The White", a filmabout the spilling over of the Rus¬sian Revolution into East Europe atWorld War I's close. A modern clas¬sic by Miklos Jancso. At Cobb Sat.at 78.9:15.SENSITIVITYTRAININGAwareness training weekends. Ges¬talt Therapy and Art, psychodrama,etc. November 6-8, Dec. 13-15. $25for students. PI 2-1000, ext. 1119.RUGBYSEE FLESH MEET FLESH in anathletic contest Saturday at 1 pm onStagg Field when the undefeatedChicago Rugby Club hosts The Chi¬cago Lions in the final game of theregular season. Why Not Rugby?RADICATTHEAfERSan Francisco Mime Troop in a spe¬cial double bill tomorrow at Mandel,8 pm. Tickets $2 50 of self-discovery’—Studs Terkel“This hook is the collective biographyof the generation that was horn on theNew Frontier, baptized on the MississippiDelta, and educated by Vietnam. Thisoverpowering hook explains why so manyof the best-educated young Americanschoose to think of themselves as un-Americans.”—Jack Newfield“His honesty, like his uncommonly grace¬ful prose, disarms us.”—The New York Times“The most disturbing hook for the estab¬lishment to contemplate.”—St. Louis Post-Dispatch“Here is a hook with a soul.”—Philadelphia Bulletin“Ought to he read by everyone under 40.”—Rook Week white man’sON ICE”e If a shin fit on Monthlytrust arc those who view lifeialoguc with experience, notan attempt to shape ideas so that they fitintellectual abstractions, or to manipulateevents so that they suit professional ambi¬tions.” So writes Paul Cowan in tliis brutallyhonest and deeplv personal political auto¬biography. In it, be tells about bis experi¬ences at Harvard, in Israel, in Mississippiduring; tin* summer of 1964, with the PeaceCorps, and bow these experiences causedhim, as be says, “to persist in redefining; imloyalties through actions: to call myself anlin-American (citizen of the world), to hewilling to ftghl against my own governmentwhenever that is necessary.”A responsible radical statement lhal tells itlike it was—ami is.IKE MUIIK Of UIDHIMEIIKIIIA by Paul Cowan4 DELTA BOOK S2.65at vour bookstoreNovember 6, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/11s Hg,;irjASir?n|||Ifg::INI Memorandum To:STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFFFrom:U.C. BOOKSTORETHE NEW UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE IS NOWOPEN, AT ELLIS AVENUE AND 58th STREET, AND IN ALL CAN-M¥¥&yggg¥|j DOR, IT IS A FINE BOOKSTORE. WITH EQUAL CANDOR, RIGHT| NOW OUR STOCK IS A BIT THIN IN ALL DEPARTMENTS. THE| RELOCATION SCHEDULE CREATED SOME LOGISTICAL PROB¬LEMS WE WERE UNABLE TO SOLVE. BUT THOUSANDS OFDOLLARS WORTH OF BOOKS AND OTHER ITEMS ARE ARRIVINGEACH DAY, AND WE'LL BE FULLY STOCKED WITHIN THE NEXTWEEK OR SO. (WHY NOT CHECK US OUT EACH DAY TO MAKECERTAIN THIS IS TRUE?) ¥goog$¥;gAAggH|I WE WILL BE OPEN TOMORROW, 9:00-3:00WE WOULD LIKE EVERYONE ON CAMPUS TO VISIT THE NEWSTORE, AND WE HOPE YOU WILL BE AS PLEASED AS WE ARE.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTOREELLIS AVENUE AT 58TH STREET fi§«•:> igy- » v*iM fki5!( »5!i »5!i ,!5!i »5!t >!5!i »5!i »5!i i5!i ,T5% »!*!i >5!i t”i >!5!i »5!i»5!i »5!i rTSti »Xi »5!i »”< r”( »5!i t »T5!«,!S!i i5!i 1T1 »TS!« iTIi >!*!i »5!i »5!i »5!i r!S!i i5!i ,5!i i5Ii i!5!i12/The Chicago Maroon/November 6, 1970THE GREY CITYVolume 3, Number 6 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of the Arts Friday, November 6,1970aslev Blackwood:omposer, Pianist, Professor...By Mark BlechnerCreative ability and an astute critical faculty arerarely found in the same person. The combination oftheoretical thinking and the ability to see practicalapplications is equally rare, as is the junction of apowerful mentality with physical dexterity. Thestructure and teaching policies of the University ofChicago take such dichotomies into account, and mayeven promote them. It is therefore refreshing to find aprofessor on campus who possesses and makes use ofimpressive abilities in all these areas.Easley Blackwood has been teaching music oncampus continually since 1958. At the same time hehas been pursuing the careers of composer andvirtuoso pianist. His most recent achievement in theselast two areas has been his Piano Concerto (1970),which he performed this last summer at Ravinia. Thatconcert received broad critical acclaim for both thequality of the work and for Blackwood’s masterlyhandling of the treacherous piano part.Blackwood began his connection with musicthrough the piano. A native of Indianapolis, his firstpiano teachers were all extremely conservative. Theywere aghast when they found him playing Prokofiev’sSeventh Sonata three years after its publication (awork which is part of every virtuoso’s repertoiretoday). The same sort of shortsighted people at¬tempted to stifle his first musical creations. “When Iwas making my first efforts with composition, writingatonal pieces, they all thought I was crazy. It wasdismissed by one teacher as being some kind ofsymbolic rebellion.” Blackwood notes wryly, “I go onmaking the same kind of music now. Now Pm.held tobe very conservative, at least musically.”During his early teens, Blackwood was brieflyexploited as a child prodigy. At the age of 14, heperformed Tschaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto withthe Indianapolis Symphony. For the next three years,he spent his summers at the Berkshire Music Festival,where he had his first chance “to connect with reallyserious musicians.” Then, after four years of studyingcomposition privately with Bernhard Heiden, Black¬wood moved on to the Yale School of Music. There, fortwo years, he studied composition with Paul Hindem¬ith, one of the most prominent composers of thetwentieth century. This was followed by three years ofstudy with Nadia Boulanger in Paris, who has trainedmany of this century’s finest composers, includingAaron Copland and Roger Sessions.Both Hindemith and Boulanger strongly in¬fluenced Blackwood’s attitudes towards music, aswell as some of his current teaching techniques. Oftheir respective methods, Blackwood comments:“Hindemith taught composition. He actually showedhow it was done. He was quite different fromBoulanger in that regard. Boulanger criticized, believ¬ing that it was impossible to teach composition. Shesaid that you take someone who obviously is acomposer, you train him to be a better musician, andyou criticize his efforts as he brings them to you.Hindemith’s view was, not only do you take someoneand make him a better musician, but you make him acomposer, too. —'Bruce Rabe“Hindemith believed that it was actually possibleto teach anyone the craft of composition. I sharplydisagree with that. Some of the people whom Hindem¬ith used at the time as guinea pigs to prove this theorydid not become composers. They composed as long asthe old man’s presence was near, and as soon as hewas gone, they stopped composing.”Hindemith instilled in his students a markedsensitivity to musical form. This influence can be seenin Blackwood’s own compositions, especially hisrecent ones. The Piano Concerto is in rather strict,three-movement sonata form, complete with develop¬ment sections and recapitulations. In the Trio (1968),perhaps his finest work to date in terms of bothcraftsmanship and power of expression, Blackwoodadapted the sonata form from an early Beethovenpiano work.On the subject of musical evolution and progress,Blackwood has many interesting ideas. He believesthat musical style progresses at a rate natural toitself, independent of social conditions or attempts atmusical radicalism. “In the eighteenth century,” henotes, “the style was harmonic. Very little chromatic¬ism in that style of music tends to express a fairlygentle and elegant emotion or sentiment. Though theentirety of eighteenth century Europe was involved inghastly political and social upheavals, this is not reflected in the music at all. Mozart’s music does notbespeak all the troubles that were going on in the courtof Louis XVI. In the same way, the representation ofgreat emotional jags and binges that comes on in thelate nineteenth century is not because people weremore emotional at that time ; it was simply that musiclent itself very neatly to that type of expression.”Blackwood therefore dismisses completely thetheory that the formless, discordant music so com¬monly written today results from the spirit of this era.“Horrible hostile, hate-filled, ugly music doesn’t existbecause the world is any more horrible, hostile, andfull of hate than it ever was. It simply happened thataround the turn of the twentieth century, those soundsthat had previously been forbidden began to be used ina greater proliferation, and that music very naturallyexpressed and hysteria. It took the paranoid-hysteric— Arnold Schoenberg — to discover it. So, are we toassume that the world is nihilistic because music isnihilistic? I don’t think that is necessarily true.” Thelogical conclusion of such a theory is that the writingof great music requires a matching of the composer’stemperament to the musical style of his time. In fact,Blackwood holds that “had Schoenberg lived at thetime of Mozart, it is unlikely that he would havewritten much in the way of interesting music.”interesting music.”Does Blackwood feel that his temperament isparticularly suited to the musical style of theseventies? “No, and that’s a great problem to me. Mynatural bent is not hysterical and the style I’mpresented with, in 1970, is one where hysteria is veryeasy to produce. I’m more interested in finding waysof using the current combinations of sounds to expresssomething considerably more subtle. If you wantsubtlety of expression, elegance, and refinement,which is what classical music should have, you have topurge it very carefully of things which would over¬whelm the subtleties which you want to express.” It isunderstandable, then, that Blackwood finds littlemerit in current experiments with aleatory (chance)music.He also finds distasteful the expansion of thecomposer’s vocabulary with musically impure soundssuch as birds chirping in their cages, the crashing dinof a stockyard, or the amplification of human pantingand wheezing. He believes that today, when all soundsare permitted, new sounds must be discovered andintegrated into a coherent system. Such new soundsmay be found in new kinds of scales, which woulddivide the octave into eleven or thirteen parts, insteadof the usual twelve. Within the framework of suchnewly-tuned scales, old harmonic progressionschange or disappear completely, creating effects thatare indeed novel, while still maintaining the abstractquality that has always been traditional to music.Eventually, instruments tuned to such scales may bedeveloped, enabling completely new types of ex¬pression. In the meantime, Blackwood is conductingexperiments with assymetric scales using a computerand an electronic sound synthesizer.The pursuit of a performing career is a relativelyrecent development in Blackwood’s life. Six yearsContinued on Page Sevent.y SdWirtr..: r l>t t'i'T 1 r-/ “ i 'I 11 Ut I * w ’ VV! v«* ^ v f ■2M.A section of the piano part from the original manuscript of Easley Blackwood’s Trio (1968).STUDENT TICKETS$1.00 at Door orat Reynolds Club DeskDOMTGSEDby CAR repairs/SurJIch '/o-..BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO-SERVICE4401 S. ARCHER. fiNE.+*br Sbrfs/ac&e/T Ju? Serrfce.^call254-3840 254-5071 254-5072ATfENTIONVOLKSWAGENOWNERS!!!Continental blackwall tires i (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 * >34.00installed(For you Do-it-yourself fans, deduct $6.00 from theabove bumper prices for labor!). 0SERVICE YOUR CAR NOW!!!! LARGEPANTSSALE10 % offon all Bellbottom Jeans50%up to■ vnoffon a large selectionof BELLS- all weights and styles.PLUSfor menin Harper CourtDON'T WAIT TILL YOUNEED A TOW TRUCK!!!!VALUABLE COUPONSPECIAL STUDENT PRICESUPON PRESENTATION OF THIS AOLIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCESAT THE WORLD'S LARGEST GUITAR STORE.ALSO FEATURING OURTRUMPET CENTERHA 7-5327both di visions ofPRAGER & RITTER, INC. NOW WORLD WIDE !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 24 j 7San Francisco, Calif. 94126 nuncMOTT THE H00PLESIEGEL-SCHWM.LCONQUEROR WORMM C—WGlD’s John RyanFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6—B 00 PMSYNDROMESHILL FICESfesturtni MO STEM!ELVtN BISHOP SOUPHAYSTACKS BALBOAM CWGlO’i ScorpioFRIDAY NOVEMBER IS—B OO PMSYNDROMEmetmmimMCKBIORDI(•atunn( ll«« recordingstirs in potion, includingCHUCK BERRYBO-DIDDIYGARY U.S. BONOSJOHN LEE HOOKERFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11-4:10AUDITCRIUI4P0DIPYOM C —WCFl i Robert E. looSATURDAY. NOVEMBER Id 30AUDITORIUMTEN YEARS AFTERQUATER MASSSKID ROW MY10NM C-—VYClO l Cwon JohnsonFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20—» 00 PSYNOROMEFRARK ZAPPA ft THEMOTHERS OF IRYERTIORM.C.—WCFl’s Pout ChriitySATURDAY. NOVEMBER 21— S M PMAUDITORIUMSAffOKEY I0BIHS0HI THE MIRACLESM.C.—KYCFl t lorry O’BrienSUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22— 7 30 PMAUDITORIUMCHICA80SEALS l CROFTS—WCFL’t Ron Brltoin A Cory GoartTHURSDAY NOVEMBER 267:00 A 10 30 PM—AUDITORIUMrjrjTCAll attractions at the Auditorium Theatre are$6.50. $5.50. $4.50. $3.50 T.cketi art nowavailable at the Auditorium Theatre Box Office,all Chicegolend Montgomery Ward stores. FlipSide Records at 3314 W. Foster, Chicago and732 Elm Street, Winnetka, and all otherTicketron outlets.The Syndrome is located in the ChicagoColiseum at 15th & Wabash Tickets ere $5.00general admission and available at yourneighborhood Ticket DealerTicket Dealer Locations are Chicago: FlipSide Records, 3314 W Foster; Grammaphqpe2663 N. Clark, Midwest Stereo, 1445 W MorseOne Octave Lower, Pipers Alley in Old TownOne Octave Lower, 175 W. Washington. Musicand Books. Ford City Shopping CanterWinnetka: Flip Side Records. 732 ElmLombard: Yorktown Records, 144 YorktownEvanston: One Octave Higher, 1730 OrrmgtonBuffalo Grova: One Octave Lower, 1300 WDundee2/Grey City Journal/November 6, 1970 TAl-SAM-YLNCHINESE* AM ERIC ANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUN DAYS AN D HOLI DAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders ‘:o take out JEWELERS • SINCE ISOSpresentsAFleuretleStarmlstDianaCatch a sparklefrom the morning aun.Hold the magicot a sudden breeze.Keep those momenta alive.Thay"re yours tor a lifetimewith a diamondengagement ring fromOrange Bloaaom.JEWELERS • SINCE 1S0Severgreen plaza yorktown"PORTUGUESECOLONIAL WARS INAFRICA: How Long CanPortugal Hold Out?"Bag lunch discussion withAARON SEGALEditor, “African Report"Men. Nev. 9 12 NoonGates Blake 321African Studies Group IBORCHESTRA HALLFRI., NOV. 13—8:30 PM$5.50, $4.50, $3.50tickets At Box UtticeMail Order, to Orchestra Hall220 S. Michigan. Chicago 60604PltiH enclose self-addressed,stamped envelope.A Scene from the Mime Troup's "The IndependentFemale.” Joan Mankin is at far right.THEATERGuerillas fromSan FranciscoGuerilla theater is perhaps the newest wave ofmodern drama. Many groups here are involved withthe production and techniques of street theater andtheir performances have been amusing and thought-provoking experiences. This type of theater had itsbeginnings on the west coast, and perhaps the mostfamous of the guerilla theater groups is the SanFrancisco Mime Troupe which will be performing inMandel hall tomorrow night at 8 pm. Tickets are $2with student ID card.The Mime Troupe productions satirize modernpolitical problems. Tomorrow they will perform twoplays, “Seize the Time”, an adaption of Bobby Seale’sstory of the Black Panther Party, and “The Indepen¬dent Female, or a Man Has His Pride”, a melodramaon women’s liberation.Joan Mankin, a UC graduate, is one of theperformers in the troupe and she has often had a largerole in the women’s lib melodrama.All tickets are reserved and are now on sale at theMandel corridor box office. Tickets will also be sold atthe door, if any are left.Bob Dylan-New MorningReg. 5.98/4.00Love RevisitedReg. 4.98/2.50Led Zeppelin IIIReg. 5.98/3.50Tommy by the WhoReg. 11.98/6.00Live at Leeds-the WhoReg. 5.98/3.50Entire Pink Floyd Stockall albums 3.00After the Gold RushReg. 4.98/3.00WATCH FOR:STEVEN STILLS withDr. John, Mick Jagger, K. adding,Ringo Starr and James Hendricks.for the musicrecords/tapes/and so forth-2201 north sedgwickChicago 60614/312-528-9828just around the corner. ThrillingThe Ivanhoe’s production of The Innocents, Wil¬liam Archibald’s adaptation of James’ The Turn of theScrew, is just another play. Only in a theater-starvedcity like Chicago is a play like this worth seeing.The story deals with a young governess who findsherself taking care of two rich orphans in a huge andempty country manor where strange things happenday and night ; suspense and terror build up throughthe play, pointing to the fact that the “innocent”children are inhabited by the spirits of dead servants(symbolic, of course, of the evil that may lurk in theheart of any of us). At best, the story is a difficult oneto put across in our day. We’re too worldly, toosophisticated to be satisfied with the nameless fearevoked by such a tale; we’re far too aware of the realevils and actual dangers of our world, which somehowresist being metaphorized in spirits — even in thisseason of ghosts and goblins. The suspension ofdisbelief required of one by this play may have beenfeasible in James’ day, but today’s audience cannotbut be moved to ask the wrong questions, our sciencehaving frightened away all ghosts.The play might yet have had a precarious successwith a director who managed to put it across asallegory: the evils of the world infesting our children,ingrained in them and inseparable from their being. Itmight also succeed as spine-chilling entertainment,were a director to exploit its potentialities for sheerlyterrorizing its audience. As George Keathley directsit, all we realize, sadly, is that we’ve spent another(yawn) evening at the theater.Miss Giddens is played by Piper Laurie, whosemuch better performance in The Hustler won her anacademy award nomination. Her throaty voice, strongand resonant, is a happy surprise, but her portrayal ofthe role lacks amplitude, and after a while the fluffedlines become as interesting as any other aspect of herperformance. Miss Laurie’s Miss Giddens comes tothe children lacking a certain sweetness and in¬nocence of her own, the vulnerability of which wouldhave added a thrill to the drama and enhanced theeffect of her courage in dealing with her circum¬stances. Miss Giddens’ fear seems curiously under¬played : wouldn’t you jump out of your skin if you sawa dead man’s visage at your window? — but MissGiddens does not, nor does she scream, or eventremble. If she’s not afraid, how can we be?Geraldine Kay as Mrs Grose, on the other hand,gives a highly pleasing performance. Her stodgy andhumorless yet warmly loving sensibilities are theperfect foil for the two kids’ teasing naughtiness.Bambi Holzer’s Flora is alternately mischievous andEVERYTHINGYOU’VE EVERWANTEO TOKNOWAOOUTDEER(But didn't knowwhom to ask) plus 25t for postageand handlingAt last... in one great book ... a delightful mixture of lore, mythand anecdote never before assembled in a single volume.For instance, do you know how many bottles of beer it would take tofloat the battleship Missouri? Or what beer can do for orchids? You’replanning a party and you need to know how to tap a keg, and howmany glasses of beer you can get from a half-barrel ... and how manyservings you should allow per male guest. . . and per female. Maybebeer steins intrigue you, and you’d like to know more about them.Search no longer... the answers are all here in Falstaff’s CompleteBeer Book. And that’s not nearly all. You’ll chuckle at author FredBirmingham's light-hearted history of beer. .. and you’ll join him in abrewery tour with the brewmaster as your guide. There's even a glos¬sary of little-known brewing terms ... because everyone should knowwhat a ’’zwicker’ is! And wait 'til you try "Hungerburgers” made withbeer IThe perfect gift for Dad... or a fraternity brother... or even forUncle Charley. In fact, this deluxe paperback belongs on every book¬shelf and backbar!Smd $1.00 plin 25c postal*and hondllitf tor oack cop, to:BEER BOOKP.0. Bos 23007St. Louis, Mo. 63156Chock, cash or monoy order torfull amount must bo includedwith order. Sorry, no COD'S.(Missouri residents add 3%u.e> i*»., Send ( ) books. Enclosed is $3Mg|R Piper Laurie, now at the Ivanhoecontrite, in the exasperatingly ambiguous manner of abright child with something up his sleeve. Miles,played by Craig Taylor, makes a deeper impression,seeming by turns a lovable and loving child and ascheming little dissembler: this contrast in the role isessential to the success of the ending and Taylor doesit well.The ending of the play, meant to be a blunt shockwhich quickly fades out, leaving only a dark loomingterror behind, fails dismally. Misdirected by Keath¬ley, it is desperately overacted by Miss Laurie, whoafter all can do little else, with the lights still on longafter the audience has realized that Miles is indeeddead.Linda Willner and David Whitaker as the spectresdo as fine a job as could be asked of any corporealbeings. The sets and costumes were apt and inter¬esting, especially the handmade miniature harpsi¬chord, the odd sound of which could only add charm tothis production.Tickets for “The Innocents” are now on sale at theIvanhoe box office, 3000 N. Clark. Performances timesare: Tuesday through Friday at 8:30; Saturday at 6and 9:30; and Sundays at 7.Chris FroulawSUN INCOMESun Life’s new incomeprotection planCould you afford to stop working for a year?If not, talk with your man from Sun Life ofCanada about their new disability income plan... to keep the money coming in when you’renot able to.Ralph J. Wood, Jr. CLUFR 2-2390-798-0470SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD, Jr. CLUOne N. LaSalle St. Chic. 60602 £NAME J isaoniTNilM rADDRESS ■CITY lu.Jtf»* November 6, 1970/Grey City Joumal/3The GreatestShow on Earth Lean and B<Those of us who love circuses wererather pleased last year when JohnRingling North sold control of theRingling Brothers and Barnum & Bail¬ey Circus to Irvin Feld, the impresarioof the Astrodome. North, who fanciedhimself something of an artiste, hadinjected tasteless elements of LasVegas, Hollywood, and Lawrence Welkinto the show. Feld promised to re¬emphasize the traditional elements ofthe circus and to recruit the best acts inthe world.The Ringling Brothers and Barnum &Bailey Circus which is playing twoshows a day at the International Am¬phitheater through Sunday, proves thatFeld made good on part of his promise.The show undoubtedly offers the bestacts in all of circusdom.There is Charley Baumann and histigers, Emanuel Zachinni being shot outof the cannon, and a variety of Bulga¬rian and Hungarian acrobats whosenames are indistinguishable but whosefeats will dazzle all but the mostinsouciant in the audience. There is alsoa fellow who rides a motorcycle up atight rope reaching to the ceiling while asequined lady hangs suspended from atrapeze attached to the cycle. And thereare ponderous pachyderms all over theplace.Unfortunately, these grand circusacts are interrupted by four “spectacu¬lars” — campy processions of costumedcircus people. John Ringling Northinvariably used to insult our in¬telligence with salutes to cowboys orastronauts or whatever, and Mr. Feld fhas chosen to continue this nonsense,though it has no basis in circus tradi¬tion.The “spec” recalling highlights of theshow’s previous 100 years is good, withimpersonations of Jenny Lind, TomThumb and other Barnum and Baileygreats. But in general these processionsmerely get in the way of the acts andmake the three-hour show drag.Beyond that, one can complain thatthe band was not sufficiently dynamicto draw us into the rhythm and pace ofthe show. The lighting and the pacing ofthe show could also have been better.But such carping is not important.This is, after all, the big show — theGreatest Show on Earth — and while itmay not be a vintage year, it’s a goodone nonetheless. Though the show isdrenched in tradition, its appeal re¬mains current.Sure, you saw it all on the Ed SullivanShow when you were nine years old. Butwe don’t go to the circus to see some¬thing new. We go to see enacted atimeless ritual in which we reaffirm ourfaith in the ability of supermen andlovely ladies to perform dazzling featsin the face of what appears to be mortaldanger.Sure, it’s a kiddy show. When the deepbaritone voice of Harold Ronk, thedurable Ringling ringmaster, opens theshow by addressing “C-h-i-l-d-r-e-n ofall ages,” a familiar tremor runsthrough the audience which recognizesthat he is separating the kids from thegrownups. I know which side I choose.— Harvey ShapiroThe Luck of the VulchYou'll never guess what happened! Dressed in myHalloween best (crow-black feathers with pumpkin insets),I flew off to the Museum of Contemporary Art's Halloweenparty celebrating the opening of Robert Rauschenberg'sexhibit. Mingling with the elite, sampling the goodies,taking in the splendor of "one-eyed dicks" and Warholeantire-tracks, I was having a wonderful time when suddenly Iheard my name — Culture Vulture — read over theloudspeaker! I had won the door prize, a breathtakinglithograph depicting multisized cheeseburgers suspended ina parsley-studded void. I was never so thrilled! — and rightthere before all those people! It now hangs in my nest, e'hd Ishall soon arrange a snowing when you all may come andview it. Isn't that fantastic?Coming events presented in a newly lucid style:THEATER Anthony Mann's The Naked Spur at 9:00 in Cobb onTuesday, a double feature from DOC;Busby Berkeley's musical Babes in Arms is in CobbWednesday at 8.DANCELee Ballets Africains will perform at the AuditoriumTheater Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at 3:30. Ticket prices:$3.50-6.50.American Ballet Company at the Auditorium Theater,November 10-12 at 8:30, with tickets from $3-9.Bayanihan Phillippine Dance Company, Auditorium Theateron Nov 15at 2:30and 8pm.The Contemporary Dance Theater, performances byColumbia College professionals and students, are givenevery Wednesday at 7:30 at the Performing Arts Center,1725 North Wells, 667-0300.The San Francisco Mime Troupe, tomorrow in Mandel ateight. A people's theater, they will present "The Indepen¬dent Female," a comment on the woman's place inAmerica, and "Seize the Time," a dramatic adaptation ofBobby Seale's Black Panther documentary. Get tickets atMandel box office now, $2.50 with student ID.William Archibald's The Innocents has opened at theIvanhoe Theater, 3000 N. Clark. It stars Piper Laurie.The Three Penny Opera continues at Goodman Theaterthrough Nov 15.Hair is in its last nine weeks at the Blackstone, 60 E Balbo.Promises, Promises opens Sunday, Nov 8, at the Schu¬bert, 22 W Monroe (Previews through tomorrow).FILMThe Chicago International Film Festival begins tonight atthe Carnegie (Rush at Oak). Fruit of Paradise, a colorproduction directed by award-winning CzechoslovakianVera Chytilova (une femme!!) shows at 6:30 tonight, andstudent films from around the world at 1 pm tomorrow. Adiscussion with Academy Award-winning James WongHowe (Hud) will follow at 6:30. Student tickets are $2.Festival director Michael Kutza has assembled a fineprogram (see ad in this issue for schedule). Watchespecially for appearances by two great American direc¬tors, Howard Hawks (Red River, Hatari, The Big Sleep) onNovember 11, and George Stevens (Gunga Din, A Place inthe Sun, Shane) on November 15.The Red and the White is CEF's showing of the week.Michelangelo Antonioni's Eclipio ("his *, ealeal and trios!marxist film") tonight at Cobb, 7:15 and 9:30, from DOCFilms.Samuel Fuller's disgusting The Naked Kiss at 7:15, and4/Grey City Joumal/November 6, 1970 MUSICTraffic tonight at 8 at the Syndrome. Ron Stewart andSmall Faces next Friday at 8 at the Syndrome.Chuck Berry, Bo-Diddley, Gary U.S. Bonds, and John LeeHooker hoc'ed by Dick Biondi Nov 13th at 8:30 pm at theAuditorium Theater.John Sebastian and Podipto Nov 14 at the Auditorium.The Bernede String Quartet at Mandel next Friday at 8:30plays works by Haydn, Schubert, and Roussel.Jennie Tourel, Nov 8 8> 10 in the Law School auditorium at8:30, $1 for students, sings Beethoven, Liszt, Schumann andSchubert in the first two nights of "The Art of the Song."The Musical Society presents the Hildner, Vas Quez, LibinTrio Friday at 8:30 in Bond Chapel. French and Englishbaroque music and it's freeARTThis is American Art Week — visit a museum or gallery!Art Institute, Nov 5 Jan 3, 18th and early 19th centuryAmerican and European silver and porcelain. MunicipalArt League of Chicago, Oct 31 Nov 21, at CampanileGalleries, 200 S. Michigan, Chicago artists; free admission.Robert Rauschenberg's "Graphics and Sculpture", Mu¬seum of Contemporary Art, through December 13. Twofilms, "Artist". Robert Rauschenberg" at 12 and 2:30 daily,and "One Eyed Dicks", a 14-minute film comprised ofsequences of photographs taken by "triggered, automaticcameras during bank robberies", continuously, will beshewn for Ihe do. atiori of Stic exhibition.Keith Morrison, chairman of the art department atDePaul University, has a one man show at the BlackhawkRestaurant Gallery, 139 N. Wabash, through Nov 15. David Lean, one of the world’s best-known and most respected filmdirectors, started his career as an assistant director in the 1920’s, and laterbecame a film editor. His first film, in 1942. 'uas In Which We Serve. Laterproductions of the late forties and early fifties included Brief Encounter,Great Expectations, Oliver Twist, Hobson’s Choice, Blithe Spirit, andSummertime. In the past fifteen years, David Lean has made four films:The Bridge Over the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago andthe unreleased Ryan’s Daughter (coming to Chicago in December orJanuary).David Lean and writer Robert Bolt, who has scripted the last three Leanfilms as well as A Man for All Seasons on stage and on screen, wereinterviewed by Journal critic Charles Flynn at the recent San FranciscoFilm Festival.In recent years, we’ve seen more and more use of techniques such as zooms,jump cuts, and the handheld camera. What do you think of this ? How does itrelate to your own films ?DAVID LEAN: I’m sick of zooms, frankly. I use them occasionally. But onTV you see nothing but zooms. In and out, in and out. I’m against a directorpointedly showing technique. These things — jump cuts, rapid trackingshots — have all been around for years. There’s been a resurgence of themlately, but I’m rather against showing technique unless there’s a specificpurpose. There’s a tendency today to use technique to cover up a lack ofcontent. It’s very hard for a camera to remain still, because it must reallybe showing something to do so. These techniques are often a way out for adirector.Many people think that the big-budgeted spectacle films are dead . . .LEAN: The “big” films that have been showing recently are bad; that’swhy they die at the box office. I’d hate to see the big film die. The life of thefilm medium depends on showing things that can’t be done in any othermedium.ROBERT BOLT: I echo what David says. I think that a good “big” film ismanifestly better than a good “small” film. But if in achieving size yousacrifice quality, you’ve defeated yourself. For obvious mechanicalreasons, film can present things that can’t be done on TV. But this shouldn’tbe done at the expense of quality or intention. There’s a certain nobility,tragedy, heroism in human life, which is large and requires a large scale ofpresentation.Oliver Twist was censored here in America . . .LEAN: Quite a bit was cut out of it in America. Alec Guiness, who playedFagin, and I were blissfully ignorant while making it. When it came to theStates, there was a howl about its being anti-Semitic. We, quite honestly,had never thought about it. Harry Cohn (head of Columbia Pictures at thattime) said, “It was that schnozzola. Couldn’t you re-take the closeups? Turnthe nose the other way ...” When the film was cut, the character of Faginwas left in solely for plot purposes. All the comedy was cut. In my opinion,the cut version is anti-Semitic.How do you visualize a scene in your mind when you read the dialogue in thescript?LEAN: It doesn’t quite go like that. Robert (Bolt) and I have anextraordinary working relationship. We talk together before we writeanything. We both try to visualize it, and then Robert writes it.BOLT: There isn’t a line in Ryan’s Daughter that we haven’t been over halfa dozen times. David is being altogether too modest, because we really writethe script together. The first thing we try to find is our intention. Writing is aprocess of searching, putting your intention on paper. A few shots arewritten into the script, and we go over some sequences shot by shot. It’s nogood writing dialogue unless you know what image will be on the screen.Once David gets behind the camera his inspiration and spontaneity mustt: Movies, Incorporated1have free play. But he’ll never depart from our intention, which is writteninto the script.LEAN: It’s up to me to put on the screen what we have put on paper.Filming is much more off-the-cuff than most people think. I always measurethe success of a film by how well the intentions of the author have beenrealized (which is my job as director). The intentions are 100 per cent in thescript; one scene may fulfill them 40 per cent. If I get up to 90 per cent, Ithink I’m doing pretty well.I What validity does film criticism have?LEAN: Let’s talk about Doctor Zhivago. To put Zhivago on screen, a filmwould run 40 hours. The novel starts with a young boy at his mother’s grave,and ends with the young boy’s daughter at the age of 21. So the film isn’tZhivago, it is gathered from Zhivago. Robert and I thought we had done agood job... so of course we were hurt by some of the criticisms of the film.BOLT: If one had to choose between public acclaim and critical acclaim,one would choose public acclaim, since the public pays and critics don’t. Butwe’d like both. That the public likes a film doesn’t prove that the film isgood. If David’s films were trivial or rubbish, one could point this out anddiscount their popularity. But they are palpably serious. So if the publiclikes them and critics don’t, perhaps the critics should look again.Do you see any conflict between “commercialism” and “art” in films ?LEAN: No, I don’t think there’s that much of a conflict. If you have a smallfilm that no one wants to see and no one wants to show, though, that’s thebest way to get the critics on your side. If a film is really good, it iscommercial. I don’t want to make films only a few people will see. I do whatpleases me, and I hope you like it.I How do you choose music for your films?LEAN: The major problem is where you place it. Robert and I plan themusic in advance while we’re writing the screenplay. I think it’s terrible ifyou just use it under dialogue.How did you approach Lawrence of Arabia?BOLT: David and I did a good deal of background reading. The bookscontradicted each other, not only in matters of interpretation, but even inquestions of simple fact. So finally, we returned to Seven Pillars of Wisdom,Lawrence’s own account of his desert adventures. That wasn t because webelieve the entire book; both of us have serious reservations about parts ofthe book. But our premise was: “suppose this book is all true. Lawrencewas both arrogant and shy, cruel and delicate. Could we show all thesecontradictory facets, and convince the audience that this was one man. Atthe same time, we wanted to comment on the idea of military glamour, ofpower politics, of nationalistic movements.How did you come to choose Peter O’Toole to play Lawrence ?LEAN: The part was offered to severalturned it down. So I began a desperate roundof the theat ^ ^ ^ ^Peter, who was very well known as a stag„ wflS *’4” andPeter is6’2”,andMany people objected that the real La wrennrmance the actor becomeson, but that doesn’t matter. If it’s a good performance,more real than the character. The scene after the train wreck, where Lawrence walks on top of the cars, isespecially impressive . . .BOLT: That never really happened, but it is a synthesis of about sixincidents in Seven Pillars of Wisdom. It shows the primitive powerLawrence raised in the Arabs. Our society sent him out there — and thenews photographer (played by Arthur Kennedy) is out there to makeexciting breakfast table reading out of the whole thing.Do you have final control of the cutting of your films?LEAN: Yes, I’m one of the lucky few. I have absolute final say on the editing— the studio can’t touch it.How do you feel about working in the wide-screen format?LEAN: I love pictures. I love a large screen; I hate the little box. It costs afortune to shoot in 70mm, but in my book it’s worth it.Could you talk about Ryan’s Daughter . ..LEAN: I saw the first final print of it yesterday. It was a very excitingmoment. It is a result of Lawrence and Zhivago — when we were halfwaythrough Zhivago, Robert and I said to each other, “What are we doing with ahuge book again? Next time, let’s do an original.”BOLT: The genesis was a long correspondence between David in Rome andI in London. This was shortly after the release of Zhivago. Thecorrespondence was about the difficulty of growing up and aboutdetachment. David feels detachment isn’t available in film, as it is in thenovel. A novelist can imply detachment. A filmmaker can’t. There’s a directconfrontation between the characters on the screen and the audience.In Ryan’s Daughter, we wanted to make a film that would becompassionate, while at the same time having the qualities of austerity andremoval that the great novels have. The theme of the film is this: the moreidealistic a young person, the more difficult it is for him to grow up. Thegreat thing about being young is that you haven’t yet confronted reality. Andwe wanted to show how difficult it is for a young person with ideals to growup. What is the optimum point between aspiration and reality? That is whatthe film is about.Why did you cast Robert Mitchum m the leading role ?LEAN: Mitchum plays a quiet, diffident, shy schoolmaster. When Robertand I began to go after Mitchum, everyone at MGM thought we had gonestark raving mad. They thought we were getting a cowboy, a roughneck.Mitchum was casting against type.<What filmmakers and writers have influenced you?LEAN: Like everyone, I remember my early days at the movies. I thinkRex Ingram had the most influence on Me . . . The Four Horsemen of theApocalypse and Mare Nostrum. I admire terribly his use of the camera. Hewas also a great starmaker. He introduced Valentino in Four Horsemen,and Ramon Navarro in Scaramouche.BOLT: I like highly finished films. I liked the William Powell-Myrna Loycomedies, and Kazan’s Viva Zapata!, because they were highly construct¬ed, highly controlled. My own view is that the arts at the moment aresuffering from a Romantic decadence, and not a Classical decadence. Ienormously like Kurosawa’s Living (Ikiru) — I think it’s the greatest filmI’ve ever seen.Your next project?LEAN: Robert and I have a mad idea that will bring tbe whole of Asia downon us. We are thinking of attempting Gandhi.November 6, 1970/Grey City Jomal/SLive From the West CoastTHE SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROUPE*a special double bill:SEIZE THE TIMEan adaptation of Bobby Seale'sstory of the Black Panther Party.THE INDEPENDENT FEMALE, orA MAN HAS HIS PRIDEa melodrama on women's liberation.SATURDAY, NOV. 7,8 pm - MANDELHAU.Please note price reduction:$2.00 (with I.D.) all seats reservedOn sale now and at the door!*Word has it that Tom Hayden is traveling with the Troupe a revitalization production.SOMEWHAT HIGHER PRICES AND OS¬TENTATIOUS; UC FACULTY MAY BE FOUNDIMBIBING HERE.Maroon Restaurant ReviewIf you’ve got it, flaunt it!THE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933ZOOM IN ONTHE WORLD!10 Heavy New Short FilmsNov. 11 & 13 at 8:00 p.m.Nov. 12 & 13 at 3:30 p.m.Nov. 14 ot 7:30 & 9:30 p.m.FINNEGAN AUD.LOYOLA UNIV.6425 N. Sheridan - ChicagoStudetns $1.50General Admission $2.00 PLAYCCy’S ALL-NIGHTPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURENOV. 6 NOV. 7"IF" "THE ADVENTURERS"(12:00 4 2:00) (12:00 4 3:00)NOV. 14NOV. 13 "THEY SHOOT HORSES,"ALFIE" DON'T THEY?"(12:00 4 2:00) (12:00 4 2:30)NOV. 20 NOV. 21"DESADE" "Cotton Comes To Harlem"(12:00 4 1:45) (12:00 4 1:45 4 3:30)NOV. 27 NOV. 28"CHE" "PUTNEY SWOPE"(12:00 4 1:45) (12:00 4 1:30 4 3:00)DEC. 4"THE PRIME OF DEC. 5MISS JEAN BR0DIE" "DOWNHILL RACER"(12:00 4 2:00) (12:00 4 1:45 4 3:30) Tuesday. Wednesday, sat ».0 THunt. fri • • closed sun. mon sorry. no phone or mail ordersDanborn-a smallbudgetwallsystem Stacked high, orspread low, the inex¬pensive Danborn isideal storage for a chil¬dren’s room, informalstudy, or den... evenfor a kitchen. More thana dozen different shelf,bookcase, and drawerunits make this system52ND & HARPER • 324-9010 • IN HARPER COURT.6/Grey City Journal/November 6, 1970 easy to fit your indi¬vidual needs. In beech,with your choice of redor white lacquereddrawers and shelf in¬teriors. Bookcasesfrom $29; base cabi¬nets from $43; drawerunits from $69.Hey you among thetrees and grass,bicycling gives you apiece of mindCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh, Robin Hood,Falcon, Peugeot, Gitane,Mercier, Coppi and Daws.Factory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spas¬modically. Fly-by - nightrentals.Torin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Fret DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; SAS 10-8Alice D. Toe Clip* sold here...and Engineer, Historian, Gourmet...Continued from Page Oneago, he gave a solo recital, having previouslyperformed publicly only in chamber groups. He spentthe next several years going through all the drudgeryof scales and exercises that is necessary to developtechnique. The hard work has been worth it, as theUniversity audience saw quite clearly in his solorecital last year. As of now, his performing repertoireconsists mainly of a curious blend of extensivecontemporary works and romantic piano music.Within either style, Blackwood chooses to study andperform works of a large design, yet with a very tightconstruction. Of particular interest is his inter¬pretation of Pierre Boulez’ Second Sonata, an ex¬cruciatingly difficult mid-century work which, likeBlackwood’s own music, contains highly complexpolyphony and polyrhythms, yet adheres strictly to aset form. His interpretations of romantic music arealso fascinating. The reserved, cooly rational impres¬sion that Blackwood makes in person causes hisrubato-filled, passionate performances of Brahms andSchumann to seem anomalous, a striking example ofthe wide gap possible between a man’s apparentattitude, in human affairs and within the frameworkof his art.The harmony course, which has become identifiedwith Blackwood’s name over the last decade, isoriented mainly toward a theoretical viewpoint.Students are not taught how to use chords but ratherthe way chords and scales operate in differentsituations. While complaints about the difficulty of thesubject are not uncommon, there is never any doubtabout the professor’s mastery of his field or of hisability to make himself clearly understood. Black¬wood maintains a serious atmosphere as he and theclass patiently explore the complexities of traditionalharmony. The assigned exercises, the same ones thatBoulanger used, are thoroughly familiar to him. Allthe same, he works them out for the class as thoughthey were entirely new to. him, exposing a keen,deductive rationality. Blackwood’s theories of harmonic relationshipsare quite original, explaining certain chord progress¬ions by the existence of symmetric modes within themusical scale. Yet the relevance of theory to thepractice of music is never forgotten; examples fromclassical music always punctuate the working out ofdry figured basses. Blackwood’s ability in this area isastounding. He can play at the piano an incrediblenumber of significant works, no matter what mediumthey were originally written for, from a simple BachInvention to Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring.” Hisrepertoire also includes many musical cinderellas; adiscussion of a certain seventh chord invariablybrings out his rendition of Sibelius’ Third Symphony.Easley Blackwood’s astounding talents extendbeyond the field of music into such seeminglyunrelated fields as electronic design and Americanhistory, with a special inclination for constitutionallaw. Twelve years ago, he set himself the goal ofdesigning and building a high-fidelity system thatwould surpass in sound quality anything availablecommercially. The result was a complex system,frightening in appearance, using huge vacuum tubesthat emit an eerie violet glow, as well as snappingrelays and oversized transformers that seem to bepreparing for some sort of mad, sinister operationduring their warm-up conversations. The completeapparatus takes up an entire closet and may have seta new record for electronic inefficiency; yet Black¬wood did achieve his original goal. Even today thesound is remarkably impressive, natural-soundingand powerful without distortion.In the field of American history, Blackwood hasabsorbed a huge amount of data and a vast array ofviewpoints. Simultaneously, his collection of primarysource works, including many collector’s items, nowfills two bookcases. The same deductive reasoningand capacious memory that give Blackwood such amastery of harmonic theory, now has enabled him todiscuss at length all sorts of political problems, with pertinent references to historical precedent. Vastreadings on what the founding fathers meant by theirterminology leads him, in more humorous moods, tospeculate on what contemporary American societywould be like were such interpretations still heldtoday. He suspects that Americans would shudder ifthey realized how Alexander Hamilton and ThomasJefferson conceived of equality and freedom ofspeech.All of Blackwood’s diverse activities are notwithout effects on each other. His continuous re¬examination of traditional harmony, for example, hascertainly influenced his compositions. Careful exam¬ination of his works reveals resolving dissonances,carefully balanced movement of individual voices,frequent pedal tones (long held notes in the bass), andeven disguised references to sequences which each ofhis harmony students must learn to recognize. Hisconcertizing has also influenced his writing: the solopart of his Piano Concerto bears the mark of one whocan execute passages of extraordinary difficulty.(Whether other pianists will also find the writingwithin their capabilities remains to be seen.) Finally,his study of constitutional history colors his everydayspeech. For example, in discussing the amount ofliberty a performer may take with the composer’sscore, Blackwood has come to think in terms of “strictconstruction” and “loose construction.”The exploration of the many facets of such aremarkable man is hardly complete. The back roadsof Utah, the subtleties of German and French wines,the endless variations of gourmet dining are all fieldswhich Blackwood has explored with the same en¬thusiasm, thoroughness, and integrity characteristicof all his pursuits. Perhaps no other man on campus sotypifies the professed University of Chicago goal, theso-called “life of the mind.” Easley Blackwood provesthat such a life need not be secluded and limiting, thatit can and should combine pure thought with active,productive involvement in the world. •Antonioni’sECLIPSEDoc Films Friday, November 6 7:15 & 9:30 Cobb $1.00ROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELSundayNovember 8, 197011:00 a.m.FAZLUR RAHMAN. PakistanProfessor, Department of Near EasternLanguages and CivilizationsThe University of Chicago"Moral Tension and Human Conduct in the Quran"Weekday Chapel MusicTuesday, November 10, 12:15 p.m.Backstage with the OrganistMr. Edward Mondello will demonstratethe organ and play a brief recital.Wednesday, November 11, 12:15 p.m.Backstage with the CarillonneurMr. Robert Lodine, will demonstratethe carillon and play a brief recital.Tour to the tower begins at 12 Noon. HAIR STYLINGUsing Nationally Famous Skulptor Cut MethodNow Available At TheREYNOLDS CLUBBARBER SHOP5706 University. Directly Across From the Quad ClubAlso Razor Cuts & Beard Trims.OPEN MONDAY& Tues. & Wed. & Thurs. & Fri. 8 to 5APPT'S REQUIRED FOR STYLING X-3573DESKS-BOOKCASESSWIVEL CHAIR - LAMPS - TABLESNEW & USEDEQUIPMENT&SUPPLY CO.8440 So. South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00Wed. -9:00 p.m.RE 4-2111Immediate Delivery j PIZZA jjPLATTERjI Pizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsI Compare the Price! I11460 E. 53rd 643-28001I WE DELIVER Iif|A Printed^IWcop.es J* WHILE YOU WAIT!Letters, Forms, Reports. Butletins.Daily 8 30 a m. - 5 p.m.Cash with order.\a- ^ §67 2410lime § PRINTING SIRVICI1950 EAST 75th St. (At Jefferyl authentic• Dinners• Late Snacks• Private PartiesMake your New Year'sEve ReservationsDistinctive, handsomeroom atop the Hyde ParkBank Building.Exceptional anddelightful selection ofMid-East food, delicacies,cocktails, and wines.Ample parking. Tues. -Sat. 5 to Midnight; Sun.1-11.1525 E. 53rd St.Ju$f OH Outtr DriveAtop TheHyde Pork Bonk Bldg.RESTAURANT A LOUNGE955-5151HendiTuesday Night15% DiscountFor the U of C Student*;Faculty Members and Per¬sonnel. Bring this ad fordiscount.(<*•••••*■* V.V.'.'A'.V.’-V.V.*.’.*.*.’ * November 6, WO/Grey City Jmmal/7• %«<*• »«• ; MTtTYtf*; 5i Bee ill i ..The BetterMousetrapWhy isn't a bigcompany like General Electricdoing more to clean upthe environment?How much can one company doto clean up the environment?Until the problems of pollutionare under control—until its effectsare reversed—no company can everbe doing "enough."What follows is a listing ofthings General Electric is doing toease environmental problems.Some are new. Some are as old astwenty-five years.Should we be doing more?Yes, of course. Every companyshould. These are only a few of themore important ones. But every daysees us take more steps in manymore directions.► General Electric is workingtoward a process that will usebacteria to convert garbage into ahigh-protein food for cattle. Onepossible answer to the mountinggarbage problem.► Modern, pollution-free mass transitfrom General Electric is carryingmore and more commuters into citieswithout their cars.► GE pioneered the development ofnuclear power plants. A nuclearplant makes electricity withoutmaking smoke. While there is still the problem of thermal effects, it'sbeing tackled on a site-by-site basisand can be solved. But for now,increasing demands for power canbe met without an increasingoutput of air pollution.► GE has developed a waste-treatment unit to significantlyreduce the water pollution fromships and boats.► We have been chosen by thefederal government to solve theproblem of jet-engine noise for theaviation industry. Our present jet isalready quieter than those on thepassenger planes of the Sixties, andyet it's nearly three times as powerful.► GE designed and built anundersea habitat called "Tektite."Several teams of scientists have livedin the habitat while studying coral-reef ecology and ocean pollution.► We're designing an earth-resourcessatellite which will be used for aworldwide survey of the oceans.A first step toward the ultimatecontrol of water pollution.► Our newest jet airplane engine,for the DC-10, is designed to besmoke-free. Of course, there's moreto jet exhaust than just smoke. Andour goal is to one day make themrun totally clean.► General Electric makes high-temperature vortex incinerators forGENERAL ELECTRIC the complete combustion of manytypes of solid waste. Completecombustion drastically reduces theamount of leftover ash, as well asvirtually eliminating air pollutants.The problems of the environ¬ment are many. And some of thesolutions will be difficult andcostly. But, as you can see, we'reworking on them.Why are we running this ad?We're running this ad, andothers like it, to tell you the thingsGeneral Electric is doing about theproblems of man and hisenvironment today.The problems concern usbecause they concern you. We're abusiness and you are potentialcustomers and employees.But there's another, moreimportant reason. These problemswill affect the future of this countryand this planet. We have a stake inthat future. As businessmen. And,simply, as people.We invite your comments.Please write to General Electric,570 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y.10022. IF you want something more than just astereo console, and something less thana houseful of electronic equipment, seethe KLH* Model Twenty-Four.The Model Twenty-Four is a completestereo music system that plays records, FMbroadcasts, AM too if you wish, plus any¬thing (such as a tape recorder) you care toplug into it. Instead of looking like aVictorian hope chest or an electrician’snightmare, it comes in three compact andunobtrusive walnut cabinets that slipgracefully into a living room. It won’t takeup much of your valuable living space, andit doesn’t take a pilot’s license to operate.But what sets it even further apart fromother stereo equipment is the level of per¬formance it delivers. It sounds—believe us—like twice the price. That’s why it’s thebest-selling, most-talked-about stereo sys¬tem on the market.Ask anyone who owns KLH stereo equip¬ment about its performance and value.Then seek out the Model Twenty-Fourand judge it critically for yourself.You won’t have trouble finding one in astore. Just follow that well-beaten path.thefilm festival’sLjOVEThe Chicago International Film Festival P O Box 4566Name....Address..City, ZipCARNEGIE THEATER / NOV. 6 - 20JESSELSON’S Favor-Ruhlisafeltpen.Please donateFavofc-RuhIs pens. radio, television,high fidelity &industrialelectronicssales & servicehavujtS3ii»3£y*l ,3M7J1-1370, 752-8190 363-9116.13401. 53rd second•>ig “TERESAfeoture DARLINGSB, LE IMAGE 750 N.CLARK337 21138/Grey City Journal/November 6, 1970 COLD or Y 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 take-out orders.)