Bureaucrat Cannon makes programs workBy NANCY CHISMANIf bureaucrats are traditionally cold andinefficient, William Cannon is a bureaucratin a different sense of the word. In a sys¬tem with a usually bad connotation, he seesa vehicle for facilitating social progress.Cannon’s work in the past has been con¬nected primarily with the operational as¬pect of bureaucracy-analysing and design¬ing programs so they will work.Now vice-president for special programsand projects, Cannon views himself as atechnician and a generalist, unconfined to asingle field or narrow viewpoint.His association with the federal bureauof the budget from 1J&1-1954 and againfrom 1959-1968 involved work with the pov¬erty program; the department oif health,education, and welfare (HEW); the AtomicEnergy Commission, and research into theworking of bureaucratic units.As a University administrator, Cannon’sscope is comparably diverse. The office ofprograms and projects, isolated on thesixth floor of the administration building,serves as the final, formal link betweenfaculty applicants for grants and the USgovernment and private foundations. Some$40 million, “an ever declining figure,” des¬ignated for up to 700 applicants is pro¬cessed through the office each year.Despite that figure, Cannon admits, “Wedon’t beat the bushes for work. Appli¬cations for grants are solely initiated anddeveloped by faculty members. We handleonly the technical process.”Added to Cannon’s responsibilities arethe Argonne National Laboratory and thecomputation center. He finds terms de¬scribing his connection with the two centersdifficult to come by. Cannon works as apoint of contact, “correlating rather thand recting” operat'ng policy with externalrelations. In a time of decreasing grants WILLIAM CANNONVice-president for special programs andprojectsand a tight University budget, he worriesthat cutbacks and reductions will have tobe made to keep the two centers oper¬ational.He also serves as director of a six monthold commission to conduct a general eco¬nomic analysis of how the University getsand uses its resources.Cannon, 50, first came to the Universityin 1940 as an undergraduate and receivedhis PhD 10 years later, a period interruptedby the war. In the years since his presenceas a student and administrator in themiddle 1950’s, Cannon feels his standard ofcomparison has been lost.Remarking on the total change in thecharacter of the neighborhood, he said, “Ikeep thinking of the University as it was 10 PROFILEyears ago and have a heck of a time relat¬ing to the present reality.“I think this place is a unique institutionwhich has different problems in differenteras. I would still come here today, be¬cause I feel it’s possible to learn here with¬out restrictions.”Except for a period from 1954-1959, whenhe was employed by the University, and aneight month period before he returned,Cannon has worked for the bureau of thebudget. It was there that he helped draftthe poverty program bill. Working on thelegislative problems of the bill, Cannon gotinvolved in designing the community actionaspect of the program.“I think the atomistic theory of society isoverdone,” he said. “People in interactionwith one another are important.” Equallyimportant, Cannon thinks, is changing thestructure of society and institutions to helpthis interaction.Cannon finds little meaning in the term“revolutionary change,” believing contin¬uing effort is more effective. The potentialsof community action have always beenrooted in local control and are therefore apotent force, he said.Cannon has never felt discouraged by thehistory of the program. “The poverty pro¬gram was a big success,” he said. “Itchanged things enormously. God knowswhat the situation would have been if wedidn’t have it.”In 1957 Cannon acted as director for oper¬ational coordination and research — a titlehe calls empty of meaning. The commis¬sion was set up, according to Cannon “be¬cause of a worry the federal government had about the number of different agenciescancelling each other out.”While acting as a policy researcher Can¬non studied the breech in communicationbetween the government and research.“Someone should be a link between pro¬gram proposal and the research that shouldlie beihind it,” he said,lie cited the job core program as an ex¬ample. “It had no better theory behind itthan, if you get delinquents off the streetsand into the country they’ll become goodcitizens.”Cannon noted that several earlier govern¬mental projects could have yielded valu¬able information on this theory if they hadbeen tapped.Before returning to the University in Au¬gust 1968, Cannon served as a deputy chair¬man on the National Endowment for theArts, a job he called a good transition frombureaucratic work. “It was fun,” hesmiled.The endowment fund acts as a govern¬mental counterpart of the private founda¬tions. Cannon admitted jokingly that he hadsecretly worked to support the modern artsover traditional arts. “It’s probably betterto support anything modern because of thebulk of historical competition. That’s re¬dressing the balance.”During his tenure with the commissionCannon formulated several opinions on thestatus of the arts in America. “Americantheater is probably bust — at least it wasbefore ‘Hair.’“There are no national repertoire com¬panies where talent can be developed andthe economics of show production hamperthe scope of new plays.“I did find that artists are really temper-mental and emotional people,” he added.“That was hard for an old bureaucrat likeme to handle.”The Chicago MaroonVolume 79, Number 20 The University of Chicago Friday, November 20, 1970Soc sci dinner cancelled after SDS threatsBy FRED WINSTON and SARA BEEBEFaced with the threat of disruption bySDS members, the social science collegiatedivision student council Thursday voted tocancel its division dinner Sunday.Chicago Police Deputy SuperintendentThomas Nolan was scheduled to speak on police-community relations.Late Thursday afternoon student councilmembers voted to cancel the HutchinsonCommons dinner, one of several held eachyear for students in that division.The council also rejected a motion to turnNolan’s appearance at the dinner into an open meeting.The majority of student council membersfelt it pointless to hold the dinner if it wouldbe disrupted by SDS members.SDS had planned to start a rally with apig roast at Kent State memorial park.They then intended to proceed to the dormsSDS convention request to bedeniedBy FRED WINSTONThe University will reject Students for aDemocratic Society’s (SDS) request to holda national SES convention on campus De¬cember 27 through 30, according to dean ofstudents Charles O’Connell.O'Connell said that he would turn downthe request in its present form, because hebelieved that the University was notequipped with the facilities or staff tohandle such a large crowd.He said his decision was in no way politi¬cal, explaining that he had also turneddown requests for a National Student Asso¬ciation (NSA) national convention.The convention, which would havebrought some 1200 SDS members fromthroughout the country, would have neededMandel Hall, two Reynolds Club loungesand an unspecified number of classroomsfor workshops and caucauses, according tothe written request handed Monday to di¬rector of student activities Skip Landt.Landt noted that the University did allowthe SDS midwest regional conference inCobb Hall, September 26-27, because it at¬tracted a smaller crowd.SDS member Barbara Foley said Landttried to discourage her from making therequest but she did so after other possiblelocations fell through.The rejection was expected, Miss Foleysaid. a«! oho has “been getting the runaround” since she first notified Landt ofSDS’s desire to hold the convention on campus. She also does not believeO’Connell’s reason for rejection is valid.She felt that the University’s rejection ofthe request is consistent with their bringingDeputy Superintendent Thomas Nolan ofthe Chicago Police Department to speak oncampus Sunday.Rockefeller Chapel is still a possibleD GALE JOHNSONWomen committee to be appointed soon sight, she said, as that decision must bemade by dean of Rockefeller Chapel ESpencer Parsons. Rev Parsons was unavai¬lable for comment.SDS members will be in Mandel corriderwith petitions, trying to build student sup¬port for allowing the convention oncampus.Members of the committee on women’saffairs are expected to be announced “veryshortly”, D Gale Johnson, spokesman forthe committee of the council of the Univer¬sity senate said yesterday.According to Johnson, University Presi¬dent Edward Levi has been meeting withmembers of the committee of the council todiscuss possible appointments.The standing committee on women’s af¬fairs is the major recommendation of theNeugarten report on the status of women inthe University.The Neugarten report’s recommenda¬tions were approved by the council of theUniversity senate November 10.At the November 10 council meeting, adelegation representing the New UniversityConference, the Chicago Women’s Liber¬ation Union and University Childcare, Increcommended lluil iiit: committee on wom¬en’s affairs be elected and include staffwomen.Women's panel to be chosen to gather more people for the march to thedinner.“We don’t want pigs on campus,” SDSmember Barbara Foley said previous tothe student council vote. “The rally will notonly be against Nolan, but against allcampus and police relations.”“We will use violence to get Nolan andJanowitz off campus,” she added. MorrisJanowitz, professor and chairman of sociol¬ogy, has been accused by SDS of being inclose coordination with Chicago police. Ja¬nowitz was also scheduled to speak at thedinner.“This rally will show that the Universityis not neutral. It takes part in police proj¬ects and surveys. It will demonstrate thatthe Chicago police and the University arecontrolled by the big bosses of the city,”she said.Several SDS members planned to attendthe dinner and confront Nolan on issuessuch as police in the ghetto, student rebel¬lions and alleged student murders.MORRIS JANOWITZAccused of cooperation with police by SDS£3-tel The Gordon J. Laing Award, 1970has been presented toGerald D. SuttlesforTHE SOCIAL ORDER OF THE SLUMEthnicity and Territory in the Inner CityThe Award is given each yearby The University Board of Publicationsto the faculty member whose book,published within the last two years,has added the most distinction to the list ofThe University of Chicago PressPrevious Winners1969, Leonard B. MeyerMusic, the Arts, and Ideas1968, Philip Foster 1967, Donald F. LachEducation and Social Change in Ghana Asia in the Making of Europe, Vol. 1 tel1966, A. Leo OppenheimAncient Mesopotamia1964, William H. McNeillThe Rise of the WestCOMPARE PRICESHelp beat the Establishment!Corolla Pinto Volkswagen VegaJ1942M »229225 *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 -776-4016THEATRE FIRSTpresents"THE PRIME OFMISS JEAN BRODIE"Exciting Drama by Jay PressonAllen Directed by Allen CarlsenWeekend Perf. Thru Dec. 6 Fri.,Sat., 8:30; Sun. 7:30 p.m.$2.00-STUDENT DISCOUNT Adm.,with I.D., $1.25, ATTHfATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport 463-3099 BOTTOMSGOTBOTTOMS*5.90and UpBut Worth More5222Vi S. Harper Ave.Near Harper Court Fine art inperfect reproductionHang this fa¬mous art withthe assuranceartist or mu¬seum experthas approvedits faultless reproductionUniquelyflush mountedwith the edgesof a black contemporaryframeEach $14.95Also AvailableFramedMini PrintsApprox. 10x14"for halls orsmall rooms.Each $4.75Call or stop in for our new,colorful, excitingcatalog - - TODAYIIm* NORTH2709 W. Devon937-0665SOUTH5300 S. Lake ParkHyde Pk. Bank Blc324-1223A bicycle puts youclose to nature - Thusspake ZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Car¬lton, Raleigh, Robin Hood,Falcon, Peugeot, Gitane,Mercier, Radius and Daws.Factory trained mechanics.Used bicycles spasmod¬ically. Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Goop2112 N Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; S&S 10-8The earpetbexarr* from Old Town 1965, Tang TsouAmericas Failure in China, 1941-501963, Bernard WeinbergA History of Literary Criticismin the Italian RenaissanceMULTI¬MEDIATHEATERLocated in HARPER GALLERIES in HARPER COURT5210 S. HARPER MU 4-1173 or 538-8093MONDAYS7:00 and 9:00 P.M.:films by Kartemquin Films Ltd, including THUMBS DOWN; PARENTS;ANONYMOUS ARTISTS OF AMERICA; THE INQUIRING NUNS; WHAT THEFUCK ARE THESE RED SQUARES/; HUM 255. Call for specific dates. Admission$1.00TUESDAYS8:00 P.M. only, $1.50An evening of song with tenor John Gahagan, accompanied by Elaine Smith.WEDNESDAYS7:30 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. $1.00Tennessee William's SOMETHNNG_UNjSPOKEN, with Marion Scott and CarolGregoryTHURSDAYS7:00 P.M. until 10:00 P.M. (except closed Thanksgivingnight) $2.50:An introduction to Psychodrama with Norton KnopfFRIDAYS8:30 P.M. Only. $2.00:Edward Albee's TH^jAMERICAN^DREAA^, with Marge Michel, Elizabeth Berg,David Walker, Barbara Bollmann, and Allen Vuchetick.Entire cycle produced by George Val.All plays directed by George Val.Please save this, our last expensive ad in the Maroon, forfuture reference.2/The Chicago Maroon/November 20, 1973Delegates support new state ConstitutionThree delegates to the state Con¬stitutional Convention urged adoption of the1970 Illinois Constitution at a communityforum Wednesday night at the LutheranSchool of Theology.The forum, sponsored by the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference, featured24th district delegates A1 Raby and OdasNicholson, and 11th district delegate Ber¬nard Weisberg.Ratification of the proposed constitutionMaroonThe Maroon’s fundraising drive to pull usout of the red has passed the $300 mark.Proceeds from a Thursday night benefitby the India situdent association have yetto be totaled.The association presented SivasankariChandrasekar in a dance recital in Mandelhall. She performed and explained samplesof Indian classical dance.Editor Steve Cook said, “We are verygrateful to the India association for thisfine gesture of support and hope that othergroups and individuals will respond in sucha generous fashion.“We thank those who have given so far.It’s true that $300 is a lot of money, but theMaroon is going to need a lot more to beable to get out of the red.”The fundraising drive is an attempt topay off an old Maroon debt. The paper hasbeen forced to cut back its size and newscoverage until the large debt is paid off.If enough money is raised by the drive,the Maroon will be able to publish largerissues and cover events better.Everyone contributing under $10 is a pa¬tron. Those who give $10 or more are ben¬efactors. All gifts are tax-deductible sincethe Maroon is a non-profit organization.Our offices in Ida Noyes 304, are open 9am to 5 pm.Our latest lists of doners follows: and four separate proposals will be decidedin a referendum December 15.While all three delegates favored itsadoption, enthusiasm for the new documentvaried from the “whole-hearted” support ofWeisberg to the grudging admission of MissNicholson that it is better than the presentconstitution, adopted in 1870.All the delegates praised its bill of rights,which includes sections prohibiting “unrea¬sonable invasions of privacy,” and unequalenforcement of Illinois law. All regrettedBENEFACTORS: Anonymous-3, Jerry Lin¬coln, Dr Ira G Wool, Benjamin DrakeWright II, and Edward McC Blair (notThe annual “state of the University”address, traditionally given in November,will be delivered in February, PresidentEdward Levi announced this week.In explaining the move, Levi said that hedid not have all information that would beneeded for the speech and that he wished totalk to more faculty and deans before mak¬ing the statement.He added that he wished to assess theUniversity’s financial situation before giv¬ing a report. Provost John Wilson has al¬ready estimated that the University willlose at least $4.25 million in the fiscal yearending June 1971.The President is required by the Univer¬sity by-laws to deliver an annual messageto the faculty senate on the state of theUniversity.Members of the senate include all facultywho have been at the University for atleast one year and who hold the rank of atleast assistant professor. however, the failure of the convention topass a provision legalizing the estab¬lishment of a state graduated income tax.Four controversial proposals of the Con¬stitution are being considered separately.Discussoin centered on two of these, theelection of House members from singlemember versus cumulative districts, andthe appointment of judges by the governorversus election.On the subject of judicial selection, alldelegates were concerned with increasedEdward McBlair, as it appeared in Tues¬day's Maroon).PATRONS: Judith Perlman.PRESIDENT EDWARD LEVIState of University address to be givenin February minority group representation in judge¬ships and minimizing partisanship as acriterion for approval. They did not agreeabout the method of selection, however.Weisberg and Raby preferred the “meritsystem”, where a non partisan board wouldsubmit nominees to be approved by thegovernor, with the electorate having a vetopower.Weisberg termed the present electiveprocess a “sham,” resulting in the selec¬tion of judges by local political bosses, andvoted in by voters not familiar with themen involved.Miss Nicholson, on the other hand, point¬ed out that in Missouri, where the “meritsystem” is in effect, only one black judgehas been appointed. She also noted that theappointive power would be in the hands ofthe governor, as partisan a system as theone now in effect.Raby attacked the changed from multi¬member districts to single member ones.Under the present system, voters may castthree votes for the three delegates sent tothe House from each of the state’s 59 dis¬tricts.This method gives individual voters morestrength, Raby said, because they can castas many as three votes for a single candi¬date, insuring minority representation.He declared that if the single memberdistrict plan is adopted, the House will beheavily dominated by Republicans for thenext 15 years.Miss Nicholson, although admitting thatshe could “flip a coin” in deciding betweenthe two systems, observed that the IllinoisSenate is divided evenly between Demo¬crats and Republicans under a single mem¬ber plan, whereas the House is controlledby Republicans under the multi-memberone.All delegates present favored the propos¬als to eliminate the death penalty and low¬ering the voting age to 18.The meeting closed on a plea to vote inthis special election, and a call for mem¬bers of the audience to serve as poll watch¬ers in the election.drive reaches $300 markLevi speech moved to FebruaryThe Eagle wants to wish all its wonderful customersa Happy Holiday Season.you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don twant to think, there's good booic.Bass ale and Schlitx beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . i , lunckcott ... dinner . . . snack $ « • •5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933Reservations taken for Holiday Parties.Our Banquet Room can accomodate 10 to 50 peopleThe Chicago Maroon Columbia Spectator to opposeInternal Revenue Service orderSTEVE COOKEditor DON RATNERBusiness ManagerCON HITCHCOCK, Managing EditorPAUL BERNSTEIN, News EditorSUE LOTH, Executive EditorSTEVE AOKI, Photography Editor•JUDY ALSOFROM, NANCY CHISiMAN, GORDON KATZ, AUDREY SHALINSKYAssociate Editors•BICK BALSAMO, SARA BEEBE, USA CAPELL, PAT COX, REVA FREEDMAN, JIM HAEFEMEYER, ELSAHERSH, MITCH KAHN, BARRY KELL/WAN, ALBERTO LOPEZ, BILL MARGRAVE, KEITH PYLE, JOESARTORELLI, HOUSTON STEVENS, FRED WINSTONStaff•CARL STOVALL CAROLINE HECK DIANA LEIFERContributing Edilor Senior Editor Assistant Business ManagerFounded in 1892. Published by University of Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regularschool year, except during examination periods, and bi-weekly on Thursdays during the summer. Offices inrooms 301, 303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3263.Distributed on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptions by mail $8 per yearin the U.S. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, III.ViolenceThe cancellation of the social sciences dinner, at which a deputypolice superintendent was scheduled to speak, was unfortunate.We understand that the student council of the social sciences divi¬sion was concerned about the possibility of violence and voted to calloff the dinner to avoid what could have been an unpleasant scene.We believe that a group has the right to invite whomever theywish to speak on campus, whether the views of the speaker are popularwith students or not. The threats of violence, which were the doing ofSDS, had the result of denying students the right to hear the policeman.We cannot comprehend how SDS can ask this University to hosttheir national convention on the grounds that they have the same rightto University facilities as anyone else and then go about intimidatingothers who wish to hear the other side.We, like SDS, feel that the Chicago police represent an administra¬tion which is often corrupt and unfair. But there is a clear distinctionbetween denying one side the right to be heard and disagreeing withwhat might be said.It is fine to demonstrate an expression of dissent; we have noqualms about supporting the right of free speech when it is SDS who isdenied a fair shake. Had SDS intended to picket, chant, or ask ques¬tions of the speaker, there would be no problem. But SDS has goneabout this campus promising to “use violence to get Nolan off campus”(a quote from SDS member Barbara Foley).We suspect that people in SDS can easily justify their actions tothemselves, according to what they consider the student movement tobe. What seems to be lacking, in any analysis from SDS that we haveencountered, is a bit of tolerance, a respect for the rights of others toarrive at their own conclusions as to what is wrong with our society andhow to solve it.But how can SDS justify their right to be heard when they will notallow a policeman to speak? How can SDS propose to be building astruggle for a just and tolerant society when they do not respect therights of others to speak and to listen to what is said?Nolan wasn’t coming here to inform on anyone or to arrest anyone.He was coming to confront students, and he knew it.How is anyone going to find out just what he had to say forhimself?OmbudsmanThere exists on campus an office which can be immensely beneficialto students, that of the student ombudsman. Established two years agoby incoming President Edward Levi, the ombudsman has two sorts ofgeneral tasks: taking individual problems brought to him and attemptingto hammer out a solution between the student and the offending partof the administration or initiating investigations of his own into mattersfor which there are no clear-cut rules or in which existing rules areambiguous.Clearly such a person can be of great assistance to students whofeel the administration has loused them up. In the past, ombudsmenhave demonstrated their individual and collective ability to deal withdifficult problems, problems which to the student might seem insur¬mountable. In addition they have proven themselves effective gadfliesin drawing attention to little-known problems and situations whichneed remedying.So, whenever you feel that the bureaucracy has you down, andwe all have our own tales of woe with registration, tuition, and soforth, go up to Reynolds Club 204 and give your troubles to TonyGrafton. He can be an effective spokesman for you and perhaps evensave others from the possibility of being in a similar mess someday.4/The Chicago Maroon/November 20, 1970 Columbia^ SpectatorFOUNDED 1077Vo;. cxv No it new york. n.y.. Thursday, October 29. wo TEN CENTSFrench Professor HeadsDepartment of SpanishBy IONL’rafe»**.»r ot ITwxh MichaelUtffetem' was »**>«the 'nwnwi «axHwihl* yvxt by tH* <rw*HRistmior: <4 adminiotraiivvutsorJer *«*i jwrwNwttt} ckxlu**within the department.Sources «*v«*U* l las! npH thata&houtjh the spa;i*h depart»« ,was acadumleaij) sumd, conflict*»»'*v<rwl prnfa**c<r' prev*nt**i seW-ti:*-. a ..**chairman. Law* Mhrar> then step¬ped In to appoint Or. ttiitaterrechairman - in order to «1y« dirwtkm a«c pl&nnlw to ttw depart-l DC Leadership DenouncesDiscipline of SAS MembersThe executive cums&lee the it jAkixrsd'Mtff ifcwfttftor? Council ;ha* cendeo .fied the jujiiilutiHfattub !lor det «Ubi> »o «u> t* «trvcm • !hers rt Studunts* Afro~.v*H*rit»n jSociety (or their part in the <xxu*of severyi offices inllanieyRail tart *prtrw.Although the ITX has w* yet a:*t chotMMt lw*> people *0 prose¬cute is ridiculous.1''We don’t feet there is *«yekar-ewt right or wrung In thesituation, and the *bnmigration i»apparently trying to say that theCluck* “ere mttv wr**.*’ he said.Last spring, during the occupa¬tion of the tfHcv, the IIK voted •RONFRl ho agpOtnUDMl an an outsWvito chair ;» department l?* a highlyiHhuuMl *?ep, and ss inode onlywhen tiw acpnimxiraiHMt IWU tin*specific tlepartowm is b- admin¬istrative ctwtMt and must *x- rt>-Uiiit.ir. ra\*»t cases the chairman of a■tepsrtracct is selected by taepra-fe* *o»‘ of ilwl department six!must be confirmed by Vice l'ri**i-dem and l>ean id hue iltki INtly-harp husch.George K. TrtenfWi, dean of Usegr(Vitiate sciiOOi,explained v«*ter-flay, Mh* Sps.iish department hashad various trwwWe* hr year*, arxla variety of step* have been taitwtiSftag back t« 1 cbnsiry ot March• «f J part of those < lunge*was tfie bcin*rtn« tr, of Dr. Hlffx-Leausrdo D* Morehxs, profcs-sor of Sjw <tMi, ,ic*ieob»v explain¬ed that when Pp-tfeMor JamesShearer stepped down us chairmaw last Jar*', the Members fifth*department UUod w reach agree-•ho ooe i» Ifae department Cfitn-mifided tb» support at die wholedepartment, *« tto» Mtmtfttatratfcm Carrillo, Rey LeadIn Senate VotingNo ! imdiilitlc Garner* UN of Hallol*-.Run-Off Vt ill Be Held ill Two Vteek*Bv mCUSUINEIOlKFour <.s\r,<iiuatc»— Kmillo Carrillo ’?2, Mariano Key’T2, Art Mulley 1J, iiwl Ed L«ne ’T2—*ill (or th»two vjeant .College «**U in tn« itnitrrulljr Senate m >runMift election to b« held w two week*.COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR: An obscure tax law is putting this newspaper’s taxexemption status in jeopardy.By GORDON KATZThe Columbia Spectator, the studentnewspaper of Columbia University, is beingthreatened with the loss of its tax-exemptstatus by the Internal Revenue Service af¬ter IRS agents discovered last summer thatthe Spectator endorsed political candidatesin 1966 and 1968.The Spectator, unlike the Maroon, isbound by section 501 of the Internal Reve¬nue Service Code which prohibits non-profitcorporations from engaging in lobbying orpropagandizing. In as much as the Specta¬tor is an independent corporation and not astudent activity, IRS cited their gubernato¬rial endorsement of Nelson Rockefeller in1966 and their Presidential endorsement ofEldridge Cleaver in 1968 as violations of thefederal tax code.To avoid losing their tax-exemption, a ne¬cessity for most college newspapers, IRSordered the Spectator to amend its corpo¬rate charter and by-laws saying that theywould no longer endorse candidates or leg¬islation. This solution, however, was foundto be unacceptable by the Spectator’s man¬aging board, and now they expect to chal¬lenge the IRS directive through adminis¬trative channels and, if necessary, throughthe courts.According to Spectator business man¬ager Mitchell Gerber, the newspaper’s at¬torneys will argue that the Spectator’s en¬dorsements do not constitute substantial in¬fractions of the IRS code in view of the factthat their circulation is only 10,000 to 20,000.“We don’t feel it proper that they apply thelaw to a college newspaper,” Gerber said.If this line of argument fails to rescindthe directive, the Spectator will resort tochallenging the law’s constitutionality, as¬serting that it is a violation of freedom ofthe press.Gerber hopes that the case does notreach this stage since their lawyers think itdoubtful that a federal court would decidein their favor and thus establish Con¬stitutional precedent. ANALYSISIf all fails and the Spectator loses its taxexemption, it could cost the newspaper upto $3000 in taxes and up to $9000 in rent forthe office space they currently occupy onColumbia property. Columbia would haveto charge the Spectator, as a taxable orga¬nization, or its own tax-exemption would beplaced in jeopardy.Although one cannot firmly say thatIRS’s directive to the Spectator is the be¬ginning of a conspiratorial effort to repressthe predominately radical-liberal collegepress, it certainly is suspicious that theIRS should single out the Spectator at thistime as a violator of an obscure, andfrequently ignored tax law. Even moreironic is the fact that the Spectator’s newsand editorials are almost exclusively de¬voted to on-campus and academic subjects.Despite the obvious fact that the Marooncould hardly afford to become an indepen¬dent corporation like the Spectator, the im¬plications of the action taken against theSpectator could eventually effect this news¬paper as well as virtually every other col¬lege paper in the nation.For if, let Is say, the court upholds the IRSdirective, it could mean that non-profit cor¬porations such as the University of Chicagowould be prohibited from supporting anyactivity — including those run by students— of a political nature.Section 501 of the Internal Revenue Ser¬vice Code was in fact invoked against theUniversity last summer. At that time theIllinois chapter of the Movement for a NewCongress (MNC) was asked to leave theircampus offices to avoid jeopardizing theUniversity’s tax exemption.Further actions, in line with that beingtaken against the Spectator, would not onlybe adding insult to injury in the case of theMaroon; it could also radically affect theactivities of such organizations as studentgovernment.BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, November 20FOOD: Free coffee and cookies for undergrads andgrads, Cobb 23, 9-noon.SYMPOSIUM: Women for Peace presenting a symposi¬um on "The Now Issues," First United MethodistChurch, 1630 Hinman Ave, Evanston, beginning 9:30am, tickets $5.LECTURE: Hans Jonas, philosophy department, NewSchool for Social Research, on "Change and Perman¬ence: on the Possibility of Understanding P3sfHistory," part l. Social Science 122, 3 pm.DISCUSSION: Professor Kenneth Jackson a candidatein American urban history will give an informaltalk in the East Lounge of Ida Noyes, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Dr Noel Himmers, Bellcomm, Inc on"Selection of Lunar Landing Sites: Geology, Engineer¬ing, and Politics," Auditorium, Hinds Laboratory,4 pm.SERVICES: Liberal Sabbath Services, Hillel House,7 pm.SPEECH: Chicanos will be speaking on "The Chicanosas a Liberation Movement," Bonhoeffer House, 5554Woodlawn Ave., 8 pm.MUSIC: Folklore Society presents two Scottish tradi¬tional musicians, Cloister Club, 75c, 8 pm.FLICK: Doc films presents "The Gold Rush," CobbHall 7:15 and 9:30 pm.DANCE- Merris Dancer;, Id; Noyce, S Prr,.• •. iy. Saturday, November 21FLICK: CEF presents "The East is Red" and "Hun¬ger," Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:15 pm.Sunday, November 22SERVICES: University religious service, RockefellerChapel, 11 amREHEARSAL: "Carmina Burana," for all 80 peoplewith scores, room for 45 more singers, Church of theDisciples (Blue Gargoyle), 2 pm.MEETING: Men against Cool, Blue Gargoyle, 7:30 pm.CONCERT: The Last Poets, sponsored by Black Colonyand the organization of Black students, tickets $2,Mandei Hall, 8:30 pm.Monday, November 23REHEARSAL: Allegro conspirito will practice sight¬singing. Brent House 5540 Woodtawn, all singerswelcome, 7:30-9:30 pm.DISCUSSION: UC Bahai Fellowship, Ida Noyes eastlounge, 7:30 pm.SPEECH: "Who are the Real imperialists in theMiddle East?", speech by Josh Muravchik, nationalchairman of the YPSL, Ida Noyes, first floor lounge,7:30 pm.SPEECH: Students for Israel sponsoring Muki Tzur,Hitlei llouit, 9 pm.A I* II U J *..» •# Cft'( • I - .41about the midwayMl SICR AFT Cl ARANTEES THE LO* EST PRICESPLl S 15 day cash refundsPLUS 30 day full exchange privilegesPLl S Free delivery for l of CPLl S Complete service facilities on the premises/:v.V.vv/ .\r. j-J, v'Laing winnerGerald Suttles, assistant professor of so¬ciology, was awarded the 1970 GordonLaing prize by the University of Chicagopress for his book, “The Social Order ofthe Alum: Ethnicity and Territory in theInner City.”University president Edward Levipresented the $1,000 award to Suttles at areception in the Quadrangle club Tuesdayevening.The Laing award, which is determined bythe 13 member board of University publica¬tions, is granted annually to the best bookby a University faculty member publishedby the press.Published in November, 1968, the bookhas also won the 1969 C Wright Millsaward.The Social Order of the Slum” providesdetailed evidence that a slum community isa highly-ordered neighborhood behavingaccording to local norms, rather than a dis¬organized jungle.Suttles says that the community he stud¬ied, the Near West neighborhood aroundChicago’s Hull House, “departs sharplyfrom the common image of an unruly ur¬ban rabble . .. slum residents are intentupon finding a moral order.”Past winners of the Laing prize, firstawarded in 1962, include William McNeill’s-The Rise of the West”; Bernard Wein¬berg’s “History of Literary Criticism in theItalian Renaissance”, and Tang Tsou’s“America’s Failure in China, 1941-1950.”University scholarsThe selection of three new Universityscholars was announced yesterday by Ro-jger Hildebrand, dean of the College. They| are Anthony Grafton ’71, this year’s studentombudsman; Rickie Hay ’71; and DavidISaltman ’72. The one-day traffic ban is a spinoff of the“Sweet Sunday” idea which Norman Mail¬er boosted in his unsuccessful bid for themayoralty of New York City in 1969.PollutionThe Environmental Law Society will con¬duct an intensive day-long course in airand water pollution law this Saturday.The course, scheduled from 9 am to 5 pinat the law school, will deal with all releva itlaws and agencies in the area at the fede *-al, state, and local levels.Course materials have been compiledcontaining all of the pollution statutes, andwill be on sale at the door for $5. They canbe reserved by calling Bill McDonald, ext3557.Registration, for which there is no fee,will be held from 8:30 to 9 am in the lawschool auditorium.Gym on SundaysBartlett gym will be open on a trial basisthree Sundays this quarter from 1 pm to 5pm.According to dean of students CharlesO’Connell, the experiment will continuenext quarter if a large enough number ofstudents and faculty use the gym on thosethree Sundays.The gym will be open November 29, De¬cember 6, and December 13.Black benefitBlack Colony and the Organization ofBlack students (OBS) are sponsoring theLast Poets in a benefit concert Sunday at8:30 pm in Mandel hall.Proceeds from the concert will go to thefund for the Afro-American center.The Last Poets will recite revolutionaryblack poetry, accompanied by bongo drumsand other instruments. Tickets cost $2 atthe door.MiuiCiaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak S».—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500November 20, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5GERALD SUTTLES: Recipient of (University Press award for “The |$ociai Order ofthe Slum.”MUSICRAFT FOR SOUS'D ADVICEThis is the first year that Universityscholarships have been given to third andfourth-year students. They were previouslyoffered as four-year scholarships and thehighest honor granted by the University toentering students with exceptional academ¬ic and extra-curricular records.A University scholarship consists of agrant equalling a student’s assessed finan¬cial need and an additional $500.The faculty-student nominating com¬mittee for the new awards, Hildebrandsaid, based their recommendations on indi¬vidual academic achievement while at Chi¬cago, as well as involvement in activitiesthat benefit the University at large.Car-free FridayHyde Park merchant and community or¬ ganizations are jointly sponsoring a “car-free” day on 53rd St next Friday as part ofan experiment in new ways of urban living.From 9 am to 6 pm the street, from Ken¬wood to Lake Park, will be liberated fromall automotive traffic as members of thecommunity celebrate a day free from car¬bon monoxide.Shoppers and strollers can try streetpainting, buy hot food, or listen to their fa¬vorite Christmas carols. In addition, a mys¬tery guest will be on hand to play a calliopeas the spirit of the pre-automobile days re¬turns to Chicago’s South Side. Nickel beerwill also be available, blit limited to oneper customer.\.R. MCINTOSH JKLI>\ vvco SOM ALTEC LANSINGkill TEAC ELECTRO VOICEFISHER RKYOX SHI RES< < ITT EMPIRE ARCII \RM \\-k \RDO\ 1)1 AL BOSEMNSl | G ARRARI) BOZAkMIFRUOOI) THORENS RECTI LINE \RM \R\NTZ. A.DC. PICKERINGOn Audio EquipmentHundreds of UC Students & Faculty Are SatisfiedOwners of North of Webster. South of Belden. East of Sedgwick. West of Clark.The old neighborhood is changing and we re partly to blame. We re the new shopkeepers and we want tointroduce ourselves and tell you a little something about three intriguing new places to shop in Chicago.Left. Andy and Susan are local artistswho deal in authentic arts and craftsof the American Indian Fine qualitysilver, turquoise, coral, and shelljewelry, Navajo rugs. Pueblo potteryand baskets are displayed againstthe background of an oldSouthwestern trading post You getan education as well as the mostcomplete selection of fine Indianproducts m Chicago Hours are noonto 8 30 Tuesday through SaturdayNoon to 6 00 on Sunday > Center John thinks a recordshop should not only look asgood as it sounds but sell therecords people want to hear(not the ones record companiesthink they should hear) He hasblues, folk, rock, classical, importsand hard-to-get albums at low,fair prices And they're all outwhere you can see and touchthem noon to 9 00 Mondaythrough Friday Noon to 7 00Saturday and SundayFIRST PEOPLE ?ARSHits and Crafts nl the Rmerican Indian * ™Arts and Crafts of tha American Indian2236 N. Clark St 929-0789 Right Howard and most everyoneelse know how they want to lookAnd generally that's different fromanyone else So he chooses hisclothes and accessories from all overthe world This gives you the widestpossible choice in design, qualityfabrics, fine leathers and suedesMore than the clothes are unusualhere so come by noon to 9 00 Mondaythrough Friday 11 00 to 7 00Saturday 11.00 to 6 00 Sunday2201 N. Sedgwick 528-9828 (krtlws lor th*‘ ini2204 N. Clark StLETTERS TO THE EDITORSfice or CIA. But at least the latter agenciesdon’t blame the faculty for their ownshortcomings.By the way, I am still waiting for myrequisition forms for the winter quarter.Edward AndersProfessor of chemistry'Bring us together1In the Tuesday issue of the Maroon youpresented two editorials titled “LaRabida”and “Priorities”. These articles are to becommended for their concern with seeminginequities, but they ignore actual and over¬all conditions and, in so doing, lack impar¬tial analysis, insight and judgment.Business in America has felt the impactof a shrinking economy and an inflated la¬bor market. It has been able to react tosome extent, unhampered by human in¬volvement, in either closing down plants,-reducing their labor force, or using what¬ever means at their disposal and discretionin arriving at some solution.Our universities feel the same pressures.As a matter of fact, universities are morevulnerable to such conditions and less ableto cope aptly with them by using harshmeasures because of their moral and in¬tellectual commitments to our society as awhole and to students, faculty and staffwhich transcend whatever conditions mayexist and which in fact may imperil theirvery existence.If certain programs are loud in their pro¬test against inability to expand or acceptpresent conditions, they pointedly want toignore that the same restrictions applyacross the board to other areas.This is not a time to lament but a timefor all able and responsible persons to layaside their own narrow vested interests and rally by doubling their energy and effortson behalf of the University as a whole.Are we so immersed in our own selfish,tiny little world that nothing else mattersor exists outside of it, and have we grownso fat and lazy through years of minimalexertion in times of abundance that we arenow incapable of furnishing the slightestextra effort when it is particularly neededfor the good of all?V Carasso ships are available for the needy amongnext year’s black students.Jesse Turner ’71Bookstore inefficiencyBlack culture centerMaroon deadlinesAll letters and gadflies which are to beconsidered for publication must be in ouroffice (Ida Noyes 303) by noon of the daybefore publication.All material must be signed, althoughsignatures will be withheld on request. Ev¬erything submitted is subject to editing.The Maroon will print letters from indi¬viduals, but not from organizations. How¬ever, individuals may sign letters as mem¬bers of a particular group. The black cultural center, as proposed,strikes me as totally repugnant. Indeed, acenter to preserve black culture and to helpit to take its proper place alongside othercultures seems worthwhile.Unfortunately, these are not the majorreasons given for the proposed center. Thereasons given are feelings of social rejec¬tion and cultural exclusion from the Uni¬versity. Blacks have felt these emotions inevery facet of American life. Rejection andexclusion by America is the sole cause ofblack problems, and as such have been at¬tacked by blacks.If black students are not strong enough tobe individual centers of culture, no centeron earth is going to preserve black culture.If black students cannot maintain theirpride and self-respect in an environmentmuch less hostile than that of black stu¬dents in earlier generations, then black stu¬dents may as well drop out of school andreturn to the security of those centers ofyesteryear — the plantations.Since social rejection and cultural ex¬clusion from University tradition is prob¬ably felt to some degree by all students atsome time or other, maybe the Universityshould build a modern, first-class studentcenter for all students.On the other hand, if the University iswilling to spend a quarter of a million forblack equality, the University should spendit where it will accomplish some real good,for example, attracting more black facultymembers, donating it to black groups withworthy goals, or making sure that scholar¬ The bookstore has lately placed half-pageads in the Maroon, complaining that thefaculty had not yet ordered textbooks forthe winter quarter. That is an insidiousploy.A few years ago, the bookstore quietlydiscontinued its practice of sending text¬book requisition forms to faculty membersscheduled to teach in the following quarter.This requires that 1000 absent-mindedprofessors remember on their own that thedeadline for textbook orders is approach¬ing, and call the bookstore individually forforms.If this procedure worked, it might be crit¬icized merely for being wasteful of man¬power. However, I have on occasion had tocall the bookstore three times, followed bya written ultimatum before eliciting a re¬sponse.Things seldom go smoothly even if theinstructor has the prescience and per¬severance to obtain a textbook requisitionform on time.The order itself often does not go out forweeks; the number of copies ordered iswell below the estimated enrollment on thegrounds that some students will buy sec¬ond-hand books, or that copies are in stockfrom last year. (In at least one such case,two cases of books shown on the inventoryturned out not to exist).The inefficiency of our bookstore is no¬torious, approaching that of the posit of- Open the libraryWith the opening of Regenstein we havenot only acquired a new library, but also anew degree of paranoid bureaucracy oncampus. Never at Harper was I .unable tobring a visitor into the library, but I havediscovered a security at Regenstein, whichis unrelenting.It is not students alone who are treated tothis librarian dogmatism, but this weekendI overheard a professor pleading with a li¬brarian to allow him to bring a guest intothe library. The librarian, of course, didn’thave the authority, but was persuaded tocall some person upstairs who did.Shortly after this incident, a student fromanother school who planned to do some re¬search was refused admittance with no re¬course to higher authorities.I cannot understand at all why a personwith a University of Chicago ID cannotbring in a guest and, in fact, why peoplewho wish to use the library cannot sign avisitors sheet and check any suspiciouslooking parcels (bombs, non-Regensteinbooks, subversive material — what is itthat the administration fears?) at the doorTo my mind the library should be a placeopen to anyone who wants to use it.Steven RoseBiochemistryPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsJ Compare the Pricei| 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800L-__WEDEUVER j piAreers all-night showPERF0AMANCES FRIDAT l SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREBob Dylan...NewManing!BOB DYLANNEW MORNING'INCLUDING:SIGN ON THE WINDOWIF NOT FOR YOU / THREE ANGELSWENT TO SEETHE GYPSY / IF DOGS RUN FREE I ANEWDIRECTIONEXPERIENCEITV«:r, You have to beginwith a cleanpatrol tarp.Kick it around a little and maybe later on, grind incarmel com. And you have a jacket with personalitycanvassy coat has tigrado lamb fur to tickle yourkers. Don’t keep it clean. 1906/The Chicago Maroon/November 20, 1970 NOV. 20"DE SADE"(12:00 & 1:45) NOV. 21"Cotton Comes To Harlem"(12:00 & 1:45 & 3:30)NOV. 27 NOV. 28"CHE" "PUTNEY SWOPE"(12:00 & 1:45) (12:00 8. 1:30 8 3:00)DEC. 4 DEC 5“THE PRIME OF "DOWNHILL RACER"MISS JEAN BRODIE"(12:00 8 2:00) (12:00 8. 1:45 8 3:30)DEC.11 DEC.12"THE STERILECUCKOO" "ME NATALIE"18 19"THE OUT OF TOWNERS" "KING OF HEARTS"(12:00 8 1:45) (12:00 8 2:00)ncurn $1 502-RECORDSET$6.76WITH THIS COUPON-DYLAN OFFER-"NEW MORNING" $3.88"SELF PORTRAIT". $6.76only atDISCOUNT RECORDS201 N. LASALLEor 55 W. MONROECOUPON • For brushing up before exams.• For understanding especially difficult material.• For reviewing what you've already learned. Or bringing backwhat you may have forgotten.• For gathering additional information for writing papers.Where can we help you right now? In almost any subject you'restudying. Economics. History. Philosophy. Novels. Poetry. Shortstories. Plays. From Beowulf to Salinger. From Aeschylus toZarathustra. Over 1,000 works in all.Five newMONARCHNOTESready now!MONARCH=Nns= Most titles $1.00 eaA division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. 630 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 10020(The Maroon Classified Ads)"BEAT THE HELL OUT OF IT, IRV //The Maroon is soliciting...Bring in your iuicy personals...(or fun and profit!!"WHO ARE THEREAL IMPERIALISTSIN THE MIDDLEEAST?"5peech by JoshMuravchik, Nationalchairman of the YPSL.Mon., Nov. 23, 7:30 p.m.Ida Noyes-1st fir. loungeSponsored by the YoungPeople's Socialist League.PERSONALSSUMMER IN EUROPE: Jet r-t $239Chgo-Lon. 6-21 to 9-16; 7-8 to 8-25.Call Chicago Student Flights BU 8-6610 x 3407 aft 6 pm. (Open to stu¬dents 8. staff only); based on 90 &60 seals respectively.Lost — Brown & black hungry dogaffectionate. Call Hitchcock 73Padre Island Sea Shore Last weekof Dec. Also Mexico, Big Thicket,Hot Springs. Call HICKORY, 324-1499.Cats (2) need home. LivelyS mo bl& wht. Call Judy 634-3698 eve.Don't miss Mimi Farina, Tom Jans,8. Jim Glover at the Quiet Knight953 Belmont. 348-9509. At the Bel¬mont elevated.$$$$$ — MONEY GIVE OUT. Re¬member last year's FOTA pro¬grams? They are valuable! We pay50c for each copy in good shape.Bring them to Ida Noyes 209.Skippy the Hip Hippo is hip toHYPPO. Are you? Check it outWed. & Fri. aft 8. eve. 5655 S. Univ-Can you dig it? Open now. Students — Europe for Christmas,Easter or summer? Employment op¬portunities, charter flights, dis¬counts. Write for information (airmail) Anglo American Association60a Pyle Street, Newport, I.W.,England.Writers' Workshop (PLaza 2-8377)ABORTION is legal in NY. For re¬ferral to accredited hospitals call212-633-9825 6 pm to 6 amJOIN THE COMPATIBLES' GEN¬ERATION. Date and-or correspondwith 3-5 compatible mates selectedfrom your own and several otherarea colleges by our own computer.Mail $4 your total cost, to receiveapplication for processing. Campus-Mates Box 544, Vienna, Virginia,22180.Very horny black male miniaturepoodle seeks meaningful Mason.Regstrd, but will slum. Call BonHomme. 624-2848Mike, don't expose yourself.CARMINA BURANAPeople who have the 80 scores out— We need your voices. Also wehave 45 more scores. Come Suns, toBlue Gargoyle. 2:00 pm.SPACESublet: Lovely 5 rm. apt. view oflake. Furn. available. Option to re¬new. 374-1196.I bd. apt. 55th-Cornell Avail Jan.,some furn. Call 955-6980Rm in Irg apt w-3 guys. 52nd 8.Drchstr. $56-mo. 324-0952 6-10 pmII rm apt in S. Shore-wall to wallcarpets-lots of storage-good trans. tocampus. $85-mo includes utilities.Call 324-7653 or 288-5799Attractive 3 rm apt nr 1C, lake,Univ bus serv. 922-6793 or 799-6641,evenings.SUN 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.SUN LIFE OF CANADARALPH J. WOOD, Jr.cutOne N. LaSalle St.Chic. 60602FR 2-2390798-0470 IMtliMl Spacious Apartment to Sublet.$225-month. 5 rooms.East Hyde ParkPhone 643-8170Room for girl in private home. $40-mo. MU 4-5076 6-10 pm or wkndSCENESIf religion is powerless, why is theBaha'i Faith so effective? IdaNoyes, each Monday in EastLounge, 7:30 pm.Bored with UC intellectualism? HearMuki Tzur, a kibbutz intellectual.Mon, 9 pm, Hillel.All sleeping women now will awakeand move. 9:30 pm, Mondays,WHPK 88.3LIBERAL SABBATH SERVICEStonight 7:00 pm at HILLEL5715 Woodlawn.ARSfor the musicrecords/tapes/and so forth2201 north sedgwickChicago 60614/312-528-9828just around the corner.GESTALT ENCOUNTER GROUPWeekend, Nov. 27, 28, 29. Fri 7-11pm. Sat. 10am-6pm, Sun 10 am-6pm.Limited to 10. $25. Lorrie Peterson,experienced leader, Esalen trained.288-3541Little Old Ladies are a Trip! Sharea free afternoon with lonely people.Take positive social action. Call 643-3156.ODELL BROWN appearing tonite atHYPPO Coffeehouse. Cover chargeof 75c proceeds for youth programs.Spend an Evening With Pete (See-ger)! Dec. 5 while helping poorkids. Barbara 752-2146YOGA single/group Exerc. Mdtn.Contrn. Sri Nergde. DO 3-0155.CRAFT COOP now open at the BlueGargoyle Mon-Wed-Thurs Fri 11:30-2:30 Thur ev 7-10 pm.FOR SALEAFGAN puppies-show & pet qual.blacks 8. creams AKC $175-250. Callday or night Metz 472-6557'65 PEUGEOT 404 Wagon. Goodcondition $700. 841-5264Biggest Jean selection. Wranglers$4.98, turtlenecks $1.99 John's MensStore 1459 E. 53.Yamaha '67. For off road only.Rebuilt engine. Needs minor work.$100. 731-2547.Viola (signed 8, dated), bow 8< case,$250. Lt-wt sleeping bag $10. 643-2516evenings.Armstrong Flute 6 mos. old, exc.cond. $85 or trade for guitar. 731-2547I can't ski due to injury. STD LangeFlo Boots (9M), 95. Salamon Anti-Shock Bindings 40. Fischer Super-glas Skis (190cm, RSL) 100. All 14Ski-days old. 324-0764.Toyota Corona 69 4dr auto. Exccond, 15,000 mi. $1500. Leavingcountry. Cash only. 363-7791HIGHER EDUCATION: SECON¬DARY EDUCATION: SOCIAL-ECO-N O M I C DEVELOPMENT. Direc¬tories of Positions. New, Innovativeapproach. Inexpensive. EffectiveWrite: Intercept-Soclocom, HarvardSquare PO Box 317, Cambridge,Mass., 02138. Call (617) 868-4150.1960 MERCEDES BENZ $350.324-4895'68 Pont. Firebird Convert AM-FM,pwr str, 39,000 mi, good cond. $1200or best offer. Ml 3-0800 x2556Office Electric Underwood fine con¬dition $100 955-9163GRAND OLD BABY GRAND Rea¬sonable 955-9163PEOPLE WANTEDStudent to care for 4 yr. old in ourhome (next to CCE) 2:00 pm-4:45pm weekdays. $15.00 per week. Call363-6387.Test your emotional sensitivity in aunique experiment. Call Stuart 288-5589. Need part-time aft. ass't. in Dentaloffice. Will train qual. person. HPBk. Bldg. Ml 8-9607.Roommate wanted for large luxu¬riously furnished South Shore house,beginning Jan. 1. Call 493-7326 after6.College students needed 7 days aweek, 4-0. Experience preferred.Call DELI DALI DELICATESSEN.643-0500 ,1522 E. Hyde Park.NEEDED! URGENT!Research Assistant in Finance731-8325 or 768-1947Going to Louisville (or Nashville,Bloomington)? I'll fly you there forThanksgiving. X4172 or 493-9278. $30r-t.The Maroon needs some go-getterad salesmen and-or women to huntdown 8, dig up new accounts. Goodcommissions on both new 8, old ac¬counts. Should have car. Cal Don orDiana, X3263.Youth Run It! Got to be a People'sThang. HYPPO. The People's Cof¬feehouse. Wed. and Fri. aft. & eve.5655 University.Wanted: Male subjects 21 yrs 8.over as control group for medicalstudy. Must spend 4 days in hospi¬tal. Call x5809. Dr. Heinrich pays$40.FEM ROOMMATE WANTEDOwn room, large apt. 55th 8<Univ.from Dec 10. $70. 955-9163ANTIQUE EVENTAMERICAN ANTIQUESFOR THOSE WHO KNOWSat. Nov 21 1:00 — 9:00 pmMAIN STREET ANTIQUES3624 W. 216th StreetMatteson, IllinoisS. of Rte. 30 8. W. of Rte. 54, Reg.hrs Fri & Sat 1-5 pm or Appt.747-4315, 748-4056.CEF PRESENTSRUNAWAY?Family'Problems? Call the Depot.955-9347.PEOPLE FOR SALETyping Service AvailableMU 4-7394 R.M. DavidsonNEW GRATEFUL DEADNEW RECORDWe have brand new DYLAN,STEVE STILLS, JUDY COLLINS,GRATEFUL DEAD, MILES DAVIS.Van Morrison, Pharoah Sanders, toname a few.3.29 - 3.99 COOP RECORDSBsmt. Reynolds ClubHelp us pay our rent. MEDICAL ETHICSStudent American Medical Associ¬ation and Illinois Citizens for Medic¬al Control of Abortion. Sunday eve.,6:30 pm, Bonhoeffer House, 5554Woodlawn.COFFEE HOUSERalph Rosenberg on 12-string guitarat Bonhoeffer House, 5554 S. Wood¬lawn, Saturday evening, November21, 9 pm. No charge. Coffee andFriends.JOHNNIE WALKER BLACKIs fine, but wait'll you see Scottishfiddler Aly Bain and mouth harpplayer 8, guitarist Mike Whellans atthe Ida Noyes Cloister Club 8:00tonight. 75c. Folklore Society. HYDE PARKFIREWOODOak - Ash - BirchS45/TON DELIVEREDFOR IMMEDIATEDELIVERYCALL 955-2480ANY TIMESpecial Student RatesWANTEDEND ANOMIESee Two of Scotland's Best Tradi¬tional folk musicians tonight at theCloister Club. Aly Bain from theShetland Islands will play his fiddle8, Mike Whelans sings, guitars 8<mouth harps. Tickets are 6-3 or 75c.SMASH SEXISMAd hoc Committee Against Chauvin¬ism seeks evidence of sexism in UCemployment practices. Send inforvia FacEx to Oleh Weres, JFI 351. Ride Wanted to New York forThanksgiving. Jackie, 363-9289Home needed quick for big friendlyTom. Fixed, declawed. Lovespeople. Linda x3776, rm. 304Room wanted by male grad std.prefer to share apt. 324-3421 eve.;684-5600 x240 days.FOTA PROGRAMS from last year.We pay 50c per copy. Ida Noyes 209by Wed. EASY LOOT!GIVE TOMAROONFUND RAISINGOn Saturday Nov. 21 a double fea¬ture of interest to aesthetes and in¬tellectual masochists alike: “Hun¬ger", the prize-winning productionof the Nobel Prize novel, at 7:00and "The East is Red", the onlyRED Chinese film allowed in thiscountry, at 9:15.And on Sunday, Nov. 22, the CannesGrand Prize winning classic byMiziguichi, "Ugetsu". And for tight¬wads and other assorted goldbricks,two (2) free films this quarter:Jean Cocteau's famous production of"Beauty 8, the Beast" on Dec. 9;and Leone's famous (though for oth¬er reasons) Italian pasta dish "Fist-full of Dollars" on Dec. 14. Allbrought to you by CEF. CHICAGO SINAICONGREGATIONpresentsRABBI HERBERT A. WEINERauthor of"9»/2 MYSTICS"speaking onTHE WORLD OF THEKABBALAHAn Adventure in Jewish MysticismFriday, November 208:30 pmS. D. Schwartz Hall1720 East 54th StreetAdmission Free Public InvitedSHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates for Students and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin & doubles from $14.00 dailyWeekly and monthly rates on requestOffice Space nowavailable for immediateoccupancy* Please call Mr. SchwartzPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveContemporary European Films present Sat. Nov. 21at 7:00 p.m. “HUNGER” and at 9:15 “The East is Red.”Cobb Hall7& 9:15 and MiziguichT s “Ugetsu” Sun. Nov. 22November 20, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7MWiMmM¥¥MH¥fflMMH¥M>1KMmH»i#5mHHMM» *:¥:• 4:¥:4 4mmM4 4MMHM WE AREDESPERATEThe Bookstore has not receivedtextbook information for over 200courses that will be offered nextquarter.If ordered next week, it is doubtfulthese texts will arrive in time for theJanuary 4th opening.We are making every effort to havey all needed texts and supplies onhand when each quarter begins.Textbook deliveries are now aver¬aging well over a month from dateof order.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE LAST CHANCE-Autumn Quarter Texts4In order to make room for theincoming Winter Quarter Text¬books, Autumn Quarter Texts willbe removed from the shelves onMONDAY, NOVEMBER, 30. fimHHMUuuNnuHuM¥n>«<u¥Hm¥We urge that you purchase any ||needed Fall Quarter Texts no later mthan Friday, November, 27.Thank you.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE mK¥¥K¥¥M¥n¥¥¥¥THERE'S A WALKIN' VOICE THAT'STALKIN'PUTTIN' PICTURES INTO OUR HEADIF YOU'RE HUNG ON THE WORDSIN THE NOUNS AND THE VERBSTHEN YOU NEVER DID HEARWHAT IT SAID(from The Walkin' Voice)RIC MASTENPlaying Singing TalkingRIC is from Big Sur. He presents an encounter: Ric andAudience. The current immediate begins to flow in bothdirections. He likes colors; he enjoys living; he is fond ofEarth.COME it's freeSunday evening the 22nd, 8 pmUnitarian Church,57th & WoodlawnSponsored by SRL-First Unitarian ChurchMeadville, Lombard and Billings Fund.8/The Chicago Maroon/November 20, 1970 METRO GOLDWYN MAYER Presents A BURT KENNEL-/ PRODUCTION StarringFRANK SINATRAan GEORGE KENNEDY n"DIRTY DPfGOB MAGEE* with JUflfE HCKBOIfco starring IOCHEU CAICT* LOIS mmUTOM'lACX ELAMTOM WALDMAN & FRANK WALDMAN .nd IOSEPH HELLER B«edon Th»BdiWd Dmqu.M**.By DAVID MARKSON Produced and Directed By BURT KENNEDY PANAV!SION\lETROCOUOR1GPI-——NOW!I HE COLLEGIUM MUSICUMHOWARD BROWN, directorpresents a concert ofSECULAR MUSIC OF THEFLORENTINE RENAISSANCETHURSDAY, November 19 andSATURDAY, November 21Bond Chapel, 8:30 P.M.Free and open to the public The Renault 10doesn’t racelike a Ferraribut it brakeslike one.Ferraris and most hi-powered racing cars rely on 4-wheel discbrakes because they can withstandbraking without fading.They are used in the Renault10 for the same reason.Disc brake pads are also easierto replace.And with disc brakes youwon’t have to worry about gettingthem wet. As you drive throughpuddles, centrifugal force drives offthe water.One more thing, since 4-wheeldisc brakes are standard equipment, Ithe Renault 10 will still only costyou under $2,000.If you can’t afford to race like2347 So. MichiganTel. 326-2550Volume 3, Number 8 Friday, November 20,1970THE GREY CITYThe Chicago Maroon Magazine of the ArtsBy CUIn the Gothic nooks and crannies of the Universitycommunity, amidst critiques and counter-critiques,annotations, assimilations and syncretistic com¬pilations, there are those whose primary sources arethe pen, the blank page, and the worlds of experiencecaptured within their memories. Everyone’s a story¬teller of some degree of prowess, for we have beenexposed to language and stories all our lives, fromnursery rhymes to Shakespeare; it is not uncommonthen to find people here who have cultivated theirnatural affinities for language as dancers have theirsfor movement, and sculptors theirs for form.Writers in Hyde Park are not blessed with aninstitution comparable to the French cafe, wherebudding artists interchange ideas, excerpts, andarguments. Most seem to have a friend or two,sometimes fellow writers, upon whose honest opinionthey rely — and some find the creative writing classestaught on campus a workable substitute of similarlycongenial atmosphere and intellectual interplay.Richard Stern, writer-in-residence who teachescourses in the writing of fiction and poetry (and whoseclasses Saul Bellow, Robert Lowell, FlanneryO’Conner, John Barth. Lillian Heilman. John Ber¬ryman, J.P. Donleavy and other luminaries havevisited) says, ‘The class is for people who care aboutwriting so much that, if they don’t have time for itthey’ll be menaces to themselves and others. Maybe our social function here is the equivalent of football.”Many student writers, however, find time to writewhile carrying a full load of courses. As MichaelMesic, a fifth year undergraduate and associate editorof Poetry, put it, “I mostly write and read thingswhich are not prescribed by my classes. I suppose Ibelieve you shouldn’t let school interfere with youreducation, and a poet’s education isn’t limited toscholarship.” Though most students agree that theacademically oriented expectations of the Universityare not especially conducive to creativity, few consid¬er it an actual hindrance.A struggle to master formal technique character¬izes the efforts of many young writers. ‘‘Learning towrite begins with trying to imitate other writers,getting used to the forms,” says Fred DeVore, fifthyear English major. ‘‘As Eliot said, only throughstructure can you transcend structure. It’s dis¬appointing to find writers unwilling to sit down andlearn the discipline. It’s the same with other art forms— Antonioni began his career making very straight,classical films. Now everyone and his dog thinks hecan pick up a camera and make a film.”Judy Schavrien, graduate student in socialthought, explains, ‘‘At first my poems resembled freeverse, but it was too difficult to have standards forthem. I then began working within traditional struc¬tures, studying others’ styles and forms. Now mypoetry is becoming more modern, and it looks muchbetter now than before — originally, the words were more in control of me than I was of them. In writingmodern verse, if you still want to write with form, youcan work out unusual meters, such as 416-3-4M> footlines.”The Raven's ReportI dreamt I was an ape, culledfrom my jungle by a false floor trap, lulledto sleep and snapped in a stout cage.I woke in a chattering rageto find myself stapled in,grey wall everywhere, no sky, no green.A strange man, stooped like a raven,peered at me, fixed with his gold peneach new reaction. I wanted to kill himbut bars blocked the swipeof my long arms, my teeth were stopped.In fury, I turned to eat my own tail,scrambling in circles from wallto ceiling to wall. I took upthe shrill cry for prayer, the fiend’s look,and smeared my excrement everywhere.Without a mate, I stood before the stooped manto masturbate. He took note and note.He dropped a female in the cage, whom Itread over. Soon after, despairing, I die.When 1 woke up, the raven hadbroadcast his lie.—Judy SchavrienIn Mesic’s words, “You find the rules for aparticular poem, and then you don’t break them.”Peter Mundy, whose 100-page novella TemporaryLike Achilles received first prize for original literaryworks from the Olga and Paul Menn Foundation lastspring, turned down an offer to have it published in theFour Seasons Foundation series. Why? “Because Ithink I can do better now,” he says, “and though I amnot now writing prose, I wouldn’t feel right letting thiswork out to bark and snap like a bad dog act. So I’msitting on it, crushing it until it turns to diamonds —something this or that side of a ten million yearprocess.” Portions of the book, however, are beingconsidered for publication in Evergreen.Michael has published a number of poems inPoetry. “Publication is the only way you can ever losepoems. They’re your children till they’re out on theirown,” he says. He is currently at work on a play calledThe Reception, a comedy about a poetry reading andreception for the poets, which will perhaps beproduced on campus this year. Judy will have a poemin the next issue of the Chicago Literary Review. GaryWolfe, a graduate English student, has written a novelas well as stories and poetry, but has put asidecreative writing for a while to work on his dis¬sertation. At the University of Kansas, where he didundergraduate work, Gary says writers are notsubject to the kind of academic prejudice which hefinds here. “There is no sense of community hereamong English graduate students who write,” heexplains. “The students are paranoid because thedepartment is very academically oriented, and as awhole does not take creative writing seriously.” Garyis getting his novel typed now, a slow process becausehe is revising at the same time, and has an agent for it.“Structurally, it’s based on Tom Jones,” says Gary.Continued on Page FiveThe Chromatic PavanI can see old people dancing. See it through my 3-Dglasses saved from horror movies in 1959: whitecardboard frames with one red cellophane lens andone green. They are dancing like an old time movie.Watching a movie of the Hindenburg crashingcrash, some get hungry for popcorn and rumbles inthe john. Some cannot remember any of the threesensations, hunger has leaked from their lives likewater. Old porcelain urinals, pipes rusted out and insome cases turned a pretty green.They are not dancing very fast, their stayscreaking and canvas flapping while the tinv engine*struggle to make headway against a strong wind.Please Be Careful With Open Flame it says in 3-Dblock letters that crumble like the gardens of Babylon.—Peter Mundy (from Temporary Like Achilles)Baja BugConvert a VW Beetle into an off roadBaja Bug and keep the comforts ofroll-up windows, heater and passengerspace. Get dune buggy utility withouthaving to remove a body or shorten achassis. Kits of precision molded fiberglass components include all necessaryhardware, and instructions for simple,bolt-on conversion.Complete Baja Bug Kit $239.95BUGSVILLE Commie Bears Unite!4575 W. SOUTHWEST HIGHWAYOAK LAWN. ILLINOIS 422-1812'EY DUCKY! GETYOUR THANG TO-GETHA'ONSTUDENT NITESMON., TUES., WED. FROM 5 PMALL DRINKS WITH I.D. 25*mixed drinks 50cHUGE!PITCHERSof Schlitz LightDark-Bass Ale-Guiness Stouton TapFISH & CHIPSChicken, Pizza,Steakburgers,Spaghetti & Chile.All the peanuts you can eatcompliments of the House. While aging Latvian freedom fighters manned thepicket lines outside the International Amphitheatre,several thousand circus fans sat waiting for theopening of the Moscow Circus on Ice, now making itsfirst American tour. Curtain time came and went,however, while Director General Serge P. Semochkingesticulated wildly from the nether regions of thearena. Perhaps one of the skating bears had defectedto the West, I thought, but no, it was worse than that.The Amphitheatre’s ice machine had broken down,and there would be no ice for skating.It was perhaps a paradigm of modern inter¬national relations — East and West assembled toentertain and be entertained, but kept apart by theunconquerable forces of technology. Ice or no ice, asV. I. Lenin once said, the show must go on. So, theCircus on Ice opened without ice and while theperformance at times resembled the tennis game inBlow-Up, it was nonetheless exciting circus fare.Staged in the traditional one-ring, Europeancircus style, with the aerialists’ riggings suspendedover the ring, the show is a lavish spectacle.Resplendent in sequined white tights, a team of maleaerialists performed a mesely journeyman trapezeact but then redeemed themselves with an excitingtrampoline act via their safety net.Yuri Makarov and Boris Yakovlev juggled whilesuspended upside down by their ankles. And assortedother acrobats, clowns, and aerialists did their things.Despite the lack of ice, the aerial ballerinas did their act in skates, and thus when the motor which loweredtheir trapezes failed, they held up the show while theyclimbed down rope ladders in their skates. (With theice machine gone and the trapeze winch faltering, Iwould have checked out those Latvians at thatpoint.)An effort was made to present the show’sheadliners — a troupe of skating bears — on foot, butwhen the curtain parted we saw the trainer beingdragged around backstage by an 800-pound muzzledbear who had no intention of going out to perform.That took care of the bear act.Beyond the assorted mishaps, some of theperformances were a bit ragged (sloppy juggling andso on) but that may have been opening night jitters.Despite the many problems, the Circus on Icepresented some excellent circus acts — though itmight have been enhanced with a dozen voluptuousVolga virgins (male or female) skating their way intoour hearts.Circus on Ice, a recent addition to the MoscowState Circus system, was founded seven years ago. Itwas brought to the US by Morris Chalfen of Holiday onIce, under a State Department cultural exchangeprogram.Ultimately, it seems regrettable to performtraditional circus shticks on ice skates. Still, its goodclean fun, and if you like that sort of thing, the show isplaying through this weekend at the Amphitheatre.—Harvey ShapiroDelta Paperbacksare Where It’s AtThe Making of an Un-AmericanPaul CowanThis brutally honest and deeply personalpolitical autobiography traces the author'sdisaffection with American liberalism andhis evolution toward radicalism. “Thewhite man's SOUL ON ICE, written, likethe black version, from the strength of aman who lives the myths of his cultureand then exposes them by exposing him¬self.” -The Washington MonthlyDelta paperback $2.65Report From Iron MountainIntroduction by Leonard C. LewinThis shocking expose—a hitherto top-secret report of a government commissionthat was requested to explore the conse¬quences of lasting peace on American so-ciety-is one of the most controversialbooks published in the last decade. Theexplosive content of the report, as well asthe story of how it was spirited out of con¬fidential files, make this one of the mostimportant books of the century.Delta paperback $1.95The New IndiansStan SteinerThe first full-scale report of the gatheringRed Power movement, a revolt by Amer¬ica’s oldest and most neglected minoritygroup. Complete with documents, charts,a tribal map. and photographs.Delta paperback $2.45iNotes on the Cultural Lifeof the DemocraticRepublic of VietnamPeter WeissIn a study as severe and vehement as hisrenowned plays (Marat/Sade and The In¬vestigation), Peter Weiss shows howtotally the intellectual and cultural life ofNorth Vietnam is interwoven with itspolitical struggle. Based on first-hand ex¬periences, conversations, and extensivehistorical information.Delta paperback $2.25 Soul On IceEldridge CleaverMore than 1,000,000 copies in print. Atotally frank autobiography, by the formerBlack Panther Minister of Information,that makes a devastating dissection of asociety in the throes of agonizing reap¬praisal and momentous change.Delta paperback $1.95: Dell paperback 95cConversation WithEldridge Cleaver - AlgiersLee LockwoodThe text of an interview made in thesummer of 1969 in Algiers where Cleavercontinued his self-exile from Americaafter leaving Cuba. Ojie of America's mostmilitant black leaders, he discusses hisdisturbing opinions and his philosophy ofrevolution.Delta paperback $1.95Die, Nigger, Die!H. Rap BrownThe former president of SNCC and leadingdialectician of black power ideology de¬scribes his development into an avowedrevolutionary and his transition fromNegro America to Black America.Dial Press paperback $1.95Black Political PowerChuck StoneAn activist and past editor of three influen¬tial Negro newspapers. Chuck Stone ex¬amines the past, present and future ofBlacks in American politics, and analyzesthe nature of the political process, par¬ticularly in terms of ethnic minoritygroups.Delta paperback $2.45A:DELTA BOOKS-at your bookstoreDell Publishing Co., Inc.750 Third Avenue. New York. 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South Chicago Ave.(Parallel to Chicago Skyway)Open Mon. -Sat. 8:30 -5:00Wed.-9:00 p.m.RE 4-2111Immediate Delivery2/Grey City Journal/November 20, 1970• '• • 1 1 • s k . . . * , NOWMI»W1STPlfMIIM Me VICKERS 11Fa r East KitchenChinese & AmericanFOOD & COCKTAILSOpen Daily 1 2 - 10Fri. & Sat. 12 -12Closed Monday1654 E. 53rd.955-2229———1 O authentic• Dinners• Late Snacks• Private PartiesMake your ThanksgivingEve ReservationsDistinctive, handsomeroom atop the Hyde ParkBank Building.Exceptional anddelightful selection ofMid-East food, delicacies,cocktails, and wines.Ample parking. Tues. -Sat. 5 to Midnight; Sun.1 - 11.1525 E. 53rd St.Just OH Outer DriveAtop TheHyde Park Bonk BldgRESTAURANT A LOUNGE955-5151EffendiTuesday Night15% DiscountFor the U. of C. Students;Faculty Members and Per¬sonnel. Bring this ad fordiscount.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 2417San Francisco. Calif. 64126 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist(53 Kimbark Plaza)1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientdf ul Around The V* odd1462 E. 53rd St.684-6856 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 Lir.'oln and Wrightwood,across from ce's Revisited")*49-8448The Freer Brothers cordially inviteyou to our Grand Opening. 10%discount for students with this aduntil Nov. 31st.m Printed*^COPIES J* WHILE YOU WAIT!Letters, Forms. Reports. BulletinsDaily 8 JO am 5 pmCash with ordermt t*tnUAV HTTIt A MINTING SltVlCI1950 FAST 75th St (At Jeffery)ViewinginChicagoChicago has had six film festivals now (one eachNovember since 1965), and they seem to get better allthe time. That’s not PR hypo, nor is it unmitigatedpraise. I missed the first two, but I’m told that theyweren’t much. Each of the four I have attended hasfeatured many good things, but this year it seemed tohang together better. One exception — which I’ll get tolater — was the dismal quality of the student films.The opening night last year seemed calculated toblow anyone’s mind. The audience was black-tie, veryheavy society, including the Junior League, anorganization whose function I’ve never been able tofigure out but which seems to have a great deal ofclout. The film was Zelmir Zilnik’s Early Works, aYugoslavian study of four young revolutionaries.Between the Marx and the nudity, the Junior Leagueand company were aghast. People booed, threwpopcorn, walked out. It was a gas.This year, either the Junior League decided todrop the festival, or the festival decided to drop theJunior League. Anyway, opening night was just aregular show, no black tie or anything. The movie wasVera Chytilova’s Fruit of Paradise. It was a master¬piece.The movie is, on the surface at least, a modern-dress re-enactment of the Adam and Eve story. It’s setat an obscure Eastern European spa (Mile Chytilovais Czech). Adam is properly naive, Eve is delightfullyambiguous, and Satan is played by a marvelouslynefarious bearded chap. The influence of Godard andJancso on Mile. Chytilova’s visual style is quite clear— and helpful. There are, God knows, few female filmdirectors, but those we have seem to be attracted tomythic material. Liliana Cavani’s The Cannibals,which I reviewed from the San Francisco FilmFestival, was a modern version of Antigone, andFrance’s Agnes Varda seems perpetually to act outvariations on the theme of an artist and his (her)materials.At any rate, the ancient story takes on a decidedlycomic tone in Mile Chytilova’s flim. Satan carries abriefcase through part of the film, and Adam doesn’tquite seem to understand what’s going on. The movieends on a serious note, though; man destroys woman.This could indeed be a comment on male-female"Ifyou see nothingelse this year,you must seeIt will not, I think,$ ever fade frommemory!"—RICHARD SCHICKEL. LiHCOLUMBIA PICTURES Presents a BBS ProductionJACK NICHOLSON - FIVE EASY PIECES ». iM Karen Black*n<3 Susan AnspaCh Screenplay by Adrien Joyce • Story by Bob Raison *nd Adr.en Joycefoduced by Bob Refeison and R-cno'd Weehsi*r • fcaerutwe Producer Bom Scnne-derD 'ected by Bob Refeison • COLOR — — —— . .^7-.A WALTIR ftCAOC THCATHC1W [squire THEA. PARK *1.0033 E. Cedar relationships, as the director sees them. The film isbeautifully directed, and has some of the best openingtitles I’ve ever seen.Another intersting film was William Bayer’sMississippi Summer, a very low budget feature shot in16mm. The film covers a period from 1964 to 1965: atraveling troupe of white and black actors in Mis¬sissippi who present pro-integration skits slowlybreaks up. The film ends with the blacks forcing thewhites to leave the group. Another parable? Perhaps,although director Bayer characterizes it as historypure and simple. History it is (although history israrely pure and never simple), but there’s nothing toprevent us from seeing history as a parable. (Oneyoung black man shouted “bullshit” at director Bayerwhen he spoke with the audience after the film, but heeventually came round to Bayer’s point of view.) Thefilm is basically a description of an historicalsituation, the loss of idealism, our disillusionment withintegration, the emergence of black nationalism.Rendered in personal terms, as it is in MississippiSummer, the process becomes quite painful; one ofthe white girls describes her affair with one of theblack actors as a “real stock company romance.” I’vealways thought it rather silly and pretentious for whitepeople to tell black people what they should want ordo, and one of the telling moments in Bayer’s filmoccurs when the blacks tell the whites to leave. Theyoung white idealists are totally unable to act; theysimply let the black people judge them. It’s unfortu-HAROLD’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 _ 1.45Order of Gizzards — 1.25 Small Order of livers 90VALUABLE COUPONSPECIAL STUDENT PRICESUPON PRESENTATION OF THIS ADLIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCESAT THE WORLD S LARGEST GUITAR STORE.ALSO FEATURING OURTRUMPET CENTER.HA 7-5327both divisions ofPRAGER & RITTER, INC. nate that Bayer had to shoot the film on a shoestring16mm budget: while there’s nothing great about it,visually or otherwise, he certainly strikes me as a farmore talented director than, say Bob Rafelson, whoseFive Easy Pieces has been receiving so much(undeserved) attention.I promised earlier to knock the student films, sohere goes. I have attended each program of studentfilms the festival has presented since 1967. That’s fourprograms of six to seven hours each, and they’regetting worse. A lot worse. I think all the talk about agreat renaissance of interest in film among the 18-25age group that’s bandied about in places like Look andSaturday Review is a lot of nonsense. At the ‘67, ‘68,and ‘69 festivals, there were at least one or two decentfilms. This year, there wasn’t one. Just hours ofpathetically underexposed or overexposed, incoher¬ently edited footage. Almost all the films revealed atotal lack of interest in working with actors, and (withone exception) a total lack of wit or humor. I admit tobeing something of a classicist and a formalist, butrank incompetence is rank incompetence, whether it’spracticed by a Hollywood hack or a UCLA studentwho’s just got his hands on an Arriflex. For crissake,boys, it takes about 5 minutes to learn how to use alight meter!A film festival is as much people as it is films.Much credit should go to the people who make ithappen in the first place: Festival director Michael J.Kutza and his faithful assistant Ramona Santellireally knock themselves out. Second, the festival is asort of de facto convention of Chicago movie people,both professionals and amateurs. Most interesting,though, were the festival’s three guests this year, whoappeared to talk with the audiences after excerptsfrom their films.First was cameraman James Wong Howe, whohas photographed nearly 150 films, including The RoseTattoo and Hud, for which he received AcademyAwards. Howe is extremely modest about his achieve¬ments, and eager to give advice to young filmmakers— which, from the look of the student films, theysorely need.Two directors also visited the festival: HowardHawks and George Stevens. Mr. Hawks was thesubject of a twelve-film Doc films retrospective twoyears ago, so astute UC students should already befamiliar with his work, which includes Bringing UpBaby, Only Angels Have Wings, The Big Sleep, RedRiver, Hatari and El Dorado. Like his films, Hawks isdirect and witty. He also tells many fascinatinganecdotes of the movie empire, such as seeingMarilyn Monroe all alone in a corner, without anescort, at numerous parties.George Stevens, like Howe, is a two-Oscarwinner: A Place in the Sun and Giant; his other filmsinclude Alice Adams, Gunga Din, and Shane. A quietand gentle man, Stevens reminisced about Cary Grantand James Dean; he also spoke of his tremendousconcern for visual space. To him, the screen is a“blank canvas.”The most fascinating aspect of these three men, tome, is simply that each one represents a lifetime ofmoviemaking: Howe started Ids career as a cam¬eraman in 1917, and photographed his first feature in1922. Hawks started as a propman in 1918, anddirected his first film in 1926. Stevens started as acameraman in 1924, and made his first feature in 1933.Each man made substantial contributions to theAmerican cinema when it was at its classical best: farfrom being dated or old-fashioned, their films lookinfinitely better today than so much of the with-it trashthat gluts the market. As Howard Hawks said, “As faras I’m concerned, the good old days are still here.”What more can you say?—Charles FlynnNovember 20, 1970/Grey City Journal/3ARTLosing Another Landmark—Scott CarlsonBy Susan LeffThe city of Chicago, recognizing therichness of its architectural heritage,carefully protects its buildings of artis¬tic and historic merit from all forms ofneglect and vandalism, right? Wrong!It is becoming all too painfully clearthat Chicago is on the way to losingmany of the landmarks that made theChicago School of Architecture so fa¬mous. An interesting example of what ishappening may be seen in the case ofthe Old Chicago Stock Exchange Build¬ing at 30 North LaSalle. Developershave purchased the Adler and Sullivanstructure, built in 1893, and have noti¬fied the Commission on Chicago Histori¬cal and Architectural Landmarks thatthey will tear it down to make way for anew glass and steel high-rise.Most experts express the opinion thatthe building is undeniably an importantpart of Chicago’s architectural heritageand that it is worth saving. As explainedby Paul Sprague, professor of art andan outspoken advocate of saving thestructure, “The Stock Exchange build¬ing is an extremely significant, al¬though perhaps not the most important,building of Sullivan’s. Other peopledon’t think it’s worth saving, which isnonsense aesthetically.” Wilbert Has-brouck, past director of the AmericanInstitute of Architects, exclaims, “It isa landmark in every sense of the word.”Praise for the building is found evenwithin the confines of City Hall: JeromeR. Butler Jr, city architect, has beenquoted as saying that it contributes tothe environment of LaSalle St and thatit would always be a “jewel amongcontemporary neighbors.”Perhaps the most outspoken critic ofthose who would tear down the stockexchange is Rob Cuscaden, real estateand architecture editor of the ChicagoSun-Times, “Tearing down this buildingwould constitute a major act of van¬dalism,” he asserts. “It’s one of half adozen great pieces of architecture builthere in the 20th century. People comefrom all over the world to see it.”A previous city landmarks commis¬sion did declare the building a land¬mark, but the Chicago commission,unlike its New York counterpart, has nolegal authority and the victory of itsdecision remained a hollow one. Thepresent commission recommended thatthe building be designated a landmarkunder a new city ordinance, which liststen criteria for consideration in desig¬nating landmarks. Even under a strictinterpretation of the ordinance theStock Exchange fulfills at least seven ofthese qualifications. Furthermore, thecommission cites the building as adistinguished representative of the Chi¬cago School of Architecture, whosestyle of construction launched the sky¬ scraper and influenced the shape ofcities all over the world. Butler, cityarchitect and member of the commis¬sion, added that the comprehensiveplan for Chicago drawn by the city callsfor a variety of architectural types andstresses that care should be taken topreserve environmental qualities im¬portant to the metropolitan area, in¬cluding historic buildings.It would seem then, that 30 NorthLaSalle should have easily achievedofficial landmark status, which carrieswith it the stipulation that the structurecannot be demolished or altered in anydefacing way. However, before this cantake place the owners of the real estate(in this case Jerrold A. Wexler andEdward W. Ross) are notified of thecommission’s designation. According tothe Sun-Times, Ross’s response to thecommission’s designation was this:“This building is neither an in¬stitutional nor a monumental structure,but an office building trying to competefor occupancy with modern structures,such as the First National, Brunswickand other new buildings in the vicinity.”In other words, Ross and Wexlerwanted no part in any scheme to savethe building. They had paid some $7.5million to get the air rights on that pieceof land and didn’t intend the investmentto go for the benefit of saving Chicago’sarchitectural heritage. Also the devel¬opers of Outer Drive East and holders ofthe options for more than one-third ofthe air rights over the I.C. tracksbetween the Chicago River and Ran¬dolph St., Ross and V,exler aren’t aboutto forgo the chance of making a neatprofit. Their arguments were based oneconomic considerations, including theassertion that to declare the building aChicago landmark would be “a dimin¬ ution of the value of the property forwhich just compensation should beascertained.”Gradually other people began to voicetheir doubts about the feasibility ofsaving the Stock Exchange. Lewis W.Hill, Commissioner of Development andPlanning and one of Daley’s men, wrotean opinion opposing landmark status,on the argument that the building wouldnot “fulfill the dramatic need for newcommercial development in the Loop.”Assertions were made that the buildingwas unprofitable, while in fact commis¬sion studies have showed the contrary;it has had nearly complete rentals sinceits beginning. Of course, at the pricewhich the developers have paid for theair rights to the real estate the oldstructure will unquestionably be un¬profitable, especially since landmarkstatus forbids the addition of morefloors. But, then, the buyers knew thatthe old building would be unprofitable,and never intended to save it. The citytax structure makes it fantasticallyprofitable for these men to tear downthe old building and construct a newskyscraper. We all know about taxfavoritism toward certain big develo¬pers who maintain close relationshipswith the city administration, and about“Hizzoner’s” chauvinistic attitudetoward bringing more “beautiful” newbuildings to Chicago. Shades of P.J.Cullerton!The not-so-happy ending to this storyis*that the City Council Committee onCultural and Economic Developmentvoted not to declare the Stock Exchangea landmark and this removed all bar¬riers to its destruction. The landmarkscommission has no further power toprotect building, but several privategroups have displayed interest in sav¬ing it. The American Institute of Archi¬ tects has spoken of pressing suit againstthe Council Committee on the groundsthat it failed to decide the issue on themerits of the building alone, as isproscribed by the ordinance, beforeturning to the issue of economic feasibil¬ity.Cuscaden, the architecture critic, ex¬presses doubt that the suit would beprofitable, however. “The Council com¬mittee will just raise the aesthetic-historical issue for form’s sake and thenvote against the landmark status onceagain,” he laments. It has also beennoted that the AIA would have to post aforfeitable bond of several hundredthousand dollars if it were to bring suitagainst the city.Sprague explains that several al¬ternatives, including a scheme for al¬lowing the owners of landmark propertyto develop air rights over some otherbuilding as compensation, have beensuggested, so far without result. “We’regoing to lose a work of art for no reasonat all,” he adds. In this situation manypeople who love Chicago’s architectureare literally being cheated by short¬sighted men who see revenue as prefer¬able to art, when in reality they couldhave both through compromise.What is perhaps most distressingabout the entire problem is that adisastrous precedent is being set. Im¬portant structures such as the Cableand Garrick buildings have alreadybeen razed. Despite the recent designa¬tion of the Carson, Pirie, Scott buildingas an official landmark:, neither the CityCouncil, the city’s big developers, normost citizens themselves seem gen¬uinely interested in preserving an ex¬tant architectural heritage. Cuscadenbelieves that “to the vast horde ofoffice-seekers a brand new building ismuch more prestigious that a dirty oldmonument.” He continues, “I’m des¬pondent over the pattern forming. With¬in 10 or 15 years all of these- buildingswill go. Probably the Monadnock build¬ing will be next, and even the Audito¬rium wouldn’t be immune if it didn’thouse Roosevelt University. Just waituntil the developers need land so badlythat they are looking as far south asGlessner House or the Widow Clarke’shouse, even though these have alreadyachieved landmark status! ”Let’s not wait until all of our archi¬tectural heritage is torn down to actagainst this vandalism. Many Europeancities have preserved their archi¬tectural masterpieces, but Chicago isone of the few American cities that is aliving monument to some of man’sgreatest art. It is unfortunate that we alltoo often confuse newness with progressand in doing so feel uncomfortablesurrounded by our buildings of the past.It is time we learned to live with thesestructures and to respect them for theirhistoric and artistic value.5 LAST DAYS!Henry G. SapersleinpresentsThe New Film CompanyProduction to*! Starts “Carry it <$>n 99ALSO:BOB DYLAN'S"DON'T LOOK BACK"2424 N. LincolnFree ParkingTel.: 528-9126 Student RateSI. 50at all timesFriday and Saturday Midnight Showing OnlyRoss Meyer'sAkron" 4 stars...Ebert 5424 KimbarkMl 3-31134/Grey City Journal/November 20, 1970Poems To Order ChaosContinued From Page One“It’s a series of picaresque episodes and depends noton characterization but on movement of action. It’slike a Marx brothers movie.”Emily Grosholz, a third year student in Ideas andMethods, is especially Interested in woman writers.“The tradition is so meagre, as in most intellectualareas, but there are many good ones — there’s SylviaPlath, and there’s Sappho.” She finds it important totalk about her work with other people. “If you’retrying to learn a craft, you have to know what othersthink of what you’re doing,” she says. “A poet istrying to communicate, and you can’t judge yoursuccess in that by yourself.”Many young writers feel that the work they areEpisode From Untitled NovelConsiderably shaken by his unexpected discoveryof life in the curtain, Joseph recoiled hurriedly anddecided upon a course of action that had alwaysproved decorous and secure, if not actually helpful, inthe past: he left the room and went into the kitchen tofix himself a sandwich. A sandwich always seemed totake his mind off spiritual matters. Sandwiches, afterall, were supremely physical entities, the directantithesis of ghosts and evil, immaterial spirits. Assuch they had, at least for Joseph, a rather charm-likequality, and seemed to offer security in a world ofuncertainty.Joseph placed a large slice of Italian bread on anapkin, put several piecesof peanut-butter fudge onthe slice of bread, and put another slice of bread on thefudge. There. But somehow the sandwich didn’t seemcomplete. He looked in the refrigerator. A jar ofpickles. Mayonnaise. Catsup. Cheap wine. Pears.Coffee. Joseph took out the pickles and mayonnaiseand wine and left the catsup and pears. He put twowhole dill pickles on top of the top slice of bread of hissandwich, then laid mayonnaise thickly on a thirdslice and placed this on top of the whole affair. Itseemed satisfactory. He uncorked the wine andpoured himself a glass. Then, before taking a sip,before setting down to bite into his sandwich, hereturned to the dining room to reassure himself thatthe lump was still there, that it had not, somehow,decided to follow him into the kitchen.The bulge in the curtain was gone. Joseph felt amoment of terror, then took up the broom and madeseveral lunges at the egg-colored curtain. The curtainmerely flopped in deference to the solidity of thebroomstick. The bulge, Joseph realized, was definitelynot there. This, he thought, could be either good orbad. More than likely it had been just another of Dr.Duck’s tricks, like that bulge in the living room carpethad been. At least that accounted for everything. Whythe doctor refused to come look, and all. No doubt.Somewhat reassured by this line of thought,Joseph set the broom down and, staring at the curtain,thought about his sandwich there in the kitchen. Hisappetite had gone, and he no longer felt he needed the.sandwich to calm his nerves. He decided to take it toDr. Duck as a peace offering. Or to Dr. Duck’salligators. It would serve them right, peanut butterfudge would. They looked hungry enough to eatanything. If he could get them going on peanut butterfudge, then he would be in control and the doctorwould have to watch out.Evil thoughts. Joseph returned to the kitchen toget the sandwich and have his wine.The sandwich and the wine had disappeared.—Gary K. WolfeBusiness East staircase Bicycles on the quads. Drawings by Franklin MacMahon. Used bypermission.doing now is actually training rather than finishedwork. “The geneticist, James Watson,” said Mr. Sternrecently, “said that the best work in the sciences isdone by young people, because only they are reallybored. But this is not true in literature — there arevery few Rimbauds, because literature is so mixedwith experience.” Judy explains, “I started writingpoetry because it seemed a better way of describing aworld that is not coherent. I got discouraged withsimple scholarship, which seemed to give too ratio¬nally consistent a picture of things. I feel as though I’llbe training until the age of forty, though, and then Iwill perhaps be a poet.”Fred adds, “Each minute that I live, somethingnew happens and affects my life somehow, addinganother overtone to my experience.”In his creative writing classes, Mr Stern usesvarious methods to help the student understand whatit is to write a poem. In the undergraduate classes, thestudents translate poems from other languages. “It’sa way of putting your nose close to the process ofwriting a good poem,” he says. “Imitation of goodwriters is indispensable to development, but “one hasto” encourage students to knock their models over andmake their own stories out of the rubble.“In class, we use texts which help the student seesome of the sources of literary power and beauty, butalso ones which, though marvelous, are not hewn bythe Almighty on Sinaiv It’s a great moment in classwhen a student who on Tuesday brought in a brilliantmess on Thursday brings in a transformed piecewhich makes everyone know immediately that awriter has been born. It doesn’t happen very often —Venus doesn’t show up every Thursday — but when itdoes, everyone senses it and it’s an unforgettablemoment.”Many writers remark upon the amount of atten¬tion directed toward working on community problemsas compared to that given creative writers. “Most ofthe induction around here,” says Fred, “seems to beThe SirensThere can be no singing withoutThe sirens to wean us fromThe pleasant beds of night,Setting us awake to roamAmong the voices on the shore;Laughing, wailing us intoAction. There is no chance forRemaining. Only arteries toThe sea can hold our feet.Once there were heroic daysFastened to enduring vessels of greatSuffering. Once, the poets madeInvectives against the endless plungesOf men into a future sea. NowEvery blind swimmer must forageThrough the crowded shore. NowEveryone risks drowning to reachThe voices, growing fainter, on the beach.—Richard Newhauser Prometheus ReboundA certain knowledge of a faith, while chainedUpon the rock, sustained the super manTo spend half an Immortal life alone,But in an undertone repeat this constantly:“There is a punctuality to Fate.It’s never late, but also never hurried.Do not be worried what the day will bring,It may bring anything.”From The RevolutionariesAnd when we ask for hands, for lips, will any sufferGiving and being given without rebellingAt the touch, now unfamiliar and strange,That trigger fingers feeling for the rangeWill never feel?From New ArrivalThe struggle rages through the moonlight.The beasts revolveAround the naked solitary figure, dreamingAbout realms where she is the mistressOf movement, vegetation, weather,And herself.Nothing prevents the animals from coming nearer,Escept disinterest; there was another such-like once.He hauled ashore from the breathing sea,Looked, ate, worried, slept here, but later,Blended in.—Michael Mesic(from the book New Arrival, to be published thisquarter by Bergman Gallery)toward getting people involved in community activi¬ties, which is certainly very important. But I feel thatthere are better people to do that than me, and that Ican do my special work through art with moresuccess, that art is also a way of reaching peopledirectly.”Judy explains, “One day I hope I’ll be good enoughto do something useful for the country — as manypeople would like to — but not as an activist. I thinkone thing missing in American city life is a decent setof values. If I can portray people’s lives clearlyenough, this may help people recognize and clarifytheir discontents.”As Michael points out, the University is not a placewhere people of the same interests gravitate towardeach other and form groups, in any case; writingbeing a comparatively solitary pursuit, it is even lesslikely to happen in the case of writers.But Stern has this to say about the University:“for those who work with ‘the times’, what othertwentieth-century institution is at once pulpit, seed¬bed, laboratory, marketplace, the crossroads ofwhat’s been and what’s to be?“If one’s need for isolation and rent money can bemet. the university will sprve as Shakespeare’stheatre served him. There is no paradise for theartist; and he can make whatever hell is necessary forhim wherever he is.”f It November 20, 1970/ Grey City Journal/5Why doesn'tGeneral Electric talk aboutthermal pollution when theytalk about nuclearpower plants?General Electric pioneered thedevelopment of nuclear power plantsin 1957.Right from the beginning, we feltthat the greatest advantage of nuclearpower was environmental. Unlikefossil-fueled power plants, nuclearplants don't burn anything to makeelectricity. And where there's no fire,there's no smoke.But there's a possibledisadvantage as well. It, too, isenvironmental. Thermal effects.We recognize it.One GE advertisement you mayhave seen recently pointed out that"all nuclear power plants dischargeheat, as do fossil-fueled plants.America's utilities, with many yearsof experience, are working onthermal problems at nuclear sites ona plant-by-plant basis.”General Electric does talk aboutthermal effects. Because they areimportant, but also because we feelthe facts about them are perhaps tooittle known.Few people realize, for example,that federal law requires utilities to operate their plants within stricttemperature limits. Thirty states haveeven stricter laws. Utilities arespending millions of dollars ondilution flow systems, cooling pondsand cooling towers to comply.But, in addition, utilities aresponsoring basic research on theproblem of heat exchange and itseffect on aquatic life. More than 97utilities have been financiallyinvolved in over 300 such studies.And each one adds a little to man'sscientific understanding of theproblem.Some interesting things havealready come of it. For one, it's beenfound that, in some cases, addingheat to water can actually bebeneficial. Warm irrigation water hasextended growing seasons. Warmwater has created new winteringponds along waterfowl migrationroutes.Power-plant discharge water isreviving Long Island's oyster trade.Florida is using it to grow shrimp andlobster. In Texas, it's increasing theweight of commercial catfish by asmuch as 500%.Listing these benefits is not tobeg the issue. Thermal effects remaina tough problem to solve at somesites. Each plant must be considered individually, in its own environment,and this is being done.General Electric, the electricutilities and environmentalists willcontinue to work. Work hard.Because we think the advantagesof nuclear power far outweigh thedisadvantages.Why are we running this ad?We're running this ad, andothers like it, to tell you the thingsGeneral Electric is doing to solvethe problems 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.GENERAL® ELECTRICWe want to talk to youabout a career in law...without law school.When you become a Lawyer’s Assistant,you’ll be doing work traditionally done bylawyers — work we think you’ll findchallenging and responsible. AndLawyer’s Assistants are now so criticallyneeded that The Institute for ParalegalTraining can offer you a position in thecity of your choice and a higher salarythan you’d expect as a recent collegegraduate. You’ll work with lawyers oninteresting legal problems — and therewards will grow as you do.A representative of The Institute forParalegal Training will conduct inter¬views on:MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23Inquire at Placement Officefor location of interviewThe Institute forParalegal Training13th floor 401 Walnut St.. Phila . Pa 19106(215) WA 5-0905 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 243-2271EH PAISAN0Cheeses and spices and everythingnices—that's what our pizzas aremade of.Introducing"The Rebel Pizza"0t pineapple-peperonialian [fiestaizzeria We DeliverMU 4-32621919 E. 71 sr Street At your bookstore now!The new novel by theauthor ot stranger ina Strange LandAsk forRobert A. Heinlein’sI WILL FEAR NO EVIL—already acclaimedas “a masterpiece”by Galaxy Magazine.Just Published/$6.95PUTNAM I Will FearI\lo Evil.4 Vv Vovet byRobert A.HeinleinMiltlOROfSTRANGER IN A STRANOt LAND. .1 / mr 1 nn This Friday“Elliott Gouldis superb!”— William Wolf. Cue MagazineCOl UMMi* M* »U«1 i *M».MELLIOTT GOULDCANDICE BERGENandHELD OVER!KUMY SCHNHDfk 64T;he Things OfLife is perfection! Asuspenseful humandrama! Don’t missit!®* -JudithCrrMICH! I PICCOt Ithe ihirmsot lifea liim byCl AUDI SMI IfHYDE PARK THEATRE53rd and Lake ParkNO 7-9071Student Discount-Sunday Matinee $1.50KIMBARKLIQUORSWINE MERCHANTSOF THE FINESTIMPORTED ANDDOMESTIC WINESFeaturing our direct imports,bringing better value to you!THE ONLY TRUE WINE SHOP IN HYDE PARKS3RD KIMBARK LIQUORS, INC.1214 L 53rd St.53-Kimbark Plaza HY3-3355say"i love youwith a diamond f nFINE JEWELERS FOR 60 YEARS119 N. Wabash at Washington^ ENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZACulture VultureGeorge Solti conducts the Chicago Symphony November20 21 performing Haydn's Concerto in F major for violin,piano and strings, and Mahler's Symphony No. 7. TicketsS3 50-8.Tonight the Civic Orchestra, conducted by Otto-WernerMueller plays Beethoven's Leonore overture and Eroica,and Prokofiev's Sinfonia Concertante. Tickets are $1-2.50.Pianist Augustin Anievas will be the Symphony's PopularConcert artist Nov. 28, under the direction of Arthur Fiedler.Tonight the Folklore Society presents two Scottishtraditional folk musicians, Aly Bain, a Shetland Islandsfiddler and Mike Whellaads, a guitarist and mouth harpplayer, performing at the Cloister Club at 8. Admission, 75Ccollegium Musicum, directed by Howard Brown, presents"Ocular Music of the Florentine Renaissance", Saturday.Tuesday at 2 at Lexington hall, Jeremy Montagu will givea lecture and demonstration on "Instruments of the MiddleAqes and Renaissance."Enouah Rope, Ink, non specialists in media, will presentan anti concert at the Museum of Contemporary Art Nov 202 at 8 The group Includes an actress, an electronicsspecialist, a double reed professional, a pianist with/ pytensive interest in African instruments, a versatilePraanist with outstanding improvisatory abilities, and apreacher who laughs a lot between ulcer attacks. Tickets:$2 50, $1.50 for students.Tonight at the Syndrome, 22nd Century Productionspresents Ten Yeers After, Quatermass, Mylon and Skidrow Admission $5. Next week, the 27th, an entire programof Grateful Dead music is planned, beginning at 8. Also,December 4, Mountain, Mylon and May Blitz. Admission $5.At the Auditorium Theater this week: Frank Zappa andthe Mothers of Invention tomorrow at 8:30, SmokeyRobinson and the Miracles Sunday at 7:30, and Thursdaythe 26th, Chicago presents two shows at 7 and 10:30 pm.Triangle Productions will also occupy the AuditoriumTheater this week with performances by Derek and theDominos (Eric Clapton's new group) Wednesday and StevieWonder next Friday, both at 7:30. Tickets — S6.50 S3.50.Blues afficiandos should already know about Alice'sRevisited, 950 W Wrightwood, but for the rest of you, FentonRobinson Blues Band with Midge, Mike and Tim will bethere tonight, tomorrow and Wednesday and Thursday fornever more than $2, sometimes $1. Shows at 8:30 and 11 pm.Also at Alice's, a Chicago Indian Village Benefit from noon to midnight on Sunday.. Jessie will perform at 8:30 and10:30. $1.50or $2.25 per couple.Mimi Farina and Tom Jans at the Quiet Knight, 953Belmont this weekend. Coming soon: Livingston Taylor,Tom Paxton, Linda Ronstadt, and Cat Stevens.FILMThe East is Red and Hunger is CEF's presentation of theweek, Saturday in Cobb. DOC presents Anthony Mann's T-Men Tuesday at 7:15 for 75 cents, Ernst Lubitsch's MonteCarlo Wednesday at 8 for 75 cents, and Charlie Chaplin'sThe Gold Rush tonight at 7:15 and 9:30, SI. Also, see KenjiMizoguchi's Ugetsu Sunday in Cobb.Downtown, The Sidelong Glances of a Pigeon Kicker hasopened at the Cinema, Chicago at Michigan; Little Faussand Big Haley, starring Robert Redford opens today at theCarnegie (Rush at Oak). Anthony Quinn stars in Flap,opening today at the Roosevelt, State near Washington. ForFrank Sinatra fans (XXX, honey!), Frank Sinatra in DirtyDingus Magee has come to the Chicago, State nearRandolph.THEATERLa Ronde, directed by Annette Fern, plays in ReynoldsClub Theater through Sunday. Tickets $2.The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is playing at TheatreFirst, The Athenaeum, Oakdale and Southport, Nov 20-22,27-29, and Dec 4-6. Phone 463-3099 for further info.George Dandin ou ie Mari Confondu by Moliere, will bepresented (in French) by the Department of ModernLanguages at De Paul University at Center Theater, 25 EJackson Blvd, 10 am Saturday.Shoemaker's Holiday by Thomas Dekker, a smashingsuccess by Renaissance Players two years ago, will bepresented at the Cahn Auditorium at Northwestern Univer¬sity tonight and tomorrow at 8 pm. $2.50 tonight, $3tomorrow.The Chicago Circle Players of Circle Campus will presentDance Plays, a drama by William Butler Yeats throughSunday at 8 pm at the Eleventh Street Theater, 62 East 11 St.$2, students $1.Val's Multi-Media Theater in Harper Galleries, 5210 SHarper has started a second cycle of presentationsMondays at 7 and 9 pm, films by Kartenquin Films Ltd for$1. Tuesdays at 8 pm, songs by tenor John Gahagan, $1.50.Wednesdays, Tenessee Williams' Something Unspoken, at7:30 and 9 pm $1. Thursday, a psycho-drama from 7 til 10for$2.50. Fridays, Edward Albee's An American Dream at 8:30 for $2. The cycle will run through December 18.Columbia College's theater department presents Oper¬ation Sidewinder by Chicago playwright Sam Shepard at thePerforming Arts Center, 1725 N Wells. FREE. Fridayf andSaturdays at 7:30. More info: 467-0300.Things that Go Bump in the Night by Terrance McN/jlly atthe Paul Bunyan Theater in Old Town. 8:30 on Friday,Saturday and Sunday. S3, students $2. More info: 943-1551.Gargoyle Cartoons by the Kingston Mines Theater, 2356 NLincoln. Wednesday through Sunday at 8:30, $2. Sat $2.50Reservations: 525-9893.The Free Theater, 3257 N Sheffield presents Achilles byRobert Perrey at 7 and 9 on Sundays, 7:30 and 9 Mondays.FREE. More info: 467-0300.Jean Genet's The Maids will be presented by the“layhouse Theater, 315 W North. Friday — 8:30, Saturday —8:30and 10:30, Sunday — 7:30. $3 and $2. Reservations: 751-9643.Hair is in its last 7 weeks at the Blackstone, 60 E. Balbo.At Organic Theater, 2259 N Lincoln, Candide openstonight. Regular admission $3; it continues throughJanuary.DANCEThe Batsheva Dance Company of Israel will perform atthe Auditorium Sunday the 29th at 8. Tickets are $3-9.Contemporary Dance Theater: performances by Colum¬bia College professionals and students presented everyWednesday at 7:30 at the Performing Arts Center, 1725 NWells, 467-0300.The Synthetic Theater, an experimental performingworkshop for dancers and choreographers. For info onperformance: 332-5924.ARTThe Bergman Gallery offers the photography of RosalindMoulton and a "Drawings of France" show by PhilippeLevanthal through December 22,4th floor, Cobb Hall.At Hillel House, Tzedakah: Justice-The Eternal Chal¬lenge. Graphics in all media, all for sale. ThroughNovember 21.Richard Pinney's first Chicago show is at GuildhallGalleries at 406 S Michigan.Paintings and drawings by Hilson, Bushman, and Nicholsat Hyde Park Art Center, 5236 Blackstone. Gallery hours:Tuesday-Thursday 1:30-4:30; Saturday 10-4.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 Campanile Galleries, 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 beshown for the duration of the exhibition.Sculpture and Drawings by Virginio Ferrari, are at theSchool of Social Service Administration, 969 60th, Nov 23Dec 22. Mon-Sat 9-5; Sunday 12-5.Shu Takahashi has a one-man show in the Deson-ZaksGallery, 226Ontario, Tues-Sat 10:30-5:30.MISCELLANEOUSThe Moscow Circus on Ice will be at the Amphitheatrethrough Nov 22.Blackfriars, the campus music comedy group, will have asherry hour for people interested in working with Black¬friars today at 4:30 in Cobb coffee shop. All interestedstudents are cordially invited.ApologyThe review of the San FranciscoMime Troupe performance in lastweek’s Journal mistakenly accused Re¬vitalization of pocketing the proceeds ofthe concert. Actually, Revitalizationlost $400 on the show. We apologize toRevitalization for the error and stressthat Revitalization is not a money-grubbing student organization, but aworthy, broke one.by CAR repairs/Su/jJ-cA ..BRIGHTONFOREIGN AUTO-SERVICE4401 S. 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We alsoclean suede coats andknitted goods.1619 East 55th StreetHY 3-9413 BY DAVID SUTTLERA GUIDE TODRAFTMEDCAL PSYCHIATRIC MORALTHE BUST BOOK: What to Do Until the Lawyer ComesBy KATHY BOUDIN, ELEANOR RASKIN, BRAIN GLICK,GUSTIN REICHBACH, "Everyone should have one, next to thefamily Bible and the I Ching,”—Rolling Stone.“For your own protection, make it a bestseller.”—Chicago Seed. $1 00IV-F: A Guide to Draft ExemptionBy DAVID SUTTLER. “The closest thing to a how-to-escape-the-draft manual that can be legally published.”—Harvard Crimson“If you are male, between the ages of eighteenand thirty-five, a book that may well save your lifeis IV-F.”—Michigan Daily. $1 50Gl RIGHTS ANO ARMY JUSTICEBy ROBERT S. RIVKIN. "If Gl RIGHTS AND ARMY JUSTICEgets into the hands of a significant number of draftees,the Army will wish it had something easy with which to occupyitself—like pacifying the Viet Cong.’ —New York Times"Should be as much a part of the soldier's library as hisBible, issued to him on induction —New Republic.$8.50 cloth, $1.75 paperfrom GROUE PRESS315 Hudson St.. New York, N Y. 10013 ROCKEFELLERMEMORIALCHAPELSundayNovember 22, 197011:00 a.m.E. SPENCER PARSONSDean of the Chapel“Thanksgiving InAn AcquisitiveSociety”Weekday Chapel MusicTuesday, November 24, 12:15 p.m.Organ Recital. Edward Mondello. UniversityOrganistWednesday, November 25, 12:15 p.m.Carillon Recital. Robert Lodine. UniversityCarillonneurGOLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM-2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM-9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559(near Harper Court)Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.) THIS MONTH’S ]SPECIALFROM DENMARKROSEWOOD DINING CHAIRSW/ BLACK VINYL SEATS$39.00 ea.FROM NORWAYTEAK DINING TABLES$69.00 ea.VIKEN TEAK DINING CHAIRW/BLACK VINYL SEAT$29.00 ea.NATURAL PINE, BLUE OR REDPAINTED DINING CHAIR$19.95 ea.jensen sScandinavian Import Systems5300 S. LAKE PARKHYDE PARK BANK BLDG.667-4040November 20,_ lWO/Greu .City _ Journal :Little fauss and Big Halsyare not your father's heroes.A06<ftT fllKHMU.AfDFOftD POLLARDLITTLI MUSS AAD SI© HALSVAN ALBERT S. RUDDY PRODUCTIONLAUREN HUTTON NOAH BEERY LUCILLE BENSONALBERT S RUOOY CHARUS EASTMAN SIDNEY J. IURIE ; JOHNNY CASHiRl944-2966 Park-C>rM«ltrhMlra (*r. MIDWEST PREMIEREFRIDAYTHE PEACE CORPSWILL BE RECRUITINGSENIORS WITH MAJORSIN:MathematicsNatural ScienceBusinessAccountingandArchitectureat the University of Chicago Placement OfficeonNovember 23 & 24CHECK If OUT!!Call 353-4990 for details ENJOYGRACIOUS 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 RATES TAKCAW-YWCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. YO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders .o Lake putPEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONJAMESSCHULTZCLEANERSCUSTOM QUAUTYCLEANING10% student discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933»*5*« »!5!« i5!t »?.» “jtCTiiJW!WE WANT YOU TO JOIN OUR FAITH AS ANORDAINED MINISTERwith a rank ofDOCTOR OF DIVINITY"And ye shall know the truth and the truthshall make you free" John 8:32We want men and women of all ages, who believe as wedo, to join us in the holy search for Truth. We believe thatall men should seek Truth by all just means. As one of ourministers you can:1. Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for ex¬emption from property and other taxes,3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ec¬clesiastic powers.4. Seek draft exemption as one of our workingmissionaries. We can tell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, the¬aters, etc., give reduced rates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinityand I.D. card, we'll send you 12 blank forms to use whenyou wish to ordain others. Your ordination is completelylegal and valid anywhere in this country. Your moneyback without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send yourOrdination and D.D. Certificates beautifully framed andglassed.SEND NOW TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHP.O. Box 1393, Dept. 66Evanston, Illinois 60204■5MMALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER’S LICENSEAPPLY NOWDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $50 OR MORE DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.PREGNANT? NEED HELP?PREGNANT? NEED HELP? Abortions are now legal in NewYork City up to 24 weeks. The Abortion Referral Service willprovide a quick and inexpensive end to your pregnancy. Weare a member of the National Organization to LegalizeAbortion. CALL 1-215*878-5800 for totally confidentialinformation. There are no shots or pills to terminate apregnancy. These medications are intended to induce a lateperiod only. A good medical test is your best 1st action toinsure your chance for choice. Get a test immediately. Ourpregnancy counseling service will provide totally confidentialalternatives to your pregnancy. We have a long list of those wehave already assisted should you wish to verify this service.COPY OUR NUMBER FOR FUTURE REFERENCE1-215-878-5800. “..regarded as the best and mostauthentic edition by 6I Chingafllci0nad0S-Peter Coll,er,New York Times Book ReviewTHEICHINGor Bookof ChangesWilhelm/BaynesTranslation$6.00Boll ingen Series XIXavailable at your bookstore orPRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESSPrinceton, New Jersey 08540Now in its 6th printing of the 3rd edition.*L WALGREEN GRILLHoliday SpecialFully PreparedROAST TURKEYANDTRIMMINGSIncludes:10 to 12 lb. brood breasted turkey2 quarts of daliciovs draising1 quart of giblot gravyAll you do.... is boat and sarvo$12.95Pumpkin Pie...69'"in the Hyde ParkShopping Center"NO 7-5533SimcaSunbeamIdisriidSeies&ServkeNew & Used CarsExpert Body & Fender WorkComplete Foreign Car ServiceQuick Dependable MechanicalServiceDaily 1.30 - 8.3CSat. 8:30 - 6:00Sun. 12 noon - 5:00HYDE PARK AUTO MPORTS6900 S. Cottage Grove 643-6100 DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Celtic1510E. 55th St.363-6363